TRIGGERnometry - June 11, 2025


Who's Really In Charge? - Roseanne Barr


Episode Stats

Length

1 hour and 13 minutes

Words per Minute

140.6517

Word Count

10,289

Sentence Count

873

Misogynist Sentences

22

Hate Speech Sentences

37


Summary

Summaries generated with gmurro/bart-large-finetuned-filtered-spotify-podcast-summ .

Transcript

Transcript generated with Whisper (turbo).
Misogyny classifications generated with MilaNLProc/bert-base-uncased-ear-misogyny .
Hate speech classifications generated with facebook/roberta-hate-speech-dynabench-r4-target .
00:00:00.860 Who's they? Who are you talking about?
00:00:02.520 The owners of the world.
00:00:04.280 The owners of the world? Who's that?
00:00:05.820 The royals.
00:00:07.520 You know, we have royals in Britain.
00:00:09.060 They're really not very powerful or impressive and definitely not superhuman.
00:00:13.240 Yes, they are.
00:00:14.680 What about Harry?
00:00:16.120 Well, this generation.
00:00:19.220 That's my point.
00:00:20.840 I wish he would toughen up a little bit.
00:00:23.980 Get some balls there.
00:00:25.500 Come on, Trump.
00:00:26.300 That is a critique of Trump that I have never heard, that he doesn't have enough balls.
00:00:32.460 He's got to get his balls back.
00:00:34.500 What? Where's it? Hang on. Really?
00:00:37.800 Why did I get off? I love hearing myself.
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00:01:13.740 Roseanne?
00:01:14.760 Hi.
00:01:15.080 Thank you so much for letting us in your home, giving us your time.
00:01:20.100 It's a real pleasure to have you on the show.
00:01:21.660 It's a pleasure to be on your show.
00:01:23.820 I enjoy your show a lot.
00:01:25.700 Well, thank you. That's very kind.
00:01:27.220 You've had an incredible life, you know, amazing work.
00:01:32.020 You ran for president as a socialist.
00:01:34.420 Yeah.
00:01:34.800 You've changed a lot of things in your life.
00:01:37.060 I have, yeah.
00:01:37.520 You've been canceled like hell, all kinds of things.
00:01:40.460 Tell us a little bit about your story.
00:01:42.940 What part?
00:01:43.540 Well, from the beginning, I guess, you grew up in Salt Lake City.
00:01:46.260 Yeah.
00:01:48.220 Grew up in Salt Lake City, a really peculiar place.
00:01:54.040 One of a kind.
00:01:55.720 There's nothing on earth like it.
00:01:57.460 I've been all over the place, and there's just nothing like it.
00:02:01.480 It was a great testing ground for me.
00:02:05.760 And I say, because God has a sense of humor, he put my Orthodox Jewish family there in Salt Lake City, Utah, to kind of mold me so that I could become a famous comedian, I think.
00:02:20.000 Because I always had the stranger in a strange land thing going on, and the outsider view, you know.
00:02:29.420 And just things that I noticed in that culture, the Salt Lake City culture at the time, which is way different now.
00:02:37.460 And just try to deal with it.
00:02:41.980 Just try to accept reality for reality and not try to make any sense of it.
00:02:54.180 But in jokes, you could make sense of it.
00:02:57.180 That was the only way I could make sense of it.
00:02:59.900 It was just ridiculous.
00:03:01.200 Like, all of American culture is so hilariously ridiculous.
00:03:07.400 And the jokes just write themselves.
00:03:10.440 And in Utah there, they kind of wrote themselves.
00:03:13.240 I had a very funny family, and jokes were king.
00:03:16.800 And if you told the right joke at the right time, like when my dad's fist was about here, and you could get out a good joke, he wouldn't hit you.
00:03:27.760 If you could make dad laugh before he slapped you in the head or whatever he did, it was a lifesaver.
00:03:37.500 So I kind of learned that.
00:03:39.480 And I just learned to funny my way through things.
00:03:45.120 You know, I always was the clown.
00:03:48.340 But also I was very hermit-like.
00:03:53.800 I liked to live in my head.
00:03:55.640 And I liked to be alone and think.
00:04:00.000 I really liked to think.
00:04:03.280 And I still do like to be alone and think.
00:04:06.800 It's fun to think.
00:04:10.000 People maybe forgot how fun it is to think and to imagine and invent and create just in your own mind without any help from anything.
00:04:20.880 Any other people talking or looking up other people talking.
00:04:25.520 But just to do it from your own life or experience by yourself.
00:04:33.360 There's nothing more fun.
00:04:35.000 And I just see, you know, people are, I think they're afraid to be alone to go there because it's all so stark and sometimes terrifying to have self-reflection and want self-reflection because that's where good jokes come from.
00:04:54.560 You know, you know, so comics, I think, by and large are kind of isolated personalities with a lot of tics.
00:05:02.600 But, yeah, we like to write jokes and think and not the way people think comics are.
00:05:14.740 Yeah.
00:05:15.340 I mean, some comics are party folk, but their comedy is different.
00:05:22.900 I think the comedy is different from somebody who sits and thinks than somebody who parties it up.
00:05:34.140 But, yeah, Roseanne, you were in the comedy store in L.A. working with some of the greatest comedians of all time.
00:05:43.480 I know it.
00:05:44.300 It's amazing to me.
00:05:46.680 Amazing.
00:05:47.700 Oh, my God.
00:05:49.380 I still can't believe it.
00:05:50.800 That's a lot of things I like to sit and think about.
00:05:53.420 The people that came in and out of my life, that each one was a giant, and I was friends with these giants, you know, that, you know, it was an amazing thing.
00:06:09.220 But, yeah, the comedy store, I got to meet and befriend Richard Pryor and Dick Gregory and, oh, my God, I'm forgetting everybody's name, Phyllis Diller, Rodney Dangerfield, Sam Kennison, Dice Clay, just everybody in my generation of comedy.
00:06:37.400 It's amazing.
00:06:38.840 It's just amazing to me that I got to ask advice on comedy from Rodney Dangerfield.
00:06:46.260 It's just amazing.
00:06:48.080 And what was Richard Pryor like?
00:06:50.800 Because when you think about people who've changed the art form, there's very few people you can actually say changed the art form.
00:06:57.680 Lenny Bruce originally.
00:06:58.980 Yeah, Lenny Bruce, yeah.
00:07:00.300 But then Pryor, it was pre and after.
00:07:03.220 Yeah, well, he's the one that made me want to be a comic, was Richard Pryor.
00:07:08.440 When I saw him on the Ed Sullivan show as a girl, I knew exactly what he was doing.
00:07:15.040 And I look back at now and go, how did I know that?
00:07:18.760 I wasn't that smart, but I just knew it.
00:07:24.220 Without words, I couldn't explain what the words were that I was thinking.
00:07:28.200 But I knew that he had, I knew he was fighting from the inside out, not the outside in.
00:07:38.100 And I went, I can do that.
00:07:41.100 I could do that.
00:07:42.200 And, you know, when I look at what he did, I mean, he changed the country.
00:07:49.380 He changed the culture.
00:07:50.460 He changed the world.
00:07:51.900 He really, really did.
00:07:53.220 Because he took on the stuff that America didn't want to talk about and just made it funnier than hell.
00:08:02.040 And I would meet people, because I traveled the country, and I talked to a lot of people, and I would meet people who, when I was doing interviews and stuff, people who don't like black people at all, you know, real racist types, and ask them who's their favorite comic, they'd say Richard Pryor.
00:08:25.680 And it was, I was, you know, kind of doing a study on his, the effect he had on American culture.
00:08:38.780 And then I was also friendly with him.
00:08:42.720 And I have a picture of him, and he's very skinny and old, and he's on his way out there, and after he burned up, you know.
00:08:50.820 And I was eight and a half months pregnant, I was huge, and he said, you want to take a picture and tell me to sit on his lap?
