Real Coffee with Scott Adams - January 14, 2026


Episode 3072 CWSA - The Scott Adams School 01⧸14⧸26


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 3 minutes

Words per Minute

175.31845

Word Count

11,153

Sentence Count

6

Misogynist Sentences

5

Hate Speech Sentences

2


Summary


Transcript

00:00:00.000 morning everyone welcome to the welcome to the inaugural session this is a stream for the scott
00:00:07.540 adams school i'm glad you're here and uh we make em oh and can we make sure that the feeds are up
00:00:13.300 is locals on okay just checking okay i see everybody okay thanks i see some comments
00:00:21.120 from locals so it looks like people are here um but i i have no visibility into the rest so
00:00:27.600 hopefully it's all working um but yeah welcome welcome everyone and i'm glad you're here um
00:00:34.920 i think we're we have one special guest mark schneider who will probably talk to us in a
00:00:40.540 little bit here but um otherwise we're just hanging out together and we can talk about the news we can
00:00:46.580 talk about you know lessons from scott we can talk about your memories of scott or how he's influenced
00:00:52.740 you whatever you want and we have a few people here to kick it off and i'll turn it over to
00:00:57.680 joshua lisek who's going to do the simultaneous sip joshua
00:01:01.200 everyone you know what you need for this you know what you need and all you need is a cup
00:01:11.140 or a mug or a glass a tankard chalice or stein a canteen jug or flask a vessel of any kind
00:01:20.060 fill it with your favorite liquid we like coffee and join us now for the unparalleled pleasure
00:01:28.140 the dopamine hit of the day the thing that makes everything better and it happens now go
00:01:34.280 for scott
00:01:39.900 sublime
00:01:43.460 thanks joshua my pleasure
00:01:47.740 something that i noticed last night we have joel joshua is that joel hi joel oh hi i'm on the
00:01:58.760 beach in santa monica this is where i would often listen to the show oh i love it you're back in cali
00:02:05.320 yeah scott would often do the show and he knew i was on the beach he actually mentioned me once or
00:02:11.320 twice he'd say for those of you working out on the beach oh that's so great hey joshua if if oh
00:02:18.780 and if you don't mind i joshua's had quite the day yesterday with all of his scott stuff and i thought
00:02:24.460 uh why am i saying joshua why am i saying joshua joel that is so weird okay um joel had quite the day
00:02:33.280 yesterday um with all things scott and if you don't know joel is uh writing scott's biography
00:02:40.320 and joel why don't you tell us about what you were experiencing yesterday like between people
00:02:46.160 magazine and the new york times and all that stuff like uh help us uh process this this day yesterday
00:02:52.860 well of course it was predictable that they would attack scott because that's what
00:03:00.380 our media unfortunately do when you have a critical perspective on how things work on people
00:03:08.940 in power and i predicted that would happen not that i had anything like scott's powers of prediction
00:03:15.140 i've just seen this happen before we've all seen it before but it happened after charlie kirk and it
00:03:21.340 happened 15 years ago after andrew reitbart passed away 14 years ago and i had just seen it before but
00:03:29.320 i also felt like scott would have wanted us to transcend it so i tried not to let it get to me
00:03:35.200 what was really amazing about yesterday was how much love there was that just came from everywhere
00:03:42.200 and when someone passes away that people know from public life there's always that reaction but
00:03:49.480 this was several times greater than anything i anticipated i'm sure scott would have been completely
00:03:54.580 blown away by it the number of people he influenced the amazing things that people said about how
00:03:59.180 he had changed their lives that was incredible and i know we'll talk more about that today
00:04:04.000 i want to just add one thing that happened last night where scott was very much in my thoughts and i
00:04:11.300 think this is how many of us will continue to engage with scott long after this week passes
00:04:17.320 i was invited on cnn and my friend alex michelson who hosts the very late night show there he used to
00:04:25.300 host a show in california called the issue is on fox 11 he's one of the fairest people in media
00:04:30.960 so he moved to cnn they gave him the late night show called the story is and he had already invited
00:04:37.480 me to come on and talk about the palisades fire pacific palisades is right behind me by the way in
00:04:42.480 the far distance in malibu and i said great and then yesterday i sent him a text message and said
00:04:48.480 i'm going to talk about scott adams as well and he said oh that's great yes talk about scott
00:04:53.120 he said can you also talk about the billionaire tax in florida or excuse me in california i said sure
00:04:59.960 i'll talk about the billionaire tax and he said okay you're going to be on with this
00:05:03.300 left-wing panelist i said no problem i got there and the first thing that they showed us in the show
00:05:11.020 and you can go and watch the video it's in my feed on x at joel pollack the first thing they show us
00:05:16.400 is a video of a woman being arrested by ice in minneapolis and i had no idea we were going to
00:05:23.080 talk about that none whatsoever and i was a bit thrown off by it because i knew we were going to
00:05:29.220 talk about scott i knew we were going to talk about the billionaire tax i didn't know we were going to
00:05:32.480 talk about this video and alex played the video and the left-wing guest responded and condemned it
00:05:40.820 talked about what a terrible country we are what this kind of thing can happen and all i could hear in
00:05:45.880 my mind was scott saying you can't trust video videos lie yeah you don't know the context you
00:05:53.340 don't know the full video and so that's how i answered alex came to me and he said well what
00:05:58.540 do you think of this video and i said well i don't know what to think i don't know anything about this
00:06:02.720 video it's the first time i'm seeing it we don't know what happened before we don't know what happened
00:06:05.840 afterwards and i almost wanted to go all the way and say scott adams told us you can't trust video
00:06:13.080 but i didn't want to go that far because i thought that if people hadn't heard that before
00:06:17.660 it would be upsetting especially if what happened in the video really turned out to be bad that this
00:06:22.260 was an innocent person who was being pulled out of her car so i just made my point and i said look
00:06:28.560 this kind of interaction wouldn't have to happen if there was cooperation between state and local
00:06:34.540 law enforcement and ice and i really wanted to get back to talking about scott we did eventually talk
00:06:39.740 about scott well overnight the new york post which is my employer through the california post
00:06:46.460 came out with a story they actually covered this video independently i didn't say anything about it
00:06:51.700 they just worked on the story and it turned out this woman had dropped had driven her car to block
00:06:58.160 the street so that ice vehicles couldn't get through so they weren't just picking on some random person
00:07:04.680 and whatever you think of ice and immigration policy or whatever it's not important to the story
00:07:09.900 what's important is that this woman did this provocative thing and in fact maybe it makes
00:07:15.960 ice look better because this time nobody was shot but it was just so incredible to me that i had sat
