In this episode of the TimCast, we talk about soy, testosterone, and coronavirus. We also reminisce about the good old days when we made fun of Birds of Prey and talk about Sonic the Hedgehog.
00:01:07.000But here's what people don't get, and I am NOT a nutritionist, so...
00:01:10.000I could be completely wrong, but I was reading a thing about it, and what I read was that phytoestrogens that are in soy and stuff like that, they're actually a weaker form of estrogen, and so it blocks the receptors in your body, which blocks the natural estrogen in your body, so you get a weaker form.
00:01:52.000I'm just gonna say it, you guys, if you don't know this, BuzzFeed, like, a big part of their business is selling cookware and like spatulas at Walmart.
00:02:03.000Yeah, but they have another brand where you'll actually go to BuzzFeed and there will be a story and you'll click it and it's their company selling cookware.
00:02:13.000That's their... I mean, it's smart, you know.
00:02:16.000But anyway, look, there were these four guys.
00:02:18.000I don't know if they're still with BuzzFeed or whatever, but they're called the Try Guys.
00:04:09.000But before we do that, let's have a little chat about You know, when we first started doing this, there was some newsy stuff, but the main idea I had was like, I talk about news and politics all day.
00:06:53.000But for the time being, they're saying we're gonna lock down for two months, reopen for a month until we hit a certain per capita infection rate, and then lock down for another two months right away.
00:09:58.000New York City's morgues are expected to hit their 900 body capacity in seven days as it asks FEMA for emergency assistance and the military set up refrigerated trucks outside Manhattan's Bellevue Hospital as the city's death toll nears 200.
00:10:11.000The first thing I'm going to say, take a look at these photos.
00:10:15.000So, I guess these are FEMA emergency tents or something.
00:10:19.000They're trying to expand the capacity of these hospitals.
00:10:39.000But what's interesting, too, is over on the Donald Trump website, their big forum, Someone posted like serious question. Do you know anybody
00:10:47.000who has this and all the comments like yes Yes, I do. They're like my my, you know
00:10:52.000Housekeeper like my wife's sister or something things like that
00:10:56.000So yeah, what's crazy is how quickly these hospitals are filling up. Yeah, and we have a couple viral videos
00:11:02.000Interestingly, this is not calling it. This is not the the video
00:11:06.000Like from the new york times, but this is showing clips in the new york times
00:11:11.000So, the reason why you don't see any photos or videos from inside hospitals, the first big reason, nobody's thinking about filming anything.
00:11:21.000Not only that, but the average person isn't going back into the ER.
00:11:25.000Like, I don't know, maybe I'm wrong, but every hospital I've been to, like, there's a lobby and you can't go anywhere unless they call you in and the doors are sealed, right?
00:13:56.000But I wonder, you know, I'm not going to be afraid to talk about what I'm about to talk about, because I know a lot of people would refuse to do it, but is there a positive that comes out of all of this?
00:15:50.000If everything just stopped working, it kind of looks like it's going to stop working.
00:15:55.000Everyone needs to learn how to handle their own stuff and grow their own stuff.
00:15:59.000I had an interesting idea for a fantasy theme for a game or something, where I was imagining how we're centralizing all of these different industries.
00:16:11.000We've got major fracking hubs in the North Dakota area, oil pipelines and stuff like that.
00:16:15.000Then you've got China producing all the rare earths.
00:16:18.000And I'm thinking, if it's cheaper to have a shipping vessel with all these cargo containers Let me stop for a second.
00:16:30.000They chop a tree down in Canada, send the wood to China, the Chinese laborers turn it into a skateboard and send it back to California, and then it's sent over the U.S.
00:17:01.000I started thinking about this, like if we're seriously gonna take our wood and send it to China to make a skateboard, what would the future of this reality look like in a hundred years?
00:17:10.000And so I was thinking of a world where no one in the United States has any idea how to make anything electronic at all.
00:17:25.000So it's like, you know, you have a company that says, we need electronic, you know, component manufactured, goes to China.
00:17:32.000And then China has these weird like states that are just like, the entire culture is making phones, the entire culture is mining rare earths, the entire culture is... Making skateboards.