00:08:59.100 And I go, you're going to, if I sit on you, you will die even faster, because, you know, I'll crush you to death.
00:09:07.100 He goes, no, you won't.
00:09:08.180 And then I saw, I sat on him, and they took the picture, and his face in the picture, he looks like, he's like, why would I tell her to sit on me?
00:09:17.700 And also, Kinison, as well, is somebody else who changed comedy.
00:09:24.440 Yeah, he did.
00:09:25.780 Absolutely.
00:09:26.620 I mean, when you talk about forces of nature, there was no one quite like Sam Kinison.
00:09:30.960 No, nobody was like that.
00:09:32.560 Boy, he was, he was a tornado.
00:09:35.220 Just a tornado.
00:09:36.920 I saw a battle on stage at the comedy store between him, Harry Basile, and I think, to me still, one of the greatest comics I've ever seen.
00:09:47.260 And that left comedy and moved to Israel, but he was just great, and his name was Jackie Diamond.
00:09:54.420 That was his stage name.
00:09:56.960 But he had the greatest act.
00:09:59.520 He was only 22 years old, and I think Sam was jealous of him, and he kept on attacking him.
00:10:07.180 And then he and Harry Basile turned on Sam Kinison on stage, and it was like a blowout fight, and people were running out, and it was just great.
00:10:19.340 It was the greatest thing that happened at the comedy store, I think.
00:10:24.340 Yeah.
00:10:24.980 You know what's really interesting?
00:10:27.560 When you talk about those characters, they were wild people.
00:10:31.800 They were genuinely wild, and I look at the characters.
00:10:34.880 They were all bipolar or borderline.
00:10:37.460 Most comics are, either bipolar, borderline, sociopaths, or something.
00:10:44.120 There's something wrong with all of us.
00:10:47.100 We're not normal people.
00:10:48.780 I quite agree, but it's also as well, we don't seem to be as wild as we were back then.
00:10:55.280 Or do you disagree, or do you think it's a different thing?
00:10:58.200 Yeah, it seems it's different.
00:10:59.740 People are more like, well, I've got to keep my shirt button because, you know, somebody's looking at me, and I might get a special.
00:11:07.720 They're always looking for the special, or the show, or, you know, the bump up, or, you know, I've got to be on my P's and Q's, and I have to do comedy in this certain way.
00:11:17.840 And you can see that they're working for, you know, a future in comedy.
00:11:26.360 But not back then.
00:11:28.540 Back then, it was like, burn the whole son of a bitch down.
00:11:32.120 I don't care if I get paid next week.
00:11:34.680 I'm here to just tear it apart.
00:11:36.600 So it was different.
00:11:38.040 And Paul Mooney was there, too.
00:11:40.080 He was, he's the one that really laid the groundwork for Richard Pryor behind the scenes because he wrote on all those Norman Lear shows, like Sanford, Son of Jeffersons, all the good times, all the ones that were, you know, the black family.
00:11:56.840 And he really laid the groundwork for Richard Pryor and wrote with him, too.
00:12:02.320 He was a great, great comic, one of the greatest.
00:12:06.380 I just have to say that about Paul, and he was a good friend of mine, too.
00:12:10.120 But, yeah, there were people then that wanted to burn down all the horrible bullshit.
00:12:21.800 The comics that were like, yeah, well, we're supposed to die like Lenny Bruce.
00:12:26.140 That was it in our heads.
00:12:28.060 We're supposed to be warriors that come out and do too much of everything and then die, you know, in our bathroom because that's the rock and roll of it.
00:12:38.900 Just like people that were rock and roll stars that used to come to the comedy store and hang out.
00:12:43.380 They knew they were supposed to party until they, you know, died when they were 27 of an overdose.
00:12:50.180 It was just part of the culture.
00:12:51.800 You were just going for it.
00:12:54.020 You weren't like, let me plan my next special so that I can get another special.
00:12:58.640 You know, it was just pure rock and roll to the bone, you know.
00:13:03.620 And what bullshit did you want to burn down, Roseanne?
00:13:07.960 Everything.
00:13:10.720 Pretty much.
00:13:11.560 I felt like it was my turn as everything that I am, every minority and hushed up gender and everything else.
00:13:30.240 I was just on the verge and I told you I was very political.
00:13:36.360 I was in a woman's commune at the time when my kids were little and, you know, we were fighting for stuff.
00:13:46.780 You know, we were fighting, you know, we were radical feminists and so we were fighting for social change and change in laws too.
00:13:57.320 Like the Equal Rights Amendment was one of those things, which went by the wayside, by the way.
00:14:03.300 But, you know, and I was like a hippie, you know.
00:14:13.540 In the 60s and 70s, I lived on a commune up in the mountains of Colorado.
00:14:19.000 And so I had that, whatever it is, that just, you know, want to go to shop at Goodwill and, you know, write a poem that pisses people off.
00:14:29.680 Wash dishes for $50 a week, 12 hours a day, six days a week.
00:14:35.920 So, you know, a working class tumbler.
00:14:40.920 Like to get in fights.
00:14:42.900 Like to go on top of the place I worked in Georgetown there when they'd have the skiers come down.
00:14:50.220 The big haspen skiers would come down there and we worked in a big bar that had a dance floor and bands and all kinds of stuff.
00:14:58.300 And they'd come for their opre ski, as they called it.
00:15:04.920 And we were just resentful, horrible, like, you know, scroungers from dirt poor and working in there.
00:15:14.440 And so we'd go up on the roof and shovel down huge amounts of snow on them while they was waiting in line there.
00:15:23.440 Just horrible people doing horrible, hippie, dirty, hippie shit.
00:15:30.540 It's interesting because you say you've always been political and coming from that sort of worldview.
00:15:36.460 You've ended up in a different place.
00:15:39.160 Well, yeah, I'm 72.
00:15:40.960 Hopefully you grow up somewhere along the way, you know.
00:15:44.520 And is that how you see it?
00:15:45.980 That kind of hippie phase was being young and naive and kind of a bit dumb and now you've wisened up?
00:15:53.560 Well, I mean, I was also like, I had a lot of mental health issues.
00:16:00.940 It wasn't just, so I was always fighting a war inside, you know, and it always led me to put myself in unsafe and dangerous places.
00:16:10.360 And just, I lived a crazy, ridiculous life.
00:16:13.960 Like, on my way to work, I had hitchhiked to work.
00:16:17.440 It was three miles.
00:16:18.380 And on my way there, I go, fuck it, I don't want to go to work.
00:16:21.300 I'm going to New York and go.
00:16:23.420 You know, with no money, no shoes, nothing.
00:16:29.880 Thank God I lived.
00:16:32.080 But there were some scary times there where, you know, I always say, you know, people go, how come you got so much swag on stage?
00:16:40.160 I got swag because I had talked my way out of getting killed a number of times in my life.
00:16:47.280 So, you know, that's where my swag comes from.
00:16:49.920 But that was all just dirty, hippie, street-fighting, working-class shit that I did as an Orthodox Jew in a Mormon neighborhood.
00:17:00.740 Just crazy shit.
00:17:03.760 But, yeah, then I got in this women's collective and saw things started to change when Reagan was elected.
00:17:16.100 In 1980, things were changing.
00:17:18.280 Like, first of all, I never had seen any homeless people.
00:17:22.020 And I worked on Colfax Avenue.
00:17:24.560 Our bookstore was called the Woman-to-Woman Bookstore.
00:17:27.360 And we had within our bookstore, oh, thousands of books written by women all over the world.
00:17:34.820 Socialists, of course.