00:07:22.420 there feeling uncomfortable about this video thinking of scott warning me back of my mind videos lie
00:07:28.280 you don't know you don't know till you see the whole thing and sure enough the story was completely
00:07:33.280 different i mean we were asked basically to condemn ice on set if you watch the video you'll see that
00:07:38.120 was the con that was the way things were supposed to happen and i just said i don't know anything
00:07:43.480 about this video and i'm just thinking about scott and i just think these little lessons that we have
00:07:49.580 every day and not just about politics i mean here i am on the beach and i didn't know if i was going
00:07:54.520 to exercise but i thought you know i'm going to exercise the way i used to scott would have said just get
00:07:58.860 out there even just a few minutes and i think these little lessons that we interact with as we go
00:08:04.200 about our daily lives where we would remember things and maybe discover new things we hadn't
00:08:08.560 seen before new videos new new writing or old writing that we hadn't read anyway uh we're just
00:08:15.160 continuing to think about scott and i don't think i ever showed him a live video from the beach i did
00:08:21.380 once in a while send him a picture from the beach but this was always a beautiful place to come and hear
00:08:25.920 what scott had to say so anyway just want to send my greetings to everyone out there to shelly
00:08:30.320 and josh and marcella and everybody else who's participating and keeping this going thank you
00:08:36.200 so much joel that was like such a perfect example like of something scott has taught us that you just
00:08:42.720 implemented in real time and gave us a story of how well that worked out for you because the opposite
00:08:50.500 would have been like oh i'm on cnn and i have to give an answer because i'm on camera right now let me
00:08:55.340 quick form an opinion and then like you said you don't even really know what the whole story is so
00:09:01.420 that thank you because that was such a good way to show us like take a beat like just take a beat we
00:09:06.540 don't know what it was like you know i don't have the context i don't know what happened before or after
00:09:11.280 so thanks for for putting scott's words into action and showing us what that looked like sorry owen
00:09:18.200 you know me i'm a hijacker
00:09:19.360 well i'm going to say more than welcome now i'm going to continue listening i have to get to work
00:09:25.940 so i'm going to turn my camera off but just want to send love to everybody please keep sending me
00:09:30.180 your stories at joel pollack on x and my email address if you want it is jb pollack at gmail.com
00:09:36.960 and i know that everybody in this audience is going to send me good stuff and not spam if i give out my
00:09:41.740 email address so jb pollack.com send me your recollections and your feelings and i'll look
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00:10:55.220 to mark schneider mark go ahead the floor is yours yeah um yeah thanks for having me uh erica thanks for
00:11:04.940 reaching out and inviting me um you know it's it's interesting because i started following scott uh
00:11:11.480 before he was on periscope if you can believe that i joined uh twitter back then when he had 30 000
00:11:19.820 followers and and i can remember uh the moment that he followed me on twitter um and i love telling the
00:11:28.140 story because uh it was one of those times we would like reach out for ideas for uh comic strips
00:11:34.280 and um i had uh i had made a suggestion that there be a new manager um and it'd be the the host of
00:11:42.880 dirty jobs micro because if you've ever worked in the corporate world we all deal with that micro manager
00:11:48.500 um and it was like i made that and then immediately he followed me and it just like it made my day
00:11:54.840 um you know it made my probably my year uh for that so it's like 2015 time frame um and i just
00:12:02.620 remember you know like he was i was the guy who would like jump on anytime i was on periscope i'd be
00:12:07.980 in the middle of work probably shouldn't have periscope on but i'd be jumping on and watching him and
00:12:13.180 and providing feedback i was in the u.s navy at that time um you know one of those uh you know scott
00:12:20.380 always talked about having fuck you money i definitely didn't have that and i put my neck out there
00:12:24.820 a lot um during that period um it was just fun to watch it grow and uh and when i retired in
00:12:32.420 2018 i actually had the comic strip uh where i was a guest character on in my retirement bulletin
00:12:39.420 with the message confirming that that was me so uh all my guests at my retirement ceremony got to see
00:12:45.560 uh some of my correspondents with scott get to see a dilbert comic not many people in the military
00:12:50.520 he put a dilbert comic in there um in their retirement pamphlet but uh but i thought that
00:12:56.180 was important um and then when i retired uh i remember uh scott had naval robincon on and uh they
00:13:03.620 were talking about like this it was this this uh periscope to that'll change your life and it was one of
00:13:10.920 those that changed my life it was no joke he got done and that's when i sent out and i put out a
00:13:16.980 thread of tweets that was my green nuclear deal in response to the green new deal and that's when
00:13:22.780 i became known as the nuclear advocate um i was working at commercial nuclear power stations at the
00:13:28.000 time um and that was just a lot of fun you know just just having that uh that getting to know scott
00:13:35.100 uh getting to know michael schellenberger and um and i know that and discussing with scott i think the big
00:13:40.420 thing that uh the three of us did was uh instead of making it a nuclear yes no conversation we made
00:13:47.580 a decision between traditional nuclear and advanced nuclear so we took that uh you know the lesson of
00:13:54.280 scott adams of a make people think past the sale was it was no longer do we want nuclear it's a what
00:14:00.140 style of nuclear uh do you want um and now i'm taking those lessons that i've learned and uh for those of
00:14:08.860 you don't know uh a little over a year ago i moved to australia so i'm uh speaking at everyone here at
00:14:15.260 11 o'clock at night uh in uh awsp time i live in perth which is the most remote city on the planet
00:14:24.180 um but australia doesn't have nuclear power they have one uh research reactor but they're working on
00:14:30.380 getting nuclear submarines and so now i'm working you know my magic if you will through uh the lessons
00:14:37.460 i've learned from scott on how to bring uh the language and you know how do we bring nuclear
00:14:44.700 energy to australia a nation that doesn't understand nuclear energy um by any stretch of the imagination
00:14:51.120 so it's just been it's been a lot of fun and uh i go to public events for the australian submarine
00:14:57.280 agency and i ask very difficult questions because um one it helps the crowd to develop credibility with
00:15:05.300 with them um and when i have credibility with them i'm pacing them so i can lead them and uh i know
00:15:12.320 i've influenced the politicians here and it's it's all for scott because of that you know scott is the
00:15:18.720 one that that uh you know when i was struggling to decide whether to come out here to follow my wife
00:15:24.880 i followed my wife out here um for the work that she's doing to support the uh the akus nuclear
00:15:30.180 submarine program but uh he was a person that i bounced things off of and um i can remember very
00:15:38.200 vividly uh one of my favorite periscopes was the time that joshua lysic jumped on um to talk to scott
