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00:04:02.000So, I mean, that could be an example of one, right?0.78
00:04:05.000So, women came up with this thing called the ick recently, you know, a couple of years ago, I don't know.
00:04:11.000And they said, oh, you know, this gives me the ick, or this about this guy gives me the ick.
00:04:17.000And it's been this phrase, you know, that comes along.
00:04:20.000And so I wanted to say, okay, you know, I've been listening to this for years now, and it's time for the fellas to have a turn, have a run, if you will, a run for the ring, a run for the trophy.0.90
00:04:33.000And I said, Gentlemen, what about women gives you the male ick?0.71
00:07:34.000They're saying women with like women have just gotten like gone overboard with tattoos was a big one.
00:07:40.000But one thread, or I should say, a common theme that I encountered was.
00:07:46.000And this wasn't trans necessarily, but more of like a learned behavior was sort of the theme of like women acting like men, women acting masculine.0.75
00:07:58.000So, cursing, binge drinking, dropping their voices to a lower register when they speak, vocal fry.0.99
00:08:06.000I think all of these different things that women have been doing lately.1.00
00:08:10.000You kind of get what I'm putting out.1.00
00:08:17.000Why are female athletes and other people, when they talk, they just really put it out there and we're going to lay it out on the field?0.97
00:08:29.000And it's like, why are you doing that?0.96
00:08:46.000I always just think of the intrusive thought I always have with septum piercing I imagine it getting caught on something and then you're hooked on it like that.
00:10:03.000Most of these are not stuff that I've actually encountered dating, but one that I have is.
00:10:08.000Where they'll like brag about doing manipulative or Machiavellian behavior.
00:10:16.000I've encountered this and I didn't understand what it was trying to communicate because it kind of just sent the message like, I did something evil and got away with it.
00:10:24.000And I could not understand why that would be appealing.0.99
00:10:27.000And you think that's just a female trait?1.00
00:10:28.000I don't know that it's a female trait, but it's a trait that a woman did that gave me the egg and a boo.0.89
00:10:32.000That's just, that's, that's, I hate to say it, but that's pretty, I think men, men are guilty of that.0.99
00:10:48.000Men are confrontational in terms of their interactions and disagreements.1.00
00:10:53.000Men are confrontational, whereas women who lack the physical strength of men become less confrontational and they become more subversive.0.84
00:11:03.000Subversion, manipulation, there's even a term for it feminine wiles.1.00
00:11:10.000These are the female strategies for success or destroying their enemies.1.00
00:11:19.000It's kind of like the old adage when they say, if women were president, we'd have no wars.1.00
00:11:24.000And I'm like, you're right, because they would have nuked the entire planet and there would be no wars to fight.1.00
00:11:34.000There were studies on that because we have a good case study in the sense of the.1.00
00:11:40.000Of the United Kingdom, where obviously there's been many kings and queens that goes back hundreds of years, over a thousand years.
00:11:46.000And when I forget the exact number, but it did actually come out, and I want to say it was a Cambridge study, something like that, where when England had a queen, they were more predisposed to go to war than when they had a king.
00:12:04.000That this is actually borne out if you look at British history.0.85
00:13:10.000There was a great interaction lower down the thread, and I had to retweet it because somebody, just one follower of mine, had said, Constantly dragging any conversation to be about them.
00:13:22.000To which a woman replied and said, Woman here, a man using the phrase gives you the ick, gives me the ick.
00:13:55.000Some of it is very much deserved, but I want to bring the sexes back together.0.88
00:14:00.000I want us to find harmony, you know, in God's design.
00:14:04.000I don't want us to always be this gender war thing.
00:14:06.000If you, Jack, you've experienced this too, I'm sure, like with like turning point students, they all like the men hate the women and the women hate the men and they're just like at each other's throats.
00:14:35.000It is this idea that pushes women into male roles and completely distorts the traditional gender roles of society.
00:14:46.000And a lot of the stuff that we talk about is like this.
00:14:49.000And a lot of this, a lot of the issues that we have described here, even on this program for years at this point.
00:14:57.000All come back from this, and it's we are surrounded and we are inundated with feminist propaganda from anytime you walk into a library as a little kid to when you go to school to when you go to Hollywood.0.90
00:15:09.000So you're just constantly surrounded by, you know, women can do anything, women are, you know, yes, she can, and all of this stuff.0.76
00:15:17.000Whereas young men, and as someone who has two boys, that, you know, you don't see any of these types of programs for, oh, we're going to help young boys get into STEM or we're going to help young boys have a track up.
