#2457 - Michael Malice
Michael Malice is a cultural commentator, author, and host of the “Your Welcome” podcast. His next book is the graphic novel "Unwanted." unwantedbook.com www.youtube.com/@MichaelMaliceofficial malice.locals.com www.michaelmalice.com Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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- Published Feb 19, 2026
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- Uploaded Jun 15, 2026
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[00:00] Joe Rogan podcast, check it out! The Joe Rogan Experience. Train by day, Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day! [00:12] So, can we be 10? What are you doing? What do you mean? Your face! I have carprosis sarcoma. Oh, I didn't know. No, I just wanted to have a fun look. It's my 10th time. And what is a Lichtenstein, is that what you said? [00:29] Roy Lichtenstein. Who's that? Do you know who it is? Yeah. [00:34] You know the pictures. Pull up Drowning Girl. Jamie, pull it up. I get to say it. [00:38] This guy. He's a comic book artist. No, he's a pop artist. He drew comic books into paintings in the 60s. You've seen his stuff. Oh, I'm sure. I have now. [00:48] I've seen them in memes. [00:50] Exactly. [00:51] Like a man backhanding a woman? [00:54] No. [00:57] Well, he's stepping on our hand right there. [01:00] That's his hand. It's a guy's hand. Oh, it's a guy's hand. It's a cop, I think. It's a feminine man. [01:03] Oh, Jeff, I love you too, but okay. The dots, I get it. [01:07] This was a lot of what I wanted to do, which I couldn't do. I wanted to do an uncanny valley look. [01:14] And looked like a mannequin with lifeless eyes and kind of like Lex, right? But that was a lot of money. Like CGI from 10 years ago. Right. [01:24] Yes. [01:26] So I just went with this. Okay. I was on – I was on – no, no, no. This is – I was on Jordan's show.
[01:36] Last January 6th. And I had the QAnon shaman paint my face. [01:41] with his look and i had a russian fur hat and i had the boots and everything and jordan peterson had to sit and talk to me for three hours looking like a complete mental patient and you're going to forget in a couple minutes you know when someone's looking like this but for anyone tuning in it's just like and it's just the clips go wide it's a lot of fun oh i know i've done dozens of podcasts with duncan oh yeah exactly like clowns and it's like why are they dressed [02:11] yeah wait isn't it saying like the face of evil there's the one that's yeah the psychology of pure evil michael malice uh how is jordan doing is he okay [02:22] I think he's doing better. I just talked to Michaela a couple of days ago. I think he's out of the woods. I don't know how much I'm allowed to say or what's my place to say. Can you say what happened to him? I don't really know. [02:35] I think you'd have to talk to her. This is really something I don't... [02:38] I don't know what I'm supposed to. He just keeps going through this series of ongoing health crises. [02:44] Yeah, and it's very – what bothers me a lot is how much glee people seem to have with this. And I think – like I was just saying a second ago, I think the internet is going in a dark place. People. People are going in a dark place. The internet is leading them there, but it's people. [03:01] Well, I think it's like a snake eating its own tail, don't you think? I think – and when AI starts validating your preconceptions, I'm very scared about the near future. I'm very scared too because so many people are so easily led and so prone to whatever the ideology is at the moment, just full –
[03:18] full-scale adopting it. I was on Gutfeld a couple months ago and they're talking about how Sam Altman said ChatGPT is gonna have erotica now. And everyone's like, "Well, it's erotica, they're making jokes." And I go, "Listen." I said, [03:30] Not that long ago, John Hinckley shot in 1981. He shot President Reagan because he thought Jodie Foster was going to fall in love with him, you know, thereby turning her away from men forever. Right. And I said, what happens when. [03:43] Chad GPT, you really hate Trump or you really hate Joe Rogan or you really hate Fauci or Kamala Harris and your AI friend is ginning you up being like, yeah, they're terrible. Like there's 350 million people. You're saying out of those, 350 aren't going to try to do something? Right. I mean they've already had Chad GPT talk people into killing themselves. Right. [04:04] I know. I know. Whether it's chat GPT or whatever AI. Whatever AI, right, right. Large language model. Yeah, I am – and I don't see any breaks on this. And it's happening, I think, faster than we can – you know, the whole point of the paleo – not the whole point, but a large part of the paleo lifestyle is our biology has not kept up with our technology, right? And that kind of makes sense in a food thing. [04:28] Bush comes to shove. Processed food you should avoid. Whole food, natural food is probably better for you. That's just a good heuristic for anyone. But when you're talking about... [04:36] the mind [04:38] You know, I – people argue are human beings basically good, human beings basically bad. I think human beings are basically animals, and animals can be enormously collaborative and wonderful and work together. Even across pieces, you see these videos of like a dog saving a cow or whatever it is. But animals are also – I need to tell you, you know, there's that chimp in all of us. And when that mob starts fomenting, like people want blood, and they love it.
[05:08] Reinforcement from other people in the group that tell you that you're doing the right thing and they support you. And if you the thing with the Epstein stuff online is just really kind of like I remember five minutes ago. Right. For the for the the blue bill people on covid. If you don't care about covid as much as I do and if you aren't informed as covid as much as I am, you want to kill grandma. [05:32] Right. Like that you're told this explicitly. Your kids should be taken away from you. Should be banned from society. Right. And my buddy, Lou Perez, is a great comic. He had a great tweet. He goes, if you don't have covid, you can't spread covid. I can't give it to you just because I'm a bad person. Right. But that was the mindset. And now there's so much. There's three million Epstein docs. If you are not as invested as some people, you are a kid toucher. You're covering for them. You want this to happen. You're complicit retroactively somehow. [06:02] And I can't make heads or tails of it. I had Luke Rakowski on my show, who's [06:06] been a conspiracy. I'm not saying in the negative way. Conspiracy guy for a very long time. He still worked with Alex. He broke it down. Then I had Michael Tracy on my show and he said, look, a lot of this hysteria. I don't know [06:17] who is right, who is wrong, but if I have any kind of skepticism, I am somehow [06:23] wanting children to be abused. It's insane. Well, it's also... It's like so much of it is cryptic. We don't necessarily understand what they were talking about. Right. And if you say... [06:34] What's beef jerky? Here's the thing. It's obviously kids. It's not just that it might be kids or probably. It's obvious. And if you're denying that jerky is obviously kids, you're denying that people are children. I'm not denying people are children. I'm just saying, what if it's heroin? What if it's weapon? I haven't read all those emails. But the idea that it's definitely literally infants, it seems like I want to see some receipts.
[06:58] Yeah, it could be. [07:00] Many things. I mean, it certainly is a code, which indicates, at least to me, that they were doing something they didn't want people to know about. [07:08] This episode of the Joe Rogan Experience is brought to you by Paramount+. UFC history is going down at the White House. It's the world's greatest fights on America's biggest stage. Watch UFC Freedom 250 at the White House live today only on Paramount+. [07:28] This episode is brought to you by Traeger Grills. If you enjoy food, and I mean really good food, Traeger is a game changer. This isn't just a grill. It's the ultimate way to cook outdoors, delivering unbeatable wood-fired flavor thanks to the all-natural hardwood pellets that fuel everything you grill, smoke, or bake. That's it. Just wood and fire and flavor. And what's truly wild is how easy it is. [07:58] handle the rest. Grilled steaks, smoked ribs, even baked pizza, all on one grill. If you're into fire, flavor, and doing things right, check out Traeger Grills. [08:10] This summer, the Cup is taking over the U.S., and only DraftKings has you covered every step of the way. Follow every group stage upset, every knockout round thriller, every stoppage time moment that flips the whole tournament. Sweat all the big matches you love in real time with a seamless experience built for the world's biggest stage. No matter where you're watching, you're always connected and in the game with one app.
[08:40] to get 200 in rewards within 21 days. That's CodeRogan in partnership with DraftKings. The crown is yours. [09:06] And I remember with the Pizzagate stuff, I talked about this in my book, and you're right, I had to get through this through the legal, because there was an email where it's like, oh, the maps or the flags are really angry today. So they're obviously not talking about maps or flags. It was obviously about something, we don't know what, but to pretend that there was nothing there is also disingenuous. It's clearly code. But... [09:26] How do we know eating is not code also? Like eating jerky could be like beating off, right? Or it could be killing someone. But the idea that – no, the eating part is true. The jerky part is kids. [09:37] And frankly, what bothers me is don't you want to hope that they're not eating kids? Yeah. Well, it's like people just want to know. And if they already were and have been doing it for a long time, that seemed outrageous before. [09:56] gring [09:57] was exposed where there really was a sex trafficker who was compromising people. [10:03] and really was doing it [10:04] at the behest of at least an intelligence agency, whether it's ours or the Israelis or whoever it is. Or the Russians. A lot of people want to say it's the Russians. Is there any validity to the Russians? I have no idea. The reason I said the Russians is because I was on Drudge, and the headline was Epstein was Russian operative. So it was presented on Drudge. Don't take my word for it. Right. As, oh, there's the receipts. This is why I'm saying there's Mossad connections with him, obviously, especially with Jelaine. CIA is a no-brainer because why didn't they bag this guy for years? Right.
[10:34] care about this, broadly speaking. And he makes the point, like, these are all interconnected. This idea that we're going to separate out, like, the CIA from MI6, they're buddies with each other. And frankly, that's, in many cases, a good thing. You want to be working with other countries if you have international trafficking or terrorism or crimes. But I don't know. We don't. I can't even finish the sentence. Right, right. No, that's. Well, you're honest. That's why. Now, the Russian thing, is there anything that makes sense to you to that? [11:04] What is going on here? New documents show Justice Department documents mention Russia thousands of times, Vladimir Putin over a thousand times, reflecting extensive Russia-related communications and contacts in Epstein's network. [11:19] Emails, travel records, Indicator, because there's real something to it. [11:24] Epstein made multiple trips to Russia, obtained business visas, had scouts there recruiting young Russian women for him, of course, similar to his operations elsewhere. The files describe Epstein cultivating ties with Russian political and business elites, acting as a facilitator in deals and introductions, not just sexual encounters. [11:43] Epstein repeatedly sought a meeting or back channel communications with President Vladimir Putin at times suggesting he had advice or insight to offer about dealing with Donald Trump. He had documented ties to at least one former Russian official with a background in the FSB. [12:00] whom he used to gather information on a woman he claimed was trying to extort his business partners.
[12:07] Well, for sure you're going to have that. You got a bunch of Russian hookers that you're bringing over there. Some of them are going to try to explore you. Putin was ex-KGB. The KGB for decades, for like almost a century, was blackmailing Americans. This is one of the big reasons why you couldn't be – there were restrictions against gays because if you were gay at a time when it was socially unacceptable and the Russians found out about it, they flipped you. [12:29] Because they would sit you down and they'd be like, look, we know, we're going to out you or you're going to play ball. Right. And in those situations, you're going to play ball. This is a huge scandal for a long time. And that's a big – there's a lot. There's a large percentage. I don't know what the population is of these undercover gay politicians. Oh, yeah. I don't mean politicians. I mean the bureaucrats, like people working for Johnson and FDR. This was a thing. And they would know. Yeah. And they would have honeypots. It wouldn't be hard at that time. Right. [12:59] us. [13:00] God, it must be hard to get women. [13:02] How would you blackmail a woman? I mean, how do you trick them into fucking some guy they shouldn't be fucking and why would anybody care? See, no one cares. Like if a woman has an affair on her husband and has sex with some hot guy on an island, everybody is like, you go, girl. Yeah, Stella got her groove back. Yeah, Stella got her groove back. How would you – if I wanted – okay, let's walk through this. If there's a CIA lady and I want to flip her, how do I – You've got to get her to fall in love with you. [13:32] her husband to cheat. [13:34] or go threaten her kids. You got to threaten the kids. But that's a hard one. But that's a different thing than getting her to do something that she shouldn't have done out of lust. How do you blackmail a woman?
[13:47] That's probably why a lot of women aren't in trouble. [13:50] They are in trouble? Aren't. Yeah, they aren't. Right, because I would imagine you would want them to. There's plenty of women politicians you'd want to compromise. I mean, they did get Stacey Plaskett. She was cooperating with Epstein, going back and forth during Trump's administration. Did you see also Kyrsten Sinema, that lawsuit? Oh, no, no, no. I didn't see it. So she was the senator from Arizona. She was a centrist, and of course they ran her out of town. And she... [14:15] broke up a marriage basically and in North or South Carolina where she's being sued you can be liable for damages if you're like the side piece. Oh I've seen that. And in the lawsuit it's like. That's a crazy law. I know. That's a bitch ass law. [14:30] And you're suing a senator and the thing and I believe the filing completely because the filing said he had PTSD so she was – [14:38] Offering to give him psychedelics to help him heal, which I'm sure she did. And basically they just started a relationship. He left the wife. And it's like – [14:47] This is unfortunate, but it happens, but she's facing damages now. That's so wild that that's a law. Yeah. Like, what if the person was on the way out anyway? That's his argument, I'm sure. Yeah. [14:59] I'm sure. Oh, no. We were a loving couple. We never had any problems. And Sanima shows up. And now, look at me. How is that not the man's fault? I don't. I don't. I think it's probably both. [15:11] Well, I know. She's suing Sinema. She's not suing the guy, I don't think. That's so crazy. Yeah. What a stupid fucking law. I don't know. North or South Carolina?
[15:20] Ah, there's some of them old school laws that are so dumb. [15:24] How is that a law that people have to be together? People change their minds on people all the time. They don't want to be with someone anymore. You meet someone you really like, and you go, I can't imagine living the rest of my life without this person, and I've been trapped in this fucking horrible marriage. [15:40] I'm out. [15:41] And then that person gets sued. She had some other funny thing about like – no, no. The guy texted her like I think it was fuck the military and she writes back only the hot ones. So there's like – so she got all the texts out of his phone. That's funny. It's funny. It's a joke. Right. But I also – it's like I think it's – [16:01] When the feminists talk about the kind of misogyny here, I think there is a bit of misogyny, that you're blaming the woman and you're not blaming the guy. Oh, yeah. For that, like the lawsuit, that's crazy. That is such a bitch-ass lawsuit. North Carolina is one of a handful of states that allow jilted spouses to sue for alienation of affection to seek damages from a third party responsible for the breakup of their marriage. You should only be able to pay them in tissues. [16:31] and crates of tissues. Oh, you get $500,000 worth of tissues. Just bring up fucking semis filled with tissues. I just think it's so salacious. It's stupid. You shouldn't need to know this. Well, even if we do know it, the law itself is fucking preposterous. Alienation of affection. People decide they don't like people all the time. That's why divorce exists. Yes. And one of the reasons divorce exists is because people find someone they like more.
[17:01] Oh, I fucked up. I have to get out of this marriage. I'm in love with this other person. And you don't always have to get divorced. [17:06] There's plenty of marriages that survive shit like this. Yeah, that's true, too. So what's the counter that, fuck you, you're a bitch? Like he doesn't like you anymore? But the lawsuit thing is, Curly, you can get money for that? What's, Jamie, do you know how much? I think it's a million. I think she's suing for a lot. How much? Do you know what the damages are, Jamie? Well, you go high just to settle. Yeah, but the fact that there's no – I don't know what the ceiling is. I'm not an attorney, North Carolina attorney, but it's not cheap. [17:36] She's basically paying the wife alivany. Oh, my God. It's real money? [17:42] Yeah, it's no joke. Does it say? Who would fucking... $75,000 in damages. [17:47] That's it? [17:48] Yeah. She gave $9,000 to a man she's accused of. If it's 75 grand, she would have paid it to shut her up. [17:56] Maybe she just doesn't want to out of principle. [17:59] I it's got to be more than [redacted address] you're a senator. You're just going to. [18:04] Maybe. Maybe because most people have the reaction that we're having. [18:09] Like no one's outraged. No one's angry. [18:12] Yeah, I think the response is that – oh, that's it. Yeah, she's alienation of affection. That's it. Nicknamed the homewrecker law and is seeking $75,000 in damages per her lawyer. She argued in a complaint that Sinema engaged in numerous unlawful acts with her ex-husband, including – but not limited to – having conversations with him. That's unlawful?
[18:33] Meeting him under emotionally and physically romantic and sexual circumstances. [18:39] having sexual encounters with him and encouraging him to leave his wife. She took her to some concert together. I think it was like – They said they went to a bunch of concerts. They went to Coppola. I think it was like Dave Matthew. Green Day, YouTube, a bunch of stuff. Yeah. Well, is that a physically romantic and sexual encounter? Is that what that is? Well, I think it's romantic. Put that back up, please. I was going to do those concerts. I mean the lawsuit alleges that in the fall of 2023, when Sinema's then head of security resigned, [19:09] What a bitch-ass security guard. [19:13] Sexual relations with other security members. The security head urged Matthew Amell to leave, but Amell refused, citing the job's financial security. I love the idea, like, you don't want this gig. She'll fuck you. She's fucking her security guards. Yeah, more power to her, I see. She's a wild bitch. [19:39] work trip to Napa Valley, California, it would have appeared as if they were on a romantic getaway. [19:44] Huh. [19:45] In 2024, Heather Amell discovered that Sinema frequently messaged her ex-husband on Signal, which included a picture of the former senator wrapped in a towel and a suggestion that he bring MDMA. Yeah, let's go, Kristen. The drug commonly known as molly or ecstasy to a rope work trip so that Sinema could guide him through a psychedelic experience. Wink, wink.
