Timcast IRL - Timcast IRL #471 - Trudeau PURGES Freedom Convoy, DC Police Prepare For US Convoy w/Dallas Sonnier
Episode Date: February 19, 2022Tim, Ian, and Lydia join Brett Dasovic of Pop Culture Crisis and Dallas Sonnier, producer of Daily Wire movies Terror On The Prairie, Shut-In, and Run Hide Fight, to discuss the Ottawa police militari...zing to fight back against the Freedom Convoy protesters, the first Daily Wire movie and how it changed the cultural warfare, Brian Cranston's sudden revelation about his white privilege, the 'colorist' complaints against a young queer actress in an upcoming movie, and the game streamer who was canceled for her hot take that short men don't deserve human rights. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Trudeau's crackdown has begun. The Freedom Convoy is being cleared out.
Members of the press are being arrested. A live streamer while streaming was arrested,
clearly not doing anything wrong. This is, it's obvious at this point, it's an abuse of power.
They were supposed to be debating the emergency act powers that Trudeau was going to be using,
and they shut it down because apparently Trudeau decided, I'm going to use them anyway.
Now there's video coming out, reports that a woman was trampled by a horse,
members of the media being arrested. It's just, it's gone a little too far. But I do think y'all should be optimistic here because it shows the protests worked, they're working.
And I don't think it ends here. In the United States, we're hearing there's going to be a
convoy leaving from Barstow, California, heading to Washington, D.C. And the D.C. police are
rescinding leave for officers because they were preparing for this. So let's get into all that. We'll talk about what's going on, but
we also have a lot of cultural stories to talk about, things about, you know,
wokeness in movies and video games. We'll talk about Bryan Cranston saying he's having like a
woke awakening or some ridiculous nonsense. And we're being joined by a refugee out of Hollywood
who's now working with The Daily Wire.
So this would be a really great conversation. We have Dallas Sanye. How's it going, man? Do you
want to introduce yourself? Yeah, absolutely. Pull your mic up a little bit. Sorry. I'm a movie
producer who is making all the Daily Wire movies now. I spent 16 years in Los Angeles. I'm best
known for Bone Tomahawk with Kurt Russell, Brawl in Cell Block 99 with Vince Vaughn,
Dragged Across Concrete with Mel Gibson.
Wow.
And then I made a movie called Run, Hide, Fight.
And even though it got a standing ovation in the Venice Film Festival,
no one would buy it, right?
All of the executives and all of the distributors that I've worked with
and made a lot of money for in the past,
they've got kids in public schools, they've got mortgages. They didn't want to take the heat
internally. So they passed on the movie and I was saying, what am I going to do? But I'd had a coffee
with Ben Shapiro the year before. I called him up and the rest is history. Wow. And now you've got
Shudden as well. Yep. And there's a on the Prairie, I think is what it's called.
We had Nick Cersei on recently.
So this is fantastic stuff because with the escalation in the cultural conflict, building infrastructure is extremely important, but building culture is probably more important.
Absolutely.
So I think what Daily Wire has been doing with picking up these movies and producing more is brilliant.
And we'll get into all that stuff, so thanks for joining us.
We're also being joined by Brett Dasavik of Pop Culture Crisis.
Yes, that is true.
I'm a refugee of my own sort out here, coming out here to work.
What's weird about this to me is, like,
I don't think I ever imagined coming on here.
Doing the show, it feels like, I was telling Miracle earlier,
it kind of feels
like I've elevated to the big leagues from the upstairs studio to the downstairs studio.
And we cover a lot of these topics. We try to keep it as open and prospective as possible,
but we're going to get into a lot of that tonight. I'm excited.
Yeah. Yeah. So for those that aren't familiar, we launched a couple other shows at TimCast.com,
one of which is Pop Culture Crisis and Brett is the host.
So, you know,
this basically happened
because I think we were driving back
from a movie
and then Brett was talking
the whole time.
I'm like, man,
this guy knows everything about this stuff.
He knows all about movies.
He was naming directors
and producers
and like, he was, you know,
and production assistants
just like knew the credits
and I was like,
Brett, you want to do a show
talking about this stuff?
And he said yes.
I literally thought he was like, God, he's never going to shut up.
If we just give him a show, if we just give him a show like he'll just leave us alone and we can drive home in peace, it'll be perfect.
Just send him upstairs to talk about this stuff on camera.
We'll make money off of it.
Brett's also an incredible skater.
You can check out his stuff on Instagram, Brett Dasovic.
I'm really glad you're here, man, because I've been thinking a lot about memetic warfare and fifth-generational warfare.
And I think that what's happening is that the message has become the communication.
It's less about the ideas and more about the way we're communicating.
And I think acting is a super important way to communicate and to get people on your side, basically.
It's a good point as to why culture is so relevant because we were talking about this the other day with Stephen Marsh and Civil War stuff, but memetic warfare.
Propaganda, information, and culture building.
You've got to have content.
You've got to have TV shows, movies, video games, all that stuff outside of the infrastructure to support it.
Yeah, variety.
Be adaptable.
The way you communicate should be adaptable, and I think being an actor can help show people that you are adaptable.
So we'll get into all that stuff.
We've got Lydia as well.
I'm here as well.
I'm so excited to have Dallas this evening.
And I'm really excited to have Brett.
I think that what The Daily Wire is doing with movies is so important.
I think it's pivotal to have movies that are interesting to people.
And I love the idea of having this analysis of the culture going on as well,
which I love what Pop Culture Crisis is doing.
So I'm excited for this evening.
It's going to be fun.
Before we get started, head over to TimCast.com and become a member.
And I will also just briefly mention someone chatted.
Is that an abacus in front of Ian?
Yes, it is.
It certainly is.
Go to TimCast.com, be a member, help support the work we're doing.
As a member, you'll get access to exclusive episodes of this show that are just for members
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But also, you're making sure the people who report here,
the people who work here have jobs. We've got on the ground reporters, we've got field reporters.
We are planning out sending someone to embed. I say embed, but you know, drive along the US
convoy and track what's happening as they make their way across the United States.
We're in the preliminary discussions about doing that, but it's all possible because you guys sign
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Let's get started talking about the big news out of Ottawa.
What's happening with this crackdown?
Daily Mail reports Trudeau's trucker crackdown begins.
Hundreds of cops backed by armored vehicles and horses
arrest at least 100 freedom convoy protesters in Ottawa
and tow 21 big rigs using Emergencies Act power.
So we got a bunch of photos out of here.
Mounted officers showing up, people screaming.
You've got regular, you know, I don't know if these are like community officers or what.
They're not wearing armor or anything like that.
But here you've got what appeared to be some kind of riot control armed with tear gas,
gas masks.
Look at this guy.
Look, I've seen this stuff throughout my time.
I've seen it at violent riots.
I've seen it at violent riots.
I've seen it at, well, mostly violent riots.
Typically, when I see peaceful protesters, you might see stuff like this, but you don't see this severity.
I've certainly seen police brutality at peaceful protests, especially from the left.
Don't get me wrong.
But this seems to be absolutely overplayed and extreme for a bunch of middle-aged truckers
and families with their kids and dogs in a bouncy castle.
I understand people are like, well, sometimes there's confrontations.
Yeah, come on.
It's a peaceful occupation in a city.
They should be coming in with like 10 officers peacefully saying, look, guys, you broke the
law.
We're going to take you in, slap on the wrist.
Instead, it is Trudeau fascism crackdown, freezing people's assets, trampling people with horses.
Dark days indeed, huh?
Is this the group that had the bouncy house outside the – yes, very scary.
Nothing scarier than a bunch of middle-aged truckers with a bouncy house for their kids.
That is what I live in fear of waking up to.
You think you're joking.
But no, seriously, they don't know how to respond to it when when you get a violent riot the state says oh thank heavens
because they know that they're going to earn public support for shutting down riots even when
they barely do it but when you got little kids in a bouncy house they're like whatever we do it's
going to look really really bad how do we handle this they do get scared of that stuff i suppose
it's kind of like in the past when they would have kids at the front lines of the protests
or the riots right to uh to prevent police action right it's a left does it all the time it's an
optics thing yep yeah they're even threatening to go after journalists this is like uh uh how a
monarchy doesn't know how to respond to a peaceful protest they talk about canada's all about and i'm
not saying canada's the monarchy but the queen could stop a peaceful protest. They talk about Canada's all about, and I'm not saying Canada's the monarchy,
but the queen could stop this if she wanted.
They talk about like peace.
We need calmness and peace, you guys.
And then when stuff like this breaks out,
they don't know what to do
because it's this fake,
you know, this platitude of kindness and peace.
You guys, and it's this fascist militant,
you know, quasi-democracy.
So now we're seeing the true colors of how,
in America, we fight each other for fun. That fun. And so we don't get to this point because we know how to deal with protest.
It's like this country is a protest. It's something you told me. It's a great way to
look at our species, the way it functions, the importance of resistance. This is bothering me.
Yeah. Dark days indeed. Now, I wonder what will happen in the U.S. because, you know, D.C. police are saying they're pulling leave because they're worried about this as well.
I can't say I'm surprised about Canada, though.
For those that didn't get the episode yesterday, we had a Canadian guy, Stephen Marchand.
He wrote a book about civil war.
And I think his perspective is really interesting.
I think I disagree with him to a great deal.
But he was basically saying in the United States,
there's two countries, a multicultural democracy
and a constitutional republic.
And I was like, wow, that's an excellent way
to point out what's happening.
And of course the United States is
and always has been a constitutional republic.
Therefore the multicultural democracy he speaks of
is supplanting our culture, our country, our society.
And that's very much what
Canada is. Canada has been for a long time. He mentioned how Canada is very unstable. And he
was surprised the US was destabilizing. And I'm like, the US has been stable because we're a
constitutional republic. It's a safeguard to make sure there's, from the smallest jurisdiction and
up, people have representation. It doesn't seem like you get that with Canada.
It seems like they just don't care about you.
You're a cog in their machine.
If you watch Canadian Parliament,
that was the feeling I got.
It's like a clown show.
Like it's dudes wearing a big white puffy outfit.
And you're like, what in the hell?
And then they start, they heckle each other.
Like, how can you get any?
It's the weirdest ancient practice,
tradition or whatever the hell,
but it is not like stable.
Well, I was doxxed this week as a contributor to the Freedom Convoy Give Send Go.
Congratulations.
Yeah, I was actually quite proud of it. It was a positive experience. I was so proud.
But I've been team convoy since day one on this, and it means so much to so many of us.
I look at Australia.
I look at Canada.
I look at even Italy, my favorite country to visit, and I don't even recognize these places.
And it makes me so proud to be an American in a red state.
I live in Texas, work in Tennessee, vacation in Florida.
My last two years have been basically okay outside of all the nonsense.
But you were in California?
For 15 years.
Now, back then, would you have dared speak up in support of this?
I would have, but I knew the tide was turning so heavily that in 2014, I left.
I took my whole family and went back to Texas.
Oh, so you got out early.
Oh, I saw it all coming.
I couldn't have told you what was coming, but I felt it coming. I know exactly what you're talking about. Yeah.
Cause I was living in New York and I kept slowly moving away because it just seemed to be getting worse and worse until we end up in West Virginia or, you know, this whole area. Yeah. Yeah. Cause
I don't want to be in a big city. And then you look at what happens with the lockdown. So we
were actually, we moved to the, to South Jersey. And then when they did the hard lockdown, I was
like, we got to get out of here.
Like, I'm not going to sit around and wait to find out how bad it does get.
And it got bad.
We had those riots.
This was back in 2020.
The riots crossed the bridge from Philly into South Jersey.
And I was just like, yo, I'm done with that.
I'm getting out.
We're going to the middle of nowhere.
We're going to do our own thing.
We're going to build our own space.
Not to mention, I'll be completely honest, way cheaper out here for land.
So expanding the business, there's way more opportunity. But I think there's a huge
opportunity in pushing back from a lot of the stuff by rejecting it. When we see this going
down in Canada, I have one thing to say to all of this, confidence in the system is being broken.
If you can't even, look, I can't speak for Canada. I don't know what Canada does.
But for us down here,
we see what's happening with the vaccine mandates. They're kind of being shattered or,
you know, how bad it's been. Talk about multicultural democracy or whatever.
But when you cannot get a redress of grievances, you're looking at a hard fall for your society.
When you look at the dysfunction in Congress, when you look at the fact that it's being
run by people like Nancy Pelosi, I'm just like, that is shattering. I'm going to go and start setting up something somewhere else to get
away from this. Because to put it simply, confidence in the system, be it Canada, be it the UK, be it
the EU, be it the United States, it's fracturing. And so it's time to make sure, like we're shoring
up our defenses, we're building something substantive on our own that we control that's
going to be isolated from this, otherwise it shatters along with it i hope that the uh freedom convoy thing if nothing else i
really hope that it shatters people's normalcy bias this understanding this thinking that it
can't happen here because trust me i i never thought i would see something like this in canada
canada is the nicest place in the world they never do anything crazy or edgy this is wild to me what
like literally watching them
tonight the videos going around twitter of the mounted police um just literally walking over
people i want to give a good shout out to my conservative friends who uh specifically not
all i'm not saying all conservatives the ones who defended ron desantis and Florida passing the anti-riot bill that would make it a felony
to block roads. I said, no, you don't want to do that because we want to tolerate some degree of
unrest. Because now we see what happens in Canada and we're going to be seeing what happens with
the DC protests with this convoy. I think we should respect people who want to peacefully
obstruct. It's annoying, but we tolerate a certain give to the system. You need that flexibility. Otherwise, if it's too brittle, it shatters.
But I also want to shout out a lot of these conservatives. Ezra Levant, I think it was,
had a great tweet where he said he used to be back to blue. He would always give the cops the
benefit of the doubt. Now he's seeing what they're doing to trampling old women and in front of
children. And I'm like, I got to tell you, man,
there are a lot of moderate, there are a lot of liberals who have been saying exactly this for
some time. Now, I get it. When you get Black Lives Matter and often lying, lying to incite
violence, the Michael Brown stuff was a lie. The Trayvon Martin stuff was a lie. Ahmaud Arbery
stuff was a lie. George Floyd stuff was a lie. I get it. You're like, I'm not going to believe
these people. And I totally agree. I'm not going to believe him either. But I'll tell you this.
When I was in Ferguson, I saw police just lob a flashbang into a crowd of people unprovoked.