00:15:46.320 uh as being the anti-trumper turned pro-trumper uh and that was one of my favorite periscopes as well
00:15:53.600 so i can remember there's just so many memories going back of scott you know from watching the early
00:15:58.560 periscope days you know to the pandemic um you know i've watched him in my car i've watched him
00:16:05.800 at work i've watched him in the middle of the night um you know i'll just everywhere uh and then i think
00:16:12.980 probably the one of the things i will uh always remember was that a couple years ago when i was
00:16:19.960 working for the u.s coast guard i got to come out to san francisco to do some communications equipment
00:16:24.780 testing and uh i reached out to scott and um we had dinner and uh and i'm and it was so funny i i would
00:16:33.800 have never asked him for a selfie but i can and i'm thinking i'm gonna close it up with this but i
00:16:39.020 can remember as you're walking out of the restaurant he goes now's the time when you need to ask me for
00:16:44.580 the selfie that you want to ask for and so he insisted i took that selfie and i literally have
00:16:51.200 stared at that photo of us with tears in my eyes for the last several weeks actually so um yeah it's
00:16:59.000 i i'm gonna miss him greatly but uh you know the love and outpouring and uh what's been amazing is
00:17:06.320 going on my x feed and just seeing positive posts after positive posts after positive posts about scott
00:17:13.800 and it's been such a thing of comfort i've never seen x so positive in my entire life
00:17:19.880 it's probably the most wonderful thing it's so true mark like uh i sounded so smart when scott met
00:17:29.240 you and started having you on i was like oh gen four nuclear it's nothing to do with the other stuff
00:17:34.060 and i'm like telling people oh all the waste can fit into one barrel i'm like what am what who am i
00:17:39.700 that's what everybody else was saying too but joshua is right here too and joshua i love that
00:17:46.640 periscope also when why don't you two talk about it together about when scott had you on that was
00:17:53.380 amazing yes thank you now mark there's a chapter i believe it's towards the ends of uh reframe your
00:18:02.220 brain that is basically all about you and about how you in in part through the vehicle of
00:18:09.560 coffee with scott adams changed the not just national but international conversation on
00:18:15.260 nuclear power and now we're seeing all of these venture capitalists and influencers
00:18:21.580 influencers venture capitalists talking about how important it is to invest in all this nuclear power
00:18:26.820 so before before there's a technological or an economic transformation in a specific industry
00:18:33.280 there's the influencers sort of give permission to explore that space and mark schneider you
00:18:41.820 personally together with scott adams sort of gave international permission for nuclear power to
00:18:49.640 uh shall we say get made great again haha uh moving rooms with one of my kids now um in any case
00:18:59.140 yes we're all talking about the i think it was june 2019 so i began following scott on social media in
00:19:10.320 2018 shortly after my son was born let's see you want to say hi to 22 000 people no no okay gen alpha for
00:19:19.880 you um he's like he'll get a message on his phone he's like i don't want to see my phone it's like yes
00:19:26.240 as opposed to those of us why are there always 2 000 no there's 20 23 000 people see even he knows
00:19:33.480 why is there only ever 20 to 30 000 people on live stream see this is what we're always curious about
00:19:38.700 why is uh you know why is uh youtube and whatnot giving the same number um yes now coming back to
00:19:46.200 uh the 2018 2019 season i follow scott daily on twitter at the time during that particular period that
00:19:55.820 particular year and he changed my thinking significantly but the first let's say experience
00:20:02.060 i had of scott was in on the on the matter of donald trump was in 2017 i was i was in my cia phase
00:20:10.200 which stands for uh cringe internet atheist and in that state i was a real follower of sam harris's
00:20:17.740 podcast called waking up and he had a debate with scott adams back in 2017 it was i don't remember
00:20:27.020 exactly what year it was or what month rather and in that show i was expecting oh i like the
00:20:33.700 dilbert guy i always liked seeing his comics and other daryl dilbert paraphernalia at office depot when
00:20:39.420 i was a kid you go there you see the cute funky little screensavers you see the cow computers right
00:20:44.640 remember gateway all the uh cow computers everywhere and then there was dilbert right all the dilbert
00:20:50.220 stuff so that was the passing the time of parents trying to make copies of everything so 2017 i'm i'm
00:20:57.700 a little worried that the dilbert guy is going to get embarrassed by my guy you know sam harris and
00:21:03.100 scott comes off completely reasonable and normal and rational and even kind to sam who sort of as we
00:21:10.560 might say in the midwest united states sam harris kind of had a cow during that debate and i like
00:21:17.240 my guy lost i wasn't expecting this that was 2017 that was the pre-suasion then follow scott for a year
00:21:25.740 read winvigley the first edition and then scott says hey if you were uh let's say uh deprogrammed from
00:21:36.700 tds trump arrangement syndrome and you also were at one point a a liberal i'd like to have you on my show
00:21:43.960 and i thought that's literally me because that at that point i had learned that so much of what was
00:21:52.200 believed about donald trump was not moved to something not correct um and one of those moments
00:21:57.320 that i had was i was with what i like to call an npr american don't forget the hyphen npr americans are
00:22:02.800 people who they consume news like npr like the new york times and they believe it's real news
00:22:07.860 uh and so i had seen it on a particular day shortly before this scott adams offer i had seen
00:22:17.160 i i donald trump tweet that i thought was pretty funny which was a new thing for me being okay with
00:22:23.540 liking a tweet from the president number 45 at that time and i was with an npr american and we were
00:22:30.180 listening to npr and the npr broadcaster reads the first half of the tweet stops does not read the
00:22:38.540 rest which provides an essential context and then they have all these commentators and experts who
00:22:43.980 come on to talk about how this is a decency free presidency and i thought oh wow i mean you know that
00:22:52.840 mean are we the baddies that i was having that sort of that experience and i showed it to the npr
00:22:57.920 american friend at the time and you know what this individual said or as scott would say and in
00:23:04.760 the visual uh this person said showing them the tweet on my phone oh that's a photoshop screenshot
00:23:11.760 it was live live on twitter oh that's a photoshop screenshot that couldn't be real npr wouldn't do that
00:23:19.480 and then just glitched into cognitive dissonance and then i began to realize that's what happened to
00:23:24.920 sam harris and i awakened to the reality that i had termed arrangement syndrome myself and now
00:23:30.760 thanks to scott happens i had been cured and so long story short i replied to scott's post in 2019
00:23:36.580 went on and shared you know gave the interview with with him there uh at the very end he asked you know
00:23:44.660 where can people find you and i said oh i'm at joshua lisek and uh i'm i'm a non-fiction book ghost
00:23:49.760 writer i said oh okay that's pretty cool and i think that day maybe the next day i got onto his
