Real Coffee with Scott Adams - April 02, 2026


The Scott Adams School - 04⧸02⧸26 HOME TEAM News & Current Events


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 1 minute

Words per Minute

165.82607

Word Count

10,258

Sentence Count

339

Misogynist Sentences

23

Hate Speech Sentences

18


Summary

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

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 live
00:00:00.720 good morning everybody look at that all right i'm gonna i'm gonna hit this song
00:00:11.340 are you guys ready i'm ready all right let's go check check this out you guys from uh bob lawler
00:00:18.440 good morning
00:00:20.340 how would you like to take it up to a level that you've never seen before
00:00:28.620 you would
00:00:30.060 all you need for that is a cup of mug or a glass
00:00:33.480 so take your chelsea side
00:00:35.160 a vessel of any kind
00:00:38.520 it's time for scott adams school
00:00:41.000 be useful is the primary rule
00:00:43.720 owen is here with the news
00:00:46.500 marcella brings the legal views
00:00:49.320 Erica, she loves the show, who's the guest?
00:00:53.980 We wanna know
00:00:56.200 Got your glass, your mug, your cup
00:00:59.460 Pour your coffee, fill it up
00:01:04.320 It's time for a sip
00:01:06.100 It's time for the sip
00:01:08.780 It's time for the sip
00:01:12.880 It's time for Scott Adams School
00:01:19.320 yes oh yeah way to start man so fun i hope lawler is here we will definitely be playing that one
00:01:35.960 again it wasn't that fun you guys funky funky he needs to explain how he did all this i mean
00:01:43.740 right? Love it. Did anyone hear Scott say, Erica, the excellent?
00:01:49.940 Oh, it was right after I said something. I was like, yeah.
00:01:54.840 Bob, we love it. That was so fun and groovy. We figured that would give some time for people to
00:02:00.000 come in. Good morning, you guys. We are ready to kick this day off. Are you?
00:02:07.380 I think we need to do something first though. Let's go.
00:02:12.020 there's a little thing called the simultaneous sip most mornings I read
00:02:19.580 from my little script for the introduction sometimes if I'm on the
00:02:25.040 road in a secret location like today I don't have that with me so you might
00:02:30.980 have to help me those of you who have memorized the introduction to the
00:02:34.940 simultaneous sip. All you need is a cup or a mug. Has anybody memorized it? Well, we'll
00:02:48.020 see if somebody can reproduce it in the comments, because I know somebody there has memorized
00:02:55.740 it by now. All right, well, we're not going to make you wait. Let's go directly to the
00:03:02.940 simultaneous sip. You know, it's the best part of your day. It's the dopamine hit of the day,
00:03:07.780 the thing that makes everything better. Simultaneous sip. Go.
00:03:18.880 Classic Scott. I love that. Good morning, everyone. My name is Erica and you are at
00:03:27.740 the scott adams school today is april 2nd 2026 you know what that means nothing really
00:03:35.380 it's no longer april fool's day thank god i hate april fool's day i'm like please let me get
00:03:42.880 through the day without someone giving me a you know false sense of doom so i happened to survive
00:03:49.680 yesterday i hope you guys did too i'm here with marcella and owen as always and you guys we picked
00:03:56.260 out some fun news stories and uh events for you oh real quick top of the show beverly you've done
00:04:04.020 it again look at this this woman and her doll houses i i spied this today okay look at that
00:04:12.980 couch the dog on the couch beverly you are just crushing it out there and then in the picture
00:04:19.060 what's that is that beverly in the picture yeah that's beverly yep she lounges in those
00:04:24.580 types of things at home okay you guys indulge me for one second i have two videos i want to show you
00:04:32.860 here is one holy shit they're going to the moon
00:04:40.560 the suspense is killing me
00:04:44.080 i love how the sound rolls in later hear the water now you start to hear the rocket
00:04:55.540 starting to come across let's go
00:05:04.580 can you imagine on the water here comes the sound listen
00:05:24.580 oh my god
00:05:28.280 that was one clip i listen you guys know i'm a salty girl i love the being on the water on
00:05:39.480 the boat so i was just like i can't imagine but let's watch the one the white house uh sent to
00:05:45.220 us and if you don't know this is artemis is it artemis uh two artemis two it's gonna go
00:05:53.160 up and around the moon and let's see the official White House video. But you guys,
00:05:59.380 this is just amazing. And I'm really, really proud that we're making this the big deal that
00:06:03.540 it is because it is a big deal and we should be reveling in this stuff. This is a glorious time.
00:06:09.440 So one more video for me, for you. Let's go.
00:06:13.060 15. And here we go. 10, 9, 8, 7. RS-25 engines lit. 4, 3, 2, 1. Booster ignition. And lift off.
00:06:32.080 The crew of Artemis II now bound for the moon. Humanity's next great voyage begins.
00:06:37.500 Houston now controlling the flight of Integrity on the Artemis 2 mission around the moon.
00:06:55.500 Integrity, AMT high.
00:06:59.500 AMT high.
00:07:02.500 On time passing 30 seconds on the technical flights.
00:07:05.500 Integrity passes the alternate vehicle.
00:07:07.500 Target milestone. Mission Control Houston seeing good performance
00:07:10.500 on the coordinate engines on the Space Launch System core stage.
00:07:13.500 Integrity, three miles in altitude.
00:07:16.500 Traveling more than 1,200 miles per hour.
00:07:25.500 Mission elapsed time. Passing one minute. Approaching Max-Q.
00:07:43.500 Max-Q on. Ponce de Leon.
00:07:46.500 Stan, we have you loud and clear on Ponce de Leon.
00:07:50.500 Have you the same.
00:07:53.500 Wow. Wow. I mean, wow. Godspeed to them. I just felt like that video needed its whole
00:08:10.020 little segment right there because I'm just so proud. I'm so happy. And I love seeing the best
00:08:17.640 of the best happening. And I feel like we lose sight of the great things we can do sometimes
00:08:23.420 were so bogged down with so many horrible images and things. And then it's like, oh, yes, yes. Thank
00:08:29.860 you for restoring my faith in, I don't know, moving forward and into the future. Marcella,
00:08:37.340 I'm going to come to you first since you're my little space girl, my little science chick.
00:08:42.380 What are you thinking? I mean, I loved watching it from beginning to end. I was nervous because
00:08:49.760 there was a they they like 10 minutes or 15 minutes before they had put a stop to to the
00:08:58.060 mission or you know a pause and so the it was kind of like is it gonna go is it going and then they
00:09:06.360 they they they basically the arm came off you know of the shuttle and it was like let's go
00:09:14.200 all systems go you know it kind of gives you back to the times when you know back to the old days
00:09:21.040 I know with SpaceX we've become more accustomed to this kind of things but I mean I'm just so proud
00:09:28.500 but the funny thing is it happened on April Fool's Day so that kind of that was interesting part of
00:09:38.820 it. And a lot of people are making fun of it. But it's been 50 years that we haven't gone
00:09:44.820 near the moon. This will not land there, but it will orbit the moon and be a 10 day mission.
00:09:54.760 And Trump, President Trump did a truth. And in it, I love that he said, we're winning in space,
