Real Coffee with Scott Adams - May 24, 2025


Episode 2849 CWSA 05⧸24⧸25


Episode Stats


Length

41 minutes

Words per minute

127.06412

Word count

5,253

Sentence count

6

Harmful content

Misogyny

11

sentences flagged

Hate speech

10

sentences flagged


Summary

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

In this episode of Coffee with Scott Adams, host Scott Adams talks about the craziest coincidence in the NBA playoffs, and gives you a movie recommendation and review of John Krasinski's new film, The Fountain of Youth.

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 x platform is down today so we're not going to stream on that one
00:00:04.320 but the rest of the platforms are working great as far as i know
00:00:11.280 so we'll have comments and we'll have we'll have a show on memorial day weekend
00:00:19.360 when all the lazy people are off on vacation
00:00:35.920 good morning everybody and welcome to the highlight of human civilization it's called
00:00:40.720 coffee with scott adams and you've never had a better time but if you'd like to take your
00:00:45.760 experience up to levels that nobody can understand with their tiny shiny human brains all you need
00:00:52.640 for that is a cup or mug or a glass of tank or chelsea stein a canteen jug or a flask a vessel
00:00:58.000 of any kind fill it with your favorite liquid i like coffee and join me now for the unparalleled
00:01:04.640 pleasure of the dopamine hit of the day the thing that makes everything better it's called
00:01:08.880 the simultaneous sip that happens down go
00:01:15.760 so i'm going to ask a favor from one of the commenters um one of you puts the entire simultaneous
00:01:28.880 sip um with the wording in the comments when i'm doing it don't do that because it's a it's a long
00:01:38.480 block which distracts me so i know you're i know you're trying to help but it's really distracting
00:01:46.960 when you put it in there as i'm talking about it because it makes me look and say oh what's this
00:01:51.600 long block of text it's probably something important
00:01:57.920 so if you could don't do that anymore thank you that would be it would be hard to know that that was a
00:02:05.600 problem so don't worry about it well if the x platform is working after the show uh owen gregorian
00:02:15.520 will be hosting his spaces uh again a coffee with scott adams after party um but it probably depends
00:02:25.760 highly on whether the the x platform is back online and uh if not you know maybe it gets pushed the next
00:02:33.920 day but let's see that's the current thinking well if you happen to hate the uh the new york knicks
00:02:43.760 that would be a basketball team uh you've had a good week i i know most of you are not into basketball
00:02:52.160 but i i just have to tell you about how the indiana pacers uh beat the knicks because it's not so
00:02:58.960 it's not even a sports story it's it's like the biggest coincidence in the world story
00:03:06.160 so the uh it was the game before this last one
00:03:11.680 and the knicks were up by two and time was running out and one of the better players on the indiana
00:03:21.200 indiana pacers takes this long desperate three-point shot if it goes in which would you know was highly
00:03:29.680 unlikely the the pacers would win if it missed the knicks would win so you you're watching it go
00:03:40.320 and it's really high and it's really far away and it hits the rim and it misses
00:03:46.080 and the knicks are like yes yes we won the first game of this playoff and then the ball because the
00:03:55.680 ball had come from the long distance when it hit the rim it went up in the air for a very long distance
00:04:03.200 as well and when it came down it went right through the hoop
00:04:08.720 it was something you would rarely ever say now since it was a three-point shot
00:04:17.840 the pacers are like yes yes we won because we were only down by two and we just made a three-point shot
00:04:26.480 and and then they look at the video and the guy who shot it his foot was just on the line
00:04:33.600 which makes it a two-point shot so first the the knicks totally won then the pacers totally won
00:04:44.560 and then it was a tie i had to go to overtime where the pacers won so if you were a knicks fan
00:04:52.480 it was a terrible week and i guess they won they lost another tight one all right i'm going to give
00:04:57.680 you a movie recommendation or movie review i guess so i don't know where it is except on amazon prime
00:05:07.760 prime video but it's called the fountain of youth it's brand new and it features john krasinski and
00:05:15.920 natalie portman i think as his sister and they play these indiana jones kind of characters now here's
00:05:25.440 what's great about this movie apparently i'm just guessing my guess is that the director had some
00:05:35.520 kind of deal with the production studio they could make the movie any way you wanted to and he made it
00:05:44.560 old-fashioned and and you don't notice it at first you just think you're watching a movie excuse me
00:05:51.600 me hold on
