This Past Weekend - Me(n)Too | This Past Weekend #68
Episode Date: January 18, 2018Follow up to Monday's episode. Aziz chatter. Callers respond to mom's inquiry. Trying to legally still be a man. Riverside. Sorry so emo. See you in Jacksonville. Hotline: 985-664-9503 Grey Block Pizz...a www.greyblockpizza.com Patreon Support: www.patreon.com/theovon Thank You Chris Perez. Kaz. Bud Galloway. Sherbbbbbb. Weeee Areeeee GUNT-shall!!!! Matthew Snow Renee Nicol Ryan Wolfe Angelo Raygun Carla Huffman Robyn Tatu Beau Adams Yoga Max Bowden Shawn-Leigh henry Roar Hanasand Laura Williams Not Even Wrong Xela Person Open Mind 101 Deanna Smith Mona McCune Suzanne O'Reilly Rashelle Raymond Chad Saltzman James Bown Brian Szilagyi Monica Hynes Matt Eckenrode Arielle Nicole Greg H Dave Engelman Dylan Clune Calvin Doyle Robert Doucette Jacob Ortega Jesse Witham Andrea Gagliani Scott Swain William Morris Qie Jenkins Aaron Jones Jon Ross Kevin Best Haley Brown Ned Arick Milo J Garcia Lauren Cribb Ty Oliver Tom in Rural NC Christian from Bakersfield Brian Martinez Matthew Holland Charley Dunham Casey RobertsSee omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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All right, let's crack open a can of this, you know, butt magic. Thank you. Man.
You got it.
You felt that, huh?
Man, that felt like a beautiful, just like a big black girl just jumped on my back and just dove just down my throat into my soul.
There at the end on that last, on that hitter riff.
Let's catch another, catch another, catch another sniff of this. Man, that thing was tight.
That note was tight, man.
Like they trying to put that note in your butt.
That note was, you could, I mean, that thing, you got to really do some work to get that thing out into the world the tightness of that
note happy thursday guys happy thursday afternoon um or thursday morning actually it's going to be
thursday morning and i am here in uh in america i'm coming to you live from los angeles california
it's thursday jan January 18 in the year 2018.
That's what I need sometimes.
Just that.
Just let the,
stop the merry-go-round.
Stop the,
just,
there never,
remember,
there used to be so much more peace in our everyday lives.
And some people might not remember that.
If you're, you know, and I'm aging myself here, but whatever, dude.
You know what I'm saying?
I'll date your grandmother's freaking friend.
You know?
And if you are, there used to be so much peace.
You had so much peace.
You did, we're not as many electronic, I mean, I'm talking about when I was a child.
And you would get home and there wasn't as many as electronics buzzing.
And there weren't as many, you know, everybody wasn't recording everything.
And there just wasn't, there was more peace.
Man, I have a tough time these days getting peace.
That's what I'm really, that's what I find.
I would, dude, I would suck, you know, I'll suck a nap out of, you know, I'll suck a comfortable
nap out of, or I'll suck a quiet afternoon out of somebody's neck.
You feel me? I will suck somebody's
neck for, you know, a couple hours of peace and quiet.
That's what it's going to come to. That's what it's going to come to.
You're going to be walking, you know, through the Tenderloin District or one of these, you know,
seedy areas in a certain city
and somebody's going to be like, hey, hey, hey, come here, man.
You know, how about you?
You know, how about you?
Let me suck your dick for a little peace and quiet.
That's going to be the drug.
Because it used to be so much more peaceful.
And I think if you're, you know, I'm 37.
I'm an adult male.
And if you are probably,
if you're 20,
if you're 20,
and this is going to sound,
I mean, I just sound
probably like an old guy.
That's what I sound like.
Oh, the old guy
telling us things
used to be so quiet,
but it used to be
so much more relaxing.
I mean, I picked up
a book yesterday.
Have you tried to open a book?
And you're like, what the fuck?
This is the worst video ever.
Every time I look at a book, I'm like,
ah, it is hard.
And it's just my ability to be patient with my ability to be patient is decimated.
It's decimated. I have a tough time.
I have a tough time, but yeah, I picked up a book yesterday, like an old paperback.
It wasn't even shiny or fancy, and I'm just like, dang I have a tough time. But yeah, I picked up a book yesterday, like an old paperback. It wasn't even shiny or fancy.
And I'm just like, dang, this is pretty sad.
And I like to read.
I like to absorb.
And here I am thinking that.
So I just wonder, what is this?
What does it look like here in the next 10 years?
You know, when you can't, when there's, you know,
when it has to be video or your brain,
it's like, it's too slow.
Because I also notice things that are
too slow for me now.
Like if I call someone's phone number
and it doesn't just go, it doesn't
go straight to voicemail, but it has that thing where it's
like, to leave a voice message, press
one. To return, to have the caller return
something or other, press 2.
If it's not just, you know, hey, it's John.
You reached for my cell phone.
Call me back.
Beep.
If it's not that, I get pissed.
Because I just am impatient.
I don't want to deal with that extra 7 seconds of bullshit that I already have heard a million times.
And then I don't even want to leave the message.
Then I don't even want to fucking talk to John anymore.
Because I don't like the bullshit that he's putting between us.
I don't like, you know, suddenly I'm angry at John.
Because he doesn't like, he doesn't have the machinery or the software that I vibe with the most.
And I just get, and it's me.
I know it's me.
You know, I could go live in the woods or live in a tent or take more hikes or do other things that would, you know, get me out of that realm.
You know, and take those, you know, and get those, you know, those, what are those things that stick to a boat?
Scallops.
Get those scallops off my body.
You know, because I let those scallops start to build up by not being out in nature.
By not swimming.
You know, by not stepping in a puddle or fucking, you know, getting a couple pats of mud and putting them on your neck or putting them on your back.
And just being a part of nature and slowing it down.
You know, I remember the first time I went, I didn't really go camping.
I got locked out of the house.
And, you know, me and my brother slept under the eave of the house, you know, by the porch.
And, dude, there was so much bullshit down under there.
And, you know, we ended up actually finding a plumbing problem that we had. My mother
didn't know we had it. And it, you know, almost really broke us as a family financially once
we found that. But, you know, but it was interesting just being outside for a little while. I remember
as a kid and slowing it down. You know, I even just remember that.
I do remember a couple of moments of how quiet it was.
You know, it was also quiet, I found, whenever I was...
When I was young, it was quiet.
You know, I talked about this on last week's episode,
that it was quiet when my family would get together when the power went out.
And that was one time in my home that there was a lot of peace in the air when the power went out when I was a child.
Because, you know, because you got together.
You fucking got together.
Where are you?
Suddenly you needed each other.
There was a commonality. You know, because my family? Suddenly you needed each other. You had a, there was a commonality.
You know, because my family didn't have a strong family.
