Trump is ordered to pay $364 million in a New York civil fraud trial that he never actually got a chance to have a trial on, and now the NYPD is going to figure out how much fraud he committed, and take all of his stuff.
00:00:39.000So all of these woke and liberal journalists online freaking out that the Russian opposition party leader died in prison.
00:00:47.000Well, I agree it's a shocking story, but y'all don't care one bit that Donald Trump today was ordered to pay $364 million in a New York civil fraud trial that he never actually got a trial on.
00:02:28.000And truth social, it would be hilarious if Trump just liquidates his dwack holdings, takes billions of dollars, which would drop way down if he were to sell it, and then just comes back to Twitter, aka Axe.
00:02:38.000So we're going to get into all that, talk about a lot of the news that's breaking.
00:02:41.000Before we get started, my friends, head over to eyesofadvice.com.
00:02:45.000And you'll need an Apple device, like an iPhone or an iPad or something, and that will prompt iTunes to open where you can pre-order the new song, Eyes of Advice.
00:02:54.000We'll be coming out February 23rd, so next week, and if you pre-order now, you're helping us to hit the charts, helping send a message.
00:03:04.000I mean, like, I'm not so, you know, with, with, um, together again, we were truly, really trying to give a big middle finger to the music industry with, um, Ben Shapiro and Tom McDonald.
00:03:12.000We were trying to mock and insult the music industry, as well as help them succeed.
00:03:16.000And they did, hitting number one two weeks in a row in sales, as well as number 16 on the Hot 100.
00:03:21.000For eyes of advice, I'm really proud of the song.
00:04:13.000Coffee is the easiest thing to do in terms of setting up a physical location.
00:04:17.000And so, you know, everybody and their mom's got a coffee company right now, and they go to these private labelers and they do all this stuff.
00:04:24.000My intention was not to create a coffee product to sell online.
00:04:28.000My intention was to create a physical location where y'all could hang out, and there would be a place to meet and gather, and the cheapest and fastest way to do that is coffee.
00:04:35.000Because you can walk in, you buy coffee, it's low cost, easy to set up, everybody likes it, it's the path of least resistance, a diner would be hard, maybe we'll have sandwiches.
00:04:43.000But, on March 5th, we're already sold out, at our Cast Brew location in Martinsburg, West Virginia, on the upper floors, private, members only, VIP, live show.
00:05:03.000But support Casper at Casper.com and also become a member at TimCast.com by clicking join us because we're hoping to have once a month a live show downtown Martinsburg, West Virginia.
00:05:13.000And aside from creating a space where y'all can hang out, share ideas, and just better organize, if you're an elite member of Timcast, you will have your own keycard that gives you access to the upper floor, where... an upper floor is depending on what we're doing, but typically it's gonna be a second floor with video games, arcade, TV, and just social club.
00:05:32.000We want to create a social club where people who, um...
00:05:36.000Have similar ideas and ideology, can come together, and even not similar, you know, debate and discuss things.
00:05:41.000And so, we're really excited for this, and that's if you join us.
00:05:43.000That's a hundred bucks a month, but that's just access to like a physical space and location.
00:05:47.000For ten bucks a month, you'll get access to our Discord server, so you can hang out online with like-minded individuals, as well as our members only on Censored Show, Monday through Thursday.
00:05:56.000This was an extended shout out because we're only a couple weeks away to the first ever event at the first Cast Brew location, which will not even be open.
00:06:05.000But you'll be able to see through the window on the first floor to see where we're at.
00:06:08.000Come up to the second floor and hang out.
00:06:10.000And of course, uh... It's sold out already, so sorry.
00:06:14.000But we will have something special for Elite members, a special dedicated area, and uh... I think that may have gone out, I'm not sure.
00:06:20.000But anyway, smash the like button, subscribe to this channel, share this show with your friends.
00:06:23.000Joining us tonight to talk about this and everything else is Mario Frotto!
00:07:01.000Yeah, which means 44% of the time she votes with Democrats.
00:07:05.000Uniparty establishment, you know, voted for the vaccine database, just voted to renew the 702 with the FISA for warrantless spying on Americans.
00:07:14.000One of only 24 that voted for taxpayer-funded sex changes, one of 30 to vote for amnesty with AOC and Pelosi.
00:07:22.000And I've been trying to tell everybody and I think now they're waking up and I hope being here people will see that and check out our site, check out the campaign and help us fight because we need political outsiders.
00:07:32.000You know, these people are destroying the country.
00:08:14.000Uh, and I am here still, my name is Serge.com, and uh, I am ready when you are, Tim.
00:08:20.000Just one last thing, go to Instagram, search for AtTimCast, follow me, I posted a video of Freedomistan, the new space.
00:08:27.000So it's 99- I keep saying it's done, and it is, but like, if you watch the video, we haven't hung one of the TVs up yet, so, you know, work with me here.
00:08:35.000But uh, you can see the new studio space, and it's a tour of the whole building.
00:08:40.000They're building a skate park right now if you want to see that video, but we'll jump into the news right here from the post-millennial!
00:09:00.000From the post-millennial breaking, President Trump ordered to pay $354 million in New York civil fraud trial, barred from running business in New York for three years.
00:09:12.000Judge Arthur Engron ordered Trump to pay over $354 million in damages.
00:09:16.000were both ordered to pay $4 million, and Allen Weisselberg was ordered to pay $1 million.
00:09:21.000In addition, Enground's ruling prohibits Trump from serving as an officer or director of any New York corporation or other legal entity in New York for a period of three years.
00:09:29.000Now, here's the important thing everyone needs to understand.
00:09:35.000We can call this a civil fraud trial, but that happened a long time ago.
00:09:38.000The judge banged the gavel saying, it's true, we don't need a trial, Trump committed fraud, next question.
00:09:45.000And what just resolved was the, essentially the damages and the did Trump falsify records, but they already determined he committed fraud a long time ago.
00:09:56.000In this, the actual trial, which I shouldn't even call the trial, in the sham trial, People who are creditors of Donald Trump said, uh, he never did anything wrong.
00:10:53.000Like when the sentencing comes out, that's when people feel like it's actually got closure or whatever.
00:10:58.000And the amount of people that are happy that this has happened, that he has been charged with ridiculous fees, literally trying to put him out of business or do whatever they can to harm his business so that he can no longer be in business is what the goal would be.
00:11:27.000In his decision, Engron wrote, their complete lack of contrition and remorse borders on pathological.
00:11:33.000He continued and said that Trump had engaged in venial sin.
00:11:35.000I just want to point out, I would show no remorse if I did nothing wrong.
00:11:40.000Like, if I were to go into my kitchen and bake a delicious apple pie, and someone came to me and says, do you regret and have remorse for baking said apple pie?
00:11:49.000I'd be like, I'm actually very proud of my apple pie.
00:12:00.000Donald Trump and the Trump Organization effectively baked a delicious pie in how they ran the Trump Organization, set up these buildings.
00:12:07.000The people that I've met who've worked for Trump, you go to Trump Tower, you go to Trump Doral, they love the guy.
00:12:14.000This is, you've got people now saying, I love this, I love telling that story, I was at the MGM when the guy with Trump's Arrangement Syndrome is yelling at me, He actually said, every business he's run has been bankrupt.
00:12:50.000I mean, speaking of risks, and again, we talk about the... Granted, the Trump stuff is one topic, but something that's related is the way that Elon Musk was treated by the Delaware court, or whatever.
00:13:02.000The idea that the court can just decide that he can't get his severance package.
00:13:37.000Some shareholder filed a lawsuit arguing that, no, no, those directors are not independent of him and work for him, so basically it was not a real negotiation.
00:13:46.000I mean, it's his company and who cares?
00:13:49.000So it went to a court in Delaware where the judge agreed and nullified his pay package, his pay structure as CEO.