00:06:01.040 but at some point you realize hey there was nobody tied to a chair hey there was no gratuitous like sex
00:06:10.080 scene or or those terrible scenes where somebody's showing their love to somebody else and you're like
00:06:16.800 i get it i get it you know all the things that you hate in the movie it just simply didn't have
00:06:23.200 them it was like a wisecracking um action movie so the wisecracking was great because john krasinski's
00:06:32.080 great at wisecracking and the characters were great but then you notice um it did have one thing that
00:06:41.840 i don't like in a movie which is somebody who's underwater for too long i i fast forward through
00:06:48.960 all underwater scenes but then you realize wait a minute there's nothing woke about this movie
00:06:57.360 the the cast is not diverse um there's no there's no overweight black woman who is
00:07:04.800 the key feature is just good looking people and the two female leads were both attractive 0.97
00:07:15.520 and the you know the lead guy was attractive too so when was the last time you saw a movie like that
00:07:24.880 there was nothing woke at all i don't know how he got it made i would love to know the back story
00:07:31.280 uh was it uh guy richie it's a guy richie film so and it's a fun for the whole family there's no
00:07:40.080 um there's no swearing i think there was zero swearing and basically it was sort of a
00:07:48.400 a genius movie of what he left out you just sort of left out everything that
00:07:54.800 movies try to put in there you know all the all the stuff you don't want to see so i recommend it
00:08:01.440 fun for the whole family well in other news according to psi post
00:08:08.480 non-right-handedness is more common across multiple mental health conditions you know what
00:08:14.560 non-right-handedness is it's called left-handedness so apparently if you're left-handed you're more
00:08:23.200 likely to have a variety of mental health conditions now that probably includes if you're a leftist
00:08:31.840 because you know how uh we've already seen that the democrats have more mental health problems
00:08:38.400 and they're actually called leftists so apparently anything left
00:08:44.480 is correlated with mental health problems
00:08:49.440 anyway um in other news according to discover we tend to trust people from low-income
00:08:57.440 backgrounds over the wealthy elites do you think that's true do you trust people from low-income 0.93
00:09:04.640 backgrounds more than rich people um i think that depends if you dropped your wallet would you rather
00:09:14.960 either a billionaire found it or somebody from a low-income background
00:09:21.440 i feel like i trust the billionaire to give my wallet back
00:09:25.680 so that's that's very situation dependent
00:09:28.400 but you can see why uh joe biden used to do i'm just lunch pill joe i'll take the train
00:09:37.120 i'm just like you
00:09:40.240 anyway according to uh some uh let's say neuroscience news ai has higher emotional iq than humans
00:09:48.000 you know the emotional iq where you know you you know how to deal with people's emotional states
00:09:55.520 and your own etc and i thought to myself that kind of makes sense
00:10:01.360 because the ai can simply memorize all the situations and it can just say all right under this situation
00:10:10.320 people should do this so yes it makes total sense that uh
00:10:15.760 ai would have a higher emotional iq could have just asked me
00:10:22.640 and it's a big deal actually it's a big difference the ai achieved an average score of 82
00:10:27.600 percent where the humans were at 56 percent so so if you want some empathy and you want a high
00:10:37.360 emotional iq i suggest you get a robot robots can set you free searchlight pictures presents the
00:10:48.080 roses only in theaters august 29th from the director of meet the parents and the writer of poor things
00:10:54.160 comes the roses starring academy award winner olivia coleman academy award nominee benedict
00:10:59.840 cumberbatch andy sandberg kate mckinnon and allison janney a hilarious new comedy filled with drama
00:11:06.080 excitement and a little bit of hatred proving that marriage isn't always a bed of roses see the
00:11:12.000 roses only in theaters august 29th get tickets now according to fox news the ladies of the view
00:11:19.840 the view have been asked by their boss the head of disney bob eiger to cool it with all the political
00:11:29.120 chatter and then apparently the ladies of the view said no we it's very important that we do political
00:11:37.440 chatter so we'll keep doing it um i don't know if that was a good idea because if your boss tells you
00:11:46.560 to do less of something you probably should do less of it but i can't believe i can't believe that the
00:11:55.120 view has the same ratings when they're being political and essentially annoying half of the country
00:12:03.120 don't you think their ratings would be higher if they just did everything but politics so it seems
00:12:09.680 like bob eiger may have the right idea here but who knows if you haven't seen this yet there's a