There was no familial bond.
There was none of that shit.
You know, it was just felt like a, just like a rescue center.
And we used to fight and we used to fight at the table.
And the best thing you could do during dinner at my house was if you could make fun of somebody hard enough
until they cried
and they had a mouth full of food
and if you've never seen somebody cry with a mouth full of food
I mean it is, it's messed up
yes, I agree
secondarily to it being messed up it is hilarious
because they can't swallow because hilarious because they can't swallow
because their mouth,
they can't swallow
because they're crying
and they can't cry that good
because their mouth
is full of food.
And so they're,
I mean, it was,
and that was like,
that was when at my house,
that's when you got somebody.
When you had them crying
with that mouth,
you had them, you know,
jawed up on a fucking couple grams of Salisbury steak.
And they was jawed up on that and running some, you know,
half a mouth still full of hot potats, bruh.
And then you hit them with a couple of jabs and they started crying.
And you hit them in the feelings.
Because in my household, that was the only way that we showed attention to each other.
It was the only time we even spoke to each other, I felt like, when we were kids.
And it's unfortunate.
I'm not saying that that's a good way to grow up.
It wasn't fun.
But it was, you know, it was real.
And then the time when we enjoyed each other's company, when we were at peace,
when we found some solace, when we found some, you know,
I remember if the power would go out, I found some, you know, I remember if the
power would go out, I'd be, you know, doing whatever I was doing. I was living in my own world,
doing what I wanted to do for me. But then the power went out and I was, I was scared.
You know, I didn't want to be alone. I needed more than just myself then. So we go and mom had
two candles in there.
And so we go in there, and we need,
that's when, you know, there was a necessity there.
It created, that created necessity.
You know, and I think it created,
with that darkness, even though, you know,
we're in our home, I think,
even as a mother, I think there's just something innate, you know, something that goes back to
what's important about motherhood, and that it, you know, it grips you in the what's important about motherhood and that it,
you know, it grips you in the neck and you say, when the power goes out, where are my children?
You know, where are, you know, these extensions of my body? Where's the rest of me? You know,
I'm assuming that's probably what a mother feels sometimes. And so my, you know, we would,
we'd find our mom and our mom wanted to find us.
And then we would all be together and those candles would be lit and you couldn't go outside
of the glow of those candles because it was, you know, you don't know what was out there.
And you wanted to keep tabs on each other and your body, your nerves were alert. So like,
you know, if you were touching, you know, not touching, not being, you know, you know, sensual or being wild, but if you were just
touching or tickling each other as children, you were feeling, it was so heightened and your nerve,
your, your ears, my nerves would go to my ears and I would have to, I could hear, I mean, I could hear,
and I would have to, I could hear.
I mean, I could hear,
I felt like I could hear the whole world
because I would just be so,
so, I needed to.
I needed to hear if anything was coming
and not spray,
and I'm talking an animal or a,
you know, a Voldemort or a falcon
or a bad falcon.
Or something dangerous was coming and I needed to be able to hear.
And suddenly my ears just developed these long, capable arms that reached out into the distance
and fucking brought in every sound that was around.
And I just, and I loved that time.
I loved it because our family was together at those moments.
And we needed each other. and we wanted to be together and we wanted each other to all be safe.
And it was peaceful and it was so quiet. And that's the quietest I remember it being was when the power went out.
Now fast forward to now, the power doesn't even go out as much as it used to.
Because now we have generators and backup generators.
And we got, you know, Big Larry or whatever who works down at the power plant.
Who's supposed to make sure he presses this button if the rains come.
You know, or whatever.
We have all these backups in order.
And it's just kind of, I don't know.
You know, you just, I miss that peace.
Because for somebody like me who it's hard to find, it's hard for me to find peace anyway.
To not have it be as readily available as it was due to, you know, technology and due to our attention span. I mean, another thing is just my attention span. Come on, a span, I would barely call it that. I noticed if I'm
reading, I'll read one paragraph by the second paragraph, my mind goes off to something else.
You know, what did that girl say? Or, you know, man, I haven't seen her in a long time. Or start thinking about sex.
I will think directly about some dang b-hole,
you know, some troubled b-hole that I've seen on the internet.
Or some set of tits that I've seen on the internet.
You know, immediately, I'm reading a fucking chapter of Mark Twain, dude.
And then it's just like, next thing you know in my mind,
I picture Mark Twain, you know, fucking by a fence or something. And the next thing you know, my brain
is gone and I have to recalibrate. Boom. Let me get back into this story. And it's just my attention
span. It's all, everything's, it's just a different time. It's a different, it's a different time,
but I like this instrumental that came in here. This was Josh Porter. And he sent this in. And it was called Luchador's Longfellow.
That is what the song is called.
I'm going to let you catch one more little hit of that right here.
Here we go.
Hear them heavy tones right there, boy?
Sound like somebody's trying to put the moves on a fucking ice tones right there, boy? Sound like somebody's
trying to put the moves on a fucking ice cube right there.
Like somebody's trying to just tickle the nipples of an ice cube.
So cold, man.
And so hot.
At the same time.
Happy Thursday to you guys.
I want to tell you guys too, man.
I'm going to tell you about them right now.
And that's Gray Block Pizza.
And they got them beautiful.
They got the Frenchie.
They got these beautiful pizza pies over there.
The Frenchie.
The Farmer's Delight.
The Onion. The Q, the Caps.
Got that Portobello Oyster.
The Shiitake Mushroom with the Parmesan Fontina Romano.
And they got all that at Gray Block Pizza.
And their link is on the YouTube.
And they're over there at 1811 Pico Boulevard on the way to the beach in Los Angeles.
If you're headed to the beach, stop at gray block and get that.
Thank you guys for being with us.
I want to thank everybody that subscribed on YouTube.
You were up to 21,000 subscribers.
And man, I cannot even tell you how, well, to be honest, I feel a couple of things.
I feel some pressure, you know, And I know that that's just me.
I just want to continue to show up and help do some things and make this thing bigger and broader.
I have some neat ideas that we're going to try and do some fundraising as a group that I'm going to be contributing to and do some cool stuff.
You know, a lot of big ideas.
And a lot of those are starting to be able to execute them.
And so, but I'm grateful to you guys
because this is kind of crazy.
Like, you know, I started doing this podcast
and I didn't know.
I didn't know what I was going to talk about.
I still don't even know what the fuck I'm talking about.
You know, and I have this horrible shirt on.
If you can see on the YouTube.
Wow.
This shirt is really questionable. And it looks, I mean, it looks like just like a damn, it looks like a dang semen cloud just busted right up over my house. and I got batched out, to be honest with you.
And that, I know, is going to be a grody thing for some people to think about,
and I'm sorry, and I won't say something like that again.
But here's the thing, though.
By being a listener, by being a supporter,
and there's been, I can't tell you how many nice emails that I've gotten,
people just saying thanks and thank you.