00:15:30.000So, you know, we do have to acknowledge, I think, that we live in a society that is governed very much by girl boss longhouse feminism.
00:15:39.000And until we deal with that and be able to wrestle that down into a place where women are told, once again, that actually that's not good for you and it's not going to give you the outcomes that you want, you're going to continue to see these conflicts.
00:15:54.000But also go to men and say, look, just because you're upset with women and just because you're upset with women the way they are, you also have to understand that doesn't That doesn't mean that we should go and bash women and, you know, trash them and all the rest of it.
00:16:06.000It just means that you have to be good men as well, or else you, you know, you're just going to have the separation of the sexes and you're going to have it turn into a situation that we call the end of society.
00:16:21.000It feels like our country finally has momentum again with our leaders fighting to restore common sense and American first values.
00:16:28.000But we've seen this before conservatives get comfortable and the left starts taking back ground inch by inch.
00:18:02.000But, you know, basically what it comes down to is probably the most important issue is fertility and making sure Americans can achieve the American dream, affordability, all this stuff.
00:18:45.000Connotations at all, but it actually is kind of like a white pill, right?0.62
00:18:50.000We like white Americans, our fertility rates are bouncing back.
00:18:53.000What's interesting is when you look at who's holding together, what's actually crashing is kind of the third world is crashing because they're getting basically fried by smartphones and TikTok.
00:19:05.000But what's holding up is kind of who we'd most want to have kids like married couples who are upper middle class.
00:19:13.000They're like ideologically more pro having kids, they're more.
00:19:16.000They're telling their kids to get married and to have kids.
00:19:22.000And so I'm kind of my optimistic long term take is basically Midwest nationalism that we're just going to have people like my siblings who are all married off, all having kids now.
00:19:31.000And like they're going to have kids and they're going to have, you know, my cousins are all having kids.0.73
00:19:36.000I think they're the future of America is going to be these like middle class just pumping out four or five kids.0.72
00:21:48.000Because ultimately, like Brigitte Bardot, right?0.98
00:21:51.000When the great French actress, Rest in Peace, that when she was asked once, Are you a feminist? she replied, No, because I like men too much.
00:22:14.000That at the root of feminism is the hatred of men.0.92
00:22:18.000And that all of this equality of the sexes and empowerment stuff that they talk about is actually just window dressing in the same way that most social justice programs are, in that it's actually a thinly veiled.
00:22:33.000You know, patina on resentment and envy.
00:22:37.000Whereas, like, yeah, you can have empowered women and you can have successful women, but without the misandry.0.99
00:22:54.000Speaker Savannah Stone is a married 21 year old who's built an audience advocating for traditional gender roles in a sometimes provocative way.1.00
00:23:03.000Submission gets a bad rep because it's seen as slavery.1.00
00:23:08.000But submission is a trust and it's teamwork.
00:23:11.000It means the woman serves the husband and the husband lays down his life for the wife because women are controlled by their emotions and men are controlled by logic.
00:23:18.000She goes viral a lot on TikTok for talking about women submitting to their husbands, being submissive.
00:25:39.000And I mean, the music makes it sound so ominous.1.00
00:25:42.000Look at these crazy women at this conservative event.0.97
00:25:45.000Wait, by the way, one insight that I have, though, is we should all point out that this, as it's a turning point event, you have to imagine that this is a room full of women that have watched hours upon hours of Charlie Kirk on campus.0.82
00:26:01.000And there was no one better ever at turning around a gotcha question than Charlie Kirk.
00:26:07.000And so now you're seeing the Charlie effect that when you try gotcha questions on turning point kids, it doesn't work.
00:26:19.000Yeah, we had to like build up antibodies.
00:26:21.000I'm telling you, you could track the political discourse in the Overton window in this country just based on like what antibodies have we developed recently to the liberal malaise and the accusations they hurl at us.
00:26:33.000And it's funny because you'll see other ones fade.
00:26:35.000So we've gotten very good at suppressing the racism label.
00:26:39.000But now we need antibodies, I think, against old fashioned socialism.
00:27:14.000And it's not working out so well for New York.
00:27:17.000They're going to drive away all the productive people.
00:27:19.000If you are a business, if you are an entrepreneurial person right now, and you just happen to be coming up, let's say in Queens, you're coming up through the ranks, you're like, I got this great idea.