00:12:17.840 some kind of ai called v vo3 in which they created a bunch of you know deep fake um street interviews
00:12:28.720 so it's a whole bunch of little clips where somebody's interviewing somebody in the street
00:12:33.040 usually at night and until now i always told myself you know i could tell ai from reality but uh you can't
00:12:49.760 it's not even just one or two things it's a whole string of street interviews and you cannot
00:12:57.760 you cannot tell that these are ai so i don't know how far away we are from making a whole movie
00:13:07.280 but that was scary so we've crossed we we've crossed the scott line where i say to myself ah i could tell
00:13:18.640 that was ai because they have six fingers or or there's something about them or the way they talk
00:13:24.400 you absolutely can't tell uh it 100 looks real crazy meanwhile speaking of crazy and crazy eyes uh hillary
00:13:36.240 clinton uh is trying to ruin your memorial day weekend because she's made the following suggestion 0.96
00:13:44.880 in a post on x she said i want you to talk to two people friends neighbors cookhouse attendees
00:13:51.680 about why trump's proposed budget would be a disaster for american kids and then she goes on to give some
00:14:00.720 examples of what she's talking about can you think of a worse idea than bringing up the the budget
00:14:10.720 at your memorial day barbecue i can't think of a worse idea that does hillary get invited to things 1.00
00:14:18.800 she talks like somebody who's never been invited to anything
00:14:25.760 it's the worst idea of all time no how about you just shut up about politics and enjoy your neighbors
00:14:36.000 and your family shut up just shut up about politics yeah take a uh take a message from bob eicher 0.67
00:14:45.520 sometimes talking about politics could be too much
00:14:53.280 meanwhile according to the college fix a tennessee university is hit with civil rights complaints over
00:15:01.280 17 race-based scholarships so when they say race-based it means you can't be a white guy basically
00:15:10.560 but some of them are more specific like you could be an african-american or a
00:15:19.440 or a
00:15:23.200 i think native american or something so some of them would give you two choices oh yeah native american
00:15:29.120 or african-american so there's 17 race-based scholarships i'm kind of happy that that stuff's
00:15:36.880 being dismantled but don't you think it'll be put right back together as soon as trump is out of
00:15:43.520 office you know don't you imagine that the minute there's a democrat who's president that everything
00:15:51.280 that trump has dismantled will just go right back to the way it was or could it be that the democrats are
00:15:59.040 happy he's dismantling it but they can't say it out loud i don't know i i want to be happy about
00:16:07.120 the direction of things but i don't know how long it's gonna last well uh kamala harris according to
00:16:14.480 that new book by jake tapper um some time ago when she was uh appearing on cnn and i think it was after
00:16:24.720 uh biden did his catastrophic debate performance and she goes on cnn and she was asked about
00:16:32.800 basically biden's brain and then she gets off and she uh allegedly blasted anderson cooper as a mother effer 1.00
00:16:47.360 what
00:16:47.760 oh um so former so the the story is that she was very mad about the question she was asked about the
00:17:03.680 president's cognitive ability and she said uh this this mfr she used the actual full word this mfr 0.92
00:17:13.760 doesn't treat me like the damn vice president of the united states she told colleagues 1.00
00:17:22.560 and then she said i thought we were better than that
00:17:26.240 well don't you think they were treating her like the vice president of the united states
00:17:32.400 because the vice president of the united states under the condition of the president of the united
00:17:38.560 united states is showing that he's cognitively impaired isn't that exactly her job to figure
00:17:45.920 out whether the 25th amendment makes sense to me it seems like they were treating her like the vice 0.77
00:17:52.800 president she would be the number one person you should ask that question uh is it time to replace this
00:18:00.640 guy so i guess she didn't like having any tough questions but um don't you feel lucky that she didn't become president
00:18:15.360 the we were so close to having a president kamala harris you know the horse laugh oh oh my god 0.97
00:18:25.360 well victor davis uh hansen i was talking about cnn and all the things that they've they've done that
00:18:35.040 were opposite of news and some of the things he listed was uh he actually went so hard as to say he
00:18:43.680 doesn't know how jake tapper is keeping his job at cnn because he mentions uh victor mentions the russia
00:18:50.480 collusion fail the steel dossier fail the hunter laptop fail and he says there's definitely a pattern
00:18:59.760 to which i would like to add the following what about the fine people hoax what about the whole auto