00:19:28.000Because then, without a working economy, there are no supplies, there is no technology, there is no cure, and then the coronavirus comes in right afterwards.
00:19:58.000I think we're going to have to realize that, you know, we've grown our generation of degeneration into this position where we think death isn't a thing that happens.
00:20:11.000There was a period, like we talked about this the other day, like I was talking about how I went to Glenn Beck's studio and he had this newspaper on the wall, all these old papers, and I was reading one where it was like a dude was outside of a bar smoking and then some guy walked up and just blasted him in the chest, pulled out his pistol.
00:20:28.000People pull out guns and they shoot it.
00:20:31.000So I think, you know, maybe we've come to a point where we've put ourselves in this bubble that's so secure, we're now, like, we're gonna burn ourselves down because we refuse to accept that, hey man, look, pandemics and viruses happen and they hurt people.
00:20:48.000You know, we want to mitigate that, for sure.
00:23:46.000So the well, I mean you can look at the number right there like the death percentage is low, you know, so You know, it's it's when you don't see it, you know when it when it's not in your face You know, it's you see all these numbers, you know, and it's like we can talk about these numbers But you know, it's not tangible because I don't see it, you know, and I'm not I don't know anybody who has it.
00:24:07.000So I'm not It's it's hard to like even talk about it, you know with it's such a I You know, a solid statement on it, because I don't know.
00:25:14.000And there was that paramedic who was evicted in the UK by his landlady who texted him because she didn't want coronavirus.
00:25:22.000I'll tell you what man, this morning when I was looking at the news, when I was listening to the bickering between the political parties, I have never been more pessimistic about our chances here.
00:25:38.000years no we got a print more money and you and give that so they have a bunch
00:25:44.000of unemployment right and they think they can just print money to buy their
00:25:47.000way out of their problems in Venezuela yeah and this happens in socialist
00:25:51.000countries because it doesn't work they start dumping money and then all of a
00:25:55.000sudden I went to Venezuela man I had stacks of cash and it was like this big
00:26:02.000we had a garbage bag full of full of Venezuelan bills it was uh it was the
00:26:07.000it's called the boulevard I think it was and you couldn't do anything with it
00:26:11.000like this big bag of like I think I had a hundred at the time this is crazy too
00:26:15.000at the time when I went a stack like this big was a hundred bucks
00:26:21.000Equivalent okay, and so I brought it back, and I'm like boom on a table I'm like bling bling and we all started laughing cuz it's like it's worthless.
00:26:28.000No it was like worth shy of a hundred bucks Okay, it's got value, but like this massive stack of cash, and so they were like what are we gonna do with this?
00:26:34.000Nobody wants anything from Venezuela, and it's because they just started printing money.
00:26:38.000Yeah, that's that's what we're doing right now That's what the stimulus package is right Print money.
00:26:42.000What do we have, like six trillion dollars now?
00:27:01.000The cost of household staples, milk, eggs, and bread skyrocket by up to 30% as panic buying leaves retailers grappling with supply shortages.
00:27:44.000If the Internal Revenue Service already has your bank account information, it would transfer the money to you via direct deposit based on the recent income tax figures it already has.
00:27:52.000So if you already filed your taxes for this year, it'll use 2019.
00:28:09.000And I got no beef with the people trying to do the stimulus, but all the restaurants and all the retail shops that are out of business right now, that are shut down or furloughed or whatever?
00:30:57.000So now, I saw reporting that Walgreens, for instance, you can pull up to Walgreens at the pharmacy drive-thru and say, milk, bread, and eggs, please, and they'll be like, here you are, sir.
00:31:06.000Why can't we do that now? That's a good question. And that's a methodology, not a technology,
00:31:11.000but using a mobile app. Yeah. You can go on your phone and do milk, bread, eggs,
00:31:15.000boop. And then they can see on the app where you are. And then they see you pulling up and
00:31:20.000they grab the stuff and they go to the window and you pull up and they say, yeah, that's true.
00:31:24.000In one of your videos earlier you said, like, you were talking about shops are still staying open because you can actually call them and be like, I would like to purchase this, please.
00:31:37.000But think about how, like, Uber works.
00:31:39.000You press the app and then you're looking and you're watching the little car come to you and you're like, and they're outside.
