00:21:03.600And I worried for decades that they would come after me until I realized it's made by the military, which means probably it belongs to the public.
00:21:14.000But I never heard from the original Dilbert cartoonist.
00:21:48.720And you just do your lettering so it goes to the bottom and top of one of these holes.
00:21:54.080And there will be straight lines and all the same height.
00:21:56.880You saw on the comic that I showed you that there was something that looks like a dot pattern of shading, like the chair and Dilbert's bathrobe here.
00:22:10.640So this is actually a decal that you place on here, and then you use an X-Acto knife to cut around it so that you leave the parts that you want, and the rest just peels off.
00:22:21.500Obviously, shading and everything is done on the computer these days, so none of that
00:26:02.660oh i love that we were lucky enough to be in there and he's right those those shelves go
00:26:16.000all the way around the room and they are packed packed we even saw the dill burrito did you see
00:26:21.640it marcella yeah i did i was like are they in there
00:26:26.580wait first of all i forgot that part about the garfield comic and he goes into the store and
00:26:35.580the guy in front of him is also getting one frame that is so bizarro so how many people saw that for
00:26:42.380the first time i'm just curious to know because you know it's like we take for great like we've
00:26:48.620seen everything probably twice right so you know we're just like wait there's things people haven't
00:26:52.920seen. And by the way, it's like Seinfeld. I could watch Scott's anything over and over and over
00:26:58.980again. Let me see. So Holsey's asking, where will the museum end up? That's a great question.
00:27:06.460So the answer is, I don't know, but they definitely want a destination for it. So
00:27:13.940it's just unknown right now. There's just so much going on right now, as you can imagine.
00:27:18.300but um oh idol you have a framed dilbert cartoon i love that yeah some of us saw it live oh first
00:27:25.940time first time for oh i love that i'm so glad we we played that today for you guys um so it's
00:27:32.860very impressive and when we were in there you know scott also has uh his photo albums from his
00:27:39.640younger days that we were flipping through and they're just like everybody else's photo albums
00:27:45.420from years ago and you're just like look at scott like with his long hair and he's all like
00:27:49.900lanky looking and we we got a kick out of that um the only picture i pulled that came through
00:27:57.180and you guys here is uh marcella and i was shelly and with savannah and that was in the museum um
00:28:04.940over here by savannah is where he just pulled that calendar off the shelf so all the way around the
00:28:11.340back wall and then to the side and then there was even a closet full of things that weren't
00:28:18.540even on display so quite the arc marcella what were you thinking watching and remembering
00:28:26.780you know i was just um remembering how he felt about his mother and how he um you know took
00:28:35.980after her art you know she was an artist as well and seeing him talk about the chair and how the
00:28:42.780mom his mom virginia helped him build the chair and all that it just seems like uh he like an
00:28:50.060homage to her and at the same time um doing cartooning back in the 80s and 90s was really
00:28:59.980difficult compared to now yeah yeah like he had to have a stucco knife and all of that he uh it's
00:29:07.460definitely um different now with ai as well and so but i mean he he was the real deal oh so the thing
00:29:16.800about about scott is that when we went there there were so many magazine covers so many t-shirts so
00:29:24.360many different memorabilia that he had for Dilbert. But he was
00:29:29.220always very authentic. He he never he knew who he was,
00:29:34.960that's for sure. But he was he he was also open to talking to
00:29:39.960me to talking to people, everyday people like he wasn't
00:29:44.460something somebody that's like, Oh, you, you must come through
00:29:48.780the other door, you know? No, no down to earth. He was down to earth. Um, I, I love, and we got
00:29:57.500to see his mom's pictures. Um, they're beautiful. She was very talented. I do love how Scott said
00:30:04.800that he got his sense of humor, you know, from his mom and, you know, this and that, and he goes,
00:30:09.800my town, my dry sense of humor from my town. And I'm just like, oh my God, I love that he credits