00:19:07.040 pen story there was nobody in the news business who knew there was an auto pen problem what about the
00:19:15.120 biden crime family totally ignored uh what about the drinking bleach hoax yeah there's a pattern
00:19:25.600 but but the pattern all comes from the same place doesn't it the pattern comes from they they created a
00:19:36.640 narrative that trump was iller once you've created the narrative that trump is iller it gives you
00:19:43.520 permission to lie about every story because obviously you don't want to be complicit in making you know
00:19:51.840 hitler in charge so they they basically there was one problem that caused them to no longer be a news
00:20:00.640 entity and it was that they had convinced themselves that he was hitler so one problem caused 50 problems
00:20:13.520 bank more encores when you switch to a scotia bank banking package learn more at scotia bank dot com
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00:20:28.880 according to uh liz peak who's writing for the hill um they're still trying to figure out who is in charge
00:20:36.800 that auto pen which is kind of hilarious because it's one of the biggest well maybe the biggest story
00:20:44.560 in the country don't you think if the biggest story in the country was who's doing all that auto pen stuff
00:20:52.960 don't you think that the people who are doing the auto pen stuff should have said oh that was me
00:20:58.480 yeah it was the three of us that this was our process but without that what are we supposed to think
00:21:10.880 there's only one thing you can think if they decided to get real quiet about that process
00:21:17.680 there's a problem because if there were no problem it would have been like day two they would have said oh
00:21:26.560 here's how it works here's the process here's our you know here's our diary of you know who did what
00:21:34.000 and who signed it the fact that they're just quiet about it and they that we have to do research to
00:21:40.160 figure out who was behind the auto pen that's uh that's a pretty good indication that there's a problem
00:21:48.400 but the thing that to me is scary is that there are two people who were mentioned as you know likely
00:21:56.080 not the only people necessarily but two of the main people who might have been behind the auto pen
00:22:02.640 and what's scary is i'd never heard of them
00:22:07.040 you know if if the real answer had been it had been uh you know ron clane or uh
00:22:14.960 jake sullivan i would have said huh you know that's not ideal because the president's supposed to be
00:22:22.320 doing the auto pen stuff but at least i would think you know this is a well-known smart person
00:22:30.000 you know everybody started those names but the names we're hearing are are uh
00:22:37.040 mike donnellan and anita dunn how many of you had ever heard those names before the auto pen thing
00:22:45.440 isn't that like giving you a little pause it's like huh i'm not so sure who they even are
00:22:55.120 so part of the mystery is why do people we've never even heard of we're signing all these things
00:23:04.080 and then there's the thought about all the clemencies you know weren't there like thousands
00:23:10.000 of clemencies that were signed and you thought to yourself how could thousands of them being signed
00:23:16.480 well the auto pen do you think anybody sold uh a clemency i'll bet they did i'll bet somebody sold
00:23:26.800 a clemency or two don't know who um so susan rice you know her from the sort of no obama person 1.00
00:23:38.640 so she was she did a little video i don't i don't know what she was appearing on but she was saying
00:23:46.560 that uh trump has only looked at 12 uh daily briefings in over a hundred days of being in office
00:23:56.880 and the way she says it with her wrinkled up eyebrows is that it's like he's not doing the job
00:24:02.560 he's only seen 12 daily briefings only 12 in over 100 days now she says it in a way that she's trying
00:24:14.480 to sell the attitude not the facts because the facts don't really they don't really tell a story
00:24:23.040 but the attitude oh you know she's she scrunches up her face so that you know it's a really big problem 1.00
00:24:37.520 but here's my interpretation what would be the second reason that trump would not be uh
00:24:47.120 listening to all the daily briefings i'm gonna take a sip while you answer that question
00:24:53.040 what would be the other reason that he had only listened to some of the briefings what would you say
00:25:11.520 the answer is they had determined that they're
00:25:15.360 if they were useful don't you think he would listen to them
00:25:24.480 of course he would i i remember that the daily briefing included the bin laden risk
00:25:33.760 and i think bush didn't even pay attention to it because it was just on a list of a whole bunch of
00:25:38.640 things and i also wonder if the daily briefing is maybe managed a little bit by some obama people
00:25:50.080 who have gotten to some other people who can get to some other people don't you think that susan rice is
00:25:56.800 a a little bit too interested in the daily briefings as if maybe the democrats have