00:23:55.640 interface by winhub app which was you could book experts for a specific period of time kind of like
00:24:00.480 a micro transaction micro lesson live you could get with people that's how i met a lot that's how i met
00:24:05.840 mike cernovich for the first time by the way as he was on interface at the time and i get on and
00:24:12.100 just mentioned hey i have an interface profile and then i guess scott did some homework on me and
00:24:17.580 some research over the next 24 hours and then on his license the next day he mentioned oh you know
00:24:22.440 we had joshua lisek on yesterday so he's this non-fiction book ghost writer he does a lot of
00:24:26.900 business and he's really good you should check him out if you want to write a book something like
00:24:30.060 that and i think i got 100 inquiries for a ghost writer in the next probably week or so and that
00:24:39.240 provided an initial batch of clients for me and through that experience i was able to move my
00:24:46.320 family from a dangerous part of town to a very safe part of a town with a new house new opportunities
00:24:52.800 new experiences get into rental properties and become a real estate investor so much of my life
00:24:59.520 opened up have have more children so much of my life opportunity opened up because of that
00:25:05.980 relationship with scott and it was from the very beginning uh where he recommended me to his audience
00:25:11.700 and then the referrals from referrals from referrals as a non-fiction ghost writer from
00:25:16.640 that one let's say one minute commercial that scott gave for me back in 2019 and then the irony of
00:25:23.500 course is after the cancellation in 2023 i get a text message from him i think the next day
00:25:29.720 and i'm not going to share exactly what it said because i just don't share those listening 27 000
00:25:37.300 people watching right now don't share your private conversations you had with scott that is so tacky
00:25:42.280 we saw all the conservative influencers doing that with charlie kirk don't do that i will call you out
00:25:46.580 if i see that i will name you and shame you i apologize that said uh the gist of the conversation
00:25:53.240 i had with scott was something to the effect of he he remembered what he had said about me what was
00:25:58.760 that four years prior and so that's how we ended up working together on reframe and the the second
00:26:04.080 editions of his books plus the third installment of god's debris but i think it was that interview
00:26:10.300 2019 coming back to you mark schneider how you and i met for the first time uh was you'd watch that and
00:26:15.740 i think you messaged me the very next day or maybe that same day that's how he was introduced to the
00:26:20.040 coffee with scott adams community and i will also admit i haven't shared a story before but i will also
00:26:25.260 add that there's one other softening up experience i'd had to donald trump as the president and kind of
00:26:31.820 the make america great again movement and it was right around the time i watched the sam harris scott
00:26:38.040 adams debate and sam kind of got trounced and this will be my last anecdote for the morning i'm gonna
00:26:44.140 hang it up here and bid you all farewell i was invited by a couple of local clients who were
00:26:50.500 conservative republicans ghostwriting clients to an event where there was going to be this guest speaker
00:26:55.740 and so i'd go to this really nice country club and i'm still kind of a self-avowed liberal at this
00:27:01.920 point but feeling a little bit of tail between the legs experience with sam harris being just defeated
00:27:06.760 by scott adams the dilbert guy like my favorite atheist philosopher gets absolutely trounced and
00:27:13.080 humiliated by a cartoonist what reality is this and so there is a guest speaker at this event in this
00:27:19.380 country club for republicans the county republican party event and i meet the guest speaker turns out
00:27:26.720 he's an author also from ohio where when we're hanging out there for probably a good couple
00:27:31.820 hours we're at the same table together and he speaks and he shares and i'm thinking this is not
00:27:36.740 the republican party of we got to go invade iraq and take out saddam and get those weapons of mass
00:27:42.000 destruction mission accomplished the rapture is coming at any moment so we got to get over there
00:27:46.940 the middle east that's the sort of political religious community i grew up in and this guy
00:27:51.960 was very different he sounded almost like a almost like a democrat that i remembered from my youth
00:27:57.760 about the working class this an american dream and opportunity and affording a house and a car
00:28:02.760 and being able to have kids this is 2017 and everyone in maga they're all wearing hats and i'm kind of
00:28:09.420 rolling my eyes at it at this point in time 2017 and this is not at all the republican party i remember
00:28:16.260 i could get used to these people i like these people and i so i exchanged some writing tips
00:28:21.340 and whatnot with the speaker we get a selfie together and that that was my first in-person
00:28:26.520 experience in my adult life where i enjoyed being around republicans and i thought i i am on the same
00:28:33.600 team as these people not the guy just humiliated by the dilbert guy or as we like you know garfield
00:28:39.760 everyone would call him garfield right scott adams so anyway as many of you have just guessed
00:28:45.200 the guy i was chatting with for a few hours there that was jd vance as a citizen before he was in
00:28:50.820 politics doing his book tour and i thought this is my republican party right here awesome thank you
00:28:56.900 for the opportunity everyone thank you very much thank you joshua thank you very cool josh thanks
00:29:04.160 sure thing good to see you beverly beverly why don't you jump on and tell us who you are and
00:29:11.120 say your say i'll tell i can tell everyone that you are uh an og locals woman you are my soul sister
00:29:21.320 and uh beverly greets scott's beloveds every morning by saying
00:29:27.080 good morning lovies because you all are my lovies and um you know i don't really have a fancy story
00:29:38.800 or anything remarkable about how um i came to follow scott other than you know it was 2016
00:29:46.500 and i'm cruising twitter and of course i've already decided you know i like this trump guy the minute he
00:29:54.500 said only rosie o'donnell i was hooked i thought this is this is somebody different and he's going to
00:30:01.020 wipe the the floor you know with everybody and he did but nobody else was feeling that way and then i
00:30:08.000 came upon this tweet simple one sentence tweet by scott um about hillary how she looked like
00:30:16.460 the science fiction president of the galactic and i laughed i tear i cry laugh the entire day over that
00:30:26.160 simple tweet and i said you know what one sentence i've got to have this person in my life and i stumbled
00:30:33.580 across his periscope and i've never left and the thing about scott adams that i think we all
00:30:39.560 probably agree on is um a coffee hour with scott adams was like christmas every day you you you had
00:30:49.220 there was a present it was going to be opened and you didn't know what it would be but he always had
00:30:55.720 something new and different and it could be um triggered by just the smallest thing a comment
00:31:02.340 that you know somebody in the in the chat said and he would pick up on it and we would get 15 minutes of
00:31:10.040 awesome content you know and feedback on that and so you know yesterday i made um kind of a tribute post
