The Glenn Beck Program - September 03, 2020


Best of The Program | 9⧸3⧸20


Episode Stats

Length

44 minutes

Words per Minute

144.59904

Word Count

6,471

Sentence Count

580

Misogynist Sentences

8

Hate Speech Sentences

8


Summary

Glenn and Stu discuss the recent shooting of a hero cop by the family of the slain officer who was shot by police, whether or not he should have been treated as a hero by his father, and the possibility of a Mars colony being built on the moon.


Transcript

00:00:00.000 welcome to the podcast it's pat and stew in for glenn uh today on the glenn beck program uh today
00:00:04.440 we're going a little bit of uh jacob blake uh who uh and and jacob blake and family because they
00:00:10.220 have a wonderful family uh yeah of situation going on over there jacob of course is a guy who was
00:00:15.920 shot by police and has become this hero on the left we kind of go into whether he should be
00:00:19.560 treated as a hero and whether joe biden should be meeting with his dad who is a virulent anti-semite
00:00:25.420 huh huh huh i don't know i would go no he shouldn't but he will not be of course penalized
00:00:32.300 for that because you know social justice anti-semic racist too yeah we should put he really doesn't
00:00:38.080 like white people not a fan no not a fan we also go into uh glenn had a special last night you can
00:00:43.120 go to blaze tv.com slash glenn use the promo code big tech for 20 bucks off your subscription if you
00:00:48.100 want to see it um there's some great stuff on blaze tv right now uh including multiple documentaries but
00:00:52.680 this one was about big tech and the way they're going to try to manipulate the election goes into
00:00:56.600 lots of detail on that and we have a final update of the paper towel saga uh as a as my wife ordered
00:01:02.860 paper towels from a chinese scam company we have a final resolution of that comes at the end of the
00:01:07.740 show and you're gonna love it i think um make sure to subscribe to this podcast and subscribe to pat
00:01:13.560 gray unleashed which is also available on this podcast app as well as stew does america rating and
00:01:19.080 reviewing is always very much appreciated five stars is the appropriate number of stars here's the
00:01:24.320 podcast you're listening to the best of the glenn back program
00:01:35.320 to read about uh elon musk planning to build a glorious city on mars i love this guy's i love
00:01:45.240 his ambition i really do it's infectious like he he really he makes you believe that we're going to
00:01:50.960 do all these things um that within a few years i think he's sticking to his plan
00:01:56.040 2024 right 2024 is the mars shot or is 2024 might be the moon and 2028 or 2030 might be mars i don't know
00:02:08.080 anyway it's a really it's a short timetable because does it feel like we're ready to go to mars yet
00:02:15.180 it really doesn't i don't to me at least yeah mars or the moon or really anywhere no it does not seem
00:02:21.220 like it uh it does not seem like something that's going to be right around the corner no i you know
00:02:26.060 doesn't they're doing amazing things they are and it's obviously possible and i love that it's a
00:02:30.960 private business doing this they have partnered with nasa but still at least you got the private
00:02:35.100 business element to it now and uh he is talking about these rocket ships he's building these starship
00:02:41.620 rockets he calls them to take people back and forth to mars and he says he's going to need a fleet of
00:02:49.700 a thousand ships to create a sustainable city not even not even a place dependent on earth it's going
00:02:56.540 to be mars sustainable and he wants to have a million human beings living on mars by i believe 20 yeah
00:03:07.740 2050 by 2050 so he can take a hundred people at a time it'd be three flights a day for nine or ten years
00:03:17.180 and we'd have a million people on mars there is one drawback there's one slight drawback okay the first
00:03:26.060 bunch of groups of people who go right will probably die uh so it's a one-way trip you're going to be dead
00:03:32.420 after you get there well everyone's going to die yes but i mean quickly i mean before their time
00:03:38.280 they're obviously going to perish because mars can't sustain life but i mean that's a small price
00:03:44.100 to pay right to start a colony on mars it's actually quite a big price to pay you think yeah do you
00:03:51.060 really i feel like it's one of the biggest prices to pay
00:03:53.860 so you still think that uh human life has value oh that's right that's my wow that's my that's