00:27:29.000You're not going to do it in New York if you can help yourself.
00:27:39.000This happens in California all the time, by the way.
00:27:41.000It's just like people have these businesses, they might grow them a little bit, but once they get to any size that they're making any money and they're paying any kind of taxes, they'll move to Arizona or Texas.
00:27:50.000Anyways, that's kind of not our topic.1.00
00:30:06.000Helen Andrews, Ann Coulter, Caroline Levitt, Anna Polina Luna, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Lauren Bobert, Dana Perino, Dana Lash, Phyllis Schlafly, Martha McCallum.
00:30:14.000I mean, I just, I think I hit them all, basically.
00:31:14.000My 99th and 100th, I was like, okay, going through history.
00:31:17.000I had a bunch of historical ones, and I was like, World War II women, Anne Frank, and then 100 was Eva Braun, which was Hitler's class.0.55
00:34:53.000I did, like, I mean, I have a few, like Dianne Feinstein, Madeleine Albright.
00:34:58.000I think my most obscure guy, eyeballing this list, I think my most obscure one has to be Pulcheria, who was a virgin empress of the Roman Empire in the 400s.
00:35:08.000I was doing like Maisie Hirono and like Kay Ivey, and I was just going through like governors and senators and stuff.
00:36:25.000Because when I, oh, yeah, I thought it was like, for some reason, when I thought, like, okay, notable women who have a Wikipedia, and I was just like, okay, Erica.
00:36:32.000Because I was starting it with, like, I'm like a concentric circles guy.
00:36:36.000Like, I start with people that I know.
00:36:39.000And then, because then I went to the cabinet, right?
00:36:42.000I had like Pam Bondi, even though she's not.
00:36:43.000Uh, technically in the cabinet right now, Tulsi, et cetera.
00:36:46.000Like, I went with Caroline Levitt, like, I went with people who are like in that concentric circle of like people I'm friends with, people I work with, people I know from like politics, and then like I just moved my way out from there.
00:36:57.000That's your impulse, and I think that's what a lot of people would do.
00:37:00.000You went to like heavily in conservative media, and then I'm like, I must go back to 5000 BC and work my way forwards and think of who comes to mind.
00:37:10.000And so I had Egyptians, then I had Romans.
00:39:07.000So, I did notice someone I knew did it, and they just, you know, there's actually many Cleopatras in ancient Egypt, so you could do like eight Cleopatras in a row, and I felt that would be a lot of fun.
00:39:16.000Yeah, because wasn't the Cleopatra that ended up with Mark Antony like Cleopatra VIII?
00:39:41.000Anyway, all of you should look up the Name 100 Women game, and if you send a screenshot to freedom at charliekirk.com, I will look at them at least.
00:39:49.000I don't know if we'll ever look at this again.
00:41:28.000The truth is this you are all being used.
00:41:38.000The vigilante citizen is delivering a brand of justice that some believe the authorities have failed to provide, targeting both criminals and those in power accused of allowing crime to flourish unchecked.
00:41:52.000There's been a lot said about me, so I thought you should hear directly from me.
00:41:57.000I'm here to help you take that control back.
00:44:34.000Which, by the way, is crazy to say illegal to possess, which is actually a thing in Germany.
00:44:39.000That I went and so I interviewed the director this week on Human Events.
00:44:44.000And during that interview, I actually went and just pulled up, like, okay, let's pull up a random movie theater in Germany and see which films are being shown, Uwe Boll.
00:44:54.000And it was like Obsession, which, of course, we talked about last week, which is incredibly violent.
00:45:01.000The Odyssey, which, again, is a war movie, like all war movies are very, very violent.
00:45:06.000Django Unchained was doing some kind of remake, or not remake, like a replay of that, re showing, and which again, one of the most violent films ever made, which is something to be said for the fact that it's Quentin Tarantino and all of his movies are famously ultra violent.
00:45:25.000And so you can imagine just all of those films, perfectly fine to be shown in Germany.
00:45:30.000And of course, by the way, The Punisher is also available on Disney Plus Germany right now, which is literally a vigilante film about a guy who kills criminals.
00:50:36.000I mean, that's why the movie's going viral right now because it's like.0.97
00:50:39.000Go into the Quran, they go into like you sent the bad ones.0.58
00:50:42.000I mean, like, this is it speaks to a primal id, and I guess this is now where Jack and I debate it because I think have all of us seen the movie at this point?0.97
00:51:25.000It's literally like, we're going to go in, we're going to throw some stuff at you that comes straight from the headlines.