00:17:37.600 And so people will come in there to check out books and buy books and stuff like that.
00:17:44.900 But I lived on Colfax Avenue.
00:17:46.800 I mean, we worked on Colfax.
00:17:48.140 And I had never seen any homeless people because we had that social safety net.
00:17:53.660 And by 1981, sitting there at my perch at that woman's bookstore, I started to see all these old women on the streets with no place to go.
00:18:02.580 And I was shocked that that was happening in America.
00:18:06.000 And we tried to help.
00:18:07.640 We tried to rent a building next to us because we thought, well, there's, you know, three or four or five of them.
00:18:13.860 We can give them a bed.
00:18:14.880 We can rent a place on our bookstore and they wouldn't have to be homeless.
00:18:19.260 And then it just was everybody.
00:18:23.320 When Reagan shut down mental health problems, and then it was just all the violent, schizophrenic people that weren't being treated all over that same street.
00:18:35.380 And I was like, what are you going to do about this?
00:18:38.900 So I started writing and getting in trouble, you know, in independent magazines and saying things.
00:18:48.940 And, you know, always a big mouth.
00:18:51.240 I always want to poke the bear.
00:18:53.280 And that led me to go want to do comedy.
00:18:58.660 I was also, at the time, a cocktail waitress.
00:19:01.840 So it's, like, kind of evident of the fact that I had lived many lives at once because I had a lot of different parts to myself.
00:19:12.300 And one was, you know, part of me was a cocktail waitress.
00:19:15.380 Part of me was a brawler.
00:19:18.300 Part of me was a housewife.
00:19:20.220 And part of me was a revolutionary writer.
00:19:24.100 And part of me wanted to be a stand-up comic.
00:19:26.840 And I did all of them at the same time, which is crazy.
00:19:32.600 I never needed any sleep.
00:19:35.100 I would sleep, like, four hours a night, and I was great.
00:19:38.120 Because I was, you know, dealing with severe mental health issues that I didn't even know I had.
00:19:45.240 But they all end up serving me.
00:19:47.000 I mean, I went to therapy for 15 years to integrate my sides and parts.
00:19:53.320 And it all ended up serving me really well.
00:19:56.040 That, you know, I can bake a hell of a pie and write and write.
00:20:01.240 And I can cut grass.
00:20:02.780 It all, and I have it in one life.
00:20:06.220 Now, I remember doing it.
00:20:08.200 I have integrated my parts.
00:20:14.020 And I think, you know, it's after a lifetime of trying to heal and trying to get better.
00:20:20.940 And, you know, I did it.
00:20:23.760 So, of course, I always say if I could do it, anyone can.
00:20:27.680 It was long and hard.
00:20:29.680 And doing the sitcom in the middle of it, I don't even remember a day of it anymore since, you know, all the trauma I went through of that.
00:20:40.500 But I just let it go.
00:20:43.280 I let everything go to go to a new place where the only thing that matters is being happy every day.
00:20:56.140 So I never knew any of that crap when I was coming up.
00:20:58.940 I never even knew what being happy was.
00:21:03.460 So, yeah, I've learned a lot, but I'm old.
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00:22:30.600 Well, you mentioned writing and the sitcom.
00:22:35.500 It was one of the most successful sitcoms in history.
00:22:37.860 Yeah.
00:22:38.580 It still is.
00:22:40.280 It's the most...
00:22:42.720 I think it's in the top three sitcoms in 150 countries still, which allows me to live so well.
00:22:53.040 You know, I get residuals from it and it's still the number one rated, what do you call it, rerun in several countries.
00:23:08.160 Why do you think that is?
00:23:09.220 What does it hit?
00:23:10.500 What is it about it that people connect with, do you think?
00:23:13.020 It's just about everyday life and real people and, you know, the fight inside and the fight outside.
00:23:22.180 Everything's about that to me.
00:23:24.880 And sometimes they come up against each other and sometimes they congeal and they're the same thing and you get a big bang for your buck.
00:23:33.080 But I think just that it was about regular, imperfect people who love each other, even though sometimes they can't stand each other either.
00:23:46.380 Just like regular families.
00:23:48.940 You know, I wanted to show a real family that I grew up with.
00:23:54.160 They were all flawed, but, you know, they'd all have...
00:23:59.120 Even if they were horrible, there would be some kind of underlying connection there.
00:24:06.120 Even if it was backward and hideous, you know, where people choose to stay, your boat is where you stay, you know.
00:24:15.360 I think that's something noble about people.
00:24:19.320 And, Roseanne, I'm looking at America now, it's in a strange place, isn't it?
00:24:27.840 Oh, yeah.
00:24:28.440 Hell, yeah.
00:24:29.260 I think we came this close to losing our country.
00:24:33.500 How far was that bullet from that year?
00:24:36.180 We came less than an inch away from losing our republic, our constitution, our way of life, our lives.
00:24:45.520 Yeah, I think we're in a real weird place.
00:24:49.320 But, thank God, I think the right thing happened.
00:24:54.280 To me, it's that, you know, I see it through my own goggles, but I think it was a good thing that America said,
00:25:03.900 no, we're not going any further down this road.
00:25:06.100 And I was as vocal as I could be, knowing so much about the left, and I was as vocal as I could be to say,
00:25:18.060 hey, you know what, when you really disrobe it, it's an ugly friggin' corpse.
00:25:24.180 It isn't that pretty young body.
00:25:27.800 What do you mean by that, Roseanne?
00:25:31.160 What, the left thing?
00:25:32.700 Yeah.
00:25:32.900 Well, it's a mind control program for one thing, just like the far right is a mind control program.
00:25:48.140 You know, I say that the, it doesn't, it's very authoritarian and looks at any kind of dissent as damnation.
00:26:01.720 And I include churches in this too.
00:26:04.220 Two, there's no dissent, and there's a lot of self-righteousness which allows you to discard the human rights of other people who don't think like you.
00:26:18.240 Two, so it's a grotesque arrogance that's inhuman with a sneer on its face.
00:26:26.020 And three, it has a loathing for Jews.
00:26:37.060 So those three things are the same three things that make up fascism, and they're just Nazis.
00:26:44.480 The left are Nazis, and the far right are Nazis too.
00:26:49.700 And that's my humble opinion, living 72 years.
00:26:53.640 They get paid from the same people, and I really would love to see some disclosure on that.
00:26:59.500 If there are any, I know that there's, I know a lot of Anons, and I have for a long time, and I'm like a non-anon-anon.
00:27:07.000 Because I research, and I'd love to see where these people who are trying to destroy our culture and our country with their anti-Semitism, which is a tool of power.
00:27:22.100 And, you know, they already destroyed the Democrats with it, and that's why I thought the vote for Trump was a rejection by Americans of anti-Semitism.
00:27:33.320 And now they're trying to take down the right with it.
00:27:36.020 But I'd love to see disclosure of these mouthpieces that the Jews, the Jews, the Jews.
00:27:41.820 I'd like to see who sponsors them, because I'm damn sure it's the same on the left as it is on the right.
00:27:49.360 But the sad thing about the anti-Semitism stuff is that that is how you destroy a republic, particularly a Christian republic.
00:28:02.460 That's how you destroy it.
00:28:04.000 And I hate seeing that happen here, and it terrifies me, because I like that this is a Christian republic, because Jews do really well and are protected in Christian democracies all through history with some bleeps.