00:13:58.000And now I'm pissed off because I own shares in Tesla.
00:14:02.000I don't own a lot, but I'd say I own a healthy number.
00:14:06.000And when I heard this, I'm like, so what?
00:14:09.000Now my stock value is going to go down because they've just destabilized the company.
00:14:14.000They've disincentivized people to be involved in the company.
00:14:44.000So, I mean, like, he's, the guy that brought it up had nine, and this action by the court has affected the amount of money that all of the shareholders make, because when that happened, the Tesla stocks fell.
00:15:02.000I mean, I don't know if there's any kind of, you know, any kind of, I don't know what the law is surrounding it, but there is definitely a fiduciary, there was fiduciary damage by the state And in violation of an agreement that everybody involved said was fine, and the whole point of it was to attack Elon Musk because they don't like him.
00:15:28.000It would probably be the state of Delaware.
00:15:30.000I was just gonna say I think this is a perfect example this case of a political prosecution like you know good on Elon Musk for coming out and starting to share his views the second he became right of center you're seeing stuff like this where if this was a CEO that was just either quiet or to the left this would never in a million years happen and I think You know, we obviously see with President Trump, it's the same thing.
00:15:53.000You can talk to any real estate expert, any real estate developer, they've never heard of a case like this.
00:15:59.000I was talking to one of the guys earlier, I think Charlie off-air about this, and we were saying that You know, this is like a case where somebody drives by you without their headlights on, and then you try to sue them for being negligent, but nothing happened.
00:16:12.000You know, whether what Trump did was right or wrong, nobody got hurt.
00:16:16.000All the people, as Tim said, said that they weren't hurt by it.
00:16:29.000They're gonna appeal it, and quite frankly, it's disgusting, and I think people right now are really upset, and this should not hold up on appeal, but then again, it's New York State, so anything's possible.
00:16:40.000Yeah, I mean, the other thing, too, that everyone's forgetting is that accounting is pretty much creative.
00:16:45.000So if you have an accountant who's going to certify your records and say, oh, this is worth this, this is worth this, we're basing it on this, that's how accounting goes.
00:16:54.000Accounting is pretty creative, you know, in the way that it's calculated.
00:17:08.000Well, it's arbitrary, but I imagine because of the fact that it is hung in Tim Cass studios, I mean... I can tell you the value of that painting.
00:17:18.000The value is whatever someone will pay for it.
00:17:21.000I gotta go to my account and I gotta put a hard number on the asset because, you know, I think both Maryland and West Virginia have this thing where you have to account for literally everything your business owns, including your chairs.
00:17:33.000So what is the value of this painting?
00:19:11.000They retain value because people who are trying to store value will use art as a means to do so.
00:19:17.000Not to mention, it's a really great painting, it took a long time to produce, and so the person who made it... It is pretty realistic.
00:19:21.000It might have taken a couple weeks to do, and so, based on the value of the labor.
00:19:25.000Now, that being said, it is not just a picture of a chicken.
00:19:28.000It is now the TimCast Studios chicken picture from the Tim Pool Daily Show, TimCast IRL, a top podcast, and one could argue, as you mentioned, because it's been hanging on the wall, it has more value.
00:19:38.000That's how you add the 3,000 and you get to 5.
00:19:51.000And so, long story short, just, you know, we're having fun talking about a chicken.
00:19:56.000When Donald Trump is looking at the values of his buildings, It fluctuates based on the market, based on the perceptions, and based on the perceptions of the people he's working with.
00:20:07.000When he goes to a creditor and he hands them documents saying, here's the estimated value based on the size, they compare that to other buildings they've lent on.
00:20:43.000Yeah, I was listening to a podcast by Nick Riccato, shout out Nick, he's got a great podcast, and he was talking about the way that big deals like this are done, multiple millions of dollars, you don't go to a bank If you're trying to take out a $100 million loan, you don't go to a bank and say, check my FICO score.
00:21:09.000like that that's not how it works and your average course seven fifty yeah you
00:21:12.000know it's like man I got an 800 guarantee I'm gonna pay this back you
00:21:16.000know it's like that's not how it is how it goes There are special people that are specifically, like, have the authority or whatever that do this, and they decide, and the reason that they have that authority is to literally prevent this stuff.
00:21:31.000The government says... Which in this case was prevented because loans were given and repaid.
00:21:37.000The point of having these people that have a specialization is so that way the government can say, okay, we know that these are reliable.
00:21:59.000And then the state steps in and says, hey, we're going to go ahead and ixnay this and blah, blah, blah.
00:22:04.000We were talking last night to Thomas Massey.
00:22:08.000The reason this is such a big deal is because property rights make your economy work.
00:22:15.000If your property rights are not secure, people stop investing.
00:22:20.000If there is a portion of the population that thinks I'm not going to invest in the United States because the government doesn't like my politics, so that means I'm going to invest somewhere else.
00:22:33.000The government attacking people and using the government to take their property will destroy a country.
00:22:40.000It is literally what destroyed Venezuela.
00:22:44.000You can watch videos of, I think it was Chavez was the guy, walking through the town saying, expropriate, expropriate, expropriate.
00:22:51.000Now this is more drastic than what's going on in the United States.
00:22:55.000But the point of it is at this state, at this point, the government will break its own laws in violation of the will of the people involved in order to use the government to take property from a person because they don't like them.
00:23:12.000This will destroy the United States economy.
00:23:18.000It is Friday night, and we are going to have a hearty laugh.
00:23:22.000Because we have this story from fortune.com.
00:23:24.000SEC greenlights Trump's truth social public offering.
00:23:29.000Donald Trump's Truth Social is poised to make its Wall Street debut after the SEC finally cleared a controversial merger that was delayed for years.
00:23:38.000As regulators conducted a thorough inquiry, the SEC has cleared the merger of Trump Media and Technology Group, which owns Truth Social, and Digital World Acquisition Corp.
00:23:48.000DWAC, a SPAC, which is a special purpose acquisition company, which plans to bring the company public.
00:23:55.000That could give Trump a sizable ownership stake in the company.
00:23:58.000Trump is set to own roughly 79 million shares of the company, valued at $49.50 per share, which basically gives Trump $4 billion!
00:24:34.000If he was like, I'll give you 7 million shares in DWAC, which would cover the costs, and then they're sitting there holding DWAC shares like, okay, I guess.
00:24:52.000We're not the Soviet Union or Venezuela, but that's how it starts, right?
00:24:57.000And the second people think that their property's not safe, that they can kick you out of your business, and they're doing it for political reasons, We're on the road to that. And the point, that's a great
00:25:09.000point, and the problem isn't the government.
00:25:11.000As much as the government is carrying this out, it's that the society we live in is accepting this.
00:25:17.000Because if society accepts it, then... Society is accepting all kinds of totally
00:25:26.000I hope that people are waking up to the wackadoo.
00:25:28.000I feel like there are people that have started to realize what's going on.
00:25:32.000I don't feel like the tide is turning, but I feel like there are people waking up that are saying that they notice stuff and that the people that have been saying this is bad are not crazy.
00:25:45.000Maybe the conservatives and the libertarians and the people that are talking about classical liberalism, maybe they're not crazy.
00:25:51.000Maybe it is bad to have LGBT stuff in the schools.
00:25:52.000I'm starting to think Tim is right, and I'm starting to be a little more optimistic.
00:25:56.000It started last week when I started to be a little more optimistic.
00:25:59.000That things are going in a positive direction?
00:26:00.000That things are going in a positive direction.
00:26:02.000I started thinking like, you know what happened is, this is gonna sound dumb, but I haven't written any plays since I got canceled a few years ago, or whenever that was.