00:51:30.000And by the way, he told me that in his interview that we did, that these crimes, they're not just similar to certain crimes that you've seen, obviously, this gang rape.
00:51:42.000He's referring to actual crimes and basing it on actual crimes that have happened across Europe.
00:51:48.000So he brought up the mass rape of a 15 year old in Hamburg.
00:51:52.000That in that instance, the judge let everyone off.
00:51:56.000They actually did not face jail time and had said, oh, well, they were victims too, victims of society because they were not allowed to fully assimilate and therefore they were lashing out at a society that would not assimilate them.
00:52:12.000He brought up a number of things that have happened in the US and Europe that just literally straight from the headlines that we talk about every day.
00:52:20.000And he said, let me put that all into a video because.
00:52:23.000I feel like, and he was totally right in saying this that there's so many people out there that if you're not a news junkie like all of us, if you're not doing this every day, if you're not focused on it, you may not even know that all of this is going on.
00:52:38.000So, an incredible way to present that, and the most effective way to present that, of course, is through a story, through a film.
00:52:45.000It was, I found it legitimately jarring to watch.
00:52:49.000I have many of the same, it's a gory movie.
00:52:57.000The bigger picture, of course, is this is a film that presents vigilantism as either a solution or at least an appealing way to go about things.
00:53:07.000And we understand that Death Wish was popular for a reason as well.
00:53:10.000So I guess what would stand out to me is if we're going to have a viral movie that's presenting vigilantism as an understandable response to what's going on with migration, I guess I wish the person was more sympathetic because the way the character Hammer's playing is basically.
00:53:30.000Kind of a psychopath, like he actually he himself murders random people in the film, which I thought was very strange.
00:53:38.000He does, uh, deal with the judges too, not just the judges, but like while he's there's a scene where he's driving with a judge and he's kind of saying, like, most people they just you know they're they're sheep who follow the rules no matter what.
00:53:49.000And he so he drives into the wrong side of the road and makes someone else swerve off the road and crash, and their car explodes.
00:53:55.000Like, that person's probably dead because they wanted to follow the rules, so he just killed the random innocent person.
00:54:38.000I didn't actually ask him, but it's sort of left unspoken as to whether or not that was the origin story of the main character.
00:54:44.000And it could sort of be read both ways.
00:54:46.000He does sort of talk about how his mother had been killed and his father sent him off to boarding school in America.
00:54:51.000And so it's, I didn't take it as advocating for vigilantism, just more of like a vehicle for these types of issues to be talked about in public.
00:55:04.000Except for the fact that part of the film was literally that they shot scenes of people on social media being like, this guy is so cool.
00:55:17.000That does read as it's promoting advocating for vigilantism.
00:55:24.000Which, again, if the director wasn't quote unquote advocating for vigilantism, his art was sure advocating for vigilantism.
00:58:18.000You know, Sarah Rogers has a bunch of these like crazy stories.
00:58:21.000Like, she has them all memorized of all just the insane, like actual true stories.
00:58:26.000If you think that's like not actually happening in Europe, it's actually happening.
00:58:30.000I mean, there's she, these are all based on true.
00:58:33.000Our friend, she lives in New York City, and they'll have cases where a mugging has happened.
00:58:37.000And mugging someone sees a mugging and they just think, do I want to intrude on this where I would have to basically, like, if it's, for example, if it's a black person mugging a white person, do I want to come in and like be the person who is fighting this person?
00:58:49.000We know how they can, if there's a video of it, it spirals out of control.
00:58:53.000And yeah, Daniel Penny, perfect example.
00:58:56.000I mean, he was vindicated, and yet he had to go through the heroin experience of you've got to count on 12 people.
00:59:02.000You had the state of New York try to destroy your life because you, the person that you were choking, was the wrong color.
00:59:11.000So this is a European story, citizen vigilante, but we should throw this graph up.
00:59:17.000This is the foreign born number and share of people living in the United States.
00:59:24.000And what's really troubling about this is the number got really high as a percentage of the total population, like 1910, 1920, and then it dropped down between 1940 and 1970 down to 4.7% of the population.
01:00:01.000Just no, and they say that in the film actually that you know, nobody, these people didn't vote for this.
01:00:05.000And uh, we should mention, by the way, um, you know, speaking about authors, the director's intent here that he does say at the end, and the very first thing he said to me, he said, I made this film for the victims, I made this film, and it says at the end, this film is dedicated to the victims of rape and murder that have been let down by the legal system.