And here's the thing.
By people listening and being a part of this.
Like, I hate to say this. It might sound a little bit, you know, greedy or egotistical, but it makes it make it made me come back to do it.
You know, like if it wasn't for you guys listening, I might have just, you know, might not have gotten out of some of the ruts that I was in because I needed this thing.
You know, I needed to come here and have some people to talk to and to think about stuff with.
And so I just, man, I really,
I'm very grateful.
I'm very grateful.
This has been a lot of fun.
We're going to do a lot of neat things as a group.
We're going to do a lot of things
that are going to lift people's hearts
and lift people's spirits.
We're going to start doing some things
for some single mothers out there.
We're going to do some cool stuff this year.
And I just want to thank you.
I want to thank everybody on Patreon
that's been supportive
and everybody that's been listening
and subscribing.
And yeah, it's just cool.
You know, all my life I just,
you know, I think I want,
you know, I want to do something good
and helpful.
And I feel like, you know, dang, sorry, dude, I'm getting a little caught up.
But I feel like this podcast is maybe a way that I can help do that sometimes.
So I'm not saying that I do that.
I'm not saying that I think I help.
I'm not saying any of that.
I just feel like there's moments that we have on here or that I'll read something that somebody sent or a comment or something that makes me not think about myself for a little bit.
For me, that's a blessing because I think I grew up just thinking about myself a lot because I had to to take care of myself.
And now I don't have to, but I still have to shed some of those old ways, you know, and I still have to get my, you know, I don't think I'm egomaniacal, but I do think sometimes I'm self-centered.
But now, man, I'm just trying to get these reins off my off my shoulders and get that drip drip out into the world.
We're going to do some cool stuff and I appreciate you guys as a,
you guys support.
What else,
man?
The saints game.
We're going to talk about a couple of things.
The saints game.
You know,
a lot of you guys were on here with me last on,
on Monday's episode when the saints game hit and I fell apart.
You know,
my brother called,
um,
and he called cause we usually talk after the game.
And I guess I hadn't reached out to him.
And he called and checked in.
We talked about it on air.
And they lost, man.
And they lost.
And it was, I mean, the next day I literally felt like,
I felt like they won, but they didn't advance.
If that makes any sense.
And I just felt bad for some of those young guys.
And I felt like this.
There's a last play and I think it'll always
be one of the stranger plays
in NFL football.
Where Mr. Williams
he's going for the tackle.
And Mr. Diggs he plays on
the Minnesota Vikings. He has the tackle. And Mr. Diggs, he plays on the Minnesota Vikings. He has the ball.
And Mr. Williams tries to hit that man and he misses him completely. But he shouldn't have.
And for me, I think this is why it happened. I think it happened because they called two really
bad penalties on Mr. Williams early in the game.
And Mr. Williams, this is his first year in the NFL.
And this is his biggest game of his career.
If you look back, there couldn't have been a bigger game for this gentleman.
I mean, I think he's an African-American gentleman.
He might be a full black, I don't know, mixed guy.
I'm not sure. But he plays
defensive back and I believe he's number 43. And he's had a great year. I almost want to say he,
I don't know if he went to the Pro Bowl, but he's had a great year. And I think that they make those
bad calls in the NFL early because they don't let these guys play football anymore. And then by the end of the game, he was nervous.
You have these guys nervous to play football.
And that's weird because it's football.
And I just think sometimes it's like these guys know they're playing football.
Yes, we want to make the game safer for them,
but we don't want to make them so nervous to make a play
that there aren't any more great plays made.
You know, I mean, because the way it should have broke down was that he should have made that tackle and that game should have ended.
But he's afraid to touch the guy now because he's already had two not good pass interference calls made against him.
So you got a scared rookie out there.
You know, just because of the way
the play calling, he's worked his whole career
to get up to this point. And now just
because of the way that the penalties are being called,
he's nervous.
I just don't think it creates the best
product. Now I think they should
make the helmets out of rubber.
Make the field out of something a little more cavalier.
You know, maybe denim.
Something where these men aren't, You know, maybe denim. Something
where these men aren't,
you know, they don't have to kill each other, but they can
still hit each other.
Because a lot of these men are dogs.
A lot
of these men are Rottweiler,
Bichon,
you know, jacked up
Russell Terrier,
aficionado, fucking pit bulls.
And they want to attack.
So then you have them all, you get this awkward stuff going on there.
I feel like most of the, there's a lot more anger going on at the end of the play
when they're yelling at each other than there is on the field,
than there is during the actual plays these days.
But yet maybe the NFL is more popular than ever. I don't know. I don't know what the numbers are. But for me at halftime of that game, I felt like I was watching a really advanced
flag football. And maybe that's just what the world is becoming. Maybe we're becoming flag football.
Maybe we're becoming flag football.
I mean, it's hard to be a man.
It's hard to be a man.
But I'll say this as well, that the thing that consoled me and made me feel better,
and I was talking about this on Facebook Live last night,
was watching the videos of the Minnesota Vikings fans.
Watching the videos of them feel joy and feel you know feel excitement and just the joy just them just elated
just them to know that a miracle can happen in a second
that something could change
and that made me feel picked up
you know because it took me out of me thinking about oh my team lost
and still my team had still, but now another team had won.
Another group of people were feeling something good.
So it made the illness that I was afflicted by, the downs,
and I'm not talking down syndrome.
I'm talking about feeling downs in the dumps.
Down in the dumps.
It lifted that a little bit because if you added those two sums up and divided them by two,
it sets me a little closer to the middle than it does if I'm just down and you divide that by two.
So that's what did it for me.
But man, what a season by the Saints.
I think Sean Payton got the luckiest draft ever.
I think his ego's gotten out of control.
I don't think he's been the same coach since they won the previous Super Bowl
when he got divorced.
To me, and this is all speculation,
this is all just me being a fan,
I mean, I love the Saints. But to me, I feel like players respond differently over the years to a married man, a man who's out there and is
toeing the line each day and going to work and leading by example. And then he was hobnobbing with these ladies in the club.
And he's doing the Dougie and all this shit over the years.
And I think that that changed some of the vibe over there.
But it was tough to see.
I wanted to see Drew Brees versus Tom Brady in the Super Bowl.
I will actually be in Jacksonville this weekend.
Popping off down there in Jacksonville.
And if you ever want to find a dead body, I suggest you go to Jacksonville because it seems like the kind of area where people are straight up H&Cs.
You know what I'm saying?
Hiding carcasses.
And that's a fact, Jack.
You know, I used to drive along the interstate when I was young.
I used to peek out the window and look for bodies in the distance.
And a lot of you guys know I found two fingers in the woods when I was young
and turned them over to the police.
And the man put them in a Ziploc bag and threw them in the trunk of his car and took off.