[20:15] at an event the former senator was having [20:18] getting handsy, [20:20] and that she held his hand and touched him. According to the complaint, Matthew Amel expressed that he didn't know how to get out of the situation without offending Sinema. [20:29] She was also the first bisexual member of the Senate ever. What a good kid. So you know she's a freak. What a good kid. Molly, towels, pictures. Let's go. She's got my vote. I'll vote for again. She should run for president. She should run for president. Let's go, cinema. Come on. She's a centrist. That's what America needs. You want a woman president? Yeah. Let's go. Let's get a freak in the office. I think we have a freak in the office right now. He struggled to admit to the affair, the complaint says, but expressed that he wanted a divorce. [20:59] Oh, he struggled to admit to the affair but expressed that he wanted a divorce. After a November work trip, Heather and Matthew Amell separated. [21:07] Her complaint alleges that her ex-husband and Sinema remained romantically involved. Sinema and Matthew Amell both appeared at a forum in October. Um... [21:16] Are they still together? I... [21:18] Those don't last. It's only six states. Chicks get bored once they win. Once they win, they get you. I'm like, eh, who's next? Who the hell knows what's in their head? It's bored. You're bored. You're bored. [21:30] This episode is brought to you by Athletic Brewing. Athletic Brewing Company's non-alcoholic beer is a total game changer. The first time you try it, you're like... [21:39] Wait, how is this non-alcoholic? They've won 185 Global Taste Awards, and they've got a ton of different styles. You get the ritual, you still get the taste, just without the hangover. They've got everything, Goldens, IPAs, light brews, even this new lime and salt one if you want something refreshing. Whatever the mood calls for, they've got the flavor.
[22:09] nationwide, or you can grab some of their limited release stuff directly from their website. Go to athleticbrewing.com slash Rogan to find stores near you or get brews shipped right to your door. Use code Rogan to get 15% off your first online order. Near beer, terms and condition and certain limitations apply. Athletic Brewing Company, fit for all times. The security got said explicitly, [22:39] Partyguards. Yeah. It's like she's going through them. She's a freak. Yeah. More power to her. Yeah. Like, look, we don't have any problem with men that do that. I think we do. Well, we do now. I think this is – Some people do. I don't. There's two types of people that want to be leaders. Warmongers and pussyhounds. I prefer the pussyhounds. Don't leave your wife alone with them. Wait. But I prefer them because at least they're just trying to get sex. They're not trying to blow up the world and conquer and, like, they want to be Genghis Khan. Is it – Well, actually, Genghis Khan is pretty much a pussyhound. [23:09] Lindsey Graham is not a pussy hound? It is my position that Lindsey Graham is allergic to pussy. [23:17] Yeah. Wait, are they? Remember when they asked him if he was going to run for president? He's single. Yeah, but he's single. Yeah. And what about a first lady? He's like, maybe I'll have a bunch of first ladies. Oh, my. Did he say that? He said something along those lines. I remember. Which is never something a man would say who's into women.
[23:47] there's like hey good look it was something like that it was so cringe and awkward yeah so what did lindsey graham say about uh having many first ladies oh my god [23:58] I mentioned his sister as someone who could fill in for the role, it says. Oh, okay. He would have a, quote, quote, rotating first lady. [24:05] Because like what Dolly Madison did that. Like there was one of the first early founding fathers was a widower. So the daughter – [24:12] His sister first and then rotating first lady. What year was this? [24:17] when he was running. [24:18] 2015. Yeah. [24:19] Do you remember the thing I remember about his campaign... [24:24] is Trump had a rally and he gave out Lindsey Graham's phone number. [24:28] Right. He did? Oh, you don't remember this? Oh, this is the best part. No, no. This is so insane. So Trump is like – because Lindsey would call him for campaign donations, and Trump's like, if you guys don't agree, let's give him a call. He holds up the page and goes, 345 blah, blah, blah. [24:43] And Lindsay... [24:44] Yeah. [24:45] Look at that face. His face. [24:49] What is this world we're living in? No, no, no. But hold on. It gets even better. So Lindsay, like, how do I reclaim the narrative? Lindsay filmed a video of him taking his phone and breaking with a hammer. And I'm like... [25:02] But you still have the same number. You just broke your own phone. You're not trolling Trump at all. It's like if I just broke a device. Right. You could have gone to Verizon and your number switched. You give out my license plate and I wreck my own car. I'm not trolling you. I'm trolling me. I'm like, does no one realize this doesn't make any sense? It was so crazy. Everyone's so performative. Is there someone who's a warmonger? Well, Putin's a pussy hand.
[25:26] Is he, though? Yeah. [25:28] He's more of a warmonger. But he's both. Did you not see him with the topless girls? [25:33] Oh, really? Here he goes. He's throwing it in the blender. He's hitting it with a hammer, a golf ball, oh, lightning on fire. [25:40] Oh, let me see that swing. [25:43] You see that bad show? You put Red Bull in with the phone? What's that about? I think it's lighter fluid, no? No. [25:48] You didn't even get that. Oh, it is Red Bull. Why is it Red Bull? [25:52] He hit it with a golf swing, lit it on fire. [25:55] Like, this is so cringe. [25:58] But it doesn't make any sense. You can put it in a fucking... Bagel oven? Is that pizza bagels? Oh my god, what's wrong with this dude? [26:06] - - [26:08] But your number's the same. What a silly bitch. [26:11] That's back in the old flip phone days, too. Yeah, 2015. [26:15] Wow. He was still rocking a flip phone back then. No iPhone. People are rocking him now again because of the state of a... [26:20] surveillance things. My friend Dave has one. Does a flip phone help you? I think so. How so? I don't know. I'd have to ask Dave. You can still get all those text messages. I think the... No, I think you're spending less time on the internet. [26:33] That's true. Yeah. But you could also just spend less time on the Internet. [26:37] Yes, that is also an option. I think that's a healthy option. I think you could do it. I want to hear your thoughts on this. [26:44] So during COVID, there was a huge... [26:48] Uh, [26:49] amount of time that everyone's spending online. Everyone's obsessed with COVID, everyone's constantly agitated. And my concern is,
[26:57] That the social media – Mark Zuckerberg's job is to keep you on Facebook as much as possible, right? Mm-hmm. [27:02] All that data that they had during COVID is still there. Right. And I think all these social media companies are still keeping us in a constant state of agitation. So you're stuck watching these screens and it's really doing harm. [27:15] And it's not getting better. [27:17] That's a fact. Okay. Yeah. Yeah, that's a fact. Well, isn't he testifying? They're testifying soon about whether or not they set up their algorithms to harm children. They set up their algorithms to addict children to their social media platform. Well, you remember Elsagate? [27:36] Elsagate, yeah. That was the whole thing. Yeah, explain that to people. Elsagate was this – I still don't think we have an answer. People made these – they don't even know where it came from. I've been overseas. There are these bizarre YouTube videos with millions of views where it would be like the Hulk, but he's like sniffing kids' feet and Elsa is just doing like putting in a cage. Like bizarre things that is kind of sexual but not really and you don't know what the purpose is. [28:06] gaming the algorithm, you know, YouTube, Trump got in trouble with this. When Trump was sharing that video, the very end of it went to a Lion King video making fun of the Democrats. It was that one second of the Obamas as apes from the beginning. They cut there and it looked like he was sharing that. It was just the next video that was queued up. And it looks like Trump's video of the Obamas as apes on purpose. Well, they're all in it in the same video. But it was like Hillary was a warthog. Obama or Biden was also an ape and he was eating a banana.
[28:36] It was the Lion King. Right. And Trump came out as a lion. Right. But the point is, I think what he posted, he posted only the first second. I don't think he posted it. Yes, he did. I thought it was an intern. [28:46] Well, the point – I mean it's from his account. But someone reposted it, right? That's what it was. No, he reposted somebody else. [28:52] I think his intern repost. But the point is, anyway, with Elsagate, kids start watching one video, and the algorithm just snags them. And one hour later, they're watching completely deranged stuff. The Elsagate thing was weird, too, because a lot of it was like old cartoons. [29:10] And what people were saying is if your child, like say if you give your child an iPad, and it goes from one YouTube video to the next, and then suggests, those got lumped in there. [29:22] Someone would get a bottle broken over their head. There'd be blood everywhere. It was really weird. Right. And it's like a Mickey Mouse cartoon. And there was no utility to this. Are those still available? I'm looking at the Wikipedia. It says it's kind of – it's continued, but it's switched from like the – [29:36] It's whatever's popular at the time for kids. So back then it was Frozen or whatever, and now it's like Minecraft. What are they doing, though? Right. It makes no sense. [29:44] Like, why would they have these cartoon characters get hit over the head with bottles and... [29:49] Because you remember that one? Like a lot of them, they would get drunk and fall and break their head on a fucking countertop or something. Or they'd be covered. I think this was another one. They were covered in dots for no reason. I'm kidding. Really? It was just like, what is going on? [30:02] Or they're eating weird stuff. So does YouTube remove those videos?
[30:07] Because there's plenty of violent videos on YouTube. [30:10] Like, is it because they're or do they put like an age restriction on them? [30:15] I don't think they did because what's the age restriction? There's nothing sexual. There's nothing. Well, violence. But some of them were just weird. Yeah. Some of them were just weird. Like lots of shots of feet. Uh-huh. And there was a lot of ones where kids got left alone with creeps. [30:29] Yeah. [30:31] cartoons very strange there's also live action stuff oh really yes and it's just like who are these people filming this and for what i saw another one there was this channel which has millions of views for each video and it's things like turtles vomiting up fish and [30:47] Like dead fish, like live action or dead fish coming from the ground as if it's – I don't understand what the point of this is. Do you remember during Benghazi they tried to blame the attack – [31:00] Oh, that's right. On this video. Oh, my God. You remember that? Of course. That was the propaganda was that there was some video that no one had seen. Right. Right. [31:09] Like some terrible video. [31:11] Oh, that got everyone all riled up, right. Yeah, that got the Muslims riled up, and that's why they attacked. And there was also – she was also blaming the 2016 election on ads on the dark web. It's like how many people on the dark web? Do you even know what it is? Right. What are you talking about? Ads on the dark web flipped the election. That's hilarious. That's insane. 50 incels. Right. [31:32] In a chat room. But that was – she says this all the time, Hillary, to this day. Well, she just says it.
[31:39] You know, like she doesn't have to be credible anymore. It's like we just assume we just know that that kind of community, like if you're having a one on one conversation with her just privately and she started talking like that, what are you talking about? This doesn't make any sense. Did you really believe that she got clowned in Europe this week? I did with the Czechoslovakian guy. Yeah. Yeah. [31:57] It was funny. It was very funny. But the way she was interrupting, too, you want women to have their rights taken away. Like, what? That's not what he's saying. He's literally talking about all this crazy shit, these gender transitions, and people were really like they'd had enough with the immigration. People had enough. You don't – you're pretending that's not real? Like this way forward – like if the Democrats want to have a way forward where they connect with people, you've got to admit that there's some reason why people were responding the way they did. [32:27] border to men playing in women's sports to all this shit, gender transitions of children. Like people were freaked out and not just fucking Republicans. A lot of people. Yeah. Karen's a swing voter. Karen doesn't like this kind of stuff. Yeah. I don't know if you saw. Do you see Nancy Pelosi's retirement video? No. Well, you laugh, but Nancy Pelosi is probably the smartest politician in Washington in terms of being crafty. Like she knows how to fucking get a bill passed. She knows how to make people walk the plank. So she's retiring from Congress this year. [32:57] minute long video about you know saying goodbye to San Francisco ten minutes ten [33:02] She talks about AIDS at length, right? Because obviously it affected San Francisco. Doesn't mention the word gay once, even in the context of AIDS. Doesn't mention LGBT. Doesn't mention black people, people of color. She mentions how much she loves going to church.
[33:15] St. Thomas of Assisi, and Veterans Day. [33:19] So I'm like, she knows what you're saying. You've got to pivot and start talking to people about pocketbook stuff. But then Gavin Newsom recently undid his – he backtracked with Charlie Kirk where he's just like, yeah, I know about men and women's sports. And now he's doubling down on trans kids, which is – Is he really? Oh, yeah. He just started doubling down. [33:37] God, how does he think that that's going to work now? I think he thinks he's got to get through that primary. [33:44] Right. But does he not know that people are done? [33:48] Now, [33:49] Because I'm sure he has better polling than you or I. And I'm sure – Maybe I'm just naive about California. [33:55] Well, it's not California. It's the Democratic base who's going to vote for him. [33:58] You know he's also killed his mom. What? What? [34:02] Yeah, he did assist Susanna's mom. He bragged about it to the Washington Post. [34:05] You didn't know this? No. What was wrong with his mom, though? I'm sure it was something awful, but when I hear a politician talking about something that personal that publicly, I am not going to look at it through a positive vein. And this maid stuff is in 14 states now. Did you know this? Yeah. Yeah. [34:22] Well, in Canada, it's off the hook. You know, Kelsey Sharon, I've been talking to her about this. She completely blew my mind. So first, it used to be... [34:30] Because it's always... [34:31] Oh yeah, 55. [34:33] Long battle with breast cancer, deeply personal event. He is described as a complex experience involving assisted suicide. The Washington report. [34:42] A Washington Post report and his memoir expressed deep grief and remorse regarding her death.
[34:48] Remorse is a very dark word in this context. [34:51] He was 34... [34:52] and San Francisco supervisor at the time. [34:56] Yeah, but maybe it was his mom's decision and he helped her. Sure. But look, if you're dying of terminal cancer and your body's rotting out, I feel like just like you put a dog down. Like there's times where I think assisted suicide is probably a good option if there's no hope and you're just going to be in agony for months. And there's times where people have gender dysphoria. [35:18] And it's a good thing. Right. That's different. Hold on. It's not. My point is people like Blair White, Brianna Wu, you know, they have gender dysphoria. It's perfectly appropriate to call them she. They, you know, it's otherwise very disturbing. Five minutes later, once it becomes a political issue, it's anyone who just puts on a dress. Right. So the point that Kelsey has been going on with Canada is now they're going after people who are depressed. Right. They're going after people who are disabled. They're going after kids. And the darkest thing that's happening over there is. [35:46] which they're importing here, is the old people are extremely expensive for the system, right? If you have socialized health care, I don't know what the number is, the huge number. Towards the end of your life, you're racking up those bills. So there's a huge incentive for that government to get you off of their ledger. So now they're having this movement where let's all get together – [36:07] And have grandma, we're all going to go kill grandma. Five minutes ago, if you don't wear the COVID mask, you want to kill grandma, you're a bad person. Now, if you don't want to kill grandma, you're a bad person. [36:17] You don't want to end this way. You were such a strong person. Die with dignity, blah, blah, blah. It's not always terminal stuff. And in Europe, they're having you with teenagers who are depressed.
[36:27] It's – and you know perfectly well – everyone listening to this knows it's not a slippery slope. It's an elevator shaft. Is this – This is the back door. Is it financial incentive? It's a huge financial incentive. Think about it. If you're old and you're $1,000 a day and the government is paying it, if I get rid of you, look how much I'm saving. Right. Right. [36:44] Oh, you don't want to be a burden to your family. [36:48] You don't want to have them sitting by your bedside? Come on. [36:52] it's happening here [36:54] New York just passed it. It's 14 states. [36:57] New York passed it? New York just passed it. You see, Mondami is trying to figure out a way to use his budget. His budget is higher than the entire budget of the state of Florida, which has three times more people. No, it's not. Is it really? It is. Yeah. No way. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Look it up. This episode is brought to you by the Farmer's Dog. Here's a fun fact. [37:27] are overweight. Isn't that wild and also kind of obvious at the same time? So why is feeding vague scoops of ultra processed kibble still the status quo for most dog owners? Healthy alternatives exist and trust me, I know. [37:43] I buy one, the Farmer's Dog. I use it for both my dogs. They love it. They eat it up quick. It smells good to them. It smells good to me. It's human-grade food. The Farmer's Dog makes fresh food for dogs, and my dogs love it. Their recipes are made with real meat and fresh vegetables that are gently cooked to retain vital nutrients. They also portion out the meals to your dog's nutritional needs, which helps avoid overfeeding and makes weight management easier and isn't getting more time with our four-legged
[38:13] to get best friends something every dog owner wants the answer to that is [38:18] is yes, obviously. So try the Farmer's Dog today and get 50% off your first box of fresh, healthy food. [38:26] Plus, get free shipping. Just go to thefarmersdog.com slash rogan. This offer is for new customers only. Let's talk about Service Titan. Over 10,000 contractors already run their businesses on Service Titan. Now they're building an AI trained on real trades workflows. This isn't generic AI. This is AI built specifically for contracting work, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and more. [38:56] Booking calls, helping run your back office, and growing your revenue automatically. Every other industry is still trying to figure out AI. The trades are about to lead from the front. Service Titan, the AI for the trades. Learn more at servicetitan.ai. The budget for New York City is larger than the budget for the state of Florida. [39:21] And holy, I did not know this. Yeah, I'm pretty sure it's true. We should look it up. But I was reading an article about it today, unless the article is completely full of shit. They were saying that it's several billion dollars more for New York City than it is for the entire state of Florida, which has roughly three times as many people living in it. Is that true, Jamie? Yeah. [39:40] Try it, try it. Um... [39:42] I just – I go back once a month to do Gutfeld, and I can't believe I'm saying this as a former New Yorker, but I like LA better now than New York. Whoa. It hurts me physically to say this. What's wrong with New York now?