00:31:20.080 right after we found out that he'd passed you know and and i did it simply because i could barely breathe
00:31:26.600 and when i can't breathe i type so i i typed this um uh you know what he meant to me and and his
00:31:36.460 passing is a small tribute i suppose and it got picked up by jack basavik and reposted and it absolutely
00:31:44.260 blew up um i spent the rest of the day trying to respond to people who were saying oh my god yes
00:31:52.760 that's me oh my god you said it perfectly that's exactly how i'm feeling oh it was exactly like that
00:31:58.460 and what am i going to do now and you know and i spent the entire day trying to personally respond
00:32:04.720 to all of these people and i mean we're talking hundreds and hundreds of people and um you know
00:32:12.120 it occurred to me that there is still a tremendous hunger out there um scott was the compass for a
00:32:21.520 lot of people and they've suddenly lost their compass and you know they feel adrift they just
00:32:27.780 feel adrift and i think we all feel adrift but we were so lucky to have 10 years with him 10 years
00:32:36.340 every day and we have people out there who were only six months in or two years in and you know they
00:32:45.920 were starting to to get into a groove you know feeling like they were going in the right direction
00:32:51.360 and then he's gone so somehow we've we've got to you know between all of us and it's going to be
00:32:59.920 mostly you guys not me i mean i'm so old i can i'm so forgetful i can hide my own stop it well
00:33:06.660 seriously i can hide my own easter eggs but you know between all of us we should be able to keep
00:33:15.780 his spirit and his um intention and his message rolling you know keep it we do keep that train rolling
00:33:24.500 and he was so much a part of my day i tell this story and you know and it still tickles me because
00:33:30.440 it's true i never missed 10 o'clock never missed and there were times when i was actually sitting
00:33:36.720 in the exam room at my doctor you know because they they chase after old people four or five times a
00:33:42.620 year so and you have to show up so i'm sitting there and it's at 10 o'clock and the doctor's getting
00:33:48.780 ready to you know talk to me or whatever it is and i tell him hush wait just a moment
00:33:54.500 wait a minute we're getting ready to do the simultaneous sip and of course he's just
00:33:57.700 i told my doctor to hush and wait because it was time for the sip now how bad are you when you do that
00:34:06.120 you know so um anyway did you not notice that scott scott was hushing away the staff during when he
00:34:15.420 was sitting in the hospital so he was doing the same thing you were yes yes yes we're that important
00:34:21.980 to each other you know you gotta have your priorities right so anyway the ambulance was
00:34:27.780 the one that blew me away yeah i know it's nuts we're nuts we're all nuts but we're nuts in a good
00:34:35.060 way so you know if whatever i can do you know i'm not a real tech savvy person i'm sitting here
00:34:40.820 literally holding my phone because erica gave me like four minutes notice
00:34:44.860 and i'm not set up for this sort of thing but i will try to be if i'm going to be you know recalled
00:34:53.120 in the future but um the important thing we got to hang together we can't fracture and let this
00:34:59.740 dissipate or fade so um i think it's a you know incumbent upon us to if nothing else take this to
00:35:08.440 the next level for scott you know and pull those people in who are are sitting on the fringes you
00:35:15.280 know those who were just starting out and now they're feeling lost and yesterday i wanted to
00:35:20.360 mention erica that yesterday i had a lot of people say what do i do now what am i going to do now
00:35:26.200 and i just i all i did was paste the link to x coffee with scott adams community and i said
00:35:33.640 we're not going away you know just go here join this community and there will be some arms that
00:35:41.700 will reach out for you and let you know what other options are coming available so i'm going to say to
00:35:48.040 all you beloveds out there and my lovies that if you happen to be on x and you're in scott's community
00:35:54.840 and you see a name that you don't recognize speak to them comment like give them some encouragement
00:36:01.300 bring them into the fold and um we will go from there and i will shut up now and let others talk
00:36:08.700 and it's so wonderful wonderful to be alive and to be with you and i loved him dearly
00:36:14.860 thanks beverly likewise thank you for uh mentioning the coffee yeah yeah yeah go mark uh mark's in
00:36:24.420 australia i keep forgetting beverly you're just so so astute and so many things you said and the
00:36:30.360 only thing i could think about as you were talking about all these people that are you know shall we
00:36:34.900 say lacking in compass um but uh if you've read god's debris uh one of the things that scott talks
00:36:40.900 about is that you know the vision that he had was that god had create you know separated himself out
00:36:47.360 into the world and maybe we are scott's debris right and i think that's kind of where we are is that
00:36:53.480 we are out here and scott has trained us and guided us and collectively we can create recreate scott
00:37:00.420 um and help each other so i just i really appreciate what you said beverly so i'm sorry i had to jump in
00:37:06.500 there erica um didn't mean to take over your show but uh oh my god it's not my show do i'm just a
00:37:13.720 control freak and and the chat's probably over there on local is like no this is just erica um
00:37:19.340 poor oh and he's like erica i have news stories and i'm surprised she hasn't used her hands more
00:37:25.200 oh yeah look at me
00:37:27.080 oh and i'm trying to get to the news but it's so hard
00:37:32.960 it's perfectly fine we are where we are
00:37:36.620 um that being said yeah oh and beverly thank you so much for mentioning the coffee with scott
00:37:44.480 adam's community on x because it is there's like uh i don't know there's like 10 000 some
00:37:51.080 odd people on there now who want to be there for scott the only thing is i ask you you guys
00:37:55.820 if you see anything sketchy or shady just report the post for me so i can boot them out of the
00:38:01.180 community um because we want to keep it positive and i i'm not you're like i've turned into cernovich
00:38:07.700 like in the last uh few months and i am blocking like nobody's business like as soon as i get cranky
00:38:14.220 i'm like blocked blocked blocked and so i want to be able to do that for scott too like i don't
00:38:20.180 want to put up with any nonsense over there um his legacy and his memory which i can't believe i'm
00:38:27.460 saying um are too important to this universe so it's nothing about respect and love and community and
00:38:34.860 um it does not cost anything to be in that community there's a button on top that says join
00:38:39.700 just hit join and you're part of that community and share your stories and please you guys dig up
00:38:46.680 all the um videos of scott cracking up because i love them so much and i was listening to and you
00:38:53.900 can always scroll back and listen to his other um live streams but i was listening to one today it
00:38:59.700 was from like 10 months ago and it was just funny because when he opened he's like okay before we get to
00:39:06.420 the serious news and then he's like you know i i saw a story about a juvenile detention center
00:39:14.080 where the people in charge were setting up like uh what was the word like these like little warrior
00:39:22.880 battles with the the people that were in there and so you're like oh my like your first reaction as a