00:10:05.580 on earth everywhere and we dominate. And I like that feeling. Yeah. Yeah, I do too. And I see
00:10:14.240 people commenting, like if you're a Gen Xer. So when the challenger blew up, I mean, crazy. And
00:10:21.660 I just remember I went to boarding school, you guys, for high school and I was sick that day.
00:10:27.620 And so I was like in the little lounge watching. It was the only thing on the TV. I didn't know
00:10:32.420 much about it, but I'm watching it take off. And then I swear my thought was like, when it
00:10:38.960 exploded, I was like, wow, takeoffs are aggressive. Like what the heck is happening here? Like I
00:10:46.020 didn't even like realize what was happening. And, you know, so now then when you realize what
00:10:50.360 happened, I was like, like everybody is commenting like you hold your breath. You're like, is it
00:10:55.560 okay? Did they get past that point that the challenger got past? Like you, you just, you
00:10:59.960 You hold your breath and pray, and I'm so happy that it seemed to go without a hitch.
00:11:06.680 And Owen, tell us your space story.
00:11:10.260 Yeah, well, I mean, I'm very proud of the country and everyone that was involved.
00:11:14.720 I think it's a huge accomplishment for them and for the country.
00:11:18.780 I'm glad we're taking the lead on this.
00:11:21.080 And like Marcella said, it's been at least 50 years, maybe longer, depending on your perspective of what happened back in the 60s.
00:11:29.960 but uh you know i and i had questions about that like i was like how are they getting through the
00:11:35.020 van allen radiation belt and that was missing from all the stories i didn't see any stories
00:11:39.460 about the launch saying here's how they figured out how to get past that van allen radiation belt
00:11:43.840 i asked grok about it and it said something about like maybe they could have the right angle so they
00:11:50.500 could kind of maybe move along with the particles so they're not getting hit by the particles and
00:11:54.720 maybe they have some kind of shielding but they didn't go into a lot of detail yeah because that
00:12:00.200 was i mean that that's one of the things where they said oh we lost the technology we don't know
00:12:04.500 how they did it like it's like come on you come on you didn't lose all you know and uh like somebody
00:12:11.580 figured it out somebody knows how they did it and um so that's a question in my mind still is like
00:12:17.800 how did they get through the van electric radiation belt without you know having lots of radiation
00:12:21.440 hit them and killing them and but they you know it looks like they did it so that's a huge
00:12:26.300 accomplishment whether it's the first time or not you know or not but um you know i'm also
00:12:31.760 interested in what's on the dark side of the moon you know there's all those conspiracy theories
00:12:35.620 there so i'm like waiting for the footage to say show me the dark side of the moon because they
00:12:39.760 they're circling it right now as i understand it so they should have lots of footage i don't know
00:12:44.460 if they're broadcasting any of it or exactly how that's going but um you know supposedly they're
00:12:49.840 orbiting around the moon and so they should be able to see all that stuff and so it's kind of
00:12:53.840 interesting from a lot of different perspectives and then the reactions there was this viral
00:12:58.820 clip where they asked some kid like why are you interested this or why did you come out to watch
00:13:02.780 the launch and he's like we're going to the effing moon i saw that kid he's like we're going back
00:13:07.640 but he didn't say effing yeah and then and of course we have to show what the other side said
00:13:14.840 so tom costello from nbc he said we should celebrate he said i think it's important and
00:13:22.420 relevant to take a moment to say wow we should be collectively not as americans not as north
00:13:27.280 americans but as just as humans proud of the achievement here that humans have been able to
00:13:31.940 do this we're about to go even further so he was like saying no no no this is an american
00:13:36.060 accomplishment it's just a human accomplishment like just come on dude just like for once in
00:13:42.760 your life show some patriotism show some spirit like we did it the chinese didn't use it my god
00:13:50.700 right exactly like we're doing it and uh so this is gonna just be so fun for so many reasons like
00:13:58.940 will the images line up like can we ever act like okay this is just the chick talking okay i know
00:14:06.420 nothing but why can't they land on the moon this time um they they will eventually artemis 3 in
00:14:18.680 2028 is supposed to land um again they they are redoing everything it um so this is part of that
00:14:26.820 uh figuring that out and how it'll work eventually it will land on the moon and then there will be
00:14:33.300 like possibly a uh like they're gonna have you know a constant um presence presence in the moon
00:14:44.080 my brother that you might not know is an aerospace engineer so i was texting with him yesterday he
00:14:51.800 was part of nasa's this particular project before and i asked him a few questions and
00:14:58.500 And, you know, my brother is like, oh, yeah, the hardest part is over because I asked him, they're supposed to do the moon's gravity through the moon's gravity.
00:15:07.680 They're supposed to slingshot back to Earth.
00:15:10.040 And I asked him, like, is that difficult, Mauricio?
00:15:13.020 And he was like, no, no, that's if they know how to how to maneuver the and go around and it's going to be, you know, it's it's elementary.
00:15:25.660 I was like, all right.
00:15:26.820 yeah i'm just wondering you know did we actually ever land there and like we can't do it 50 years
00:15:33.780 later there's not the technology so i'm just like what's going to be revealed when they actually do
00:15:40.100 land on the moon is it going to look the same as it did in the it should video back in the day i
00:15:46.220 mean that was as i understand it again assuming we actually did land on the moon that the big one
00:15:52.040 of the big challenges was that you know you need all that fuel to get out of earth's atmosphere but
00:15:57.240 then you also need lots of fuel to get off the moon and to make your way back and then i know
00:16:02.380 gravity is less so it's a little easier but you still it was like you know we only have so much
00:16:06.360 room and so much weight that we can take and so it was a kind of an engineering challenge just to
00:16:11.080 say how do we make sure not only do we have enough to get there but to get back and um you know that
00:16:18.100 that might be a lot less of a concern now because i'm sure we've had so many advances in energy that
00:16:23.480 we probably can do a lot more with less weight at this point but still i'm sure that's a just a
00:16:28.840 physics problem and um yeah i think uh and i i didn't i didn't miss the fact that the artemis 2
00:16:36.360 from lockheed martin was pointier than the spacex rockets i don't think that was an accident did you
00:16:43.600 did you guys hear that the toilet malfunction see i didn't hear about that no plumbers are needed
00:16:50.700 it is now fixed integrity the actual where there are the astronauts if there was a toilet
00:16:59.220 next time they can bring mark with next time and they'll have a plumber oh yeah somebody was um
