Modern building codes in earthquake-prone areas like California require foundations to be 20-80 feet deep with rebar and concrete, creating structures 2,000 times stronger than historical telephone pole foundations that have survived earthquakes for over 80 years. This extreme over-engineering results in millions of dollars spent on foundations before any building materials are used, raising questions about whether regulations are proportionate to actual structural needs.
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Firefighter Pay Raises Rejected by Newsom + Diddy Turns to Trump + AI Takes Over Workplaces? | AdamAdded:
You got a nice fit wife there. But yeah, but she's a little too obsessed with it.
You know, there's like a sexual version of that. Anything to the extreme.
Uh, if it is a negative, it's something I would have liked to take for a test ride for about 11 years.
>> Whoa.
>> From age 5 to 16.
>> Ed Gan's mom's made him delicious sandwiches. Look what happened.
>> I saw that there's a series on now with that. I I'm tempted I'm tempted to watch it. I read many books on this the case and wow.
>> Can I say we may have a new leader in the [ __ ] sandwich clubhouse. I'm looking at you Dawson for a reason. Uh I like to know where everyone's mom is in the sandwich department. Andrew's mom's a toasted bread mom. Going to see her in Philly coming up this weekend.
>> Um but I got to chatting with uh our friend Izzy backstage at Kimmel's Club.
Dawson's buddy, my buddy, come out.
Helps with the merch, so on and so forth. And uh he brought up the sandwich, and I know he's pretty, you know, whitish trash, you know. And uh he described the sandwich his mom made, which now remember Dr. Drew, no, like like hold on. Michael Chickas is the top of the sandwich list so far that his dad had a sandwich that he invented that was sold named after him or something and his mom made like fresh bread and stuff like that. So >> he's number one with a bullet.
>> Michael Chickas is is the commish of sandwiches and then and then Dr. Drew's at the bottom with the [ __ ] sandwich.
Uh, I'm lower than him with no sandwich, but Izzy may have bumped Dr. Drew off in the [ __ ] sandwich department.
>> What's the sandwich?
>> I can't believe you spent that much time drinking with that man and you didn't find out what his sandwich was growing up.
>> Food would [ __ ] with our buzz. So, we >> Well, talking about food's not going to soak up any alcohol last night.
>> It's a mental thing.
>> You're right. You're right. Even talk about a sandwich, you feel the buzz wearing off.
>> Exactly. So he said he got white bread, American cheese, not grilled, just American cheese, white bread, and jelly.
>> That's disgusting.
>> I I've never heard of that sandwich.
>> Child abuse calls child protective services.
>> Like [ __ ] shitty grape jelly on top of the cold American cheese on the white bread.
>> It makes perfect sense why he never told me that before. That is a horrible, horrible experience.
>> He wanted me never to talk about on the air, but here we are.
>> And unusual.
>> Yeah. So, so he now I got to drill down with Drew cuz Drew is, you know, he's got a he uses a little hyperbole. His [ __ ] sandwich may not been as bad as Izzy's [ __ ] sandwich. Still can't beat my no sandwich, but Izzy's given it a try with the his [ __ ] sandwich cuz that sounds horrible. And I don't know something less nutritious you could send your kid to school with. It's white bread, processed cheese, and the grape jelly back then was just corn syrup and purple dye. Number seven, and you know, >> sugar and trans fats. Perfect. Perfect.
>> Perfect. Yeah. And carbs and empty empty carbs. When the carb is sticking to the roof of your mouth, it is empty, baby.
>> All the nutritional value has been bleached away in that Wonderbread.
>> All right. All right. So, may maybe is he at the top of the the pyramid?
>> I think so.
>> I think so. I think so too, man.
>> All right, what's going on in the news?
>> Well, in the news, you'll be surprised to know that Democratic Governor Gavin Newsome vetoed a bipartisan bill to raise the salaries of California firefighters 9 months after the most expensive inferno in state history incinerated Los Angeles. Well, I listen, I first off, I you know, okay, firefighters and one of the reason I want to be a firefighter is I learned the schedule and they would tell me all the time. And they'd go like, "Well, 3 days on, 4 days off or something like that." And I go, "What's three days on mean?" He's like, "Well, you live at the firehouse." I was like, "What do you do?" You know, eat chili, play foosball, clean the fire truck, go out on calls.
And I was like, "That feels like." And then four days of off, you know what I mean? Like every I mean, firemen work. I don't know. Look it up. LA County firefighter. But I I would say firefighters work less than half the number of days in every month.
So >> sounds like three to four. Yeah, that works out.
>> They're I I mean out of out of a 30-day month, they work 13 days or something like that. Now, I know everyone talks about danger and everything else. I like firemen. Also, firemen I've been to a few firehouses. They're almost always in a good mood, which means they're not that stressed out. But let's see. So, what's it say? So, average, so average working days per month for 30-day month is 10 days. 10. 10. Okay. I average 28 and a half working days out of a 30 day month. Now, I I got an easy job, so I don't care. But you work 10 days out of a 30-day month. And then I cannot tell you, especially now that I'm old, when I see a fit 49year-old dude now, he looks like these guys look like they could play college football. And I talked to these guys. I I was at Thanksgiving a few years ago and it's like young. There was like a dude who's like 49 or something. I was like, "What are you firing?" "Oh, how's that going?
I'm retire next year." I'm like, "You're fit, you're trim, healthy, young." Yeah.
Yeah. retire. If I wait a year, I get full benefits and full pay. It's like, all right, you just retire. And by the way, you work 10 days. It's a pretty [ __ ] good job in that department.
I'll tell you, >> on the other side of that, Ace, you got to admit that it would be uh pretty traumatic in certain ways, pulling dead bodies out, you know, really hard job. Yeah, >> I I couldn't be uh paramedic is a different thing for me. And now that there's homeless people [ __ ] dying everywhere, that's a different thing.
and starting fires in the hill. Um, but um, you know, it's funny.
Everybody who works in Hollywood, every executive, every producer, they all used to be lawyers. No one used to be a fireman cuz it's a good [ __ ] job.
Lawyers stressful and shitty and they hate everybody and they got an ulcer and they [ __ ] can't stand what they become kind of thing. I've never I it'd be interesting to think what is the I I am telling you the number one job is used to be a lawyer. That's why when you run into all these people like Mike August, you go, "Oh my gosh, what do you do? Show business. You book shows, do live shows." Yeah. Used to be a lawyer though. Don't [ __ ] with him.
Everything's like used to be a lawyer.
Used to be a lawyer. Lawyer's the number one. I've spent a ton of money, trained my ass off, went to a ton of school, passed the bar, and I'm not doing it anymore. So, that's like the number one job. Doctor, there's a little there's a fair bit of doctor. There's a fair bit of used to be school teacher, a lot of used to teach history, used to be a cop, there's fair amount of used to be a cop. Never hear the used to be a fireman because it's a good kick.
you settle in and get that pension >> 10 days you average.
>> Chillion dollar nations. Are you kidding me?
>> Yeah. So, my whole thing is I don't know and they get paid. Okay. And I I don't I don't need them to have a raise. But what I would say is look for the price of the bullet train that'll never be completed. We could have had aqueducts and a system and fire hydrants that worked and alert systems and >> could have paved over Merrcett. We could have had planes that dropped the chemical retardant and everything like why don't we just take money from somewhere and put it into the system.
That's fine. Okay.
Next up, uh Trump says Diddy asked for a presidential pardon after receiving a 50-month sentence and he calls him Puff Daddy. I don't I do we even know why did he other like other than kind of being an [ __ ] or being a douche or whatever like this man act thing like somebody from Nevada he brought a prostitute in from Vegas from Henderson to [ __ ] his girlfriend like that's a thing.
>> Yeah.
>> That that's really there's a man act. I mean, shouldn't the man act which was originally I don't know look the the man act but I basically I think uh you know the dominant black heavyweight Johnson or J was it Jim >> Jack Johnson?
>> Jack Johnson. Yeah. Yeah.
>> Yeah. Jack Johnson. I think the man act was like >> partially Yeah. He was like bringing prostitutes all over the country with the Right.
Okay. I love that brothers haven't really slowed their roll in all these years. You know what I mean? But as soon as Southwest Airlines came into our our our nation's conscious, >> yeah, >> we should have got rid of the man act if if you for for 89 bucks. if you can fly the [ __ ] in from Henderson.
He used to drive these chip people, you know, he'd throw them in the rumble seat of the Duesenberg or the Stuts Bearcat and drag people around in from state to state. But if I'm on the [ __ ] phone with my lady friend who lives in Henderson for tax purposes and I just go, "Hey Melinda, you think you can fly out and [ __ ] my girlfriend and allow a watch or whatever it is." That that's a man act thing there. That's not Jack Johnson. Yeah, >> the man acts a federal law criminalizing interstate foreign blah blah blah uh passed in 1910. The law was a response early 19 fears of industrialization, urbanization, immigration.
Where's the Jack Johnson part of the man act? The act is a response. Let's see if you can figure out Jack. Anyway, >> it was put in place >> to buzz successful black men and so maybe >> it was used as intended. There's precedent for this, but >> but it's also okay. You know, his his team is arguing later on to Oh, here we go. Jack Johnson was convicted in 1913 for violating the man Act, also known as the White Slave Traffic Act, the federal law prohibiting the transport of women across state lines for immoral purposes.