00:26:07.920 figured out how to influence somebody who does the daily briefings for the resident
00:26:12.880 and they're trying to manipulate him that way but he's just not paying attention to them at all
00:26:18.480 maybe well general mike flynn who of course has seen daily briefings he said the uh daily briefings
00:26:26.960 is a complete waste of time financial resources and people he said rice is another marxist who sees 0.99
00:26:33.680 globalism as a future and i say if you can't trust government employees to give you the right stuff
00:26:41.200 who can you trust
00:26:44.960 well senator jody ernst
00:26:49.040 is talking about something i think you heard this from elon and doge at one point that there are
00:26:55.520 60 billion dollars spent on the federal government credit cards
00:26:59.440 and apparently there are twice as many credit cards as there are federal government employees
00:27:07.440 that that's a little red flag right there hmm twice as many credit cards as employees
00:27:12.400 but apparently it's worse than that um because a lot she says that a lot of the card usage occurs
00:27:20.800 during federal holidays and on days like new year's eve and nightclubs and bars
00:27:26.240 and sunday afternoons and whenever there's a big ufc fight and there are also cash withdrawals at casino atms
00:27:37.680 so i guess they canceled about half a million of those cards i think you've heard that story before
00:27:43.920 but the funny part is that it's so obvious that they were stealing because you could tell the pattern of
00:27:49.520 when the cards were being used well trump has threatened the european union with a 50 percent tariff
00:27:57.840 because they seem to be dragging their feet you know dealing with the trade stuff
00:28:03.520 um and part of it is that it's complicated so the it's not just tariffs it's uh they got fees on
00:28:14.800 streaming services value-added taxes they got automotive regulations and fines imposed against
00:28:21.440 u.s companies and antitrust so it's a lot of stuff to untangle so trump's just saying all right take your
00:28:29.680 time but we're going to give you a 50 percent tariff i kind of like that wall street journal is reporting that
00:28:36.080 well according to uh one source i saw uh i saw it on a post by luke groman that if all chinese students
00:28:48.000 were removed from all u.s colleges most of them would go bankrupt because the chinese students pay full price 1.00
00:28:57.680 for tuition and the colleges need that so if we remove all the chinese students from all the 1.00
00:29:06.720 colleges besides just harvard
00:29:11.760 a lot of colleges would go out in business but don't you think we're heading toward a situation
00:29:16.720 where a lot of colleges need to go out in business because they're not really adding enough value
00:29:22.080 you know once you have ai it seems like you could make your own college so not too worried about
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00:30:33.120 trump says a u.s steel will partner with nippon steel is it nippon nippon and remain in the united
00:30:40.880 united states headquartered in pittsburgh and it's going to create 70 000 jobs and add 15 or 14 billion
00:30:48.400 to the economy yeah that sounds good sounds good we're going to have more steel and fewer chinese 1.00
00:30:55.440 students now i do worry that some of the foreign students would be you know highly value added to our
00:31:04.240 tech situation in this country but i do think we got a lot of them so maybe we can have fewer
00:31:13.040 well texas has decided uh it's on the verge of it hasn't done it yet of completely banning thc products
00:31:22.400 and so tim waltz governor of minneapolis minnesota um governor of minnesota right
00:31:38.240 uh so tim waltz weighs in because texas might ban thc and he says in a post on x texans flee the nanny
00:31:48.320 state and come up north to enjoy the land of the free and i'm thinking to myself tim waltz just came
00:31:55.520 out publicly in in favor of smoking weed in his state hmm okay
00:32:04.960 i i like him a little bit better now he's got that one thing going for him
00:32:10.400 well according to john bolden there's no such thing as a south african white genocide
00:32:20.320 um and he apparently you know that video of the uh what we were told is the south africans
00:32:29.840 singing kill the farmers kill the you know shoot the africaners that was one of the main pieces of 1.00
00:32:36.880 evidence that trump was showing the president of south africa apparently those were not even south
00:32:43.840 africans it was video from the republic of the congo now that's what reuters is saying um
00:32:55.040 there was a clip grabbed from reuters and it wasn't even south africans but i do wonder if there are any
00:33:02.720 south africans who were doing that that song on that dance but i don't i i don't know what to believe
00:33:10.000 about south africa anymore so john bolden basically says you know there's just so much crime there and
00:33:18.720 you know murder that of course the white farmers are getting murdered because everybody's getting 0.99