00:04:02.180 weird yeah still i've been thinking that maybe i don't know even unborn human life had some value
00:04:06.920 so that's really crazy i'm way out on a limb wow uh it's funny i was i was watching some social media
00:04:13.160 feed i think from steven crowder who's on blaze tv can always watch his show on blaze tv and he was
00:04:19.400 doing something about you know he does those things change my mind he goes and just sits down and
00:04:23.440 sets the table up and goes and says something controversial and says change my mind well
00:04:27.420 this was sort of the reverse of that where he it said something about changed my mind and it was
00:04:32.880 about tesla and he was talking he had clips of him joking about tesla and mocking the cars and
00:04:38.260 everything and then it had him driving in one and at least the insinuation was i didn't see the
00:04:42.640 whole segment but it was the insinuation was he drove and he was like this is pretty great uh we
00:04:46.120 went through that same transition same thing same exact transition we had the same experience
00:04:51.140 because yeah you know you could sit here and and part of me still feels that like every time i see
00:04:55.920 one i'm like oh geez look at this look at this dope and they're a little stupid tesla and at the
00:05:01.020 same time like knowing we drove this thing oh it was the most amazing thing i've ever driven in my
00:05:06.520 life yeah i mean you know it is incredibly fast you feel like you're in a spaceship yes they're updating
00:05:12.560 the technology all the time all the time and it just happens like it happens automatically kind of
00:05:17.060 because it's downloaded to your car and one day your car just goes faster it's an amazing what
00:05:21.880 it's amazing it really is yeah now i guess they do have some quality control problems i think they've
00:05:27.140 got some of the biggest issues in in the auto industry in fact in the quality control i believe
00:05:31.140 that aspect because they you know yeah they're bound to right because it's really high tech so they're
00:05:35.860 going to have some issues uh but it's a i mean you've got that great big screen you've got the cool
00:05:42.200 sleek look of the car and it goes zero to 60 in less than three seconds i think i mean it's they're
00:05:48.440 pretty amazing they're pretty amazing it's done some cool things yeah it really is and tesla's like
00:05:53.380 the the second biggest uh by market cap the second or first biggest car company first is it first
00:06:01.240 that was past toyota yeah um just passed toyota a couple weeks ago like that's out of control like
00:06:07.200 it's just i mean they don't sell anywhere near the volume that toyota or ford gm anybody sells yeah
00:06:16.060 and yet it's more valuable than those companies and obviously people are projecting the future
00:06:21.140 and this thing and their stuff is great but i i still don't know that i see that as like the
00:06:25.540 ultimate solution but whatever i mean like and this is what's so funny about elon musk is that
00:06:30.000 here's a guy who has come to the place where as you point out pat he's not only created
00:06:36.440 an electric car company to try to solve the climate crisis he's actually sending people to
00:06:42.120 mars so that we can figure out a way to get off this planet in case the climate gets so bad that's
00:06:47.640 how liberal the guy is yes but the fact that he wanted to open up his own freaking factory
00:06:52.540 against government edict made him some crazy right winger it turned the the left against him yep
00:06:58.360 now they hate him now they hate him because because why because he wanted to open up his own factory
00:07:04.900 right he wanted to make money again sorry wanted to produce cars for people who want him oh what a
00:07:11.040 horrible thing to do i know and you know he can't be mr i'm gonna save the climate unless people are
00:07:15.680 actually doing the thing that they're supposed to be doing at the factory yes right but i and i was
00:07:20.380 told quite clearly the biggest threat to us was was the climate change situation oh multiple times
00:07:26.460 by multiple people not a pandemic right no that was never any that was george bush's concern
00:07:31.900 that was not the left's concern and bush was uh was obsessed with pandemics everyone kind of just
00:07:38.820 ignored him on the on it yeah that one seemed like that was a little bit of a bigger situation than
00:07:43.980 than what we've seen with the big 0.9 degree temperature rise over the past century so so not