Despite the law's stated goal combating prostitution and trafficking, the prosecution of the first black heavyweight champion was widely seen as racially mo motivated due to public outrage over his relationships with white women.
>> Yeah.
>> Johnson fled the country before his sentence, living in exile for several years before returning to the US and serving his prison term. 2018 Donald Trump is issued aostimous pardon for Johnson acknowledging the racially motivated injustice of >> so PD was like hey remember he did for Jack Johnson how about this brother right over here so PD's a bad dude but I don't think you should go to prison for just being a horrible person you if we're going to bring up >> breaking some laws >> yeah if you're going to bring up some charges and bring up some charges and this just didn't >> that's what that's what his team plans on arguing at the appeal. I I read that um that the the whole point of um >> the the the sentence was they were trying to prosecute it or charge him with other crimes that didn't get you know found guilty on. So the judge is using his discretion. On the other hand, you know, four years, while it may suck, it's >> Oh, big picture, Diddy did. Okay.
>> Yeah.
>> Uh, and also he's got time served, right? I mean, he's got a year worth of time served. Oh, diddy saying uh white men like Trump need to be Oh. Oh, we got Diddy. Uhoh. Yeah, Diddy's not going to help his case here. If this man is elected, we're not standing by no more getting killed. We're not scared of anybody standing up and standing by. We're on the verge of a a race war.
>> He's not going to stand by. All right.
Well, Trump should let him rot in front of prison in that case. All right. By the way, so Jack Johnson uh got in trouble because he brought his own prostitute, one that he already had a relationship with across state lines >> to his fight.
>> Uh so they used it. Yeah. Was definitely racially motivated in him. But he got aostumous pardon. Guess who pardoned him?
>> Trump.
>> 2018.
>> Yeah. Well, he read that. But yeah. Um I wonder, you know, fellas, I'll tell you what I like to do. Dawson, you go back and forth. You go to Vegas every once in a while. Mhm.
>> Sometimes you get a lady friend when you're uh >> depends on the price, but yeah, >> when you're coming back from Vegas with your lady friend, you should go, I don't think we should travel in the same car.
And then they go, why? And then you go, well, there's the man act. And then they go, well, what's that for? Well, you can't take prostitutes across. And then they go, I'm not a prostitute. You go, okay, >> you dropped her off at Buffalo Bill.
>> Listen, not technically. Yes, you're not technically a prostitute, but you've, you know, definitely been with some dudes and I just don't want to chance it. You understand? And I'm just going to drop you off at Whiskey Pets and you can thumb into North Hollywood.
>> Yeah. Just thumb it from terribles.
>> Yeah. Yeah. I'll drop you off. They they have 57 pumps. No waiting. Speaking of pumping, >> you've done a lot of that. And again, what is a professional prostitute?
What's an amateur prostitute? I don't want to find out.
So, I'm just going to drop you off at Whiskey Pets. You thumb it to my place in North Hollywood and uh you know, no hard failings. I'll see you in seven hours.
>> Well, the ride home would be more peaceful.
>> All right. What else you got?
>> All right, I got that AI could wipe out a 100 million US jobs from nurses to truck drivers over the next decade, according to a report by Bernie Sanders.
Um yeah, the uh analysis, ironically based on chat GBT findings, found that new tech could erase jobs from a wide range of fields, including white and blue collar jobs. Uh 40% of registered nurses could lose their job, 47% of truck drivers, 64% of accountants, 65% of teaching. Hold on.
>> Nurses in the 40s.
>> Nurses in the 40s. Yeah.
>> Truck drivers in the 40s, too.
>> Yep.
>> And then teachers in the 60s.
>> Yeah. Listen, uh, in a in a way I like it because it forces a trade. It's like you got you got to think about a trade, man. And if you got a young son or a daughter, you got to think about a trade because I >> in all my trade experience, >> you know, the distance we are from putting data in a computer and have have it do the accounting or the tax burden for the following quarter, whatever that it could figure out that the the self-driving car, stuff like that that the you know go into the apartment building, demo out the kitchen, you know, install hang the drywall, tape and mud, tape and mud, you know, put the tile down, grout the tile, install the new cabinets, install the plumbing. Like we're hundred years away from that robot, you know, like we got robots and they go, "That robot can dance and that robot can jog and stuff like that." But you know the [ __ ] that these guys are doing, you know, in in installing just something like like like a very basic part of plumbing would be installing a uh garbage disposal. That that's kind of easy DIY stuff.
We're a long ways away from a robot being able to show up and install a garbage disposal. Not to mention, you know, roofing and and also lots of sort of editorial decisions you have to make sort of there. It's not just all about move one thing to the next place. Um, speaking of that, and um, uh, Andrew has a picture of it. I I sent him an an update. They are uh going to they are starting on one lot I've seen in Malibu. They're starting to do the the quesons into the ground. And I went by and I looked at the length of the cage the quesan cage a round cage probably two foot around looks like watts towers or something.
Um, and if you go to the next picture, it's all rebar. I don't know why it's purple, but that [ __ ] is six stories >> and it gets dropped into the ground and it gets it goes all the way down all the way into the earth. Like I I don't know that people know I think I sent you a couple of these, Andra. Um, I don't know that people know how far into the ground, >> yeah, >> this [ __ ] goes.
>> Is that earthquake proof? That's the reason for this?
>> Uh, I don't know.
>> This is more with the I I I don't know.
But if you look at this picture, you can go to am.com. These are the cages that get dropped into the hole after the queson drill drills into the earth.
These things ain't 20 ft long. No, >> these things go off into the sunset. And by the way, they don't stick out of the earth. They go all the way in. So you got to drill all the way down. Um >> and they drop this filled with concrete.
>> Yes. But here's the whole thing.
Um remember Dawson, I'm not going to uh I'm not going to put you on the spot here, but remember the famous Joel McCale rant about him went in a swimming pool. Yes.
And I was went my house back built in 1929 with nothing >> nothing >> nothing >> nothing >> the nothing rant. Now if you can find the nothing rant will accept it. But here's what I'm saying.
Every house that's burnt down now that was built there in the 40s and 50s sat on telephone poles that got pounded 10 ft into the ground. Literally a telephone pole that was 11 in around made of wood, dipped in creassote, like dipped in tar, and then a pile driver just whacked it into the ground and whacked it in the ground >> 14 ft.
>> And we regulated ourselves into drilling to the center of the earth to dip and and then the house was built on top of those pylons >> like the Malibu pier.
>> Wait a minute.
Andrew, what year is the Malibu Pier?
The Malibu Pier must be from the 40s and 50s. It's all just pylons pounded into the ground out in the ocean. Yeah.
>> Malibu Pier's been there for 65 80 years. All right. So, the point is >> the the the point is this. They used to do it and then they build the house in 1947 and in 2025 the house was fine. But then the fire took it and now they go, "You must build Hitler's bunker." And they go, "But the house that was here before was on telephone poles that just got pounded in the ground." And they go, "We're going to need 20 quesons all going 30 feet into bedrock." And those [ __ ] things.
>> Yeah. Who wrote this law? The rebar lobby. When you stand when you when you stand under a six-story building and you look up to a six-story building, that's how far this stuff goes in. And by the way, that just gets you to the soil line. That gets you to that gets you to the ground. You could, by the way, you could spend three million bucks drilling, dropping yards and yards and yards of concrete pumped into everything pumped in, and you could put 20 of these things all around all according to the what what the uh what the engineer wanted, and blah blah blah. I could show up with a flathead shovel.
You could have $2 million in this. I could show up with a flathead shovel and just shovel some sand over the top. the the top looks like you took a trash can lid from a trash can just put on the ground. I should and you could walk up and go, "Well, they haven't started work here yet." Like you couldn't even see it.
What those things what it would take to move that house with those 70 ft into the ground with hundreds of yards of concrete and by the way they're all going to get tied together with these huge grade beams. I mean, you are talking indestructible. Indestructible.
And my whole thing is, here's my whole thing. Okay, you have to upgrade from the telephone poles. Malibu Pier 1905.
IT'S STILL THERE. IT'S ALL WOOD. There's no quesons. It's just wood in the ground. Just like every one of these houses was just wood in the ground. So, here's here's what I'm saying. Here's all I'm saying.
You would like to upgrade. Okay, fine.
We didn't have the technology back then.
Now we do have the technology. We have the rebar. We have the queson rigs. We can pump the concrete. What you're saying is reasonable. So you making this new structure five times stronger than the old structure. I'll abide by that. It's going to take extra time. It's going to cost money. But fine, we'll make it five times stronger or 10 times stronger. But you are building this 2,000 times stronger. 2,000 times. I mean, the difference between a telephone pole being pounded into the sand 12 ft and sevenstory quesons littered all over the place with grade beams and rebar and pumped concrete. It's insane. It is so overkill that you don't. And so what happens is is people go >> it's a safety first kind of Yeah. It's a safety first but someone has to pay for that.
>> Yeah.
>> Like I mean meaning you could go I want to build a house and then someone could go >> I want 4 foot thick concrete walls in my house and you'd go yeah I don't want to pay for that. That that's going to cost too much. It's not worth it. Do you understand? You're making a house that could that could defeat an atom bomb.
Somebody is paying and the city doesn't pay for it. So the city engineer just goes, "Yeah, go ahead." Yeah, go. How far do you want to go into bedrock? 5T.
Make it 25 ft. Cuz they're not the one who's there drilling it and doing it.