00:26:13.000In 2018 and I started like writing some dialogue and I don't know, you know, it's like just whatever but I hadn't felt like I was even in remotely a place like to write any dialogue at all and it made me feel really optimistic and I thought, If I'm having this feeling, I must be feeling optimistic.
00:26:31.000I have an anecdote I'll share about that later.
00:26:50.000We must vote and be prepared that there is currently a shadow campaign If you think there was a shadow campaign in 2020 and they admitted to it, there's definitely one today.
00:27:00.000We need people planning lawsuits, we need every political activist imaginable, but let me just pause and tell you why good things are abound.
00:27:09.000First, let me start with Joe Rogan's Spotify deal.
00:27:12.000Maybe the most important cultural news we've had in years.
00:28:29.000I often tell this story that I met a pro skateboarder and, you know, the question was brought up during a skate session by someone else like, why don't you speak up and call these things out?
00:28:38.000And they were like, I don't want to lose my sponsors.
00:28:41.000I only make, you know, 50,000 a year or whatever.
00:28:43.000I'm not a big shot, you know, and I can't do it.
00:28:45.000And I said, here's what I'm going to do.
00:28:47.000We're going to start our own skate company and we're going to pay you more.
00:28:51.000And then when your sponsor says, don't speak up, you can then say to them, Well, I gotta be honest, my other sponsor pays me twice as much as you do, so I'm gonna speak up, because they won't fire me over it, they've given me those assurances.
00:29:03.000And when I do speak up, I'm gonna tell everybody, you dropped me, and I'm gonna put the focus on you.
00:29:07.000And they're gonna go, no, no, no, no, no, wait, wait, wait, wait, please don't, please don't.
00:29:10.000So this will force these companies into an inverse position, with Donald Trump potentially about to secure $4 billion in cash for his social media platform.
00:29:20.000It means that there's going to be a lot of people who want a piece of that pie.
00:29:24.000There are people all over this world who will lie, cheat and steal to get a piece of that sweet, sweet green.
00:29:29.000And Donald Trump just got a whole lot of it.
00:29:32.000I can't tell you, but you can probably guess how many people and which people are going to immediately turn around and say, I'm not, I don't mind Trump.
00:29:40.000You know, I was just, I was being honestly critical of him, but you know, I'd love to get a contract with his new company because we do social media tech.
00:29:47.000I mean, there's going to be tons of people.
00:29:49.000Who are on social media whinging about Trump because they were like, this is the popular thing to do.
00:29:54.000But when Donald Trump turns around with $4 billion in shares that he can use to build up the platform, invest in the platform, you're going to have all of these people being like, I was never anti-Trump.
00:30:36.000I don't got that big of a problem with Trump.
00:30:37.000I'll be honest, like, you know, I'm critical of some things, but I guarantee you, Most people who are anti-Trump, these are the default liberals, who are only saying it because they don't want to lose their jobs and don't care.
00:30:49.000When money comes around, they will immediately say Trump's the best.
00:30:52.000And it's important to point out that this is the goal.
00:30:56.000Remember, we're not trying to be like, we need to make everybody, you know, Pay for saying bad things about Donald Trump and blah blah blah.
00:31:06.000The goal is to convince people to come to our side.
00:31:10.000So, like, when people start saying that stuff, welcome them.
00:31:12.000You'll know they're BSing, and it's okay just because they're BSing doesn't mean you have to call them out.
00:31:17.000Just snicker a little bit inside and be like, yeah, man, cool, no sweat.
00:31:21.000Let's play this video real quick while he's talking.
00:31:24.000So this is, uh, it's really hard to see.
00:31:55.000Skate Park Construction Company, one of the best in the world, has put together this phase one, which is a quarter million dollar wood skate-like construct, which is currently underway.
00:32:30.000We're still looking at the, we're gonna hang the guitars on the wall, we're setting up an area for music to be played acoustic like we have in the back, but then we're building a bigger stage area.
00:32:40.000Most importantly, the reason I'm showing this, We're investing about $2,000,000 total in what may be one of the largest semi-private action sports spaces in the country by the time it's completed.
00:32:55.000This will include what's called a mini-mega ramp, which is like a big ski jump for those that don't understand.
00:33:00.000But for skateboards, bikes, whatever you want to use.
00:33:02.000And as the saying goes, if you build it, they will come.
00:33:13.000There were forces in skateboarding that were overly woke, and still are, and have been pushing, but they're starting to lose.
00:33:21.000More and more pro skateboarders, and I don't know, I know many of you don't care about skateboarding, that's fine, just think pro athlete.
00:33:26.000Because the big industry with a lot of famous people and billions of dollars behind it, it just happens to be the one where we have expertise.
00:33:32.000So we're building a company, We have money behind this.
00:34:33.000There's a small amount of people, they don't control that much, but when people get angry emails, they panic.
00:34:38.000Now that we are building a board company, we're building merch, we're building, uh, we're producing merch, we're building a massive skate park and skate media, and we go to these big companies, and we tell them, we're putting millions in, millions upon millions, I mean, and the 10-year plan is probably massive, they immediately say, sign me up.
00:34:58.000I don't want to get too much into it, but we have been attacked by far-left activists who have tried to get this shut down.
00:35:04.000And in the end... Your private building?
00:35:06.000They've tried to get your own... I'll be very vague with it because there's private matters involved with third parties, but there have been attempts to shut what we are doing down.
00:35:14.000The plan is not just about this building, it's a lot about what we're doing.
00:35:18.000And ultimately the conversation came down to Are you really concerned about the opinions of these activists?
00:35:24.000I'm about to write you a check for half a million dollars."
00:35:26.000I'm like, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
00:35:48.000We'll hang up on the next time they call.
00:35:50.000There ain't no position these people can take when I'm dangling a check with, I will be a customer for you, I will produce media that will promote your company, I will sponsor more skateboarders, which will in turn result in more public jurisdictions wanting skateboarding, skate products, more skate shops, this will boost the industry, or you can go hang out with those activists, and they're immediately like, nah, we don't care about that stuff, let's roll, baby.
00:36:14.000So, simplified, long story short, we're winning.
00:36:17.000You know the problem with that is, like, the opposite is true, and I think Tucker had something on with it.
00:36:22.000He had the guy talking about Ozembic and the pharmaceutical ads.
00:36:25.000He's saying all these news companies, they're taking such a share of their revenue in advertising from the pharmaceutical companies to the news stations, and they won't call out these drugs.
00:36:36.000So whether it was with the Vaxx, whatever it was, if your sponsor is these people, the last thing you're going to do is start dumping on them, so we can't get real news anymore.
00:36:44.000But don't worry, because TimCast is sponsored by castabrew.com.
00:36:48.000So long as people buy products from Public Square companies, and companies that are on Public Square, or Public Square in general has sponsored us several times, we are building a parallel economy.
00:37:12.000Even the Super Bowl, did you see that Pfizer ad?
00:37:14.000And then, it's like, at the end, they said, oh, they're on the road to curing cancer, and they sponsored the Super Bowl, and I'm like, How do these people flip that switch like that?
00:37:22.000They go from pushing this to being like, oh, by the way, we're curing cancer.
00:37:33.000CBS just fired a bunch of journalists.
00:37:34.000And I'm like, I'm sitting back and laughing my ass off as people like Taylor Lorenz try to rag on the work we do while she's basically on the verge of being unemployed along with all the rest of them.
00:37:45.000I think she still works for the Washington Post or whatever.
00:37:55.000No, but like, she's mostly on threads, and like, it's all this mask content that she wears.
00:38:02.000But yeah, I mean, Public Square sponsored Bethany Hamilton, which was so cool, and Rip Curl, you know, owned themselves by being like, this is a woman surfer, and it's just this big fella on a surfboard.
00:38:29.000Guys, you gotta download the app, Public Square, because this is exactly what I'm talking about, and it's not just us that's doing it.