00:31:44.000And then you know to go outside because you see them pulling up.
00:31:47.000The inverse is true for curbside delivery.
00:31:49.000You go on the Best Buy app, and you're gonna be like, I need to buy this here laptop for work.
00:31:53.000And then you pull up, and right before you get there, they see you pulling up on the street, just like you would see the driver, and they say, oh, he's pulling up.
00:32:48.000But I want them to develop that to the point where they can be fully autonomous, they can operate for 16 hours, and then we need Neuralink.
00:32:56.000And then we create the world of surrogates.
00:32:59.000Where we have like an avatar version of ourselves.
00:33:01.000I almost watched that movie the other day.
00:36:13.000People are, you know, it's kind of like buying something and then waiting for it to become more valuable when someone could actually use the house.
00:36:19.000But if someone can't work to mow the lawn, to fix the plumbing, to fix the electrical, then the house collapses and the people get hurt and then you have a stain and a hole in the community.
00:36:29.000And then another homeless is still homeless.
00:37:15.000Well, sometimes you can't do that, actually.
00:37:17.000Like, you have to inform them and let them know, otherwise they can come after you and claim you damaged something.
00:37:22.000But anyway, the point is... If you don't know how to fix it right.
00:37:24.000If you have a slumlord... Yeah, there are laws.
00:37:27.000Slumlords, you know, you can't do certain things.
00:37:29.000If your electricity goes out, if the power goes out, if there's a problem with the house... Man, it's also the assumption of risk and liability.
00:37:37.000You could rent a house and then annihilate it.
00:37:47.000So it is a job, especially when you maintain multiple properties.
00:37:50.000More importantly, how many landlords are just like retirees who have like a cottage attachment or something and they rent it out and you're paying rent to them?
00:38:01.000What about, so I've actually rented property before from some retirees and they had a mortgage on a house that was, they could only afford it on their retirement budget by renting out part of the house.
00:38:14.000What happens if I was like, I can't pay you, and you can't evict me?
00:38:18.000Then they're gonna be like, well, then we're gonna default on our mortgage.
00:38:20.000Well, don't worry, they can't foreclose on you.
00:38:22.000Yeah, but when this is all over, then what?
00:44:06.000So Pelosi's, uh, Nancy Pelosi, you know, she's like basically the leader of the Democrats is saying the next one's going to be bigger with more money.
00:44:45.000I heard someone mentioned six million at one point.
00:44:47.000But if Pelosi's got a $2.5 trillion, and it's just like, let's just dump money in, you know, into the sewer, is that really going to solve anyone's problems?
00:45:37.000Because the bigger question is, if we're deluding ourselves that we can get a handle on this thing, then all we're doing is making things worse before it gets even worse.
00:46:05.000That's what everyone's trying to figure out.
00:46:08.000And so it's funny because when Trump and Republicans and other people come out and say we need to get this economy started as soon as possible, the other side just accuses them of trying to sacrifice people for corporate profit.
00:46:21.000It's such a naive and childish way of viewing the world.
00:46:26.000They're not looking at it like, corporate profit to line our pockets.
00:51:35.000But the story is like, you can clearly see them saying Trump is wrong to say this is a good idea, and then turning around and saying Cuomo is a hero for suggesting this idea.
00:52:10.000Actually, and you know, if you, if you look through the reports, it wasn't actually what Trump was saying.
00:52:16.000She was like in the interview with this, with the woman that survived it, but her husband passed away.
00:52:21.000She was saying that she saw his press press, the, you know, the press conference, and then it was reported in the media multiple times over and over and over again.
00:52:31.000And that's when she was like, they found information online.
00:52:51.000You know what I think insulated me from the orange man, bad Trump derangement syndrome is that I was covering a lot of what Obama was doing.
00:53:33.000Like that we can sit here and be like, can you seriously name, you know, the average person can't name a single thing they don't like about the president other than he's a potty mouth and he's like a gross dude or something.
00:57:11.000And I said, we will talk a little bit about politics, like it'll pop up, but we'll avoid saying the D and the R word because we want to make this more about like what regular people are up to, what's fun.