It is if if this is what it if this, by the way, this is just on a lot in in Malibu. This is next to Grant Cardone's house. I was just walking last night and I saw it and then I got up this morning and I went there to take a picture like an insane man. But and I talked to the guys working the quesan rig and by it's not a fast process. You got to go down all the way down. Anyway, I talked to the guys and they were like, "Yeah, we're going about 70 ft each one of these." I'm like, "Okay, you're going to have three million bucks tied in to [ __ ] we can't see." I mean, I mean, they'll get the grade beams more and stuff, but before the first 2x4 piece of plywood, the first building piece of material, just what's in the ground, you have millions of dollars into the ground.
>> I don't understand the benefit. Like, >> if you're Here's the benefit against earthquakes. I I don't I don't get >> bureaucrats.
>> Yeah. No, I know. Everybody needs a job.
>> Well, the benefit is this.
I will never if I'm the engineer, right?
And you you go, I want to engineer this thing. Could be a tool shed, you know, and I go, you go, this is just a 8 by8 tool shed. We don't need more than a 2x4 roof rafter or ceiling joist. It's nothing, you know. And I go, hm, >> yeah, okay. Uh, make it a 2x10. And you go, oh, that's way over for what I need.
It doesn't need it doesn't have a second star. And I go, "Yeah, let's make it a 2x10." And you go, "But that that's going to cost a lot of money. That's going to take more time." Whatever. In my world, >> if it's 2x4s and somebody falls through the roof, I'm getting sued.
>> Yeah.
>> I'll just go 2x10 and then I'm covered.
>> Yeah.
>> So, I'll go maximum and then I'll be covered.
>> So, that's what they do. They just go, "You want to do quesons 20 feet into the ground?" You go, "Yeah." They go, "Make it 80 ft."
>> And the word >> and they just walk away. They don't if they had to cut a check, they wouldn't do it.
>> I believe in La Hoya there were some examples where they didn't get down into the bedrock and they didn't really secure the foundation to the cliffs and and I I think some of those I think some of those resulted in some major lawsuits a long time ago.
>> It it can happen. But let's not forget every house, every other house that burnt down was on telephone poles across from the 1905 telephone pole pier called the Malibu Pier. And now you got these cages and it's going to be 200 grand a cage to drill it, drop it, form it, fill it with concrete and that just gets you to the dirt. It it literally just gets you to the dirt.
>> And then conversely, you have like no new regulations on fire retardant and new, you know what I mean?
>> You can frame it out of wood after that.
>> Yeah. Exactly. Yeah.
>> Uh I >> So zero sense.
>> I don't know. But if somebody said, "Look, if if you were in uh Nevada and you're on a flat lot and somebody said, um, you I want to build a a 2,000t home here cuz these houses are only going to be 1,800 ft, 2,000 ft.
They're not going to be that big." And you said, "All right." And you go, "How much?" She go, "Well, you know, let's say the foundation, slab, footing, whatever, you're in for 75 grand or 100 grand or whatever. Then you can build the house for, you know, 400 bucks a square foot." But what if I said it's going to be 3 million bucks before you start building anything? There's going to be 300. It's going to be three million bucks buried in the ground before you start anything. That's the crazy part. So I didn't >> So it's like a nightclub. They're like charging $70 for a drink. That way they keep the the pores out.
>> I don't I I I just know it's city. It's bureaucracy. It only goes one way and it gets crazier and the engineering gets crazier and it just goes deeper and bigger and stronger and more unnecessary.
And I did it. I I did it when I pulled a permit to build my super garage. I had to put I don't know if you have that, but I had to do the case on there.
>> I got the the famous nothing.
Oh, okay.
>> Um, yes. If you want to do any building in this goddamn city, especially if it's up in the hills, you must either build the Hoover Dam. This is like 18 years ago, by the way. This is me 18 years ago ringing the bell.
>> Go ahead, sir. Hide behind the veil of safety. Hey, just playing it safe. Hey, better safe than sorry. Hey, we're in earthquake country. My house was built in 1929.
It has no reinforced concrete, no plywood because plywood wasn't invented.
No Simpson straps, no HDs, no hold downs, no all thread, NO JBOLTS, NO NOTHING. NOTHING.
NOTHING. THEY HAD SOME POOR Irish guy, poor foundation, and they set a house on it.
>> That was it. There was no straps and no TCO clips and no A35s and no continuous shear wall and no moments and no nothing. No nailing schedule, NO INSPECTOR, NO NOTHING. NOW >> NOTHING.
>> NOTHING.
>> NOTHING.
>> NOW THAT HOUSE WAS BUILT in 19 goddamn 29. And you know where it IS TODAY?
RIGHT. THE AIRPORT WHERE IT WAS PUT by all the dead people with no hold downs and no rebar and no bunkers and no straps and no nothing. WHY? IT'S AN EARTHQUAKE COUNTRY. IT'S AN EARTHQUAKE RIGHT NOW. WHAT DO YOU THINK THE H HOUSE DID YOU RETARDS? Did it sprout legs and run to Montana every time there was an earthquake and then and then hustle back and land on its foundation? By the way, this is uh >> uh at about 8:20 on a nice August morning in 2006.
>> YEARS, NO PYLONS, NO GRADE BEAMS, NO RETAINING WALLS, NOTHING.
>> I DON'T KNOW WHAT WE'RE YELLING ABOUT.
>> 80 GODAMN YEARS THROUGH EVERY GODDAMN EARTHQUAKE THIS CITY COULD PUT UP. AND IT HAS MOVED NOT AN INCH. But yet, when I add a garage onto the back of the house, it has to withstand an oil tanker running around and plowing into the side of it. Why? Because the structure that I build new can't be twice as strong as the existing house. Can't be 10 times as strong. Can't be a thousand times as strong. It must be 1 million times as strong as the structure that it's next to. Well, first off, WHAT DO YOU THINK?
WHERE DO YOU THINK I mean the kids are going to be when the next big one hits?
In the garage. Hey, kids. We've moved your cribs out to the garage so we can withstand a nuclear attack.
Listen, you idiots, make the goddamn thing stronger than the existing structure. Not a million times stronger.
>> All right, that went on for those screaming nothing. I recall >> I it it's it's literally like saying look uh we got a new car and it's a little bit safer and you go what's it got? Crumple zones and airbank. No, it's got a full roll cage and fire susp uh suppression system and it's a Kevlar tub and then you have to wear sixway harness. It's like my grandpa's Buick worked fine.
>> Not not need tank treads on that Buick.
Oh, I'm going to keep going over there and checking those. I'm going to find out how many yards they got to pump in every one of those holes. It is such >> What's the colossal >> deregulation? Would it have to be a complete regime change out of >> So, you got to convince you have to convince dumb chicks that less safe is better. Number one, >> good luck. Good luck explaining that to Katie Porter.
>> Right. Right. the same [ __ ] who shut schools down for two years because of school safety and teacher safety and well, okay, so your kid's healthy, but what if he gets it and brings it home because we all live with our grandparents, don't you know, because it's like Italy in 1939 here in Southern California? You're going to have to convince one of those [ __ ] that we should make it less safe. That we should we should go in a le less safety direction even though basically what you're saying is go to a thousand times overbuilt. Can we just go to 500 times overbuilt? But they would never go. So we're going less safety which optically they don't like.
>> No.
>> We're going with hey the rich guy cutting the checks is getting gouged. So it's Rich Whitey wants a break and less safety. That's strike one and two for those [ __ ] It's not like they ever cut a check. They just tell you to cut a check. And it would also get them to have to understand some like basic engineering and some basic economics and some basic decency. And that's all that's how the >> bridge too far, >> right? They're they're the people that blame Toyota for catalytic converter theft. So, they're not clear that you you have to you have to convince them.
And then something on the Coastal Commission and it's a bunch of angry [ __ ] who are, by the way, pissed at rich people who are building on the >> Well, if you could reframe it as like a housing crisis solution to bring the leg regulations down, I I think that could win some voters.
>> Yeah. If I told them my transitioning mixed race son/daughter wept openly because of the depth of these quesons then maybe >> we got a clip will spread a lot of misinformation a lot of chaos a lot of confusion it's just a very dangerous thing I I I say it with the utmost respect some of it's good and some of IT'S NOT THAT'S THE POINT >> YOU KNOW IT it listen we all have different views here >> um and when you say you know misinformation, disinformation. We could go back to CO when >> he's connecting circumcisionism.
>> May I finish?
>> I'll pause it there for a second. First off, they hate CO talk. They [ __ ] hate co talk cuz it's 5 minutes old and they're all [ __ ] liars or stupider or liar.
>> Uh she brings up CO and you go into circumcision.
>> Um >> also, you know, they go all the misinformation like like it's that thing. It's that thing. It's like, listen, what happened to Charlie Kirk was wrong. I disagree with everything that came out of his mouth, but it was still wrong. It's like, what do you disagree with? You disagree with everything that came out of his mouth.
Everything. Everything.
>> Everything. Yeah.
>> Everything. So when he said take care of your family and raise your kids or disagreement with that, you didn't disagree with they do it all the time. I just disagree. How much miss What was Look, we just had a pandemic. We just had a pandemic. ladies of the view. So, it's easy to keep score. Let's just take the [ __ ] he said about CO versus the stuff you guys said about CO and we'll get a batting average. Okay. So, no one is batting a thousand, but let's see who has a higher batting average and I will put my net worth on him. So, what are you talking about? All the misinformation. I love it. They go all the stuff. All the stuff. Yeah. No one's going to be perfect in their batting average. His is much higher than yours.