00:30:14.380his town for part of his dry sense of humor which is so funny um yeah and and then there was just
00:30:20.700like frame after frame after frame on the wall like marcella said of magazine covers with you
00:30:26.940know uh interviews with scott and dilbert and all of this stuff and i mean comic strips were
00:30:35.260i mean they still are for some people but they were like they were like the0.95
00:30:39.820shit back then because you didn't have all this other nonsense noise. You had like six channels0.98
00:30:44.700of TV. And when the newspaper came, you look for the comics for some like light entertainment and
00:30:50.360to see if you got the joke and was it funny. And then you, you know, people would actually talk
00:30:54.600about it and kids. So we had silly putty. Does everyone remember silly putty? And it was like0.96
00:31:00.180this little like shiny clay thing. And then we used to press it over the colorful comic strips
00:31:06.360in the paper. And when you'd lift up the silly putty, the comic would transfer onto your silly0.98
00:31:11.040putty and you could like stretch out Dilbert's face and all that stuff. So, um, comic strips0.93
00:31:17.240were a huge thing. So to be like the top guy, to be a Dilbert, a Garfield, a Snoopy, that is like
00:31:26.520an achievement that you really just can't comprehend. Because I really feel like if you
00:31:32.040think about like just think about the 80s and 90s you can probably really an average person can
00:31:38.000probably only name like three or four famous comic strips far side I think that's the only ones I know
00:31:43.680are the ones I just said so you know kudos to Scott man he just and how tedious it was and he
00:31:51.200never gives up he'll give up something he'll give up you know he would give up uh businesses and
00:31:57.920ideas if he kind of ran its course with it. But he never gave up on inventing and creating a bigger
00:32:07.160talent stack and talents and learning and then adding his skills into his everyday life. And
00:32:14.480he was never like, oh, that didn't work. I gave up and that now it's over. He was always just like,
00:32:19.480no, let's keep going. And even when he had Dilbert, how many businesses was he attempting
00:32:26.820to do and and actually everything he did was to be useful so you know he he was living the mantra
00:32:33.900i remember i know we have to talk about news but i remember him talking about his mom virginia and
00:32:41.360how she showed he showed her uh magazine cover and she was like not impressed as much and he was
00:32:51.460like oh my gosh because she said well that's not a people magazine and he was like oh boy I don't
00:32:59.280know what he told her but that was just like oh man that was crushing you know to us man's soul
00:33:05.680so eventually he did make it down to people magazine but I believe he had an issue with
00:33:11.180the people magazine cover because it was just Dilbert uh and not him on the cover and so he
00:33:17.920did finally make it onto people magazine and he showed his mom but it wasn't just it was not him
00:33:25.520himself you know so right so it was always funny that's what made me laugh about you know he would
00:33:31.680always tell us these things but he would always uh make fun of himself and oh yeah and what was
00:33:38.640happening and never like took himself too seriously but was very serious about always
00:33:46.080moving forward and challenging himself like i mean right till the very last second you guys
00:33:52.080working doing thinking creating i mean he hated sleeping he felt like it was a waste of time
00:34:00.800he's just like oh like it's just something i have to do but like i need to get up because
00:34:04.880time's ticking you know and i'm just like oh my god it's like insane but you know that's that
00:34:09.200kind of mind like maybe it's a gemini thing too you know him and trump trump doesn't really care
00:34:13.920to sleep either. You know, so it's just, it's just, he's a special, special man. We all are
00:34:21.840so lucky. You know, think about the people in this world that people, I don't want to say the
00:34:26.960word idolize. Like, it's not like an, like, you know, you just, you have such a love and
00:34:32.100appreciation for Scott, right? So imagine how unlucky a lot of other people are that have a
00:34:38.360love and appreciation for someone and they never had access like this where you could go behind
00:34:43.880the scenes and he would tell you about Dilbert and he'd answer your questions in the chat and you