So I haven't found a whole body, but I'll be damned if I haven't found about at least probably
maybe 1% of a body.
All right, let's get into a little bit more stuff that's going on here.
It's hard to be a man these days.
It's hard.
And I think the toughness for me, I mean, especially in Los Angeles,
you can't good luck meeting a woman.
The best you can hope for these days in Los Angeles
is you go out to the club
you don't get in a lawsuit
that's the big thing
they should open up a club where
it's called NDA, non-disclosure agreement
everybody signs one before they go in
just to know that
if you wink at a woman
she's not going to say
you took a swing at her with your eyelashes
because it's getting wild
I won't even masturbate locally
I refuse to masturbate locally
I'll drive out to Riverside
or I'll drive out there near Commerce Casino
and you know
spray out around back of there,
around that area, you know, not at a park, you know, in a safer area.
But I'm not jerking locally.
You're crazy.
You are crazy.
I'm afraid even, I'm thinking about getting a bunch of garlic and hanging it up
because I'm afraid that some woman out there is going to buy a Ouija board and accuse me of trying to, you know, diddle up in her seance zones.
So it's tough.
It's tough.
I mean, I think there's probably a lot of men out there who are, you know, getting involved in homosexuality because they don't even, they're just tired of it.
They're like, look, dude, let's go back to your place.
You know, let's both be fucking just blindfold each other and just act like, you know, pretend, you know, maybe play sounds of women in the background or something.
I don't know.
But it's tough.
And you had the big case with Aziz Ansari.
We talked about it the other day a little bit.
And I get nervous to talk about some of this stuff.
And I know I shouldn't.
But I'll say this.
I mean, when I read this story,
I could see this being Aziz type behavior to me.
I mean, you know, Aziz is one of the only comedians I've ever met where when I shook his hand, he didn't look at me.
You know, he just is like he seemed to me like he has this vibe about him that he's better than other people, which is fine.
Maybe he is in some realms but you know i haven't really i've you know the only other comedian that didn't look at me
when he shook my hand was chapelle and that's fine i mean chapelle is you know he's really good at
what he i mean he's he's a legend you know his new special, I haven't seen the second hour, but that first hour, it might have saved comedy by him talking about things just to make words okay to say.
But yeah, you had this instance. It was a crazy instance. And then years later, the girl brings it up and it's tough.
And I think some women are probably confused about the me too
do i say something was it really something you know if say if a woman's only had one
one sexual experience and it was uncomfortable but over the say was she say she had five more
over the next two years or she's going to have five more and then she'll realize that it wasn't uncomfortable
that it was just her scope of
knowing what
you know getting involved
with someone was like sexually
was
limited
but she makes that claim now
you know and put
someone's name out there because that's the thing
it's just so damaging
or maybe it was a bad instance that a girl had you know, and put someone's name out there because that's the thing. It's just so damaging.
And maybe, or maybe it was a bad instance that a girl had, you know,
but it's just, I think it's,
I don't know how you get this right.
Because also there's some things out there,
you know, because you don't want,
it seemed like it was handled,
when I read back on this Aziz Ansari
situation, it seems like it was
handled between the two of them.
She texted him the next day
and let him know that she felt like
she was not appreciated.
She felt like he didn't
recognize proper signs.
And
I wouldn't be surprised. It sounds like he didn't.
But it also sounds like there were other signs
where if you're a man that's in the heat of that beat,
that you are not going to be probably as keen to notice them.
You know what I mean?
When a man gets overcome with sensuality,
you know, it's almost like somebody takes out a fucking little mallet
and starts just beating a mallet at the base of their spine.
And then that rattle goes up their back.
And that's a sex rattle.
And they start wanting to do sex.
And experience sex and titties and everything.
Or even if it's, it's just, it overcomes, it's a limbic thing.
That arousal, you, I mean, you look in the jungle
when a lion see a girl lion in the distance
or a cheetah, you know, or a lynx
that's wearing some tight, you know,
that have some tight fur on her legs,
he perks up.
And at that point when he's perked up,
it's tough to notice things.
It's tough probably to notice smaller signs
because the foot,
the biological foot of the universe
that tells you,
that pushes you towards procreation
and doing skeet out of your body
is already being accelerated.
So it's like, you know, it's tough to,
how do we manage that when it is beyond,
when it is beyond,
it's not our choice sometimes.
Now at the point if you know like of course I'm not saying
if a girl or a guy
if you're doing male on male sex
if a man is being
you know saying he don't want it
he doesn't want it
he's not interested
no
then you need to know that shit.
And part of us, I mean, a lot of this comes back to people taking responsibility for themselves.
No means no. That's easy.
That's why it is no.
They gave an opposite to no, and it's yes.
That's the things.
the opposite to no and it's yes.
That's the things.
But ladies also,
you know,
to be so empowered and so in control of yourself but then to show
up and it sounded from
this Aziz story to stay in an environment
where it wasn't the
most suited for
comfort.
I don't know.
You know, it just creates there's a lot of gray area in all this is what I'm saying.
And I feel like a lot of this, and a lot of this I've always said goes back to
what's going on in these classrooms when people are children.
And when children are children, those same people.
That's what I'm talking about.
Because the shit we're teaching each other, the shit we're teaching our kids, I don't
give a fuck about most of it.
You know, I don't, these days, I don't care if my kid can, you know, do times tables past 9.
I do
care if my kid
knows how
to
share his feelings
with someone else.
I'm not saying share what he thinks
because everybody's doing that shit.
Everybody's woke and all
this bullshit.
A lot of that is bullshit to me. You know, everybody's woke and all this bullshit. And a lot of that is bullshit to me.
You want to get really woke?
Try and understand what somebody else is going through.
I'm just so sick of fucking hash.
A hashtag does nothing.
It does nothing.
You know, there might be some awareness, but what it really does for, you know, if you want to help something, go help it.
Donate.
You know, I'm just so, it's like, I don't know.
I don't even know what the fuck I'm talking about, dude.
But it's hard.
It's tough out there for men.
And I can't believe that these aren't the things that we're starting to teach each other
teach children in
an education system. Half the people
ain't even fucking paying attention in school anyway.
So let's get
that goo goo.
Let's get into people's juju.
You know? Crack open that sternum.
Get the
mayordas thumping.
Because when a man gets out there, he needs to know how to be a man.
And, you know, with women, there's so much empowerment, so much after the fact empowerment.
Let's get the empowerment early.
Let's get the empowerment.
Let's get the me too in second grade.
And start teaching kids what it's like.
And what kind of the vibe is like in certain instances.
You know, we're so, you know, we have such a weird thing about sex here in America.
We have such a weird thing about sex.
And maybe I don't know what the fuck I'm talking about.
And you know what?
That's highly, highly plausible.
We had some calls that came in, though, man.
I'm going to go through a couple of those a little bit right now.