01:00:25.000And he specifically said that uh, this is about them, this is about their experiences.
01:00:32.000This is about because he pointed out in that case in Hamburg, which you know, similar to the movie, as it shows, that that girl still lived in the same neighborhood as her rapists, and then when they were let out of jail, that they were basically just sent back to the same neighborhood, so she still has to live with them right around the corner every single day.
01:00:52.000And you know, I again, I still don't think it reads as advocacy, I think it's more just like an exploration of like a what if scenario, kind of like Joker was a what if scenario.
01:01:03.000Well, it's not really a what if scenario, it's literally happening.
01:01:06.000Well, actually, I think the what if scenario.
01:01:11.000Let's suppose one of these grooming gangs got, like, a vigilante went and they actually, like, killed three members of a confirmed grooming gang who we thought were underpunished.
01:01:22.000How do we think people would respond to it?
01:01:59.000Yeah, so he, his son was abducted by a karate instructor who was like, oh, you know, he had like wormed his way into the family, and it was a family that I believe was.
01:02:11.000I'm not going to get into all the details, but he was a trusted member of their circle, he was taking the son to a karate tournament in California.
01:02:21.000They had lived in Louisiana and basically just abducted him, absconded with the son.
01:02:26.000By the time they found him, he had dyed the boy's hair.
01:02:33.000And they did find him, they brought his son back.
01:02:35.000But when they were bringing the perpetrator back, the karate instructor, which is a young guy, I think he was in his 30s.
01:02:43.000That the father went around all throughout town and kind of like was able to find out just like going to bars and talking to local cops what the specific logistics would be, like what flight he was on, like when it was going to land and all of this.0.96
01:02:58.000And he wore like a stupid like costume, like his, his, uh, his, uh, actually, actually, uh, that was not a costume.0.96
01:03:06.000I, I've, I found out because I followed the son on Twitter, um, that he actually said, like, no, my dad just dresses like that.0.99
01:03:13.000Like my dad just always dressed like that.
01:03:27.000And he just waits for him to walk by and he just walks up with a snub nosed revolver and just gives him one of the head, runs right to the temple.
01:03:44.000Yeah, so the reaction to it was they got him, they gave it like temporary insanity.
01:03:51.000And basically, I think one of the prosecutors later went on to say that we don't think there's a jury anywhere in Louisiana that would convict him.
01:04:03.000He was sentenced to, he was originally charged with second degree murder, took a plea deal of no contest to manslaughter, was given a seven year suspended sentence, five years probation, 300 hours of community service.
01:05:14.000And TikTok has always strived to build the kind of place that thrives on respectful connection, where curiosity fuels connection and we can share what's on our minds and learn from each other.
01:05:24.000When ideas meet respect, good things happen.
01:05:28.000Explaining the why behind a problem most of us wouldn't even know how to name, or a father sharing a lifetime of knowledge with his viewers, viewers who listen, discuss, and then they respond.
01:05:38.000TikTok turns connection into community through small acts of understanding.
01:05:42.000You can feel it in the comments, in the thank you from a stranger halfway across the world.
01:05:46.000TikTok is a place where respect opens the door for discussion, and discussion helps us build something real.
01:05:55.000There was a German woman who shot somebody in court, I believe.
01:06:00.000Yeah, she shot her rapist, I believe.1.00
01:06:43.000In that instance, it wasn't like a migrant, but there's that crazy video that goes viral every so often on X or whatever where it's like this migrant dude who comes in with, I think it looked like a French scene where the mom is trying to protect the daughter.
01:07:26.000This is the story kind of peak woke Biden era.
01:07:28.000I want to say early 21 in South Carolina.
01:07:31.000The army guy who was caught on video and he's kind of confronting the black guy in the neighborhood, he like slaps the phone out of his hand.
01:08:18.000And so I do wonder if this were to happen.
01:08:21.000I feel like they would, I feel like if it happened in America today, if we had an equivalent version of Marianne Bachmeyer or Gary Plasche, and maybe it was a migrant who injured or killed or raped their kid or whatever, I think they would crack down on it harder.
01:08:36.000I think that the government would, certainly a European government, would say, we need to send a message for this.
01:08:42.000And it would be very, I don't want to bring this about, but it would be interesting to see how that would unfold.
01:08:47.000Yeah, I think it would depend on the state.
