JustPearlyThings - October 19, 2023


Pearl SHOCKS @vtsoscast With This Fact


Episode Stats


Length

8 minutes

Words per minute

195.97026

Word count

1,634

Sentence count

141

Harmful content

Misogyny

6

sentences flagged

Hate speech

7

sentences flagged


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

On this episode of the podcast, we're joined by our good friend and former co-host of the PBR podcast, Andrew Tate. We talk about his life, his views on the world, and how he thinks about the future of the world.

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.000 do you think Andrew Tate has evolved in the most? We've covered Andrew Tate a lot. What's your
00:00:03.220 opinion? I mean, I think he's a person who is a strong voice. He's a good influence.
00:00:11.360 I think he's also giving advice through life experience. You know, you kind of see him kind
00:00:17.380 of change perspectives in certain areas, but that comes with, you know, different perspectives. You
00:00:22.040 know, he was in a prison cell. Like, you don't know what goes through your mind during those
00:00:25.520 times and maybe you value different things. So I can admire that he's firm in some things,
00:00:30.620 but I can also admire like new information as you may refer to. He adjusts and shares his
00:00:36.880 experience. I think that's also keeps that authentic human person. You know, it keeps
00:00:43.000 some like, what's the word I'm looking for? Human. Humanism? Keeping it real. Keeping it real.
00:00:49.260 I will say one thing. I actually said this to Sneeko over a year ago when he came on the
00:00:54.960 podcast. I said, whatever beliefs you have now, just be prepared for things to evolve.
00:01:01.320 Sneeko was, I think, 24, 25 at the time. As you get older, I think you're 26. Your birthday
00:01:05.480 is coming up in November, I want to say.
00:01:06.960 Oh, happy birthday.
00:01:07.840 You're going to be 27. This is in general. It's not even directed towards you in general.
00:01:13.200 Your beliefs should evolve, meaning they could get more. You could double down on your beliefs
00:01:21.940 even more. No, I actually firmly believe this and I'm going way deeper on it. Or it's like,
00:01:25.900 you know what? What's kind of wrong about that? Let me evolve a little bit. But the whole purpose
00:01:30.400 of life is improving, involving, reflecting, maybe saying, you know what? I could have done
00:01:35.740 that better. You know, given a second chance, I would do this. So I think you are going to evolve
00:01:41.700 at some point. At some point, you're going to want to be a mother and a wife and, you know,
00:01:46.820 things might change. I'm not saying that you need to even name that now, but I don't think
00:01:50.620 evolving is a bad thing. I think it's natural. No?
00:01:57.120 Yeah, no, I think opinions change over time.
00:01:59.820 Okay.
00:02:00.380 Yeah. But no, I think what you're going to see, if we're talking about the marriage issue
00:02:05.440 evolving on that, you're going to still see the wealthy get married like that. I just
00:02:09.900 see it disappearing from the middle class.
00:02:13.260 You think it's more likely to disappear from the middle class?
00:02:15.140 Yeah. Regardless of what I say, to be honest, I mean, that's what you're seeing. But yeah,
00:02:21.440 that's what the numbers reflect. Richer men are married at a higher rate. So I think you're 0.87
00:02:25.820 going to see it disappear from the middle class.
00:02:26.800 Holla if we want prenup. I will say one thing.
00:02:30.480 And I will say just from anecdotally interviewing guys, rich men fare a bit better off in divorce
00:02:36.220 because typically they have the ability to, you know, you know, a lot of times wealthy
00:02:42.560 men, if they lose their wealth, they can make it back where it's the, the men that I see
00:02:46.940 on the brink of suicide that have like a tougher time with it are the men that have worked the
00:02:51.320 same job 25 years, have a pension and their wife takes half. They never recover.
00:02:55.560 Oh, I'm sure. I mean, that's a different reality.
00:02:58.020 There's a lot of truth in that. Let me, let me get one more take on you.
00:03:01.260 Um, the, the Tate similarity, um, first time we interviewed Tate on PBD podcast, PBD and
00:03:09.220 I flew out to Madrid to meet him. This is right after he got canceled. We had the first big
00:03:15.380 interview with Tate after he got canceled. All right. So, uh, demonetized, de-platformed,
00:03:21.520 canceled, uh, all the social media companies, uh, Facebook, meta, Insta, the whole thing,
00:03:29.420 YouTube, Google, Snapchat, Tik TOK, the whole deal. Right. And then it got, went to payment
00:03:36.780 processors, um, square, all that fun stuff. Uh, then it went to Ubers and Lyfts, Airbnb. It was
00:03:44.320 just canceled. It was a press of a button, but you're no stranger to this. I think you're on your
00:03:47.880 like eighth Tik TOK account. Oh, I've given up on Tik TOK. So, um, what platforms have you been
00:03:56.060 canceled on or demonetized? And what is it about your message? You think that the big tech
00:04:02.640 organizations or digital governments don't want the people to hear?