And there's videos of things like this. This stuff happens. So there's a certain degree that
I'm willing to tolerate because I think policing is an important institution. But you get to the
point where they're not stopping the riots in these big cities. The big cities vote for this. They're the
ones rioting. They're the ones supporting these mayors and these Democrats and these appointees.
They're the ones cheering on the police, defending the illegal seizure of funds to paint political
message in the street. And I'm just like, why would I defend any of these cops from the rioters
when they're a part of that same system? Then you see other cops come in and shut down small businesses over COVID lockdown.
And I'm just like, okay, that's it. I'm out. Look, duly elected law enforcement seems to do
a really great job, sheriffs. We have a great relationship with our cops out here,
but these big city cops are basically part of that multicultural democracy establishment
Democrat machine. They can live however they want to live. I'm not going to intervene when they try to defund those departments.
Or now in Austin, where they're arrest, they're indicting 19 officers in aggravated assault.
I'm like, you know what?
I don't want to live in Austin.
Y'all voted for that.
Congratulations, officers.
You get it.
I understand the isolation mentality.
I was thinking about this a lot, too, because if we really hit like a bad place of civil
war or like where all the power went out, you'd get roving bands of militants that are like really good at what they
do it's called uh uh i don't know what you call it but not imbalanced war what do they call it
where like one side is way better than the other side asymmetrical asymmetrical war you'll get
people they'll go from house to house and raid every how they'll be like 12 guys with machine
guns or or semi-autos raiding house by house to get
all the valuables and like everyone these americans are like i got my guns i'm safe i'm going to stay
here in my house but you're a sitting target these people know how to conquer and control
and there will be so i understand the desire to isolate but those kind of things will come for
you if you try and isolate what you have it is good to be out in the country and have space,
but isolation is not the answer. You need to be involved consciously with your fellow man.
That's what we do, movies and TV and music and internet video and things like that.
You're right. I agree. What I would say, I don't think the goal should be to try and
infiltrate their systems. For a long time, moderates, left liberal libertarian types
have been complaining about movies and video games
getting woke and doing all this other stuff
because they genuinely believed
they were in the same system with these people.
When I say to you,
I don't like your video game
because you did these things,
it is because I believe genuinely
we're working together as one society on a product.
I think people need to realize they're not treating you that way
and they don't care what you think and they're going to do whatever they want.
In which case, you don't want to isolate yourself.
You want to make something better on your own
and attract the people who are disillusioned by them
to come and join you as one civilization, as one society.
That's exactly right.
And I spent enough time in Hollywood to understand that.
And that's something I feel very passionately about.
A year ago when I went on Ben's Sunday special, I talked about parallel economies.
Oh, yeah.
And this is so important to me because a parallel Hollywood is, in my opinion, the only answer, right?
There are not ways for me to get the movies that I want to
make, politics aside, in traditional Hollywood right now. They're not supported. In fact,
they're discouraged or even disallowed. And so I had to go and try to create a parallel economy
where I wasn't going to get attacked. I wasn't going to get, you know, I wasn't going to be
tolerated. I was going to be celebrated.
And, you know, we're just getting started,
but it's game on right now.
Well, so the first movie you actually made,
was it Run, Hide, Fight?
Run, Hide, Fight.
But you didn't make that with Daily Wire.
Correct.
They bought it.
Yes.
So this is a movie that you produced.
Yes.
And it's about a young woman
and there's a school shooting.
So I'm surprised
you even got that made
in the current environment
to be bought by Daily Wire.
Like, how does that happen?
Our company paid
for the movie ourselves.
Wow.
So we have investors
and they bet on me.
And so what happened was
we made the movie.
We got great cast, Thomas Jane,
Rodda Mitchell, Isabel May, who's now the star of 1883, the Yellowstone prequel.
And we went and made the movie by ourselves, totally independently. And right after I made it,
I was in Los Angeles and I had a coffee with Ben Shapiro.
And I talked to him about the movie, and he was very excited about it.
And at the end of the coffee, I said, let's make movies together.
He said, really?
I said, yeah, let's do it.
He said, well, okay, well, we can help you in the background, but if you put our name on it, you're going to get killed.
I said, are you crazy?
I'm going to put your name all over it.
I actually want to ask a question about that.
The Run, Hide, Fight was produced beforehand and then they
bought it. So then did they have to do press
tours for this with the actors and were the
actors hesitant about being involved with the
Daily Wire? Like you said, Ben mentioned before
and he's like,
even before he asked, said, we'll do it in the
background because he just assumes that
you're not going to want their name involved.
Certainly.
We had gotten the movie into Venice,
which is next to Cannes and Sundance,
the most prestigious film festival in the world.
And we got a standing ovation and all that kind of stuff.
But when we walked out, our text messages from our publicist started coming in.
F, you know, zero out of 10. How dare
you, right? Personal politics, right? All those things. And so I knew we were in big trouble.
So by going with Ben, the movie found its best, by going with Daily Wire, the movie found its
best home. That also meant that some of the actors couldn't, I couldn't ask them to support the movie publicly beyond their comfort zone.
And some of the actors supported the movie.
Some of the actors supported the movie sort of privately and quietly.
And others just sort of tuned out.
They're all becoming big stars right now.
And they all kind of love it, right?
They all kind of – because they knew.
They were in Venice when we all saw a great movie.
Standing ovation, you said.
Standing ovation.
Wow.
The fact that they have to worry about it at all is the most disturbing part of all of it.
No, no, Brett.
They don't have to worry about it.
They don't.
If they don't, yes.
If they had the –
You're both right. They do have to worry about it, but they don't have to worry about it. They don't. If they don't, yes. If they had the... You're both right.
They do have to worry about it, but they don't have to.
Right.
They shouldn't.
I'm saying that as a point.
Obviously, they worry for their careers.
I'm saying they shouldn't.
For sure.
They don't have to if they choose not to.
These are not, by any stretch of the imagination, impoverished people.
That's right.
It's hard to ask somebody to slash your
income by a by a large percentages i mean look i get it um i don't you know for a movie like
shut in i don't know i don't know if these people are like a-lister celebrities with worth millions
of dollars but they get paid probably substantially better than say you know tradesmen or someone
working at starbucks i'd imagine. They do.
Even on shut-in, where we had the whole cast in advance understanding who we were making the movie with.
I mean, we all went to dinner before the movie started shooting.
There was still an element of, right before the movie started coming out
and press time was upon us, people started to get hesitant, right?
In one case, a publicist told one of the actors involved in one of our movies that we were queuing on, right?
And that she would have been canceled, you know, this actress would have been canceled
right away.
Now, maybe that's true, maybe that's not.
Our opinion is you suffer through 72 hours of bad tweets, and then the world moves on, right?
And you made the best movie you've ever made in your career.
Isabel May is not the star of 1883 right now because Taylor Sheridan watched Katie and Alexa or Alexa and Katie on Netflix.
He watched our movie, and she's great in it, and now she's a massive star. So, our movie and she's great in it.
And now she's a massive star.
So, you know, it's a tough thing.
I'll never ask anyone to do anything they're uncomfortable with.
But I will say, and we'll get into Gina Carano in a minute, Gina Carano, working with someone
who is totally on board from day one.
Oh, man, that's great.
Gina's fantastic.
That's just so great.
That's, you know, the fact that she was so outspoken the entire time while on Mandalorian,
and I'm following her on Twitter, and I'm just like, this is, you just gotta not worry
and be yourself and stand up for what you believe in.
And when they canceled her, she was just like, I'll find a way.
And Ben Shapiro and The Daily Wire were like, we're going to make this work.
You got nothing to worry about.
It's a great story.
If you don't mind, I'll tell it.
Absolutely.
It's so terrific.
So I believe that when someone like Gina has the guts to do what she did, you have to pray that there are people like me and Daily Wire ready to catch you.
And that's not fully realized yet, right?
It's not totally, the infrastructure is not all there yet.
We're building ours, but there needs to be more.
So Gina gets canceled on a Wednesday night at 10 p.m.
I text Jeremy Boring, the CEO of Daily Wire at 10.05.
And he texts me right back.
Ben and I were just texting about this.
I said, dude, keep your phone on tomorrow morning.
I'm going to call you.
This is going to move very fast.
Just please keep your phone on.
So I reached out to Gina's agent, who I used to work for.
The agent said, yeah, we're dropping her.
I said, oh, I said, yeah, we're dropping her. I said, oh.
I said, oh, it's terrible.
I said, well, at least give me her manager's phone number.
So I reached out to the manager.
I'd known him from my L.A. days barely.
Can you say which agency this was?
Was it a big five?
UTA, United Talent Agency, where I used to work.
Yeah, they're a top three for sure.
I'm not a fan.
Huge agency.
The same agent, by the way,
still represents James Franco, who, by the way,
I'd work with in a second. Love him.
But James Franco is more
canceled than Gina Carano yet.
One gets dropped and one is not.
The film school stuff about the intimacy course.
James, come.
It's such a joke, right?
So I reach out to the manager who I'd known back in L.A., say, hey, let's get on the phone.
So we spoke immediately.
He's like, oh, okay.
He's like, we're kind of just, you know, reeling from all this.
We were going to sort of take a step back and, like, you know, we're getting calls from Megan Kelly and Hannity and all the stuff.
I said, no, no, no, no. Two things.
One, say no to all of it.
Number two, you have to move now.
You have to trust me.
I'm your guardian angel.
I'm showing up daily wire and we are going to do this.
Let's go.
So the next morning we got Gina on the phone with Ben himself.
We got Jeremy and I on the phone with the manager.
We banged out a deal that day.
Dallas was in the middle of a snowstorm
where I live.
And then Friday morning we announced it
on Deadline Hollywood that we
did a movie deal with her.
And that exploded more than
the original announcement.
So this is how
you fight. You were right about moving fast. That boosted morale. So this is how you fight.
You were right about moving fast.
Fast.
That boosted morale.
By Monday, the story's passed.
Nobody cares.
It's that fast.
So she got fired Wednesday night, 10 p.m.
By 10 a.m. Friday morning, the announcement.
I'm jealous, man.
We got to get TimCast Films going. Oh, we have to.
Yeah, when you're talking about we're
growing decentralizing or basically a new hollywood a parallel system when how do you envision that
because i wonder yeah hollywood centralized that was kind of the point of it was there's all these
big walled boom stage sound stages and stuff so do you want to put them all over the place well
we're all in nashville what are you thinking definitely it has to grow an ecosystem, almost taking the role of an old Hollywood studio system.
So we would have multiple screenwriters that we would pay full salaries to.
They can make more money that way anyway.
Full benefits, all those kinds of real jobs, writing and directing movies.
Do you think we need to build localized soundstages?
Absolutely.
Nashville has a few, and we've used them, and they're pretty good they've got uh you know some some really nice ones but they still
don't have one that's competitive with atlanta or albuquerque yet okay what's that gonna run
we talk about that stuff off air i guess yeah 500 million whoa okay but we could ground yeah but uh
full ecosystem i mean that's netflix money so. So what our move right now is baby steps, right?
I came, my sort of emotional gift to Daily Wire in many ways is that I'm going to work on these movies as if my life depends on them, right?
Because they can't be bad.
If they're bad, we will get shunned mocked all this kind of stuff they're still going
to attack us and they are there's some amazing articles that came out the last few days about us
but like you know trying to poo-poo the movies but these articles exist because they're scared
who cares about them i love it this is what this is what i'm saying if there's somebody who's like
ghostbusters 2016 was a great accomplishment by all all means, go watch Ghostbusters 2016.
Enjoy it.
I'm very happy for you.
I'm going to go watch Run, Hide, Fight or Shudden and enjoy myself.
And if you want that, Hollywood, you can do whatever you want.
But I'm saying if they keep going down this path, I think it's very obvious that their system is going to crumble.
The gentleman we had on the other day, Stephen, even mentioned that when institutions start
getting woke, they start falling apart.
And he's a guy who has a very establishment worldview on things, very critical of the
far right, as you would call it.
But even he recognizes media companies are moving left.
And once they do, it starts just crumbling.
So if Hollywood wants to get woke and go broke, by all means, I'm not going to complain about
it.
Oh, let them.
If my neighbor wants to go
swimming with alligators I'm going to be like I will advise
against it but far be it for me to tell
you what risks you can't take
now we'll go over here and we'll make some good movies and have some
fun and make jokes and not have to worry
about being cancelled every two seconds
and then I think ten years from now
the work you're doing the work Ben Shapiro
and the Daily Wire is doing is planting
a tree
whose shade you will actually get to sit beneath and so will your children. That is the hope.
That is the entire hope. That is what this is all about. It's to create infrastructure and
ecosystem for people who are willing to take risks and fight the system, knowing they can
do that, get canceled and come over here and work with us.
It's also really important that we make great movies so that this is sustainable.
It has to make money, right?
So we're making movies that are small budget, big idea, little box on purpose, but we're growing quickly.
I mean, the budgets are already moving up.
We're going to get into series, all these kind of things.
So it's game on.
It's going to take trailblazers in the writing, in the production part, too, because like you said, like Gina walks away as an actor, those same people who have been told that they have to live within the Hollywood ecosystem are going to have to walk away and know and feel strongly enough about the work they create that they believe that that script, that that show can stand on its own two legs no matter where it's put out not through the perceived legitimacy of
hollywood but through any form of media that it can come out through and the story uh is what
elevates it not the uh the deadlines not the av clubs in the establishment press media that
make these things seem like they're better than they are the you know yeah i think we got to utilize piracy game of thrones was like one of the most pirated shows
of all time and it was also one of the most popular i think those this is not a coincidence
piracy is a tricky one um uh when you're in a transactional business vod movies or even
theatrical you're so in you're so reliant on that purchase of that movie.
When you're in the streaming world, the money's coming in and it's for a bunch of stuff, right?
In Daily Wire's case, there's the political folks that are political members.
They're watching the podcast and the political content.
There's folks who are simply fans of Ben or Candace Owens, for example.
And then there's the people who love the movies.
And they're all going into one revenue stream.
And it's really working from a financial perspective.
So the company is super healthy.
It's run like a real fortune whatever company, a fortune however many numbers company.
And it's terrific and you walk in and you're you cannot believe the feeling of being
surrounded by all of these people who you know if they don't share your exact same values they're
civically aligned they have the same goal which is not to be the other side do you think there's
a value at running it at a loss like selling on the moon for 99 cents a pop and taking like a our version 70 percent loss our version of that has been opening night youtubes so we play the
movies on youtube one night only uh for the first 20 you know for the first two hours it's only
available two hours in fact if you start at 15 minutes late you're gonna have to go watch the
15 minutes on daily wires uh Wires on their site.