Okay, but let her finish. Sorry.
>> May I finish please?
>> Uh when people Fouchy people were saying when you get the vaccine you cannot transmit CO it will stop COVID and that was disinformation misinformation.
>> We were also still learning about it. It was a novel virus encountered before cuz now the doctors will acknowledge that and Dr. Fouchy has a medical So there Dr. Fouchy has a medical degree. That's right. That's why he was able to do gain of function in a Wuhan lab. Chris Corollola does not have a medical degree. So she wouldn't be able to do gain of fun function research in a Wuhan lab behind people's backs. And she wouldn't need to be pardoned for that reason either. So I first I love the medical degree. Yes, everyone who was either wrong about CO or lied about CO had a medical degree that you guys threw in our face. There's also many people with medical degrees that were correct that you shunned and said need to be deplatformed. So, I'm not sure how this medical degree part works, ladies of the view, but they as soon as you bring up co we didn't know. We didn't know. We didn't know. You never said you didn't know. You said you knew.
>> Yeah. So, it's stupid or liar. In his case, Fouchy was lying. But I love the backtrack of we're [ __ ] [ __ ] and we don't know anything. And by the way, then why should we listen to you when you make decrees? Okay, cuz your argument is why you listening to me? So, so be like, >> you and I are driving to the club and I go, Rudy, I got this.
I've been to this club a million times.
Go right up here on Hoover Street. And then to take that straight away to Adam's Avenue and then we'll go down to Martin Luther King and then at some point we're out of town.
>> Yeah. Well, Adam, I I know you have your way, but listen, my like I I saw a shortcut through that ditch.
>> Yeah. Okay. We're in the middle of the bario. We're not near the club. And then you go, "What the fuck?" And I go, "Why are you listening to me?"
>> Yeah.
>> I don't know.
>> I don't have a degree. I I don't have a driver's license.
>> I'm not. Yes. I well because I spoke with authority for a long time and I told you where to go the whole time and at the end when you say you didn't know where you were going my excuse is why are you listening to me cuz I don't know anything.
>> I WAS STILL LEARNING THE WAY DURING THAT TIME YOU WERE STILL learning the way.
>> But you were trying to get people deplatformed, fired from their jobs, thrown out of the fire department, lose their pension, uh locked out of their jobs. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. BUT YOU DIDN'T KNOW ANYTHING. But you didn't know anything. Okay. So, you shut the beaches and you shut outdoor dining, but you didn't know any. And okay, what else don't you know for the next >> crisis that comes up? Okay. And and then are you basically saying then we shouldn't listen to you because you don't know [ __ ] and you talk with authority. And by the way, you didn't end anything with a question mark as exclamation point. Everything was I know. Remember Fouchy was science. You didn't believe in him. You missed out on the science part. So the I know crowd now backpedals and again their excuses were imbeciles and we're incompetent and we didn't know anything. That's the best we got. Yeah. Okay. All right [ __ ] We're not listening to you then.
>> Yeah, >> there's more. I think there's >> you can go back like 10 seconds. I do I do love when you bring up COVID and MISINFORMATION from before >> cuz now the doctors will acknowledge that >> and Dr. time they were censoring Bobby because Bobby said where's the science to show us this and there wasn't any but people attacked him and said you you're wrong. So it's like let's let's take a step back. I know that's your opinion and that's okay. Will spread a lot.
>> Yeah. Well, you know, a lot of the other stuff that they talked about in this that I love Cheryl for because it's it feels like Cheryl's starting to her winds are starting to change a little bit as time is going on and maybe she's sort of seeing that her political party is full of [ __ ] >> I think so. Also, she needed to navigate Hollywood. Yeah.
For a long time now. Now, >> okay, so here's here's um Larry David's a [ __ ] nut job. He's a political lefty insane person. like he may be let's see he would be left of Mark Ruffalo or or maybe tied in the political nut job insanity global climate change just [ __ ] stick [ __ ] super hard left so >> he's great in task >> your boss is a super hard left dude super hard and you don't know when you're coming back for the last season.
>> So, what are you going to do? Put on a MAGA hat and stroll down the boardwalk at Venice Beach? I don't think so.
Hollywood people are [ __ ] and they know they know where the [ __ ] bread's coming from and they just shut up and suck a dick because they're cowards. So, they she had >> she wasn't going to upset the apple cart over there at HBO, especially with Larry David. Yeah. So, she had to just shut up. Now she's in charge. Yeah. Her man's in the catbird seat. It used to be shut up and don't piss off Larry David because he's a [ __ ] lunatic and a leftist. Now it's season the season's wrapped. That's it. No more curb your enthusiasm. Oh, and my guy is uh Trump's guy and Trump's president. So now she's like, "Fuck y'all."
>> Yeah.
>> See what I'm saying?
>> Why doesn't it work the other way though? Like why how come guys like us can look at Larry David and go absolute comedic genius. We can sit and watch Kirby enthusiasm. Somebody who's on the left can't watch something that you put out or like a uh Tyler Fiser or or something that the Daily Wire puts out.
You know they they did that movie a few years ago. What was it called? Something with the balls something. I'm I'm still But why is it that >> that the old male team transgender said they going to go play play basketball against the girls?
>> Yeah. Why is it that we have no problem going the other way and watching people who >> Why are we so much better than everyone?
I'll tell you why. Basically what I'm saying. I want you to cut me off at minute 22.
>> Um they do this thing all the time. And I I believe that they hurt their argument. Cuz when people dig into me, they go, "He said this, he said that. He did this, did that, and they'll go the unfunny Adam Corolla, blah blah blah."
Now, there is no way of units to measure funny, but I'm funnier than all these people. You can't say that I'm not funny because that's what I've been doing for 30 years and I haven't missed a day. So, the you know it so you can't like you can go um you can say you know I can go [ __ ] LeBron James.
He's a race hustler and that guy sucks at basketball because now I seem like an idiot. Yeah, >> because he clearly doesn't suck at basketball and I clearly don't suck at comedy otherwise I wouldn't do it for as long as I have done it. And by the way, pre-politics I was considered funny by the same people. So did you just I you decided I wasn't funny at some point. So they have to work an emotional component into everything which is the unfunny, not funny, not going to watch that, you know, versus a separation. Because I would say about John Stewart, let's say, I would go, well, I disagree with a lot of his political stances, but he's a good dude. He pays taxes. He loves his country, and he's good to his kids. All right. Now the other side is is I disagree with the political stances and he's Hitler, >> right? And and the one that's always weird is I'll go his policy, the Ronda Sanders's policy of cruelty.
That's what he is. He's an evil dog catcher from a Disney movie from the 60s. Right.
>> Cats and bags.
>> Right. Right. Um e he's cruel. HE HATES KIDS AND HE'S CRUEL. YEAH, THAT'S RONDA SANTIS. HE'S CRUEL. YOU [ __ ] IDIOTS.
Just say you disagree. And also you hurt your argument when you start piling on.
>> Mhm.
>> You know, it's that sort of when you were a kid, you go, you know, some point the guy beat you verbally and you'd go, "Oh, fine, BUT I'M NOT. YOU'RE FAT."
IT'S LIKE, OKAY, YOU'VE been defeated.
You're because you're arguing over something and now you just had to yell out that the guy >> was fat. So, they can't do it because the argument isn't enough. They lose the argument. They're not going to win the argument. So they have to add on the extra spiritual moral things of being cruel or evil or racist or bigot, homophobic, xenophobic. They have to tack on all the window dressing because the argument just based on the merits of the argument or the policy just that's not going to work >> because the numbers don't pencil out in that department. So then they have to go to this sort of cruelty department, you know. So you go, I don't think we should raise the minimum wage because you raise it to 20 bucks an hour as they did here in California and there's a lot of people out of work and a lot of businesses going under and a lot of kiosk now and automation and robotation and robotin and all the stuff that we're going to get rid of. We're going to put these people out of work and then you can't argue the numbers. You're not going to be able to argue the numbers. It's going to raise the price of the food.
Businesses are going to go out. They're going to start cutting back on staff and everyone's going to be part-time. No one for full time. All right. So, you can't make that argument. So, you say, "I believe mothers should get a living wage, and you're cruel for wanting to deny them and their children food." cuz you can't make an argument that works with the numbers. So, you start working the emotional side of it. And you'll see it when you argue with your kids. You know what's a kid say? What's a kid say >> who doesn't make the team >> who's nine who comes home from school?
Coach hates coach hates me. That's an emotional argument. Not you [ __ ] suck at baseball. It's coach hates me. Not if I worked harder and learned to hit a curve or whatever it is. It's coach hates me. Right. That's an emotional.
You just got an F in your history class.
What? The teacher has it out for me.
These are emotional arguments because you can't compete.
>> Yeah.
>> You're not writing the book reports.
You're not doing the homework. You're not doing the work. So everything boils down to this person's cruel, this person doesn't want families to eat this one.
You're making an emotional argument because your numbers aren't working in the in the stats department of the argument.
>> Yeah. The best Charlie Kirk videos are the ones where he talks people back into a corner and then they go, "You got a big head."
>> AND THEN THEY TURN AROUND AND run away.
I'VE SHOWED SO MANY PEOPLE THOSE VIDEOS and go cuz they would disagree with everything he would say for no reason.