00:07:50.440 only does he do the tesla thing not only does he do the space thing but now he's doing like chips in
00:07:56.380 your brain to try to control seizures or depression or any number of things now i'm not sure i want a
00:08:04.940 chip implanted in me anywhere but but it's in it's an amazing piece of technology if it does help
00:08:11.660 people um he one of the things that's supposed to do is maybe even cure depression which would be
00:08:17.780 amazing that's just i mean he's done some incredible things he really has uh and along the way has become
00:08:24.360 what the third richest man in the world now he just passed mark zuckerberg i think at 120 billion
00:08:31.280 dollars or something 120 billion can you believe 120 billion is third on the list now amazing just
00:08:38.360 absolutely incredible um and you just you just have to sit back and and kind of marvel because he's a
00:08:45.420 weird guy oh yeah he's a very strange person he is and kind of admittedly so and at one time he was
00:08:53.040 apparently sleeping in his factory because he couldn't get the cars produced that he wanted to
00:08:56.460 get produced i mean it took him way longer than he thought it was going to take to produce what a
00:09:03.480 thirty thousand dollar car thirty thousand dollar version of what he was making before uh so he had
00:09:09.200 to sleep on the premises in the factory in order to make that happen to be clear he did not need to
00:09:14.720 sleep at the factory he's just what he said stew he's just that's what he said right he's like
00:09:20.460 like there's no there's never a reason the owner of the company needs to sleep on the factory floor
00:09:24.700 to get a car built like that's not a thing true it's not a thing but he's was he on the floor though
00:09:30.080 he was he slept right on the floor maybe yeah like he was sleeping bag yeah and it was a paw patrol
00:09:36.740 sleeping bag which i thought was interesting uh it was it was interesting visual the guy does push
00:09:41.520 himself really hard yeah and he cares you know and and i will say you know he's he's definitely a
00:09:47.440 a very quirky guy but part of me is like you know if i was a billionaire it's kind of how i roll i
00:09:54.940 think now i wouldn't work as hard as him definitely no way and i wouldn't care about the same things i
00:09:59.560 wouldn't be trying to solve the climate crisis but would i be would i build a flamethrower company
00:10:04.400 probably i probably do have my own flamethrower company that would be kind of fun like i you're just
00:10:09.720 going to throw money at really crazy things that you think have a one percent chance of working
00:10:14.540 you know and whatever you think the biggest like you would just do all crazy things and not apologize
00:10:21.620 for them and that's what i think people like about elon musk like he just doesn't care you know he
00:10:26.620 doesn't he obviously should not have been saying things like i don't like the regulation in california
00:10:33.740 i'm going to move to texas like as a liberal he's not supposed to say things like that
00:10:37.420 but he did because it's what he thought was true he actually said at one point was it last year
00:10:43.000 he said his stock price was way too high yeah which is kind of counterproductive uh when you own a whole
00:10:51.040 bunch of those stocks you don't want them to be lowered necessarily yeah and somehow he survived that
00:10:56.320 and the stock price went up a lot and now he's a much richer man because of it amazing
00:11:02.060 but to understand what happened on august 23rd which was the date of the shooting you have to
00:11:13.140 go back to may 3rd so may 3rd is an incident there's an incident uh it's it's it's a little
00:11:19.300 it's a little uh icky um he was charged with third degree sexual assault among other things
00:11:25.620 and there's some rumors going around the internet that he had uh that was about sex with a minor
00:11:30.060 and so that's not true they've someone has like taken a different state's third degree sexual
00:11:36.400 assault law and put it in to posts online which again is bizarre because i've heard that too but
00:11:42.080 not true no not true now here's what the wisconsin there's two things that need to be true to get
00:11:47.020 third degree sexual assault in wisconsin number one the defendant had sexual intercourse with the
00:11:51.940 victim okay number two the victim did not consent to the sexual intercourse now to me that's just