Is there a way that they're going to figure this out financially?
When we look at it, we break down box office a lot.
It's already cash flow positive.
But we break down box offices.
So when a studio invests $100 million,
they put 1.5 times that into marketing.
Then they have to look at their return on investment for what they make at the box office.
How are they going to be figuring those numbers out
when it comes to streaming?
It's actually worse than that.
You've got to add in foreign sales.
You've got to add in –
And they only take 60% of the box office, even less if it's in China, 25%.
The value of who your star is, things like that.
All of those pressure points on making a great movie go out the window.
So this is as close as you can get to 1969 Easy Rider as I could possibly imagine.
I mean, it is the Easy Rider. Most people don't know this, but Easy Rider and Five Easy Pieces
and The Last Picture Show and some of these other great movies were all produced by these three guys,
SBS. And there's a great Criterion collection about their works. And these guys set up their own shop.
They had their own deal with Columbia TriStar at the time, and they made these great movies.
That's all we're doing here.
We're just creating sort of the most creatively unfiltered version of Hollywood absolutely
possible today.
I would like to think that once the work starts coming out more frequently and people can
see that what they're producing is not conservative media per se, it's just good media, that as culture turns, people come with it and it becomes less stigmatized.
Yeah.
And certainly one day we'll be accused of making a truly conservative movie.
Like, I'd love to make a comedy called Kamala!
Exclamation point.
You know, like.
Yeah.
Maybe a question mark and an exclamation point.
I mean, come on.
I call it HBO Films in Reverse, right?
I would love to do that at some point, but not right now.
But it's going to get labeled that way either way.
Oh, sure.
That's what I'm saying.
You have to not care that, like I said, the Deadlines, the AV Clubs, all these websites,
the Shill Media sites are going to call it that, just like they label religious films,
you know, the way they paint all religious films with the same brush.
There was a period where I cared maybe a few years ago, worried about mainstream press, their reactions.
And like I was saying, it's because I felt like we were part of one system together.
And I didn't want them – I don't want my neighbor to think bad things about me that don't represent me.
Then I started to realize eventually, like, these people aren't our neighbors anymore.
And it's scary.
It's unfortunate.
But I'm not interested in trying to convince people who hate me and refuse to listen when I try to be nice to them.
Yeah, I'm actually.
When I've approached many of these people, be it on the ground in Portland at protests or on Facebook, and I'm nice to them.
And their response is, I literally don't care what you have to say.
F you, you fascist.
I'm like, okay, then.
Then I'm going to go do my thing over there.
You no longer factor in.
So when these media outlets say whatever they want, don't care.
We're going to build our thing.
We're going to do a good job of it.
And guess what's going to happen?
Like I said, five, 10 years, people are going to be knocking down the door desperate to
get a role with Daily Wire Productions, with your company. And I'll tell you this too.
Look at Rumble right now. I advise people when they're like, I want to make a show. I want to
do YouTube videos. No, no, no, no. You want to do Rumble videos because YouTube has pulled up the
ladder behind everybody else. You're getting banned. You don't know what you can or can't say.
Live streamers get too popular too fast. They take you down. Start on Rumble. You've got more market opportunity. This means
in LA, there's going to be writers. There's going to be production assistants, producers,
smaller staff, APs, whatever. And they're going to say, I would rather move to Nashville because
I know there's a great opportunity with Daily Wire and the stuff they're producing and it's freeing.
But more importantly,
the market opportunity.
Hollywood is such a monolith.
It's so hard to break in.
You hear all these stories about people sending a pizza into producers.
When they open it, there's a headshot.
Don't even worry about it.
There's a real opportunity now
with what you guys are doing over at Daily Wire
and your productions.
So why bother with trying to climb an ivory tower
when you can go knock on the front door
of people who said, we want to do great stuff and we want to make something new. Here's
your opportunity. You were telling us the story beforehand about Tom Cruise negotiating his own
contract for risky business. Okay. Can you explain that story again? Because I want to
pull back to that. Yeah. There was a fantastic article on Daily Mail today interviewing Tom
Cruise's first manager from when he was 18 to 22 or 3. And Tom Cruise,
when he was engaging on Risky Business, sent an email, sorry, sent a letter to his agent at CAA
telling her what to counter in the negotiation. The fee down to the size of the trailer, everything involved.
And it was just fascinating.
And it just goes to show you what a movie star truly is.
And so the modern day business savvy actors, writers, directors are going to start see
the tides turning, see things shift.
And they're going to see that Nashville is just as much of an opportunity for them
as it would be to go straight to California.
And you would hope that in there,
there's going to be some script,
a couple of scripts here and there
that are going to be so good
and they're going to stand out so well
that it will be that initial cultural shift,
that touchstone that pushes things
to bring it back this way.
Absolutely.
And those floodgates have have flung open right i'm
getting a phone call almost every day now from an actor a director a writer major major players
people who have show run that's the head producer on a tv show head writer of the some of the biggest
tv shows just saying i'm so sick of this like like what's, what's going on up there?
What are you doing?
And then also I think we've become very inspirational to a younger generation of filmmakers.
I have this rule.
I answer every email.
So send me an email, dallasatbonfirelegend.com.
I will, I will write you back.
And, you know, I try to respond to every single email quickly.
Sometimes it takes me a few days, but I want,
I want to,
to,
to encourage these filmmakers,
these young people who,
who understand culture at the,
at that generation better than I do to create,
create,
create,
and hopefully they can bring me the right.
I guess we need to start building tutorials of how to use sound equipment and
lighting equipment.
Oh,
that's all over YouTube for sure.
Good.
Have you looked into starting a new union?
I'm kind of fed up with SAG.
I was thinking about a web actors guild like WAG or something where you could decide not
to screw people over, but also that you don't have to pay them $1,400 a day or whatever.
The unions are sort of separated into the crew and then what we call above the line,
actors, writers, and directors.
Those three have their own guilds,
SAG, WGA, DGA,
and then the crew is under IATSE.
And it's a really challenging relationship
for low-budget independent producers
to work with these unions.
They have, for the most part,
a reason to exist
for the Netflixes of the world. When it comes to a million-dollar movie, it's very hard to engage
with them. What I think the trick is, is if we're going to sort of go further out into the woods
on these movies and really make them on our own, we have to be good stewards, right? We have to pay people fairly.
We have to provide opportunities.
The other thing is, like, especially with the stunt actors,
their insurance is through SAG.
So if they get hurt doing a stunt, and if you've seen any of my movies,
there are tons of stunts in every one of them.
Someone dies in every movie.
And it's like, you know, if these people get hurt,
they need the insurance to protect their families.
And still no Oscar for stunts.
Could we set up?
There should be.
That's a good point, dude.
Best part of movies is continuing.
In today's day and age where stunts make up such a huge percentage of the tentpole films that we see and they get no recognition for it whatsoever.
Oh, brilliant.
Great. That's a great idea.
Instead, why don't we create our own Oscars?
Stunts will be the last
award. Yeah, let's do it. Remember
the Wiries. They did like the
YouTube video
award ceremonies they started doing.
Yeah, the Webbies.
The Benjamins. And then like VidCon
and all that. Let's just start like a new movie.
In Nashville.
Absolutely.
You know what we do need?
So are you familiar with VidCon?
Yeah.
There was a year where a bunch of YouTubers with big followings showed up because their political commentary, cultural commentary, and their shunned.
But I'll tell you my story.
I actually had a big talent agency reach out to VidCon. This was back when I was working for Disney,
went to the ABC company, and they were like, hey, Tim Pool is a streaming journalist. We'd
love to get him involved. And they said, nope, don't care. Won't do it. They end up doing
journalism panels with people who aren't journalists and have no followings. And so
I'm just like, this is an industry insider game. If you're a friend of the people who run it,
they'll claim you're a journalist and put you on a panel for which you have no expertise and have you talk to a bunch of people.
It's just trash.
So you know what?
We do need our own multimedia, video, social media conference that actually talks about
merit because that's what their whole system is about.
Authoritarianism, the woke multicultural democracy is a
religious hierarchy.
If you are part of the party, you get
privileged access. We need meritocracy.
If the crowd decides who gets to go speak
at it, but then you've got to avoid popularity contests
so there's going to be some sort
of calculation. That doesn't work because you need
if the people
all knew who say you were,
then why would they need to see you go speak if
they know who you are because they've heard you speak? The issue is if we're doing a big event,
it's to introduce people to experts in certain fields and certain industries to tell them about
what's going on. Here's what you should learn. Here's the information I can give you.
The problem with VidCon is they bring on, you know, they bring on this woman who has
like a thousand Twitter followers who doesn't really work in journalism.
And then they have her speak to an audience of people as an expert.
I'm like, why don't you actually just reach out to people who are experts and invite them
to come?
So that is the woke authoritarianism.
If you are a part of the cult, they'll just put you in a privileged position and claim
you're an expert.
Makes no sense.
But it's exactly what these regimes have done in the past.
People who aren't farmers are given farms.
We need meritocracy.
Someone who's got proven skills, who's worked in the industry will be invited to come speak and share their knowledge the way it used to be.
Remember, they hate meritocracy.
Right.
They hate the idea of meritocracy.
That's exactly it.
You hit on it, though, because it used to be a situation where we were all in a respectful
relationship with each other and the other sides.
And that is gone.
These people hate you.
I say that all the time.
Your face,
these people,
Hollywood hates you.
I'm not talking about you.
I'm talking about you and everyone who doesn't just, you know, sort of just cave to their absolute willfulism.
Just to add to that, I think they hate everyone.
That's the elite part of the elite.
They hate themselves.
They start hitting everything around them.
But here's where it gets weirder.
Also, I get phone calls from my friends who are still inside the system, trapped, right?
And they're having to go to their, and their biases trainings and things like that.
And it is – they have to play ball because they're getting paid so much money that to lose that salary, right?
It's the freedom scale.
So the money holds them hostage.
Absolutely.
And that's the only way they can get a movie made.
They don't know how to come out
and risk it all and all
this kind of stuff. But they're starting to
crack a little bit. It's
exciting. It's exciting to see it.
What you guys are doing is going
to create a position where Hollywood
will be forced to
mingle, to cross
over. You're going to have the latest film that Daily Wire acquired is Hyperions, right?
The Hyperions, yeah.
Cary Elwes.
One of my favorite actors of all time.
When I saw this.
Princess Bride, what's up?
No, seriously.
I love that movie.
When I saw the tweet come out with the trailer, and I'm like, Daily Wire got a Cary Elwes
film.
That is impressive.
He's fantastic.
Sooner or later, Hollywood's going to say, if people are finding opportunity with this
other new emerging film industry, we're not going to be competitive if we put constraints
on them that the Daily Wire guys don't.
So if the issue is right now, someone can choose to do a movie with you guys, and your
position is, we'll always work with you
and hollywood threatens them they're going to say you know maybe i just go where it's easier and
less stressful hollywood will be forced to be like no no no no we won't we won't blacklist you we
need your talent too that's that's the market competition you guys are bringing that's what
we need to see when i was in hollywood i worked with folks on the left and folks on the right
tons of them right the folks on the right never had an issue working with folks on the left and folks on the right, tons of them, right? The folks on the right never had an issue working with folks on the left.
The reverse was so painful.
It was just constant complaining and this and that, and everything was a problem.
You know, I remember coming in to work one day after Trump was elected, and half the office was crying, right? And I just, I thought to myself, oh my gosh, something like,
I don't understand this, right?
I don't even identify with this behavior.
And so then, you know, it took me a little while to catch up to
where I was supposed to be, which is, you know, my optimized version now,
which is hopefully, you know, making movies with The Daily Wire for a decade plus.
I'm obviously considering moving to Nashville and being a really big, even a bigger part of it than
I am now, but I'm having a blast. And it's so important to do this now because I didn't grow
up as a 13-year-old wanting to run – produce independent movies that I'm producing now.
I thought I was going to be running Paramount.
I thought I was going to be the president of production at Paramount like my idol Robert Evans.
Kid stays in the picture.
Well, you technically will be.
Yeah.
It just won't be called Paramount.
That's correct.
It will be a major studio producing some of the biggest films in the world and it will be called something different.
I thought the same thing.
I was like, I'm going to be Brad Pitt.
And then I got just that sexuality grossed me, and I was like, I've got to bail on this.
Ian was in a Super Bowl commercial.
But I'm still – we can do it.
Yeah, we can make – we can become the biggest thing on earth.
It's just not the way it seemed.
I want to pull up this article from Bounding into Comics.
That's awesome, dude.
Yes.
Godzilla actor Bryan Cranston – well, Bryan Cranston is well known for a lot of things.
Claims he has white blindness.
Says he needs to learn and change.
In an interview with the LA Times, promoter's upcoming role as Charles Nichols in the stage play Power of the Sail,
he revealed he suffers from what he calls white blindness and advocated for limits on free speech.
What?
Okay. It's a privileged viewpoint
to be able to look at the Klan
and laugh at them
and belittle them
for their broken
and hateful ideology.
Blah, blah, blah.
You get the point.
You know what this really is?
This is...
He doesn't actually believe
any of this stuff.
No, he's being held hostage.
Exactly.
He's being held hostage
by his manager,
by his agents,
by the industry he needs
to continue to be a part of.
I'm afraid it's being changed.
Ben Shapiro, I implore
thee, we must save this man.
We must give him an opportunity to say
all that stuff was because they made me say it.
I just want to make films. And we'll be like, yeah, you're
cool. Right on. We're a fan.
Or is he such
a capitalist?
They are. They're just hyper
capitalists who are like, you know what?
If I have to do this to make the money, I'll do this to make the money.
Is he possibly worried that his last two or three movies didn't go so well and that if
he does this, he'll be on front page again.
Such a good actor.
And Breaking Bad was a terrible script.
I'm just going to say that now.
There was a big flaw in it that I can get into.
What were the last films he produced?
Well, I'd have to look. I haven't seen anything from him since trumbo yeah the trumbo movie you know
2015 was not great he killed him off in act one in godzilla look they're real yeah i can't give
specifics but we can look it up but but it is inarguable that he has been as relevant as he was
when breaking bad ended he's not then it feels
like almost so you've got the el camino the breaking bad movie okay fine isle of dogs the
one and only ivan ladies night is something else maybe it was the getting cast as zordon and power
rangers that did him in his work on malcolm in the middle was supreme i mean he's fantastic he's so
good he's so he's so good and by the way i'd work with him in a Middle was supreme. I mean, he's fantastic. He's so good. He's so good.