00:17:06.580 i'm not i i guess i'm not so knowledgeable about this but they were quoting like oh they need that
00:17:13.000 guy from the big bang theory because the toilet malfunction i was like i don't i don't watch that
00:17:18.840 i don't know that i don't know that i didn't catch that reference either i've seen it a bunch
00:17:23.160 of times but i certainly haven't seen all of them yeah they don't get to the moon for six days the
00:17:28.840 dark side of the moon is just the back side that we don't see due to the orbit they are looking for
00:17:34.920 a parking spot well k huntimer we shall see we have a we have a theory about the other side of
00:17:45.080 the moon yeah it'll be interesting if they just sort of cut out the footage and say oh it's dark
00:17:50.680 we're not going to broadcast as we get back to the light side yeah we'd love a good little theory
00:17:57.000 okay so you guys so congratulations godspeed to them and um we pray all goes well we cannot wait
00:18:04.440 to see the footage and hear all about it. So congratulations to everybody. Oh, and I heard
00:18:12.240 that one of the gems on the view was like, well, now that NASA is doing that, we don't need SpaceX
00:18:19.020 anymore. I'm like, oh my God, you people just walk and chew gum. Just try it. So let's get into some
00:18:28.660 news i know uh owen you were going to start us off with something yeah so um there's apparently
00:18:37.220 a connection between um thinking that speech is harmful and progressive ideology and being
00:18:45.540 depressed all three so the article seems to be kind of pointing in the forward direction of if
00:18:53.060 If you think speech is harmful, then you're more likely to be or it might cause you to
00:19:00.780 be progressive in your ideology or be depressed.
00:19:05.240 I certainly think it could go the other way.
00:19:07.340 It could be backward science that maybe because you're depressed or because you're progressive
00:19:12.080 ideology that you might be more likely to think that speech is harmful because that
00:19:18.560 certainly seems like the more logical direction to me.
00:19:20.620 So I think this qualifies as backward science.
00:19:22.260 but I also think it qualifies as just ask Scott. You could have just asked Scott, you know,
00:19:26.100 she could have told you that you didn't need to study it. Everyone knows that. And, um,
00:19:30.980 you know, I think it's, uh, also maybe one of those, you just can't fix this.
00:19:35.860 Like someone from the outside can't really fix this. And that's right. I mean, did we need a,
00:19:42.740 did we need to hear this study slash story? No. Like, just look around, look at, I was going to
00:19:49.780 to say, look at all the parades they have. What are they called? Protests. Those people are not
00:19:55.140 happy. I, you know, it's, it's sad for them, but, and they're also paid, but yes, that was
00:20:01.140 definitely backward science as Scott would say. Marcella, I'm going to toss over to you. Tell us
00:20:07.280 what you have for us. Well, the boss is not the boss anymore. So this morning I was like, I know
00:20:14.700 Trump truted or whatever you want to call it he was on Ruth and I was like I know he's gonna be
00:20:22.080 on there I know he's gonna be there and so he was right at 4 58 in the morning I think he said a bad
00:20:28.820 and very boring singer Bruce Springsteen who looks like a dried up who looks like a dried up prune
00:20:35.180 who has suffered greatly from the work of really bad plastic surges has long had a horrible and
00:20:41.260 incurable case of trump derangement syndrome sometimes referred to as tds the guy is a total
00:20:48.140 loser he spews hate against the president who won at landslide election including the popular vote
00:20:55.180 all seven swing states and 86 of the counties across america under sleepy joe and the dams
00:21:02.540 her country was dead now we have the hottest country by far anywhere in the world mega should
00:21:09.180 boycott his overpriced causes which suck save your heart or money america's back so it is what it is
00:21:17.500 i know that they that um bruce springsteen and um in his band we were gonna do a protest concert tour
00:21:28.300 against evil dictator trump so i can imagine a worse choice for that band because his whole
00:21:36.380 identity is like america right like yeah he used to he used to have the flag behind him didn't he
00:21:42.380 yeah but you know what you guys i always tell you look up the lyrics to born the lyrics of born in
00:21:48.180 the usa are anti-american and people don't realize that it's a just check him out look it up he he's
00:21:56.040 he's not pro-america and you know he did that kind of as just a way to have people think that
00:22:02.080 but his messaging has never been pro-America is this a jersey thing because he's from jersey
00:22:07.560 right and he's one of your people is it a jerk is what do i look like an old lesbian
00:22:11.900 yeah like what the hell does that mean i'm just wondering where he got all this from you know
00:22:19.440 he's an idiot yeah no i don't i don't have any respect for him and i think it's a but i do think
00:22:26.420 it's a horrible choice like i think it's just a way to turn against your audience because most of
00:22:30.040 audience probably does have a lot of patriotism and they're going to be entertained. They're not
00:22:35.860 going to a protest, you know? Yeah. I mean, honestly, so yes, he lived in the same town I
00:22:42.700 lived in, you know, I've seen him 8,000 times. We've worked for him. He used to come with his
00:22:50.300 wife to a place of business that we had. He's everywhere, you know, whatever my entire life
00:22:58.040 he's been around, but, um, I was like about to talk out of school. I'm just saying my friends.
00:23:06.940 So like we, you know, everybody was cool with him. Nobody bothers him here. We're not like,
00:23:10.740 you know, we don't act all Hollywood here. Although now with Netflix coming, we'll see
00:23:14.060 what happens. But, um, he's just never been pro America. Like he's always been woke and the people
00:23:23.000 that still like him typically are older and liberal. But I will give him this. So we went
00:23:32.600 to one of his concerts because we have friends that work for him and whatever. And we were at
00:23:39.100 Madison Square Garden standing right in front of the stage. I did not want to go. I begged to not
00:23:45.100 go, but they made me go. She's like, say it, Erica. I can't. I'm going to get myself in so
00:23:51.180 much trouble because I know too much. Um, so anyway, I will say his concert was really,
00:23:58.880 really good. And I didn't realize he was as good of a musician as he is. Um, and like
00:24:07.940 the, the ensemble, like the, his stamina was amazing. The whole thing. I hated every second
00:24:14.980 of being there though, but, but I think that's what he's known for is the stamina part. Like
00:24:19.600 I did see him once live. My wife got tickets and we saw him and it was like a three hour
00:24:24.080 thing. And I don't think they took any breaks. I think they just went all three hours.
00:24:28.500 Yeah. I missed the last train out of Penn station. I'm like, come on, I want to get on the train.
00:24:33.280 And just when you think it's over, like everyone's like, okay, good. I'm like, let's go. We can get
00:24:37.620 the last train. Then all of a sudden like Elvis Costello comes out and you're like another hour.