00:04:09.160 Um, I've been, I've really only lost accounts on Tik TOK. I've actually been pretty lucky with that.
00:04:15.280 Um, I've never had a YouTube strike. I've never had any, yeah, I've never had a YouTube. I've had
00:04:20.120 a warning before, but never a strike. Nice. Uh, so why do you think it's Tik TOK specifically?
00:04:25.960 Well, I got banned on Tik TOK cause I called the chick a whale. Okay. Yeah. But she called 1.00
00:04:30.920 me ugly first. So it's like, if I call you fat back, it's like, what did you expect? But
00:04:35.900 I got banned. So what is that violating terms of service? Yeah. Like hate speech. Yeah. Yeah.
00:04:42.800 Cause well, no, no, she didn't call me ugly. She called me a slag, but I didn't even know what 0.57
00:04:46.540 that meant at the time. Cause I was like interviewing on the street. Yeah. Yeah. And
00:04:50.680 then that was the first time that you got, that was like the big account. Cause I almost
00:04:53.480 had a million followers on that account. And then, and then I just, I never really like
00:04:57.760 rebuilt and then it would just keep getting banned. So I want to stay there on the banning
00:05:01.980 thing. Are you on your eighth account right now? Or even, are you even active right now?
00:05:05.100 Yeah. I don't really use it. So what were the reasons that the second, the third, the fourth,
00:05:09.500 like I get the first one. All right. I'm not saying I even agree with that. Yeah. We all know
00:05:12.720 that Tik TOK is owned by ByteDance owned by the CCP, allegedly all that fun stuff. So,
00:05:18.280 but the second time, the third time, the fourth time, the fifth time, what was the reasons for
00:05:22.940 that? God, I don't even remember Adam. I mean, it's all anything that goes against women gets 1.00
00:05:30.820 you canceled. Uh, uh, the fact of the matter is for a thousand years, we've had a gynocentric 0.82
00:05:36.100 social order saying women are so special and amazing women, amazing men, bad. And if you
00:05:41.020 go against that narrative, that's when you get canceled. Hmm. But I'm trying to understand why
00:05:45.480 Tik TOK meaning it's not, you said nothing, no strikes on YouTube, no issues. You've ever been
00:05:50.940 taken down on Instagram, anything? Oh no, I did lose it. And I forgot about that somewhere now.
00:05:56.900 Yeah. Yeah. What did I happen on? I don't even remember. I, what did I do on Insta? I know it was
00:06:04.460 something on my story, but I literally don't. At the end of the day, if you can sum up whether it's
00:06:10.180 Tik TOK, whether it's Insta, whatever you're forgetting to remember at this point, what do
00:06:13.980 you think is the message they don't want, uh, the audience hearing anything that women aren't 1.00
00:06:18.420 special, amazing, and awesome. Okay. That's, that's what they come at you. How about this
00:06:22.860 weird question? Do you think you are special, amazing, and awesome? No, I think I'm quite
00:06:27.260 normal. I think I'm an average chick in an average world. Okay. So let's say let's, let's,
00:06:32.140 let's go there. Let's say you're normal. You say you're average, but I don't really interview
00:06:36.520 one-on-one normal average chicks. Like you could be one of 10 girls on a panel, but I 0.79
00:06:41.720 don't do many one-on-ones with special women. So maybe you've built yourself up to being
00:06:46.860 more special. What do you, what do you say to that? Well, I'm good at YouTube, but I think
00:06:50.880 most people, like I put in a lot of hours into it. So you get good at things that you, you
00:06:55.560 know, what's it like the 10,000 hour? Yeah. Malcolm Gladwell. Yeah. Like, you know, if you rewinded
00:07:00.480 this four years ago, I wouldn't even be on the show. So by that logic, this is interesting
00:07:04.900 because I would say that most young men are not special, you know, the whole helicopter
00:07:10.360 moms, you're the best thing ever. You're the beautiful thing. But men know that, uh, listen,
00:07:16.960 just because you're 21 and a cool guy, it means nothing. Okay. You got to make money. You
00:07:21.680 got to look good. You got to act good. You got to dress good. You got to treat women, right? 1.00
00:07:24.900 You got to be a bad-ass. Like you got to work your way up in society. Whereas women, it's 1.00
00:07:29.180 just like, you can just be 20 and pretty and the world's your oyster. So by, by men's 0.94
00:07:34.640 standards, starting from nothing, doing nothing, you've actually become special because you put
00:07:40.040 in the work. Doesn't work and success and status, what is, what makes you special?
00:07:45.980 Uh, I mean, maybe on the internet, I, I not really in like, it depends from what point of
00:07:51.640 view you're going to talk about, like from dating. No, I don't think guys really care about
00:07:57.360 that, but, um, I would say in work, sure. But I don't know, Adam, I would even say that most
00:08:06.020 men are more special, amazing, and awesome than women. Cause when I look at it, I look at value
00:08:11.640 added to society. Men do the infrastructure jobs. They pay a hundred thousand dollars more in tax 0.96
00:08:16.780 in a lifetime than women. Men add more value to society. 1.00