[39:56] There's no – Here it is. Eye-popping amount, insider called Insanity, is up around $11 billion from the current year. That's like 9% up. A record $127 billion budget proposal on Tuesday. The socialist city leader's plan includes a whopping 9.5% proposed property tax hike. Holy crap. [40:26] migrants. [40:28] Migrants. What's the Florida budget, Jamie? Raskins. [40:31] Scroll down a little bit. Okay. [40:33] Uh... [40:35] Wow. [40:36] Oh, my God. It's the same. It's about the same. Yeah, the New York one would have been that this year, I think. Yeah, but it's comparable. Holy crap. So it's not three times more, whatever the fuck it is, more. [40:47] No, three times more people, right? Right. So that is triple per capita. Yeah, triple per capita. So the budget of Florida, Florida House, is $113.6 billion to $115 billion. [41:06] Holy – so New York City is – their budget is more than the entire state of California with three – Florida, Florida. Excuse me, state of Florida with three million more people – or three times the people. Holy – I can't even talk. But for this year, it would be about the same because if it's $11 million, that's $116 million. Sure. That's the same. [41:24] But the point is it's still – Well, it says it's up $11 billion from the current year. It's still a proposal though. He hasn't passed it. Well, he's not. He's a fucking psychopath. The amount for migrants is crazy. There should be zero dollars for illegal immigrants. Zero. I don't think you can have zero because if they're going to be there, they're going to be – you have to feed them. You have to do something with them.
[41:49] Like literally, if you don't feed them, they're going to be robbing stores. They have to – human beings need food. What are you going to do? Get them jobs. How are you going to get a migrant job? Yeah. [41:57] Get him a job in Guatemala. Wouldn't you rather give him food than a job? I don't want them taking American citizens' jobs. Well, the whole thing is a mess. The whole thing is a mess, but the point is you can't just throw him away. Right. That's the problem. Unless you're going to remove him from the country. Right. Unless you're moving – even if you want to put him in jail, that's not cheap. Right. That costs a lot of money. Right. So what are you going to do? I remember Piers Morgan had this amazing interview with my favorite British politician, Diane Abbott, who is really special needs, clearly. [42:27] The government, which is members of parliament from the majority party, and then you have the minority party, which has a shadow cabinet. So if there's a secretary of state, Rubio, the Democrats would have a Democrat equivalent who would deal with those issues. And she was their shadow home secretary, which deals with immigration. And he goes, Diane. [42:45] If the labor government wins the next election and you have illegal immigrants here, what do you do with them? Do they get to stay? Do you have amnesty? You're going to deport them? And he goes – she goes, Piers, the Tory system is not fit for purpose. It's terrible. We'll be more efficient and more fair. And he goes – [43:03] Right. Gotcha. [43:05] There's an illegal immigrant. Do they get to stay or are they deported? I've explained this to you. And she's just it was just this amazing thing. Circular. Yeah. I love her. [43:15] Um... [43:17] How much money do they give to poor New Yorkers?
[43:21] Oh, it's going to be a lot. [43:23] But is it the same amount of this? [43:25] Okay. Okay. [43:27] So $7.54 billion to fill cliffs across six major unbudgeted needs. They haven't raised property taxes there in over 20 years. Is that true? That's what this says. It's 25 years since September. Well, the property taxes are high. [43:43] I'm just a point. But I understand they haven't raised it, but they shouldn't raise it. [43:48] Because it goes with – as the property values go up, the percent is going to go up. The revenue is going to go up as well. Exactly. There's no reason to raise – like this idea that they haven't done it so they should do it is crazy. Oh, look at that. So if your condo is $120,000, which is – no condo is going to be that cheap. You're paying like 15% every year in property tax. Yeah, absolutely. [44:08] That's not nothing. That's not nothing. I think the idea is that rich people are just going to pay it, and this is what they're trying to push. Meanwhile, people are going to flee. [44:17] Just like they've done in other countries when they've done these sort of wealth taxes. [44:23] That's $1,200, though. [44:25] A month, but the, the, it's a 1200 a month. Yeah. [44:29] 1200 for the year. [44:30] A condo assessed at $120,000 would go from paying $14,000 to $16,000. But that's a condo that's assessed at $120,000. Good luck finding a condo assessed at $120,000 in New York City. $14,000 divided by 12 is $1,000. Well, for that particular condominium unit. From $15,000 to $16,300, that's a difference of…
[44:54] Oh, I see. I saw you were talking about that. That's 12% on $120,000. Now do a $55 million condo. This is a $3.2 million one. [45:04] The really wealthy people are responsible for a large percentage of the tax income in New York City. I think it's the upper 1%. I think the upper 1% of New York City are responsible for 50% of the tax revenue. It's something crazy like that. See what the actual number is. So the thing about that actual number is those are the people that are going to leave. Because those are the people, if they own multiple properties in New York City, [45:34] being an excessive amount of money. And then they're planning on taxing people if they leave. This is like what they proposed in California. They've also proposed this, I think, in the Netherlands to try to stop people from leaving. Where you still have to pay taxes. Or France was doing some weird thing. I remember when Depardieu was leaving, they were trying to do something. They were all just trying to steal money. Top 1% of New York City income. 49, holy crap. Yeah. Yeah. [45:55] Earners paid 48% of the city's personal income tax liability in 2021, the most recent year with detailed data. Why is the most recent year five years ago? The PIT share equates to roughly 11% of New York City's total tax revenue. PIT accounts for 23% of overall city tax collections. So it's a lot of money. 48% of the city's personal income tax liability is an enormous amount of money. So property tax is 45%. That's where they get all their money from, which you can understand because you can't take the Empire State Building somewhere else.
[46:25] Right. But if you're jacking all that up... [46:28] Top 1% paid 40% of PIT. Shares may have declined post-2021 due to lower capital gains. But he did do something I liked. So him and Kathy Hochul had this thing where now they're trying to streamline, I'm sure there's some catch, to make it easier to build. [46:42] Because they're understanding if rents are high, increasing supply is going to lower costs. So if they do that, I think that's a great thing, obviously, which I never saw coming. Right. That's definitely good. But there's still people who are just – they don't like that kind of leadership. It's spooky. I'm much more concerned about – he has someone in his cabinet or proposed to be in his cabinet who's concerned with decarceration. And the principle is we got too many people in jail. [47:12] But when you apply that en masse and not on a case-by-case basis, who are you going to be letting out? Because I don't think this claim people used to have that like, oh, all these people are in jail because of weed. They're not. [47:23] It's certainly not in New York City. When I was on a grand jury and these weed cases came along, people would even indict them. They're just like, we're not taking part of this. This is BS. And now it's legal. So for you to get to look at what's the guy who was on the Jordan Neely? Was that his name? But he had 40 arrests. [47:39] The one who punched that girl in the face, the old lady in the face and tried to kidnap a girl. Yes. So for you to be in jail in New York, it's not nothing. Right. [47:47] Yeah. [47:48] And why? Why would they want to do this? Because their principle is the system or society, whatever you want to call it, whether your term for it is, is making people who are marginalized desperate. So they act out. So instead of putting them in jail, which helps no one is the argument. We should be working with them systemically to kind of normalize and make productive citizens out of them. And what's their plan for that?
[48:16] You have welfare programs, different training programs to throw money at it. Oh. And here's the thing. I can understand that argument. Maybe if someone's stealing bread to feed their family, I have never understood how I'm really poor, so I'm going to hold a woman down and do bad things to her. Right. That's not a thing. Or just randomly punch people in the streets or throw people in front of trains. Yeah. That's right. It's like that's not – it's not because you're late to your job interview. Right. That you shove somebody in front of the six train. Right. [48:44] Yeah, it's dark, man. It's very dark, but L.A. is not as dark as this. [48:49] I think in L.A. there is still this sense of hope. [48:54] Really? Because people I talk to in L.A., everyone I know knows someone who's been broken into. Like the home invasions. Oh, that's right. That's the thing. [49:03] They're up in a huge way. [49:04] I'm just comparing two different kinds of cancer. And I'm saying the cancer in L.A. Is better than the cancer in New York? Yes. [49:13] Because I remember growing up and not that long ago with New York, you could find some new neighborhood and there'd be some cool ice cream store, some sock store, whatever, a button store, cool little spots. And it would be a fun adventure to just walk around and just walk in different places. And that's gone. Is it? Yeah. [49:33] You can't open up some weird little store in New York anymore. The rent is through the roof. Like the crime is through the roof. It's miserable. L.A. has these little pockets, which I enjoy seeing. So what's the solution for New York after this guy is out?
[49:48] Do you think that it ever turns around or do you think it keeps going in the same general direction? Do you think the powers that be want it to go in this general direction? It always turns around. So John Lindsay was mayor in the late 60s during the Summer of Love stuff. [50:03] sexual assaults through the roof. You remember New York was going bankrupt under a beam when Gerald Ford was president. And Ford, the headline, I think the New York Post was, Ford to New York City dropped dead. And that cost him some votes and possibly the presidency. But New York has these, I don't know what the cycle, for Giuliani to win, you had to have a Dinkins. For Obama to come in, you had to have a Bush. But here's the other problem. There's two issues. One is a lot of people who could left. [50:32] There didn't used to be a plan B for New York because New York was its own thing. Now it's Florida. Now it's Florida or Austin. Yeah. And New York isn't New York anymore because Fran Liebowitz, my second favorite public speaker, she had this point. She goes, look, there's a lot of things you could say about a city that's full of rich people. You could say it's good. You could say rich people are bad. You can't say it's interesting. [50:52] And unless there's a space for young people of nothing to lose who are going to bring culture and innovation. Artists. Artists. Broadly speaking, not just little painters, but artists. It was Williamsburg. It was the Bowery before that. There were little pockets of magic. And Red Hook, I remember there was a bar called Lily's, and all of Red Hook was deserted. There's just one light open, and I came to this bar, and there were just amazing singers. It was like a mystical experience.
[51:22] But that's – you can't do that now. A friend of mine's girlfriend used to work in this place called Den of Thieves. Oh, OK. Yeah. And there was no sign. Right. You go in there. It's this dingy little hole in the wall. Or Milk and Honey was another one. This place is so cool. It's so cool. But you can't do that anymore. No. So – and I don't think under this guy there's going to be – [51:43] that return. So do you think he's just – [51:48] appealing to this base of disenfranchised young people that have been told that the reason why they have all these problems is rich people are greedy and they've ruined everything and we should tax the rich and we'll feed the poor. I think he is speaking to a lot of people. So people on the right think everyone on the left is like a big monolith. They're not. And I think there's a lot of lefties, especially young lefties, who don't think the Democratic Party is an effective mechanism [52:18] And he's not – just like Trump wasn't really a Republican, he's a Republican on paper. He had no allegiance to the Republican Party. He took them all out one at a time. This guy is a Democratic socialist. He has no – in 1934 when Upton Sinclair ran for governor of California after years of running as a socialist, he goes, people vote for the party their grandparents voted for. So he's a Democrat on paper. He's a leftist obviously, but he's a Democrat on paper. Cuomo was the establishment hack. And he's like, look, it was like Obama in 08.
[52:48] young guy who's got a different vision. And he definitely does have a different vision. This isn't how Hillary would govern New York City or even Eric Adams or some of these others. I think one of the big reasons he won was that debate where he said that he wouldn't go to Israel. You think that's a big one in New York? 100%. I think that was an enormous shift. I would say that's a 10-15% shift. 10-15? Huge. Absolutely huge. I think the polling's horseshit because it's only people so fucking stupid they answer polls. Who are those people? [53:18] I think there was a giant cultural shift where people were like, right, shouldn't we be paying attention to New York? Why are all these people saying they want to go to Israel? Why are they saying that? Who's paying them? Why are they saying that? That's an odd thing to say. No one's saying the first thing I'm going to do is visit Belgium. They're not saying that. They're saying we're going to go to Israel. Sure, but there's also a huge Jewish population in New York City. Right. [53:48] outed as an anti-Zionist. Right, but the politicians, like, the percentage of people that are Jewish in New York City is small in comparison to the people that think that New York City should be the main focus of attention and not Israel. And I think when you have all these politicians that are doing things that don't make sense to most people, like saying the first thing I'm going to do is visit Israel. What are you talking about? This city's a mess. And then this guy comes along and says, I can serve the Jewish people of New York City
[54:18] Jewish percent of Jewish vote. My point is I don't think that that number happened because of the debate. I think that was part of his appeal from the beginning. Well, I think for fence sitters, though, that debate was big because you got to see one guy who's like, this is a solution to this system that we have been just replacing the heads of the people that are in charge, but it's the same exact mechanism. No, that's that's what I was saying earlier, that he's not a member of the Democratic Party. Cuomo is this old party hack. And he's like, [54:48] garbage. This is something innovative and new. This is the argument Obama made in 08. And he's not wrong. Like he, when he, when he had his inaugural speech, and he said, we're going to get rid of the cold, whatever, of grasp of capitalism and be embraced by the warmth of collectivism. No Democrat, [55:05] is saying things like this. This is something completely new and completely innovative. So how it's gonna look in practice. Here's the other thing though. [55:13] The mayor of New York has a ceiling to what he can do. So I would not – if I'm – he's 34, I think. Yeah. He's young. I don't – if I'm sat in that office and I'm up against the New York City real estate [55:25] industry, it's not going to be an easy fight for me. [55:30] Right. [55:32] Trump had to learn this the first term. It's like just because you're president doesn't mean people are going to bend the knee and play ball. So who knows what this is going to look like? [55:40] Sigh. [55:42] And it's not just New York City. Seattle is doing the same thing. What are they doing there? Seattle, they elected a full-on communist. Oh, that's right. Yeah, yeah. Who lived with their parents.
[55:50] and hasn't had a job, lives off her fucking parents. Well, this is also a big concern with the Democrats in general, with both parties. When you have the base and the establishment, we're basically just – [56:02] gangsters who are doing money laundering and you have the kids who are like we've been screwed over hearing this shit for bullshit for decades let's have an alternative what do you do when you're Nancy Pelosi and you're Chuck Schumer and you're to less extent Hakeem Jeffries and these people are coming up the kids wanting democratic socialists I don't mean kids I mean young people who are idealistic and they're like you're we tried your way didn't give us shit it gave us Trump what do you tell them [56:28] Yeah, what do you tell them? [56:30] There's no answer. You like vote for Steny Hoyer for another 10 years? Like it's ridiculous. [56:37] Amy Klobuchar is not going to be your candidate if you have this democratic socialist vision. She will not deliver that for you, and she'll tell you that to her face. Right. [56:47] So I think that's the dance. [56:52] Newsom is trying to do. [56:56] And I don't see who... [56:58] I think he'd be the perfect VP because he's a great attack dog. He doesn't have to worry about defending his record. He doesn't want to be the VP. I've heard that too, but he was Jerry Brown's number two. He bided his time. [57:10] Yeah, but he was Jerry Brown's number two when he was young and he had never been the governor. Sure. I [57:15] I'm just saying like he would be the perfect VP for the Democrats. I don't think he wants that. I think he wants to be the king. I think he wants to ruin San Francisco, ruin California, and then go on to become the president. You don't think he'd have a good shot?
[57:28] Being the president? Yeah. I think he does. He does. He has a great shot. I think he does. Yeah. I think people are that dumb. I don't think it's that dumb. I think you can – They're that dumb that they're willing to vote party line no matter what. That's true. And a guy who's just a good speaker who's a good bullshit artist that he could be able to sweet talk his way into that position and just fudge data, lie about stuff. Nick Shirley is in California right now doing the same thing that he was doing in Minneapolis. Yeah, and they've already uncovered fucking billions of dollars of fraud. Is that right? Yeah. [57:58] about it. [57:59] Same kind of fraud, Medicaid fraud, through the roof, all kinds of crazy shit. Yeah. But, I mean, I don't know how much that Minnesota stuff – [58:09] I mean it took down Tim Walz, which is one of the biggest scalps. Like no one saw that coming. But the same thing. You take out Tim Walz. He's Klobuchar's governor. It's a hydra. You're not – frankly, you'd rather have him. He's more defeatable than her. Does it depend upon how much fraud gets exposed and who gets connected to that fraud and what the investigation unveils? [58:38] They'll have a little list, a list of excuses. It's been investigated and resolved. What, there's no fraud in Florida and Texas? Or what are you saying? Or why are you targeting the Somalis? So you're not going to get – [58:52] And at the end of the day, I think people expect government to have fraud. And if it's in Minnesota, you're not really going to – if I'm a Democrat in Minnesota, I'm voting Democrat. And if I'm a Republican, it's not – how many votes is this going to sway? Well, they've done an amazing job in Minnesota of distracting people from Somali fraud by organizing protests against ICE. And that's – people need to understand. Like, yes, people are upset about ICE. Fact. Unquestionably, just regular people at home that aren't protesting. But that –
[59:20] protest is not just organized. It's funded. It's heavily funded, organized. They had signal chats with Democratic congressmen or Democratic politicians rather that were involved in this. There is – they knew what they were doing and they did it because they wanted to distract from the fact that this fraud was being exposed. Well, I think they would do it regardless, but yes, it certainly serves that purpose. But they did. They totally shifted the narrative. Yes. Nobody is talking about the fraud anymore. Everybody is talking about ICE being murderers. Right. Right. [59:47] Yeah. So it worked. So that's what I'm saying. If there's more fraud exposed, I don't know that it's going to work against Newsom. [1:00:17] fly that arrow through three hoops. Yeah, you got to go through the bushes and make a small hole to shoot through. [1:00:23] Yeah. [1:00:24] And then to try to make it in dick. And then it'd be very easy for Newsom to be like, I'm so glad this got exposed. Right. I promise you, as president, this won't happen in America. And if you want to talk corruption, look at Trump and all his sweetheart deals, blah, blah, blah, blah, blah. Hillary's a ray throwing man on the bus about Epstein. [1:00:39] They don't have shame. [1:00:41] What's she saying? Hillary's like, Trump's in the files thousands of times. Like, let's have this conversation. She started already. Right, right. What does that mean, though, when you're in the file thousands of times? Because he is the guy that was in contact with the FBI about Epstein. He did contact the FBI after Epstein was arrested and thanked them for arresting him and getting him because that guy was a real problem. Right. And he did kick him out of Mar-a-Lago in 2005.