00:39:28.880 normal person is like oh my god they're gonna do like gladiator fighting with the juvenile inmates
00:39:34.240 but then like scott starts laughing and he's like i shouldn't be laughing he's like but he's like what
00:39:40.780 you know like these are juveniles and they're good and i'm just like you know what he just reminds me
00:39:46.040 like look at this story from different angles and if you can laugh about it a little bit it's okay
00:39:50.720 and he just made everything okay by seeing the funny and the spin and the humor and things but
00:39:57.720 um is there a news story that we should probably talk about today while we have uh 20 minutes left
00:40:05.520 owen
00:40:06.560 i can pull up my feed hold on a sec okay i'm sure i'm sure something's happening i i know that there was
00:40:16.540 um a ruling from scotus on uh women's uh men being in women's sports and um yeah i don't think i caught
00:40:26.180 that one but um trump there's a win on affordability apparently rents are dropping
00:40:32.940 because of all the deportations um there's 20 metro areas they ranked them according to how rents are
00:40:40.840 changing and most of them are going down significantly like austin is down seven percent
00:40:47.020 san diego is down six percent san jose is down five percent dc is down almost five percent
00:40:52.660 so affordability is on the way for a lot of people can you forward that to the prime minister
00:40:59.720 of australia yeah well i don't know how much uh immigration you're having in australia but um
00:41:09.540 i suppose you might be having the same problem we are i mean i thought you kind of had that
00:41:14.160 ocean surrounding you that would protect you but um so do we supposedly and it doesn't seem to be
00:41:21.100 until trump shut down housing prices are atrocious yeah yeah and meanwhile elon musk is telling us we
00:41:30.020 don't even need to save for retirement because ai is going to just make everything abundant and it
00:41:34.800 won't matter so don't even that was my favorite story i was like oh my god let's go elon i don't
00:41:40.680 even have to save i'm gonna have so much money and prosperity according to him and ai i'm loving that
00:41:46.200 yeah don't worry about the fact that it probably also means money is worthless and we won't have
00:41:53.900 anything of value thanks elon but hey you know i don't know i i know musk has this vision i don't
00:42:02.480 know how it would ever happen that way it seems so unlikely to me um even if most of what he thinks
00:42:08.240 is going to happen is true like if robots and ai really do take over all the jobs and make everything
00:42:13.540 super cheap um i just i can't envision in my mind how the people who own the robots would just say you
00:42:21.640 know what we're going to just give all this wealth to everybody and have this universal high income and
00:42:26.940 have a huge tax on the robots and essentially just hand over all of our company wealth that we're
00:42:33.920 making off this super cheap manufacturing that we're able to do now to everybody just give it
00:42:40.020 away yeah it feels like it feels like um highfalutin socialism to me but what do i know
00:42:46.240 it just seems so much more likely that the companies would say i just want to keep all this for my profits
00:42:52.980 and maybe the prices will go down but um you know it would still end up being going to the companies i would
00:42:59.540 say that's a good thing mark yeah yeah so i work with my company we have um an ai that works in
00:43:08.260 defense secure networks so it doesn't have the same issues of a hallucination um but literally i was
00:43:16.020 using it to evaluate some some questions and uh it literally was like well it's implied this is that i
00:43:23.240 don't care what's implied i care what's written and i'm like i want you to look in this document
00:43:27.980 like those words don't exist in that paragraph literally have the document open and it has a
00:43:34.640 copy of it i'm like those words are not in that paragraph where are you getting these words and we
00:43:40.140 we have a very low hallucination ai and i'm like if ai if they can't solve that at this point like
00:43:47.820 i feel like ai is um it's useful it's helpful it's another tool but it just makes it just means that
00:43:56.420 one person can do a lot more i mean i use it to write emails i use it to do a lot of research but
00:44:01.580 i always have to verify it i'm verifying work instead of doing the research right so it will
00:44:07.560 tell me where something's at i can validate that and then move on so it allows me to triple my workload
00:44:13.840 but i don't think it's going to be replacing as many jobs i think that these these uh ai futurists
00:44:20.760 believe i know scott feels like it had ai's kind of plateaued now so um we'll see if it pushes forward
00:44:29.820 i i don't mind a little plateau that we can catch our breath with it and re-evaluate and just like
00:44:36.720 how much further do we want to go with it so maybe maybe this is a good thing right now i would still
00:44:44.120 encourage everyone to learn ai try it out and see how useful it is for you um i've been doing that more
00:44:49.720 and more and i'm amazed by what i can do and i use it every day at work and it saves me tons of time
00:44:56.940 i mean just like i don't know it probably over 50 percent productivity gain i mean it just you know
00:45:04.320 things that used to take me a week to do or at least several days i can just do it in like an hour
00:45:08.820 and and i do have to have expertise like you said to be able to know when it's giving me bs
00:45:15.280 and to correct it and to edit it and to even i think the magic part is knowing what questions to
00:45:23.420 ask and how to phrase it to give it specific instructions and not leave anything important
00:45:28.260 out and you know that i think that's the part that's difficult if you're just a novice like
00:45:34.820 in a field like if you're trying to you know have it tell you something about nuclear energy and you know
00:45:39.560 nothing about nuclear energy then i think you're going to have a hard time but if you are an expert
00:45:44.820 then you can ask the right questions with the right words and it can you know at least tell you what it
00:45:51.840 knows and it's kind of like a huge you know great research assistant but i think it's much more than
00:45:57.780 just like a search engine it's it's it can interpret things like you said how it can figure out what might
00:46:03.160 be implied by something or it can um craft things in a certain way or summarize things that might have
00:46:09.240 taken you hours to read and understand and and all of a sudden it's you have the gist of it in minutes
00:46:14.120 and um you know you can ask it to recommend things to you or you know give you options for things and
00:46:21.000 it does a pretty good job with that a lot of the time and it does so i i find it incredibly useful
00:46:28.000 and i do think it's going to make a huge impact on the business world just because the people who use
00:46:33.240 it might be twice as productive as the people who don't and that's going to be a huge differentiator
00:46:37.960 over time and it'll impact everything but yeah can i ask you a quick question i use uh grok and
00:46:47.260 chat gpt myself um grok usually if i just need an instant answer you know who was president in what year
00:46:54.600 i use chat gpt and one of my conversations with it uh is titled writing guidance and sometimes i'll
00:47:04.580 use it just to double check my syntax or you know is this actually a word you know and i would type it