00:28:22.760 You could call it that.
00:28:24.340 Well, I mean, but then you have to look at what happened.
00:28:28.020 They overthrew the republic to get to the Nazism.
00:28:31.120 And I don't want that here.
00:28:34.000 And I think that that's what they're working on.
00:28:36.860 Who's they?
00:28:37.560 Who are you talking about?
00:28:38.400 Who's funding these people?
00:28:39.120 The owners of the world.
00:28:40.720 The owners of the world.
00:28:41.860 Who's that?
00:28:43.300 You want me to say who the owners of the world are?
00:28:46.020 This is where everyone starts asking me.
00:28:48.200 I love this, that you would ask me that.
00:28:50.700 I might have to have a cigarette.
00:28:52.200 It makes me nervous to say who they are.
00:28:56.200 First of all, I've been saying that for 30 years, and people, when I tell them, their eyes just go dead.
00:29:02.140 Because they cannot handle the truth.
00:29:06.320 Remember that Jack Nicholson movie?
00:29:08.400 You can't handle the truth.
00:29:11.380 You don't want it.
00:29:13.020 But it's so obvious that I just will say it.
00:29:16.020 The owners of the world are the royals, kings, queens, dukes, duchess, imams, popes, wizards, that own every single dime on earth and bank at the Bank of International Settlements.
00:29:34.020 That's the owners of the world who decide every war and arm both sides, because they make money.
00:29:43.440 They're arms dealers.
00:29:44.980 They're Nazi arms dealers.
00:29:47.980 They also make prisons.
00:29:50.080 They also make, you know, poisons.
00:29:53.420 They're invested in depopulation.
00:29:57.120 The W.E.F., who, all those bullshit things out of the U.N.
00:30:01.920 They need to depopulate this planet of useless eaters, which they call us, because they have no place to ride their horsies.
00:30:11.980 And conduct their fox hunts or their people hunts or whatever it is they do that we all really know about but ignore.
00:30:26.320 The reason that the vampire stories are so popular, take a look at that, too.
00:30:34.160 It's evil incarnate, and the owners of the world embody it.
00:30:40.220 And the world is going exactly like they want it to go, like they planned it for generations to go.
00:30:49.260 And I intend always, as a Jewish girl, to be a ranch in that works.
00:30:58.180 I want to be.
00:31:01.760 What?
00:31:04.240 What did I get off?
00:31:06.200 I love hearing myself.
00:31:07.860 My kids won't listen to me anymore, so I have to do interviews so I can tell people how I feel.
00:31:15.380 Nobody listens to me.
00:31:16.880 But, yeah, kings and queens.
00:31:18.760 Okay.
00:31:19.800 Does that, like, register that people who are superhuman exist in our gestalt?
00:31:29.000 We go, oh, the royals.
00:31:30.700 There's going to be a royal wedding.
00:31:33.680 The royals.
00:31:34.980 They have royal blood.
00:31:37.420 They've handed down their royal blood, and they've owned everything for centuries because they're royals.
00:31:46.060 They're royals.
00:31:48.480 You know, we have royals in Britain.
00:31:50.220 They're really not very powerful or impressive and definitely not superhuman.
00:31:54.040 Yes, they are.
00:31:58.720 What about Harry?
00:32:00.760 Well, this generation is.
00:32:04.140 That's my point.
00:32:05.260 No, but, no, no, no.
00:32:06.360 They're fucking useless.
00:32:07.740 But they're not useless because they still, um.
00:32:11.780 Okay, okay, okay, okay.
00:32:16.460 I see what you mean, and I don't disagree because after the queen died, it did change.
00:32:24.020 Yes.
00:32:24.740 Definitely.
00:32:24.960 Yeah, it changed with Trump.
00:32:28.860 But I don't know if you know all this stuff, but anyway.
00:32:32.400 I'm curious to hear your take on it.
00:32:35.180 Well, other people say it better than me because I can't remember dates and stuff like that.
00:32:39.780 But we, and this will sound crazy, but you should listen to other people who put it better than me about how we came back under the control of the British crown in the late 1800s and how we still are.
00:32:57.140 And so is Canada.
00:32:59.180 Little more than colonies till Trump.
00:33:02.280 Our tax money goes to them.
00:33:04.100 The bar, the American bar is the British accredited, uh, whatever.
00:33:10.620 We are still under the, uh, control of the, of the, uh, city of London and British UK power.
00:33:23.540 I so wish that was true.
00:33:27.040 I'm looking around at what the UK has become.
00:33:29.940 You have no idea how fucked that country is.
00:33:31.920 No, I do know it's fucked, but.
00:33:37.920 It's not totally fucked.
00:33:40.180 I hope so.
00:33:43.280 We want the good parts of it not to be fucked.
00:33:46.520 That's right.
00:33:46.900 That's what we want, but the bad parts of it are fucked now, and there's going to have to be a huge change, and the people are going to have to demand it, and it's the same here.
00:33:59.900 But up until the part where everybody went, hey, this is fucked, it was really fucked.
00:34:07.160 Yeah.
00:34:07.640 They were, they were allowing rape, grooming and rape gangs, and the police were protecting them, you know, and, you know, the BBC, and even back to Margaret Thatcher, they were protecting the worst fucking elements in the world.
00:34:26.720 And, uh, you know, I mean, I don't want to say too much about the Epstein thing, but, you know, that, that was also, they had a royal.
00:34:39.080 Well, they did.
00:34:39.920 Helping them do that.
00:34:41.600 So, it may not be apparent, but also when you say the royal family, you have to say standard oil.
00:34:50.360 Standard oil, like the standard, the standard oil, my grandfather used to work, this probably shouldn't be the right person.
00:34:55.960 Of course you did, mate.
00:34:57.240 But I mean, the, the, Britain, the British, the, whatever, kingdom.
00:35:04.740 Yes.
00:35:05.400 They want to make a big comeback.
00:35:07.620 Of course.
00:35:08.000 They want all that oil, so they're not powerless.
00:35:10.760 They want all the oil in the world, and they pretty much will get it wherever they're going to go.
00:35:17.280 But if they have to partner with China and Iran and Venezuela, they'll do it.
00:35:22.700 But they don't care about their country.
00:35:26.660 They're globalists.
00:35:28.280 Look at Prince or King Philip or whatever his friggin' name is.
00:35:31.940 King Charles.
00:35:33.000 Yes.
00:35:33.980 He's nothing but a low-life globalist.
00:35:37.780 He, he's supposed to be the head of the Church of England, right?
00:35:41.880 Yes, indeed.
00:35:42.740 I won't go into more of it, but.
00:35:46.900 Come back to your political journey, because you don't sound like someone who's still a hippie in a, in a, in a women's commune.
00:35:52.800 You've, you, as I alluded to earlier, you've kind of evolved over time.
00:35:58.140 But I am.
00:35:58.920 I knew when I was a hippie in a women's commune that, you know, that the owners of the world, the royal classes, the privileged classes, were fake.
00:36:14.380 And, you know, probably me and my sister used to play the Queen of Russia versus the Queen of England, because we, we have Russian background, Lithuanian too.
00:36:28.340 And so we'd always have a war between those two queens, because they weren't human to us.
00:36:35.080 They were superhuman.
00:36:37.180 They were queens.
00:36:38.820 Yeah.
00:36:39.120 But we'd say, she's nothing but trailer trash.
00:36:42.800 Look at her kids.
00:36:44.260 You know, we'd say that.
00:36:46.380 But.
00:36:51.860 We've accepted that we have owners.
00:36:55.320 We've have accepted.
00:36:57.120 And that's why I said it that way.
00:36:58.560 We've all accepted.
00:36:59.820 Oh, yeah, we have owners.
00:37:01.800 You know.
00:37:03.900 The deep state, the royals, whoever pulls the, you know.
00:37:09.120 Turns the switches and pulls the buttons that take away everything we have.