Some neat thoughts.
And thank you for hitting the hotline.
And that number is 985-664-9503.
Here we go.
Hey, Theo.
This is Kevin from Visalia, California.
Just listening to the podcast. I got to the part
where you said you paused it before
the Saints lost. I'm a Saints fan
too, man. So sad.
We'll get them again next year. Take it
easy. And you know what? I can't
even remember if I already played that call or not.
So.
But yeah, will we get them next year?
It's all there is to say
because only one team wins it
and only one team wins it
and there's still some good teams in it
there's some great fan bases
Philadelphia great fan base
Minnesota great fan base
they're going to be out there
it's going to create some good new rivalries
that's exciting
Jacksonville's in there
dude anything is exciting. Jacksonville's in there.
Dude.
Anything is good for Jacksonville.
And I'll be there this weekend, actually,
at the Comedy Club.
So I just wanted to let you guys know that,
that I'll be in Jacksonville at the Comedy Club this weekend.
I will also be,
I'll be coming up in Tacoma in March.
You can go look at that.
It's on the calendar now.
And the April dates will be on the calendar this week.
A lot of dates are popping up on there.
Okay, here we go with another call that came in.
This was Aubrey.
Let's check it.
Hey, Theo.
This is Aubrey from Pittsburgh.
We've had some fun little Instagram exchanges sometimes.
You know, nothing dirty or anything.
I'm a dog walker.
I listen to you while I'm...
Oh, yeah, Aubrey out there with them bitches walking dogs.
And this is a good line, and this isn't my line.
A friend of mine told me this one time.
If you see a lady walking a dog, and the dog is a male dog,
then you say to the lady, you say,
Hey, that's a pretty girl you got there. And she says, It's a male dog. Then you say to the lady, you say, hey, that's a pretty girl you got there.
And she says,
um, it's a male.
And you say, oh,
I was talking to the dog.
And then that lets her know that you
trying to
catch her little
dirty frisbee in your mouth. You know what I'm saying?
Her!
What the fuck am I even talking about?
All right, let's go.
Here we go.
Walking the old puppies.
I listened to today's podcast a little bit surprised at the exchange with you and Zoe.
You know.
And she's talking about Zoe Monroe.
And Zoe Monroe, even though she's named after obviously a Civil War general who also probably stole the name from a Native American, M-U-N-R-O.
But Zoe Monroe is a butt actress.
She does all types of butt activities and tit circus and all of that.
Sex artist.
Pornography.
And she called it in last week's episode.
Onward. Talking about the dark arts all the time and how much you kind of are sort of against
masturbation with the
porn and everything.
And then to have that, I mean,
kind of weird.
Okay, so you're saying it's kind of weird that
we had her on and then also
but those are things I'm against.
I agree.
And we needed to talk to a pornographer to know if it's okay to pleasure oneself to dead artists.
And I've still come to the conclusion I don't think it's cool.
I don't think it's cool.
And I've also thought that we might get a seancer on here.
Someone who does seancers and get in touch with one of the deceased
porn artists and see if we can
ask them personally and get their word.
So,
if you guys think that's a cool idea or it's a weird idea, whatever,
put it in that YouTube,
into the comments down there, and we'll see
kind of what the vibe is on that.
Not to continue to discuss
porn, but to, you know,
it's tough. And I've landed
on the fact that I don't think it's okay to jerk off to the
deceased. And I don't think that's crazy.
If you're driving down the road
and you're jerking off, okay?
You know, this is
just a hypothesis.
You're driving down the road and you are just
touching your little fucking long
green bean, you know.
And that could be your wiener or could be some lady's got that freaking, you know, they got that tender lima down there, you know.
But you're touching that green bean and you see a dead body.
And it's sexy.
It's wearing a bathing suit.
You're going to jerk off?
No. So that's really where, you You're going to jerk off? No.
So that's really where some of my thoughts come from.
But I see what you're saying.
We talk to her and it's like, well, if we're against the dark arts and we're trying to stay out of our crotch and stay out of vibing into our dirty pleasures, then why are we discussing things with her?
Well, we needed her as a reference.
then why are we discussing things with her?
Well, we needed her as a reference.
And secondarily, you know, like, I mean, I would not want my sister doing pornography.
You know, it would make me feel a certain way.
And also wanted to have Zoe just, you know, I guess I just, I just wanted to, you know, also hear her and not just have to talk about sex and just be thinking about, you know, a little bit more of a human take on what's going on sexually.
You know, when she said some things that were interesting to me is that, that what she thinks her job is, is selling fantasies.
And I'd never had it put to me like that before.
But that's a lot of what it,
it made it suddenly so obvious to me.
Because I would see things in pornography and then hope to catch them out here in the real life.
But most of that's fantasy.
Most of that's not realistic.
You know?
No chick is bringing by, you you know a pizza and wants to fuck and not even have
to get paid for the pizza that's you know most most chicks aren't hitchhiking and gonna fuck
you in your car after they get in you know it is fantasy and i didn't i never even realize that
to me i was just so intent when i would cut it on to seeing the bodies and
seeing the you know the um the angles and the and the just just crotches just attacking each other
you know just like a damn you know just like the battle of you know bulger and I was so used to
seeing that that I wasn't focused on what else was going on.
I couldn't see what else was going on.
So it was interesting to hear her take on it.
But that's why we needed to have a reference.
And so we asked her.
Because she still, you know,
even though it is tempting to have her around,
I didn't go jerk off.
You know, I texted with her and said,
thank you.
And that was it.
But I'm sure there's a lot of dudes out there
who listen to the podcast, who checked
in, and next thing you know,
they're out there firing
that body sauce
out of the whole new
internet.
Staring at that dirty
balloon knot.
And getting a peep at that thing, at that dark wink.
And it's out there.
And maybe I shouldn't have.
And I appreciate you bringing that up, Aubrey.
And maybe I shouldn't have.
Maybe I should have thought more about that.
But I wanted to try and, you know, in hindsight, I was seeing like maybe this just kind of humanizes what's going on here a little bit more.
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There's speculation out there that Donald Trump, President Donald Trump, paid off a hooker that he allegedly slept with at some point in his life.
I don't know if the news stories are true or if they're false.
But here's what I don't understand sometimes about the news.
Who fucking doesn't think that this occurred?
Like sometimes the news keeps saying shit to me that I'm like, no shit.
You think I think he only had sex with one prostitute in his life?
No.
He's Donald fucking Trump.
He's just like all these other.
I mean, he's just like fucking.
I know dudes who have $30 and they've had sex with a hooker.
I bet if you looked it up these days, I bet probably.
I bet 30% of men in America have
had sex with prostitutes. Now that doesn't, I'm not justifying what happened, but certainly if I
see Donald Trump, yeah. That's the thing. It's like, people think that this is news. It's not
news to who? Like who doesn't, who with a real mind in their head looks at Donald Trump thinks like, ah, he's never had a prostitute.