00:57:53.000People who are online on say like YouTube or Twitter or social media who are active and searching for the news will find, will gravitate towards honest conversations, Joe Rogan, you know, Dave Rubin, Jordan Peterson.
00:58:23.000If you're somebody who cares about the news, and you read a bunch of stories, and you're like, whoa, I can't believe it's happening.
00:58:29.000And then you turn on a show like ours, and we say a variety of like, here's what the media claimed, here's what actually happened, here are the polls.
00:58:36.000You're like, It's confirmation bias, but because the people who read the news and know what happened... Like, how many times have we got superchats or comments where they corrected us?
00:58:55.000I don't want to say everybody, because I know a lot of people are like, you know, after I get off work, I like to turn your show on because I trust you or something like that.
00:59:31.000Yeah, I don't always agree with his opinions But he has on opposition right and he's in front of this like he was talking about this stuff in January.
00:59:39.000Yeah, and And the other hosts weren't so much.
00:59:42.000They tend to be kind of like bombastic tribalist pundits.
00:59:46.000I'm not trying to give beef to them necessarily, but I don't like Rachel Maddow either.
01:00:36.000It's not about just reading a news source, it's about reading it, and then finding their source, and verifying the information.
01:00:43.000And there was one story, I can't remember what it was about, it was about Ocasio-Cortez, and it was a news article that referenced a tweet, that referenced an activist blog, that referenced an article, and I had to dig down to find the source, and of course it was fake news.
01:00:55.000So it's like a media game of telephone.
01:00:59.000Where they slowly change the story to finally get to the media and it's like they're talking about a purple elevator.
01:01:06.000Yeah, and you start out talking about like a bathtub or something.
01:01:17.000This guy from NBC, because I got invited to the White House, He wrote a story about the people who were invited to the White House, and because the narrative had to be specifically that the only people invited are fringe wackos, this activist who works for NBC who purports to be a journalist wrote that Tim Pool, who pushed the Seth Rich conspiracy theory and then linked to an activist blog post that showed a clip of me out of context,
01:01:44.000And then use that as evidence, and then all of a sudden, dozens of other outlets started just copy and pasting.
01:01:51.000And so I started hitting them up, saying like, Ooh, it's working!
01:03:29.000A snippet of me being like, I don't know, I'll give it a 68% chance.
01:03:33.000And then claim Tim Pool pushes the conspiracy theory by saying the Fox News story, which was definitively posted, and they retracted it later.
01:04:29.000The craziest thing to me is how they use that as a weapon against you.
01:04:32.000And so it's like, if you go to any counterculture or There's a bunch of... I don't know, I guess counterculture is the easiest way to say it.
01:04:40.000Their Wikipedia pages are just loaded with complete BS.
01:04:44.000And so, I've gone... There's a bunch of journalists who do, like, news organization stuff and, like, conferences, and I've repeatedly said to them, why won't you call this out?
01:05:47.000I reached out to Ben Smith of BuzzFeed, and I said, hey, this story's not real.
01:05:51.000And then he sent me a quote, the police saying they believe that this had something to do with the release of the Popeye's chicken sandwich.
01:05:57.000And I said, that doesn't prove it's real.
01:06:00.000That put them in the restaurant at the same time, that was it.
01:06:03.000And I said to him, I'm vaguely remembering, I don't want to, you know, but I remember saying something to him, this was over Twitter, that The dude's family came out and said, nobody, his cousin was like, ain't nobody died over a chicken sandwich, this is BS, the media's lying.
01:07:03.000I use this as it's a sort of a credibility check for myself.
01:07:07.000It's a shield for me that if you want to claim I'm being biased by using bad sources, I only use sources when they're certified by an organization that I find to be biased.
01:07:16.000News Guard's actually not that bad, but I got an email from them and they were like, you know, the trolls are trying to give us a bad rating.
01:07:23.000Whenever they give a news website a red exclamation point, these sites, not all of them, will encourage their readers to go and downrank NewsGuard.
01:07:41.000And I wrote, it's because they give BuzzFeed green checkmarks across the board, except for the difference between, like they say they don't handle the difference between opinion and responsibility, I'm sorry, opinion and news responsibly.