It was just like, "I hate this guy." I go, "Well, do you love your family? Do you want peace? Do you want a nice community?" Yeah. Well, that's what this guy wants. You disagree on 20% of what he says. I know. All right, we have a video of uh Larry Larry David finding out on that show. This my I This is my favorite show. We just bring progressive rich white dudes and tell them their families own slaves.
>> This isn't AI, is it? This >> is just such an odd combination on my father's side of the of the Germany and and the South.
>> Yeah. Two places that we have fought against as a country.
>> Yeah. All right. Oh my goodness.
I hope no slaves show up on this.
>> Please turn the page.
>> Now, Larry, this is another part of the 18.
>> Oh. Oh, you did it. YOU DID IT. I KNEW IT.
I knew it.
Unbelievable.
>> Unbelievable.
>> Boy, >> that's unbelievable.
>> Oh boy. Oh boy. Name of THE SLAVE OWNER, HENRY BERNSTEIN. MY GREATGRANDFATHER WAS A SLAVE OWNER.
>> Ernestly bigot. Just ask >> one female age 17 mulatto.
>> Oh, professor. I'm so sorry.
You can see why my father didn't want to tell me anything about his family.
>> All right. So, there you go, Mr. Pas.
Yeah.
>> Okay. Can we just do this? I and and I mean it with the what's Larry David's net worth. Okay. Can we do something like this? They talk about reparations all the time. We argue about reparations.
>> And then some people go, "My family wasn't even in this country, you know, blah blah blah blah blah."
>> Okay. So, >> my kids' mom's family is all born in Italy. My dad's parents are born in Italy and nobody's known anything here but poverty. There's no slave owners with the Corollas. Were too new to this country. Like my kids have no slave owner reparation, anything. There's nothing there's nothing there.
>> Yeah. Well, you had slaves except for your mom bought them used at a garage sale.
>> Yes. She we'd go slave dumpster diving on the on Friday nights. She covered one of the sheet, which is import. That's what she do with her sofa. All right.
Larry David's net worth is $400 million.
He's 77 years old. So, he's not going to be able to spend that money with the time he's got left on this planet.
>> So, he and his party, and he's very progressive, are for reparations.
>> Sure.
>> And he has a history of slave ownership in his family. And so does Ben Affleck, whose net worth is 600 million. And so does Oh, who else did we talk about? We We talked about Andrew. Ben Affleck has this.
>> I'd love Oh, who was the other guy who was revealed? Oh, Sunonny Hawen. All right. From the view.
>> Wow. Yeah. Okay. So, you guys are all bleeding heart liberals and you're four reparations and your family has slave ownership and you're all multi-millionaires.
>> I don't have your money and my family has no history with this and I'm against reparations. So, I'm 0 for three. You guys are three for three.
>> Why not cough up some cash? Why not just get that side of the aisle who is for reparations? And here's all you here.
It'll be easy.
If you're for reparations and there's a history of slave ownership and your net worth is more than $30 million, then you cut a check. That'll be a substantial amount of money. I mean, look, Larry David's net worth could go from 300 or sorry, 400 million to 375.
It's not going to put a dent in his bank account. And there's Sunonny Hawson can cut a check. Ben Affleck can cut a check. They can all cut a check. And then they could get >> what they want, which is reparations.
This is Hold on. Do you want reparations? Yes. Okay. Good news.
>> Yeah.
>> Great news. Great news. Your family owns slaves and you're rich. Mhm.
>> So, you cut a check. What about Corolla?
Corolla's family didn't own slaves. He doesn't have your net worth and he's not for reparations.
>> So, cut a check, Mr. reparation guy, who never will cut a check, by the way. But it's pretty easy. Why isn't some Why isn't Jasmine Crockett pitched this?
Like, why isn't Let's just look. Let's see if you own slaves. See what your net worth is and let's do it.
>> Yeah. Aren't we paying for our white privilege, though? Isn't that Yeah, that's what we have to do. every time I travel.
>> I know. You know, man, I I got pulled over on my way to a gig the other night and uh the police officer let me go with a warning and when I called somebody, I was on the phone telling them about it and they go, there's that white privilege kicking in. I was like, no, no, that's the respectful hands up on the steering wheel where they can see them. Sir, do you mind if I reach into my glove box and grab my registration?
Sir, I'm going to reach around and grab my wallet. All the whole time being incredibly respectful at the end of it.
And it WAS A LATINO COP. GUY WALKS UP AND GOES, "Hey man, just keep it slow."
in these small towns. I said, "No problem, officer. Have a great night."
And that that's how you get out. It's not because he walked in was like, "Oh, Whitey, keep moving, bud."
>> Well, by the way, there aren't I mean, the majority of cops in LA or, you know, black or brown or women or something.
It's not that good old It's not like Murf, the redhead from >> Union 76 comes out. You don't know who Murf is?
>> Murf. You find me a commercial from Murf of Union 76. That's the whitest dude.
Hound dog, too, right?
>> Oh, >> Murf, >> didn't he?
>> I don't know if Murf had a hound dog. He was the friendly guy. By the way, they would run these state these commercials in LA. And that's what I thought going to the gas station was going to be like when I got older and got a license, got a car. I didn't know it'd be the steely Middle Eastern GUY GOING, "NO, NO, CAN'T. NO, NO, NO.
Pump three. NO, NO PUMP FOR YOU. NO PUMP. NO, I didn't know it was that behind the bulletproof glass. I thought Murf was going to come out going to come out and go, "Can I check your oil?"
>> Always have a rag wiping oil off his hand. Yeah.
>> Murf was the whitest dude who was the most helpful guy.
>> The noise would go off. Bing bing the bell when you'd go over the air hose that would alert Murf. Murf would come out.
>> Check that tire pressure. Check that oil.
>> Check that oil. Yeah. Yeah. Pop that hood. Your PSI is a little low on that front left, Mr. Higgins. Don't worry about it though. Old Gus has got you.
>> Gus has got you. Murf Union 76 commercial. That's ah this one. That's the whitest guy ever.
Murf 76 station. Here it is.
>> Volkswagen Bug.
>> Yep.
>> My engine's missing and my wife won't talk to me.
>> A newlywed. You're off to a pretty rough start.
>> He said he had the car tuned up.
>> WELL, I DID. HE DID.
>> Then why are we here instead of that honeymoon lodge?
>> Somebody probably pulled a spark plug wire. It's an old wedding drink. Turn it off.
>> Okay, start her up.
>> You saved my marriage. Well, getting people off to a smooth start is what the spirit of 76 is all about.
>> That's funny, dude.
>> I um I had an old I had an old Volkswagen.
>> Well, and there was a 76 at the corner of my house down the street and I would take it there to this old white guy who would fix it. And every single time he'd fix it, he'd look at me and hand me a bill and say something like, "30 bucks.
Never get rid of this car."
>> Mhm. Yeah. You can fix it. Well, you can almost fix yourself. By the way, is sabotaging someone's engine an old wedding? I feel like that's a that's a cruel joke. You know, they're by the side of the road, it's at night, >> they're both buzzed. You know what I mean? They get hit by semitr >> guys hook hopped up on trucker speed.
They get cleaned out. Like that's it's kind of I mean tying cans to the back of the car, so be it.
>> But [ __ ] with the distributor cap and pulling a spark plug wire and making it miss, >> that's that's a little cruel.
>> I'm sorry. Hey, I banged your wife in the in the broom closet on your wedding night. You know those old wedding gag?
Yeah.
>> So Murf just went down there and fixed it. But uh Murf is who that's who I thought I was going to be dealing with in Los Angeles. Not >> scary foreign guy. WHAT THIS IS? NO.
JUST screaming at me through the bulletproof glass.
>> SMART PLUG WIRE.
>> HOLD MY TRACK.
>> All right. You got one more?
>> Yeah. Let's do uh Leticia James, New York's top law enforcer, is housing a cophating fugitive relative with a lengthy felony rap sheet who was twice arrested for assaulting police officers uh at one of her Virginia homes.
According to court documents, >> her her great step or no, her great granddaughter niece. So, what is she?
>> Grand niece.
>> Her grand niece >> has a crazy rap like felon record. A rap sheet.
>> Yeah.
>> But it's also it includes >> getting pulled over four times in the same day. Like it's it's literally it's like >> I just saw this. I was like, I It's so easy to avoid cops. It's so easy not Oh, no. It's easy not to interact with cops.
It's easy. You just don't do [ __ ] that that attracts them.
>> Wait, do we have the clip or or was it I heard I heard it all. Well, you can lay it out. I don't know. There was no Yeah, there was I didn't see a clip, but talking about her grand niece, uh Nikia Nikia Thompson, 36, wanted for uh failing to complete the terms of her parole following a 2011 arrest in Winston Salem. In that case, she was charged with malicious conduct by a prisoner, a felony, along with assault of a government official, and resisting a public officer. But then, uh, keep going. Uh, this was, uh, 2020. Since she's been living in Virginia in the house that Leticia James owns, she's been charged of possession of burglary tools, contributing to the delinquency of a minor, and grand lararseny, including the summer before in July, uh, Thompson was hit with four citations in a single day, including driving 80 m an hour in a 55 mph zone and stopping her vehicle improperly on a highway. It was just the year before that that she was ticketed once again for doing 80 and a and a 55 and got a summon for improper child restraint.
>> Yeah. Um so Earnestly Bigot wants to know if she got her together with the ta the guy's been tased a million times. I think you'd find >> at some point their kids are going to be impervious that pepper spray and >> tasing. Mhm.