00:47:10.760 in there and because i'd get a red squiggly on something that i thought was a common word so i use it
00:47:16.580 do you find that um over time you're training your conversations with chat gpt or ai to come to know
00:47:27.440 you because i'm to the point now i mean i've been using this well over eight ten months now well you
00:47:35.700 know as soon as it became available to us and i find that it is giving me answers that are really
00:47:42.400 almost customized for me you know it does remember certain artifacts it does remember questions that
00:47:49.100 i've asked it before um even though i haven't told it to remember it is starting to customize itself to
00:47:56.220 my experience do you find that as well that it's it you're actually training to get to know you
00:48:03.180 personally you know and not just a voice out in the void yeah i would say it's it's highly dependent
00:48:09.700 on the system that is something that in certain ai chatbots is kind of built in and some that it's
00:48:17.080 not and many of them and probably most of them now have capabilities to put in that memory that you
00:48:23.260 want it to have where you you can give it overall guidance like you can tell it globally like every
00:48:30.960 time i talk to you remember these things and i think you can give it essentially what they call
00:48:35.280 like a system prompt where every time it responds to you it first reads the system prompt and
00:48:41.840 remembers that first to put what you said into context and if you told it to respond a certain
00:48:47.100 way or with a certain length or in a certain style um then it'll try and do that every time and and i've
00:48:53.980 noticed that it does remember those things because when i give it certain guidance it often mentions
00:48:58.020 that guidance in its response which can be annoying sometimes because you don't necessarily want it to
00:49:03.060 mention it all the time but um but it you can tell that it's keeping it in mind and um then many of
00:49:10.340 them including chat tpt and grok have what they call projects now where you can group conversations
00:49:16.340 into a project and you can also upload files to it and it'll remember all the files that you upload to
00:49:23.420 that project when you're talking to it within that project and it will also give you the same sort of
00:49:29.580 system prompt for the project where you can say okay anytime i'm talking to you within this project
00:49:34.880 even if i start a new conversation within the project always keep in mind whatever i just told you
00:49:40.840 about this project so you can give it context you can say this is what this project is about this is
00:49:45.440 what we're trying to do you're an expert at this for this conversation and um you can steer it in a
00:49:51.540 particular direction for that project and then it'll customize what it says now within a session
00:49:58.400 usually these chatbots will remember what you just asked because it'll look back basically and say okay
00:50:05.840 let me predict the next word but it's the next word based on the whole history of that conversation
00:50:10.520 and so it's going to try and keep in mind all the questions and answers and other things that it's done
00:50:15.720 up to that point but every one of these chatbots has a limited context window that's what they call
00:50:23.180 it is a context window of how much it can remember and so if you keep talking and talking and talking
00:50:27.820 in that same chat window without starting a new conversation um then eventually the first stuff that
00:50:35.400 you told it it's going to forget because it might be let's say 128 000 tokens which is you know not
00:50:43.340 necessarily exactly the same thing as words but it's something like that and so if you keep going
00:50:50.520 for what i would say is too long with a conversation then it's going to start forgetting what you told it
00:50:55.480 and it'll remember the recent stuff that you just told it but it won't remember the stuff that was
00:51:00.520 farther back and it might even not even have that in the conversation anymore if you scroll up you'll
00:51:06.860 probably see only the context window part and then anything before that is just gone you it's not even in
00:51:11.680 your history anymore and um so what i've heard a lot that i try to keep in mind is you have to treat
00:51:19.660 these chatbots like they have alzheimer's they they have a short-term memory but they do not have a
00:51:25.660 long-term memory and if you start a new conversation it's like starting over with a different person
00:51:29.760 and so you have to set all the context again and you can't expect it to remember what you said
00:51:34.680 in a different conversation and if you if you don't start a new conversation then you you can't
00:51:42.220 count on it to remember everything even within that same conversation you have to keep reminding it
00:51:47.020 like you know if there's something that it already said itself that you wanted to remember you might
00:51:53.280 have to tell it remember you said this or you know remember i told you this and keep reminding it
00:52:00.240 like just keep a text file on the side or something and just paste it back in every so often if it's
00:52:06.020 important to just keep it on track and oh and i'm just i'm just laughing because i see andy over there
00:52:13.600 on the locals chat he said it's like talking with biden so it's exactly it's exactly like that you got
00:52:22.560 it and i mean i had you know it's it's not funny but i i had a father who had alzheimer's my
00:52:27.020 grandfather had alzheimer's yeah so i have experience with this you know i would ask my
00:52:31.240 dad a question late late in his life and it would be like 10 seconds later he wouldn't remember that
00:52:35.800 i just asked him a question um and you know i'd have to just repeat the question or he would answer
00:52:42.120 it multiple times not remembering that he already answered it i would ask him to tell me a story and
00:52:46.860 he would just start repeating himself you know every time and um you know that's really my experience
00:52:54.160 with ai too is that eventually it starts forgetting and it just won't keep the knowledge now again
00:53:00.140 different chatbots are different like gemini for example the google ai um that one does get to know
00:53:06.720 you and i think that's somewhat unique i think the other ones are trying to replicate it so chap gpt
00:53:10.820 might be starting to do this but i know that google is kind of hanging their hat on this where
00:53:16.780 if you have gmail and if you have uh google docs and you have a whole bunch of content in there
00:53:23.560 when you use gemini it's going to read all of that and it's going to know all of that or at least have
00:53:29.780 access to it so it can look it up on a moment's notice whenever you ask it something it might do a
00:53:33.940 search through all your mail forever that's on gmail and all your documents that you may have written
00:53:40.500 or uploaded or anything and it's going to use that when it responds to you and and i saw an article
00:53:46.160 from a journalist that said you know it used it to respond to an email like it said okay you know
00:53:52.620 this it's this person's birthday i want to send him a birthday message so craft a draft you know draft
00:53:57.780 this email for this person and it was he was blown away by the response because it it it remembered
00:54:03.900 details of conversations that these people had between each other years prior and it customized
00:54:10.820 this birthday response to their relationship and their specific details that no one else would have
00:54:19.020 ever known and and you know at first i think he was probably like how the hell did it do that but i