01:08:03.000And then they'll give BuzzFeed green checkmarks across the board, even though BuzzFeed's literally made stuff up.
01:08:07.000The problem is, these organizations By default, believe BuzzFeed to be credible, and so they use BuzzFeed to fact-check other organizations.
01:09:36.000I don't think he... Like, it's been a while since we talked, he didn't directly say like, I refuse to correct or something.
01:09:41.000He just said, the police said it was related to it, we're good.
01:09:44.000And the headline says... It sounds like a brush off.
01:09:46.000In a fight over... And basically saying no.
01:09:49.000And when I did that review for NewsGuard, I responded to the email saying, just to let you know, you requested it, I gave it to you, I gave you a 2 out of 5 and here's why.
01:09:58.000They emailed me back saying, I respect, you know, you've talked about us, but I don't think it's fair.
01:10:05.000You give Media Matters green checkmarks across the board.
01:10:41.000They said, Tim Pool falsely claimed that the Star Tribune claimed that Ilhan Omar may have married her brother and they showed a picture of me with my face in the corner and the newspaper for the Star Tribune with a sentence I was reading.
01:12:00.000If NewsGuard says it's good, I use it.
01:12:02.000So I used the Center for Immigration Studies as a source once, and a bunch of progressives started claiming I was using alt-right propaganda.
01:12:09.000And I'm just like, don't look at me, man.
01:12:11.000NewsGuard said they're certified factual and correct.
01:13:32.000We are in, you know, this, this, this shutdown.
01:13:35.000So, uh, let's, let's hit these super chats.
01:13:37.000If you're, if you're just tuning in or if you haven't yet hit that like button, tell YouTube that we're awesome so that YouTube doesn't ban us or whatever.
01:14:16.000But that's where he started telling me about how We cut down trees in Canada, send to China, and then ship them back, and it takes such an amazing amount of energy.
01:14:23.000It's just so destructive for the environment.
01:14:26.000He was like, the amount of carbon those things pump out, plus cutting the trees down?
01:14:39.000Lance says, what if the only the NPC dying?
01:14:44.000I'm not quite sure what you meant, sorry.
01:14:46.000Sev says, Tim and Co, can you please theorize and visualize our economy if permanently affected by the coronavirus, whether by severity or duration?
01:14:53.000This is one of the things that I was kind of thinking like, if we go into this two year period of on and off, we'll see new businesses emerge that you've never even thought of.
01:15:04.000There'll be like, dude, we will have lock-up parties where it's like, there'll probably be warehouses where they're like, come in for the month, man.
01:15:16.000We lock the doors, we got all the food you want, we party, we hang out.
01:16:40.000You held your tongue and didn't care when all these politicians, could you imagine what would have happened if they passed like a couple, like it was last year they wanted to do the assault weapons ban, would have banned like handguns and stuff.
01:17:13.000I think he was saying something about he's like kind of a socialist, but when it comes to 2A, he's like... But the reality is socialists tend to be pro-2A.
01:19:47.000You know, you wanna know why you lost your job.
01:19:48.000People are worried about where they're gonna eat next and how they're gonna pay their rent.
01:19:51.000But I gotta give you that point, like, they're stuck at home with nothing to do but watch the news and now they're seeing the lies in real time.
01:22:51.000Grace Fang says, y'all notice after watching one of Tim's videos, YouTube marks it part watched or not watched at all, showing up in my history, but at zero minutes watched for all.
01:24:55.000So for those that aren't familiar with the delicious, creamy chocolate treat that is Nutella, it is a chocolate hazelnut spread, and it was because of a chocolate shortage.
01:25:03.000So the dude was like, if I mix this with like a nut butter, what could I do to make chocolate bigger?
01:25:08.000So we could take a little bit of chocolate and expand it to filler.
01:26:17.000Yes, because that was a $5 super chat, but I appreciate it.
01:26:20.000Well, we try to read as many as we can and then we speed up by doing the bigger ones just because we get, you know, we have too many and we probably have too many now.
01:26:56.000The issue with a lot of these other diseases people don't get is that when someone gets cancer, they get a treatment, they go to the hospital, they get, you know, a chemo shot or a pill or whatever it is they get, they go home.