00:33:24.080 murdered they're they're just part of the getting murdered crowd but they're not they're not specifically
00:33:30.240 being targeted i don't know about that so john bolden is not exactly the best source for
00:33:38.720 really anything uh he's usually wrong on all the important everything
00:33:45.920 but if the white south africans believe there's a genocide wouldn't they be the best source
00:33:54.160 that are you they're not making it up right the the ones who want to get out of there because it's too
00:34:01.200 dangerous yeah seems like it's unlikely that it's fake well david hogg you know him the co-chair of the dnc
00:34:13.600 he's uh he says that representative jasmine crockett is the type of leader that they need because the
00:34:20.400 the democratic party is rudderless rudderless rudderless the rudder would be the thing that dangles down under
00:34:29.760 the boat you know what they are is they they are rudderless but they're also penisless and scrotumless
00:34:40.720 um but david hogg says i love her she's amazing i think that people want to see somebody who fights
00:34:53.200 and calls out the bull the bs ultimately uh he was talking to charlemagne the god i think that's what
00:35:00.640 jasmine does do you think he's uh called it right do you think he's got his finger on the pulse
00:35:08.560 do you think what the democrats need more than anything is a angry black woman who can yell yell a lot 1.00
00:35:20.000 or or is he just being uh sort of a dei guy and he wants to make sure he's he's backing her
00:35:28.400 i feel like jasmine crockett is what the republicans want for the democrats
00:35:34.880 she might be the worst spokesperson that the democrats have ever had and i love the fact that
00:35:42.480 david hogg has to embrace her oh well good luck with that guys according to the conversation
00:35:52.160 um and this is based on some australians i think oh wait yeah uh authors are not happy about ai using
00:36:02.400 their work even if they get paid so i guess a bunch of australian authors have weighed in and they don't like
00:36:11.120 at all the ai might be trained on their work um now does that surprise you uh so i went to grok
00:36:24.160 grok and i said grok are are the uh sales of non-fiction books going down since ai because that
00:36:34.880 would be the way you'd know um if people felt they didn't need to read non-fiction books because they
00:36:41.360 could just ask grok and it's already read all the books and grok was very very vague
00:36:50.080 you know grok was a little bit well you know there is a little bit of a decrease in that market
00:36:59.840 but you can't really tie that to ai because you have lots of different factors happening
00:37:06.080 to which i thought oh my god is ai covering its own tracks it looks like ai is coming up with its own
00:37:13.840 alibis well you know it's not the ai it's a variety of factors that would be hard to measure
00:37:23.360 i don't know
00:37:27.520 i'm going to say that that's an open question
00:37:31.360 but here's my prediction my prediction is that non-fiction books will continue to decrease in sales
00:37:40.240 and it will be because of ai eventually all right well it's a holiday weekend there's not much going on
00:37:52.000 so can anybody tell me if the x platform is working can you give me an update
00:37:59.840 in the comments i know there'll be a little time lag here but uh is the x platform working
00:38:06.240 because if it is then owen can do his spaces because there's not much going on today i i i
00:38:17.600 probably have a little less content today because a lot of it comes from x oh it's not working erica
00:38:24.400 says damn it so owen does that mean you won't be trying to do his spaces 0.74
00:38:32.240 because i doubt the spaces would work if the platform's down all right well um if it's not
00:38:41.360 working today owen says he'll move it to tomorrow um but i'm here i'm seeing uh authoritatively that it's glitching
00:38:53.360 hmm okay
00:38:54.640 uh owen says he'll give it a shot and see how it goes all right so he's gonna give it a shot and uh
00:39:05.920 i'm gonna end early because there's not much going on but uh you can go to owen spaces and if it works
00:39:16.000 you can get a lot more and thanks for joining everybody um i'm gonna say a few words to
00:39:22.720 you look at those people privately but for the rest of you enjoy your saturday
00:39:52.720 with him you mentioned it's showing you the elephant here at it in caterpillar the healthcare
00:39:54.800 so well i hear a lot of uh man but i know you're chr med potentially uh that i believe
00:39:56.720 too i mean
00:39:57.220 oh you have chr med like a small area is in the Chinas whichер Ihnen helpful i believe
00:39:59.360 to get up to you you talk is at a bottom part of who lives are kind of feels
00:40:00.720 a huge estatus remote was there i mean i think that a lot of you know it's not
00:40:02.000 listeners are muchเชctors to
00:40:19.820 let us know that that's so important
00:40:20.500 Thank you.
00:40:50.500 Thank you.