00:24:41.700 I'm like, I can't take it. Um, but he was great, but it's like his whole audience is so woke now.
00:24:50.860 And if they weren't woke before his fan base is like rabid and he will turn them all woke. So
00:24:58.320 that's just kind of the way it's happening. I'm just very disappointed in him and he's cheap.
00:25:02.840 He's cheap. Okay. I'm just putting it out there. Let me just say this without getting into it
00:25:06.920 further he's cheap okay what's not cheap is his concerts that's right and you should yep
00:25:13.160 you need to spill we'll we'll get you to spill in the sub cave or at the after show yeah maybe
00:25:22.260 in the sub cave one night we'll do it uh okay so moving on um oh and do you have a next story for
00:25:30.940 us yeah elvis casella was great by the way yeah of course there's still a war going on in iran
00:25:36.300 um the big news of course is that trump addressed the nation about iran last night and said we are
00:25:43.540 going to bring them back to the stone ages um and so it does look like there's going to be a lot
00:25:49.640 more bombing going on over the next two or three weeks he did say it was probably going to take
00:25:53.340 another two or three weeks he said we're going to hit them extremely hard over the next two or
00:25:57.100 three weeks we're going to bring them back to the stone ages where they belong so i think people
00:26:01.620 took away that it was a pretty aggressive speech, probably more than expected. I don't know why
00:26:08.480 there was so much surprise because I don't think it was really a departure from anything he had
00:26:11.880 been saying in the days leading up to it. But the stock market took a plunge. Don't look at your
00:26:18.500 stocks. It's not pretty. And oil prices went up and all the rest. And so it does look like we're
00:26:25.380 going to have another two or three weeks of bombing campaigns. He did threaten again to
00:26:29.780 take out all their power plants he said he wasn't going to touch their oil because then they would
00:26:33.840 have no chance of recovery ever ever but he said he's you know still thinking about doing the
00:26:39.360 the power plants and that um you know i know hegseth recently said bombing is our negotiation
00:26:46.980 strategy we negotiate with bombs so seems like we're having more and more stuff happen and then
00:26:51.940 you know there's more a10 warthogs heading over um and those are like the close air support you
00:26:58.820 know where they can like strafe people and do do supported ground troops so there may be more
00:27:02.820 indication that maybe that's coming in some form and i think there's more people going over there
00:27:07.740 and there's more ships going over there like the marine marine ships that would support any kind of
00:27:12.660 amphibious operations so seems like we're still building up at this point and uh there's probably
00:27:18.800 going to be some more stuff happening some say the bubbles in an arrow truffle piece can take
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00:28:06.380 I wonder how the Iranian people are doing.
00:28:09.960 You know, they're so excited to be,
00:28:14.400 you know, having this happen on one hand
00:28:18.340 because they don't want to live that way.
00:28:20.520 But I wonder how they're surviving all of this.
00:28:22.840 i can't even imagine hearing a bomb going off period and like the the ptsd you would have of
00:28:30.280 like is it going to fall on me like i don't know what do you think they're do you think that they're
00:28:35.160 strategic enough i mean then there was the girls school and then i heard there was another
00:28:40.280 um school that got hit like a bunch of um boys uh young boys and i it's somewhere out there i
00:28:49.080 think that one might have been debunked you think well there was i can't remember the exact details
00:28:54.580 but there was something that also was on the first day of the campaign and there was some
00:28:58.920 accusation that they had hit some civilians um in some civilian facility and uh there was a
00:29:06.100 statement from cent count saying we looked into it and it wasn't from us it was an iranian missile
00:29:10.640 um and so they were pretty sure about this one and pretty quick to say this wasn't us we didn't do
00:29:16.320 that. Yeah. Yeah. Miss Virginia Adams did say you can get used to anything, but man, that's got to
00:29:24.120 be so scary. I mean, for anybody who's been living under conditions like that, like we are so
00:29:29.540 lucky where we are, you guys. So let's remember that when you're poo-pooing America, like Bruce
00:29:36.060 Springsteen, you know, we're so lucky, but you know, and a lot of these things are happening.
00:29:41.920 yeah you could look at it like okay because they have resources that we want but it's happening
00:29:47.240 I'm gonna just say also because there are these horrible regimes people are living under
00:29:53.200 and when you look at the pictures of how Iran used to be and the women and like it it was like
00:29:59.520 beautiful and everybody looked you know happy and the women were wearing pretty dresses and
00:30:04.500 you know now like I mean have you ever been in a store you guys I was at Target one time years ago
00:30:11.240 and two women came around the corner but in the full hijab where there was just like a slit for
00:30:19.480 their eyes like sometimes i see people with the headscarf but i was like literally it took my
00:30:25.560 breath away when i saw them it was so scary to me to see people like that here in our country
00:30:32.440 and i was like and why are you like that here in our country like you don't have to be that way you
00:30:36.840 know but it was really scary and i don't know that could interesting thing one day
00:30:42.680 the interesting thing is um i had friends that were muslim and um a lot of them choose to do
00:30:49.080 that there's no reason they their husbands or their family doesn't force them i had a friend
00:30:55.560 that um her family was very liberal muslim and she believed you know in in her religion and
00:31:05.480 And she wanted to have that as a token to God or whatever to cover herself up.
00:31:11.460 So a lot of the times what I realize is that the women are the ones that promote it, not the men as much.
00:31:18.320 Right.
00:31:18.580 That's an interesting part.
00:31:19.780 And they push their sons to only marry women like that.
00:31:23.600 I could certainly see that from different perspectives.
00:31:26.640 One might be that sort of introsexual competition where, you know, there's plenty of slut shaming here in America and it's probably just on another level with the Muslims because they have different standards of how you're supposed to dress.
00:31:39.320 And I'm not encouraging that.
00:31:41.380 I'm just saying I could see that happening where it's more driven by the women as opposed to anybody else because they would call each other out if they're not complying with things or doing something more attractive or more tempting than the other women are doing.
00:31:56.640 um so i could certainly see that yeah maybe i don't know i remember watching uh something about
00:32:03.280 like the women in kuwait that have to have the whole hijab and underneath they're wearing like
00:32:10.300 gucci and they're all down and they have like meetups with their girlfriends because they can't
00:32:16.060 be out in public and they're like take off the hijab and then they're like you know very kardashian