00:37:13.520 We know we can't do nothing about it.
00:37:16.780 We all know that.
00:37:18.780 I mean, we can squawk and make a fuss.
00:37:22.460 But, you know, then, like in Canada, we'll just cancel your bank accounts if you protest too much against them.
00:37:28.660 They're a huge, in-power network of money and slavers and people who don't mean well for the rest of us.
00:37:41.900 Everyone should know that much, but they don't.
00:37:46.160 They think, oh, yeah, if I met the queen, she'd be real nice to me.
00:37:50.520 I don't know.
00:37:52.860 It just drives me crazy.
00:37:54.840 Because people can't clearly see how enslaved we are mentally, psychically, spiritually, and physically.
00:38:02.560 What do you mean, Rosa?
00:38:03.460 Enslaved how?
00:38:04.700 In every possible way.
00:38:06.340 Less so here in America now.
00:38:11.240 But we were really headed for it.
00:38:13.540 And if What's-Your-Name-Ed won, I'd probably be in prison.
00:38:18.240 Really?
00:38:18.840 Why would you have been in prison?
00:38:20.040 Because I would have said something nasty about the Democrats.
00:38:23.540 Do you really think that we would have been at that point where you would have said something nasty about the Democrats,
00:38:29.140 and that would have been a prison sentence?
00:38:31.960 I wouldn't doubt it.
00:38:32.840 It'd depend on how brave I got.
00:38:35.720 Yeah.
00:38:37.200 It's already putting everybody else in prison.
00:38:40.260 How do you mean?
00:38:43.920 Have you heard about Tina Peters being in prison?
00:38:47.120 A Gold Star mom who actually just did her job in Colorado with the voting machines,
00:38:54.540 and they imprisoned her.
00:38:55.400 They've imprisoned a lot of conservative grandmas who spoke out and didn't agree with the vote tallies.
00:39:04.800 They went into prison, too.
00:39:06.720 And they're just gulags.
00:39:08.620 I mean, this country, we are, in my opinion, this is a Marxist revolution.
00:39:16.480 It's a color revolution, and they almost won.
00:39:21.320 So when you're saying a Marxist revolution, you mean that they want socialism in the United States of America?
00:39:30.300 No, socialism, I was all for socialism.
00:39:33.240 I'm all for a safety net and things that people aren't forced to do.
00:39:39.880 Of course.
00:39:40.320 But what I mean by socialism is abolishing capitalism, not having things like a welfare state or, you know, free to enter health care systems.
00:39:50.900 And I don't see that as socialism.
00:39:52.740 I think socialism is a huge grift.
00:39:57.980 I think it's the opposite side of the coin as vampire capitalism, because every time things, they build up a bubble, Marxism comes along and the bubble bursts, and then the richest people move in and buy everything for pennies.
00:40:16.880 So I think they work like this, and even Marx says that.
00:40:22.640 He was hired to write it by a capitalist.
00:40:25.360 He was hired to make up Marxism by a capitalist.
00:40:29.380 And, you know, he—I won't even go into that.
00:40:33.080 But the fallacy of Marxism is being a feminist.
00:40:37.540 The French feminist wrote a critique of Marxism in the 60s, which said, Marxism doesn't even count the unpaid labor of women.
00:40:49.160 That's why it's bullshit.
00:40:51.400 It's just another scam, another grift to rob the poor and move money up to the rich.
00:40:57.980 And that is what it does.
00:40:59.440 That's what COVID did.
00:41:01.400 Yeah, agreed, agreed.
00:41:02.960 And that was by Marxists in our government and one-world globalists through the WHO and all that shit.
00:41:12.160 They had it all planned.
00:41:13.500 They just care about money and nothing else.
00:41:16.580 Wherever there's money, that's where they go and get it.
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00:42:34.800 When you talk about the Democrats, one of the things I always found very sinister was
00:42:40.220 these very, very progressive policies and values that they put in.
00:42:44.840 And the moment you started to question or challenge that, it could be that would be framed as hate speech.
00:42:51.140 Right.
00:42:51.580 And racist.
00:42:51.960 Oh, they had it all sewed up.
00:42:53.440 And it became like a game of chess.
00:42:56.940 But you didn't realize when you were playing the game with them that they were playing something else entirely.
00:43:02.220 I know what they're playing.
00:43:03.600 It's a grift.
00:43:04.400 Because all their USAID proved it, too.
00:43:09.760 And I've been saying it for a really long time.
00:43:12.520 Everybody goes, oh, you're crazy.
00:43:14.040 Okay, whatever.
00:43:15.320 I don't even care.
00:43:16.460 I just pity them that they can't even see.
00:43:21.160 But as they were grifting the American working class's tax dollars for their fake NGOs that
00:43:29.700 go back to them all that money, they were all socialists.
00:43:34.240 It's just a grift to get them paid.
00:43:37.340 They don't do a damn thing.
00:43:38.900 Hillary Clinton built 13 houses, 30 houses in Haiti with those billions.
00:43:43.660 It's a grift to get the money laundered and back in their pockets.
00:43:50.320 And I've said it for a long time.
00:43:52.040 And I saw it firsthand as a candidate for president.
00:43:57.080 They are taking public money and putting it in private pockets.
00:44:01.240 That's what the left is all about.
00:44:03.200 That's what Marxism is all about.
00:44:05.360 That's what their socialist horseshit is all about.
00:44:08.180 Nobody sees any of that money.
00:44:12.140 Nobody in the real world sees any of it.
00:44:15.940 They do because they're privileged, grifting, lying criminals.
00:44:22.280 That's what they are.
00:44:24.160 They're a class unto themselves.
00:44:27.720 And you sound very relieved that President Trump won the last election.
00:44:32.400 Hell yeah.
00:44:33.080 I've prayed for it every day for seven years or more.
00:44:36.700 I've done everything I could to help him be, you know, for him.
00:44:46.720 Because I know exactly what needs to be done and he's doing it.
00:44:51.160 And I wish he would toughen up a little bit.
00:44:54.240 Get some balls there.
00:44:55.780 Come on, Trump.
00:44:57.500 That is a critique of Trump that I have never heard.
00:45:01.760 That he doesn't have enough balls.
00:45:03.260 He's got to get his balls back.
00:45:05.500 What?
00:45:05.880 Where's it?
00:45:06.600 Hang on.
00:45:07.680 Really?
00:45:08.800 I've told him that myself many times.
00:45:11.360 In person, eye to eye.
00:45:13.400 What do you think he needs to do that he's not doing?
00:45:15.860 As I've said over many years, where's the fucking arrest of these criminals that were traitors to our country and to our troops and to our people?
00:45:27.640 I think it's a traitorous act that our Congress is allowing our veterans to sleep on the street.
00:45:38.340 That is traitorous and they should be charged.
00:45:43.900 They should all be punished.
00:45:47.040 People should be called out for their being traitors to our troops and our people and our parents that sent their kids over there to fight and die for this country.
00:45:57.160 And then the first thing that happened when I was running for president, I said this, isn't it funny that the single mothers of the heroes that went to fight overseas, they're the first ones that lost their fucking houses.
00:46:12.380 They're the first ones because of that grift, that fake bubble Marxist burst grift.
00:46:21.860 This is a whole new time now.
00:46:24.240 So I'm talking about the past and how I used to see it.
00:46:27.420 Now that I'm an old woman and, you know, I'm more calm and I'm less angry.
00:46:35.200 Har, har, har.
00:46:35.920 But, I mean, I see we're moving through space at such speed to, I really think, a golden age.
00:46:47.460 And I just have to remember, let the past go.
00:46:50.800 Don't be so angry.