00:38:37.000When you download Public Square, And you use the app and you will see all the companies that agree with your values and have taken a pledge to support American values and family values.
00:38:47.000Public Square is using that money to promote professional athletes and reinvest in people who share our values.
00:38:54.000Shout out to pro skateboarder Beaver Fleming.
00:38:56.000He does double backflips, 70 feet in the air, sponsored by Public Square.
00:39:02.000It is absolutely amazing to see that there are now pro athletes that can make a living without fear and they can speak up and they can say no to the woke cult because we have built and we are building a parallel economy.
00:39:14.000Yeah, I think it's very cool that you've done that with skating because it's like skating was always such a counterculture thing And now it's it gets to be a counterculture thing again.
00:39:24.000Well, it's Olympic So that's the challenge, you know to Mario's point the Brett Weinstein was tired I'm talking about zero is a special number right when you don't have anywhere to go that's safe to talk about dissident ideas and stuff Then the powers that be or whatever, the corporate media or whatever, can really shut it down.
00:39:46.000But since Elon Musk has bought Twitter and has made it so that way topics don't get shut out, right?
00:39:54.000If you have vulgarities and you're offensive or whatever to people intentionally, they will boot people for that stuff.
00:39:59.000And I know there are purists that hate that, but there aren't topics that are off limits on Twitter.
00:40:05.000And because of that, It is changing the world, and because there is one place that has that, the other outlets are responding.
00:40:13.000The grip that Woke had began to really loosen up in two points.
00:40:19.000One, the LGBT stuff last year in the summer, and then when Elon Musk got his hands on Twitter or X and bought it.
00:40:26.000That's when the iron grip of the Woke started to really loosen up and people started to say, Wait a minute, maybe this isn't good.
00:40:32.000That's when all of the people that were talking about their negative reactions to the vaccine started to be able to say, like, I can actually talk about this stuff now.
00:40:40.000That one location, or that one place where people could go, made it so that all of the other places had to respond.
00:40:47.000And now you have CNN that's actually marginally critical.
00:40:50.000Like, there was someone that was actually talking about the court case yesterday where Fannie was embarrassing herself.
00:40:59.000It was, and it didn't sound like they were trying to cover it over and stuff.
00:41:03.000And granted, it's not the best coverage or anything, but it is a response, and it does show that everyone else is noticing that there is a lot of people there on Twitter.
00:41:13.000Did you hear how she was talking about, like, I just keep cash in my house?
00:41:16.000Yes, I mean... No, no, no, but then how she took the money out of her campaign?
00:41:24.000There's an argument against that because that was an out-of-context clip.
00:41:27.000I'm not saying it's an absolute defense, but an NPR reporter pointed out earlier in her testimony, she said she withdrew $50,000 from her retirement to fund her campaign.
00:41:36.000When she took that money out of her retirement, she kept a portion of it as cash in her house.
00:41:41.000Because I watched the whole thing, but I did miss that part.
00:41:43.000And people thought she was saying... But here's the point, just because she may have taken money out of her retirement to her campaign doesn't mean she didn't mean... Because she said, I took money out on my campaign.
00:42:01.000I kid you not, he was asked, um, Willis' father, quote, excuse me, your honor, I'm not trying to be racist, okay, but it's a black thing, Floyd said, per Fox News.
00:42:11.000Willis had testified her father had encouraged her to always have cash on hand, quote, most black folks, they hide cash, said Floyd, they keep cash.
00:42:19.000So a lot of people, of course, are saying this is a weird racist thing, but I don't know what else to say or respond to it.
00:42:26.000I just want to point out that it doesn't matter what your race is.
00:42:28.000There are a lot of people who hide cash.
00:42:44.000It was literally just showing men, women, and then where it intersected in the middle, it said mental illness.
00:42:49.000I got a thing saying it was illegal what I said in France, and because it was illegal in France, I could not get my account back.
00:42:55.000I've gotten things of this nature as well.
00:42:56.000Yeah, they wouldn't give it back to me until I deleted it, but it took, just the point, he went out saying, you know, this is the new town square, it's so important, and then even there on something like that, they forced me to comply and eventually... Those are the EU rules, like the EU is different.
00:45:24.000Well, you know, I just, I go to Publix and I take 50 bucks and I just leave it and keep it.
00:45:29.000And my dad always told me to keep cash on hand.
00:45:32.000And, uh, and she actually, she filibustered a lot.
00:45:35.000She's like, my dad would probably be upset with me because I only had about 9,000 and you know, he always tells me to have more.
00:45:40.000So where we are today is she wouldn't testify, but her father testifies that, quote, "'Excuse me, your honor, I'm not trying to be racist, okay, but it's a black thing,' Floyd said, per Fox News.
00:45:56.000Well, I don't know why he would say it was a racist thing, because he is a black man.
00:46:00.000He's allowed to say that he perceives as in the community.
00:46:02.000I would just like to point out that everybody hides cash.
00:46:06.000Like, you're supposed to have a certain amount of cash on hand, regardless of your race.
00:46:10.000I'm not telling anybody how to live or whatever, but if you have the ability to have some money on hand, it's not a terrible idea.
00:46:18.000My stepmom used to always say, keep some mad money around.
00:46:26.000Wait, how much money in cash is reasonable to have for an emergency?
00:46:31.000So for me personally, I like to have like just a couple gold coins because they're easily, you can sell them real easy and because of inflation they'll hold their value.
00:46:42.000So if you're worried about keeping some gold, now I'm just saying just a little bit, like two or three gold coins because you know, if you need to sell them.
00:47:04.000Your 10-year return on Bitcoin is 15,000%.
00:47:06.000I mean, I'm a dude that believes in Bitcoin the way that Jack believes in Bitcoin.
00:47:15.000I'm a little more than just... I do agree with you on gold.
00:47:19.000I think anybody who's like... Just a little, though.
00:47:21.000Yeah, you always want to diversify what your hard assets are to have lying around, and I definitely have gold and silver, but I don't know that $9,000 in cash just lying around is a good idea.
00:47:45.000Yeah, but I mean, depending on a percentage of what you own... No way.
00:47:49.000You know, you see, like, some of these athletes, like Floyd Mayweather, he's shown $2 million on a table, $3 million... They usually do that when they get paid.
00:48:15.000I was watching The Five, I think it was like Greg Gutfeld and Jesse Waters, and they were just like, what lawyer takes large sums of money from their clients in cash?
00:48:23.000He's like, I don't have receipts for it, I can't track it.
00:48:25.000That's the, I mean, yeah, that's like- No, you get an invoice in your email and you click pay.
00:48:30.000Yeah, if you do that kind of thing- Unless he's like a barter or like Atticus in To Kill a Mockingbird, he took- Phil, you're saying a couple gold coins, you're talking about four to $6,000 in value.
00:48:42.000That's just like, She has money to spend.
00:48:45.000To pay back, she goes to Belize with thousands of dollars on her to give back.
00:48:51.000That seemed wacky, taking like a whole bunch of American currency to Belize, and then you have to like tell them when you get off the airplane that you brought all this cash.
00:49:00.000And then you're like hanging around, like this lady, you're clearly getting drunk because she likes the Grey Goose, driving around in taxis, she's just carrying masses of amounts of cash.
00:50:07.000I do not believe that it is backwards.
00:50:09.000I saw a listing for the dress that looked identical to this.
00:50:13.000There was a woman who was like a fashion person who named the exact model and where it came from and who produced it and the zippers in the back.
00:50:20.000Yeah, we saw that too because it has literally a zipper in the back and the front.
00:50:27.000I think it's just so believable though because it's her like after seeing her speak and watching this whole thing unfold it's like she seems like she would do it.
00:50:35.000See this see it has a zipper in the back and the front.