He's never paid a woman for a crazy party.
Like, I just don't understand sometimes.
You know, but I do notice that I look on, you know, if you look on news sites, every politician is now being called a piece of shit.
It doesn't matter. It doesn't matter what party. It doesn't matter what affiliation. All of them.
Because what I start to notice is that Hollywood is more powerful these days than politics.
these days than politics.
Hollywood is our political,
it's our politics.
The presidents are these people that are running these huge businesses.
Those figureheads are obviously
been made by the media to seem more important or better or wiser.
And that's where we are now.
And you can start to see how because the media like these news sites, that's Hollywood.
Like what's happening is the news.
What's happening is reality.
But the way that it's presented to us by the media and the media itself is that's Hollywood.
That's a media.
So and I'm not like becoming some conspiracy theorist.
I'm not a dude.
I just I want to check myself before I let something wreck me.
And I just start to notice.
I just started to notice.
It's like, man, every story is about how politics,
and I've never thought politicians were the cat's meow.
Like, who believes that anymore?
You know, I don't know if you can find a hero
because all these heroes that are always, you know, sold to us, they're not real.
They all fail.
Because we're not, we are mortal.
We can't be, we can try to be heroes, but I don't know if we can't be, we can try to be heroes,
but I don't know if we can.
You know, I don't know if we can be to a level
that triumphs
the value that is out there to pull heroes down.
Because there's value in building them up and there's value in building them down
and breaking them down.
I mean, in all these, you know, all these, you know,
the media, all these websites and the clicks,
that's all, it's a formula now.
Build them up, find something that breaks them down. Then we and the clicks. It's a formula now. Build them up.
Find something that breaks them down.
Then we got the comeback.
There's a lot out there.
It's formulaic now.
But I start to see that the news just beats every politician now.
Every one. And I think it's because that Hollywood,
that's the politics these days.
They have more power.
They have more power than these overall.
They're the ones running this show because they are controlling the cameras.
And I'm not saying that it's a bad thing.
I'm not saying there's bad stuff out there,
that everything's bad. But I'm just saying that it's a bad thing. I'm not saying there's bad stuff out there,
that everything's bad,
but I'm just saying to me,
you have to have some awareness about that and I'm happy to be wrong on that too, dude.
I could be a fucking weirdo.
I really easily could.
All right, cool.
I want to get into a couple of calls that came in.
We had a mother that called last week
and she's raising a son.
She's having her second child, and she wanted advice on what to say to her son
or how to behave to her son to make him be a better man.
But right before we get to that, we had this call that came in.
Here we go.
Hey, Theo.
I was diving into the dark arts a little bit.
And we've all been there, brother, and you're not a bad guy for doing that. I was diving into the dark arts a little bit. jerk off off a pier you know at least that way maybe i catch international water laws or something
you know but who knows there's a you know there's there's a lady 700 miles away with
strong binoculars and next thing you know i'm in court you know for pleasure of myself out
into the ocean but anyway onward christmas time when uh your exes come back into town
or you come back into town and start hitting each other up.
Got a question about when does that stop?
Because I'm young, 21.
When does that go away that you and your exes stop trying to link up every single holiday?
21, man, I bet you got nice skin on you.
And I'm not saying that trying to be wild with you, but I am saying that just to,
you know, because at my age, you, you, you like seeing nice skin. It's, it's on any,
anything it's on, it's nice. You know, you see some nice skin on a 21 year old boy and you're like, oh, he gots nice skin, you know, and I'll recognize it where I recognize it. But, um,
but hopefully your question or your, your thing you're talking about is people coming over from
the holidays and hooking up with their exes or, you know, getting in touch and booty call.
And look, man, ride that donkey.
Okay.
Water that pony.
Okay.
Hey, you know, feed hay to that aardvark.
You know, age up that vark because you want to keep this animal alive.
because you want to keep this animal alive.
Because some of the best times I've ever had was coming back from college,
you know, and being at home in the summertime
and catching you a little bit of local trim, you know.
Maybe a girl you knew and now she's graduating
and suddenly she got, you know, breasts
and she's 18 and you're 19 or 20.
And next thing you know, y'all out there just,
you know, fucking behind an optometry center
somewhere off the interstate and you're enjoying each other's company and man it was fun and next
thing you know you know somebody's mom might get divorced and you might be that you might be that
man she picks up at the workout fitness center or she's buying a bag of bread and next thing you know you fucking you need them titties you know and that kind of stuff can happen and it's during that time in
your life when you can when it happens a lot i notice when you come back for the summer
because you know people's friends or things have changed and they've people are changing
they're not sure what's going on in the you know when the dust is in the air
and you got to get out there
and you know you got to ruffle some dust
and that's a good time to do it
that's what I found
so hopefully it doesn't end for you for a while
you know and throw some
that's a good time to throw some lines out in the water
because when people haven't seen
you know high school can really
it puts us in these
people put us in these boxes people put us in these boxes.
People put us in these spaces.
We put each other in these spaces.
We only see each other a certain way.
And then after someone's gone away to college and they've come back and you start to see
them a little differently or they'll see you a little differently.
And there's an opportunity for some romance because you haven't seen each other.
You haven't been a part of each other's lives.
You wonder what they have and they wonder what you have.
Even if it's just a story
or a moment or
an experience. There's something
there's
natural planks there
where you can walk out
on your plank and show them a little bit of your wood
and they can walk out on your plank and show them a little bit
of their wood.
You can say, oh look at this. This is what I've you know. And you can say, oh, look at this.
This is what I've been doing.
Look at it.
And they're like, oh, this is what I've been doing.
And maybe you just bridge up, you know.
And next thing you know, you're making love to some lady out behind a damn fucking Xerox copy center.
And you're like, I don't have any protection.
And she's like, oh, it doesn't even matter.
You know, I had my ovaries taken out.
You know, I was in an accident, I had my ovaries taken out. You know, I was in an accident.
I had my ovaries taken out.
So, you know, make it do what it do.
And that happened to me one time back there behind a,
I guess it was kind of like a strip mall,
but also had some, like a little bit of a recycling center.
But that's a great question, man.
And I would say ride it as long as you can.
Get that.
Get that summer hit.
Get, you know.
Because I'll tell you this.
Sober sex is for children.
When you fucking, when you're older, man, it's all, it's diluted. And there's, you know, you'll be fucking and you can't even get one of your socks off.
And somebody's wearing a hat.
And there's all kinds of, you know,
somebody that don't have cologne
or somebody's got a, you know,
had a smoking issue and have a trach pipe or hole
and you can hear the wind whistling in their trach hole.
But when you're young, you can have that.
And so that, so then, so you need drugs
and you need alcohol, a little bit of hit
to get you through some of that as an adult.