>> Um, well, here's Okay, let me I will I will I will put uh I will put this in perspective and then we'll talk to uh Senator John Kennedy. The thing about the lawfare and the turnabout, is it fair play? And then he's using the legal system to go after and so on and so forth. I I will just paint a picture for everyone cuz Leticia James ran on doing that to him that she ran on saying I'll find something and take Trump down.
Okay, which is an insane thing to say to my friend. Okay, so turnabout is fair play and this isn't anything and this is a nothing burger. Yeah, technically she did it, but so does half of America and whatever. Whatever. Okay, I'll tell you what this is. This is basically you're the Oakland Raiders and you just got screwed by the tuck rule and it's [ __ ] and you don't know what it is and you don't even know why, but you just lost the game because of Tom Brady and some rule that we didn't even know about, but they're going to the Super Bowl and you're going home because of the tuck rule. And now it's a new game and you got the ball and the Patriots everything. They can smell gunpowder.
They can smell cocaine. It's not like they know gunpowder or cocaine, but they can find it. Yeah.
>> And they could find >> what cancer has a smell. Like tumors have a smell. Everything has a smell.
Everything comes with a smell. The veneerial disease comes with a smell.
>> The dog who's already right there.
>> You know, a medium-sized dog. Pow. Yeah.
>> Right there.
>> You know what I mean? Could sus it out pretty quick what was going on down there.
>> Now, I don't know if you thought it out.
I know.
>> You know that that's actually a a sneaky kind of genius way you could get that off cuz you know you get a cute dog and people love cute dogs especially women.
>> Oh, she goes to rub it but it's sniffing around if it a certain sound you know I ain't [ __ ] this [ __ ] >> Well that's I was thinking of that more for parties you know as people enter you know what I mean but the dog starts chasing its own tails like oh right this way miss you probably enjoy this side of the party a little better.
>> You know what I mean? Yeah, >> that's something to think about. But is there is there a Fouchy type who's at the head of this movement?
>> You know, is there a face to it?
>> Uh I I don't know that we want to put a human face to it. I I I you know, I think the dog should be the face.
>> The dog. Okay. The dog, you know, the bear. Smokey the the bear.
>> Smart. Yeah. So that way uh Yeah.
>> And do we have a type of dog that we think might suit this? You know, cuz they're schnowzers and St. Bernard's, you know.
I'd like to be a cute dog.
>> A cute dog. But it's got to be medium size cuz it's got to be right there. You know what I mean?
>> Right. I think the dog should be appropriate to the person.
>> Well, I listen. Uh Lassie was a collie.
Yes.
>> And it was an attractive dog and the right height. Yeah.
>> You know, perfect snatch height.
I don't even know why. You know, maybe that's why Lassie was last.
>> Lassie would be too big for a [ __ ] woman. So then we'd have to Taco Bell dog.
>> We'd have to get We'd have to get the Chihuahua for the [ __ ] That's what I'm saying. The dogs got to fit the woman. I don't know if I am not sure if I want to have sex with a [ __ ] >> You know, my podcast partner and I talked about this. I couldn't do it. You could >> And I've seen some cute midgets, but it's just something about the the the the I just it gives me the heebie-jebies, >> right? You know, it's like >> it would make your dick look bigger.
>> I mean, on the positive side, >> you know what I mean?
>> Confidence. Yeah.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. I I uh like I like drums, but >> Yeah.
>> That's I can't drum at a [ __ ] >> No, I get it. I like drumats more than wings. I feel like in a way that makes me soft.
>> Yeah, I I hate flats.
>> Does that make me soft?
>> No, that makes you a man.
>> Liking drumats more than wings.
>> Drumats. Yeah. I feel it's >> I got a thing about breaking bones.
>> It's weird. But I I like I like drums and I and I I like a Hawaiian pizza and I feel LIKE THAT MAKES ME >> OH, >> THAT MAKES ME A [ __ ] YOU SEE WHAT I'M SAYING?
>> OH, I'M A NEW YORKER. THAT IS BLASPHEMOUS.
>> RIGHT. That's what I'm saying. But I admit it. I admit it. But I like drums.
>> Where you from originally?
>> North Hollywood.
>> Oh, okay.
>> We didn't have drumats or pizza or anything, but we didn't have anything to eat. But I I feel like it's we I I know you support the drumat. I like the drumat much better, but I feel like I'm not authentic. I'm not keeping it real or something like that.
>> Oh, you're good. You're good with the drumat. The pineapple on pizza. That's sacrilegious.
>> Okay. All right. Batting 500 here.
>> Yeah.
>> So, we go with a collie.
And I think we need to have a female dog because that helps. You know what I mean? We'll be not accused >> a female dog. Women cover up for each other. So >> Oh, the dog could be helping him out.
>> So the [ __ ] might help the [ __ ] >> Yeah. Yeah. So you couldn't be with a a [ __ ] or a dwarf or what?
>> No, no, no, no. I like I like really grown [ __ ] Adult grown [ __ ] I'm not saying midgets aren't grown, but I'm just saying like >> some you want to grab on to something.
>> Yeah. I just I don't I don't want to feel like if she's sitting on my dick and I'm standing up, >> she'll stay there.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I uh listen, I feel like we've been henpacked into some sort of world where we're supposed to go like, "Yeah, well, you know, if the guy was trans, I and I could be with a trans, you know, like we just the [ __ ] like I could be with that." I'm I'm sort of like nah that there's enough >> able-bodied women around. I'd like to get through that.
>> You know, that's like when I when I >> once I got through all of that.
>> Yeah. You know, I would I would hear people say, uh, you know, thing about Hollywood is, you know, guys when you're famous and you're rich and you're successful, Allah, Brad Pitt, Denzel, they've gone through so much [ __ ] they get bored and that's why they probably start [ __ ] with men. It's like, listen, man, I will do a world global tour before I go down that road. There's [ __ ] in Bucharest I haven't touched.
So, I'mma never get that bored.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. I That's >> That is always my Richard Gear theory.
Yeah, >> he's married to Cindy Crawford. You know, Cindy Crawford's like 27. They're married.
>> Yeah.
>> He's married to the best looking woman on the planet.
>> One of the best women.
>> One of the best looking women on the planet. At some point, you got to go gerbal.
>> You just said, "Where else you going?"
>> Oh, I I I [ __ ] a hostess from TGI Fridays and >> Glendale.
>> How much Cindy Crawford [ __ ] could you get before you went gerbble? Yeah, I'm going go through all the Hooters and all you're going through chains before I even think about a >> gerbble. Yeah, but yeah, there's that there's that thought the MC Jagger kind of thing like they've been through so many women they start drifting toward dude.
>> Yeah, I never had that.
>> I don't know. I I don't I don't think it it's like for me it's like saying, "Oh, you've eaten so many great ribs and barbecue and steak. Why would you?" It's like, "Why?" Because this [ __ ] Saturday I want more ribs. That's why.
But you've eaten in a million. Yeah, I know I have. And I watch you 100 football games. I've drinking 1,000 IPAs. And guess what? Let's keep going.
I I there's a quote by one of the comedians that I used to uh be a fan of from back in the day, Cory Hulcom, where he said, "Men don't need Viagra. We need variety."
>> Yeah.
>> You know, um, very true.
>> Yeah. So, yeah, man. I I never understood the theory of how a man could just be with one woman. that to me. If you only really truly get one go around in this thing called life, why would you do that to yourself knowing how great [ __ ] is?
>> Well, it's not like you cement up the [ __ ] of the chick you've been with for 10 years.
>> No, you don't. But but after a while, I don't care how much you like a good Ruth Chris steak. You eat it over and over again. It It loses.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Just switch it up a bit.
>> I get it. You single?
>> Uh now I am.
>> Yeah. after that statement.
>> Yes. Yes.
>> After she hears the podcast.
>> Yeah.
>> All right. Should we do a little uh news?
>> Yeah. So, Tik Tok says it's going to challenge in court in quote unconstitutional law that could result in it being sold or banned in the US. Uh we talked about how it was being pushed and Biden said, "If it makes its way to my desk, I'm going to sign it." Well, it made its way to his desk. He signed it and he gave um Bite Dance, which owns Tik Tok, the Chinese owners that own Tik Tok, nine months to um sell the app or it's going to be blocked in the US.
>> I don't know anything about Tik Tok. I'm never on Tik Tok. I hear, you know, rots kids minds. I hear there's a version in China which is not like the version we have here. And I hear all sorts of bad things. But I am such a I'm so naive about all things digital and technical that I I don't have strongly formed thoughts other than it's probably bad for you to spend a lot of time on TikTok as a young person. You're much better off outdoors hiking doing [ __ ] >> Although that was once upon a time ago.
>> Yeah, I know. I know. But there'll be a movement. There's going to be a movement. There is a movement. I'm waiting for it. I mean, you know, listen, I'm 49, so, you know, I take it for what it is in terms of just way to kill time with mindless, sometimes good entertainment. Um, but I'm just glad that I didn't come up in the era of today where as a young person that's going to consume you.
>> Yeah. I think there's going to be What was that might Shyamalan movie where they're like living in the forest?
>> The village. I think there's going to be a village type movement. Like I mean there's already Amish and Shakers and Quakers and you know that sort of thing, but I think there's going to be a secular version of that where people are just going to go look no video games, no social media. We're going to live. We're going to harvest the land. You know, eventually one guy plays acoustic guitar is going to [ __ ] all of us.