And by the way, I'd work with him in a second.
I would 100%.
And I think you give him the opportunity and you give him a path to success.
But I wonder how much of what people are chasing after is legacy.
And so the issue is these people who live in the cult genuinely believe that's the real world.
And they view actual America as a foreign entity and something to be
feared or something not legitimate whereas you know the way we described it especially yesterday
talking about the civil war with steven marsh there's a there's a multicultural democracy in
the united states and a constitutional republic they're at war they're at odds with each other
but the woke democracy is not the real mainstream america it's
something weird and new that emerged in the past 15 or 20 years that's held in place by the media
that promotes it daily like you don't realize that your average neighbor does not believe the
stuff that you're watching on the news or that you're seeing in these television shows the
average neighbor uh across from you is a lot more reasonable than you would think but they're held
in these beliefs are held in place by the mainstream establishment press,
which has, you know,
your television holds a lot of weight in your house.
The social media that your kids look at
holds a lot of weight in your house.
A lot of times when you talk about,
when we talk about CNN,
like you'll talk about the,
we talk about,
they rag on the ratings of CNN, right?
It's like, it only got 800,000 views this episode, right?
I'm like, yeah,
but these views are parroted by celebrities, each of who has hundreds of millions of followers and that
pushes it outward to the general public that's a good point they measure only three million views
but how many retweets that show how many more views that's a calculation that hasn't been
accurately done how many of the average celebrity just watches cnn parrots those beliefs and then
every one of their followers is, you know.
Or how many, Bryan Cranston has an agent who comes to him and says, look, man, you got to come out and you got to say this stuff, okay?
It's going to be big.
You're going to get a bunch of attention.
And he goes like, oh, okay.
I got a feeling he runs his agent and that he actually got brainwashed.
I saw it happen to a few other people where one morning they wake up and they're like, yeah, yeah, whiteness is a problem.
I think LeBron James had happened to all of a sudden one day they just want money you go to enough of those uh those
con those uh you know those seminars they make you attend to if you work for the government and
i'm sure uh you know more than a few of them do end up starting to fall prey to it very prevalent
in hollywood oh yeah and those stories tim like i see like 20 of those a day when i'm looking
when i'm when i'm looking up stuff to talk about.
Like a lot of those, I'll skip them.
I'm like, you know what?
It's so obvious.
Like we could cover that every day and I'd be like, do I really need to rag on this?
Read this.
You know what the weirdest thing too is?
I'm sure you can go to Bryan Cranston's history and find a whole bunch of racist and off-color jokes and offensive comedy and transphobia
i mean there was a someone mentioned um i saw on twitter svu with uh you know nb law and order svu
and that the main character benson has has been severely transphobic in a bunch of different
episodes or something i don't know if that's true yeah because i know that often these people lie
or exaggerate but i wouldn't be surprised because it was a very different world 15 years ago.
The culture shifted.
I wonder if this is actually – he's got a crisis management firm, risk assessment, and they're like, you did these episodes of Malcolm in the Middle.
These could come up and bite you in the ass.
If you come out now and become devout, you'll be safe.
There are absolutely examples of that and and in hollywood
if you're if you're the most vocal about you know being a sort of a male feminist or any of these
things never trust a male feminist you have the you have the worst history of you know dating
and past and things like that so that is that is a rule i think in cranston's case it literally is
he was less uh popular he's just less part of the zeitgeist he was fading yeah
and he said how can i get back on the front page that was it i think is i think it was that simple
so he decided to figuratively self-immolate yes that's right he was like i know that is exactly
what happened in my opinion look at james gunn got uh. He had his tons of tweets that were really creepy,
stuff we can't even talk about on here.
And if you're part of the establishment,
you get a pass
because what Disney did
is they fired him,
DC hired him,
and then Disney quietly rehires him
for Guardians of the Galaxy 3.
I wonder if it actually played out
very, very favorably for him.
I wonder if he was actually
quote-unquote fired by Marvel.
James Gunn, I think it was Mike Cernovich
who pulled up these tweets to make a point about cancel culture.
Because it was after Rosie O'Donnell.
Right.
Rosie O'Donnell or Roseanne?
Roseanne.
Roseanne.
You know, he pulls up these tweets.
James Gunn used to make those movies,
those really gross horror films or whatever they were called.
And so he has these really off-color offensive jokes.
And I'm like, eh, he's trying to be an edgelord. It's whatever.
But of course, it creates
a media frenzy. By quote-unquote
firing him, he was able to
work for Marvel and DC.
Yeah, he got to do both. He got to do both.
And Peacemaker came out great. Peacemaker's fantastic.
We loved it. And shout-out to
have you seen Peacemaker? Oh yeah, it's great.
So I don't want to, I'm not going to give too deep of a spoiler, but if you don't want to hear it, you're being warned.
I don't think it's a spoiler.
I just want to say the villains in that show are the establishment Democrats.
I'm not even kidding.
They give a speech, and I'm just like –
Climate alarmism.
That's like Dr. Fauci giving a speech.
What is this?
They're the bad guys it was climate alarmism mixed with max
mask propaganda yeah uh disguised as aliens coming from another planet and then they're
the villains so the bad guys and i'm like i i actually thought they were going to try and
pull some like it turns out you know this this whole authoritarian worldview is the right idea
but they're the bad guys and i was like you know gotta respect it you know we got to do
create a movie where we've already as a species with learn how to withdraw the carbon dioxide from
the atmosphere and fix the climate change thing to create graphene with it and we're building new
materials but now we're competing with trees for the carbon dioxide and it's a new problem and the
trees become mobile the trees become sentient and mobile yeah but that way it'll implant in people's
minds like hey it's not that big of a problem, by the way, climate change.
We can fix the climate if we get proactive about it.
Well, to get a little bit more broad in your point.
It is a big problem that we can fix, basically.
To get a little bit more broad on your point, this is the purpose of culture.
Runhyde Fight, for instance, was about standing up in defiance, fighting for what you believe in and saving people and things like that.
These are cultural messages. It was, um, you know, I haven't seen it, but I've seen the trailer and there's like this young girl, she's being trained how to use a weapon,
stuff like that. There's, there's a, there's a photo going around of kids in Wyoming being
in a gym with airsoft pellet guns. Uh, I'm sorry, not airsoft with pellet, uh, CO2, um,
compression rifles. And I'm like,'m like my my my joke about it was
i am disgusted and offended these children should be outside with 22s putting them in a gym with co2
what are you doing give them a 22 come on it's it's but um the the establishment democrat activist
review was shrieking children with guns oh it's the and there's like there's this video from libs of tiktok of a guy
screaming what are you insane and i'm like yo guns are things like we we used to teach kids how to be
safe and respect them and understand them and i think that's a good idea so when you make a movie
that shows someone teaching you know a young person how to use a weapon that is creating the
idea it's planting people in people's minds this is a this is a part of life. It's a normal part of life.
That's the purpose of building culture.
So you're writing.
Yeah.
Not a movie about showing kids how to make guns,
but in the movie,
the character you love is showing kids like as is teaching proper technique.
And so then you understand that these things are a normal part of the world.
So,
and you're in your view about solutions towards climate change and stuff like
that,
making movies, showing possibilities, opens people's minds up to things they may have not considered before, which is why it's so important.
If you seed culture only to the left, the woke, you're going to get movies like – man, have you seen The New Craft?
The Craft?
You know the original The Craft?
Oh, I know all about it.
I've seen it.
You've seen the new one?
Yeah.
It was – i don't
even think you can call it a movie no it was it was a a grouping of random woke psas that don't
seem to go together at all they cast a spell turn a guy gay or something i'm just like this is not
a movie it makes no sense but if kids grow up watching that stuff their brains are going to
be all jumbled up and broken from this nonsense one of the biggest producers in hollywood uh
was caught in an
interview saying he didn't know any female directors even even though a female had just
directed a movie for him wow and so of course he got called out semi-canceled for about 10 out 10
hours and then back back and he was back because he's such a big producer and And so his sort of, you know, his way of fixing things was to put a bunch of female movies
into production, female directed movies into production.
The problem is he didn't go and oversee those movies the same way that he did his male directors.
He wouldn't be allowed to.
He let these women go on set and, you know, by themselves.
And the movies failed.
Black Christmas and the Crash.
Oh, Black Christmas.
So bad.
And it's honestly really sad.
And so while he was applauded for hiring all these female directors, the truth is he let them fail.
That's like Biden's withdrawal are you are you familiar
with uh you're familiar with kierkegaard's story about the clown no uh a fire breaks out backstage
at a theater and a clown runs on stage to begin to warn the audience of the fire and they all begin
laughing he then becomes more erratic and extreme no you need to understand they all laugh even
louder and he says i think this how the world will end with people believing it's a joke or something that effect and i wonder
if you know i think about that when i see this guy he he puts these female directors in play
just because they're females doesn't oversee them the movies are abysmal and flop and then everyone
cheers for him i wonder if what's actually happening is the people in the audience know
there's a fire they don't care though because they're all worried about being the one person to not clap while everyone else is clapping
one of the female writers on one of the two movies started to talk about this phenomenon
on twitter and quickly stopped oh yeah you know was sort of encouraged not to do that anymore
you know is that the girl that was talking to Jeremy Hamby, the quartering? I saw a good dialogue.
I don't think so.
Jeremy's terrific.
She wrote – the girl that's writing The Witcher, I think, decided to strike up a dialogue with Jeremy on Twitter, video chats.
So they were really talking about it.
I was like, hey, yeah, diversity is important.
But within like one skin color, you can have a lot of different cultural diversity.
Don't forget that when you're creating.
Well, no, go ahead. color you can have a lot of different cultural diversity don't forget that when you're creating well well uh well no yeah i was gonna say they got the guy the producer went further and created
a deal with amazon to make low low budget uh horror movies where he could get his diversity
quotas met so that he could go back to making halloween with a white male does he actually
have quotas or is it a personal thing of his it's a little uh it's all it's all it's all all it's all part of the it's all part of the unspoken rule of hollywood
that's now more spoken to be to be frank it's like the identity politics version of like west
craven saying he'd only do horror films so they'd let him make a classic love story yeah and like
and he does what they say the things they request of him uh with no passion for it whatsoever. Although I love the new Joker movie.
You know, Todd, the director, he wanted to make Taxi Driver.
And that's what he made.
So he made, yeah.
Let's just make a good movie and call it Joker.
Yeah, but Todd Phillips.
Todd Phillips.
So you put it in a Joker storyline, and now you get $70 million to make the movie instead of seven.
$55 million made a billion without China.
Wow.
But Joker was awesome.
It is awesome.
Taxi Driver is awesome, too, though.
But that's the trick, right?
Right.
It's happening with the new Batman movie.
I'd like to make Indiana Jones in a new skin.
What's the new Batman movie?
The new Batman movie is a 1970s New American cinema movie housed under Batman.
Now, hopefully it's great.
That's the pitch.
Yeah.
Yeah, but I think it will be because they're letting Matt Reeves have run of his production,
whereas every other Warner Brothers production they've done, they've interfered so heavily.
That's a party line, right?
Who knows?
But that's what they're pitching.
And Robert Pattinson is a great actor.
Yes.
You know, so.
The lighthouse.
Joker was, I saw Joker in theaters.
The media tried destroying it.
They claimed it was incel.
That's why it made a billion dollars.
But I went to see it, and it's really amazing what the movie is
I hope everybody's seen it
no I haven't seen it but tell me
I've watched so many clips
the ending is like
it's not action
it's not superheroes
bro the ending is just
psychological thriller
edge of your seat shaking
Joaquin Phoenix's performance.
My heart leapt from my chest
in that final scene and I was just like,
I gotta watch this movie again. Wow.
It was amazing.
For what it was, you say it's like
Taxi Driver with the Joker storyline, but still
it did Joker very, very
well as the Joker character.
I would love to see them
use that version of the Joker in
future iterations of
DC films because that
is an excellent Joker.
He would fit within the Matt Reeves
version of those characters. I don't know if he
would fit as well into the standard
DCEU given that it's far
more Whedonized.
No, he would. It would be amazing.
I'd rather see him in matri it was kind
of lex so look i watched i watched a dark knight recently and that version of the joker is absolutely
incredible but very magical right like how he pulls these things off like all of a sudden he's
got two fairies rigged with explosives like how did the joker do that why why are people working
for this guy who's broke he stole money from the mob mob, but he's reckless so much so that the mob
guy Maroney, I think it is, he's like, I can't do this craziness. I'm going to help the police now.
It was an excellent portrayal. It was a fun movie, but it was magical. This version of the Joker,
they actually made it make sense. Why are people following him? Ideology. Because he was bucking
the system and he's out of his mind, but people like i don't care anymore i i absolutely love it i think he'd be fantastic that makes so much sense about why
people why joker has a following in gotham city because gotham's always been like post-apocalyptic
it's basically like the worst new york could become and you can see that's great great observation i
actually like batman begins more than the dark knight is visually because i think it actually
captures what gotham is supposed to look like.
Once it became the Dark Knight
and then the Dark Knight Rises,
it just became New York and Chicago mixed together,
whereas there was a far more ethereal dark tone.
Here's what really gets me with Joker
is the people protesting the 1%.
They're outraged.
Their lives are miserable.
There's crime, and they're driven by ideology.
So when I think of superheroes having to fight crazed masses, I'm like, I actually understand how you can't reason with far-left extremists on the ground smashing windows.
They're blinded by hatred and zealotry.
And as a superhero, you're sworn to protect them.
Yeah, how does Batman fight them?
He doesn't.
Not really.
Well, no, Batman gives them TBI.
He bashes their skulls in and leaves them shivering on the ground.
The guy stealing the loaf of bread in Batman.
The meme of the thing.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
But I'm thinking about how they would do the new Joker in a future Batman movie is the followers of the Joker are just ideologues who are like, you know, Bruce Wayne is corrupt.
The Batman supports the police.
The police are crooked.
This system needs to be torn down.
Cloud world, baby.
From the ashes of the old, we shall build anew,
and the Joker's the one to do it.
And then you get Order, the Batman.
I think that would be fantastic.
There's elements of like Court of Owls story
being brought into this,
meaning that there's a lot of possibility
that the Waynes end up being corrupt
in the new interpretation of the film, which could lend itself to that even better uh because you
know he can't fight back as bruce wayne then because his parents are his and and you know
like in the joker thomas wayne looks kind of bad yep so i i think i'm so impressed with with joker
and uh they've done like jared leto come on you know no disrespect i think you know i don't know
about that weird stuff he's doing with those women or whatever,
those weird stories about him in Hollywood.