00:46:51.860 Yeah, we know what happened.
00:46:53.060 We saw it happen.
00:46:55.720 We saw what they did to Trump.
00:46:58.320 I saw what they did to me, which was all bullshit.
00:47:00.580 But I feel like they were experimenting on me to do it on to Trump and all the other people they did it to.
00:47:06.680 So many people lost everything for saying they don't like Democrats.
00:47:12.740 But now it's all over.
00:47:15.460 It's a whole new time.
00:47:16.880 And, you know, I just wish it would come faster.
00:47:19.580 I wish I'd like to see one huge arrest after all this time of saying, you know, fake dossiers, fake FISA's, fake spying.
00:47:30.560 How come nobody's arrested?
00:47:33.040 Let's see one arrest.
00:47:34.440 Come on, Trump.
00:47:35.380 Let's do it.
00:47:36.800 You mentioned your cancellation.
00:47:39.740 That was, first of all, just grotesque in the way that what you said was misrepresented.
00:47:45.580 Totally, by ignoramuses.
00:47:48.140 That's what was so fantastic.
00:47:50.380 When, you know what they say, you can, you know that book, and it's, I think, I can't remember who said it, but it's like,
00:47:56.540 you can tell the greatness of a man by the confederacy of dunces who come against him.
00:48:02.020 I just said that by head over and over.
00:48:04.320 Because it was a confederacy of dunces who had no geopolitics whatsoever, knew nothing about the Iran deal,
00:48:12.360 knew nothing about Israel, knew nothing about my years, decades old defense of my own people
00:48:20.860 and our history, to say what they said that I said, I mean, it's just duncery to the, you know, just duncery.
00:48:35.200 And they, they couldn't congratulate themselves enough.
00:48:40.680 And I was always going, pretty soon America is going to know what I meant.
00:48:46.000 And I thought it was about a year away, maybe.
00:48:49.180 Now it's seven years, and nobody still fucking knows.
00:48:53.220 It makes me mad.
00:48:55.180 It makes me mad.
00:48:56.240 But I see glimmers of it.
00:48:58.840 I see glimmers of where people go, aha, oh, I didn't think of that.
00:49:04.620 Yeah, well, you weren't allowed to, because it's never on any media, it's not allowed to say those things.
00:49:12.940 And, but now I'm seeing people come up on the internet and actually talk about the Muslim Brotherhood
00:49:19.760 and what they, how they have infiltrated our government, and how many people have died for saying that.
00:49:28.000 And, and that's why I got canceled.
00:49:32.580 It was not, they say, it was, because I said black people look like monkeys.
00:49:38.460 But no, it was because I said, Valerie Jarrett is the Muslim Brotherhood.
00:49:44.340 And that's why.
00:49:46.640 And I just pray for the day when people get it.
00:49:50.940 And some are getting it.
00:49:53.580 Some were getting it back then, and they end up dead.
00:49:58.160 Whistleblowers.
00:49:59.560 I wish I could remember his name, because he was a great American.
00:50:02.980 A lot of whistleblowers, a lot of dissenters, prison, just like in the Soviet Union, like the Stalinists here did.
00:50:14.280 I mean, the January 6th people, that was a gulag.
00:50:17.980 And they just loved prison, imprisoning dissenters and whistleblowers and thinkers and ruining everyone else's life by, you know, stepping on their face with their jackboot, like they did me.
00:50:33.720 Their jackboot-wearing Stalinists.
00:50:36.980 So they're the best of both worlds.
00:50:39.260 And if you know about World War II history, you know that Stalin and Hitler were in a competition, and we're never allowed to know that.
00:50:46.740 But they were in a competition, and there was a Hitler-Stalin pact.
00:50:51.140 And that's what we've got here.
00:50:53.080 We've got them all working together in bed with each other.
00:50:56.860 All of them.
00:50:58.540 And the few things they don't like are the things we like, like our Constitution and women's rights and children's rights and rape activism.
00:51:14.420 They don't like that much.
00:51:17.420 They were coming at me for a long time with that.
00:51:21.260 It's as evil as you could imagine if you were the most paranoid person on Earth, and even worse.
00:51:30.460 Roseanne, you know...
00:51:32.200 You're like, Roseanne, you're not funny at all.
00:51:34.300 You don't know why we came here.
00:51:36.100 No, you are.
00:51:36.840 I get too jacked.
00:51:37.560 You're hilarious.
00:51:38.120 So when you talk about the left and the socialists and whatever else, you're talking about it as we're going to a different place.
00:51:48.480 And they're buddies.
00:51:49.760 And they're buddies.
00:51:50.520 And I agree with you.
00:51:51.080 The fascist Nazis.
00:51:52.120 Yeah.
00:51:52.400 They're best friends.
00:51:53.440 Yeah.
00:51:54.400 But there's also...
00:51:55.380 With the Islamists.
00:51:56.320 Yeah.
00:51:56.760 I mean, you don't...
00:51:57.600 They're all in bed together.
00:51:58.540 You don't need to talk to me about this or both of us about the Islamists.
00:52:01.540 We've seen it in our own country and the terrifying impact that that is having.
00:52:05.980 But it's very different from Islam.
00:52:09.120 Yes.
00:52:09.460 Yeah.
00:52:09.720 It's an extremist interpretation of that particular religion.
00:52:13.740 They're like the trans activists of Islam.
00:52:16.520 They're a bit more aggressive.
00:52:18.540 Well, I don't know after all these Tesla places are burning.
00:52:21.760 Yeah.
00:52:22.380 Yeah.
00:52:22.640 Their training are malcontents.
00:52:26.560 Yeah.
00:52:27.500 To get like them.
00:52:28.980 Mm.
00:52:29.760 But I see the people on the right.
00:52:33.360 But, and there are certain elements of that, and I'm seeing them come back in.
00:52:39.260 Some people, look, there's a lot of good Christians.
00:52:41.380 Come back in where?
00:52:42.420 As in coming into power, you know, people on the religious right.
00:52:46.140 Not all of the religious right.
00:52:47.260 Not all Christians.
00:52:48.220 Mm-hmm.
00:52:48.440 But there's a certain element of them.
00:52:50.000 I think we can all agree.
00:52:51.260 And they're looking at things like women's rights and, you know, gay rights and going,
00:52:55.680 yeah, we're going to roll back on that one.
00:52:57.700 Yeah, I don't want to live in a theology.
00:52:59.180 I don't think that a Christian democracy has ever been a theological Christian place.
00:53:06.820 It had different thing.
00:53:09.240 It was, you know, had, you know, disparate members and groups that were under, you know,
00:53:20.880 the protection of the state because equality was one of the things, justice, equal justice
00:53:26.940 under the law, but they don't like any of that.
00:53:30.200 They want to jizz you a tax or probably a non, they probably want to put on a gender tax
00:53:36.700 out, you know.
00:53:38.520 It's just a grift.
00:53:39.820 They just want the money.
00:53:41.400 But, I'm sorry, I forgot what.
00:53:44.760 No, we were talking about elements of the religious right.
00:53:47.580 Yeah, I don't want an American theology.
00:53:50.180 And I backed away when I heard some of people that I thought, you know, we were talking about
00:53:57.960 our constitutional republic and our constitution, okay, because that's a perfect document that
00:54:05.020 doesn't need anybody fucking with it.
00:54:07.820 It needs to be unfucked with.
00:54:10.160 But, when I would hear that stuff, I'd be like, count me out, man, I'm not, mm-mm, I'm
00:54:19.100 not into that.
00:54:20.380 I'm not, I mean, for common sense, Main Street, the wide middle.
00:54:25.180 Yeah.
00:54:25.860 That's what my show was about, the wide middle.
00:54:28.800 It didn't go left and it didn't go right.
00:54:30.820 It stayed right in the middle where American needs to go.
00:54:33.400 Because, stay, because the middle way is the wide way, because it's the right way.