>> That's how it starts.
>> Sounds familiar.
>> It's It always gets there, right? At some point the guy pick the guy who picks up the acoustic guitar is the guy who's going to [ __ ] your daughter at some point. That's how all cults work.
>> Yeah.
>> But I think we're going to get back to that. Like I think there's going to be villages and things, >> you know? I I I tell people all the time, I'm so proud. I'm an 80s baby.
Like I just came up in that era where you played outside, >> you know, video game. I've always been a video gamer, but the graphics weren't then what they are now, which I said to myself, if they were that then, I would have never left the house, right?
>> But, you know, how about the porn?
>> Well, yeah, now it's it's here. It's, you know, you don't have to go into the the back of a of a store somewhere and be sneaky with it, >> you know. It's it's literally in the palm of your hand.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. So, uh it's the blessing and the curse, man. There are some things technology-wise I go awesome that we have today. But then I look at other things and I go, it's terrible.
>> Right.
>> There's no anonymity at all.
>> Well, I I every I guess every innovation kind of has that. Every, you know, the gun >> can be good. The gun can be evil. You know, nuclear, you got nuclear power.
You know, people don't realize like you can take, and I'll screw it up a little, but an isotope or nuclear, whatever, the size of a softball and run a battleship for like 10 years.
>> That's crazy. No diesel, no coal, no nothing coming out of the pipe, you know, but uh steam.
>> Yeah, >> it's a blessing. And then and then there's Hiroshima and Nagasaki. You know what I mean? So it's like every single innovation has, you know, has an angel and the devil attached attached to it. And the people that do well are kind of the people that use the innovation and use it well.
>> But what would be the angel for these kids today being so consumed with Tik Tok?
>> No, that's the downside of technology.
The upside is more computing power in your hand than Apollo 13 had, you know, like answers right away. Yeah. No, that's that's 7 hours of watching porn every day and and snuff films. That's the downside of the technology, being able to look up like I >> I remember just the ability to go uh I was sitting around I don't know how I got onto it, but I was looking at old race car videos and um there's a guy named John Wire and John Wire I think was out of England and John Wire was a guy who kind of started the whole Ford GT program that ended up uh you know beating Ferrari at Lemon, Ford v Ferrari and the whole thing. But there's a guy named John Wire who wasn't really in the film who's kind of the brains of it. Put together the first GT4 was built in England >> at John Wire's place and whatever it is.
And then he went on to do uh >> Porsche 917s like Steve McQueen and Lemon stuff.
He was very instrumental guy in all the racing from the 60s and 70s. And I just think about the other go John Wire still alive where he died in Phoenix, Arizona like 1998, you know, 79 years old. But but it's because of my phone right there. Then I watch a bunch of snufforn after that to cleanse my pallet. I was literally walking up to my bedroom going, I'm going to bed and then I went, >> how old was John W? Where's John Wire?
And I just died in Flagstaff. Well, you know, to kind to kind of go back to what you said earlier about the logic between, you know, uh the ordinance with where you live and the zone and this and that. I remember when I was on Twitter or before I got banned, I was like, "So, I'm getting banned because of things I say, but I can look at videos of a person being decapitated or a guy jumping off the roof of a building and literally hearing and seeing his body hit THE PAVEMENT OR SOMEBODY SHOT AT POINT BLANK RANGE." THEY don't ban that [ __ ] But if I say, you know, whatever I say, I'm I'm getting flagged.
>> What'd you get banned for? you know, the appro inappropriate behav like verbal uh like I would argue with people and you know I'm a comic and when I argue with people I turn in Scarface balcony scene shoots actually.
>> Yeah. No, it never first off none of it ever consistent.
>> Yeah.
>> Or makes sense. That's the whole that's the whole nine yards when you're when you're going >> this guy this guy's restaurant just got a C and that guy's cooking get talks on the street and it's like come on the government doesn't care you know I mean that's how the government works like wild inconsistencies I mean even even even when we talk about uh going into the future in terms of technology AI like I'm I'm trying to monetize videos on Instagram from my me doing standup clips and you I engage with the audience and [ __ ] with people and they're going, "We can't monetize it because AI is recognizing it as bullying.
>> It's a standup. It's it's [ __ ] a performance."
>> Yeah.
>> But there's no real people doing this.
This is algorithms and AI AND I'M GOING that how is this good?
>> No, it's not. No, but you can then there's ways and I can get I can open my phone and go, "How long is it going to take me to get to the Irvine Improv on Friday night? What time do I have to leave?" And then like that's a [ __ ] blessing, right? Cuz we all remember the past. We're like, "I don't know. Is traffic going to be bad? I You got to give yourself 3 hours. Give yourself three hour, you know?" But you never knew, right?
>> You never knew. And now, you know, so there's the blessing.
>> Yeah. Speaking of like the online mobs, I mean, how's the how's the Lizo stuff kind of >> Oh, that's that's that's completely died down. And and once she got in trouble herself, >> uh that was like more to my everybody was like, "Hey, he was he was on to something. He was right, you know." So, um you know, the thing that I I And again, you >> What was the Lizo situation? Uh I did an interview and I guy asked me about her talent and I started as they would say now body shaming talking about >> her how she looks.
>> Oh I remember that.
>> Yeah. Yeah. But weren't you going I'm a fat guy too.
>> Yeah. I was saying me and the [ __ ] should be handcuffed to a treadmill.
>> Yeah.
Listen. No one cares.
>> You know the phone thing is you just hit the nail on the head with the devil in the in the angel [ __ ] Everybody's got a voice now.
>> Like this thing gives everybody the keys to the liquor cabinet and everybody shouldn't have the KEYS TO THE LIQUOR CABINET.
>> NO, I agree.
>> It's it's it's some people don't deserve to be heard. You know, I listen, this was before my time, but I go I loved it cuz I the documentary. I saw the documentary and I saw the movie and I just went everybody shouldn't be allowed in Studio 54, >> right?
>> You know, some people deserve to be on the other side of the road waiting forever.
>> You know, it just it's it's it's insane.
No, I I agree. I mean, I do. You probably do it, too. You talk to people, I want to do standup. I go, "Do you have something to say?" And they go, "I don't know. I want to do it." You know, I go, "Well, don't do it if you don't have something. You don't have something to say."
>> The the the when it was out, divine people, you know, or people that have these quick little skits they do on YouTube or even Instagram. And now I'm looking at them going, they're they're going to be at the Improv doing a night.
>> Oh, yeah.
>> Based off of >> No, I mean, what are you serious? He talked to a lot of these owners, theater owners, club owners, and they're like, "Uh, we found out the guy only could do about 15 minutes, you know. He doesn't have an hour."
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. So, we had to book a bunch of other Canadians, >> but they're they're selling the joint out.
>> Yeah, I know. Sad.
>> At least Lizo can play a flute.
>> YEAH, SHE'S TALENTED. I I I always said she was talented. I just said, "Bitch, put some clothes on."
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> We don't need to see your whole ass out at a Laker game. She does a weird thing where she wears like a flesh color uniard and then puts the thong back over it sometimes. So it has some weird illusion of nudity, but it's it's not.
Listen, I always say >> I'm old school. I like thin Lizzy and not fat Lizo.
>> Hey man, you know, uh I guess some women would get upset and be like, "Well, who are you to >> you like what you like?
>> Uh I just never found that attractive."
No, nobody does. Nobody does. Nobody does. Yeah. No, I don't.
>> And I mean, as a as a as a as a dude with a gut myself, uh, that's the double standard, man. We could be hairless and a little pudgy. You know, swag is swag and sexy is sexy. Sean Connory, you know, could bag any chick he wanted at any point, even without the hair.
>> Yeah. One, I don't know if you've seen this clip. It was such a great clip with him being interviewed by Barbara Walters. Oh, you know I've seen I've seen all the greatest misogyny hits all the most misogyny. This was the pimpiest [ __ ] I ever heard. I I'm going to one up you, brother.
>> When she goes when she goes, "Oh, you're going to get male behind this." And he goes, "I might get some female."
>> Like, if I if YOU'RE A RAPPER, THAT'S A HOT BAR. LIKE, [ __ ] THE MALE. I'M GOING TO GET SOME FEMALE. AND WHAT'S SO GREAT ABOUT it is he's not lying. There are some women that will be turned on with a little slap. I love it. HE PUT HIS DICK ON THE TABLE.
>> But you know the great Deacon Jones?
>> Deacon Jones?
>> No. No. You don't know who Deacon Jones?
>> No. What?
>> No. Is he black?
>> He's five shades of black.
>> Love it.
>> Deacon Jones. Is that him?
>> Well, can you not see the man's face cuz he's so black?
>> Yeah. I was going to be mad at you, but now I see it.
>> You don't know DEACON JONES?
>> I DON'T. I'M NOT A FOOTBALL GUY. I'VE NEVER HAD THEM. HE invented the word sack.
>> Really?
>> Yeah.
>> Sack is a ter or like football sack.
>> Oh, sorry. The football.
>> Okay.
>> Ball sack.
>> No. No. I'm sorry. I thought we had a context with the football. Okay. I'm sorry. It's all right.
>> I thought you meant like a nuts.
>> He Well, he had a predigious nut sack, too. But he invented >> I don't know what prodigious means, but now I'm curious. It hit I imagine he invented the term sacking the quarterback.
>> Okay.
>> He probably was a 10 time allpro, maybe 12. He's in the NFL Hall of Fame for sure. And I think they presume that he had the all time he was be the all-time leader for sacks.