But Fight Club, big fan.
Him as the Joker, not so much.
So in Batman, is the Joker, who's up against the 1%, like against the Waynes because they're part of the 1%?
Because that's a cool storyline too.
He's just crazy.
Or the people that follow the Joker, are they against the Waynes?
Have they focused the hatred onto the Waynes? Okay. In he thinks thomas wayne is his dad and he and he's he's just
schizophrenic and so he's this angry angsty deranged guy who snaps and there's some sympathy
for him the way he's mistreated and abused and how he goes off but the protesters just think the
system is broken and they see this guy who goes on tv
and says it to the world and now he's got a he's got a following and now the joker from that point
becomes arrogant and and when he says like now i see the humor in it i'm like that is such a good
joker it's i would love to see his evolution into legit super villain how his followers support him
because they agree with them because they're driven by ideology fantastic do you like the
idea of them doing it with william defoe as like an as like a faux joker like a three jokers type
storyline from the comics i didn't think i didn't like that like i don't want it to be any more like
the comics i want it to be like nolan made it was basically crime dramas I don't need it to be superhero-esque.
I need it to be more like a standard thriller.
The way they did Joker, if they went ultra-realistic,
like Joker doesn't have magic powers where he can rig a ferry up,
but then you deal with the Batman or other superheroes
struggling to deal with someone who's got such a large following.
You don't know who is supporting him or where.
You don't know who is supporting him or where you don't know how like what what he's doing and there's something to be said about people who
don't know how to play a game and they're difficult to defeat so if anyone's like plays poker there's
a certain difficulty in playing poker against someone who has no idea what they're doing
they make weird bets yeah you don't know if they're bluffing and then they play two seven
off suit and they hit a full house and you're like we got got to – I saw the 2 and the 7 on the board.
I thought they'd never play it and they win.
So having that erratic behavior of Joker would be a really interesting – they could take that version.
It would be really interesting against a Bruce Wayne who's –
Where he like – where Joker releases like a bioweapon and can blame it on the bat.
Well, I don't know about that.
Come on.
That's the perfect –
That's great.
Ty's little bow to put on this conversation.
That's not realistic.
Well, that's like the Wuhan land.
It's a joke about the Wuhan land.
I get it.
Oh, okay.
But when I just –
I thought it was funny.
I just said –
In writing, I think.
I suppose I didn't understand because I'm like, that's the opposite of what I just said.
Yeah, yeah.
It was something else.
So I'm saying like you have this joker who's just a mentally ill guy who develops a following.
How could that manifest realistically against a Batman or a Justice League?
He's like, I can calculate anyone's
actions, but this man is totally
erratic. I can't pick his next move.
He would have billionaire followers.
Like the far left.
He'd have patrons who are ultra
wealthy, and they would get word of
how to support the Joker, and they would be like,
yes, the system must be torn down.
And that's how he would develop these...
Joker lives matter.
You'd be like – you'd see like the Joker's face painted on like –
Clown lives matter.
What is it?
The stadium.
They'd have like a Joker flag at the stadium.
It's just a rich guy who's telling the Joker what to take down because then he can bet stocks against the company.
Or here would be a good one.
A rich guy trying to manipulate the Joker thinking his craze can harm companies that would benefit him.
Exactly.
The Joker is smarter than that.
He may be crazy, but the Joker ends up manipulating him back, taking his money.
Oh, man.
I think they could do a lot of great stuff with that.
Pinning the blame on him.
But I want to go back in time to something that Ian said.
You mentioned that even within someone's race, there's great diversity.
Well, Ian, I bring you now to a story from Bounding Into Comics.
MCU fans claim casting Xochitl Gomez as America Chavez as colorist harass actress for being
too light skinned, wrong ethnicity.
Well, so there you have it, Ian.
Yes, you are correct.
Within different color people, there's great diversity, but they don't want that.
They want simultaneously someone who looks just
like the person in the comic while also
saying that you can have a black woman play
like Anne Boleyn or something.
My attitude is, honestly, I don't care who
plays a character. Like when Idris Elba
was, what's the guy's
name in Marvel with the eyes?
He can see everything? Oh, I can't remember.
Who's the guy who can see everything
in Marvel? I don't know. He's the norse god yeah and people are complaining because it's clearly a norse it's
based on norse mythology and he's not uh and he's not exactly as pale as the as the other ones and
i'm one of those people that i don't have a problem with the race swapping as much as other
people especially if i don't have a strong connection to the source material heimdall
heimdall but so so people there's a lot of people who are like, it's Norse mythology and Heimdall is a white man.
I'm like, dude, he's an actor.
I don't care.
Like there are some instances where I can certainly understand it if you're like, you know, that one's a little too much.
When people complain about Anne Boleyn being played by a black woman.
Well, it's because it's a real person.
Right.
It's a historical figure.
That's a good point.
I still kind of don't care that much because I want someone's performance to –
Yeah, the best actor should carry the show.
Then I want you to play Martin Luther King Jr.
Yes.
Well, there lies the point.
I can make that happen.
They right now, the woke, are complaining that Xochitl Gomez is the wrong color.
Yes.
But they're also the same people who complain or state that you can have a black person play a white character the
little mermaid is now yes uh but it only goes one direction it only goes one direction they don't
actually believe what they believe and they are harassing the crap out of this girl and it's like
i feel so bad i'm really young actor interested in your experience now sorry to cut you off there
but i want to yeah uh you were there i mean you're yeah i mean um this is a pretty new phenomenon
in hollywood right and and so you go back in time and you see movies from 10 years ago when someone did something like this, and now they're getting sort of canceled for it.
But the worst case was Scarlett Johansson.
Her attachment was going to get a movie made.
About the trans.
About a trans person and and i think you know those types of movies can be
helpful in uh normalizing a behavior pattern things like that whether you believe in it or
not i'm just saying it's a fact and her star power and so and so the the trans activist came out uh
canceled the movie and now this movie is not going to get made yeah ever uh uh there isn't a foreign sales driving
trans name now you could say well okay hold it back until there is one uh yeah that's not going
to happen 15 years it's you know her name recognition drives the ability for that movie
to make profit and and and benedict cumberbatch uh you know playing a gay man it's
all these different things it's so exhausting so again just the the reason why and i don't want the
rules but once the rules are created them's the rules so so look look at this real quick it's this
this twitter user claudia amenabar says oh whitewashed america chavez i am so sorry what
they did to you. What?
Like, literally what?
I don't understand.
Read some of the other ones farther down.
Oh, man.
They get more insane.
Who attacked her, though?
Was it the Aaron Rupars of the world, or was it the, you know, who made the first?
Okay. America Chavez is a strong, confident, queer, Afro-Boriqua?
Boriqua.
Boriqua.
With queer biological parents and Afro-Boriqua adoptive parents.
I do not know who this variant in Doctor Strange is supposed to be,
but it's not the character whose stories I've been reading for a decade.
Okay.
So when people complain that Heimdall was played by a black character,
I would like to see you say the same thing.
Now, me personally, I don't care that Heimdall was played by...
I think Idris Elba's fantastic.
They talked about...
Many people were like,
Idris Elba should play James Bond.
I'm like, he'd actually be a really great James Bond.
He'd be great.
But the problem is these people are acting in bad faith.
Correct.
They would not say, like,
Daniel Craig would be a great, you know, Black Panther.
Nope.
They would never say that.
Nope.
Because they don't actually believe what they're saying.
They're just racist lunatics.
I would do the first half of my career in the theater, and it was very much about anyone can play any role.
The idea is give actors a chance.
The best actor should have the position.
Then I got into film, and it was a different mentality.
It was more about you want to be as realistic as possible.
So if the person is supposed to be an African-American descent, dark skin, and it's not, then it's very confusing, the film.
I like how you pointed out when you're portraying real people, it's a very different thing than portraying a comic book character or a movie character.
And I get the people who don't like it when the actual characters get changed.
I get the dislike of race swapping, but it just doesn't bother me the same way it bothers other people.
Have you found it to be different?
What were you going to say?
Well, I just love when the left
eats itself. I mean, this is such
a cell phone.
She's got the LGBTQ flag
pin on her chest and she's being cancelled.
Yeah, this poor actress, Gomez,
is no right winger.
Scarlett Johansson
is no right winger. This is
just pathetic.
She's not the one that cast her in that role.
Somebody else put her there.
There's a tweet up there where they said,
these actors need to be better about not accepting roles.
They're telling you that you need to look at this and say,
this opportunity could feed my family or in her age,
just could set me up through college,
and I need to pass on that because of ideological reasons.
Do you remember when just recently Peter Dinklage came out and said, they're making
Snow White and the Seven Dwarves. I mean,
really think about what that means.
And then a whole bunch of
actors, little people actors,
came out and they were like, you're taking our jobs
from us. Stop doing this.
The best roles in a decade.
Yeah, seven Disney
movie roles opened up
for little people.
At a minimum, $100,000 each person.
He pulled the ladder up behind him.
He has a tremendous career.
He's a great actor.
He was in big movies.
He was in Game of Thrones.
And now he's like, stop.
The only reason he was cast as Tyrion Lannister is because Tyrion is that character in the book.
And so they said, we want someone to fill that role.
How about we just get a regular guy to play that character?
If it doesn't matter who plays who, it's all acting.
Well, what movie is funnier than Elf?
So that scene in Elf is so good.
And he was hired for it.
He was great in it.
So I think Ian mentioned this, and I looked it up.
I recommend you not look it up, but we were like, Snow White and the Seven Dudes.
It's real.
It's real.
It's an adult.
It's not what I thought it was.
I just thought you could change the name.
I downloaded the wrong Snow White.
Cast whoever.
Girls can be dudes too.
So Disney is talking about changing the story somehow.
No, they had already done that beforehand.
So they had already anticipated that this was going to be a problem
before they even went into production.
They're going to make it seven magical creatures, all CGI.
So a large list of people are going to get paid
just a lot smaller amounts on the special effects cast list.
But like a unicorn, a dragon, what is it?
Snow White and the seven Magical Creatures?
That's all they know so far. It was never going to be...
Is Lord of the Rings cancelled?
Because dwarves does not reference
little people. It's a reference to
magical creatures like elves.
Are we going to complain about elves being too tall?
There's dwarf with a big D, which is fine,
but it's the little D dwarves that you can't
say because that's...
Lord of the Rings is grandfathered in. If it was a brand new project, no way. Snow White's not grandfathered in? No, it's the little d dwarves that you can't say because that's yeah dwarf uh lord of the rings is grandfathered in if it was a brand new project no snow white's not grandfathered in no it's not
because it's a new project look have you ever looked at the thing that's like the ginger side
and it's all the redheaded characters that have been removed in a place with yeah so it's like
that's what's going on right now like uh like what they did with the little mermaid they've
recast a little mermaid uh so all of these stories are not grandfathered in.
You're going to suffer either way.
Here's what I want to add to this Xochitl Gomez story, America Chavez.
She was given the role of a queer woman of color who's wearing an LGBTQ pin, and now she is being attacked for it.
You know what the ramifications of this will be?
No one will ever want to play a character that represents a marginalized group because it'll damage their career like scarlett johansson
like sochiel gomez and you know what they're doing it to themselves this means in the future
they're going to be like we've got a great character for the superhero film who turns
out to be a gay guy i was gonna be like no i'm not going anywhere near that sorry whenever they
were uh releasing being the ricard, which is a fine movie.
It's okay.
There was a lot of talk about Javier Bardem playing Desi Arnaz. all of the different folks, the diversity coordinators that he brought onto set,
so that he could get away with casting Javier Bardem as Desi Arnaz.
It's just incredible.
Do you remember what they did to, you mentioned Gina Carano earlier,
when she got fired from Disney, but before they fired her,
they tried to have her do a 40-person struggle session with members of the LGBTQ community on a Zoom call.
She said, I'll do it in person.
I'll talk to these people one by one in person in an auditorium.
I'm not going to be bullied by 40 people on a Zoom call.
That's insane.
Yeah, I wouldn't do it.
What am I going to sit here and stare at my camera and be like, dude?
But the average actor, like you said, she's brave.
The average actor is like, yeah, you can abuse me for the next hour.
That's right.
Gina Carano was an MMA fighter. Yeah. Yeah, she's seen some stuff. She's brave. The average actor is like, yeah, you can abuse me for the next hour. That's right. Gina Carano was an MMA fighter.
Yeah.
Yeah.
She's seen some stuff.
She's not scared.
She's taken a punch in her day.
And that's something to be said.
Often one of the things I bring up with this – you mentioned people crying about Donald Trump winning the election and you're like, what is this?
I'm like, well, look, if you've never been in the sun, you'll get sunburned.
So these people are soft little blobs of pink jello.
And then some other people have dealt with hardship.
Someone like Gina Carano, who's trained and fought and had to deal with injuries and getting punched in the face, is going to shrug off the stupidity of words i was someone who's grown up in a pastel safe room with
padded walls and beanbags all all their lives will step outside quivering and shaking and then
when someone says a naughty word they'll go i'm being attacked it's violence a lot of my friends
from high school uh none of them went into the military really except for one guy and i in the
time i was like please don't i was so afraid for him because i thought he was gonna get hurt and i
didn't want it but now today he's the most aware, doesn't care about the stupid stuff.
He's fully engaged in what matters because he saw combat.
Once you see combat, there's no joke.
There's no messing around.
MMA and the military are both like that.
When all this stuff happened with Joe Rogan, the amount of MMA fighters that came out in support of him,
because they understand.
They understand that you cannot just let these people bully you.
Well, it's like when you get punched in the face, you kind of realize some things don't matter all that much.
You know, when you've dealt with real hardship.
And if Gina hadn't done what she did, then there would be 10 other people who came after her and showed courage that never would have been able to do it had she not had the courage in that moment.
And it was the way you encouraged her to do it right away.
Absolutely.
That Daily Wire interview was like three days later, right?
It was about a week later, but it was as fast as we could do it.
But the announcement of the movie came literally within 72 hours or even less, 36 hours even.
And, you know, it's – we tend – Gina and I talk a lot about being the flak jacket, right?
Walking out there, coming on shows like this, talking about our careers, what we've been through, and taking the bullets and showing courage.
In many ways, I'm not saying I'm courageous, but I'm saying in order to give other people courage to come out and come work with us
and let their American flag fly.
That's why I think humility is so important,
because if you can embarrass yourself in front of people, that's courage, man.