01:08:49.000Like if we do it in, like, California, New York versus like Louisiana, Utah.
01:08:59.000But, you know, Russ, to your point about Mangione, like in that case where he takes like left wing vigilantism, which is just literally assassination, that if you look at what they're doing on the state level and the federal level with those judges, they've been like, they already took the death penalty off the table.
01:09:17.000They've been like dropping charges left and right in the Mangione case.
01:09:21.000I mean, it's like this blue jurisdiction, it's exactly what This movie is all about that.
01:09:27.000You can see it happening right now where a guy who clearly committed a political assassination.
01:09:33.000He just walks up and shoots a guy in the back on the street, right?
01:09:37.000It's obvious done for political purposes.
01:09:39.000And yet the judges in both of the trials, the federal level and the state level, are like jumping through hoops to try to get Mangione off.
01:09:49.000I have that video from Bordeaux, 22 B roll.
01:09:54.000This just like freaks me out watching it.
01:12:14.000One tier of justice, not the two tier.
01:12:16.000Kirstarmer, of course, by the way, just thrown out of office.
01:12:19.000You know, he would have been thrust out by his party if he hadn't resigned over a number of things, but a lot of which included migrant violence and migrant sexual assault that he was directly involved with looking the other way on.
01:12:31.000There's no question that played a huge role in his ouster as the government of England just fell over this, and yet the movie is banned in Germany.
01:12:39.000So, no, we don't want this two tier policing.
01:14:31.000It's good to be, you know, head on a swivel.
01:14:33.000But if you would just lock up the bad guys, for sure, there's like a very small percentage of the population that causes most of the damage.
01:14:40.000Especially for random mayhem violence on innocent people.
01:14:45.000Like, you know, most murders, it's often pointed out, it's a criminal kills another criminal, and that's bad, and we don't like it.
01:14:51.000But it's not as likely to make someone feel terror when they go outside.
01:15:04.000It was so horrific because of how random it was.
01:15:06.000Anyone who's like stabbing a random person.
01:15:08.000This is why the UK, though, is such a terrible case because you mentioned Keir Starmer, Jack.
01:15:14.000Keir Starmer apparently, in his previous role before he was prime minister, I forget what the name of the role was, he sent 13,000 letters, you know, strongly worded letters instead of prosecutions for these Pakistani rape gangs.0.79
01:15:30.000Yeah, it's really offensive when random criminals, you know, commit random acts of violence.1.00
01:15:36.000It's really offensive when you refuse to prosecute them because they're migrants.1.00
01:15:41.000That's what's absolutely infuriating about that case.0.97
01:15:43.000And yeah, we get it here in the States too, but less under Trump, thankfully.
01:15:47.000But it's just, yeah, we make our point from consequences.
01:15:52.000But Blake, not that I want to go much longer, but there is a really cool scene that we should mention as well where it's definitely the director speaking through the character, as most of the scenes are, where he's monologuing.0.76
01:16:05.000But there's a scene where he also confronts a couple of fair jumpers on the bus too, which I really like.
01:16:09.000And he's like explaining to them the concept that if you don't pay for your bus ticket, if you're running around stealing, then that's going to make the cost of everything go up.0.99
01:16:20.000And then eventually, maybe we won't have those things anymore.
01:16:24.000And he's like, all of society will fall apart if we don't abide by these basic rules.
01:16:31.000I feel like that's way too much abstract thinking for the typical fare jumper.0.77
01:16:36.000I thought you were going to say the weird scene, as I call it, the autistic landlord scene.
01:18:13.000Eight minute version of this film that cuts out like a lot of the middle, and it's much better.
01:18:19.000There's a lot of slow monologuing, there's a lot of like extended sequence of just people walking, or like for example, when the SWAT team is coming, they're just like, let's have 45 seconds of them running around.
01:18:32.000I think I actually think people should support the film, actually buy it, and if you whatever speed you want to watch it, I would say that as well.
01:18:38.000Yeah, yeah, so you can get it on Amazon, right, and get like pay for it, and you know, we should re emphasize to everyone, it is a very popular movie that you can get.
01:18:48.000I went and I bought five of the special packages or whatever.
01:18:54.000So you get Blu ray, signed lobby cards, and a couple of other things.
01:18:59.000Not sure exactly what you get in the package.
01:19:01.000And I was thinking about maybe doing a giveaway.
01:19:04.000You show me that you paid for it, and I'll send listeners the set or something like that, just to do what I could to support the cause.