00:34:48.680were like in his home every morning while he's in his pajamas sipping coffee and taking if you were
00:34:54.000a locals you know you saw him in the kitchen making the coffee before the show and his little
00:34:58.720putting green in the house and you know you'd walk through the house and he had a little elevator
00:35:03.160and he'd go up the elevator sometimes sometimes he'd take the stairs but you know it's like
00:35:07.360that's an incredible level of access to somebody that this is why this community is so amazing
00:35:15.000because he talked to all of us we all bonded with each other of course we were bonded to him
00:35:21.200and that's why this can go on just like scott wanted it to because it's just a you know it's a
00:35:28.020our commonality was scott it is scott it will always be scott and i just think that it this
00:35:36.240a very special group of people um i know i don't want to talk about news either you guys but we do
00:35:42.560a little bit of everything it's a variety if you will um and we do have to catch up on some stuff
00:35:48.960but listen there'll be way more about scott coming up so i promise you that so i'm glad you guys
00:35:54.320enjoyed this so i'm going to um toss the first story over to marcella and oh and you guys listen
00:36:02.480if you are enjoying the show it will help us to keep it going if you could share the show hit the
00:36:10.000like button the bell the little heart it just it really helps keep our show alive and going so more
00:36:15.680people might find it and um you know that's the goal okay so marcella i'm gonna toss over to you
00:36:21.520for the first news item so a lot of you might be tired of winning i'm not tired of winning at all
00:36:28.320um i know yesterday you may have talked about ken paxton winning the primary for republican
00:36:37.080primary now he's going against uh talafrico oh talarico yes and there's a good chance that he
00:36:46.180will win of course it's texas uh but there is uh it's very competitive but the other thing was
00:36:53.600the funny part was that Trump had posted untruth about it. And I will pick out only the funny stuff
00:37:05.120because it's a long post. And he congratulates Ken Paxton and talks about Cornyn and having a
00:37:14.960strong race. This is a senator that's been there 24 years, I believe. And, you know, it's a big
00:37:22.680deal. One of the main reasons he did not back Cornyn was because he was not pro the Save America
00:37:30.220Act. And one of the things that he says in there, and I'll go quickly into it because I want to go
00:37:36.620to the next story, is Jasmine Crockett, a very low IQ individual who has no relations to the0.88
00:37:42.200legendary frontiersman David Crockett, would have been a far better choice for the Democrats
00:37:48.340um in regards to in regards to uh the opposing party uh talarico he calls talarico alfred e
00:37:58.060newman if you know that you'd have to see a picture of newman but that's the mad comic mad
00:38:05.860mad magazine okay okay so loser loser track al green if you guys remember al green he's the
00:38:14.900protester that had signs in the state of the union and he's waving his pain oh he yeah several times
00:38:24.420so um so trump posted about that and he congratulated the the democrat democrat party0.76
00:38:31.880um al green one of the most mentally deficient congressmen in the history of our country has0.98
00:38:36.880lost in a landslide his seat in congress but i will miss that lunatic not screaming and0.96
00:38:43.280finally waving his cane at me during my next state of the union speech.
00:38:47.960So one of the things that happened with Texas is that it got redistricting, happened there,
00:38:55.620and it forced Al Green to go against another Democrat.
00:39:00.300The area where they're at is just pure Democratic power in Texas, but he lost against that Democrat,
00:39:09.360at the 18th congressional district he lost 69 to 30 percent so menifee the person he lost to
00:39:17.100is most likely going to win the final race but um because i guess that that district the 18th
00:39:24.520congressional district is known to be a democratic stronghold um but who knows so and i mean who
00:39:31.320knows if this guy has any kind of reasonable bone in his body but we can only hope so but i doubt so
00:39:36.920he's out of there. So the other loser, well, that's just my opinion. Where's my sign? Is0.95
00:39:45.120E. Jean Carroll. She's being investigated by the DOJ. And I don't know if you have0.93
00:39:49.520a clip of that. Oh, this makes me just giddy. Okay, here we go.