00:11:58.960 straight out rape right like that that's you could call it a third degree sexual assault if you want
00:12:03.300 but the definition of rape i would i could easily define it just like that the defendant had sexual
00:12:09.940 intercourse with the victim the victim did not consent to the sexual intercourse kind of just seems like
00:12:14.980 straight up rape that's what i would call it um so we now know that the woman um the alleged victim
00:12:22.380 was the same woman who called police on the day blake was shot she called police on blake because he
00:12:27.440 showed up at her place when he wasn't supposed to and the last time he was there he was charged
00:12:31.740 with third degree sexual assault my understanding was not only did he show up when he wasn't supposed
00:12:36.040 to he showed up in the middle of the night standing over her in her bed so this is the may
00:12:40.140 third incident i'm talking about the shooting so okay this is why he yeah she's calling police
00:12:44.140 because this guy who showed up in the middle of the night last time he was there is a bit of a
00:12:48.140 problem in her life okay um it's and like look obviously we have the whole thing it's this is an
00:12:54.820 alleged situation at this time we all get trials uh we all get are innocent until proven guilty i
00:12:59.660 will point out to the left this includes the police officers too i know this is gonna be shocking but
00:13:04.740 i'm gonna give that benefit of the doubt to both sides uh but basically what happened was the victim
00:13:10.360 here the woman went to a party in milwaukee the previous night so this is may 2nd may 3rd early in the
00:13:17.240 morning comes back at like 4 in the morning arrives at home comes in and goes to bed in her in her bed
00:13:23.600 jacob blake breaks in to her home and uh she is startled awake when she at 6 o'clock in the morning
00:13:32.400 she wakes up and jacob blake is standing over her okay now they had known each other for years but it
00:13:40.300 was well known that he was not welcome in her home so think about you know what kind of person you have
00:13:45.840 to be to do this right like you need to actually break into someone's home you're you're intimidating
00:13:50.560 this woman you're standing over her now she was not alone in bed you know this is important to note
00:13:57.300 she was not alone in bed she was sleeping next to one of her children so she's alone she's in her bed
00:14:03.440 with one of her children and then blake assaults her in a way that i'm not going to describe here
00:14:09.140 on radio but uh it's not pretty and there's a lot of really disgusting details that go along with it
00:14:14.280 uh we're going to spare you those um but the police report is available the new york post
00:14:19.320 obtained it among others a couple of other media sources as well uh but he uh he sexually assaulted
00:14:25.680 her uh now after this ends he leaves uh the woman gets up collects herself runs out of the door to
00:14:37.360 basically yell at him you know whatever she's very pissed off that this has occurred she goes out
00:14:43.840 to find that her car is missing comes back in looks in her purse realizes he's taken her keys he's taken
00:14:50.020 her atm card she he uh the car is gone she he goes in the car takes and makes two withdrawals uh from her
00:14:59.680 bank account um unauthorized withdrawals from her bank account she's so he's stealing he stole her car
00:15:05.780 and money now it's interesting what happens when she actually calls 9-1-1 because as you know the
00:15:12.620 police are a bunch of a bunch of racist monsters they're going to come here probably and execute
00:15:16.000 every minority in the place right that's what i would assume is going to happen talking about uh
00:15:20.020 jacob blake and some of his background before the shooting you can get all the details and i have uh
00:15:25.680 you know uh screenshots and all this stuff uh on the show last night on stew does america go to youtube
00:15:31.260 search for stew you can watch the whole show there if you want to get additional detail but we're going
00:15:35.200 through what happened that day and it's really ugly honestly she's finally she's been assaulted
00:15:39.960 he's stolen the car he's done all these terrible things now he's decided uh she's called 9-1-1 the
00:15:45.800 police come and instead of you know violently attacking every minority in the complex they're
00:15:50.800 actually really protective of the victim which is i know a shocking thing for police to do uh they
00:15:56.120 take a tearful statement from her where she said her assault quote caused her pain and humiliation