[1:01:11] but not truthful. So it is factual that his name is in the files thousands of times. And then you leave it for the person listening to make that conclusion. Right. That's all you have to say. That's all you have to say. We were talking to Dono Rawlings yesterday. He's in the files. [1:01:23] Okay. Because Epstein went to visit his show, went to watch his show at Improv in West Palm Beach. I did a search for the word retarded. And the one email I found was someone like, can you mail me that photo where I look fat and retarded? That's it? It's not clear from who. It's to Epstein. It's redacted. Yeah. No one wants to know they were admitted they look fat and retarded. Or the N-words in there are a fair amount also. Well, there's a lot of references to pizza. [1:01:51] I think there's thousands of references to pizza. [1:01:55] And jerky. [1:01:56] The jerky and the pizza. And grape soda, yeah. [1:02:00] Well, grape – the thing about grape soda is grape is like what people do to get around the algorithm when they're discussing rape. When they – he graped them. But this was like 2011. I don't think people knew about that stuff. Right. And I don't think Epstein as a boomer knows how to get around algorithms. Right. That's not an algorithm thing. Right. It's just a code thing. So I thought maybe it's a black thing, but then – Grape soda? Oh, right. Yeah, but then he's racist. There's like things about don't bring black people. Oh, really? Oh, yeah. He says don't bring black people to parties? Something to that effect, yeah. Whoa. [1:02:30] something to that effect. Please double check me on this, but it was something that he was not, no black girls. [1:02:36] Oh, no black girls. Interesting. Huh. So, yeah. I don't think we're ever... The other thing that I'm kind of stunned at
[1:02:46] is there's this belief online that if there's enough agitation... [1:02:52] like, [1:02:53] QAnon, we're all going to have these mass arrests. [1:02:56] And I don't see that happening. And I don't think you can do anything to force them to release the really bad stuff if they have it. [1:03:04] So what else is left? There's three million other files. Right. They said they released everything. [1:03:11] Well, they also said there wasn't anything. Right. You know, when Cash Patel was on here, it's like there's no videos. There's no evidence. There's no nothing. The craziest for me was when Pam Bondi said, I've got the list. [1:03:24] And I said to myself – and I talked to my friends. They all agreed with me. I'm like, I really don't think he had like – [1:03:30] clients list dot doc on his desktop that's not a thing right so i would i believe he doesn't like have a literal list and later she goes when i said list i meant blah blah blah and i'm like but you said list right well they had those binders they were all right performatively holding those binders we have the files we're going to go through them heads are going to roll nothing happened right and then les wexner what did he say today jamie you were saying that he said he got man he was conned or something but he's gone for so many years i've been seeing [1:04:00] received that there's a bunch of missing files from specifically 1999 through 2001. Right. [1:04:06] And that people are connecting that to 9/11. [1:04:09] Oh, wait, 19... Pre and post 9-11 are all missing. Wait, so Epstein might be involved with 9-11? Yeah.
[1:04:17] But I mean what's the thumbtacks and strings? I'm not saying it's impossible. Well, there's a lot of people that believe that Israel was involved in that. Right. But I don't think Epstein was high up in the Israeli decision-making process. [1:04:29] But I think they're just looking for financial records of things, and those are all missing – [1:04:35] People's names pop up. If I found out Muhammad Atta was a pedophile, I might actually start to dislike that guy. [1:04:44] That would really change my opinion of him. F.C. files surrounding 9-11. Wow. Coincidence. This just came out. Yes. I mean, people are still digging in this stuff every day. Holy crap. Why people keep fighting new shit all the time. Oh, my God. Scroll down. This is fascinating. That fucking cryptic George W. Bush photograph. The Clinton one's worse. Yeah. We have that outside. [1:05:05] Yeah, I saw. Yeah. They stumbled across something where there was redacted photos. If you looked through the files and typed in something like no photos rendered. Yes. You could change the .pdf to .mp4 or .mov. There's thousands of videos. Tons of videos are popping up. Wow. Yeah. People are starting to watch all those videos. Some of them are from the prison. Some of them are from the island. Flight logs starting. Okay. Have they found anything in those videos? You got to go to them individually, right? Yeah, I know. People are now. Again, the accuracy, I don't know. [1:05:35] and there's like a girl crying in it but i don't adderall and autism do your job find those videos that should be the subtitle of the show the broken experience adderall and autism do your job holy crap that's hilarious oh my god what a world we're living in you want to talk about i want to talk about scott adams sure i was just at his memorials are you was he ever on your show yes um i got invited to speak
[1:06:01] And it was really a great experience. I got a, because I'm a mental patient, I got a Dilbert mask. [1:06:09] And the thing with the Dilbert mask is there's no mouth, right? So Dr. Drew was supposed to speak, and I was going to go there and do my little terrorism where I was going to have my little phone and say, nice to meet you. I'm Dilbert, and wave, and then swipe and be like, you know, can you take off your glasses, please? And he takes off the glass and be like, nice eyes, I'm going to take them, and just fuck with people at the funeral like Scott would have wanted. It was really great because it was very upbeat, right? [1:06:36] And, uh, [1:06:37] I was kind of honored. Gutfeld asked me to, Gutfeld texts me. He goes, hey, do you want to speak? And I go, it'd be a huge honor. He just goes, great. And I'm like, am I actually speaking or you're just, you know, quizzing me? Um... [1:06:48] I got to see Cernovich was there, Posobiec, a few other people, and then afterwards went to his house. And there's something really kind of – [1:06:55] Eerie. [1:06:57] about walking in the house of someone who had just passed. His ex-wife, Sherry, let me take two of his markers, which I will always treasure and kind of hang in my house. There were two lines I couldn't say at the memorial because I knew the fans would get salty, which is, Scott is in heaven right now doing what he loved most, avoiding black people. And the reason Dilbert was a black and white comic strip is because Scott didn't really like the collards. Right. Because Scott was a humorist. Just go for the joke. [1:07:27] But, I mean, it's... [1:07:30] it's just, it's weird how much he still resonates, I think, with people. Yeah.
[1:07:39] And I don't really have anything else particularly to say, but I just felt it was important to kind of commemorate his passing because he's really helped me out a lot in my thinking. [1:07:48] Yeah, it's a real bummer man because I [1:07:51] It happened so quickly. It's cancer. He got turbo cancer. Well, he had it in January 2021. [1:07:57] Five. Uh-huh. And he said, I'm going to wait for my stepdaughter to get married. And she was there, and I got to meet her. She was a lovely kid. To get married, and then I'm going to do it. [1:08:06] And then he tweeted something out. RFK jumped in. Trump jumped in. They got him this medicine, and they got him a few more months. So he got six more months, point being with the maid stuff, just because someone's terminal doesn't mean they don't have – [1:08:20] months left. You could do a lot in those months. It was funny. There's another cartoonist. I apologize. I'm blanking on his name. He was friends with Scott for a long time. Scott had... [1:08:30] promote his work once and he went from like obscurity to like a big name and scott asked him hey can you write the foreword to my forthcoming biography and the guy's like i'm not really gonna have time so it like scott was that kind of person where he's just like just because you know i'm about to meet my maker i don't want you to be morose i i he his book reframe your brain is a complete [1:08:52] masterpiece. Because what he does is he goes through [1:08:55] Freight mindsets and instantly recalibrates them one of them is the regular framework is I should do great at my job and his reframe is I [1:09:05] My job is to prepare for a better job. And when you think about it that way, having that shitty job isn't that rough because you're just laying the groundwork for something better. So when I spoke, I said the framework is we're having a memorial for Scott.
[1:09:17] But the reframe is we're having a party and Scott's really late. [1:09:21] So if you think about that terms, hey, we're having fun. Where's this asshole? Because he didn't want us to be there like moping. He always was positive, always was fun, even during that day. So I thought – I just owe him a lot. Did he blame his death on the COVID shot? So he got a lot. This really bothered me because he'd be tweeting about stuff. People are like, shouldn't have got the shot. It's like this guy is about to die. This is your gotcha moment. This is your like I told you so moment. [1:09:51] He did not blame it. I would be surprised if that was the – you saw what just happened. I met James Van Der Beek through you. I met him at the mothership in the green room. 48, six kids. The wife seemed very sweet and charming too. He seemed like a really chill dude. I haven't seen one person. Yeah, he seemed like a super nice guy. Not one person has anything bad to say about him, which says a lot from that kind of era. Yeah. No, he was a sweetheart. So 48, man. That's scary. I know. [1:10:17] And it's – there's an unprecedented number of young people that are dying of cancer. In fact, was it Time Magazine that had a cover of it? I saved it because it was kind of – the cover is kind of crazy because it's proposing like what is causing these things and why is this all happening as if no one knows. [1:10:33] Yeah, right. Like, what could it be? What is the... Some fucking mystery. It could be anything. [1:10:38] You know, I know I saved it. [1:10:41] Thank you. [1:10:42] Race to explain why more young adults are getting cancer. Holy crap. Yeah. What do you think it could be? Anything weird happen?
[1:10:49] Do you guys know what SV40 is? I should probably look it up. What's amazing about articles, like, does that article make it a point? Do they ignore the vaccine, so-called vaccine, or do they downplay it as the cause? Like, those are the two options. Right, right. [1:11:04] What do they say in that article? Do they bring up? [1:11:08] I'd love to hear that. Couldn't possibly be... [1:11:11] Thank you. [1:11:12] Thank you. [1:11:12] Do you know what really fucked me up recently? And you're going to laugh in my face. And every Maha person listening to this is going to laugh in my face. What? And you can feel free to laugh in my face because it's covered in polka dots. [1:11:22] Aspartame. [1:11:25] I would drink... [1:11:27] My main method of hydration was Dr. Pepper zero. [1:11:32] It's warranted. I know. This is why I have the polka dots. And I go to New York, and I'm low on calories for my macros, and I switched to full sugar, Dr. Pepper. So it wasn't the caffeine. And my thinking changed. [1:11:44] And I'm like, this is, and I go online, this has been known. [1:11:49] Did you change how so? I was quicker on my feet. I was having trouble remembering words, remembering names, remembering just being – my verbal speed of how I speak is something that is part of my job. And I was having issues with that. I had to work around when I couldn't think of someone's name or someone's word. Or I was having this – there you go. [1:12:09] Research has linked high consumption of aspartame to impaired memory, spatial learning deficits, and faster cognitive decline. [1:12:17] in adults under 60. Yep. Neuroinflammation, oxidative stress, aspartame metabolites can trigger chronic disease.
[1:12:26] micro glial activation and increased oxidative stress in the brain leading to neuronal damage and potential neurodegeneration. [1:12:36] You know who pushed that through, right? Who? Aspartame. [1:12:39] Rumsfeld. [1:12:40] No. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Search that. [1:12:44] So here's the thing. Throw that into perplexity. If you're listening to this and you're someone like me who was living on it, just try for two days. [1:12:51] Right. Really? And you'll know right away if – because I also had this low-key anxiety all the time. Like it was like a one out of ten, but it was there. I thought, okay, it's just whatever. I thought it was just life. Nope, it's gone. Donald Rumsfeld, CEO of G.D. Serial in the late 1970s, early 80s, played a pivotal role in the FDA approval of aspartame, the artificial sweetener in products like NutraSweet. [1:13:12] Holy crap. [1:13:15] There was studies back then... [1:13:18] showing... [1:13:20] Approval due to potential carcinogenic carcinogenicity risks. Hayes approved aspartame for dry food shortly after expanding it to beverages by 1983. [1:13:33] There was studies on, I think there was rat studies. They gave them like Alzheimer's. [1:13:39] Thank you. [1:13:40] Well, I... [1:13:42] So I am just warning people as much as I can. Pretend I'm a quack. [1:13:46] That's fine. Just give it two days. Lay off aspartame. I'd see what happens to you. [1:13:50] Okay. [1:13:52] Well, it makes sense. I mean, there's no biological free lunch. If you get something and it does something positive, it's probably doing something negative. If it's some novel...
[1:14:03] potion that you're pouring into your body there's probably some negative aspect i was talking to dr mike about this about um oh zempic brain tumors in rats yeah led the fda to stay aspartame 74 approval brain to and fucking rats man highlighted high brain tumor incidents in rat feeding studies and risks from phenylalanine causing convulsions or mental retardation isn't that what they think [1:14:33] fucking gallon of Diet Coke a day. Really? Yeah. Find that. I think that's what a lot of people, because Tammy Faye Baker, I think, died of brain cancer. [1:14:44] Colon cancer? Okay. [1:14:46] What's that? That spread to her. Oh, that's awful. Went from her colon to her lungs. What is she doing? Ask the mouth stuff? [1:14:53] she should call kristin cinema i don't think it's contagious she should call kristin cinema that was some weird orgies down there um [1:15:01] Fuck. But wasn't she like a prolific Diet Coke drinker? [1:15:07] I think she was. [1:15:09] I think people were trying to link it. [1:15:11] Look, it can't be good for you. [1:15:13] It tastes like sugar. It's not sugar. It can't be good for you. It did a number on me, and I'm happy to be able to warn people. It scared the fuck out of me. I like Stevia. [1:15:23] Like, I like these drinks called Zevias. They're stevia drinks, and zero calories. Tastes good. Right. It doesn't quite taste like sugar, but it tastes good enough. I'm just sticking to my water and my full sugar drink.
[1:15:36] So it is. But my daughter is, like, really good at reading labels and finding – she's like, you're only supposed to drink one of those a day. I was like, are you sure? I was eating a protein bar this morning while getting my face did, and I just look at the label, and one of the ingredients I see is titanium dioxide. I'm like, do I really – Titanium. Interesting. Like what? This episode is brought to you by Manscaped. Wondering what to get your dad on Father's Day? [1:16:01] The Beard and Dome Bundle from Manscaped is a really solid option. I've been using their Dome Shaver for a while now, and the thing I like about it is how easy it makes everything. You don't have to think about it. It just glides over your head, gets everything clean, no weird patches, no going over the same spot ten times. Honestly, it's so much better than anything. [1:16:21] any of the other brands I've tried. And then there's the Beard Hedger. It's got this zoom wheel with 20 different length settings. It's built right in. So if you want to get your dad something he'll actually use, the Beard and Dome bundle for Manscaped is an easy pick. Get 15% off plus free shipping with the code ROGAN15 at manscaped.com. That's 15% off plus free shipping with code ROGAN15 at manscaped.com. [1:16:49] This episode is brought to you by LifeLock. Lots of places can accidentally expose you to identity theft. Doctors' offices, online retailers, insurance companies, the list goes on. Thankfully, LifeLock monitors hundreds of millions of data points a second for threats to your identity, which is way more than anyone could do on their own. LifeLock keeps an eye on your personal information, credit applications, finances, and more.
[1:17:19] like new loans or changes to your financial accounts, they'll alert you right away, all through text, phone, email, or the LifeLock app. Even better, alerts are automatically activated the moment you become a LifeLock member. No extra work on your part. Get the alerts that could make all the difference. Don't wait. Join LifeLock now. Visit LifeLock.com slash J-R-E and save up to 30% your first year. [1:17:49] slash J-R-E for 30% off. Terms apply. Yeah. So that's in me now. Yeah. [1:17:57] There's other protein bars. You don't have to eat that shit. I think they all have that. No, I eat carnivore bars. You ever had carnivore bars? No, I haven't. It's just like fat and meat. I use MRE Light is the brand I use. Carnivore bars are great. They just taste like you're eating fat. Fat and meat. Okay. Is that all the ingredients there? Yeah, I don't think there's anything bad in them at all. I think it's like... Pull that company up. Carnivore bars. [1:18:25] I'm happy to switch. Yeah, I think it's pretty natural. I don't think there's anything in there. This has got to have a lot of salt or sodium. Yeah, there's some salt in there, but salt's not bad for you. That's all horse shit. I... [1:18:36] Like when you're eating TV dinners and those numbers, that's not bad. That's different. TV dinners are filled with preservatives. Carnivore snacks is great. Is that what you're talking about? Well, this is something that I eat all the time. This is my go-to snack. When I go to the UFC, that's the stuff I bring. Okay. I bring that. You bring it if you don't have it for you? No, I bring it. I bring it because I work with this company, so they send me a bunch of it. It's fucking great. But the carnivore bar. So this stuff. Okay. Purest meal on earth, two ingredients.