00:52:53.000And the judge is just like, I'll allow it.
00:52:55.000What's funny, too, is she kept talking about how she doesn't eat lunch in her office, but then every time she was talking about doing stuff with friends, it was driving five hours to have lunch.
00:53:04.000And again, this points to what we were talking about earlier, how, like, if the courts are not going to be, you know, held accountable or actually uphold the law, then we have a massive problem.
00:53:32.000And I get it, that's one of the things that pisses people off about lawyers, but that was a lawyer tactic.
00:53:37.000That wasn't the actual justice system, right?
00:53:40.000So that was a lawyer and a president defending himself.
00:53:44.000This is the actual justice system, allowing someone in the justice system to just sit there and filibuster and deceive the court and stuff.
00:53:54.000This should be something that the court wants to prevent from happening, but they don't.
00:55:35.000I was just making fun of her because she didn't know what continent Belize was on.
00:55:38.000I think most people need to understand something.
00:55:41.000So, uh, when I was... I think I was 18, my brother and I were at a shopping mall in the south side of Chicago, when, for seemingly no reason, security guards started beating the crap out of us.
00:55:52.000And then, when I tried calling 911, because all- I'm like, three dudes just started beating the crap out of my brother, and they bashed his head in the ground.
00:55:59.000When I called 911, they grabbed my phone and turned it off.
00:56:05.000But at this point, they've pinned me to the ground, and this big fat guy's sitting on me, and my phone's ringing, and I was like, that's the police, and he holds it in front of me, and he presses end, and he puts it down.
00:56:14.000What had happened was, someone else had been accused of shoplifting, these overzealous guys saw us, and assumed it was us, and when they found nothing on us, uh-oh.
00:56:24.000Did we just randomly grab two customers and beat the crap out of them?
00:56:28.000So, the police show up, and I tell the officers, I'm the one who called 911, and I'd like to press charges.
00:56:34.000And the cop talked to the security guards, and the security guards made up a story.
00:56:37.000Claimed that me and my brother were screaming at people and swearing, causing a disturbance, and refused to leave.
00:56:42.000I said, check the camera, that's not true!
00:56:44.000We were walking around, shopping, and nothing happened.
00:59:08.000That's the reason I became an attorney for for those kind of stories that they get people that where you're up against it like that like well just say you did something even if you didn't do it just say you did it so we can get a little something from you and go forward I mean look at with President Trump right now look at with all these people on the right that have a million allegations and accusations and they say You know what?
00:59:59.000Let's just... So when my brother and I, who were the victims, tried to get justice, they said, the cops are basically like, we work with these security guards every single day and the last thing we want to do is create an acrimonious relationship because of you.
01:00:40.000So a lot of times what I would see is that right before, literally, it'd be on the courthouse steps, like the day that the trial was supposed to take place, they'd say, oh, this guy's facing 10 years, you know, for something, whatever.
01:00:50.000And then they're like, how about two years?
01:01:32.000But still, at that point, I think she's gambling because if you go to your home state and get crushed 70-30 and nothing happens to him, your career's over.
01:04:29.000Trump would have done the stuff that Trump does.
01:04:32.000The media would have behaved the way that the media does.
01:04:35.000But we wouldn't have... I don't think that we would have the clarity of What a problem the administrative state is, what a problem bureaucracy is, how much they behave on their own, what a problem security state is, what a problem the intelligent industrial complex, which is essentially the tech companies that are, you know, because essentially they're, and I've said this before, they're another arm of the military-industrial complex now.
01:05:04.000They're, you know, so I think that we wouldn't have all of the insights that we have if Trump had Gotten in and been elected again.
01:05:12.000I think that he probably wouldn't have wouldn't have gone after and made such a stink and had had so many people be like, wait a minute like people wouldn't have noticed.
01:05:18.000No, he wouldn't have been charged at all.
01:06:02.000But I don't have a lot of confidence because again, I don't think that I think I think Libby's right.
01:06:09.000I think the talent pool is a puddle because I think that because again my my conception of the problems in America are Basically at the citizen level.
01:06:20.000The people are not interested in paying attention to the government.
01:06:24.000When they do pay attention to the government, they're easily manipulated.
01:06:27.000The government is actively manipulating people.
01:06:31.000Last night, Thomas Massey was here and we talked about the Smith-Munt Modernization Act.
01:06:35.000That the federal government, and you confirmed that my impression of it is correct, that it is the federal government being, you know, being allowed to propagandize the American people, that was in 2012 when that passed, and you know, so all the things that we know about the government doing things, all the things that we know that are outside of the extra constitutional, outside of the constitutional limits that the government does, they're all confirmed, that everybody has, they haven't been confirmed like in a court, Some have, but not all of them have, but they're all confirmed by admission or by there's plenty of evidence for it and stuff like that, and nothing is changing, nothing is happening.
01:07:12.000The problem does boil down to the population, and we lost the population when we lost the ability to educate people as liberals.
01:07:21.000When you started educating people through a critical constructivist lens, Which is why everyone talks about CRT, because we taught people to not think about liberal principles, but to see everything through a lens of oppression, power versus not having power.
01:07:40.000But that has made people completely and totally blind to how our government works, because they think that our government should be solving the oppression that is out there.
01:07:55.000Any number of problems with it, but that's the way that people behave and that's the way people vote is the biggest problem.
01:07:59.000They vote as if the government can solve the problems the government says the government can solve.
01:08:04.000I think we need to discover some new ocracies or isms.
01:08:09.000You know, like the turn of the 19th century, 1900s, there were a lot of new ideologies that were emerging and began fighting with each other.
01:08:16.000And what I think about now is we're in a completely new era and new ideas Ideas, concepts, philosophies, they're discovered and formulated and created and then people start to understand.
01:08:30.000Some of them are bad, but I think we need... When I look at where we currently are right now, I'm not sure that the...
01:08:39.000Simply put, traditional American structure and Constitution and all that stuff, as it stands right now, can work a system as large and as crazy as technologically advanced.
01:08:51.000That is to say, I think it's a great foundation, but we need to start updating the framework.
01:08:57.000I mean the figurative framework, not the literal.
01:08:58.000I think the Constitution is the best basis we have so far, but now we need to expand upon it.
01:09:06.000One of those things is really simple, like simple ideas.
01:09:28.000Don't, yeah, you shouldn't be voting if you're not part of it.
01:09:31.000So we need a restoration of this kind of concept.
01:09:34.000An idea that Vivek Ramaswamy brought up when I interviewed him the first time on the Culture War podcast was tying it perhaps to selective service.
01:09:42.000He's moved away from it, but I think it's a really good idea.
01:09:44.000In order to vote, you must, male or female, sign up for selective service.
01:09:48.000This does not mean you will be drafted.
01:10:09.000If you're not willing to stand up and fight for your country, you don't vote.
01:10:12.000And if we remove all those people who are not willing to be drafted for this country and they're not voting, only the people who are willing will end up voting.
01:10:20.000We'd get a highly conservative population.
01:10:24.000Military service has long been a path to citizenship, and it makes a lot of sense, because if you're willing to stand up and fight for the country, then you love the country and want to be part of it.
01:10:32.000And this is a really simple thing, because it's not even actually serving the military.
01:10:34.000It's literally just saying, I'm available in the event of major war, and I guarantee you, these people who hate America will never.
01:11:09.000And then it'll take a generation of voting, but this will slowly start to skew things towards those who believe in civil service and responsibility to their country.
01:11:17.000I am 100% in agreement that there are too many ignorant votes.
01:11:23.000Too many people are voting that have no idea what they're voting for.
01:11:27.000I'm still, I don't like the idea of saying that we limit, or I don't think that, actually no, it's not that I don't like it, I don't think that it will work to present the American people with the idea that we're going to limit who can vote.