I want to bring up this story just because it's in the realm of cancel culture
and it's hilarious.
So we have this once again from Bounding into Comics.
Pro Tekken player Tanakana dropped from eSports team after saying
short men don't have
human rights. What?
Saying men under 170
centimeters in height don't deserve human rights
according to a report from Japanese news
outlet Jcast. During a stream
on February 15th, Tanakana declared
that men who are under 170 centimeters
just over 5'5 don't have human
rights, adding they should have bone lengthening
surgery to compensate for their lack of height.
I do think there are a lot of people
who are deeply offended by that,
but I hope she's joking,
because if it is, it's actually a funny joke,
but now she's canceled for saying it, right?
As a 5'5 individual,
I'd just like to say that I'm extremely offended by this,
and I think that her cancellation is exactly, she got exactly what she deserved. And I am not getting bone lengthening surgery
unless the government offers to pay for it. As a 6'4 individual, I do not identify with your
problems. You can't understand my lived experience. That's the problem. Yes. My height privilege.
You're an oppressor, if you understand. Oh, yeah. And you're oppressing this.
See, I don't know when I'm going to finally get my due in the social hierarchy of identity politics.
But I think being short means I'm not at the exact bottom as a straight white male, but I'm getting a little bit closer to the top by being under 5'6".
Now, I will say, I think the issue is she was kind of joking but in a more serious way like it's one thing if the point of the joke is that you're mocking like there's the stories about tinder where if a guy's list is
height is under six feet they never get response responses if you're mocking those people by saying
it and we know you're mocking the idea it's a funny joke but if she's actually saying like
jokingly she does think they deserve human rights but she's insulting about it that's kind of a dick
move you know what i mean was she like streaming and she just said it to the her followers while Interestingly, she does think they deserve human rights, but she's insulting about it. That's kind of a dick move.
You know what I mean?
Was she like streaming and she just said it to her followers while she was streaming?
Because I could see like if you're just gaming and you're like, oh, yeah, I hate these people.
They should all – you know what?
Like just joking, like it just comes out as like a goofy little kid thing.
But I don't know.
She's basically saying that a guy went to deliver her food and he like muttered and mumbled in front of her house, rang the doorbell, then asked her for her number.
And she said she was scared because he knows where I live, so it's tough.
I don't want them to start a fire or something by acting coldly.
He was short, maybe only 165 centimeters, she continued.
If he was tall and muscular, I might have given him my contact information.
Isn't that amazing?
Rough life, man.
Yeah, rough life. She wasn't insulted by being hit on. She was insulted
by being hit on by a short guy. Exactly.
Now imagine if it was a guy
on stream. Now, mind you, she's
gotten the boot, right? So, hey, at least
there's some consistency there. Because I would say
if there was a dude and he was saying that
a woman delivered his food
and she was morbidly obese
and she asked him for his number
and he was like, oh, get out of here.
Yeah, he'd be banned instantly.
They'd be like, you're fat shaming and all that stuff.
I actually think it's funny.
I wouldn't have expected her to get any penalty for mocking short dudes like that.
I'm actually surprised this is a story at all.
Yeah.
I really am.
That she got booted off her team?
Yeah.
I'm surprised that anybody cared.
Really?
I mean, a pro player getting kicked off a team, I mean.
She probably had a very expensive salary that they needed to get rid of. That's true. They found their reason. They're like, short guys? Really? I mean, a pro player getting kicked off a team, I mean. She probably had a very expensive salary that they needed to get rid of.
That's true.
They found their reason.
They're like, short guys?
Really?
Is that really a reason to get rid of her?
They're like, it'll have to do.
But hold on.
This is the secret that people need to understand.
When we often hear about cancellations, what we're really hearing about is a company trying
to break a contract that they can't break.
Yeah, exactly.
But they have morality clauses saying if you shock or offend we can terminate
your contract immediately and this is what you get so people people might be like oh why why was
gina carano fired maybe it really had nothing to do with it yep maybe they were just like
we're paying her too much and we just don't like her we need an excuse for termination well it
probably was ideological lines if they wanted to get rid of her. This just gave them the excuse, and it's selectively
enforced because Pedro Pascal said stuff
that was way worse.
And he's, of course, he's part of the in-group,
so he's allowed to exist in that
sphere, but they're like, we need a reason.
That guy's creepy.
The things he's posted and tweeted about, he's like
a creepy guy. I wouldn't have posted
anything that any one of them have
posted, but the truth is
like i i kind of am a first amendment absolutist right and so i i think just far away right but
i also have thicker skin than most people and so you know i'm not offended by it uh i i think i
think in the case of jeff zucker and and certainly maybe in this case of this Tekken player, I think this is a money thing.
I also like that it's a Tekken player.
Did you say she's part of a Japanese team?
Is that part of the story?
I think that was mentioned that she's – I know she said she was Japanese.
If that's the case, maybe there's a cultural thing about hating on short guys because I think Japanese people might be shorter.
Nothing in life is worse than disingenuous morality.
That is the worst thing in the whole universe.
You know, I think there's a big divide when we talk about the multicultural democracy, the constitutional republic.
I think a core element of it is strength through hardship, strong men, weak men or women or whatever.
And, you know, you've got a lot of soft people that can't handle the real world.
They can't, they're so dependent.
Maybe it's independent versus codependent
is another way to look at it.
For me, I'm kind of like,
if I was working in an industry,
in fact, this literally happened
and they were doing things I didn't like,
I'd be like, I won't do it.
When I worked for Fusion,
they hire me on and they say,
we're gonna be nice vice. We wanna be edgygy on the ground to reporting, but we're not going
to be as crass and crude and overt with like sex drugs and rock and roll. And I'm like,
yeah, I totally get it. Like we can get that, that, that on the ground adventurous vibe,
that like cool hip feeling, you know, whatever trying to get while still being family friendly,
I'm down. And then six months later, they're like, we decided we're going to be woke. And I said,
okay, well, I'm not, you know, I'm going to keep doing my thing.
And they were like, then you can, you know, I tried quitting. They offered me more money.
And then ultimately I'm like, dude, I'm not going to do it. I don't care about you. I don't care
about your company. I would much rather sit in my living room playing video games and fall asleep
than deal with whatever it is you think you can offer me. So maybe that's just like antisocial,
whatever. I don't, I don whatever. I don't rely on them for
my confidence or my self-esteem. But I think a big difference between the two overarching
political factions are people who are desperate for recognition and desperate for people to,
they want people to think good things about them. And then there are people who are just like,
yeah, I literally don't care what you think. I'm going to live my life and be true to myself.
In 07, I was doing Hollywood acting and YouTube. And I like yeah i literally don't care what you think i'm gonna live my life and be true to myself in 07 i was doing hollywood acting and youtube and i
started to get i was like what you were saying i was seeking the attention i want i was like when
i win an oscar i'm gonna thank my geometry teacher for the 10th grade i was really excited in my
whole life and then i started doing youtube videos and i started getting the attention elsewhere and
i realized okay it's not all about the attention it's why are you getting the attention what are
you contributing?
And that really changed my perspective on everything after that.
I left that industry pretty much.
I want to change that industry.
Well, you build out of Nashville
and you make your own.
Yeah, it's unchangeable.
It's Sodom and Gomorrah at this point.
It's gone.
They fled New York.
I think that's how Hollywood got started
They fled the mob
Because the mob was trying to shut them down in New York
All these directors in 1910, 20 something
I'm really inspired by the Tool song
You know
Enema is like
Learn to swim
Flush it all away
It was my favorite
Arizona Bay baby
Praying for mayhem
In California the federal government Struggled to enforce tax law We'll wind up in the bay. It was Arizona Bay, baby. I was just thinking that. Praying for mayhem, praying for tidal waves.
In California, the federal government struggled to enforce tax law.
Wow.
So it was a lot cheaper and easier to – but I'll give you an example, Ian.
When people say they want to change the system, it's like you're walking up to the Sears Tower in Chicago.
I know it's called the Willis Tower.
We're from Chicago.
We call it the Sears Tower.
And you're saying, I want this building to be my building. By all means, you can accomplish that
with great power and time and dedication. But that's like trying to move a monolith of such
a great structure. Build a new building. Start your own building. So this is the way I see it.
Why should I go to Austin? Everyone's like, we're going to go to Austin. And I'm like,
it's woke central. Why would I want to go to Austin? No, we're going to get a field in the middle of nowhere in West Virginia,
and we're going to build our own building and we're going to build our own thing out here.
Cause I'm, you know, there's also people go to Nashville. I certainly think Nashville is a way
better bet than Austin, but even then I look at it and I'm just like, I'd be really happy just
having my own little free Domestan that we can start up and we can build that around. Cause I'm
not dependent upon anyone else for what we seek to create.
And that's the plan, man.
Yeah, there has to be a happy medium between infrastructure, right, and freedom, right, and the ability to sort of do what you need.
So Nashville, Dallas, a couple of these other cities are great places for that because you can – you have enough sort of talented people who can help you fight the culture.
But remember,
someone has to handle the Instagram account and someone's got to handle the
marketing and someone's got to cut the trailer.
And you got to be close enough to an airport.
Yeah.
Otherwise I'd be in North Northern Maine or Wyoming.
But legit,
we did look at properties in rural Pennsylvania, Maine, Montana, Wyoming,
and the big problem with all of it is they actually have really great internet. No joke,
airports. And so it's like, how do we actually bring people out to the middle of nowhere? Well,
it's really difficult. But with West Virginia, you're close enough to DC, about an hour.
So the airport's right there. So that's something that ends up working out.
Because we've got to build an airstrip
and a soundstage
and we can't
the $500 million
soundstage
in the airport
and then we're set
yeah
perfect
the airstrip on top
of the soundstage
is that what it was
I don't know
helicopter pad
helicopter pad
on top of the soundstage
we've got to start
investing in helicopters
alright we're going to go
to super chat
so if you haven't already
smash that like button one honk
is one like and subscribe to the channel share the show with your friends become a member at
timcast.com to help us grow and expand we have actually taken pitches for uh sitcoms and um you
know fiction content right now we're doing at timcast.com it's mostly just journalism but we
also do have pop culture crisis brett of course the host. So make sure you go to Pop Culture Crisis on YouTube
and subscribe to that show.
And Spotify.
I really do like, to me,
we cut them up into segments for the YouTube part,
but I love the full episode
from start to finish. It's about an hour and a half
to an hour and 45 minutes, and I think you don't get
the feel for it. It's a lot more fun if you listen to it
from start to finish. There's stuff that gets cut out from clips
and you don't make the full episode. What do you do? more fun if you listen to it from start to finish. There's stuff that gets cut out from clips and you don't make the full episode.
What do you do?
What do you guys dig into?
How do you get it?
Imagine what we're doing here.
I go through the news.
I try to focus more
just on entertainment.
Less about the politics of it all.
We do cover it.
You said the other night,
you said politics are pop culture.
I'm like,
you screwed me, bro.
I can't do both, right?
So we try to cover the more ridiculous stories I leave out a lot of the time because I'm like, I don't need to make fun of this story or talk about this story.
But we do a lot of reviews of movies.
We just reviewed Uncharted last night.
We talk about general news.
We do a lot of stuff on Kanye West because Kanye West is one of the most interesting people in the world to cover.
I talk movies a lot, everything going on within the industry.
Bounding into comics, all the stuff on there.
We get everything from there, and it's a lot of fun.
We approach stuff from a political perspective and sometimes drift into pop culture,
and then you guys start from a pop culture perspective and sometimes drift into cultural politics.
Yes.
Whenever we get into it, I try to like,
you learn over time, we're on episode 58 right now,
you feel to the point where you're getting too far into it
and you're like, the average person isn't going,
the normie, the person who doesn't understand
that there is a culture war going on
isn't really going to be enamored
with the harder line political takes
that I might have on these things. So I try to
draw attention to them and bring
them up in a way that shares my perspective
but doesn't bludgeon you over the head
with what my beliefs are. I don't think that's the
importance of it. I'm more likely to call
out the stupidity of
projects. My new segment, it's called
Who the Hell Asked for This?
They're making a
Blue's Clues movie and they said it's going to be like
Spider-Man No Way Home.
I do ask who the hell asked for this.
A Gumby movie just got sold.
Oh, I love Gumby.
Yes, live action Gumby.
Pokey was my dude.
Live action Gumby.
Live action.
So I see that story.
Stretchy people.
I read that article.
I'm like, oh God, this is awesome.
I can get 20 minutes out of this easy.
All right, so we're going to,
let's get these super chats. But again, smash the like button and subscribe to pop culture crisis on
youtube all right key lloyd says when can we expect ben to start doing stan lee style cameo
cameos in the productions yes well first we got to get him to visit set right so if we can get
him to visit set then i will throw him in a movie secretly.
Maybe he'll be the guy that opens the door or the driver of the actor.
Can I get you something to drink, sir?
This has got to be a joke.
You've got to give him a role he has no business doing.
Bodyguard.
Bodyguard.
Exactly.
Perfect.
But like a cameo, just because people would be like, oh, and it'd be fun.
Oh, yeah.
He's starting to act in more of the Daily Wire Instagram videos.
So maybe your wish is going to come true.
We got to see the Daily Wire cinematic universe.
Yes.
So you get these movies and then they get connected at the end of shut in.
Someone gets shut in in a school supply closet.
Does that make Gina the Robert Downey Jr.?
Absolutely. Yes, she is.
But, you know, considering the time
gap between, you know,
Terror on the Prairie, I think it's called, right? And then
these other films. She's very old. She lives forever
so it's always her in every different
iteration of reality.
At the end of Terror on the Prairie, she
falls into a hole with magic ice
and freezes her and then she wakes up in, you know, 1970-whatever. Yeah, she falls into a hole with magic ice and freezes her, and then she wakes up
in, you know, 1970-whatever.
Yeah, she just plays her great-great-granddaughter.
There you go. Did you guys ever read the Dark Tower
Stephen King novels? I mean, doorways
that lead you to other realms.
I saw the movie. The movie was fun.
Alright, let's read some more. We got Just Complies
as the RCMP horse trampled
an elderly lady and a guy on a scooter
tonight. What are these chuckleheads doing?
I am ashamed of my government.
Yo, I have seen this stuff more times than I care to recall.
I was up in Montreal during student protests, and I see the cops were throwing.
They have these things.
I forgot what they're called, but they're like flashbangs with pepper spray in them.
So they bang, and then the whole area stings.