But as a kid, man, y'all fresh, y'all young, y'all are rabbits, dude.
You know, you could do backflips and everybody's, you know, you could fucking do whatever you want.
You can cultivate that crop.
You know, as a kid, you can really get out there and touch each other's ass and people can feel it.
So I implore you, if you are young, get out there and do sex.
Make it do what it do.
Because when you get up here in these middle ages, it's a damn fiasco out here.
Somebody got too much cologne on their neck and next thing you know, you get it in your eye, or perfumes, woman's cologne for woman.
So if you're young and sober, you get out there and do some sex, man.
Legal sex.
All right, let's take another couple of,
we had some callers that hit us up,
and this was in response to the young lady that called in last week,
mother of two, and she called in last week, a mother of two.
And she called in and asked for suggestions from some of our listeners as to what do I, what are some things I want to instill in my son?
And I was grateful at that moment because it made me think about that.
And then my brother called in and he and I were able to discuss it a little bit.
Just about some things we would have liked
to have had as children.
Emotionally,
I think, is where
some of this stuff landed for us.
But here are some other calls that came
in and I want to get to some of those. Here we go.
Hey, CEO. This is Carl from
Auburn, California.
Dirty Carl. You out
there, huh?
Dirty Carl out thereward and I'm calling about the question regarding what mothers can do to kind of
set an example that's most important that spans the evolution of the family
household through time is you know the mother can set an example for that child
to show them what a real woman is
and how a real woman acts.
That way when that young man grows to be an adult and he goes and searches for his woman,
he has a nice framework of what a real woman's like.
And that's a great point, Carl. I appreciate that.
That's Hot Carl out of there.
And Hot Carl is a nickname for you know actually feces I think
or used to be anyway and I hope it's not anymore Carl because I didn't and I'm sorry I shouldn't
even brought that up but it used to be when I was younger and I think that that's gone out of time
so I probably shouldn't have you know re-brought that up but I don't think about you that way
yeah so that's one thing you can you know so as a mother to then so as a mother you can
show show by example you know be an example for you know i think just having that connection
because then your child at the very least is going to want to have a connection with the woman he
seeks you know it's i'm sure it's got to be scary especially these days because I think
parents should feel a responsibility
for the value of somebody they put in the world
because I have a feeling
that there's going to start to be an evolution
into merit based living
because one of the big problems we have
these days are
people that just don't have
they don't want to be better they don't want to be better.
They don't want to be contributing members of society
for just whatever reasons.
And I think that there's going to,
hopefully there'll be some correction in that world
where there'll be some merit-based society
where who you are as a person
somehow becomes quantifiable
and that there's value there.
I could easily see that. I feel like we're on the cusp of a person, somehow becomes quantifiable and that there's value there. I could easily see that.
I feel like we're on the cusp of a huge evolution,
I think, emotionally.
And that's pretty exciting, bro.
You know?
We out in them fucking emotional streets.
Thanks for that call, Carl.
Onward.
Okay, let's listen to this call right here.
Here we go.
Hey, Theo.
This is Brandon Cox from San Diego. What's up, Brandon? From San Diego, boy. Okay, let's listen to this call right here. Here we go.
What's up, Brandon? From San Diego, boy.
That's down there in the Dub B, boy, that whale's boot hole.
Okay, thanks for calling. More?
You know, as a mother, I think that's really important for them to be there emotionally
for their kids, especially their sons, because sometimes they don't get that from the father's
side.
That's true, especially if they don't have a, if there's a father not in the household,
then, you know, that's a lot of pressure on the mother because she's playing two roles
now.
And if your mother doesn't have schizophrenia or she's not, you know, probably a transvestite
or something, that can be probably even more tough.
I mean, I'm just saying, and I'm not, that's not a joke.
I'm saying that that could be, it's probably easier for some of those people.
More?
The mother should be empathetic and kind of there for their son in emotional regard.
Because if they're not, you know, there's a time when my mom was kind of disconnected from that for me.
And I think later on in life, I seek that out.
And girlfriends and relationships and stuff.
Yep.
And I'm going to stop you right there.
And I appreciate your call, Brandon.
But I'm going to say that too.
I mean, I was in a relationship when I was young.
And I remember it was, I guess, one of the first times I was really in love.
And that young love is fucking powerful dude when you're in love and you're young you could start a you
could start a truck with your fucking tongue i mean you could power a damn building with your
just just with a you know just with the salt on your breath. Because you just so, there's nothing, I mean you are so hopped up
on hormones. You know, you could spit into a cat's mouth
and knock it up.
And I remember, yeah, I had issues from growing up with my mother and then I met
this, I met a girl and we fell in love and I remember when she broke up with me
I remember,
dude, this is, I mean, all my shit gets always fricking oddly emo, but I remember thinking that
I'd lost my mother, you know? And that's when I realized, yeah, I have some, I got some stuff
there. You know, I got some issues there where, you know, I'm, I'm looking for connections with
women with that are supposed
to be filled when I was younger. And I think a lot of these things go back to the fact that,
you know, um, nobody's, nobody's taking care of children. Nobody's at home with them. There's not
a family anymore. We've, you know, that's all it's. And that's one of the things that I don't
like sometimes, or that one of the things that I question about some goals of feminism, if it's just, a lot of times it's used as a marketing tool just to get women to sell them shit.
Just like everything else.
It's all like, yeah, buy this book.
Next thing you know, you have a woman who wanted to have a family.
Next thing you know, she's 42 years old.
She has no kids.
She started a small business somewhere off the interstate.
And she's fucking furious and miserable at her life.
Because she was led astray by a,
you know, by some of the
darker sides of
some of the feminist evolution.
And I'm not saying that for everything,
but I'm saying that that is a reality, and that's
going to be a reality that, for some, and that's going to
be a reality that's going to be out there.
Let's hear some more, here we go.
What's up, Theo? My name's Ericic geepert i'm calling from virginia thank you for calling for virginia sir onward i'm originally from louisiana oh you from that
dirt huh from that boot and we appreciate your service here uh vocally onward i'm calling about
the girl with the uh question about her son's biggest and most important things that you can instill in a child.
I think it makes you better at so many things.
You know, you're a better lover for the ladies.
You're a better fighter when you need to be.
I just think it makes you a better person overall.
You build character.
I wonder if something made me passionate when I was young.
Man, I'm stumpeded I got nothing for that man
but look I appreciate that thought
passion ladies
put that passion in your boy
and nothing illegal
stay out of that family sexual zone
nothing sensual with the family
you know what I'm saying I've always known that
my number one rule if you think it's incestual
remember this
if you rearrange the letters of sister it spells
resist
And you could take that to the bank here we go the old vine man
This is Stefan up in Lexington, Kentucky
Stefan up in Lexington Stefan
Let's go fellow southern man calling in response to
Stefan, let's go.