[1:19:06] 20 grams of protein, 35 gram animal-based fat, 400 to 420 calories from grass-finished beef, shelf-stable, no refrigeration. Oh, shit, okay. That's what I eat. [1:19:16] Okay, send it to me. Send me some, guys. I have some. They'll send you some. Hell yeah. But if I had some here, I eat those all the time. I take them with me. I throw them in my car. [1:19:24] It's fucking great if you want to eat something. That is what I need. It's protein. It's got grass-finished beef tallow, so you get the fat from beef tallow. Some people don't like the taste of it. I like it. [1:19:34] It's kind of mild or bland. That's fine, though. You're eating it from macros. I'm just trying to get food. Right, yeah, nutrition. Yeah, but it doesn't make me feel bad at all. It feels like food. Like, I've tried some other stuff. Like, I tried those David bars. Oh, my God, the farts I was having. So David bars... [1:19:53] They have some weird fat in it that your body doesn't digest. Like those Olene chips? Something like that, but a new version of it. And so when this company, when they were purchased, they got a monopoly on that kind of whatever this ingredient is. And all these other companies, they blocked it. These companies that were using it, they couldn't use it anymore. So a lot of people were like boycotting David bars. They taste good. And they have like a lot of protein. [1:20:23] for like 150 calories but good lord the farts i was having i was like this is because your body's like what is this i had that same thing with protein cheerios protein cheerios yeah it wasn't farts i was having the trots oh really yeah like your body's like hey right this is fuck are you doing just eat just eat some yeah yeah but eat something like carnivore bars or those carnivore
[1:20:53] are, it's like a beef pastry. It's not even like jerky. It's chewy, it's delicious. So this is a lab-engineered fat substitute called EPG, manufactured by a little-known Indianapolis-based company called Epigee. After tinkering with the product formulation, the Fugles set up a website in 2024 and began promoting the bars at local bodybuilding shows and farmers markets... [1:21:16] It's just an article about the... Right. So what does it say that stuff does? Well, I'm... [1:21:21] So find out what that stuff does. It's a fat substitute, yeah. But it does something where your body doesn't digest the fat. Like it doesn't turn into calories or something. Well, this is promoting them. This is making it sound great. Yeah, there's 58 other mentions of VPG in here. Yeah, this is making it sound like, oh, it's the best thing ever. They're not mentioning the farts. Well, yeah, this is probably promoting it. Yeah, it is, yeah. Oh, no, this is about the lawsuit. Oh. Oh. Oh, it is Olestra, like you said. It's essentially a better Olestra. At the time, fat was the big culprit for heart disease, which it's not. [1:21:51] Oh, Lester was undigestible. That was its key attribute. It passed right through the digestive tract, therefore wouldn't result in body fat. The problem was its low melting point in the body, which led to an infamously polite phrase printed on the wow labels may cause abdominal cramping and loose stools. Yeah, people are shitting this stuff. Yeah. Wasn't those Pringles or something, I think? Well, this stuff didn't give me loose stools, but it did give me like the devil was farting out of my asshole. [1:22:21] nice fun.
[1:22:23] Farts? [1:22:24] Like when you have a fart that sounds like a symphony. [1:22:27] Like when you're old and you start having new farts, I kind of like it. I'm just like, I still got it. Well, this was just like, for me, it was a warning sign. My body was like, hey, this ain't good. I think it's a warning sign for other people too, Joe. Yeah, right. Anybody else? [1:22:41] What is the problem with that stuff? [1:22:44] Okay. Ooh. [1:22:47] uh... [1:22:49] and problems. [1:22:50] Yeah, I guess. [1:22:54] So that was the thing. They were trying to block other people from using it. Bloating, gas, and diarrhea. Yeah, bloating, gas, and diarrhea due to sugar, alcohol, and the non-digestible fat substitute. That's it. [1:23:07] which are poorly absorbed and can have a laxative effect, especially in larger amounts. The company recommending limiting intake to two bars daily to minimize discomfort. Wait, wait, wait. Can we stop? I love that they say minimize, not eliminate. There's no food where you're like, you know, if you eat too much of this, you're going to definitely have discomfort. Who's eating two of these fucking things a day? [1:23:29] I'm sure people – I know, but I mean like after the farts, wouldn't you be like, hey? But it's not only the farts. It's the distention. The inflammation. Yeah. You have that bloated feeling. For some people, but why they would choose something like this is they want all that protein with 150 calories and they'll just take the farts. [1:23:47] Yeah. Well, I mean, look away. He's not digestible. [1:23:50] That's the standard protein for bodybuilders. Yeah, but it doesn't bother me. Yeah, but a lot of people, whey is not easy to break down. For a lot of people, yeah. I have zero problem with whey. I can't do whey. Really? I was getting brain fog.
[1:24:01] A little bit. A little bit, yeah. Huh. Maybe something's wrong with my brain. I don't know. Well, you might have like some sort of a milk allergy or something. That's possible. Who the hell knows? But the point is I switched to the whole meat protein. And that's much easier for me. Something like carnivore snacks or those carnivore bars, that's the solution. Get those. And that way you don't have to even think. It's just food. And your body treats it like food. It feels like food when you eat it. It doesn't feel like. [1:24:31] for what I need. [1:24:32] What are you trying to do? I'm doing lean gains. [1:24:34] Lean gains? Yeah. What does that mean? So you're keeping the same body fat, but you're slowly putting in weight. So it's really a tightrope. Oh, okay. So you're involved in that again. I know you bailed on... [1:24:44] bodybuilding type activities well no i still go to the gym but you're trying to get jacked i think i'm in good shape but you're trying to get jacked i don't know okay yeah i don't know why you're doing that i didn't do that what do you mean i'm just asking are you trying to get jacked i i okay that seems like a kind of question that you corner me in the gym no what do you know no no no no it's a normal thing for people that are trying to get swole you're trying to get like big muscles i am
[1:25:14] maintaining a somewhat lean build what are you doing like as far as your workouts i go to gym four days a week what are you doing with your workout what kind of workout i do a bro split don't make fun of me no there's nothing wrong with a bro split there's a roast there's nothing wrong nothing wrong with it works yeah but i'm not doing legs [1:25:30] Because my leg's already too big for my jeans. What? Yeah. Get stretchy jeans. Yeah. [1:25:35] I have 30 pairs of jeans. I don't need to get more jeans. Point being, my legs... But do you have regular jeans that are made out of cotton, or do you get jeans that have flex in them? [1:25:44] I have 30 pairs, so it's a mix. The point being, my legs are great. I'm Russian. Russians have great leg DNA. So you don't work out your legs at all? You're going to get an imbalance. [1:25:53] How? Also, if you work out your legs, your whole body will grow. That's true. And you'll put up more pounds on the scale. But point being, I'm already at the point marginal with most of my jeans. And they're not skinny jeans. Let me see your legs. How am I going to show you my legs? Just stand up. Let me see your legs and your jeans. Okay. [1:26:13] Those are not too big. That is ridiculous. No, no, no. I don't need to be. No, no, no, no, no. Hold on. I will send you a photo of my legs and you're going to apologize. My legs are great. Okay. They're not chicken legs. I believe you. They don't look like chicken legs. They're not chicken legs. But I don't think you should be concerned about them getting bigger. First of all, it takes a lot to get your legs much larger. It takes a lot. You're going to have to really push past some severe discomfort. I'm not disputing that, but point is they're already marginal with my clothes. [1:26:43] You've got new clothes. You've got money. Listen, you've got to keep your body balanced. That's why you should do legs. You should never just do upper body. Joe, I am nowhere at the point where my upper body is too big for my legs. Well, it's not that. You should condition both of them together. Okay. It's like you want to have a body that works together.
[1:27:03] My body is fine. I'm not going to be body shamed on this show. I'm not body shaming. I'm talking about functional. [1:27:09] What function? Going up the stairs? Anything you have to do. If you have to pick something up and move it. If you're not working your legs, then all that stuff in your hips, all that stuff, all the surrounding tissue, all that stuff is not getting the exercise it deserves while you're working out your upper body. Fine. The point being, my legs are perfectly fine and strong. And it was hard for me to get the calories I need. That's all I'm saying here. So how many calories? What are you trying to do a day? I think it's 3,200. [1:27:37] Okay. Which is not nothing. [1:27:40] That's a good meal for me. [1:27:41] That's a lot of calories. Yeah. Yeah. [1:27:44] I guess. What do you mean? You don't think that's a lot? I eat a lot. If you're eating clean, 3200's a lot. Okay. Yeah. [1:27:50] Yeah, I guess. Yeah. So 3,200 calories. So, but you're trying to stay lean. [1:27:56] And are you on testosterone replacement or anything like that? I don't know what you're talking about. Okay, you are. Good. That's good. [1:28:04] peptides any peptides you know what i tried i guess okay good [1:28:09] I tried Glow. [1:28:11] What's Glow? [1:28:13] Oh, well, well, well, Mr. Doesn't Skip Leg Day. He doesn't have polka dots on his face. Someone does. You call yourself a bro and you don't have polka dots on your face. Glow is this new peptide. It's a combination of three things and it's called glow because it has heavy copper, so it's blue.
[1:28:34] Glow, huh. [1:28:36] You are welcome. [1:28:37] Interesting. Most people combine PPC-157, TB-500, and GHKCU without addressing sequencing or inflammation first. Here's what determines whether GLOW truly works. [1:28:52] Interesting. Oh, okay. So it's a combination of all those things together. Interesting. Because I pulled my shoulder pretty bad. [1:29:00] With your heavy lifting? [1:29:02] It wasn't. I don't think it was heavy. It's just probably, I don't know what happened. You don't lift heavy? I lift somewhat heavy, but not enough. I'm not going to lift heavy enough to provoke injury. Okay. I think that's kind of foolish, especially at my age. It is, but if you want to gain weight. [1:29:15] But I'm gaining weight. You're not doing benching or anything, are you? You do bench press? Why wouldn't I do bench press? Why wouldn't you? Yeah. Because it's terrible for your shoulders. Well, I do dumbbell bench. [1:29:25] That's slightly better for your shoulders. Okay. But that activity of having a lot of weight down here. I'm only putting up 70s. That's not that much. It's a lot for you. Okay. [1:29:34] So all that weight back here when you're right here, it puts tremendous strain on your body. So what should I do for your pecs? You could do dips. Dips are fantastic for it. [1:29:43] You know, don't go past 90 degrees. You can once you condition your shoulders to be able to do it. But dips are good. Weighted dips are really good. There's stuff that you could do, like just kettlebells. Well, I don't do any chest exercises other than dips. Really? Yeah. I do a lot of kettlebells. Most of my exercises are full body motion stuff.
[1:30:05] Almost everything. I do a lot of snatches. [1:30:09] A lot of cleans, a lot of like alternating cleans, a lot of renegade rows. Everything I do is kettlebells. All I do is I know someone who really knows this stuff and I follow orders. That's good too. That's good too. My concern is always functional movement. My concern is always I want my body to work as one unit. I don't like isolating things. [1:30:31] I think I do a lot of compounds, like incline dumbbell. Incline bench is one example. Or I don't even remember the other kind of stuff. But if you have shoulder problems and you're benching, there's a lot of people I know that just have a completely eliminated benching. Is that right? Okay. Especially heavy benching. It only resolved this week, thank God. But you know what? It won't like... [1:30:52] If you're doing kettlebells, that's the weird thing about kettlebells. It increases the strength of all your activities. They found that people that do snatches, it increased their VO2 max and it increased their ability to do chin-ups. I did used to do kettlebells. I had one of the lifts in my workout. And I... [1:31:09] pulled out my back once something so fierce. It was a temporary, like almost like a cramp, but it was very, very scary. Do you remember what the exercise was? Yeah, I was doing the, when you're bending over, you swing it over your head. Snatch. Yeah. Yeah. [1:31:21] Yeah, well, the key to that is warm-ups. Do you warm up a lot? No. No, I do warm-ups with the weights. Like, my first set will be 40% of my working set. What I would recommend is... [1:31:32] You got to, especially as you get older, you really have to warm your body up. And one of the things that I do is I always do 10 minutes on the Airdyne bike, get everything like slightly sweaty. Then I do a lot of jump rope. I get everything fired up. And then I do a lot of mobility exercises. I do like body twists. I do these things like you wave. I get down to the bottom and I wave all the way up and I bend backwards and I go forward. I do a lot of twists. I get everything loose.
[1:32:02] I do 100 push-ups, 100 bodyweight squats, and that's my warm-up. So all that stuff, by the time I've done with all that stuff, now everything's warm, and now I can start working out. How many days a week do you lift or work out? Well, I work out almost every day. Oh, okay. Occasionally I'll take a day off, but I work out almost every day. And then with lifting, it's almost every day. It depends on what I'm doing. If I'm hitting the bag, generally I don't lift weights the days I hit the bag. So that's like maybe two or three days a week. [1:32:32] I alternate between stuff like body weight stuff, like pull-ups, chin-ups, dips. [1:32:40] I do L pull-ups where, you know, you stick your legs out straight. Yeah, yeah. So you're working your abs at the same time you're doing that. I do a bunch of different things, lower back stuff, a lot of back extensions, reverse hyper stuff, sit-ups on that GHB machine where you're going all the way down and – [1:33:01] I'm just happy with the results. [1:33:04] And I'm of the, if it ain't broke, don't fix it mindset. [1:33:08] That's good. Yeah. As long as you're happy with the results. I would just avoid a lot of heavy lifting with bench press. I think bench press is – so many people I know that have fucked their shoulders up, fucked their shoulders up through bench press. I know a lot of bros are going to get angry. I know. That's what I'm waiting for. It's, oh, my gosh, do you bench, bro? Yeah. But here's the thing. Like we did this Sober October thing where we had these stupid fitness challenges, and then after Sober October is over, we all got drunk.
[1:33:37] And so then we went out to my gym, and Ari, Tom, and Bert were all trying to bench 225. And I don't bench at all, and I did it 13 times. Like, I don't bench, and I just – Ari could pull up two plates? No, he couldn't do it. Okay. No, they all got pinned. Yeah, 225 is no joke. Yeah, Bert can do it now, but back then he wasn't lifting. You can't casually do two plates. Yeah. No one can. [1:34:02] Yeah, but I did without ever benching. I mean like you're someone who works out or do. Right. No, no, no. They all got crushed. Yeah, of course. Wait, they thought they could do it? Bert did. Bert definitely did. But Bert's heavy, right? How much is Bert? He's like 250 probably. Oh, Bert's like 250. Yeah, for sure. Tom was bigger at the time too. [1:34:19] Okay. I mean it must have just collapsed. Yeah. They got crushed. But the point is it's like doing kettlebells will help all those other things. Yeah, of course. Because it just – your whole body gets strong and it's not an unusual motion to do that. You could do it. Yeah. I just – I like the weights. [1:34:40] Dumbbell weights are great. There's nothing wrong with weights. I just would be careful about benching. I think dumbbell benching is probably better than barbell benching, and I just think there's other ways to work your chest. Okay. I'll talk to Monster Russ. That's my guy. There's a lot of people that don't even agree with dips. Like my orthopedic surgeon that told me that I need to get my shoulder operated on 15 years ago, and I never did. He was like, got to stop doing dips. I go, why?
[1:35:10] up did it through dips i go well that doesn't mean anything right like what like i'm looking at him and i'm looking at him and his body i'm like look at your shut the fuck up look at all these gymnasts yeah they do dips 24 7 exactly just build up to it don't do too much all of it is like overworking your body you have to like slow progression is the the key there is something fun about i do love doing dips because you feel like you're flying [1:35:34] There's something about it when you're just kind of – yeah, yeah. What can I say? But that's a great chest exercise. [1:35:41] This episode is brought to you by Uber Eats. This summer, soccer is here, and the watch parties will be going back to back to back. But don't worry. Uber Eats has your game day essentials covered with 30% off all orders from Aldi, Kroger, and Dollar General. All the snacks and groceries to keep your crowd happy delivered straight to your door like chips, dips, wings, guac, and fresh ingredients for the perfect game day spread. [1:36:11] locked in on the game, all the hosting, none of the hassle. Order now for 30% off your game day snacks and grocery order only on Uber Eats for a limited time. Offer eligible for 30% off entire order. Taxes, fees, and terms apply. Offer valid through July 5th. Product availability varies by region. Exclusions may apply. This episode is brought to you by ZipRecruiter.
[1:36:41] experience, availability, but even more important than that is someone's enthusiasm. They should want to be there. Finding the right kind of motivation isn't as tough as you think. You just need ZipRecruiter. Try it for free at ZipRecruiter.com slash Rogan. ZipRecruiter connects you with qualified candidates instantly, and their latest feature puts the most interested ones at [1:37:11] You're speaking with the right people at the start. Use ZipRecruiter and find enthusiastic talent fast. Four out of five employers who post on ZipRecruiter get a quality candidate within the first day. And now you can try it for free at ZipRecruiter.com slash Rogan. That's ZipRecruiter.com slash Rogan. Meet your match on ZipRecruiter. [1:37:35] Dips are. Yeah, along with the push-ups. You do 100 push-ups a day and then do dips. [1:37:41] But you're the – okay, we could talk about this also. You're the one – can I tell you what you said to me? [1:37:45] At the mothership about this? What did I say? You said you can't be jacked and be funny. [1:37:51] Well, you can, but you can't show it. I meant like at a certain point, you're too jacked. There's a cost. Well, there's definitely a cost to the way you look. Like you look intimidating. Right. And that's not that funny for people. Right. Yeah. And Roseanne was telling me when she was starting out, she lost all this weight and people stopped laughing. Ah, there's plenty of skinny, funny women. Not in 1981.