I've never seen something like that before. It's kind of weird. But that bang and then the whole area like stings. It was a really,
I've never seen something like that before. It was kind of weird, but that's at least how it was described to me. And I was like, is that, is that true? And then I read some stuff online about it
might've just been activists claiming it, but one of these flashbangs went off and then I walked
past it. It was like walking through a cloud of pepper spray. So look, I've seen peaceful protests
on the left and, uh, you've had bad cops. I've
seen more than my fair share of riots though. So I tend to be like, well, you know, look,
sometimes people lose control. Now what we're seeing though, I think a lot of people on the
right are starting to experience that these cops are indiscriminate. They'll, they'll trample,
trample an elderly lady, man. All right. Let's, uh, let's grab some more super chats. Let's,
let's get into this. Okay.
What is this one?
James Rogers says, hey, Tim, how can I determine who is telling the proper narrative on this?
I have friends in Canada who call this a national embarrassment and they need to go the F home,
but then you tell us the opposite.
Who's right?
Well, that's just a matter of opinion.
If you, look, I trust Aviva Fry, for instance, because he's a regular dude.
He's an honest guy.
He's got a YouTube channel.
He goes down there and he live streams all of this. And I'm like, I think that's an accurate or fair representation for the most part. There's probably some nuances and things
you don't see. But a dude that I know and like telling me live walking around is infinitely more
trustworthy than the Toronto Sun or whatever saying it's a bunch of white supremacists who
are stealing food from the homeless.
That's insane and not true.
And it doesn't even have to be just that bad.
It's the stuff where they call it anti-vaxxer protests
rather than just saying that it's about mandates,
which is a much simpler, it slips by people.
They don't realize.
So the average person who doesn't have a political bias here just says,
look at these crazy anti-science people who are protesting science. Tray martin story was a lie the michael brown story was a lie the the guy in baltimore
forget his name that was a lie george floyd ahmed arbory lie lie lie endless justice molette another
lie then we get the bigger lies russia gate ukraine gate lie lie it just keeps happening
so i just i don't i'm i'm done you know i still read a lot of these sources and i try and
fact check them because there's some stuff you can't get anywhere else and it's not all bad
but it's too too often the overt political stuff and activism is just agenda driven and full of
crap but let's grab some more super chats people are talking about ukraine it's getting pretty
pretty uh pretty crazy i heard the russians pulled the troops off the border is that right i don't know they said they just they were just
been establishing training exercises and now they pulled back i don't know what to believe
okay let's uh turn pike paladin says hey dallas any updates you can share on breakfast with the
dirt cult so there's this great book written by this guy in Oklahoma
named Samuel Finlay. And it's this amazing, amazing story of the first insurgency into
Afghanistan, you know, go on 15 years ago. And I have shown interest in getting it made.
And there is this wild, rabid contingency online that shows up
anywhere I go and asks, what's the latest with this movie? The truth is, I want to make it
really, really badly. It's a tough movie to make. It's about a soldier who comes back from the war
and falls in love and basically struggles through it as as a young man so it's it's a drama with war
elements to it it's a terrific book everyone should go buy it's called breakfast with the
dirt cult cool cool all right let's see what we got here mordred says so i have to give my first
super chat to ian for his consistent natural 20s yesterday normally he just raises my blood
pressure but he absolutely killed it yesterday much love love, man. You got it, brother. And I think a lot of people should definitely check out
yesterday's episode where we had a conversation with Stephen Marsh on the next civil war.
He has what I would describe as an establishment worldview. So there was some arguments,
but I think the conversation was absolutely worth listening to, especially if you want to hear
opinions you'll disagree with. I think people should check it out. It wasn't really a news-driven story as we often do with like a lead story.
It was more of a conversation with someone we disagree with about a lot of things.
People certainly – the Super Chats had their opinions.
It was an example that it's not so much about trying to convince people of information,
more just that you are able to communicate with people that have different types of information.
I think it was both of us recognizing from different points of view that this is inevitable.
That, you know, the point I made to him when he said, when will Americans realize this
conflict is tearing you guys apart and it's going to lead to something worse?
And then I said, he's from Canada.
And I was like, you like your socialized medicine?
Okay, we'll abolish that.
Canada will go full private health care.
Do we have peace?
And he was like, I see your point. Like there, you know, our worldview is very much freedom,
meritocracy. We're not going to give up civil rights and freedom to people who want to take
it away. It's just never going to happen. They can think the same thing, but I'm just going to
say it one more time. They live in a cult crackpot worldview. And you know, his point was, he's like,
but they say the same thing about you. And I'm like, I know. And they're wrong because Jussie Smollett was a lie. Michael Brown was a
lie. Trayvon Martin was a lie. All Ahmaud Arbery was a lie. All of those stories, George Floyd,
all of it, Rittenhouse, another lie. A Black Lives Matter activist was arrested for attempting
to assassinate a Jewish Democrat about a week after he posted black nationalist anti-Semitic,
you know, support for this
organization he gets bailed out on a hundred thousand dollars cal rittenhouse goes to prison
goes to jail for a couple months two million dollars bail is smeared and demonized in the
media yo i'm sick of the lies one side is very clearly lying one side just might be wrong
sometimes i think it's anyway that being said go fund me taken down for cal exactly exactly
and then you've got you've got to uh goundMe allowing Antifa to fundraise to literally steal property, to seize a building.
But let's read some more.
Arthur Anzala says, Ian rolling a 20 with your tie-dye sweater.
Looks nice and fluffy.
Rolling a 1, thinking the queen can put a stop to it up here.
She has a figurehead at best.
Wow.
You might want to reconsider that statement, that the queen has a figurehead at best.
She's the queen of England.
But Tim bought me this sweater.
Thank you for shutting it down.
We were at the mall, and I saw that, and I was like, that looks like a sweater Ian would wear.
He was right.
All right.
Let's see.
Rudy says, hey, Brett, what do you think of Nintendo Direct?
Miracle would be, our co-host Miracle would be the better person to ask about that.
I am a vintage video game collector. I am a modern day gamer oh vintage gamer all right jason
lindholm says i did security for man of steel and part of batman versus superman the division was
apparent then left versus right some of the cali crew hated being in illinois now illinois is a
red state with a blue city in it as as basically every every one of these states minnesota is a red state with a blue city in it As basically every one of these states
Minnesota is a lot like that too
St. Paul and Minneapolis are very blue
And then the rest of the state just kind of has
Ohio is like that too
Northeast Ohio is very blue
There are no blue states
Only blue cities and red states
It's very much a city
Like you said city versus rural
Is a big part of what these
Here's a good one
Boof says
Good name by the way,
Dallas, do you see masculinity returning to cinema anytime soon?
If today's young men ever watched a John Milius movie,
they would poop themselves and cry.
Well, a few things here.
The answer is yes.
We will solve this soon.
Strangely, we're only reacting at this point
to most of the stuff being written out of Hollywood.
So our first three movies with The Daily Wire
are female leads fighting back.
But that's also because they're cool.
In terms of John Milius,
his daughter Amanda, who's been on your show,
is someone I am desperate to get into the director's chair.
I bugger all the time.
So we'll get this going.
You know what I'd like to recreate?
Oh, what were you going to say?
Well, I was going to say the last thing is masculinity,
because the great Breitbart said politics is downstream of culture,
we have to show solid, heroic, masculine energy back in movies again,
and we'll get there.
I thought, and, and,
but no, no, but,
and feminine energy.
In fact,
Matt Max.
No, no, no, listen, listen.
I think feminine energy
is missing more
than masculine energy.
Dude, absolutely.
We just covered this the other day
because Hannah Clare,
she said,
why is everything reboots
and why are they all
female-led reboots?
And we went and I found
a feminist article
of what, you know,
it's like,
where can I find a take on this that you wouldn't think is the typical take?
And it's talking about how they're not telling female stories.
They're telling male stories with female characters.
So they're essentially erasing the female experience from these.
In the new Terminator movie, she denigrates motherhood and turns it on and says having
kids is basically bad
that everything about femininity motherhood uh the ability uh what it means to be a woman in
modern age is denigrated in hollywood in favor of telling much easier simpler masculine stories
and just inserting females there and it's it's why it always comes off as inauthentic it's why
it never works well i thought mad max Mad Max nailed it. Fury Road.
Charlize Theron was basically the lead
and she was powerful
and almost exuded the masculine energy
except Max was insane.
But still, you could see his humanity
and throughout the movie,
you see the man come back
and it's like the power of the woman
to help the man become masculine
was just such a good, good dichotomy.
Mad Max Fury Road is a woman in a man's role.
No, Max is still Max.
He's just lost his mind, so she helps him.
You don't understand.
The masculine role of going to war,
going to combat, risking their lives
to save the day, that's the masculine
archetype.
Fury is
not a feminine archetype.
It is a role written for a man with a woman cast.
I think it's like if a woman in a post-apocalyptic situation
found her man incapable of protecting himself,
she would become Fury.
She would become that woman.
And that was what was so cool about it.
So what you're telling me is the story is
femininity gets sacrificed when there's not a strong masculine presence.
But then you can see the femininity in Max,
like the growth in the child.
You think so?
No, no.
I'm with Tim on this.
I think Mad Max Fury Road, while it's such a fun movie to watch, I think the story itself, the plot, is not aging very well.
We got an amazing article written about us a couple of days ago from a guy named John Simley. Just awesome.
We were all just so enjoying it. It's a total hit piece,
but we love that kind of stuff.
So we're reading this article, just
quoting lines from it to each other
and everything like that. And it's just amazing.
And in it, he was
so angry that there was
religious iconography, that there was
femininity, things like that.
And, you know
that we you know it's just it's a blast right we're going to keep doing this and solve these
things remember we're just getting started right we should do something about islam and christianity
and like bringing them together so i i thought wonder woman was actually uh really great i
wouldn't go as far to say that Wonder Woman was an overtly feminine
role because she's still in war with her shield. But there was something more motherly about her
perspective on war and ending it. It was the idealism versus the realism. And her and Chris
Pine having the argument about how to stop war from happening. She was overtly idealistic. We
end the God of War and it's done. He's no sometimes people fight i really really enjoyed that but in terms of actually getting femininity right i think the
issue is hollywood keeps saying we're gonna we're gonna make a strong female character
so write rambo but make it a woman it's like yeah but that that's no it's rambo's mom because
well we did we did rambo we we did rambo adjacent as a woman in some ways in Run, Hide, Fight.
We did everything they asked us to do, and we got attacked for it.
I love the movie.
It's a great movie, but we followed the rules and still got attacked.
Let me read the super chat here.
We got Expedition.
It says, Dallas, I'm a great first AD with good credits and have directed episodic.
I left Hollywood because of my beliefs.
Want to use my talents and skills outside the system for outlets like Daily Wire.
Any ideas of how I can connect?
Absolutely.
The easiest way to get to me is DM me on BonfireLegend Instagram, at BonfireLegend.
So I'm not available anywhere else.
I'm certainly not on the hellscape of Twitter.
I'm too young for Facebook.
Keep an eye out for Expedition Pangea, because I'm sure you'll get inundated, but they were
the ones who made the request.
Oh, good.
Great.
I do want to, before we go on, point out that if they're looking for a series that does
have a good amount of masculinity in it, go check out Reacher on Amazon Prime.
Excellent. That was a good one. Excellent.
I was like, when we did that, when we
covered the show, I'm like, okay, guys,
I'm going to fanboy for about 25 minutes
here, so you're going to have to
settle in while I just sing this show's
praises for about 25 minutes. And that dude
is allowed to be both hyper-masculine,
extremely smart,
he even gets the woman in the show,
which is almost like a no-no in today's day and age.
And the female character is both strong,
but also allowed to be feminine.
She protects the children later on at the end of the show.
It almost is, in current year,
as close to perfect as you can get
to do that type of character.
I thought the show was fantastic.
Fantastic.
Does the guy have a flaw?
You've got to give a gigantic flaw to the hero if you want him to be super powerful.
He does.
Yeah, Kryptonite.
No, I'm kidding.
Is he racist?
He's actually, I would say, I don't want to spoil anything, but I would say he's short.
He's 5'5".
No, no.
He's 6' –
I'm kidding.
His character is 6'5".
But I would say for Reacher, he is all of these really great things.
But he takes – what's the right way to describe it?
His like honor is more important than his success.
Oh, okay.
Pride.
Pride is a big problem.
So I don't want to spoil too much,
but he's more interested
in killing those who've wronged them
than solving the case.
Vigilante.
Yeah, it's dangerous.
No, it's not vigilante.
It's like, you know,
we need to...
No, no.
Just slow down.
Thanks, Tim.
We need to capture this guy
to learn who controls the system.
And he goes, no.
Bang, and kills him.
So he's more...
He has no patience.
He's more interested in retribution than he is in solving the case.
He even – like there's early on in the show, he shoots two dudes in the back, and she's like, these are exit wounds.
And he's like, they would have killed me.
It's very morally gray.
But the best part about the character is, in fact, he is almost Sherlock Holmes-ish in the way he describes when he solves a crime.
That character in modern day, at his size, and this dude is enormous, Alan Richson, is either going to be allowed to be hyper-masculine, big hyper-masculine, or he's going to be allowed to be smart.
He can't be both.
And they let the dude be both, and that was incredible.
I thought Sherlock, he's a heroin addict, which I thought made such a great – that was his big flaw was he's a drug addict.
But it makes the character like when he succeeds, you're so happy for him because he overcame his problem.
The character is a bit of a loner.
I don't know if you consider that a flaw, but he definitely has like attachment issues and it's played as like a part of his character to be very much separate from society.
He's traveling his own road and that plays a part of the character.
I don't know if it's necessarily a flaw, but it's definitely an element of who he is so let me read this one
murph says dallas could there ever be a silent movie i've been thinking about how you could
make a movie work with no dialogue it probably couldn't work but it would be a challenge
there's an obvious answer to this but did you want to address it first i would say a silent movie
in in many ways you know i made bone tomahawk and it
had i think two minutes of score right and most of the time people weren't talking or or or in some
of the scenes it was very quiet so that that's that's a that's a version of how far it could go
um i would say that a silent movie could work if it was experimental and you found some way for it to still be appealing
to a commercial audience in a modern era?
There's two really simple answers.
I mean, we just had that movie.
I thought it was terrible where you can't make a sound.
What is it with the...
Quiet Place.
Quiet Place, which was very little dialogue.
And correct me if I'm wrong, I haven't seen it in a while,
but Apocalypto.
Yeah, there's almost no dialogue.
Certainly.
I think there's literally no dialogue in Apocalypto, right?