Fellow Southern man, calling in response to the lady that wanted to know about how to raise a young man into a real... And I got one comment, and I think you'll understand it being from the South.
Okay, let's get to that, Stefan, and thank you for the call.
The best thing a mom can do is love unconditionally, but most importantly, be her son's number one confidant in the world and a very good friend.
And the reason I say that is I guarantee you, you meet a man who's close to his mother and you meet a man who treats women well.
It's interesting.
You know, I think this is all new territory for me and seeing how people treat, noticing how people treat their mothers and stuff.
I was so unaware of some of the value of that connection.
I didn't really notice it going on around me.
But that's interesting, yeah.
I mean, there was times I didn't treat my mother well.
That's for sure.
You know, when I was probably embarrassed of her for things or ashamed.
You know, and now I just want her to be happy.
You know, it's crazy.
Like now it's like I almost have to let go of any issues that were there between us,
whether she knew about them or not.
And, you know, I think the biggest issue I noticed growing up in my own life was that
I just, I wanted, my mother never seemed happy and I wanted her to be happy and I couldn't
make her happy.
her to be happy and I couldn't make her happy. You know, she, and I didn't even notice it as a child. I just knew she wasn't happy. And so I felt like that was for some reason my fault
because a child, everything in a child's world, everything revolves around them.
So if something's wrong, they think that it's their fault. It doesn't matter what it is.
You know, they have to have it that way
to survive. The world just
revolves around them.
You know? A fucking four-year-old ain't
thinking about his buddy.
You know? Or thinking about how his mom's day
went.
You know? And you just,
you know, I remember as a child just, uh,
I remember as an adult
now thinking back that all I wanted was my mother to be happy.
And I realize now that since I couldn't make her happy when I was young, it made me feel like something was wrong with me.
And I think that's a good point.
If you can establish that confidence with your kids, and it might be tough probably.
I bet that's tough, ladies, to be able to break down those barriers and talk about things direct with your child, with a boy.
And I wish you single mothers out there well with that sort of journey because that's got to be tough.
Because I bet as a mother, you just want them to be, instinctually, you want them to be happy and fed and home and safe and warm.
And home and safe and warm.
And then it's hard probably to have the time and the ability to go beyond that.
And discuss and get into things where, you know, that probably almost feel like they're out of your role.
Especially if there's not another man to be around.
If there's not a man to be around to do that.
So I commend you moms out there doing that.
All right, guys. I think that's actually a pretty good place to pull up the anchor right here.
I got to go do a set
tonight at the Comedy Store.
Mr. Joe Rogan will be up there and Christina
Pazitsky and
Brian Callen and a couple of other comedians
and I want to be able to spend time with them.
You can check out the dates on theovon.com
slash tour.
And yeah, I think
it's just, you know, it's
there's a lot of pressure on men right now.
And then I bet that there's a lot of pressure on mothers to make better men.
And then there's this outside, you know, and then there's this vibe out there that's saying women should even just be doing things on their own.
That they don't even need men.
out there that's saying women should even just be doing things on their own.
That they don't even need men.
And I don't know how those all fit together well.
I don't know how you're supposed to learn to treat a woman if
your mom isn't even at home.
Or your father isn't even at home or your father isn't even at home.
You know, we've created a vibe where, you know,
both parents have to work or an environment, a society.
You know, I don't know how, you know,
we expect people to know so much
when we keep distancing ourselves connection-wise.
You know, whether it be being on the phone or, you know, being away for, you know, being on these iPads or whatever.
And we're all, I mean, I can't, how long till we're all in these addictive meetings for phone?
You know?
What happened to you, Larry?
You know, it was that fucking update.
That Microsoft Sea Lion or the, you know, the Mac It was that fucking update. That Microsoft Sea Lion.
The Mac OS X Sea Lion update.
And I've never been the same.
It's just like we have.
It's just like we've created this society.
Where we don't have a family.
To help us be better.
Or to help us learn.
Or to learn any of these skills anymore.
How to treat each other
you know i mean marriages are you know it's all becoming extinct it's all like this singular you
you you do it you do it you don't need someone else and then we wonder why people are growing
up and don't know how to even be around other people or don't know how to treat them or why a guy, you know, treats a woman like
an animal or why a woman feels like she got treated like an animal or why a woman stays in
an environment when a guy is mistreating her, you know, or why a woman feels afraid to talk about
what happened to her. You know, it's just, I just think we, I don't know if what we want innately and what we really want in our hearts is what we are, is the world that we're creating.
Or the world that we're letting be created by people that control it.
I don't know.
It's wild.
It's wild, dude.
It is wild.
But I appreciate you guys being here with me and happy Thursday to you guys.
And I want to thank everyone.
We got to 21,000 subscribers on YouTube.
If we get up to 30,000, man, I'm going to do something special for you guys.
I'll put out a comedy clip you haven't seen or do something special.
So thank you guys so much.
Hit the hotline if you have any questions or thoughts or suggestions, any constructive
criticisms as well for me, I'm always open to them. You know, that number is 985-664-9503.
And if you have, you know, and I'm not trying to be right in anything we're talking about,
I'm just trying to talk about it.
And I appreciate so much the community that we're creating here online.
And you guys be good.
Be good to yourselves.
You probably deserve it.
You know that, huh?
Here we go. That's Luchador's long fellow, Josh Porter.
Maybe if you have a lady over, just put this on.
Just look at each other for a little while.
See what the vibe is.
I bet you'll get a vibe you can trust
if you got something beautiful like this going on in the background.
I bet you'll get a classy vibe going on or something real.
I bet you'll make a bridge you can trust.
Y'all be good.
Ladies and gentlemen, I'm Jonathan Kite, and welcome to Kite Club,
a podcast where I'll be sharing thoughts on things like current events,
stand-up stories, and seven ways to pleasure your partner.
The answer may shock you.
Sometimes I'll interview my friends.
Sometimes I won't. And as always, I'll be joined by the answer may shock you. Sometimes I'll interview my friends. Sometimes I won't.
And as always, I'll be joined by the voices in my head. You have three new voice messages.
A lot of people are talking about Kite Club. I've been talking about Kite Club for so long, longer than anybody else. So great. Hi, sweet. Here's the deal. Anyone who doesn't listen to Kite Club is a dodgy bloody wanker.
Do you know what I mean?
I'll take a quarter pounder with cheese and a McFlurry.
Sorry, sir, but our ice cream machine is broken.
I think Tom Hanks just butt dialed me.
Anyway, first rule of Kite Club is tell everyone about Kite Club.
Second rule of Kite Club is tell everyone about Kite Club. Second rule of Kite Club is tell everyone about Kite Club.
Third rule, like and subscribe wherever you listen to podcasts or watch us on YouTube, yeah?
And yes, don't worry, my Brad Pitt impression will get better.