01:11:42.000But you're right, so what we do is, we create fragments of a bill in ten different bits, and then each of them activates and it forms the exodia of laws.
01:11:53.000But I mean, the thing is, our big, again this is, In my opinion, our biggest problem is that we have the biggest problem is our government reflects our electorate.
01:12:03.000Part of that, too, is that we had I mean, if we're going to go down this road, part of it is that we have had these massive get out the vote campaigns without actually any get out the education about the electoral system.
01:12:15.000I think it really comes down to that, look at Congress, right?
01:12:19.000I think it has like a 26% approval rating.
01:12:22.000That's lower than Joe Biden's, if you can believe it.
01:12:24.000Yeah, but everybody likes their own Congress.
01:12:26.000Exactly, but that's the problem, that they look at it and then they send 90% of the same people back.
01:12:31.000So even now, there's people that'll blame the economy on what Trump did still, that are on the left, and they'll say, oh no, Joe Biden's doing a great job.
01:12:39.000It was what he did right before Biden got in that caused it.
01:12:42.000And then they'll say, oh well, Clinton's economy was so good because a Bush senior, he had to raise those taxes and then Clinton was allowed to ride this.
01:12:49.000So whatever side you're on, you're just going to look for something that basically is that echo chamber.
01:12:55.000And until the voters feel enough pain from the people they're electing, they're never going to change.
01:13:04.000If you're not able to pay your bills and you're not able to take care of your family and you're going to go out and get mugged and they're not going to jail, maybe you'll change your votes.
01:15:00.000He hired a bunch of really really bad people and there's only because he's just good enough that I want to support the guy.
01:15:07.000But I do believe it's fair to say that his foreign policy was the best in my lifetime because they're all warmongers and he was the only president who actually didn't declare a war, didn't start a war and was pulling our troops back.
01:15:17.000On this show, we could absolutely address the nuance of the claims made against Donald Trump.
01:15:21.000But people like Colbert have no idea what's going on, will not look into what's going on, and will go on TV and scream into the camera, why is this happening?
01:15:33.000If you used Google, you might actually know why it's happening.
01:15:37.000Because Donald Trump, in the court case you're referencing on your show, did not actually have a trial to determine whether he committed fraud.
01:15:44.000The judge ruled summarily that he did.
01:16:36.000We have Devin Arch, who have all made incriminating statements as witnesses, plus all the emails and they just happen to be loans.
01:16:41.000We have the president, Joe Biden, flying on Air Force Two to China for a private equity deal with his son.
01:16:47.000And with all of that, we sit back and say there's no justice.
01:16:50.000And this man does not even mention it one time.
01:16:54.000The whole like Comedy Central's whole like late night stuff from the aughts and and beyond with with ever since but Jon Stewart has been just absolutely propaganda like totally propagandizing the American people to be against anything that a conservative says and it's made it so that way conservatives can't I somewhat disagree on early Jon Stewart Daily Show stuff.
01:17:18.000They praised James O'Keefe on like three or four times.
01:17:20.000You actually got this relatively anti-establishment view from Jon Stewart.
01:17:26.000It was after he left, they homogenized, formulized, created this garbage, like what's his face, Klepper?
01:18:29.000It's like, the guy's just sick, he's angry, people are supposed to be tuning out to have a laugh, and they're watching this guy like, he's livid.
01:18:42.000This is a man who is seeing a shadow monster wiggling in the screen, he's going, and we're all outside the cave being like, what is he screaming about?
01:20:11.000The other thing that wasn't mentioned by Colbert is how yesterday the special counsel appointed to investigate Hunter Biden, who is also the U.S.
01:20:21.000Attorney for Delaware, arrested the FBI informant... The whistleblower who was accusing the Bidens of wrongdoing got arrested by Biden's DOJ.
01:22:36.000And it was, imagine you walked into a mall, and it was a jackhammer from every speaker at max volume.
01:22:43.000So I took out my phone, and I recorded it, brought it home, put it into Adobe, played the video, and said, okay, now many of you can't hear it, right?
01:22:51.000Because if you're older, you can't hear it.
01:22:53.000Shifted the pitch down, and all of a sudden you hear, And I think they claimed they weren't doing it, but I'm like, oh, they were totally doing it.
01:23:02.000I have video evidence of it, and I think they should be sued for that.
01:24:09.000We should get people, uh, on ex-formerly Twitter here that every time a leftist is saying some crazy or mad hour, somebody, you just send that.
01:24:40.000Remember he had the man show and stuff?
01:24:42.000To see this guy transitioned in front of our eyes from something where it was like, oh, he's kind of funny, he's kind of decent, to what happened to you, man?
01:26:28.000And I was talking to one of them who worked there, who was a friend of mine, and she was like, all of the companies are doing this ad rights distribution thing where basically You created a digital news website.
01:26:38.000I've talked about this before, but you create a digital news website, you get 10 million views per month on your articles, and you can sell ads against those.
01:26:44.000You can say, give us $500,000, we will deliver you 10 million hits this month.
01:26:52.000And so what's happening then is, there's a limited number of advertisers.
01:26:57.000So one company tries to find a way to inflate their viewership.
01:27:01.000There were websites that produce those really awful articles where it's like 25 celebrity
01:27:05.000photos that will shock you, and every photo is a new page with 50 ads on it.
01:27:09.000Because what they're doing is, mainstream high-profile media brand buys the rights to
01:27:16.000the clicks on the click farm websites.
01:27:19.000They generate a whole bunch of low-cost clicks from people in India or Turkey or whatever.
01:27:24.000Then the mainstream brand buys the rights and includes those in their numbers.
01:27:28.000So instead of $10 million, they can say, our network has $30 million.
01:27:31.000And then they can go to the advertiser and say, give us the $500,000, we'll give you $30 million.
01:27:35.000And so I was talking to this woman, and I was like, you shouldn't do it.
01:27:42.000And she goes, if we don't, we go out of business.
01:27:44.000Because even though all of the numbers that everyone's selling are fake, if we stick with our core numbers, all we're doing as tongue advertisers, we give them less views.
01:27:53.000And I was like, yeah, so it's basically fraud?
01:27:57.000And she's like, well, it's not really fraud because we do, like, people do see the ad.
01:28:03.000And I'm like, yeah, but they think they're buying an ad on a premium, high-profile media website.
01:28:08.000They don't realize what you're actually selling them is some garbage clickbait nonsense that no one's actually reading.
01:28:13.000And she's like, if we don't do it, we're not going to make any money because we can't compete with the people who do.
01:28:17.000So when it comes to Nielsen ratings and all this viewership, I do not believe that a system which has no real hard data on the numbers other than extrapolation is being honest.
01:28:27.000Because The Daily Show is an incentive to inflate their numbers by any means necessary.
01:28:31.000So they probably, they pay for the rating system and the rating system says, Yeah, you get a million.
01:28:38.000That sample size is like 25,000 households or something out of however many millions and they said it's so off that they're just they really are guessing but I think people do that like you know Instagram or whatever people who have followers do that and then say oh well I'll sell you this or whatever and they have fake followers you know and the person thinks they're getting exposure all these people and they're not you know so it's like the same.
01:29:02.000You know and it's not just about the TV stuff too.
01:29:32.000I'm wondering, who would actually have the largest footprint?
01:29:36.000A live show on social media that gets 500,000 key demo viewers, With all of its clips and all of its ubiquity and the conversation around it, versus the Daily Show who gets 320 key demo but a million television viewers that we don't get elsewhere.
01:29:52.000My point ultimately is, I think the social media shows in the podcast, Joe Rogan, IRL, Ben Shapiro, whatever, have more social media rippling effect than the Daily Show does.