Yeah, they're speaking in their native language, but there's very little.
Yeah, but A Quiet Place.
I got bored by that.
I didn't like it.
It was too quiet.
Right.
I'm not joking.
I was going to say something.
That should have been your EP.
Take me somewhere.
It's mentally painful. So there's a room. They call it is. I was like, say something. That should have been your opium. Take me somewhere. It's mentally painful.
So there's a room.
They call it the quietest room in the world.
Ooh.
And they say I think the record for sitting in it is 45 minutes.
So you'd have to watch the movie in that room to really get the full effect.
When you go into this quiet room, it's got these spikes that come out of the walls.
It absorbs almost all sound.
It's physically and it's like mentally painful for you to be in a room with no sound.
Wow. And I'll tell you this. I've been in soundproof rooms. sound. It's physically and it's like mentally painful for you to be in a room with no sound.
And I'll tell you this, I've been in soundproof rooms. We have a sound booth where like all the sound absorbing stuff on the wall. I've built soundproof rooms for recording. I cannot stand
sitting in soundproof rooms because what happens is what you don't realize. One thing that really
becomes apparent when you talk in a room, you don't realize you are hearing an echo because the wall the sound
bounces off the walls when you go into a fully soundproof room it's a weird feeling you'll talk
and then the sound erases the moment it's it's weird it's sharp almost no i would call it dull
i i think it feels like i've got giant gym mats smashing my head yeah okay yeah and i'm just like
couldn't imagine going into that world's quietest room, you know?
All right, let's see what we got here.
Arturo says,
The thing about Batman villains is that the conflict they create is not just violence,
it's psychological.
Each of them is a study in human psychosis.
Oh, that was...
Thanks.
Your plug is rubbing on your headphones, I think.
Thanks, Tim.
I don't know what that is actually
there's a buzz happening
I think it's your power cable
it's this hoodie
it's all this hot static electricity
yeah so Batman villains is not just violence
it's psychological
each of them is a study in human psychosis
the rogues gallery of Batman
it is really great
Paul Dano as the Riddler
is probably the part I'm most excited about
really it's Paul Dano
yeah
and Colin Farrell as Penguin.
No.
Yes.
In basically full bodysuit makeup.
Really?
And they're giving him his own show, too,
on HBO Max to do before.
Penguin?
Yeah, they're going to do a Penguin spinoff with him.
Yo.
Probably so he doesn't have to wear the suit the whole time.
It'll be a prequel where he's just Oswald Cobblepot.
Body positivity.
Yep.
John Cena was fantastic in Peacemaker.
The best part.
Miracle can't stand John Cena.
I'm like, he was literally built for this role.
It's fantastic.
And James Gunn, he's designed for James Gunn's style of writing,
which blends very heartfelt, meaningful moments with really crude and over-the-top humor.
And he blends it together so perfectly that John Cena was the absolute perfect casting.
I think the Fast and Furious cinematic universe is the best cinematic universe.
And John Cena in the latest film, I was kind of like, you know, take it or leave him.
So I was kind of like, eh, John Cena.
But Peacemaker, I watched, and I'm like, he nails it.
Peacemaker is a fun show.
I think they did a fantastic job. And, you know, I just absolutely love the watch and I'm like, he nails it. Peacemaker is a fun show. I think they did a fantastic job.
And, you know, I just absolutely love the end when I was like, oh, it's the democratic
establishment of the evil villains.
I'm like, okay, you've won me over with your politics.
I'm half kidding.
But at first I started to roll my eyes when they started to like, you know, monologue.
I told you about the line at the end where I'm like, proto-fascist.
No spoilers. That's not a spoiler. It's just the line that she end where I'm like, proto-fascist. No spoilers.
That's not a spoiler.
It's just the line that she says.
Ah, it's a spoiler.
I don't say it.
All right.
That's like a key line
at the end of the film.
So this is like a political movie
sewing division
by John Cena,
the CCP guy?
No.
Is that what it's called?
No, no, no.
For sure.
Like John Cena coming out
and doing that China bit.
Not good.
Not a fan.
And then they call it, let's just put this Peacemaker.
Everything's fine, guys.
No, no, no.
Peacemaker is a violent, murderous psychopath.
The character, he was like, I will kill anyone for peace.
That's cool.
He's insane.
So he's like a-
But I cherish peace with all my heart, and I don't care how many men, women, and children
I have to kill to get it.
That's right.
And I love when he's with Vigilante, they're talking about how they have to kill, how they used to kill people.
And it's like sometimes you've got to kill the murderer or graffiti artists.
Jay Walker.
Jay Walker's, yeah.
They're just insane people.
Yeah, they're not, they're villains.
It's funny though.
All the characters in the show are insanely over-the-top bad.
And that's the best part of it except for Adebayo who plays basically the straight man to the rest of the characters.
She's looking at all these people and she's like, what the hell is going on?
Who are these people?
I love it.
Yep.
All right.
Let's see.
What do we got here?
Let's read this one.
Agent Juice Cartoon says, Dallas Sanye, I admire you helping create a viable parallel Hollywood.
I want to do the same for animation.
I know you do live action, but any way to reach out to you or your studio,
even if only for advice?
I would say absolutely reach out to me.
The Daily Wire is so pumped about doing animation, right?
They've got a couple of projects in the works,
a lot of conversation,
a lot of financial resources being put forth to this.
So please reach out to me. I'll hook you up with them. We're actually working on a couple of video resources being put forth to this. So please reach out to me.
I'll hook you up with them.
We're actually working on a couple video games, actually.
It's hard to get going because we're not a video game company,
but we have had for a while a playable,
I guess you'd call it an alpha.
And I don't want to give away too much,
but I did post on Instagram almost a year ago.
It's based on Freedom Tunes animation.
And I don't think we've said too much about what the plan is, but it's going to be like a roguelike combat game.
And so the goal is to – let me just say this.
The game mocks far-left extremists.
And so –
As they deserve.
It's cartoon violence, so nothing over the top.
But it mocks political extremists in general.
And that's kind of the idea.
We want people to play games and make fun of the crazies and the idiots and not want to be a part of that.
So we're working on stuff like that too.
I read a lot that Pixar animators are leaving because of basically Disney giving preference to their animation studio over Pixar.
Yeah, you're a guy who's been there for 15, 20 years and you're expecting to get
your turn. And they're not getting theater
releases for any of that stuff. They're putting all the
Pixar stuff straight to Disney Plus while Disney
animation movies go to the theaters.
Are those creators leaving?
I know a lot of them are creating their own projects outside
there. Is there a possibility of
those animators coming over and working with you guys?
Animation is a new space
for all of us. We've been live
action guys for so long, but
it's an important space, especially
because it can be comedic,
it can be for younger audiences,
all kinds of stuff. And it tends to get less scrutiny
from the mainstream.
I've noticed... You can get away with more.
DC animated movies
are always far superior to
DC live action movies because they're
allowed to be let they don't have to take as many liberties with the source material they can stay
true to what the actual story was supposed to be and it gives because of the the reduced scrutiny
you know they're allowed to create what they want let me just worry about your actor being the right
color constantine is an incredible character and the the Constantine film, I liked it, but they missed so much.
Constantine in the Justice League dark films as a character in the comics is awesome.
The Keanu Reeves version is not nearly as awesome.
Now, as its own universe, I thought it was a great movie, but it's just not Constantine.
You know what I mean?
Matt Ryan does the live action role well on TV, but he's not, he's not a movie.
They wouldn't cast a TV actor to play that in a film at this point right now.
They would want a bigger name.
But Daredevil.
I love Charlie Cox's Daredevil.
He's the exception.
And cameo.
And he also said that he wants to do that character for like the rest of his life.
Like he's like, I'd do like 10 more years of this if he can.
So hopefully they'll, not that I have any faith
that Disney will be able
to recapture the magic
of Netflix Daredevil.
That cameo was fantastic
in No Way Home.
He's like,
how did you do that?
I'm a really good lawyer.
I will say this out loud
so we can start to manifest it.
But how crazy would Hollywood go
if Tim Pool and the Daily Wire collaborated on a movie together?
It would be great.
I mean, I'm down.
What could we do?
Animation, live action, comedy, drama.
I don't care.
We've got to figure it out because that would melt their faces.
It would be cool.
It would be an honor and a privilege.
The Daily Wire spun up a master class on how to act, how to basically tech.
Because there's a lot of people I think want to come do this right now.
Yeah.
And if they understand.
I have a tiny version of it happening right now.
I call it Bonfire State University.
Nice.
And we bring about 10 people to all of our movie sets and we put them in new roles and
they're very young and they're very hungry and they're, they're excited to learn.
So they get to see, and they get to see me and Gina Carano and our directors,
Michael Polish,
normal people are that,
that,
but also like how to conduct yourself on set.
Like that is a,
that is a skill.
And I'll tell you,
and takes time to sit around and wait.
We're really ramping.
Wait,
I'm really working on it.
Daily wire needs to fund a like 2000 episode anime series.
So just like,
yeah.
Dragon ball,
take it one piece,
you know,
and I'm actually half kidding.
I don't expect Daily Wire to fund anime,
but I think there's a lot of,
there's like the anime right meme.
You got to do it.
Oh, a thing where a guy can go inside his own body
and then he has to fight the stuff in his own body
to fix his body if he gets hurt.
Right, right.
The treatment.
Like Inception.
Come on.
Come on.
I think that's been done
in many ways
but more as a subplot.
Yeah, yeah.
It'd be a subplot.
It'd be like his power.
Inner space.
Buy the rights to
Honey, I Shrunk the Kids.
Yeah.
And get Rick Moran
as son of the tournament.
Honey, I Shrunk the Kids
was written by Stuart Gordon,
the great horror director.
Well, I would love
to do a movie.
We're not,
I don't know what we would or could
do. You tell me and we're
game for whatever. Sci-fi.
Yeah. We gotta do sci-fi.
It is the number one thing we're not
doing right now that we have to do. Star Trek The Next
Generation is my all-time favorite show.
There was a period where I was referencing
it non-stop. Then I started watching Stargate
SG-1, which is also an amazing show.
Star Trek, man, The Next
Generation was... I've got awesome
ideas. Have you ever heard of a charged black hole?
Because you're about to, baby.
It's a real thing. Let's use it for teleport.
Let's do it. We're going to be warping around
the galaxy. My idea for everybody listening
was a movie like
Harold and Kumar or Dude, Where's My Car?
But it's about Ian trying to get to a
graphene conference and then –
Be a spaceship.
No, no, no.
It's got to be normal to make those jokes.
So like Ian gets an invitation in the mail and it's like you're hereby invited to the latest revelation in graphene technology.
And then he goes on wacky shenanigan adventures trying to get there.
Slips on a banana peel.
Yeah, stuff like that.
We can make that happen.
Falls on the stairs and then like,
you know,
and then gets picked up by the mafia and they think he's the delivery guy,
but he's like,
I'm just trying to get to the graphene conference.
Like,
is that a code word for something?
And they like threaten him and he's like,
ah,
and then,
you know,
finally he makes it there and you know,
somehow he's now the CEO of a company.
He's a millionaire and he's on a jet pack and he's like,
my life's crazy and graphene,
you know?
Yeah.
Yeah.
That's my plan.
That's my idea. I'm actually, I'm darn Ian's crazy and graphene, you know? Yeah, yeah. That's my plan. That's my idea.
I'm actually –
I'm starring Ian.
I think you could do it.
All right, everybody.
I'm just trying to find the graphene, man.
We're going to have a conversation about what movie we can do.
But in the meantime, smash that like button, subscribe to the channel, become a member at TimCast.com to help support all of our work.
Check out the Daily Wire's films.
I'm really excited.
When I heard Daily Wire was getting into movies. I was like,
it's exactly what we need. You can follow
us at TimCastIRL on Instagram
or anywhere else. You can follow me at TimCast.
Dallas, you want to shout out anything specifically?
Yeah, you can find our new movie,
Shut In, at Daily Wire
on their app or at ShutIn.com.
I just have to say this.
What Ben Shapiro and
Jeremy Boring and all the guys over at Daily Wire are doing is so important in giving me the opportunity to make these great movies.
For us to help Gina Carano and folks like her continue to make movies outside the system, it's really, really, really special.
I can say that there's a lot of love for Tim Kast over there and vice versa.
I think folks who are sort of pushing back on the left's narrative, the more we can do together, get in touch with each other, that's great.
This is going to be so big.
And just understand, like, we are killing ourselves to make great movies.
And I tell you, Terror on the Prairie, the Gina Carano movie,
is one of the best movies I've ever made.
I just got to give you a correction.
No love.
No love.
No, no.
Pure jealousy.
Just envy.
I look at what The Daily Wire is doing and I'm like, man, we got to step our game up.
We got to get on this movies, shows, and all that stuff.
No, but I kid.
I'm a big fan of everything they're accomplishing and they're working on. And I got to admit, I absolutely am jealous
of how they're doing movies. I'm like, man, I want to do the same thing.
So we can build culture and we can challenge the BS and build parallel
systems and have our own spaces. So absolutely amazing stuff. Brett, you want to
shout out? Yes, guys. You can follow me at Brett Dasvik on Instagram.
But more importantly, go follow Pop Culture Crisis on youtube like the channel please we appreciate that uh subscribe
the channel but also follow us on spotify it's also on amazon music on apple podcast and on
pandora and we do episodes monday through friday me and miracle sam follow us over there and i will
say you can follow me at IanCrossland.net um and keep in mind i think one of the wonderful things
about the entertainment industry is that it's very cohesive.
There is competition to get into the industry.
But once you're there and you're working on a project, the better you make everyone around you look and do, the more that you're going to end up working in that industry.
It's a very team-based orientation.
And so it's very easy to do once you get into it.
Come join us.
Get involved.
I'll see you later. Thank you all you all guys all very much for joining us oh i adjusted my camera a little too far up yeah tall guy over there was getting tough as head okay there we go um i want
to thank you guys for joining us very much i know the news has been getting a little dark lately so
it was really really fun to be able to talk about some slightly other things and the culture is so
important i really appreciate what you guys are doing. And I really enjoy what Brett and Miracle are doing
over on Pop Culture Crisis.
You guys may follow me on Twitter
and Minds.com at Sarah Patch Litz.
You can check out us at YouTube.com slash Cast Castle
because we don't do the shows on the weekend,
but Cast Castle is every day.
And that's our vlog and shenanigans and joke channel
where we have a lot of fun.
So subscribe there.
Thanks for hanging out.
And we'll see you all next time.
Bye, guys.