00:16:01.040 was done without her consent she was quote very humiliated and upset by the sexual assault uh they
00:16:08.120 also noted that she had a very difficult time telling the officer about what had happened and she
00:16:13.840 cried as she told how the uh told them how the defendant assaulted her and so you know people might
00:16:19.980 say and i understand it you know okay he's a bad guy what about the incident himself itself
00:16:24.720 though right like you could say he's a bad guy but what about the actual incident and this is where i think
00:16:28.660 people need to focus their attention this is the incident this if you're going to pick an incident
00:16:35.860 that involves jacob blake this is the one to care about this is it you can talk you can put his name
00:16:42.240 on your shirts if you want but this is the incident this is the one we should prioritize yes a woman being
00:16:47.520 raped next to her child in bed as she slept should take priority over an alleged rapist getting shot by
00:16:56.780 police yes like frankly that is just true and you know i hear a lot of a lot of calls for justice
00:17:04.300 for jacob blake where are the calls for justice for this woman who is sitting there uh is lebron
00:17:10.900 james crying about her no it doesn't seem to be it doesn't seem to be at all i haven't heard lebron
00:17:14.940 james say word one about this woman he raped where does she get to her justice because she doesn't see
00:17:19.820 no one seems to give a crap about that you know and yeah you know he might maybe he doesn't deserve to
00:17:25.140 be uh shot seven times and we can talk about the circumstances there which we've covered and
00:17:30.900 obviously there's a million reasons why that happened and we can go into all the details on
00:17:35.060 that but again this is a it's not like he did something where there was the thing with eric
00:17:40.480 garner remember eric garner and they're like oh you know he should have been you know killed for
00:17:43.800 selling loose cigarettes it's not exactly you know it's not true per se but he didn't commit a major
00:17:49.900 crime to lead to the incident as as it happened this guy did commit he committed third degree
00:17:56.820 sexual assault you you heard the definition it's rape the victim um by the way uh it was a victim of
00:18:04.900 not only rape but also her car being stolen her bank account being stolen several other things
00:18:09.660 it's also not a one-time incident as the victim stated he quote physically assaults her
00:18:15.880 around twice a year when he drinks heavily the guy basically has a you know a recurring calendar
00:18:22.380 event to come commit domestic abuse against this woman and she's had to live with this this entire
00:18:26.780 time and i don't know what's the appropriate penalty for this repeated domestic assault uh grand theft
00:18:34.040 auto um uh stealing some money from a bank account and rape what's it what are you gonna get a life in
00:18:41.520 prison that might be appropriate yeah that might be where i landed on it uh the penalty for his
00:18:48.380 sexual assault is 10 years in wisconsin ask me if i think that's a good enough it's not okay the 10
00:18:55.040 years is is a ridiculously small sentence for what this guy did and that doesn't even include all of
00:19:00.780 his other crimes including of course fighting with officers resisting arrest and all the other things
00:19:04.140 that he did so should we care about the injustice of an innocent woman who is sexually assaulted in her
00:19:10.000 bed as she slept next to her child or should we be talking about the supposed injustice of a frequent
00:19:14.480 domestic abuser thief and rapist who was shot after resisting arrest ignoring clear directions from
00:19:20.360 officers while possessing a knife and walking through two tase attempts which one should we be
00:19:26.080 talking about because that that choice is easy to me it doesn't seem to be easy to the media
00:19:30.460 doesn't seem to be easy to the wmba or lebron james or drew breeze and all these people who purport
00:19:36.040 to care about women yeah right these are the people these are supposedly the people who protect
00:19:40.880 women this is the thing that hit me i think harder than so ridiculous going into this i mean this
00:19:44.900 how the hell in the freaking me too era how the hell is this happening you know everyone in the public
00:19:52.060 eye should stop and think about what they're doing here imagine how this victim feels imagine how