[1:38:17] Are you calling Roseanne Barr a liar? [1:38:21] I've seen people lose weight and still be hilarious. It's just like – but there is a mentality that people have. Like Kevin James, his fucking agent said this to him once. I got furious. Kevin was losing weight. He was trying to get in shape. He was really self-conscious about his weight. And his agent said, Kevin, when you lose weight, you're losing rolls. Really? [1:38:39] But that's true, though, because he's very much a specific character. He could fucking do anything. He's a talented guy. It's not like if he lost the weight, he wouldn't be funny anymore. That dude's fucking funny. Hold on. Hold on. I'm not disrespecting Kevin James in any way. [1:38:54] Mad respect for him. Mall Cop, the greatest comedy of all time. It's a funny movie. I believe you. I haven't seen it. Point being, he is very much in people's mind a certain specific thing. Right. So if Kevin James stopped being that thing, I think it's going to be hard for a lot of normies to come over with him to a different paradigm. That's all I'm saying. Come on. It would be a challenge, but I think he'd still be hilarious. I do not think that he is limited by his weight. [1:39:24] Okay, if Will Ferrell got Hugh Jackman, do you think he'd have the same roles? [1:39:29] He wouldn't necessarily have the same roles. He would still be very funny. Yes, he would. But you know perfectly well that there's lots of people. It would be weird because he would be super jacked. Like if he got The Rock jacked. Right. It would be weird. People don't. [1:39:43] know how to deal with that stuff. So the agent's not wrong. Well, the agent's still not looking out for Kevin's health. Was he that big? He was big and he didn't like it and he was worried. Yeah, okay, that's very fair. But you don't have to go from, you could go slimmer, you don't have to go to like, you know,
[1:40:00] running peptides and stuff. Right. You don't have to get jacked. Yeah. But maybe he wants to. You can. It could be done. I mean... [1:40:10] What's that guy who claims he's natty? That Indian guy? [1:40:14] Who was in, I think, The Avengers or something. Oh, Camille? Yeah. [1:40:18] Was it him? I don't think he claims he's daddy. Does he? They do special. No. [1:40:23] It's special exercises, Joe. Come on. He doesn't even claim he's on testosterone replacement. [1:40:30] Don't you know that if you just do lateral races – yeah, he claims that he has to. [1:40:36] I don't know if that's real. Yes, it does. Look him up. He did a very funny bit about people being angry at him for getting in shape. Oh, okay. He did a funny bit in his stand-up, his recent stand-up special about that. Does he claim that he's natural? [1:40:51] All right. [1:40:52] That's a weird thing. The one I'm thinking of is in a stand-up, the one from the movies. Yeah, he's a stand-up. He started out as a stand-up. Oh, good for him. Camille Nanjiani, right? Yeah. Yeah. [1:41:00] Yeah, he started out as a stand-up. Yeah. And he's doing stand-up again, and he just released a special. What's his name? It's funny. He's 92, the Thor. [1:41:07] They all do. No. That guy claims daddy. They have to. Chris Hemsworth? I think he does. Get the fuck out of here. That guy gained like 60 pounds of solid muscle. Well, that's because he's doing lateral raises, you fool. Oh, I didn't know. How do you know? You've never seen him put a needle in his ass. He has personal trainers that teach him second exercises. You're right. [1:41:28] I've been on testosterone replacement for a long time, and I highly recommend it to anybody who wants to stay in shape. How long have you been on it? Since I was, like, almost 40. I started with, like, the cream, and then, well, I noticed my, I was, you know, I was training a lot. That was back then I was doing jujitsu four or five days a week, and I was lifting. That's harder than body. It's hard. Yeah, of course. And you're always tired, and, you know, I had a doctor that specialized in that stuff.
[1:41:58] doing a lot of it for people that had head injuries. [1:42:00] Because people with head injuries, people that have had CTE and a lot of – like you have damage to your pituitary gland. A lot of times your brain is not producing testosterone at the level it's supposed to. Oh, is that right? Yeah, your pituitary gland gets damaged from repeated head trauma. That's one of the things that causes depression in a lot of people that have had head trauma is like your body is not making hormones anymore. So you're just like – you're fucking lethargic all the time. It's a factor. [1:42:30] by marvel daily workouts precise calorie tracking no refined sugar and minimum fats in his 2019 instagram post he emphasized the resources required but never mentioned peds steroids or denied their use so he never denied it okay he didn't deny so go okay i take it back apologize yeah his from a softer build at age 41 for fucking sure he got on testosterone there was a lot of people that were giving me shit about being on testosterone like 15 years ago that are on it now [1:43:00] back to him. [1:43:02] Well, there's nothing wrong with it. I just said I'd do it. No, that's the point. Everybody should do it at a certain point. It's just really funny when people are yelling at him, oh, you're cheating. It's like, cheating for what? Where's the test? People are silly. [1:43:12] People are silly. And they're just mad that he didn't look like – he looked like them. He was doughy. And now all of a sudden he looks like a bro. And they don't like it. Yeah, but the thing that's kind of crazy is now the kids in high school are hopping on. That's crazy because you're going to destroy your endocrine system. And also if you're peaking at 18, that's not going to be good for your mental health. Well, it's not just that. It's just like it kills your dick. It kills your – when you put a bunch of exogenous testosterone in your body, your body stops making testosterone.
[1:43:42] two months, it will take you four months for your body to get back to normal. I think that's the ratio most people, if you're not taking like clomiphene or any of these other things or HCG or something that naturally ramps up your testosterone, you're going [1:43:56] Um... [1:43:57] I think they think that the number is like double the time that you run a cycle before you get back to normal. It's also harder and harder. If you keep running cycles, it gets harder and harder. 100%, because your body starts relying on it and your endocrine system shuts down. [1:44:08] And it's like, why do we have to make testosterone? This guy's got more than a normal human ever has. [1:44:14] And so we just stop. And I think these numbers are through the roof with the kids now. Well, they all want to be like an influencer. They all want to be jacked. You know, it's just like you don't understand the harm you're doing to your body. But it's also the kind of thing where it's just like – [1:44:27] You shouldn't be comparing yourself to the guy on Instagram or the gym. Compare yourself to the guy on the plane next time you're in an airport. That's what I do. That's what kind of helped me. When I get on a flight, I'm like, how many of these people, especially my age, are in good shape? It's going to be one out of 100. Well, the other thing is there's – especially when you're young, there's plenty of stuff that you can do that's natural and super beneficial and not dangerous like creatine. Creatine is tremendous. But you're not going to be a name. [1:44:55] No one's going to notice you on Instagram. That's the thing. They're chasing the fame. That's so sad. It's very sad. I mean, some of these guys look better than Schwarzenegger and they're 17. It's insane. But it's just like, what's your future going to? Well, you're not going to have kids, right? You're going to be sterile.
[1:45:12] You're not going to have any sperm. [1:45:14] But there was that thing about they asked Olympians, would you give up like 20 years of your life and you're guaranteed a gold? And like 90% of them said yes. Yeah, I know. Well, look at Lindsey Vonn. I mean she knew that she had a blown ACL and she still skied. Is that right? Yeah, she blew her ACL out like a couple of weeks before the Olympics and still decided to compete and then shattered her leg with this horrible compound fracture. [1:45:40] Oh, my God. Oh, you didn't know about that? Oh, yeah. She had to get airlifted. She's had multiple surgeries. She's fucked for a long time. Her leg broke in multiple places. She's got rods and stuff in it. And leg breaks are really scary because your body doesn't necessarily always heal from those. Like sometimes the blood flow is not appropriate. It's not what you need. And people get their legs amputated from those things. Jesus. Yeah. Femur breaks are super dangerous. [1:46:10] And I'm part of ever. I know. Right. That's crazy. Yeah. Nothing. A part of me is like, is this something I want to try before I die? Like, no, it sucks. Does it? But it's like how bad is it? Well, I broke my arm when I was seven. I broke my forearm right here. I fell off a monkey bar and snapped my forearm in half. That healed perfect. But when you're a kid, you're a kid, they just put me in a cast. And like six weeks later, I was good to go. I broke my. [1:46:35] My fibula, the small bone of my tibia in sparring, a friend of mine threw a back kick at the same time. I was throwing a kick and his heel hit my fibula and he cracked that. But that was only a crack. I actually competed with that. I put soccer pads on it, those plastic soccer. I taped soccer instep pads. That was allowed? That part of my...
[1:46:58] I didn't tell anybody. Oh, okay. Because it was a taekwondo tournament, so I had pants on. Okay, yeah. And so I put like a regular – these soccer pads. I taped them to my calf, and then I put the foam one on over that, and I competed. Huh, okay. I won the States that way. Okay, great. Were you a national champion? I won American Open, and I came in second place in the U.S. Cup against the national champion, and I think I should have beat him. I got a bad decision. [1:47:28] But I never won the national championships. But at the time that I was getting ready to try to win the national championships in 88, the problem was I had already been – [1:47:37] disillusioned because i had started kickboxing okay and i'd already started like realizing there's a lot of holes in taekwondo well taekwondo is like with the rise of ufc it's really not good well it is if you know all the other stuff right because those kicks are devastating right they're devastating and a guy who's a really good kicker like a michael venom page for for instance who's a karate specialist who learned how to defend takedowns they're really dangerous because they have the ability to cover distance and kick at range and if you're not a good kicker and you [1:48:07] what this guy's doing. They could fuck you up. But there was so many holes in Taekwondo when it came to like punching to the face and then leg kicks. I didn't realize like how many holes there were in it until I started really getting into kickboxing. So I was, by the time 88 rolled around, I was already disillusioned. Huh. [1:48:24] Okay. Yeah. And then I was already starting to do stand-up, so it was like, what am I doing with my life? Oh, I got a bone to pick with you. Ooh.
[1:48:32] I'm excited. Oh, you set me up perfectly. Okay. You set me up perfectly. I was – thank you, Joe Rogan. Bridget Phetasy sat in this very chair. Right. The chair I'm farting in right now because I had some vintage Olean chips from eBay and this chair is going to be a disaster. That's a Trump chair. I know. Okay. [1:48:53] And she told you that I'm starting to do stand-up. And you said, that's great. He's so funny. You can open for me. And then I was all excited about this opportunity. And I wait a few weeks because I was scared to, like, whatever. And you text me about some meme. And I go. First of all, I don't think I said you could open for me. I highly doubt I said that. You did. But that's fine. I'm not holding you to it. I'm just saying you said that. That's fine. Maybe I was joking. I'm not holding you to it. You were just encouraging. Okay. Let's just leave it there. I think you're very funny. [1:49:21] Okay. You text me, that's a meme. I go, hey – [1:49:24] I'm going to do stand-up. You go, you absolutely should. You're very funny. I go, I have my set. What should I do next? Do you know what you said? What? [1:49:30] Nothing. Yeah. You left me on a rant. You're on your own, bitch. What do you mean? Because you've got to figure it out. [1:49:36] It's like, you know, I want to start fighting. What should I do? [1:49:39] You know what to do. Go to a fucking gym. Figure it out. Start training. I can't hold anybody's hand. Stand-up is too hard for you to help someone in the beginning. You've got to actually want to do it. Sure. So you've got to go to open mics. You've got to do stand-up. You've got to get ready. Put a set together. Record it. Review it. Done. [1:49:55] Okay. Yeah. So you're doing stand-up all the time? Not all. You're saying I should do it all the time? You have to do it all the time. It's like if you want to spar, you have to spar every week. Do you know what everyone told me who I asked? Like I asked like 10 big names, bigish people who are names, and they all said the same thing. You have to bomb.
[1:50:12] Yeah. Well, bombing is good because it lets you realize how difficult it is, and then you don't like the feeling, so you work really hard. And also you know you have to be ready for that moment and how to recover from it. Yeah. Yeah. Failure. Failure, I think, in everything is good. Losing is important. It's very important. It motivates you to do better. People don't like that feeling, but a lot of uncomfortable feelings lead to growth, and that's why they're important. That's true. Heartbreak, losing a job, getting fired, all those things are important. [1:50:42] Okay. Yeah. Stand-up is important to – it's important to have like bad sets. Oh, I think you said bad sex. Bad sets. Yes. Bad sex. So when was the last time you went up? I haven't done it for a while because I didn't know what to do. Yeah, you got to do it a lot. It's got to be something that you're dedicated to. That's why I'm saying you can't just – [1:50:59] Say what do I do? Okay, that's fair. You got to do it. That's very fair. I've been talking to Cal and he's been very helpful. [1:51:05] Yeah, just there's plenty of places we could perform. I mean, Austin alone, on my street alone, on 6th Street, there's like within a one block radius, there's like seven clubs. I'm not arguing that. I mean, this is the place. If you want to do stand-up, this is the fucking place, man. I mean, it's incredible right now. Okay, fair enough. Point taken. My club alone has two nights of open mic nights. Is that true? Uh-huh. Sunday and Monday night are both open mic nights. Okay, then I'm going to sign up. [1:51:29] Yeah, we have a real development program. The whole idea is to make it so that we have a real foundation of people that are coming up. And that motivates all the people that are already doing well. It's like, oh, these guys are really working hard. And it gets everybody excited about working hard. And then it motivates the people at the top saying, hey, these young guys are really good. And then guys start getting specials. And Cam Patterson just got on SNL. All these things are happening for people from the club. So it's like...
[1:51:55] It's a great place. [1:51:56] Okay. No, that's fine. That's very fair. Yeah, but it's not something that you can kind of casually do every now and again. You can, but you won't be as good as you will be if you do it every week. Callan said that as well. He's like, you have to put in the time. This is not something that you could do just on weekends. Yeah, you can't run around your block regularly. [1:52:16] once a month and think you can go do a marathon. [1:52:19] Right. Yeah. You got to get in and you got to the thing about stand up is like you're making a mountain one layer of paint at a time. It's not it's not a quick process to become a stand up. Most people agree. And it's not a hard, fast rule because it's depending upon how much actual time you do and how much focus. And the general rule is 10 years. [1:52:43] Really? Yeah. The general rule is 10 years. People don't really think of you as being legit until you've been in it for 10 years. [1:52:50] I don't know that I have 10 years. I don't know if anybody has 10 years. I don't know if the human race has 10 years. You see those robots in China that are doing fucking kung fu? Are they already? Oh, my God. They just did this demonstration, this martial arts demonstration with these robots on a stage. It's crazy how fucking – how they move. I'm more worried about if anyone can use AI to engineer a bioweapon. [1:53:15] Oh, that – yeah, that's real. Because there's a piece – a guy – I forget his name. I apologize. He's one of these big AI people, and he goes, if you use the paid-for AI, he goes, I can tell it to write me code. And it also knows –
[1:53:29] idiosyncratic preferences. So it's better than hiring a person. And that's today. [1:53:34] So what's going to happen in two years, three years? How do you put guardrails on that? I don't think you can. I don't think you can. [1:53:41] And there's a lot of people that are resigning from a lot of these companies that are saying we're doomed. Yeah. Yeah. I'm not a doom and gloom kind of guy, but that I think is a much faster path toward something happening than, you know, robots, Kung Fu robots. Well, there's also automated weapons, weapon systems that are totally autonomous. Is that right? Yes. The government's working on that. And I believe there was an issue. See if you can find this. [1:54:10] With one of the AI companies not willing to partner with the – or not willing to – [1:54:17] do something with autonomous weapons programs. I think it's anthropic. [1:54:23] Oh, wow. Yeah, I think Anthropoc was like, we don't think that's good. And all the other ones are like, let's go. Holy shit, yeah. [1:54:31] Yeah, well, the thing is, is China doing that? They probably are. Anthropic is clashing with the Pentagon over AI use. Here's what each side wants. Anthropic's relationship with the Department of Defense is... [1:54:43] is under review as the two sides negotiate over how the company's AI models can be used. Startup wants assurance that its models will not be used for autonomous weapons or mass surveillance. Oh, my God, these pop-ups are brutal. [1:54:58] Fuck you, CNBC. The DOD wants to use anthropic models for all lawful use cases.
[1:55:06] Without limitation, according to Emil Michael, the Undersecretary of War for Research and Engineering. [1:55:15] Holy crap. Yeah. So this is what they're doing. So which is worse, autonomous weapons or mass surveillance? I think it's mass surveillance. Both of them are terrible. Yeah, which is worse, though? Because they work hand in glove. [1:55:26] Both of them are terrible. [1:55:27] I mean, did you see Alex Karp, that interview that he did? Which one? Where he was talking about Palantir, and he's like, we're going to, you know, and occasionally kill people. We're going to use it to kill people. Yeah. [1:55:39] That's what he said. Right. Right. But he was like openly saying, kill people. [1:55:44] Like, this is what we're doing. Like, what? [1:55:47] But I... [1:55:48] Did you see that big leak from Palantir, which I don't know if it's been verified or not, where they were talking – Kim.com was the one who dropped this. Yes. I did see that Kim.com tweeted about it, but I didn't see if it was verified. What did he say exactly? It was a long, long thing, and it was very – because Palantir got hacked. He said he doesn't have – [1:56:12] I don't think it was verified that this was legitimate, but these were the bullet points he laid out, and it was extremely disturbing. It's not surprising that a private company is going to be more effective and efficient than the government at implementing what the government wants. A lot of the things during COVID wasn't literally the government. These corporations were more than happy to impose these kind of – if you don't get the vaccine so-called, you're going to get fired. Well, they were all having backdoor deals. Exactly, but they were more than happy to do it. Yeah, they were being incentivized. Right, right.
[1:56:42] But the thing about this AI stuff that no one realizes except for the engineers that are deeply invested in this is that it's accelerating at this tremendously rapid pace that they can't really control. [1:56:56] Chat GPT 5, I was reading this article, chat GPT made chat GPT 5. [1:57:03] So... [1:57:03] They essentially tasked the AI to make a better version of itself. Make sure that's true. I'm pretty sure that's what they're saying. Right now for free, if you put any photo on Grok Imagine, it animates it, and it looks realistic. Yeah. Like instantly. There's a video of me and Keanu Reeves doing kung fu in this room. [1:57:21] Like he's dressed up like John Wick. But it looks real, I'm sure. It looks very real. It's like a scene from John Wick. It's like we're doing like movie style kung fu in this room. And the average person can't distinguish between what is on their screen and what is outside their window. Right. And for the human brain, they're going to remember it and perceive it as something that they had seen before. Right. It is a very scary thing. I remember something that clicked in my head, Survivor Season 1. So that was like 2000, I think it was. Yeah. [1:57:51] Thank you. [1:57:51] contestants left and they go next week on Survivor and Sue turns to Kelly and she goes, we got to vote out Richard. [1:57:58] And I was on a message board at the time, and one of the people – they're like, who do you think is going to be eliminated? One goes, oh, I think they're going to vote out Richard. Did you hear what Sue said? We all heard it. [1:58:08] This wasn't eavesdropping. This was a sound clip that the editor left in. There was nothing else to hear. In fact, you could only hear what Sue said to Kelly. And that was such a wake-up moment for me. Like, holy shit, people really think they're on that beach, and they heard something they weren't supposed to. But you laugh. But there will be people who tell you right now with a straight face, and I think they could pass the lie detector test easily, that Trump said we should inject bleach.