01:27:07.000And then they come back later for the follow-up treatments, and then if they get really bad, then they're put in, you know, in the hospital.
01:27:13.000With coronavirus, it's like one day you're walking around and then all of a sudden you're gasping and wheezing, you collapse on a subway train and they bring you to the hospital, and they're desperately trying to stop you from dying.
01:27:21.000They may or may not even know how to treat it.
01:27:23.000They think they know how to target cancer to some extent.
01:29:53.000We can't, we can't, it's like, I feel like, like, you know, one day, oh, remember that story I told you about the wolf?
01:29:59.000The family was on the beach and the wolf showed up and they ran out, they swam out into the ocean to a rock and were huddling, freezing, terrified of the wolf.
01:30:06.000That's what I'm, I'm like, dude, Wolves are out there.
01:31:02.000Now it's like, we have this, you know, deadly disease, and people immediately run inside, slam the doors shut, and start huddling in fear.
01:31:08.000I mean that I'm being somewhat hyperbolic, but at what point do we recognize that we can't control everything and these things are going to happen?
01:34:07.000The Hylian VoIP technology, voice over IP, theory regarding Chinese phones is that people are destroying them or shutting them off to hide.
01:34:23.000I didn't know that it was the ownership that was mandatory.
01:34:25.000I knew that if you got the phone, you had to like get facial recognition and like register who you are and where you live and all that crazy stuff.
01:34:43.000Indeed, and I'm already in touch with you.
01:34:45.000We'll figure it out, but here's the thing, we don't really do Skype, we're not really set up for Skype stuff, and we were actually bringing people down to the show to come on, and we even set up this big empty space in between us.
01:34:57.000And now we're quarantined in the apocalypse and we can't have people over.
01:35:01.000Gothic says, hey Tim, there's an anime called Sword Art Online where players use a helmet called Dive Gear where all the controls are your brain.
01:35:09.000Seems like the future of gaming as far as I can tell.
01:36:03.000BV says, Ernit Act likely just the beginning of sneaky government overreach during a crisis, and we all need to be especially vigilant right now.
01:36:11.000Remember, the Patriot Act was written and shelved years before 9-11.
01:37:31.000Nonservium says, someone pointed out to me that during the government shutdown a while back, a bunch of activist rallies suddenly got canceled.
01:37:37.000And now because of this whole pandemic, you see less activism on the internet.
01:38:53.000Will China the CCP be punished for the coronavirus, or the leaders of the world will just ignore it like what happened in SARS outbreak years ago, which also came from Chinese wet market?
01:39:18.000Yeah, well, Adam wasn't even getting notifications.
01:39:20.000I'm trying to figure it out myself, because I have my computer here, and when I sit down and he logs it up, I try to get it prepped and ready, and I don't get it.
01:40:36.000Eman Bell says, I've watched about every video you've put out every day for the last year, but I've never had one appear in my up next feed.
01:41:39.000In the turn of the century, they said, okay, we won't ban the sale of pot, but you need to buy from the government approved stamps for the purchase of the pot.
01:42:33.000And I even went and did an interview with this weapons trainer for local police, and he's a top-tier shooting competitor.
01:42:42.000And he said we got problems with non-nationalized, like, non-uniform background checks.
01:42:47.000Like, you can go to one state and in a short amount of time actually get a gun, and then you can take it to another state where you can't have it.
01:42:53.000It's like, you can't have these rules.
01:43:01.000So there's got to be something uniform everyone can understand, and we make sure that crazy people can't try and source guns from other areas.
01:43:07.000One of the things they do in Chicago is there will be people, because the Indiana border's right there, someone from Indiana will buy it and then mark it up, like they'll give it to the guy from Chicago illegally.
01:43:19.000The problem now is after seeing these arguments where it's like, hey, it makes sense, you should be able to do that, what happened?
01:43:25.000In a major crisis where now, more than ever, people are realizing they need self-defense, the government just goes, oh, by the way, we're not gonna process background checks anymore.
01:43:34.000Effectively illegalizing the purchase of all guns.
01:43:45.000You can see how much power they try and grab as soon as the crisis starts, and because of that desperate attempt at power, it makes me recoil in the other direction, like, nah, now I'm very much like, mm-mm, nope.