00:39:56.060Exclusive and breaking news right now. The Justice Department, CNN is learning,
00:40:00.140has launched a new criminal investigation into one of Trump's enemies, E. Jean Carroll.
00:40:06.400Now, E. Jean Carroll was the former magazine columnist who accused President Donald Trump of sexual assault.
00:40:11.560Ended up being that he was liable for sexual abuse.
00:40:14.240The source is telling CNN that the investigation now is focused on whether Carroll committed perjury during her two civil lawsuits against the president.
00:40:22.120Paula Reid is breaking the story, and she's out front.
00:40:24.280And, Paula, what else are you learning about this?
00:40:27.400I mean, there was obviously a verdict here.
00:40:29.480That's right. And here, Erin, this is the latest move by the Justice Department to take action against one of President Trump's longstanding foes.
00:40:38.120Our sources tell us this investigation is focused on a 2022 deposition that Carol gave where she said that she had not received any outside funding.
00:40:46.980Now, her later her lawyers later told the judge that she had, in fact, received funding for legal fees and expenses from billionaire Reid Hoffman.
00:40:54.680And the judge overseeing this case ultimately said there were no issues with her credibility
00:40:59.060and blocked Trump lawyers from asking about this at trial.
00:41:02.840Now, Carol currently has multiple legal battles with Trump currently pending,
00:41:09.320including one before the Supreme Court.
00:41:11.900And notably, Erin, the Supreme Court has deferred 12 times on a decision
00:41:16.740whether they want to take up that case.
00:41:20.240Now, over at the Justice Department, Acting Attorney General Todd Blanche, I am told,
00:41:24.100has recused from this case because he worked on one of the appeals related to the Carroll case.
00:41:30.960Now, I'm told he has not attended any meetings or been in any discussions about this investigation.
00:41:36.240The case is currently being handled out of the U.S. Attorney's Office in Chicago.
00:41:41.620Now, tonight, the Justice Department issued a statement saying, quote,
00:41:44.500We can confirm that no U.S. Attorney's Office has declined to investigate any case relating to the subject matter of CNN's inquiry.
00:41:52.940We will not comment beyond that. Now, Carol's team tonight declined to comment. Erin?
00:41:59.660All right. Okay, Marcella, let's take it away.0.50
00:42:05.260So, I mean, the main issue is that when you are deposed, even if it's a private civil matter
00:42:12.280or it's not a civil matter, you're under the penalty of perjury. And just as if you were
00:42:19.540in the courtroom. And basically Alina Haba, his then attorney asked clearly Carol, whether she
00:42:28.520was being, whether her legal fees were being covered by someone else. And she refused, she
00:42:35.920said no. And then basically then her own team had indicated that there was someone else that had,
00:42:43.820you know um funded her legal costs so you can always um do the clinton move where what is is
00:42:55.980what is funding funding you know so they could always sidestep it but basically there was
00:43:03.820somebody and i think having the disclosure by her lawyers that billionaire reed hoffman was behind
00:43:11.040that um i mean i love the whole thing because it shows the crookedness and i think there was
00:43:18.120other things that we can talk about of how president trump was treated before becoming
00:43:24.880president one of them was the florida mar-a-lago issue i have that too which you have but this one
00:43:33.660was another issue of having people sue him. Now, the Second Circuit recently delayed the
00:43:41.920$83 million that President Trump was supposed to pay for the defamation payment for what
00:43:50.400was found in that case. And the Supreme Court, I think they talked about it in the newscast
00:43:56.620that they were deferring hearing the appeal. So we'll see how it turns out. But the structure
00:44:03.400of everything is that there was as as scott was trying to put it is that there could be a rico
00:44:12.600action of conspiracy um between all of these players to in order to um affect the election
00:44:23.000and in order to derail trump as they do other candidates he's not the sole person you know
00:44:30.120know they always come out in their October surprise with some lady saying that she was
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00:45:04.100details. Well, Reid Hoffman, correct me if I'm wrong, wasn't he also behind Christine Blasey
00:45:11.080Ford with the Kavanaugh? He was behind that too. So this guy's a real piece of work.