00:19:57.340 this victim feels you're burning down cities over this rapist a rapist and imagine the victim who
00:20:03.720 sits there and watches wnba players wear t-shirts to spell out the name of her rapist imagine watching
00:20:10.500 drew breeze if you're this victim and seeing uh on his helmet the name of your rapist it's despicable
00:20:17.720 imagine realizing that thousands of people across the country have united in effort to give your rapist
00:20:24.940 two million dollars imagine how that feels if you're the victim of his sexual assault
00:20:32.420 and frequent domestic abuse imagine how that if we can't recognize this as a society that this is
00:20:41.220 we're doing this wrong police brutality is the least of our issues i'm not saying it's it there's never
00:20:48.300 been a case of it obviously but the last thing in the world we need to worry about if we are a society
00:20:53.140 who can't recognize that the real crime here is this poor woman who was raped in a bed next to her
00:21:01.040 child as her child slept and we have celebrities plastering their uniforms with this guy's name
00:21:12.160 it's disgusting it is in every possible way it really is i mean and that's assuming that's assuming
00:21:19.640 that the shooting wasn't justified right i'm not convinced no i i mean i think i i don't think there's
00:21:25.540 going to be i wouldn't think they'd even face charges i would not be surprised if they face
00:21:31.100 charges because this is the new reaction maybe right like kyle rittenhouse look i don't want a
00:21:37.420 17 year old with a rifle no i don't either by any of any means i don't think it's a good idea
00:21:41.980 and you're and look it you're you're putting a 17 year old into a a very chaotic situation and it's
00:21:49.200 very hard to see how good could come out of it so that being said there's no way the man is guilty
00:21:55.840 or the kid is guilty of first-degree murder it's ridiculous and everybody knows it's ridiculous
00:22:00.780 yeah and the reason they know the reason they did it is because we think if we charge overcharge him
00:22:05.940 we can get these riots to stop and we'll deal with the fact that we've overcharged him in six months
00:22:10.020 well and you might be dealing with a jury saying no you overcharge him he's not guilty right
00:22:16.440 and then you're gonna make it worse that's but this is their plan this is what they're doing now
00:22:21.100 yeah so unbelievable
00:22:22.460 this is the best of the glenn beck program and we really want to thank you for listening
00:22:30.500 and of course now we know that disney is also racist
00:22:41.140 disney disney is is racist yes uh according to john boyega you know who he is right yeah the guy
00:22:49.620 from uh star wars right yeah uh they're apparently racist uh because they just tossed aside his
00:22:56.480 character uh and other minority characters because they were racist he portrayed of course this is the
00:23:03.040 character finn on star wars it's a huge character huge and part of huge part of what the last three
00:23:09.820 movies right yeah he was through the whole series what do you mean he tossed you aside you were in
00:23:14.620 every movie he accused the company of not giving minority characters enough depth or character
00:23:22.200 development of course while making white carrier characters uh with more substance he made the
00:23:29.440 comments uh in in an interview with british gq which is where you want to go with all your racist
00:23:34.600 claims i think for for disney and america uh you get yourself involved in projects and you're not
00:23:40.840 necessarily going to like everything but i would say to disney uh is to what they should not do is
00:23:48.400 bring out a black character market them to be much more important in the franchise than they are
00:23:53.680 and then have them pushed aside you can never be woke enough man i mean never be woke enough it
00:24:00.140 doesn't matter what you do here disney makes one of the main characters in the last three movies
00:24:05.700 black and still that's they're racist right they're still racist for doing that and they made
00:24:14.400 one of the lead characters a woman right right which was you know people talked about at the time a
00:24:19.600 little bit controversial at the time yeah it's it's fascinating because and by the way i we must at
00:24:24.520 least acknowledge the bravery of john boyega for doing this after the movies are over
00:24:29.780 the right what a wow we stand up and applaud your bravery of taking all the money and complaining