00:54:24.500 think he realized that it must have come from all their email history and all their documents and he
00:54:29.540 i think this person happened to do a journal every day in some kind of google doc format and so
00:54:33.960 it had like this whole person's whole life history and it really knew that person in detail and it could
00:54:39.200 also talk like them because it could say okay you're telling me to draft an email for you
00:54:44.040 so i'm going to model it after the way you talk in this journal um owen i i don't mean to interrupt
00:54:50.960 you but we're coming down on time and mark schneider is going to teach us something about nuclear social
00:54:57.520 license training i don't really think that's what it is okay it's ai related which i can see it was ai
00:55:03.840 related yeah so go ahead so and this is where i was going in it is that uh so my company we
00:55:09.120 have ai clients that we build and so i went and i spent the good five to seven months building out
00:55:17.320 11 powerpoints making beautiful drawings and all that and one of my ai engineers built this in one
00:55:27.920 day so it took my powerpoints took my presentations with all the text files and it took him one day to
00:55:35.840 build this and he said the the hardest part was that i had these crazy formulas in it and that took
00:55:44.200 half a day was to get the formulas that i had if i see if i could find them where like these crazy
00:55:50.580 formulas in there the way i formatted it in powerpoint the ai didn't like and he spent half a day making
00:55:57.280 those formulas look pretty using the ai agent like so that's what you can do with ai um and then i have
00:56:04.360 another uh another story to talk about ai because i think it's all related um but uh so my wife and i
00:56:11.160 we both submitted for uh a contract both our companies did her company did it the old manual method
00:56:18.760 our ai engineer built an ai client that it literally i i didn't had no idea that we had a meeting about
00:56:26.480 this because i was having a medical procedure um my wife sends me this hey are you submitting for
00:56:32.200 this i said hey are we submitting for this like oh by the way you're required to fill out two of
00:56:36.860 these sections of it and then i reached out to her agent you're like hey do i need like send me our
00:56:42.240 two clients i have enough training on our clients to be able to create them and in 20 minutes i just
00:56:48.840 answered some questions and it wrote up my thousand word document um no more than a thousand words
00:56:55.360 with the word count based off of my inputs took me 20 minutes it took my wife a week to write each
00:57:02.080 one of her sections super useful so yeah so there's a huge amount of use but again as owen said you have
00:57:11.860 to you have to be an expert in the in the field so that's the hard part is that how do you get the
00:57:17.200 expertise to be able to be able to do that right interesting i love that um marcella you're sitting
00:57:26.480 quietly do you want to add in anything yeah um my name is marcella pena again um i um long time uh listener
00:57:39.200 first time here not not the first time here but um i started you know going back i'm sorry i'm gonna
00:57:47.600 go back to scott but uh as he would have wanted um i just wanted to a lot of us are sad you know all
00:57:55.920 of us are going to grief him for maybe our whole life um and i wanted to share um a reframe from him which
00:58:06.240 is get out get out meant like if you were being negative in your mind or you were thinking of the
00:58:13.040 past of regrets of things like that use that to go out do something useful today just live how he lived
00:58:25.760 which is always being useful always being helpful to everybody um and that is gonna help me today
00:58:33.600 uh deal with one day with thank you i love that yeah i think we'll have a lot of scottisms in our
00:58:44.960 thoughts in the forefront you know going forward and they will help us get through every day and
00:58:51.840 together and um you know he's just uh just seeing how much he's even taught people that were like oh my
00:58:59.840 god like these people are so brilliant and whatever but no scott taught all of us i recommend if you
00:59:05.440 guys did not see gutfeld last night um and you can go back and watch it the second block was a tribute to
00:59:14.160 scott and i mean i was like greg like you are my soul brother greg because we had the same um experience with scott
00:59:23.680 like how we found him when we found him you know i i knew what dilbert was i wasn't a dilbert girl and um
00:59:31.760 i just was like yeah like this guy is saying stuff that i am totally vibing with this is how i feel
00:59:38.800 and i knew when i first found him i'm like oh this guy scott we are totally going to be friends he's
00:59:45.680 going to be in my life forever like i totally vibe i felt like whichever plane you want to talk about
00:59:52.960 the simulation god put me you know into his periscope for a reason and um it's true and i'm i'm so
01:00:03.840 appreciative for the connection and the friendship we had and um that we could be confidants and um
01:00:11.600 build something amazing and mostly because of this community that he put all of us together
01:00:18.480 and i love you guys so much um you know we're gonna try to do something like this every day this
01:00:25.040 is now the scott adams school okay so we're not trying to be scott obviously we're not scott no one
01:00:32.800 ever could be but you know if we could get together in the morning if it's not on video some days maybe
01:00:39.440 it'll just be on chat maybe on locals we could do like a micro lesson chat or we could do a reframe
01:00:47.120 you know whatever it is and just hang but no matter where you are every day you know we're going to
01:00:53.840 all take a simultaneous sip together and um and you know it'll be in honor of scott and of this
01:01:02.400 community and owen it's so hard because i can't see you so i don't know what you're seeing or if you're
01:01:09.200 reading the chat so sorry you guys sorry i'm just i'm just like this um if you guys don't know me
01:01:14.800 the locals know me and i'm just kind of the person that takes over sorry not sorry but um so sorry
01:01:23.440 owen so you know we're gonna we'll get more into the news as time goes on i'm sure so you know right
01:01:29.760 now it's just all new and um i wanted to bring up something that scott would probably have talked
01:01:35.920 about in his show today which was um president trump um posting about him um and giving him a nickname of
01:01:46.160 the great influencer and he would always um read um sometimes uh president trump's uh
01:01:55.760 um truth post uh on the show and and he would say he's the best writer ever and he's this and that
01:02:04.960 and i just wanted to bring that up because i know wherever he is he saw that and it was great to see
01:02:12.400 um also the tribute besides greg gufffeld the tribute by megan kelly and and glenn beck yeah
01:02:20.240 they really moved uh their audience and they were very moved by him but i'll give the floor to erica
01:02:28.640 again and to owen i know owen do you want to close us out and want to have you guys want to have a
01:02:36.000 goodbye sip for just bye for now sip until tomorrow go for it let's do it we'll do it for scott you guys
01:02:44.880 raise your raise whatever vessel you have and uh until we meet again okay to scott
01:02:56.560 love you beaver thanks for coming on you guys bear with us we'll see you soon love you thanks for coming
01:03:04.160 mark thank you from australia
01:03:14.880 um
01:03:36.000 me
01:03:36.560 me