00:45:16.720He's also alleged to be in the Epstein files. But I know that there is people that are innocent.
00:45:27.200so you know all right well that's interesting so she's just you know a gem for headlines but you
00:45:36.600know the thing is the the wonderful thing is is that they're actually going forward and doing it
00:45:42.460and seeing what results because sometimes when you start an investigation you find out more
00:45:47.480once you um uncover you know you you find out all the venomous snakes under the under the under the
00:45:57.640rock but because there was a time where i would be talking to people about these kind of things back
00:46:05.560in you know 2020 or even before that or even after that and they looked at me like i was alex jones
00:46:42.440well she says that she's never seen him act that way before since but in the interviews that over
00:46:48.380200 of which that Jake and I did other people did see him act like that in the months before
00:46:54.440and in the months after that and those moments became increasingly hard to predict
00:47:00.300and the White House was increasingly trying to manage them to keep those moments out of public
00:47:06.160view and eventually you know during the debate um they could no longer hide those moments from
00:47:13.200the public um i'd also say that what she just said there is very much at odds with what many of
00:47:19.280biden's top aides have said at the time and have said you know since the 2024 election which is
00:47:25.680they didn't think the debate was that bad and they think they thought the democratic party way
00:47:30.160overreacted they certainly didn't think that he was having a stroke at the time and they thought
00:47:35.120it was you know he was clearly trying to say big pharma and um instead of uh beat medicare and that
00:47:42.320the that this was a whole you know tempest in a teapot overreaction but jill biden is now saying
00:47:47.680that at the time when she was watching she thought her husband the president united states
00:47:52.160was having a stroke and then also later that night spoke at a rally in which she praised
00:47:58.480his performance then also did an event right afterward at a restaurant and then also let
00:48:03.680let him go and do a rally the next day in North Carolina that seemed okay so what happened was
00:48:11.120Jill Jilly was interviewed and she was questioned you know what did you think about that debate
00:48:17.980performance to which she said you know I've never seen him like that ever and I've never seen him
00:48:24.960like that since and I was you know I was scared I thought maybe he was having a stroke in which
00:48:31.680she then takes said maybe stroke victim out on stage and parades them around and goes to a
00:48:39.040diner and takes them to an event it's like stop it and also the aids that saw this behavior
00:48:46.720everybody who saw this which was all of you because we all saw it i mean i never say this phrase
00:48:52.400but shame on you you know everything's a big effing joke to these people we're talking about
00:48:59.360running our country and the world. And you're like, yeah, like, you know, we knew he couldn't
00:49:04.920talk, walk, maybe he had a stroke. There was a one brain cell left, but if we could just push
00:49:11.060him through and it wasn't until that debate that was just so mind numbingly ridiculous that people
00:49:18.040were like, oh, we can't co-sign anymore. Like it's just, it just went too far. And I'm like,
00:49:22.420you know what, George Clooney, you're so full of it too. Don't let me go on a rant, but you're so
00:49:27.180full of it too. Everybody knew what was up. So I hope that our DOJ follows the money all the way
00:49:34.620to all these people being put in jail. There was a great cabinet meeting the other day and the DOJ
00:49:40.240is stepping up and doing stuff. But Marcella, what do you want to say about this Jill Biden
00:49:44.580bullshit? Sorry. The sad part is I see this all the time in my practice. Elder abuse is rampant.0.99
00:49:53.340And I mean, to be honest, what was happening to Joe Biden not to make him a victim was it could be discerned as elder abuse for not having, you know, not having someone step in and say, hey, maybe he is lacking capacity now or he needs more time or, you know, he has disabilities or whatever it was.