[1:58:38] you find people white nationalists. Right. And you can play the tape. They will not perceive it. They're not lying. Right. And I think that's a big hurdle for a lot of people to accept. People honestly are perceiving things that you're not. [1:58:49] That's true. Yeah. And they're also only looking at headlines or only looking at narratives. They get a tweet. They read the tweet. Oh, my God, I can't believe they're doing this. And then they put it down. They're too busy. They're not going to do deep dives. It's not that they're too busy. It's that their preconception has been validated. They're not running a true false filter. They're running an us them filter. Right. That's right. Trump's thousands of times Epstein files. There you go. What else do I need to tell you? That's it. Yeah. Very fine people on both sides. I mean, Obama said that during the campaign. [1:59:19] When he said that during the campaign, I'm like, that's crazy. Well, Biden said that was his reason for running. [1:59:25] You don't remember that? You see in the Epstein file someone said that Biden's dead? Well, they're also saying that Epstein's alive. Yeah, that might be real. [1:59:34] I don't know how they pull that off. Here's the thing. I'm sorry to interrupt you. Whenever I hear something that's out there, I'm not saying it's ridiculous. I always say to myself, what steps would need to be taken for this to be true, right? So if you're going to keep Epstein alive… [1:59:49] And he's obviously extremely visible, his face, and very known. How do you keep that guy under wraps would be the question I would have. You move him to Israel and you get plastic surgery. [1:59:59] You think so? That's it? Yeah. Look, Renee Zellweger looks different. That's true. [2:00:04] And she's a fucking movie star. She kind of ruined her career by making herself look prettier. So...
[2:00:09] No, she looks Asian now. [2:00:12] She's got all those big cheeks. She did something weird. No, she's got all those big cheeks and her eyes are all like small now. What did she do? Let's take a look at what she did. She's all puffy-faced, yeah. Yeah. [2:00:18] Like people said that Bradley Cooper did something, but he came in here. He looked fucking completely normal. It's just weird pictures online. Yeah. [2:00:27] Like maybe one day he was tired and one day he wasn't. Renee Zellweger really did a lot of work. She did something. Bradley Cooper looks exactly like Bradley Cooper to me. Yeah. Yeah. Okay. Okay. [2:00:37] Like she did something weird. She was so cute. She looks like that. Look at her in 2009. She was so cute. Who's that annoying lefty lady who's a podcaster? [2:00:46] I don't know. Yes, you do. The one who was a real housewife and now she's like – Oh, yeah. That awful one. I don't know her name, but she's awful. Yeah, she's a heel. She does a great job being a heel. She's great at that. Everyone – They'll fucking lock them all up. Right, right. Yeah, yeah. That's what she looks like. No one wants to fuck her anymore. She's very angry. That's what she looks like now. Let me see that again. I'm just looking at other photos. Other photos. [2:01:04] Okay, the one on the far right. She's still pretty. [2:01:08] But there's definitely a change in her face. Look at that fifth photo. Jennifer Grey is a better example. Well, she's got a nose job. Right. But after that nose job, her career kind of fucking stopped. Well, no, Linda Evans is the worst of this. Can you pull up Linda Evans? [2:01:20] Linda Evans from The Terminator? From Dynasty. Oh. Linda Hamilton, Terminator. Yeah, Linda Evans is really- Linda Hamilton is fucking awesome in Stranger Things. What did she do? I mean, she looks horrific. Well, she's old, man. Yeah, but there's plenty of old people who don't look like that. She doesn't look like she did anything. She sued. [2:01:38] She sued.
[2:01:40] For a plastic surgery? Yeah. Look at that one right there, Jamie. Yeah. [2:01:43] Pull that up. [2:01:44] Yeah. [2:01:45] Hmph. [2:01:46] It's bad. It's a YouTube video. [2:01:50] Well, that's just – I don't see – where does it say? The one right under that, the red one. See that? [2:01:55] Yeah, pull that up. See? Finding peace and happiness growing older in the Northwest. Well, that just looks like an older lady. But she doesn't look like herself at all. [2:02:04] But she's older. But she had a lot of effed up work. Maybe she had some of it reversed. Maybe. [2:02:10] You're saying that's not... [2:02:12] That one's not that shocking to me. That's just an older lady. I don't think – I think it's quite shocking to me. [2:02:18] Because I think it looks bad. [2:02:19] No disrespect to her. I mean, that's the difference between a 30-year-old lady and a fucking 70-year-old lady. There's plenty of 70-year-old ladies who don't look like protein bars. I don't know. I don't think that's the best example. I think the Renee – okay, what has Linda done to her face? It's from like a tabloid. Right. Okay, so it might not even be true. There's a lot of cases like this. [2:02:42] You know, it's whatever. Yeah. [2:02:45] What was the point? How did we get on that? What were we talking about? Keanu Reeves, the [2:02:49] Renee Zellweger. I was looking up chat GPT stuff and then switched to... [2:02:54] that. Okay, yeah, ChatGPT5, did ChatGPT [2:02:59] code chat GPT5 [2:03:01] I don't even know how to search that. I don't know the right search term to look that up because I'm not getting anywhere. If you ask that question, it doesn't? [2:03:08] I chat GPT-5 makes itself better. You know, I don't – there's something that I was trying to dig into about – Is that singularity stuff? It's called like self-correcting loops or something like that, but I'm not getting anywhere with that. That's not the right term. This was the –
[2:03:20] This was the concern about AI, was that eventually AI would become sentient and autonomous and would create better versions of itself. Right. And it would do it very quickly. Right. And I think we're in that. [2:03:31] right now. I think what we're getting from these engineers is an indication that the people that are deeply involved in this are fucking disturbed by the power of this stuff. They essentially say that they don't have a job anymore. They just kind of show up and it does the work for them. And that this is far more potent than what the general public is aware of. So we're getting better all the time. We're at the point now where Grok is a better conversationalist and better at [2:04:01] and humor than the average person. A lot of times if I have a tweet and some cretin comes in with some response, I will just say, "Hey, Grock, explain to this person such and such and such." And I leave it for Grock to be like a tart handler. And I do this every single day. But the point is, if I'm being humorous, maybe my jokes aren't that funny, point being, Grock understands that I'm being humorous. Even this person isn't or is pretending not to. So what happens when the average person, what are they bringing to the table? [2:04:30] Right, what are they bringing to the table? What about artists, too? Right. The AI art's getting better every single day. Like, I did a book where I used AI for the cover. It's like, what are you going to do with... [2:04:40] And you're going to have a certain number of people who are good at massaging it and having great ideas. But at a certain point, there's only so much you can do. Did you see what the Doerr brothers did? No. They're these really good AI artists. They're the guys who do all the intros to the Kill Tony videos. Okay, yeah, yeah. They're fucking awesome. And they just made like a Hollywood movie. And they did it in like a day with AI. See if you can find that clip because it went viral and everybody's kind of freaking out.
[2:05:10] But it's so realistic looking. The other thing is – [2:05:14] By the time we're all wrapping our heads around it, it's already six months ago. [2:05:19] That's what's crazy. And it's far better than it was then. Dang, they put on another one today. Let me see. Put the headphones on. All right. [2:05:25] Yes, sir. [2:05:26] go full screen, back it up. [2:05:29] Pause. [2:05:32] This is all AI? Yeah. [2:05:51] Holy crap. [2:05:54] My life! My life! Holy crap. Whoa. [2:06:02] What the fuck? [2:06:23] Holy shit! Holy shit!
[2:06:49] I don't... [2:06:50] Wow. I don't think it's a good idea for humans to casually... This is the other one they did. Check this one out. I'm really busy. Can you get Sophia today? What? No, I have a meeting. I can't. [2:07:00] Thank you. [2:07:01] Oh, shit. This is all AI? Yeah. I'm reporting what is being called a geomagnetic storm. [2:07:07] This is a phenomenon caused by a massive... Holy shit. [2:07:12] Thank you. [2:07:14] I'm sorry. [2:07:44] God, look at her face. It looks so realistic. [2:07:54] I don't like this. [2:08:06] Sophia! Mom! I love you. I'm on my way. I need you to hide. Get underground. [2:08:14] I can't watch it.
[2:08:44] Oh my God. [2:09:07] It's a great Cybertruck ad. Now people are pointing out online, you can hear the engine. [2:09:14] the engine when it does that. It makes a weird humming noise. [2:09:42] Good morning, Sleeping Beauty. [2:09:48] Why don't you get the president on the phone? [2:09:50] Oh. [2:09:53] We have her. [2:09:56] I'll be right there. Oh my god. I don't like this at all. [2:10:02] I don't like that at all. I don't think the sound was AI. Some of it could have been, but it's mixed too good. I don't think it's a good... [2:10:10] for people to casually be seeing... [2:10:13] footage of [2:10:14] people being shot in the face. I'm on YouTube.
[2:10:18] I'm saying it's not a good thing. Check out this video that I just sent you, Jamie. [2:10:22] There's a lot of, I watch a lot of police body cam videos on YouTube. Oh, yeah. And you see people get killed. Oh, the real ones. And it's just like. No. [2:10:27] Are we not having conversation, the effects of the human mind of just watching... [2:10:31] real people getting killed left and right all the time? I know. Especially on young people? There's a lot of that. Like, I don't like seeing... I mean, watching... Check this out. Okay. Oh, Jesus. Okay. [2:10:40] Thank you. [2:10:41] . [2:10:48] *gunshot* [2:10:53] *gunshot* [2:10:56] I was just asking about the pencil trick. [2:10:59] This is crazy. [2:11:02] This is crazy. Oh, they're shamed. Okay. Wow. Weird. [2:11:05] But I don't... [2:11:07] You don't see anything wrong with just casually showing planes flying into buildings? Yeah. Well, all movies do that, though. I don't think that's... Yeah, but the thing is, this is how you kind of boil the frog. [2:11:18] Thank you. [2:11:19] But they've always done that in action movies. I don't think to that level is to have anyone be able to make this the drop of a hat. I'm not saying it should be banned. I'm just saying I think at a certain point if 24-7 we're seeing dozens of people getting killed, it's going to have an effect on – [2:11:37] People's psyches. No question. [2:11:40] And I don't think that's a good effect. Well, it's what we have now before this. Not good. Do you know what else is fucked up? We're not even talking about what the kind of porn is going to look like. Right. Right. And porn with anybody like you or Jamie. You and Jamie could be fucking in a video. What?
[2:11:56] I'm talking about snuff films. Oh, right. [2:12:00] Right. [2:12:01] Yeah. You can make point right now. A hundred percent. Where you're doing the girl, then you can cut her head off or cut body parts off. Yeah, just pull out a shotgun as soon as you climax. No, pull out a knife. Yeah, anything. Yeah. [2:12:11] And it will look really realistic and you have no way – we're still apes. People probably already making that. Of course they are. They're probably already making that. Well, no, that I know. The investigators already don't have the tools to distinguish between real videos of infants and AI videos of infants. And this is – again, this has been a bridge that's been crossed and like no one knows what to say or do about it. It's just like we're kind of just blinking and it's here. Well, it's not just here. It's here and growing. Right. [2:12:41] stronger all the time and we're all just... [2:12:43] plowing head first towards the cliff. And what's going to happen when this kind of stuff gets matched up with psychedelics? Well, it's not just that. It's like what happens when this stuff starts running all of our resources, running our economy, running everything? Right. Because that's what's going to happen. It's going to be our government. This episode is brought to you by Blinds.com. [2:13:13] hot enough to make your backyard feel like a punishment. And if your windows are bare, indoor temperatures can go up 20 degrees. Get ahead of it with custom solar shades for your den and your patio from Blinds.com. Whether you want to do it yourself or have a pro handle everything, they've got you covered. It's all online so you can shop whenever you want but still have access to real design professionals. They'll even send free samples. Blinds.com has been doing this for 30 years.
[2:13:43] and they back everything with a 100% satisfaction guarantee so you can order with confidence. Right now, my listeners can get an exclusive 40% off when you spend $500 or more at Blinds.com and use the promo code ROGAN40. Limited time offer, Blinds.com, promo code ROGAN40. Rules and restrictions apply. This episode is brought to you by Gold Belly. Gold Belly will ship you the most insane dude foods from all across the country. [2:14:13] Blacks in Austin, massive, juicy beef ribs that take a day to cook, and you just... [2:14:19] sink your teeth into them, Gold Belly will ship them to you anywhere. [2:14:24] And you've heard me talk about Roscoe's Chicken and Waffles from L.A. Man, now you don't have to sit in L.A. traffic to get some of that chicken. Just order on Gold Belly. So ship that something awesome from the most iconic restaurants across the USA. Go to GoldBelly.com and get 20% off your first order with the promo code ROGAN. That's GoldBelly.com, promo code ROGAN. Well, I mean, who was that, the Creepy Line guy? [2:14:51] Creepy line? There was that documentary, The Creepy Line. Robert something Malone, I think his name was. He's an academic. He went through Google. [2:14:59] And he goes, look, if I'm Google, right, and I – or I'm Facebook, and I have people who are like Trump and people who are like Hillary. So if I just – [2:15:08] put out, hey, you should vote and send it just to the Hillary people. I'm not on paper endorsing Hillary. Robert Epstein. Robert Epstein, thank you. Oh, that guy. Yeah, we've had that guy multiple times. Right, but then you're going to be getting out that vote in the direction you want. Well, his concern is Google searches. Sure. So like if you search Trump, it's all negative stories. If you search Hillary, it's all positive stories. I've talked to him also about the Facebook stuff. If you're promoting, go out and vote, and you have this group versus that group, it could nudge it very easily. Right.
[2:15:38] already here and been used and been used right that's real election manipulation that's already legal and being used right for whatever reason so well you know what reason but but also but you know curated search engines are a real fucking problem if you're if you're hiding certain information like i noticed that during the pandemic there was a story about a doctor in florida that got vaccinated and then really quickly afterwards had a stroke and died and i read the [2:16:08] Google, I could not find it. I could not find it. I looked everywhere. Then I looked on DuckDuckGo, and I found it immediately. It was in the first page. Then somewhere along the line, DuckDuckGo got weird too. [2:16:21] Oh, Jesus. Yeah. So it's like they realize that people are finding things on – and then I believe – is DuckDuckGo curated? [2:16:29] Or did they just have open source... [2:16:33] What are they saying? And then I started using Brave, and Brave was showing me things that other search engines weren't showing me. But then on the other hand, you have the problem of is it showing you things that are just not true? Right. But I was searching for a very specific story. I'm talking about your case. I'm talking about broadly speaking. Right, right. You're definitely going to get a lot of that, especially if there's like – look, the Hunter Biden laptop story. They've got 51 different former intelligence agents to say that it was Russian disinformation. It's not curated. Okay.
[2:17:03] but it does curate results by ranking. [2:17:06] I don't know how you can really avoid that, though. That's curating. Indexing and filtering from hundreds of sources, including Bing, Google. [2:17:12] Bing's not good. It has to put things in order somehow. To provide what it deems relevant, what it deems relevant. Unlike Google, it avoids user tracking and personalization, providing a more neutral, non-personalized search experience, but also curated by ranking. [2:17:28] Thank you. [2:17:29] no user profiling, does not store search history. All I know is that there was a difference in the way it worked for me. It doesn't mean that it's... There has to be some ranking process. Yeah. It can't just, you know, it's going to have things in order no matter what search engine you use. Right. When you're looking for something very specific. That is, yeah. Google would not show me that article. I put in all the facts that I could not find that. All it was saying was the benefits of getting the COVID vaccine. Has it gotten better or worse? I don't know. We don't [2:17:59] at Robert Epstein's work because Robert Epstein's work shows that with just this curated search result, you can shift all these centrist voters, all these middle-of-the-pack voters, these swing voters. You can shift them by... I think it's 2%. I think it's larger. And point being Trump 1 by 1. It was 9% or something crazy like that. Even if, let's be conservative, say 2. Trump by 1 and a half. Yeah, yeah. So it's... And I don't think things are looking good for the Republicans going forward. [2:18:29] terms, right? I mean, this ice stuff is doing a great job for that because a lot of people are like, hey, we're moving towards fascism. And the perception of the economy.
[2:18:40] You know, voters can have contradictory perspectives, like they want to get rid of illegal aliens, but... [2:18:46] Don't force them out. It's like, what are you going to do? Send them a strongly worded letter? Well, I think the real problem is they're not willing to address the fact that these are paid protests and agitators. Sure. And that these people, it's not, this is not an organic thing where people are taking the streets. They're literally being paid. These people have come out and said, you get X amount of money. You get $100 a day. If it's cold out, you get more money. One of the things people were saying that I don't know if it's true at all was like, this might be horseshit. They were saying they gave them decibel meters. [2:19:13] To see how loud they were yelling. [2:19:16] Who? Where? Protesters. Really? They were providing protesters with these decibel meters for them in order to get paid. They had to be yelling at a certain decibel. I was like, this sounds like disinformation. Yeah, I feel like that was – How much are those things? How much is a fucking decibel meter? That sounds like very – [2:19:32] Like a problem in terms of like cost. Right. If I had that, I'd sell on eBay, right? Right. If I'm a bookcaster. If you have thousands of people and you're providing them with these decibel meters. There would be receipts out the wazoo, I would think. Right. Yeah. It sounded like horse shit. But there's a lot of horse shit out there. There's a lot of people that they do interviews and they just make up fake stuff just for clickbait. But the thing is there, I think people are – I agree with you. We're like over ice. But it's like what's your plan B? Right. Right. [2:20:01] The amnesty, like if that's your argument, that's fine. But it's just like it's not a tenable situation. I mean, look what's going on overseas. Right. What are you going to do? Like right now, there's a guy who's running against Farage from the right of him. And it's like you're going to break up that vote. Like it's called Restore Britain.