00:54:41.180 And, that's the challenge, really.
00:54:44.420 And I think, it's not just America, I think it's every country, that we don't go too far
00:54:49.340 to the right, and we don't go too far to the left.
00:54:51.900 Yeah.
00:54:52.380 And that we have, because the majority of us are quite happy being here.
00:54:56.800 Right.
00:54:57.100 But we have these radical factions on either side, who are always trying to drag it left
00:55:02.880 and right.
00:55:03.440 Well, that's what I said when I first was on my show, you know, in the late 80s, early
00:55:10.140 90s.
00:55:10.720 I felt like I was bringing things a little more left, because they were too far right.
00:55:17.680 And then when I came back, I thought they were way too far left, so I was bringing them
00:55:22.700 a little more right, because I always am aiming for the middle, because that's America, the
00:55:27.980 middle.
00:55:28.440 And what's horrible about what I've seen is that when you, I saw this for a long time
00:55:35.540 too, when you have the far left and the far right, these two, what's the word?
00:55:45.980 Extremes?
00:55:46.540 Yes, extremes.
00:55:48.400 They managed incredibly, because of how they manipulate the media and everything, they
00:55:55.200 managed to, I can't think of the word, I'm so bad on words these days.
00:56:02.580 They managed to, oh, I can't think of the word and I need the word.
00:56:13.160 They marginalized the vast middle.
00:56:17.120 These guys marginalized the voters and the middle.
00:56:22.980 How in the hell, neither of them has a future, it can't go nowhere.
00:56:30.940 They end up going, you know, back on themselves, which hopefully would be good if they all got
00:56:37.060 on each other, but they never will, because useful idiots never attack each other.
00:56:43.180 But they did it.
00:56:46.280 I couldn't believe that they had marginalized the American people.
00:56:54.400 It really bothered me.
00:56:56.120 And are you excited now?
00:56:57.460 Do you think that that return to the middle is possible now?
00:57:00.640 You don't seem very excited.
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00:58:00.620 That last bit doesn't flow, but do what we can.
00:58:04.780 I think it's possible, but the thing that's, that, and I'm hopeful, but without facts, you
00:58:15.140 can't get nowhere, without actual facts, and data, and truth, you can't go back to the real.
00:58:27.240 You can't.
00:58:28.240 You can't live in a big world of lies, and it's just hard to find truth that you go,
00:58:37.840 I know this is true, and I think I do because I read and I talk to many, many people, but
00:58:46.220 for the average American who doesn't have time to do all that, they're not old and, you
00:58:53.440 know, have time on their hands, I just feel like I want to be one of the people who tells
00:59:03.160 the larger truth, but, you know, then if nobody wants to hear it, that's kind of sad, but I
00:59:12.120 don't know, I'm hopeful, but it's easier, I think, just to get through the day with your
00:59:22.600 head down.
00:59:24.680 You think that's the role of the comedian, to tell the larger truth?
00:59:27.920 Oh, of course.
00:59:29.480 Well, that's what you try to do.
00:59:31.480 I try to get a reaction where they let go, where they go, ha, which is really a spiritual
00:59:37.380 sound, and it's a response that they can't, it's a, you know, a response they can't control.
00:59:45.700 And it's a freeing, healing one, too.
00:59:48.380 So, of course, you're trying to get that, but sometimes when you're up there and you're
00:59:52.280 following five guys that just did dick and shit jokes, it's hard to get an audience who
00:59:59.000 even gives a shit to hear any kind of concept, which is a lot of comedy now is like, oh my
01:00:07.220 God, it's the Chronic Masturbators comedy, you know, I'm too old, I'm too old for it,
01:00:13.540 you know, I don't like it.
01:00:15.300 And I'm like, where can I go to just talk to people who want to think?
01:00:20.900 Yeah.
01:00:21.040 So I did, I've done a few shows and they were fun, and I wouldn't get off the stage,
01:00:26.820 I've stayed on there for two and a half hours.
01:00:30.320 But yeah, it was fun, but you know, I'm old now, I don't know.
01:00:33.820 You know, you look back at some of those comedians who made you think, like, to me,
01:00:38.820 America has produced some of the greatest of those.
01:00:41.240 Of course.
01:00:42.360 George Carlin.
01:00:43.400 Oh, God, yeah, I knew him a little bit, too.
01:00:45.480 Yeah, Bill Hicks.
01:00:46.840 Bill Hicks, so great.
01:00:49.080 Unbelievably great, and it still stands up, too.
01:00:53.300 Everything Bill Hicks said stands up now.
01:00:56.660 Well, especially now, because I think those guys, they were pushing back against the extremes
01:01:04.140 of their day, and you're going to have extremes of our day now that need to be challenged,
01:01:08.580 including through comedy, right?
01:01:10.100 Yeah.
01:01:10.720 I've seen a couple of comics, I think, that are going to get there.
01:01:14.360 They're on the right path of comedy, and it's exciting, because I like to go see somebody
01:01:21.380 working audience like that, because it does take a lot of guts and a lot of head, you know,
01:01:31.020 a lot of brains that you thought up that you're selling a concept on stage, which that used
01:01:37.080 to be back in my day, we could sell a concept and then do 10 jokes within that concept, but
01:01:43.140 now it's just, I was jacking off, and it's, oh, God.
01:01:48.800 Do you feel that's almost like going back to the way comedy was before you and others
01:01:54.560 made a difference?
01:01:55.940 Yeah, it's back to ground, it's back to, you know, it's back to the muck, where you go
01:02:01.480 back to the muck, you know, and then the little amoeba crawls out of the mud, and then it becomes
01:02:06.480 a whatever and whatever, it grows into something else.
01:02:10.140 It's, it's back at the test case, you know, in the primordial muck.
01:02:17.900 Why is that, Roseanne?
01:02:19.020 Why do you think it's back in the muck?
01:02:22.920 Well, people want relief, and, you know, they want, they want to laugh, and that's what
01:02:37.420 they're laughing at.
01:02:38.340 Yeah, but do you not think it's also, because everything was so restricted for a long time,
01:02:44.240 and every word you said, like in your case, you know, you say something gets totally misrepresented,
01:02:50.760 taken out of context, and people got tired of that, so now it's almost the release and
01:02:56.040 the relief that you're talking about is for, to hear someone say the weirdest or the worst
01:03:02.140 thing that you can imagine.
01:03:03.060 Yeah, but that's going back to the muck, and I think great things will come out of
01:03:07.820 it, and I'm watching like a few comics, I'm like, like I had one here the other day, and
01:03:15.580 I was like, oh my god, I love that.
01:03:19.820 I can't wait to see how that hits.
01:03:22.960 You know?
01:03:23.640 So there's some coming up great ones.
01:03:27.040 Yeah, and I think that's a very good point, because, you know, I think it's very easy to
01:03:32.820 be in a moment and think that it's going to last forever, but all it ever is is a moment,
01:03:38.080 and life changes, as it always does, because nothing stays the same.
01:03:41.440 Yeah, so at the moment, we are in this point where you can go on stage and say the word
01:03:47.060 retard six times and get a standing ovation, and maybe a Netflix deal.
01:03:51.220 Yeah, well, that's like, that is backlash from being held down.
01:03:55.000 Yeah.
01:03:55.800 But eventually, something more interesting is going to come of that, because it's like
01:03:59.780 being a 13-year-old boy.
01:04:01.580 You know, someone's...
01:04:02.180 It is just like that.