00:32:21.460 looking and they they they hate it like they're like we we can't believe we have to act this way
00:32:26.300 dress this way. And I was just like, God, but you should be able to wear what you want to wear
00:32:32.760 is the point. And that's freedom. So not just that, obviously, but the fact that these women
00:32:41.880 in Kuwait couldn't just walk around in their Gucci and their Prada. They had to be covered
00:32:47.460 from head to toe, their face, everything. It's just insane in my opinion. And if it's their
00:32:54.040 opinion too, when they live there, I feel bad for them. That's a scary thought, but I do hope
00:32:59.700 the people in Iran, the good people in Iran are okay. I hope that they can see this through.
00:33:08.740 And you know what? I just want to add on one more thing. I wish I had thought about this further so
00:33:13.820 I could articulate it in a way that it was to me, but I'm going to botch it. But so sometimes,
00:33:22.380 no, you know what I'm going to do? So this is something Joel had said to me, Joel Pollack,
00:33:28.000 we were on the phone the other day and he had such a good way of explaining to me, we were
00:33:33.260 talking about Passover and what freedom really is. And that, you know, sometimes like you're
00:33:39.200 walking across the desert to get to, you know, your freedom and maybe the first group that was
00:33:47.480 walking. Most of them didn't make it, but they also still knew that they were walking away from
00:33:53.040 slavery. So they still had all of that slave mentality on them. We were slaves. Maybe that
00:34:00.640 first group that had to face it still had to carry that burden, but they paved the way for the second
00:34:07.280 group to be like, oh, the people that went before me, they're the ones that broke through so then
00:34:13.520 we could come after. And that's why like the second wave of people are the ones that really
00:34:17.080 made it. So I feel like, you know, maybe this is the first rung of that type of thing. So the people
00:34:22.920 that are living in Iran right now, you know, that had to live through all of this, like they're kind
00:34:28.460 of paved the way for their freedom. I hope, and I hope that more make it behind them. That was so
00:34:35.600 inarticulate. But when Joel said it to me, I was like, wow, that's a really good way of looking at
00:34:40.620 like what's what you're already living with and what you have to carry on top of what you want
00:34:45.080 so it's a big burden so I I pray in whatever way I pray for anyone living that way so
00:34:52.600 Marcella or Owen did you want to add on to anything with that story yeah I mean I would
00:34:58.080 just say like I understand what you're saying too and another angle to that might just be that as
00:35:02.560 if you grow up with those types of standards like I'm supposed to be under a burqa or a hijab or
00:35:07.980 whatever it is um you might consider that almost like a safety thing like i'm safe if i'm in this
00:35:14.640 i'm not safe if i'm not in this and you might just feel really uncomfortable without it on if
00:35:19.180 you're out in public and you feel like oh i'm doing something wrong someone might do something
00:35:22.560 to me yeah um and and maybe they raise their kids differently you know they might say we want we
00:35:28.160 don't want this but it's you know probably often hard to just adjust and live a completely different
00:35:33.040 way than what you're used to perhaps all right we'll move on so um there's a trump that the post
00:35:44.260 uh says kangaroo court so i don't know what which i mean i don't know which court he meant because
00:35:51.020 there's so many uh cases that come out the that one a federal judge blocked a mass termination
00:35:58.360 of parole for nearly 900,000 migrants who entered via a CBP one app under Biden,
00:36:08.440 Sleepy Biden. And so basically she undid all of this all at once, the judge did. And that was
00:36:18.720 shocking because it's going to create a massive amount of court blockage because the reason that
00:36:27.180 she did that is that you can't really do a blank mass termination of parole via one order. You have
00:36:36.120 to do it pursuant to every case, which in a way I agree with her, with the judge, but at the same
00:36:44.280 time, it becomes almost impossible to do that in a timely manner. So I'm sure it's going to get
00:36:50.340 appealed beyond this point, and the Supreme Court might have to hear it. There was another case,
00:36:58.200 a commercial therapy case, where the Supreme Court sided with President Trump's eight to one
00:37:06.360 decision. The Supreme Court in that one had struck down Colorado's ban on conversion therapy for
00:37:13.160 minors. It wasn't President Trump's, particularly his his
00:37:18.740 deal, but it is a conservative position to have conversion
00:37:23.360 therapy. I don't know if you're familiar with that. But basically,
00:37:28.620 it came down eight to one. Put it in the chat. If you know, who
00:37:33.200 was the one that was against it?
00:37:35.680 Who was the one? You know, that was the one one out of all of
00:37:40.820 them and you're like oh i'm the one hey you're the one which which justice was it that here it
00:37:49.040 comes was against conversion therapy to have the freedom yep katanji brown jackson yes
00:38:01.920 jackson brown what is it brown jackson brown jackson yeah brown jackson okay yes yeah but
00:38:09.320 But there was also recently the case where a judge blocked the construction of the ballroom and the defunding of NPR and PBS.
00:38:17.340 So there's a lot of stuff happening and a lot of, you know, what I would call obstruction happening in the courts where it's like they get these activist judges.
00:38:25.060 They may even shop it around to find the right judge.
00:38:27.280 But then they get them to put in some injunction and just stop every single thing that Trump is doing.
00:38:32.900 And it's just ridiculous.
00:38:34.140 and the thing is too though the ballroom as far as i know correct me if i'm wrong like it's not
00:38:40.580 even like trump's gonna ever get to use it right but he's building it for the future and to me it's
00:38:46.580 embarrassing to bring people into a tent like i said the other day so he's building a big beautiful
00:38:51.820 ballroom it's not costing anybody money he'll never get to use it and they're just mad because
00:38:58.140 why and i was looking at like a bigger mock-up of the the site it looks like every other built like
00:39:04.980 it looks completely in proportion to everything else that's around it so it's not like he put
00:39:11.120 like a glass tower next to it and he's like here's the ballroom and it's like this you know 30 foot
00:39:16.600 tower i mean 30 story tower so like you're right owen it's just because it's trump and they can't
00:39:23.620 it silly yeah they said that congress needs to approve it so for the ballroom um they're not
00:39:33.100 used to somebody like president trump that just does things you know and he just does things
00:39:39.080 why would congress need to approve it if it's not coming out of taxpayer dollars i know congress
00:39:43.820 has the power of the purse but if it's not being paid for by taxpayers then what authority do they
00:39:48.960 have to say no it's not about funding it's about um the actual projects that are done on federal
00:39:55.580 um like the white house and congress the buildings themselves it always has to go through congress