01:30:02.000The Daily Show will put up the full show, or a 7-minute or 8-minute clip, but IRL, Rogan will have 30-second to minute-long clips, and people will clip... I think the ubiquity of new wave podcasting media stuff is probably substantially more.
01:30:22.000No, I was just going to say you really are everywhere with it and it does have this snowball effect where it keeps going where really with TV it's gone and somebody's got to upload the clip to YouTube or something and it doesn't go into their ratings but at least with yours you see the views.
01:31:18.000But I generally think that the digital, younger-based shows, Rogan's a better example, When Rogan puts out his numbers and he says we get like 120 million or whatever the number is, I bet it's a billion.
01:31:29.000I bet it's, you know, like international and... Okay, maybe not a billion, but maybe like three, four hundred million.
01:31:37.000Because we're not just talking about how many people watched your show, we're talking about how many people heard your voice in the context of this show and you influenced them in some way.
01:32:01.000So, when we do our sponsor deck, we know for a fact that with segments and a show, outside, only internally, it's about 3.5 million per episode.
01:32:27.000Like, we can take a look at the Daily Show and they can see how much they get.
01:32:31.000I don't know how many people are clipping and sharing his show either, but I'd imagine we get more because we are internet-based and we fight with people on the internet.
01:32:37.000Well, and like you said, you can't quantify, you can quantify the way you did, but if somebody takes that clip and puts it on their Instagram or puts it somewhere else, you have no way to measure that now because it's just, they're not sharing a link to your clip.
01:33:04.000And Colbert isn't scrolling through anybody's feed, you know?
01:33:08.000I mean, it does when MythInformed posts it, because they're a great account, but, like, they're not, you know, you're not just going to see randomly Colbert.
01:33:26.000You know, I wonder, there was the old school model that Jon Stewart and Colbert and the rest of them do, which is a show broken into segments where they talk about something that's pre-scripted.
01:33:40.000With Joe Rogan, we started to see the shift into longer form, free-flowing, conversational stuff.
01:34:06.000I look at an article, I read about it, I fact check it, then I line up, it makes me think of things and I'll put other stories in, and then I press record and just start talking.
01:34:16.000And I have no idea what I'm going to say when I'm saying it, I'm just telling you what I'm thinking and how I'm feeling about it.
01:34:21.000And I genuinely think this will replace, and I think it has replaced, obviously.
01:34:26.000Rogan's the most important journalist of our generation, and he won't agree.
01:34:31.000He'll say he's not a journalist, but he's literally sitting down and interviewing people on his show all the time.
01:35:54.000It's basically the golden age of these kind of shows are done, and this is the new format.
01:36:00.000I don't think TikTok will displace What Rogan does.
01:36:06.000I don't think there will ever be a circumstance where young people are like, when I get the news, it's typically me scrolling for two hours through TikTok at random one minute videos of random people.
01:36:37.000And then usually when I see something that I don't believe, I'll try to find the original source.
01:36:43.000And I will say this, one of the reasons we've often avoided being part of big, wrong stories is that if I can't find an original source for it, we ignore the story.
01:36:51.000And so this has resulted in many instances where stories that have been big and reported we have not covered at all and then it revealed like a day later the stories is wrong and we're like okay now now we can jump in with the source but I think I think conversational open format has taken over and unless there is a dramatic shift in technology maybe VR podcast or something False hangouts.
01:37:14.000Imagine one idea we had like 10 years ago.
01:38:19.000There's people that like before COVID happened, I hadn't talked to in a year or six months and all of a sudden it's like, oh, FaceTime me and you sit there and you have a half hour conversation.
01:38:27.000You realize you missed those interactions and nothing can replace that.
01:38:31.000So I think that this is so much more authentic than this, you know, reading off the teleprompter On the news everything.
01:38:59.000So if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to the channel, share the show with your friends, head over to TimCast.com, click join us, become a member to help support our work directly, and you'll get access to our Monday through Thursday members-only uncensored shows which come up at 10 p.m., and you'll also get access to our Discord server where you can hang out with like-minded individuals.
01:39:43.000So he retired after getting his two weeks at number one and then number 16 on Hot 100, he announced he was retiring from the rap game.
01:39:50.000And I was like, we'll do, I'll do a rap with a high res and we'll include, like the idea is to include like a fake diss where it's like Ben couldn't handle the heat.
01:40:01.000The limelight was too much for him so he had to bow out.
01:40:04.000And then... He starts out with the hoodie on with his back turned, you don't know who it is, turns around, it's like, Ben Shapiro's back.
01:40:11.000I'm just saying, like, we will do a song where I will say something like, Ben Shapiro couldn't handle the rap game, and after one song he got overwhelmed and he bowed out.
01:40:21.000But I told Hi-Rez, we got Eyes of Advice coming out in a week, so maybe after that we'll start working on it.
01:40:27.000And then we have to... We have a couple songs that are already done, we'll probably just be released with the whole album.
01:40:33.000But there's like two more, maybe one, but maybe two more big ones we want to do.
01:40:40.000And Phil and I were just brainstorming.
01:40:41.000Phil had a really good idea for a video.
01:40:45.000And so I think this is going to be sick.
01:41:19.000Like, is it really going to be the old show?
01:41:21.000You think you're going to stay true to the I think, so we had a story we didn't get to, but Dylan Mulvaney went on some unhinged rant about, my 15 minutes are not over, I'm still here, I'm not gone, and I'm like, this guy won't stop.
01:41:34.000Bud Light sponsoring Shane Gillis was like the bell tolls for the Disney.
01:41:40.000Shane Gillis is a funny comic, and he has no problem making jokes.
01:41:47.000He did an Asian-Chinese stereotype joke about- it was really good!
01:41:53.000He did it in the past two specials, I absolutely loved it.
01:41:56.000He said that he took his wife's phone, and he was like, I didn't know her password, but fortunately it was okay, because his face ID, and so then he did a stereotypical Asian face, and then it unlocked!
01:42:09.000And he is such a great comedian because that joke was good.
01:42:13.000He squints his eyes and then the phone opens.
01:42:16.000And then he was like, he ends the joke with, my wife had my phone and I was like, how did you get in my phone?
01:42:30.000These companies know they can't sustain trying to do this ridiculous garbage.
01:42:33.000I'm willing to bet they try to recreate the X-Men of the 90s with a more adult through-line because we're all older, but they're desperately trying to get us to give them money.
01:45:04.000It's an older band, it's established, more people know it, and younger people don't have as much new things because no one wants to invest in a smaller market share.
01:45:22.000These guys, they're 80 years old, still dancing, and they're charging $500 or $1,000 a ticket because their fans are the ones with the money, and they can keep going.
01:45:30.000These young people gotta pay, you know, 50 bucks to go to Drake or whatever they're listening to.
01:45:35.000Well, I guess he charges more because their parents pay, but... Instead of making a new show and new IP for a new generation, They're just regurgitating the old stuff because the older generation is a larger market in terms of disposable income, but also in terms of size.
01:45:51.000In 20 years, I think Gen Z and the Millennials will be comparable in size.
01:45:56.000But I think what we're gonna end up seeing is Gen Alpha.
01:45:59.000And moving forward, the generations are gonna be smaller.
01:46:02.000And that means, very simply, You want to sell products that have the biggest market share, and there are more boomers and millennials and Gen Xers than there are Gen Z and Gen Alpha, so let's go with the older stuff.
01:46:17.000Well, that's like when I was a kid, there was like nothing marketed to Gen X. Everything was marketed to like boomers and then suddenly millennials and we were like, Skipped over, right?
01:47:46.000They might be like, I gotta be honest, you know, if it was me and I owned a historic piece, part of me is like, it's bad to destroy this thing.
01:47:56.000Because even if you don't like it, we want it to exist in a way so people know what it is.
01:48:01.000That being said, you know, I do have some kind of like, man, it's the Seattle Lennon statue.