01:46:09.000The military is going to have a huge outbreak soon.
01:46:12.000Necroside says, for the Tylenol thing, my sister works as an RN at one of our major local hospitals and was officially warned about ibuprofen use and the use of Tylenol instead.
01:46:43.000I have YouTube Premium, but for some reason these streams, and even the recorded version you put up, I can't play with my phone locked while working.
01:48:45.000Sure, I talk about it, but I think it's relevant in certain situations.
01:48:48.000But if you're going out to the woods and you're taking the time to find an animal and hunt it yourself and you're harvesting it yourself, That's how humans have done it for a long time.
01:48:57.000And hunting is important to control populations.
01:48:59.000Yeah, I mean, I lived in Chicago for a while, and there's places where the deer would overrun some areas, and they needed hunters to go take the deer out.
01:49:08.000So if you're gonna just go kill deer for no reason, just because, it's like, okay.
01:49:12.000But if you're going out there and you're actually helping and, you know, feeding your, like, one deer can feed, you know, a lot of people that you need.
01:50:22.000Well, there's a bunch of different quotes.
01:50:24.000No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no Mr. Paul R says, Lydia, soy juice and Tim Pool beanies.
01:54:00.000So, let's see, they say couch potatoes trying to get in shape could one day be helped along their fitness journey by an ankle exoskeleton that makes it easier and less tiring to run.
01:54:26.000I actually do like running because there is a point where you kind of get the endorphins running and you go into like this spacey cloud space and it's actually pretty great.
01:54:42.000Doing something you don't want to do is very difficult and you need community support to get into something.
01:54:47.000So like, if you're somebody who wants, if you're a lazy couch potato and you want to get into running, find some people to run with and hang out with them.
01:56:05.000Right, so maybe they'll wear a backpack at some point, but the other thing is, what they're arguing, like, they're saying, you know, eventually a version will be created to help runners on a treadmill save an average of 24% more energy.
01:56:45.000It's like hydraulic bars with like a hook at the end and he would like hook it around stuff and then lift like, you know, 100, 200 pound weights.
01:58:39.000The idea is that you have these things on your legs that have stored energy in like a spring or some kind of, you know, I don't know, piston, I have no idea.
01:59:16.000Do you know the story of Spring-Heeled Jack?
01:59:22.000Spring-Heeled Jack is an entity in English folklore of the Victorian era.
01:59:29.000The first claimed sighting of Spring-Heeled Jack was in 1837.
01:59:33.000There are many theories about the nature and identity of Spring-Heeled Jack, the urban legend that was very popular in its time, due to the tales of his bizarre appearance and ability to make extraordinary leaps, to the point that he became the topic of several works of fiction.
01:59:46.000Spring-Heeled Jack was described by people who claimed to have seen him as having a terrifying and frightful appearance, with diabolical physiognomy, clawed hands, and eyes that resembled red balls of fire.
02:00:00.000One report claimed that beneath a black cloak, he wore a helmet and a tight-fitting white garment like an oil skin.
02:00:06.000Many stories also mentioned a devil-like aspect.
02:00:09.000Others said he was tall and thin, with the appearance of a gentleman.
02:00:13.000Several reports mentioned that he could breathe out blue and white flames.
02:00:29.000So, my general understanding of why they call him Spring-Heeled Jack was that the assumption was he had some kind of things in his boots and he could jump really high.
02:00:36.000And there were stories that he would be being chased and then he would just jump on top of a building.
02:00:41.000Have you ever seen, uh, what's that movie?
02:00:46.000I think it's Heath Ledger and Matt Damon, yeah.
02:00:49.000And they just, like, they're the Grimm brothers who, like, kill the demons or whatever, and it's all a hoax.
02:00:56.000They got, like, springboards set up to, like, convince the people that they're doing these amazing things, but it's all just, like, smoke and mirrors.
02:01:04.000That's the reality of ninjas, you know that?
02:01:09.000I'm not a ninja expert, but I have read one or two Reddit articles when they popped up, and I was reading how they would try to create the perception of having magic powers, so people would avoid fighting them.
02:01:23.000So one of the things they would do is, before, like, they're assassins, right?