00:40:02.620 um so it's not really a funding issue it's more of like you should have shown the plans
00:40:08.700 than the going through the procedures you know and and president trump jumps that you know
00:40:15.340 that's how you just don't get ever anything done at all that's yes that's unfortunate there was that
00:40:20.820 john stewart i think had a clip recently that came out about the uh broadband project i think
00:40:28.020 that biden was doing in the build back better and uh he basically was coming to the realization i
00:40:34.320 don't know if he ever said it but that elon musk was right about how inefficient things are and how
00:40:38.400 much waste and stupid things happen because they went through this process that was outlined in
00:40:43.380 the build back better plan for this broadband stuff and it's like there's 12 steps to it and
00:40:48.480 so you have to like tomorrow okay i mean you have to like issue you know issue requests for
00:40:55.280 for proposals and then you have to go get them challenged in each of the states and you got to
00:41:01.360 do like and it's just step after step after step after step and like until you reach the end of
00:41:06.480 those 12 steps you can't even actually do anything so it's like and i think they said you know they
00:41:12.100 were down to like like nine of the either they only had nine left at the end of that process or
00:41:17.940 that they nine of them dropped out or something but some high percentage of them I think never
00:41:23.280 made it to the end of the 12 so that's why nothing ever happened is because they just couldn't get
00:41:27.120 through this government red tape where you have to like let everybody challenge things and the
00:41:32.080 federal government needs to be able to say no or yes to the state proposal and then the very last
00:41:37.540 step was to do like sub grants to subcontractors to actually do the work so it's like you you don't
00:41:43.300 actually even hire the people that would do the work and like if you have this whole plan worked
00:41:47.220 out that's been approved by the government and then you put it out to bid those subcontractors
00:41:51.580 might say well it's going to cost twice as much or it's not feasible or this plan won't work like
00:41:55.760 you it's you it's totally backwards and why would you want to try you you need to be honest i i am
00:42:03.720 actually on the side of you need to actually go through certain channels because, you know,
00:42:09.600 I'm very hopeful that we'll always have a Republican president, but we might have a
00:42:13.640 Democratic president that goes, oh, Trump did this. I can do this. So, I mean, the reason why
00:42:19.900 it needs to go through a certain channels is that the White House is a historic building.
00:42:27.180 So, I mean, a lot of us maybe live in the East Coast or something. If you have a historic house
00:42:33.380 or whatever. You need to get certain permits to build to it. The same with, I would imagine,
00:42:39.460 something historic like the White House. You can't just go and destroy part of it and then
00:42:44.280 put a new building in. So, I mean, it's like the filibuster rule. A lot of people want to get rid
00:42:51.200 of it. It's just, I think that people need to think further in the future because any Democrat
00:42:57.820 can use what trump is doing now in their own fashion i'm not worried about that and i'll tell
00:43:04.500 you why i think if biden tried to do the same thing nothing would have ever happened
00:43:09.980 we'd still be in the 12-step process right it wouldn't the auto pen guy but i'm saying like
00:43:17.020 that that 12-step process is what biden proposed like that was what they wanted it to be and i
00:43:24.180 think the comment with john stewart with whoever his guest was is like it's it's basically designed
00:43:28.240 to get as much money out of the taxpayers as possible before you actually do any real work
00:43:32.320 and it's like i'm guessing that if if biden took on the project of rehabilitating the east wing in
00:43:37.700 whatever way they thought was proper we'd still be studying something we'd still be issuing
00:43:43.280 proposals or or you know getting feedback or whatever and it wouldn't we wouldn't have broke
00:43:48.900 ground nothing would have happened and so i'm not worried about the other side because i don't think
00:43:54.000 they can do anything what's going to happen when somebody wants a mosque on the uh property right
00:44:01.920 so i mean that's why there's checks and balances that's why i came to america
00:44:08.000 because in my country there's no checks and balances so i actually i'm for checks and
00:44:13.040 balances so to your point i mean i may be popular i'm not saying there shouldn't be any checks and
00:44:19.040 balances but i am thinking like you know first of all trump is maybe uniquely the type of person
00:44:25.540 who can make all this stuff happen quickly and properly because he's done so much construction
00:44:29.560 that he has the experience as the commander in chief and i know he's not doing the work but
00:44:33.420 he can you know review things really quickly and he knows how to get things done as far as that
00:44:38.980 stuff goes and so i think it's different having him as president than anybody else and i also think
00:44:45.720 that um you know it i certainly would object if it was like hey we're putting a golf course on the
00:44:53.100 you know white house lawn or we're you know we're building some big tower or something like that
00:44:57.700 would be different but as you said earlier it's like this looks just like the rest of the white
00:45:03.380 house and it's you know very consistent with the architecture and it's not anything that anyone
00:45:08.880 would really have any reason to object to and so if you put all this bureaucracy in there just to
00:45:14.580 rubber stamp everything every step of the way but it takes months or years to go through those steps
00:45:19.460 then you're just introducing delay for no good reason you're just saying okay we got to go
00:45:24.100 through these steps just so we can say we did we didn't actually accomplish anything we just
00:45:29.580 you know added two or three or five years to the process yeah and you could eliminate
00:45:36.480 a million of those steps. I mean, I, it's like New Jersey. I swore I would never operate another
00:45:44.640 business in New Jersey again, because it was like, at some point I'm like, just, all right.
00:45:49.620 So I literally was building a business and the thing, the requirements they wanted me to have
00:45:56.940 for what the function of the business was, was like, it didn't even, you couldn't even make
00:46:01.300 sense of it. I'm not kidding. You guys, I literally said to the nice lady in like the
00:46:06.720 building department one day, I was like, finally in tears. I was at my breaking point. I was like,
00:46:12.080 listen, you guys, forgive me. If you don't know me, this is normal. Um, I was like, listen,
00:46:17.720 I'm going to turn around and I'm going to just start shooting a hundred dollar bills out of my
00:46:22.360 ass. And when you have the amount you need for this entire thing to be okay, like, just let me
00:46:28.520 no, because that's all this is about. And she started laughing. I'm like, obviously you just
00:46:33.560 want money. Like everything was like, we need 500 for this. We need $45 for that. We need 200 for
00:46:38.920 this. Now you have to, I'm like, just tell me how much money you want because you're, you're,