>> Yeah.
>> You know, above Lawrence Taylor or whoever. But they didn't keep track of sacks when he played >> right >> in the 60s and the 70s. I mean, they knew at the end of the game, yeah, guy got two sacks, but but they didn't have a tally like they do now with the Watts brothers and all that was going down and also the Dallas had two and a half sacks this game and they're getting into fractions and stuff. Two and seven sacks, you know, >> like a sack, >> but >> and I know the Conry misogyny thing.
Yeah, >> cuz I know all the greatest hits.
Literally, secret misogyny. That's how I go to bed at night. I put on my greatest misogyny hits and I fall asleep.
>> You're going to like this one.
>> Okay. Is a quote.
>> All right.
>> Atkins thread of breaking arms was the reality of the Deacon Jones head slap.
The head slap was to do two purposes.
One was to give myself an initial head start on the pass rush. In other words, a extra step because anytime you go upside a man's head or woman, then they have a tendency to blink the eyes or close the eyes. And that was all I needed.
>> There yo, >> there's jaws on the floor.
>> Yo, >> now they're asking him >> meant that [ __ ] >> They asked him how you got to the quarter quarterback. They asked how he got to the quarterback, Aries.
not through the entry hall to the quarterback. He really said that [ __ ] And it wasn't even like HE WAS BEING FUNNY. HE MEANT IT.
>> He meant it.
>> Wow.
>> I think we should see it again. I think he really digest.
>> And for the record, I really when you showed the original still like that picture, I have a hard time believing he is that black. That has to be poor lighting. That [ __ ] looks like a fingerprint. I told you you should know who he is. That's all. Play it again.
>> Atkins blood of breaking arms was the reality of the Deacon Jones head slap.
The head slap was to do two purposes.
One was to give myself an initial head start on the pass. In other words, a extra step because anytime you go upside a man's head or woman, then they have a tendency to blink the eyes or close the eyes. And that was all I needed.
>> David. All right. If if that is not the clip that should be shown at every domestic abuse center to let women know, be on the lookout for this [ __ ] >> Yeah. Well, he's dead.
>> So, he's he's you know, head slapping Harriet Tubman in heaven right now.
>> No, she shot that [ __ ] >> Okay.
>> Harry Tubman carried it.
>> I don't know. I don't know if they they're packing in heaven. I don't know how it work.
>> Listen, again, let me quote Cy Hok. He had a great joke where he said, "Fellas, if you going to uh domestically hit your woman, never do it with a closed fist.
Always do it with a open palm, cuz that's just you rebooting the system."
>> All right. We shouldn't laugh at these things, but again, we're comedians.
>> Yes.
>> So, we're allowed to say things.
>> Yes. Absolutely.
>> To joke.
>> Yes.
>> All right. So, I'm glad I turned you on to that clip.
>> Jesus, man.
>> I know. Like I I felt like Shan Connory was being a little funny.
>> That was serious.
>> He was answering a question.
>> Yeah.
>> But the the the incredible part about that is he was only asked about his technique on the football field, >> which did not include any females.
>> And that's what makes it insane.
>> Well, some dudes, they live life off the field the way they live it on it.
>> I get it. But the question was, how did you get to the quarterback so fast, right?
Not what's up with your old lady, you know what I mean? So, since there are no weak side tackles that are female in the NFL, that's what makes it insane.
>> Additional info that you didn't need.
>> And he paused, >> right? Went upside a man's head.
>> And then the description of blinking eyes.
>> But here's the bigger question. NFL Films ran this clip for 22 years and they never edited it.
>> Hey man, that was the glory days, man.
>> They ne This went to 2008, 2009.
>> Yeah. Yeah. This These were the glory days, man.
>> They never edit it.
>> Life just corrected itself over the last four years.
>> It's the easiest edit in the world, by the way, cuz you're interplacing game film. So he just goes, "I find when you go outside a man's head, b-roll cut, head slap, and then they go back to him." They tend to blink their eyes, right? Easiest cut in an edit room you'll ever do. He gave a beat, >> then B-roll, then back to him. Easiest cut you could ever do. And on the of a black man.
>> Well, they said they He said they they blinked their eyes. It was the way you perform of a black crowd.
>> Oh. Send me to Atlanta, brother. So easy as edit in the world. And there was a producer in the room. Cameraman, sound guy. No, nothing. And they edited the piece. The piece was edited because they had to interspice all the game films. No notes from anybody.
>> Nobody edited this piece. No.
>> We we we want to evolve as human beings.
But I got to be honest, man. There was something a little geniqua about the good old days. Like like growing up in New York when you went to Time Square and you know you had the peep houses and they literally had TVs outside the porno theaters showing previews of porn.
>> Uh not actual like graphic [ __ ] but leading up to it and just Time Square was a different place. Oh yeah.
>> Now it's just Disneyland, >> you know, it's all corporate, >> you know.
>> Yeah. The great is it David? No. Who?
Johansson. Who the hell wrote that song that I always refer to? David Johansson.
No, David Johansson's a comedian. Isn't he a comedian?
>> What What song are you talking about?
>> Buster Po Dexter.
>> David Johansson is a singer.
>> No, that's Buster Poex. Is that Do you know that Dawson?
He wrote a song about what they did to Time Square and it's a great fun catchy tune that he wrote probably in about 1996 when they were switching Time >> Square over. Yeah.
>> About how it used to have this and now it's been replaced with Disney.
>> Yeah.
>> You know, and >> Buster Po Dexter Time Square song.
you'll find it probably 1997.
A quick Time Square story.
>> Mhm.
>> I ran away from home when I was living in >> uh Jersey. Uh and I knew how to get to New York, take the train and all that. I went >> uh I can't remember. Young young teen, probably like 12.
>> Mhm.
>> And I stole a bunch of money from my dad, like a a fistful of cash. And this was back when Times Square was doing three card monty.
>> Oh boy. Uh, and you know, of course, the 12-year-old kid, I didn't know that everybody, it was a scam, right?
>> So, I I go, "Oh my god, it's just that easy to win money." So, I basically lost all the money. But the guy felt so bad for me cuz he saw I was a kid. He pulled me aside. He goes, "Here's $20 back, man. I'm going go and get out of here."
>> Wow. How much you reckon you lost there?
>> I probably lost like 200 bucks.
>> I know. Everyone done the New York threecard monty?
>> It's crazy. Yeah, you lose, but you can't figure out how you lose cuz it's >> Well, there everybody that's winning is in on it, >> right?
>> The people It's like three people, the guys that's doing the cards and two bystanders, right, who are going, "Oh, I won." He gives them the money, but they're all in on it.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
>> Yeah.
>> All right. What's the name of that song?
>> Still looking.
>> Well, it's from an album would have been from 96, maybe 97 in there. It's the only one he wrote about time. They tore down Time Square. Then it's not Time Square is not in the title. They're just what they did to if you YouTube point Dexter to Time Square, wouldn't it pop up right like that?
>> One would think, but I don't know.
>> It be Nova Broadway.
>> Yeah. Let's see if that's it. What year?
Let's say it's from trying to think cuz >> 97.
>> 97.
>> Yeah. He was on Love Line and I remember going, "Oh, yeah. That's what they did to Time Square. Turn it into a mall."
>> Yeah, exactly.
>> They took all the fun stuff.
>> Yeah. No, you couldn't. You can't get mugged no more over there. Is Buster Poex are still alive is the question.
Dawson, >> have you ever been scammed, Adam?
>> Uh, I was on uh I was down there with Jimmy and one of our weird friends named Cow. And um he >> You just say Cow.
>> Cow. And uh and we cow did the three card monty and got scammed. I think I did three card monty. I just did it once. Got beat and you know kept it >> kept going. Uh >> I've gotten I've gotten white white van speaker scammed.
>> Oh, I got Yeah, I got van speaker. But I didn't get scammed. I bought speakers from a guy in a van and they were speakers.
>> They worked. So >> yeah, they were I probably weren't nearly as good as whatever it is.
>> Right. Right. you know he was talking about. But I did buy speakers from a guy in a van.
>> Is that a scam?
>> That's a scam. Yeah. Like they put >> So they put a cinder block in the box.
>> Well, I've always I've always had a couple guys approach me about that and I just never I was like I don't you know >> Oh, I just got just got done from a job.
We got these extra speakers or we got to offload them before I get back to the warehouse. You want to buy them? They're like worth like 5,000 bucks, but >> give me for like a couple hundred.
>> Oh wow. Just >> No. What I did I remember very well. I was probably like 20, maybe I was like 21 and I bounced our rent check and I was living in an apartment in North Hollywood, onebedroom with three dudes and um so I bounced my rent check and I went to the home savings and loan in Studio City. was my bank and I had to like try to put money in or do something so the rent check wouldn't bounce again, you know. And then um I went in there and when I was walking out of the home savings, there was a dude in the van and he and he said, "I'm selling speakers."
And even though I was [ __ ] broke, I just got done bouncing a rent check. Um I was like, "Okay, yeah, I'll take some speakers." And I bought these speakers and I took them back to my apartment and then uh I plugged them in in my apartment. It was like middle of the day, middle of the week. And my roommate said, "We got to test these speakers out." So he takes eruption from Van Halen, the crazy guitar solo. And he puts it on and then he starts cranking it and cranking cranking. And it's Eddie Van Halen just going going nuts on the guitar.
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