01:48:09.000For that reason, I think it's probably more valuable to desecrate.
01:48:12.000But the owner might say, I don't want to see it destroyed as much as I'm critical of it.
01:48:16.000Just because we own it doesn't mean we like it.
01:48:18.000But if your intention is to desecrate it, we'd rather see it in a museum.
01:48:21.000And if they said that, I'd say, fair point.
01:48:24.000It should be in a museum with the critique and criticism of communism and what it represents and where the statue came from so that people can learn and understand.
01:48:32.000But I do believe we can convey those ideas with our toppled statue of Lenin with chicken shit all over it.
01:48:40.000And people watching live will ask that question and we'll put a little thing explaining.
01:49:11.000All right, we'll grab some more Super Chats here.
01:49:14.000The Homeless Veteran says, how do I get in the queue to tell my story about being on a mission overseas where we experienced possible UAP UFO engagement and how the U.S.
01:49:23.000Army denies the mission even took place?
01:49:25.000I have receipts and being on the FBI list.
01:49:31.000Because we are launching the Tales from the Inverted World live show, which the purpose of the show is for Shane, co-host and potential guests, to take your calls so you can tell him these stories.
01:49:52.000You then submit your stories to call in and you talk to Shane live on the show.
01:49:58.000The main point of the memberships is that it is the, it, for one, it funds the operation.
01:50:04.000Like, we got, we sell a product, like, here's a thing we made, if you like it, you know, pay ten bucks a month, you get access to all this stuff.
01:50:10.000In terms of screening to submit questions, if we do open inquiries, we get ten thousand emails.
01:50:15.000We can't sift through them, and most of them are not good.
01:50:17.000Some of them are trolls, some of them are insults.
01:50:20.000You respond to one guy and then he insults you.
01:50:23.000I'm saying trying to dodge and filter through that can be tough.
01:50:26.000By making it through members only, you reduce dramatically down to only the authentic core who genuinely care and really want to be involved.
01:50:34.000So, you know, you ever see those people on the street that give out CDs?
01:50:42.000The important lesson, you know, 20 years ago when my friends were in bands trying to promote their music, the important lesson everyone would always tell you is never give the CD out for free.
01:51:16.000All right, Big25 says, Tim, last spring you made the convincing argument that we need to have more kids to outpace the liberals who kill their own, self-sterilize, and choose not to propagate.
01:51:25.000Well, here we are 10 months later adding to the conservative pool.
01:51:29.000Welcome to this brave new world, little Augie.
01:51:45.000It is such a, I think, so I used to come up as Liberty Left-Leaning, but my moral foundations are very much the same.
01:51:52.000I think I, It probably is more related to the questions pertaining to authority, which have gone up, which resulted in a shift towards conservative.
01:52:03.000So my liberty is much higher than my authority, but my authority is now closer to that of a conservative, where it used to be a little bit lower, which probably resulted in me being towards left liberal.
01:52:13.000But I recommend everybody Google search IDR Labs Moral Foundations Test and take it because it's fun.
01:53:06.000Me, I'm like, if someone grabbed an authentic American flag, like, okay, I'll say this.
01:53:11.000If you buy a flag from a grocery store on your own and you desecrate it, destroy it, whatever, that's fine, I don't care, that's yours.
01:53:18.000If a flag was flown legitimately for any reason, at a school even, And it was in storage, and you took it out and tried to use it as a rag, I would physically stop you.
01:53:25.000Yeah, that's- I mean- Unless I had attacked you, I'd walk up to you and I'd say- It seems like there's gotta be some paper towels somewhere.
01:53:30.000Yeah, but it's like, it made me laugh for how, like, disturbing it is, and you think about any other country, if that kind of stuff was happening, you'd be shamed.
01:53:38.000The shame alone would be enough not to do it, and here it's like, people are proud.
01:53:42.000They'll put it on TikTok, doing something like that, and it's like- And nobody cares.
01:53:47.000But I will stress, if someone's like, I got an American flag and I'm gonna burn it, I'm like, okay, you can buy a flag, you can burn it, I don't care that you did that, I personally am not a fan of it, but it's your property, you can speak and express yourself.
01:53:59.000But if you took a flag, like, I'll tell you this, and there are varying degrees of it too, if a flag was purchased and then flown at a school, and then you tried to destroy it, I would be like, no.
01:54:10.000Because that was like a public display that was representative of the community and its values.
01:54:17.000If it was your property, you purchased it, and you're trying to destroy it, I would express displeasure and distaste.
01:54:22.000I would ask you not to do it, but I have limits based on libertarian principles.
01:54:26.000That being said, if this flag was ever flown at a military base for American troops or whatever, we're gonna have to have a civil dispute over whether you have a right to try and desecrate that flag, because I will stop you.
01:55:37.000Trump is nearing life expectancy, but you have Biden going out there today complaining that Navalny died in prison, and that's exactly what he's trying to do to his political opponent.
01:55:45.000He's trying to make his political opponent die in jail.
01:56:25.000You want to know something that's crazy about that?
01:56:26.000When I was talking about Claudia Tenney when she voted for the taxpayer-funded sex changes single-issue vote, she claims she got a call from General Mattis and he asked her to do it.
01:56:35.000That was Mattis who was the mad dog and everything.
01:56:38.000I don't care if the Lord called you, like, you know, that's wrong.
01:56:43.000But if it was him, then they all got to be wrong.
01:56:48.000Anyone of sufficient rank in the military is a politician.
01:56:52.000Any general, if you're a general, probably if you're a colonel, possibly if you're a major.
01:57:00.000One star, two star, three star, four star general, you're a politician, because if you want to get a promotion, there is no way to get around it.
01:57:08.000The reason these guys are doing this stuff isn't because they're true believers, it's because they believe in their careers and they want to continue up the ladder.
01:57:17.000Those four-star generals, right now, there's 44 four-star, you know, in the military brass now.
01:57:52.000Uh, shoutout to Dickie Barrett, of The Defiant, and of the Mighty Mighty Boston's, formerly.
01:57:57.000He was the announcer for Kimmel, and they were friends for a long time, and I think he says they still are, but he got fired because he did not want to get the vaccine, and he was working remotely.
01:58:07.000Jimmy Kimmel went on his show and said that if you are unvaccinated and you go to the hospital, they should not treat you because if you want the horse paste instead, that's what you should get or something like that.
01:58:18.000I think, I want to be very clear, I think he was saying the people who want ivermectin over the vaccine should not get medical treatment.
01:58:27.000And the general concept of, if you don't fall in line with what we think you should be doing, you should die.
01:58:33.000And I'm like, uh, you know your friend of 20 years is right there and he's saying he won't do this?
01:58:39.000Jimmy Kimmel's effectively saying, like, if you go to the hospital sick, you should die.
01:58:48.000And I will also stress, the media love the propaganda of When people were claiming Kimmel might be in the Epstein documents, they all came out and even Bill Maher was like, what?
01:59:00.000He may appear in the Epstein documents, he did not, but like the potentiality was because Information pertaining to the restaurant that he was involved in may have been in there, and Kimmel's name might have come up.
01:59:10.000That being said, anybody insinuating that he was, like, involved with Epstein, like, slim to none, but I mean, he's a celebrity in the periphery of Epstein.
02:00:31.000Alright everybody, if you haven't already, would you kindly smash that like button, subscribe to this channel, share the show with your friends, head over to TimCast.com, click join us!
02:00:40.000Because this show is made possible thanks in part to viewers like you.
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02:00:54.000Mario, do you want to shout anything out?
02:01:09.000Guys, if you want to support me, if you want a real America First candidate, if you want somebody who's going to take on the Uniparty establishment, take on the RINOs, and clean the Republican Party up first before we go after the left, Please support my campaign.