00:24:35.420 afterward wow that's incredible uh yeah look he was a big feature i i think he also complained about
00:24:41.720 the asian character that was in the he says well i'll take the deal when it's great experience they
00:24:47.400 gave all the nuance to adam driver now he was the bad guy right he's the it looks like the i don't
00:24:54.240 know he looked like a backstreet boy um all the nuance to daisy ridley ridley let's be honest daisy
00:25:01.420 knows this adam knows this everybody knows i'm not exposing anything really okay so uh he he's uh he's
00:25:11.720 just not happy with his character now i mean you're right after the fact after the fact after he's made
00:25:15.860 his millions of dollars he's very upset that he didn't uh get a bigger i mean i thought his role was
00:25:20.740 pretty big i did too he complained about i think the asian character as well who was not a good
00:25:24.940 character unlike boy who's which one i can't i thought you the name would be in the article i
00:25:30.520 can't remember her name um but she was in a she's in a short scene in one of the movies and then they
00:25:34.980 they tried to bring her back a couple times but she just wasn't good like sometimes the characters
00:25:38.880 suck and you just like you just gotta bail on jar jar yes everyone like they brought in jar jar they
00:25:44.140 gave jar jar a huge role i don't know what race he was i don't either but it was bad it was bad
00:25:49.260 whatever it was and well he was gungan gungan yes he was gungan now i don't know is there an
00:25:54.360 anti-gungan sentiment in star wars there might be there might be well it was by the fans i'll tell
00:25:59.580 you that he is with me because i hated that character he was terrible so they got rid of
00:26:04.120 him basically like he was still walking around in the background every once in a while so they
00:26:07.620 could say they didn't get rid of him but like i don't think that was the case with with john boy
00:26:11.080 he was one of the main characters in all those movies he was in it and in the whole time i thought
00:26:16.220 you might be arguing why wouldn't they get me out of that last movie it was so bad they should have
00:26:20.280 they should have removed me completely they left me in because i was black it's not that bad i thought
00:26:24.920 it sucked in fact i liked it i liked the last yeah you did you were my fourth favorite out of the nine
00:26:30.780 of the nine it's number four number four out of the nine after empire strikes back new hope
00:26:36.020 return of the jedi so the first three and then you think this one she's and then this one
00:26:41.360 couldn't i'm not i'm not on board with the pat gray analysis on that one no no what's not what's
00:26:46.120 number four for you because aren't the first three the for you it's not even the first three i don't
00:26:50.580 really like return of the jedi i think return of the jedi is very overrated i mean it's just basically
00:26:55.640 a bunch of ewoks making noises it's really not there's not a lot to it i'll say i actually like
00:27:01.460 the first one uh that they came out i guess like the 1997 one no the force awakens uh which was the
00:27:09.100 first jj verbis one okay i actually liked that one i think you weren't as hot in that one as i was
00:27:14.020 i liked it okay i mean it's all right i thought that one was pretty good the middle one was
00:27:17.600 awful that one that was the one that was i mean they ruined luke skywalker in that one i hated that
00:27:23.600 one i hated it and by the way pat we should point this out you know movies have been gone out of
00:27:29.500 our lives for a long time this weekend as tenant right the first real big blockbuster movie
00:27:35.280 it's already playing near me yeah uh it's being re-released this week and it's the first one there's
00:27:41.220 been a couple of other smaller releases that have come out but this is the first one it looks
00:27:45.520 really good it looks really confusing i feel like i'm gonna walk out having no idea what happened
00:27:49.480 in it that's what i keep but i'm gonna go are you worried about going or are you gonna go oh i'm
00:27:53.320 not worried about going i've been to several movies i just this is yeah this has been well we
00:27:57.380 went together that's true that is early on really early like the first week they opened theaters
00:28:02.120 in like may we went to one together we were the only two people in the entire building that
00:28:06.280 didn't work there
00:28:06.900 na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na na naA na na na na na