00:46:43.040 you're like killing me with this like slow drip of, we have rules and we have that. And I was
00:46:47.820 like, I'm never doing business in the state again. And then the taxes. And like, if you make this
00:46:52.400 much money. So it's all a grift and it discourages good people from doing good things that are going
00:47:00.980 to help other people. They make it so hard. So even with this project, it seems like they just
00:47:08.800 handed down a binder full of paper and were like, okay, everybody take a shot at it and write a
00:47:15.900 rule that you want there to be in here. And everyone's like, oh, let's do this too. And
00:47:20.000 Like you can't do it on a Tuesday after three o'clock and this, you know,
00:47:23.960 it's like such a bullshit to get something done. So, you know,
00:47:27.980 and again, somebody might've been Jack Posobiec reminded me the other day that
00:47:32.400 I'm sorry, I forget the name.
00:47:34.080 Is it the keys bridge that was hit by the tanker a couple of years ago?
00:47:40.900 In Baltimore.
00:47:42.180 In Baltimore. Nothing's happened. It's just still a wide open gap.
00:47:47.360 Like, so this is what I'm talking about.
00:47:49.000 If we add in the nuclear side, there's another story I saw recently where the TerraPower, which is that Bill Gates-backed nuclear firm, they're doing the small modular reactors, I think.
00:47:59.960 But they said they were able to get all the engineering work that traditionally in the past has taken 18 months, and they completed it in eight weeks.
00:48:12.320 So it's like two months instead of 18.
00:48:14.640 It's a small fraction of what it used to be.
00:48:16.940 and i think it's using digital twin technology like you know which is a little bit like an ai
00:48:22.080 thing but it's you know not quite the same but um you know with all the various advances we have
00:48:27.480 i think a lot of these things can be done a lot faster but i think the bureaucracy is is the slow
00:48:33.120 part it's like you know if you say we got to allow 90 days for feedback or we've got to allow however
00:48:39.600 long for people to submit proposals or we've got to allow you know all these things and then we
00:48:44.020 you multiply that by 12 steps or 50 steps or however many you put in the
00:48:47.500 process, then you're still limited to saying, okay,
00:48:50.480 even if I can do it in a day, I've got to wait three months for a response.
00:48:54.280 And once I get the response,
00:48:56.840 maybe I got to go back and do something else. And it, it just is just painfully
00:49:02.060 slow.
00:49:03.240 Yeah.
00:49:03.440 But the analogy doesn't work there a lot. You know,
00:49:06.980 you can't compare that to the white house, which is a historical building,
00:49:12.420 you know? So.
00:49:14.020 you can that's the difference to me it's too too many steps too much red tape it's the white house
00:49:20.420 i mean it hasn't been that long since he started being president no i get it that it's the white
00:49:26.100 house but that's my point like like everything everyone wants to put their freaking uh stamp
00:49:32.100 on everything and their opinion into everything well guess who can change the rules congress can
00:49:39.860 change those rules which i it comes again to congress not doing their job of actually um
00:49:49.700 you know updating all these antiquated slow-moving rules and one of the reasons could be fraud
00:49:57.620 um just my opinion and possibly trump's opinion because he brought up the federal reserve building
00:50:04.900 in a in a post about this historic preservation um he talked about the federal reserve building
00:50:11.480 that's taken so much um you know that they're not suing them to stop it it's taken billions
00:50:18.260 of dollars to build it and now this that's not being paid by by uh the congress or any any
00:50:25.380 taxpayer they're blocking that possibly because that's not how it goes you didn't go through the
00:50:33.780 right channels. You didn't pay the right lobbyist. I'm looking at the comments. It is a free ballroom
00:50:41.360 for sure. And let me just let you guys in on a little secret. Let's just do it this way. In
00:50:51.120 2028, when there's a new Republican president, I don't care if it's Vance, Rubio, DeSantis,
00:50:58.360 whoever it is nothing will change they will then have advanced arrangement syndrome so it does not
00:51:05.120 matter you guys they did the same thing with george bush they will do the same thing with
00:51:10.660 the next president it went the democrats are like literally they're getting more kooky by
00:51:17.460 the minute so it does not matter who the next president's going to be like they're like oh no
00:51:22.740 it's just because it's trump nope it's not going to matter you'll say it's so nothing's going to
00:51:27.200 change. Speaking of kooky Democrats, there was this birthright citizenship case and Ketanji
00:51:34.740 Brown Jackson put a hypothetical in front of the court to consider. And she said that the way she
00:51:42.500 put it is, if I steal someone's wallet in Japan, the Japanese authorities can arrest me and
00:51:46.520 prosecute me. It's allegiance, meaning they can control you as a matter of law. So there's this
00:51:51.740 relationship based on even though I'm a temporary traveler, I'm still locally owing allegiance in
00:51:56.060 that sense. So it sounds like what she's saying is if you want to show allegiance to your country,
00:52:01.040 go steal a wallet. I can't. Can you imagine? I think Trump was sitting there when she said that
00:52:07.320 too. I think he was sitting there. I don't even know how to respond to that. I'm wondering how
00:52:15.040 the lawyer did respond, but I think they shut her down pretty handily and explained why that wasn't
00:52:20.520 case but um yeah i don't understand how a supreme court justice could say something that stupid
00:52:27.240 because that was biden's pick by the way does anyone know who gave her to biden i want to know
00:52:33.720 who um like go backwards in the trail like who said this is your this this should be it because
00:52:38.840 it wasn't him you know i i don't i should look into it but i think a lot of the justices are
00:52:46.440 picked from the dc circuit um their their court of appeals judges already in dc and are well known
00:52:54.360 to the political you know what i'm forgetting too i forgot dei like i'm thinking they just
00:53:04.260 picked somebody now i'm remembering that they needed like a black woman yeah i forgot biden
00:53:10.000 definitely said that i think yeah he did okay so she was the best black woman they could find
00:53:15.560 fantastic well she's a gem she has major dreams of being famous and being an actress
00:53:24.300 so i'm like thinking somebody does she yes she does she was on on a broadway stage like they
00:53:32.580 brought her up to act out a part in a broadway stage totally inappropriate as as as a justice
00:53:38.240 she went up on stage on broadway to like dance around in some show i'm like this is so pathetic
00:53:43.960 and I think she might've even been in a TV show. I'm not sure, but, um, I think some like Patriot
00:53:51.900 should offer her as leading role where she plays a judge, almost like a night court kind of show.
00:53:58.520 And she gets to play a judge and she gets her show, but she's got to leave the Supreme court
00:54:03.780 to go do this job. So it's just a nice way of being like, here lady, we're going to put you