02:01:58.000So it was all about trickery and deception.
02:02:00.000Well, not always, but that's one of the things they would do.
02:02:04.000You create, you know, so maybe this spring-heeled jack-eye was just some dude who pre-set.
02:02:09.000Maybe it was a board on the ground in the spring, and he would run and hit it, and it would bounce him in the air, and they'd be like, how did he do that?
02:04:15.000We want a game where you can pop up in the box, and you can play with your friends, and it's really funny, because the goal of the game is that you are trying to cancel your opponent.
02:04:25.000So it's basically just a bunch of pop culture references, and the gag is, you know, you'll have a character who's like Peter Jordanson fighting against, you know, Rojogin.
02:04:49.000And that's the goal for the expansions, is to actually just make, like, when stories come out and there's viral moments, we'll make cards for these things.
02:05:56.000Just silliness, parody, making fun of people, making fun of this whole culture war stuff.
02:06:00.000Yep, we're working on it now, it's coming.
02:06:02.000So, uh, well, we'll see how long it takes, you know.
02:06:06.000We do a lot of things, but maybe soon.
02:06:08.000So, uh, let's just grab the last few Super Chats, and then we will sign off for the night, but for now we're still here, so make sure you hit that like button.
02:06:15.000Subscribe and hit the notification bell if you haven't already, and get your superchats in because we're gonna be about 10 more minutes.
02:07:01.000Jmax says, My buddy in the AF had corona-like symptoms, and his PCM said it was most likely a cold or allergies and sent him back to the shop.
02:07:09.000It's just anecdotal experience, but some military doctors are not competent trained enough to handle this pandemic if it hits our bases hard.
02:07:33.000Gundanium says, do you think the supply chain, such as truck drivers, are at risk of severe infection by asymptomatic carriers through truck shops and travel?
02:08:21.000Especially when you're dealing with a real crisis, and you start to understand why Trump was right about the threat of China, why he was right about national borders, why he was right about manufacturing, and now we're getting hit with it at the last minute, and you're like, damn.
02:08:34.000Yeah, we should have been on this sooner, huh?
02:09:03.000So we do have a camera coming, but the problem is It's not a set.
02:09:07.000It's like she's at the production table handling camera stuff, so we have to actually set stuff up.
02:09:12.000Like, this is set design stuff that Adam did, so you'll get to it.
02:09:17.000Deplorabology says, we need to stop obeying unconstitutional laws, or we need to figure out how to deal with it because so many things are unconstitutional for sure.
02:11:07.000So this guy in, I think he's in the UK, what he said after the fact, and maybe it's true, maybe he's not trying to backpedal, but what he said was, based on social distancing and the measures that are being implemented now, the projection is 20,000 dead.
02:11:21.000If we do nothing, it's half a million.
02:11:24.000A bunch of people started saying, hey, I thought this guy said it was gonna be half a million, now he's saying it's 20.
02:11:27.000So then he came out with a Twitter thread saying, no, no, no, I'm saying that if we do nothing, it'll be 500K, and if we do everything like we're doing now, it'll be 20.
02:12:21.000I would cross the Manhattan Bridge every day, and that's a brutal climb on a bike, and I would just... And then by the time I got to the top, I was like... Like it was just like... Just like, fly down?
02:13:08.000Angry Bellsprout says, isn't it ironic that the resist fascism and ban the fash crowd are the ones demanding the government force people into their homes?
02:14:03.000It was a really cool line in Endgame when War Machine is with Nebula and she's like a robot and she reaches her hand in the thing and pulls the orb out and her hand's all burned.
02:15:33.000Yeah, like, we've been talking about these people that are doing these stupid things, and then coming out a couple days later going, you know what?
02:17:59.000Naruto, on the other hand, his dad sacrificed his- his parents sacrificed their lives trying to save the village from a giant demon of some sort.
02:18:06.000It's hard to explain, so I'll just call it a demon.
02:18:09.000And then he, uh, they- they trapped the nine-tailed fox within him, and so he got ostracized for being the embodiment of it, but eventually earns their respect.
02:18:17.000But what is this question actually about?
02:18:19.000It's not about their backstory, it's about what... Who had more of a right to be upset.