00:50:15.700It just seemed like they were just doing the weekend at Bernie's and just dragging him along.
00:50:22.180I remember there was a funny video that we talked about of this lady in Brazil taking her deceased uncle or someone that she knew to the bank and she was actually dead.
00:50:34.520And he was trying to get money out of the people actually do this.
00:50:38.320You guys, this is what I litigate for a living.
00:50:40.960Some of these things are people doing this to their own relatives because that particular relative or that particular person is the one that's generating the golden eggs.
00:50:51.160You know, they're the ones generating the money. I'm not I'm not saying that Jill was aware of that, but you have to because who knows, maybe she's also being abused herself. I don't know. You know, so the issue is that somebody had to come in and say something. But when you're president of the United States, it's hard to, you know, step on and say, you know, you need to stop, you know.
00:51:18.680I know because he was the president, but let's get real. He didn't have one brain cell bouncing
00:51:23.860around in there. So it seemed like that. Yeah. Yeah. So it's like, how could it even be hard?
00:51:28.620It was so disgusting to watch. And, and it was like, I, I don't think Joe Biden's a good person.
00:51:33.940I just don't, but it was sad to watch that for him as an elderly person who obviously was1.00
00:51:40.760handicapped. It was sad to watch that. Um, I, I would hope nobody would ever do something like
00:51:47.040that to somebody they love, you know, obviously the greed and the power and the power were more
00:51:52.360important to the Biden. You know, and sometimes individuals like a wife or a daughter or anything
00:51:58.760like that, sometimes you're too close to the situation where you are not able to discern the
00:52:05.400changes that are coming to that loved one. And you need a doctor, somebody else. And there was
00:52:11.740a doctor involved that would see President Joe Biden, and would have been able to tell them,
00:52:17.440hey, you know, something's going on with him, there is tests that you do for dementia, and so
00:52:22.260on and so forth. So, you know, when you're a relative, you kind of just like, oh, yeah,
00:52:27.500he's forgetful. You know, that happens, you know, I mean, he forgot, he forgot where the exit is.
00:52:35.240And sometimes you kind of just keep it going, because you'd want to believe that your relative
00:52:41.360where your loved one is, is good. Marcella, you are so much nicer than me. Honestly,
00:52:47.060it just happens in the cases that I deal with. I deal with conservatorships and I deal with that
00:52:53.480a lot. And a lot of it is like, no, there's this doctor saying that your loved one does not have
00:53:01.460capacity to do X, Y, and Z. Well, we got that report from the her report when he interviewed
00:53:06.920him and he said, I can't release the report because he he's brain dead, basically. That's
00:53:13.100just me talking. But anyway, I want to move on. We all know that this and, you know, and by the
00:53:17.540way, people are like, oh, you know, it was nice to see Hunter Biden talking about his addiction
00:53:21.260to Candace Owens. Bullshit. That just listen to me, you guys. The Bidens are professional liars.1.00
00:53:28.600Okay. Hunter Biden, whatever his addictions, that's brutal. Like I understand addiction.0.99
00:53:35.000Like I get it. Yes. Terrible. But these people are so full of shit when they talk, everything
00:53:41.260they say is just a calculated lie. So I don't want to hear about them. I don't, I'm not giving1.00
00:53:46.600them the benefit of the doubt. They destroyed this country. They let people flood in here. I'm
00:53:50.940over them. Um, Jill, you're a horrible wife. And I've said that since the, before you even got1.00
00:53:56.860into the white house, you're disgusting. Thank you. Good night. Okay. So I just want to move on.1.00
00:54:02.100And so this was this is also interesting.
01:00:41.000The way that it is, what you have is what it's designed to do, which is fraud.
01:00:47.920One of the things that came out recently, and I think it was Stephen Miller that said this, but Scott had said this a while back, is that we could probably solve the budget issue with finding all this fraud.
01:01:03.020Because the deficit might be all fraud.