00:54:07.900 over here. Okay. You, you go over here and you're going to play a judge just like you are now.
00:54:13.100 And then we go fill that seat with someone amazing because this is a joke. And I can't even imagine
00:54:20.200 it was eight to one. Do you think she has any self-awareness where she looks around and she's
00:54:26.720 like, oh, am I the one? It's just so crazy. You know, Scalia, Justice Scalia, my favorite justice
00:54:38.920 of all time he used to be sometimes the only one because he would always be against you know
00:54:45.760 against the grain and so there is some kind of thing in in the supreme court where you
00:54:51.920 are kind of become entrenched as with your own political viewpoints or you know your own legal
00:55:00.020 viewpoints so she might be there and she might like that because she gets that attention it's
00:55:06.920 true it was hamilton she appeared in hamilton that's what i was gonna say that sounds something
00:55:13.620 like she would like she's like a um she is like a local municipal judge in my opinion like she's
00:55:21.640 just i'm sorry i like she she's too stupid to be there it's not right like her decisions affect
00:55:29.000 this entire country it's not right can can you impeach a judge how do you get rid of one
00:55:34.940 um you you she's appointed for life i know i think i think there is an impeachment process
00:55:43.800 but like all the other impeachment processes it's never going to actually happen
00:55:46.960 they would i don't think they'd even bother trying because they would know number one that
00:55:51.420 it would just never remove that person from office and number two given that you know it
00:55:56.940 would just be a big spectacle and wouldn't it would just maybe pit the branches of government
00:56:01.560 against each other in a pointless way like there's no reason to go through that whole process for
00:56:05.560 that and so i doubt that would ever happen unless there was some massive scandal like you know
00:56:09.920 somebody really was an epstein pedophile or something where it's like everybody agrees this
00:56:14.580 guy gotta go you know but i think you know short of something really really massive scandal i don't
00:56:21.120 think he's not scandalous enough i mean it is for me but i don't i don't think it's gonna work
00:56:27.640 I don't I don't think she's she's dumb. I really don't. Because to get to that level, you really can't be in. But again, it's not a matter of intelligence, as we've seen a lot of very intelligent, educated people do don't have any common sense.
00:56:45.600 So I think Marcella.
00:56:48.780 Marcella, what is a woman?
00:56:50.120 well i mean she has her viewpoints just like you do so she gets to what is a woman didn't even
00:56:58.920 express her viewpoint she's like right i can't we know that you know not everybody's gonna see the
00:57:05.480 world like we do and so she has her own viewpoints um and i have mine you know but her viewpoints are
00:57:12.580 disqualifying as a chief justice let's get real again congress and again she got their
00:57:20.100 because of dei not because she's so smart that she worked up the ranks to get there she was like
00:57:25.820 what they thought was the best black woman so and like how embarrassing like how embarrassing oh i'm
00:57:32.900 here because i was what they thought was the best black woman not the best person not even the best
00:57:37.940 woman the best black is she gay is she gay please tell me she's gay too because i'm gonna die if
00:57:42.720 She's got, somebody tell me.
00:57:45.400 She's married.
00:57:46.660 Ugh, I can't.
00:57:49.420 I would also just point out for the record that she is not the best black woman choice.
00:57:53.640 There are plenty of other black women that are a lot smarter that they could have chosen.
00:57:57.360 That's right.
00:57:58.360 It's never about, it's who you know, you know?
00:58:03.360 So again, the DC court.
00:58:05.880 Will you do what they want you to, will they do what you want them to do?
00:58:10.280 Ugh, all right, enough on her.
00:58:11.900 She's married to a white guy, they say.
00:58:14.460 Of course.
00:58:16.860 This is like, so is Don Lemon.
00:58:18.640 She knows the best things.
00:58:20.820 Oh, or Don Lemon is going to be president?
00:58:25.060 Oh, of what?
00:58:28.460 Of nothing.
00:58:29.800 Yeah, like of what?
00:58:31.260 He wants to run for president.
00:58:33.640 He expressed a desire to run for president, and he said he would be a better president than Trump.
00:58:38.180 Oh, my God.
00:58:38.820 The man loves him.
00:58:41.040 Can you imagine that guy in the Oval Office?
00:58:45.240 I mean, that's the best story to end on.
00:58:48.320 That man loves himself.
00:58:50.320 And it's so fun to me because all these racist –
00:58:54.040 I want to just curse so bad today.
00:58:56.920 People are all married to white men.
00:59:02.000 And I'm like –
00:59:02.440 Oh, even Don, right?
00:59:03.980 Yes.
00:59:04.120 Don is married to a white guy?
00:59:06.860 Yep.
00:59:07.280 is is um whoopi goldberg she's not married but she's she dates white men when she was men okay
00:59:17.820 yeah yeah yeah i mean i don't know what else she does she who probably knows but
00:59:22.180 yeah no but everybody's so hypocritical sunny hostin uh hostin hostile whatever her name is
00:59:29.680 she's married to a white guy i'm just i always want to say sunny hostage hostile i think of yeah
00:59:37.420 it's has it's something but um the market recovered is that drew uh might be coming
00:59:44.260 back a little bit let me see yeah whoopi and ted dancing although he wore blackface when he dated
00:59:49.400 her so everything's backwards and upside down you guys you know that's that's our lesson for today
00:59:55.260 everything is just nutso and sharks have cocaine in them yeah cocaine sharks
01:00:01.940 i knew i would get a laugh stay out of the water right i feel like we're so chaotic today it's
01:00:09.320 mostly my fault you guys i'm just delusional and tired but listen we did it we made it through
01:00:16.360 this show and tomorrow oh marcella you're not gonna be here tomorrow we're gonna miss you
01:00:22.740 you're gonna miss my viewpoints i'm gonna miss everything my girl so marcella you have um a case
01:00:29.760 you're doing tomorrow our attorney girl right good luck i'm winning tomorrow yes you are
01:00:36.620 she's gonna win bigly um but owen and i will be here maybe with a guest and maybe without a guest
01:00:44.880 So you guys just have to tune in to see, um, you guys let's have a closing sip.
01:00:51.460 Love you all so much.
01:00:53.500 This was so fun today.
01:00:55.520 A Scott approved show crusher says amazing.
01:00:59.240 So thank you so much for being here.
01:01:01.120 Let's have a closing sip to our beloved Scott and to our Shelly.
01:01:05.240 And, um, we will be back tomorrow in the meantime, you guys just do something amazing today.
01:01:10.380 let's let's remember we've got a spaceship up there going around and we're going to find out
01:01:16.560 all sorts of good things and america is the greatest country in the world and you are the
01:01:22.000 greatest people sippers and friends we could ever have so let's go you guys to scott and shelly
01:01:28.300 let's be useful and we'll see you tomorrow all right be useful
01:01:32.140 my cold coffee i'll wait for you guys to say bye
01:01:39.840 bye
01:01:43.620 there's a cocaine shark
01:01:47.620 alright guys see you later
01:01:49.640 bye