01:04:04.540 Yeah.
01:04:05.340 You know, people say that when you're hurt, and then eventually you go, all right, but what
01:04:09.160 else?
01:04:09.840 Yeah.
01:04:10.320 Yeah.
01:04:10.560 It's not very sophisticated, but out of that will come something, I guess is what I'm saying.
01:04:15.900 Yeah, because comedy is a great art form.
01:04:19.840 It really is the last free speech art form.
01:04:22.780 It was sad to see it.
01:04:25.500 To press like that.
01:04:26.400 Yeah, it was horrible.
01:04:28.580 But they always said, when I was coming up in my day, back when I was alive, they always
01:04:34.120 say, when there's a Republican in the White House, comedy gets great.
01:04:38.520 But now it's kind of a different time, so...
01:04:42.700 Yeah.
01:04:43.860 But it still might be true.
01:04:45.560 Yes.
01:04:46.000 Yeah.
01:04:46.840 Because these comics I've seen, they're smart.
01:04:53.900 They're very smart.
01:04:55.000 I think people will start going, I got to hear some smart comedy.
01:04:58.360 Yeah.
01:04:58.960 Yeah.
01:04:59.460 Yeah.
01:04:59.680 Because you need, it's, you know, it's like eating fast food.
01:05:02.240 Look, there's nothing wrong with eating fast food.
01:05:04.240 You can go once in a while and it's fine, you know, and it hits the spot.
01:05:07.500 But eventually you want something substantive.
01:05:10.140 You want something that really nourishes your soul.
01:05:12.820 Right.
01:05:13.100 Like women comics, I don't give a shit about your sex life.
01:05:16.960 OK, you're a fucking bore.
01:05:19.460 I don't give a fuck who you're having sex with or your sex feelings or any of your body
01:05:25.240 parts.
01:05:25.680 I don't give a fuck.
01:05:26.640 Say something smart.
01:05:28.360 I'm sick of that shit, too.
01:05:30.840 My sex life, God, Christ, any goat can have sex.
01:05:35.200 Get off it.
01:05:36.040 And say something interesting.
01:05:40.780 So to you, what is interesting?
01:05:42.780 Is it the human condition?
01:05:44.060 I mean, obviously the human condition.
01:05:45.680 Culture as a whole.
01:05:50.660 I think people, I think, I think the mass brainwash we're under is hilarious.
01:06:00.320 And there should be tons of jokes about that.
01:06:02.640 Remember when you thought, I mean, just the brainwashing, it just gets, I have a joke,
01:06:08.720 you know, well, I shouldn't even say it on here, but just the, huh?
01:06:12.920 Say it on here.
01:06:13.540 Come on.
01:06:14.060 Well, I say, boy, I remember back in my day when you used to get molested, it was your fault.
01:06:21.160 You know, my mom was like, I told you not to go near that old Joe when he comes down here
01:06:26.840 on his bicycle.
01:06:28.140 Didn't I tell you not to go by old Joe?
01:06:31.140 And now it's like, I mean, things move in a more, a more just, and they move for justice
01:06:43.020 and intelligence, I think.
01:06:44.700 So it's good we don't do that to kids anymore, but, you know, everything's just fucked up and
01:06:51.340 stupid.
01:06:52.480 You're talking about mass brainwashing.
01:06:55.140 What do you mean by that, Roseanne?
01:06:56.500 Well, I think everything's mass brainwashing.
01:06:59.740 So, you know, I have since I was maybe born, because I would go like, it ain't like that.
01:07:07.460 I would just look around and go, it ain't like that.
01:07:11.100 I'd see it.
01:07:13.040 That was probably part of why I got mental illness, because they were talking about, I remember
01:07:18.220 when I was little, and they're always talking about God is good.
01:07:21.080 God's in control of everything, and then, you know, God sees you.
01:07:24.940 He sees everything you do.
01:07:26.720 And then I'd see, you know, them doing bad shit, stealing things, lying.
01:07:33.740 And I'd be like, what is this?
01:07:38.260 I couldn't make any sense of it.
01:07:40.560 Why you said one thing, and then turn around, did the exact opposite of that thing, and then
01:07:45.580 turn around again and say the shit you said before you did the bad thing again.
01:07:50.180 I think that's hilarious, because obviously you're disconnected from your mouth.
01:07:54.980 Your brain don't hook up to your mouth or something.
01:07:58.440 It's all a kerfuffle, and nobody even knows what they're doing half the time.
01:08:03.700 They're only doing what they think everybody else is doing, and they're wrong.
01:08:08.320 Those people ain't doing that.
01:08:09.860 Yeah.
01:08:10.340 You're just lost, and you're a fucking idiot.
01:08:14.940 I love the way she's looking at you.
01:08:16.240 Yeah, it reminds me of...
01:08:18.700 I've not said it to you.
01:08:20.160 This is my, what in my head conversations I have with people.
01:08:25.960 Yeah.
01:08:26.380 It's like, you're a fucking idiot.
01:08:28.740 You don't even see...
01:08:30.240 It's okay.
01:08:31.380 You don't even see, like...
01:08:34.240 It's all right.
01:08:35.460 It reminds me of mother.
01:08:36.780 No, I don't mean you.
01:08:37.840 But it is mother, because of my own kids.
01:08:40.880 I'd be like, why are you...
01:08:42.680 Yeah.
01:08:43.940 Why are you licking your feet?
01:08:47.120 You know?
01:08:47.900 You just were out in the mud.
01:08:49.680 Yeah.
01:08:49.880 Why would you want to lick your...
01:08:51.200 You know what I mean?
01:08:52.140 It is a mother thing.
01:08:53.440 It is.
01:08:54.220 I want to gather everybody, make them see something together, so they will behave correctly.
01:09:01.300 I can't let go of it.
01:09:03.760 I...
01:09:04.200 It must be a mom thing.
01:09:06.120 I just...
01:09:06.780 I just wish people would let reality really in their deep and see it.
01:09:14.780 See reality for once instead of what you're told to see.
01:09:19.640 See the real reality.
01:09:21.240 It's pretty amazing when you see it.
01:09:25.660 Like when I see Doge, I'm like, this is freaking amazing.
01:09:34.320 This is messianic.
01:09:36.460 You know?
01:09:36.840 I think this is really a new thing for the world and for America.
01:09:42.680 You know, to go to where you're going to actually have accountability for the money, I just...
01:09:50.040 That thrills me.
01:09:50.860 And somebody like Musk and Trump to have thought, hey, it's time for accountability in the money.
01:09:57.260 It's so basic and genius.
01:10:00.120 It should have been done 500,000 years ago.
01:10:03.440 But we're there on the cusp of this great awakening and accountability.
01:10:10.640 And wow, maybe I can dream or create or synthesize or be part of a whole new reality that makes sense.
01:10:20.860 For all the people, not just a few at the expense of the many, but all the people, we can have something that made sense for once.
01:10:31.720 I'm hopeful for that.
01:10:33.800 Roseanne, on that happy note, the question we always end the interview with is, what's the one thing we're not talking about that we should be?
01:10:39.620 Well, I think that one thing that we're not talking about that we should be is money and the Bank of International Settlements in Switzerland and how that all works.
01:10:58.620 It's the central bank of all central banks, how that all works and how it affects everything.
01:11:05.600 I think we should be talking about that.
01:11:08.380 And it's right next to CERN.
01:11:10.980 If that don't say everything, it's a scary time.
01:11:16.160 But human intelligence, I think, is connected to God and God's like making us be smarter.
01:11:24.300 We don't want to, but he's making us.
01:11:27.220 So I'm hopeful for that, too.
01:11:29.800 All right.
01:11:30.020 Well, thanks for coming on the show.
01:11:31.160 You have a great podcast on Rumble that people should check out.
01:11:34.180 Oh, thank you.
01:11:35.300 And head on over to Substack where Roseanne's going to answer your questions.
01:11:38.680 Oh, boy.
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