[2:20:16] Oh, what is he saying? He's saying – he's like Farage is too soft. We're going to deport them all, blah, blah, blah. It's just like how would – like fine. I understand that's your argument. Literally how are you going to do that without mass enforcement? I'm not saying I'm for it or against it. I'm just saying what is your plan? It's not – it's easy to promise. If I'm in a country that's awesome, I don't want to go back to my shithole. I'm going to do whatever I can legally and sometimes extra legally. Right. [2:20:42] to make sure I'm staying. Especially people over there that have been encouraged to go there. Right. And then they bend the laws in order to kind of hide their crimes. Right. [2:20:50] One of the best things that happened to me was December 31st, 2024. So it was the beginning of 2025. I was on Twitter and you heard about these grooming gangs overseas. [2:21:02] And even me, who writes a lot about the nature of evil, was naive because when you hear the term grooming, I thought, okay, these high school girls have these boyfriends from different countries and who are 30, whatever, and it's gross and whatever. And then someone posted the receipts of the legal cases. These were girls, children, 8-year-olds, 10, whatever, being violated and beaten with baseball bats. They were complaining to police. The police said everything's fine. Like really graphic stuff. [2:21:32] I was to think grooming meant what anyone else thinks of grooming. These are rape and torture gangs. And then Elon saw my tweet and he blew a gasket. And then they kind of talked about it in Parliament. So it was a great way to start 2025. But like where is it all going? You know what I mean? People are upset. But Keir Starmer is not in jail. Like things he's in trouble for aren't stuff like this. The entire Labor Party voted against further inquiry. It's like some of these guys got prison sentences, but they're not anywhere near proportionate. Why are they still in the UK?
[2:22:02] I just don't understand it. I just don't understand, like, what's the endgame there? Right. [2:22:09] Is it the destruction of the UK? What's the end game? Well, if that isn't their goal, that's sure where they are headed toward. Right. If you were trying to destroy the UK, that's how you would do it. Bring in violent migrants. Let them do violent crimes. Don't prosecute them. Prosecute people for complaining about it online. And don't bring them into your country and kind of assimilate them. Right. [2:22:32] Like encourage them to not assimilate. [2:22:35] So I was just there in August. As bad as people think it is, it's even worse. Really? There was a theater a block away from the House of Parliament, and they were bragging that seeing their shows are safe. [2:22:49] Not fun for the whole family. Not, you know, oh, this is educational. You're not going to get murdered if you come see a play here. [2:22:56] That really shouldn't be a selling point when you're going to the movies or the theater. God, that's so crazy. Yeah. [2:23:01] And it's only getting worse. [2:23:04] So it's it's it's I don't I don't. But here's the other thing. Let's talk about America. Right. [2:23:09] If you want to get rid of all these illegal immigrants, what is your mechanism? [2:23:14] Because what Trump is doing is too much. There's no... [2:23:18] The alternatives to make it difficult for them so they remigrate. But there's plenty of people who would – I can certainly understand it. I'd rather be an illegal immigrant in America than go back to whatever hellhole. [2:23:28] Right. Right. [2:23:29] I found the video talking about decimators. They were fucking around. That was a joke. Okay. Grok says they were satirizing.
[2:23:37] Paid protesters with the... The decibel meters. Yeah, the decibel meters. That sounds ridiculous. [2:23:45] Yeah, the whole thing was junk. Yeah. Bullshit. [2:23:48] Yeah, that makes sense because I was like, there's no way. There's no way they're giving people decibel meters, but that's also just clickbait. What would you do with the illegal immigrants? [2:23:57] It's a good question. [2:24:00] The real problem is that they let 10 million people plus in over the last four years. And – [2:24:07] That's the thing that no one wants to address. Like the only reason why there is this problem is because we had a fucking open border for four years where they actually encouraged people to come in. And they let in a bunch of violent criminals and people have been killed. Women have been raped. Children have been killed. This is – and they want to hide that data because they don't want to be held responsible for what they did over the last four years. The fact that that doesn't get – [2:24:33] the kind of outrage that it should, but then an ICE protester shooting a guy who was armed. Do you know what really is going on with the gun community about that guy, that Alex Preddy guy? Right. Do you know the story? Well, I know that What's-His-Name got fired correctly for saying, well, you shouldn't bring guns to fight the police, and all the 2A people are like, are you crazy? The whole point of the 2A is against the police. Right. But that guy, so they disarmed him. He was carrying a SIG P320. Okay. [2:25:03] T320s are notorious for accidentally discharging. It appears, at least in videos that I've seen, and some people seem to verify this, that as one of the officers pulls the gun from him and walks away with it, it accidentally discharges. Okay.
[2:25:20] They think this guy has a gun still. They just pulled a gun from him. A gun went off. They think they're in a gunfight. Everything's happening split second. They empty on that guy. [2:25:29] The two guys that killed him, both of them Mexican guys. Right. Did you see? They look at those people. [2:25:34] Did you not see them? I didn't see. They showed their actual faces? Oh, yeah, yeah. It's on my Twitter if you crawl back a few days, Jamie. They look like I said the village people. It looks straight up village people. But what's crazy is how many Latinos are in ICE. [2:25:46] Why is that crazy? I think Trump got the Latino vote. [2:25:48] Well, it's not just that. It's a really well-paying job. Sure. And they give you a big bonus to sign. Right. [2:25:53] What is the bonus when you sign for ice? [2:25:56] I think it's like a great incentive. But here's the other thing. I mean, it's a lot of money. Why that debate drives me crazy. If there's a hospital... [2:26:03] Right. And there's a nurse who's killing patients, which happens. That happens. You have these like black widow situations. No one's going to say shut down the hospital or stop medicine. So even if this was a first degree murder, let's assume for the sake of argument, that doesn't mean you should abolish ICE. It just means that guy should go to jail. What does one thing have to do with the other? Look at this. Signing bonus of up to $50,000. [2:26:27] $60,000 in student loan repayment, up to 25% in premium pay. I don't know what that means. [2:26:34] Probably overtime, maybe? [2:26:36] Premium pay? 25%? What does that mean? [2:26:39] I don't know. But either way, just the $50,000 bonus. How many people are willing to take that job just for that? [2:26:45] And then $60,000 in student loan repayment? And it's paid on your resume. Yeah, well, you get your student loan paid off, and you get a $50,000 bonus? Holy shit. Right. You can get a lot of people to do that. And job security. Yeah, and you can wear a mask. And it seems like a job...
[2:26:59] That macho guys would enjoy. And if you're desperate for work and if you can't find work and then all of a sudden this is like an answer to all your financial problems, a lot of people are going to do it. But again, what's the – You're also like very undertrained. Like they only trained for seven weeks. Is that right? Yeah. But what's the answer though? [2:27:15] No one has an answer. Right. That's a good question. Because, yeah, well, there are a lot of violent criminals in this country that did get in over the last four years that do need to be removed. So what are you going to do? But what do you do with the nonviolent ones? [2:27:27] Well, here's the thing. There was an interesting statistic. I think I sent it to you, Jamie, where they were saying only 14 percent of these people that they've arrested are violent criminals. Okay. Okay. [2:27:37] But... [2:27:38] That's what they didn't say is that 60 percent of the people that they arrested had criminal history. And when you say nonviolent. [2:27:46] Non-violent meaning what? What about strong-arm robbery? What about a guy pulls a gun on you? Is that – how are you classifying? That's got to be violent. I bet it's not if you don't cause violence. No. There's no way – armed robbery isn't a violent crime. If you do not cause violence, I wonder if they're categorizing it as violence. Like if you do not shoot someone, stab someone, beat someone, so you're not convicted of a violent crime, you're convicted of robbery. Because they're doing everything in their power to make the gun violence numbers as high as possible. [2:28:16] Any opportunity where a gun is involved, that will be counted as gun violence. Perhaps, but you could rob people with a knife. You know what I mean? Does that count? If you pull a knife on someone and you rob them, is that considered a violent crime? I bet you it is.
[2:28:29] I wonder. But either way, [2:28:31] The misleading aspect of the article was that only 40 percent were violent criminals. But is that OK that the other fucking 46 percent are breaking into people's houses and robbing cars? And what about that? But what about the 40 percent who just shouldn't be here? Right. That's the question. Right. They all shouldn't be there. Right. So what are you going to do? Right. [2:28:53] Okay, so here it is. 400,000 ICE arrests in Trump's first year, about 60% involved individuals with some criminal charges or convictions. However, only 14% had violent crime records, including as homicide, 2,100 arrests, sexual assault, 5,400, robbery, 2,700. So robbery. Nearly 40% lacked any criminal record detained for civil immigration violations. [2:29:18] Wait, can we skip ahead? Look, this is what's so shameless. Arrests for nonviolent issues like DUI. I'm sorry, if you're doing DUI, you should be deported. That is a violent crime. Well, you definitely cause death and destruction. Drugs, 22,000. DUI, 30,000. Outnumber severe violent crimes. But yeah, but those are fucking bad crimes. [2:29:40] I think this kind of is a distraction from if you have 10 million people and they're all homemakers – [2:29:47] Let's suppose they're the nicest people ever. Are you comfortable with them just remaining here? I don't think most people are. No. Then what do you do? [2:29:56] Rand Paul thinks that you should allow them to stay but not give them citizenship. See, if birthright citizenship went away, a lot of this would be solved. Right. If you're not eligible for welfare, you're eligible for Medicaid, you could pay your taxes and income, but you're not getting the benefits. People could understand that argument maybe. Especially if you are illegal and then you come here specifically to have a baby and then you can stay too. That's kind of crazy. That's a crazy law. I think we're the only country that has that too.
[2:30:26] China definitely doesn't. So – well, I mean no one is really banging on the door for Chinese citizenship to be fair. That's true. Unless you're from North Korea maybe. But yeah, so it's – It is a problem that doesn't have like a clear-cut solution that would make both sides happy. That's for damn sure. Well – [2:30:41] I think one side is against it entirely, and many Republicans don't think it's worth kind of overturning our whole society, get these 10 million people out. So what's – I mean if we had – [2:30:54] If we had 10 million Canadians come to America, that's not going to change the country. [2:30:58] It makes no sense. Right. Well, especially 10 million Canadians that could be violent criminals if you just have an open door. They're not going to be – they're Canadian. There's violent Canadians. Sure. They're all – they need to be on the TRT. Drinking maple syrup. Do you know about my enslaved Canada plan? No. Okay. This is – I want to get the exact – I have the exact numbers. Hold on here. So there are – [2:31:24] I want to get this exactly right. 41 million Canadians. Okay. Now, let's talk about reparations. [2:31:31] So if I wreck your truck and your truck is worth $10,000, I got to get you a brand new truck. [2:31:38] Or $10,000. That's reparations is restored. Okay. How can you have reparations for something as horrific as slavery? A check's not going to do it because there's no amount of money where I could say, you know what, you own my grandma, it's fine, right? Right. 41 million Canadians, they've already demonstrated repeatedly, [2:31:53] that they don't want freedom through every action that they've taken. 42 million African and black Americans.
[2:32:00] slavery in the South. [2:32:02] was a horrific blot in America's past. So the opposite, slavery in the North, [2:32:07] would be better. So we invade and enslave, hashtag enslave Canada, and every African American gets one Canadian, and that's reparations. And then you don't ever have to hear about slavery or racism again. What a great idea. And the big names can get the big names. So like Michelle Obama can get Gad Saad, right? Barack Obama is not African American. He's African. You don't get one. [2:32:30] Do you think that's real? [2:32:31] The Kenyan thing? [2:32:32] Well, he was of African descent. His ancestors were never slaves. [2:32:37] So he does – he does not do reparations. In fact, his ancestors owned slaves and so did Kamala Harris's. Michelle Obama's ancestors were enslaved. So she gets Gad. Sorry, Gad. [2:32:47] I'm not kidding. I think we should do it. It would solve Canada. It would solve a racism problem. Canada just needs to be free. Yeah. They need a better government up there. That's right. Liberate them. You know, Trump ruined that. When he was saying they were going to be our 51st state, like he killed the conservative party because then everybody sort of united. [2:33:07] from trying to turn us into the 51st state. This Greenland thing. [2:33:10] Okay. Let's talk about this. [2:33:13] I don't know if people know this. In the first term, Marie Fredrickson, I think, is the prime minister of Denmark. They were going to have a meeting, and Trump's like, we want Greenland. And she's like, oh, you. Ha ha. Looking forward to meeting you, Mr. President. And on Twitter, he cancels the meeting and goes, since the prime minister doesn't know her place, we're going to have to meet another time. And she's like, what?
[2:33:37] What? Like, what are you talking about? And now they're saying you could have Greenland to do anything you want. You want to dig for the minerals? Please bring industry there. Nope. We need to own Greenland. And they don't know and I don't know what to make of his. Someone I saw on social media thinks he must be on the spectrum because he's so fixated on this thing that no one who's neurotypical has this kind of fixation. But what do you make of this whole Greenland thing? I don't understand it. Do you know they offered us Greenland in the 1920s? Right. OK, yeah. [2:34:07] Was it too much money or something? [2:34:10] How much was it? [2:34:11] How much do they offer us Greenland for? [2:34:14] But I don't blame them for being like, what is going on? It is crazy. Right. So Denmark owns Greenland. Who's closer, Denmark or the United States? We are closer to Greenland. Then we should have it. Shouldn't Canada have it then? No, fuck them. [2:34:31] This is what it must be like in Denmark right now where they're like, what do we say? Okay. Did not offer itself to the United States in the 1920s. U.S. expressed interest in acquiring or basing in Greenland during that decade, but no formal offer came from Denmark. [2:34:44] I thought there was negotiation. That's what it's saying, yeah. Okay. A land swap idea. Okay. For the U.S. Virgin Islands for $25 million. The U.S. bought the Danish West Indies, now U.S. Virgin Islands, for $25 million. What a deal. But affirmed Danish sovereignty over Greenland. 1920s U.S. Army General Billy Mitchell advocated for American air bases on Greenland and Iceland to expand air power, viewing them as strategically vital amid advancing technology.
[2:35:14] Or secession offer emerged from Denmark. U.S. interests remained internal military advocacy without diplomatic action from Copenhagen. We just got to give him a swap. We get Greenland. You get Puerto Rico. [2:35:26] So in 1947, go back to that. [2:35:31] 1946, President Truman proposed $100 million in gold for Greenland. Rejected by Denmark amid Cold War tensions, U.S. gained defense rights via 1941 agreement during World War II occupation of Denmark. How interesting is that? Like we've been interested in Greenland forever. Oh, it's right there. That's ours. We should take it. It's that fast route to Russia. [2:35:55] Well, yeah, because you have those straights on both sides. [2:35:59] But the thing is, they're already saying you could do whatever you want. Like, take a dump on it. We don't care. Like, we're happy to you to exploit it, please. That's kind of crazy. And he's like, nope, we got to own it. It's like, but why? I guess he got it in his head that he could make it happen. [2:36:16] But this is really... The thing is, they're getting freaked out in Europe, not because he's being this aggressive, I think, not just, but also because it's like, [2:36:25] Like what are we missing? Like you and I, like what are we missing here? Like what about Greenland with owning it change? You could do whatever you like. Put more bases. We love it. I don't know, man. [2:36:37] You hung out with him. What's he like? Does he have a screw loose? [2:36:41] It's hard to say. [2:36:43] I mean, I think anybody who wants to be president has a screw loose. Sure. And anybody who went through that guy, what that guy did. Sure, of course. What he went through over the last four years when Biden was in office, where they were trying to lock him up. What about when he was president, what they went through? Yeah, the Russiagate stuff. Yeah, all that stuff. It's kind of crazy. You would have to have a little bit of a screw loose. And now I think he's on a victory lap for sure. But he also wants to get a lot of stuff done because he knows he only has one term. You know, and I think –
[2:37:09] The Greenland thing, I understand the strategic approach. [2:37:13] implications, why you would want [2:37:15] But I don't understand why you wouldn't just like accept a deal. Right. Well, we could have bases there and – We have bases there already and we do whatever we want. Here's the other thing. This is the other one that I don't understand. We go to Venezuela. We basically teleport Maduro out. Right. Obviously, there's some kind of inside information or whatever. Who knows? And then everyone just stops talking about it. [2:37:36] I know. It's just like, well, the news cycle is crazy. But what is going on in Venezuela? Did they change the government? I don't think they did. They didn't change the government, but they got rid of the one guy that was a resistance. And a lot of people like Kurt Metzger thinks that what's going to happen is during the trial, they're going to reveal that Maduro was involved in rigging the 2020 election. The American 2020? Yes, because there is some sort of a connection with Venezuela and the 2020 election and the voting machines. [2:38:05] Wait, okay. I love Kurt. I was one of the people at his birthday party. When I say I love him, I mean ironically and non-ironically, I think he's the best. I love him too. [2:38:17] Don't see any... [2:38:19] route... [2:38:20] where they would need the theater of a trial to release this sort of information. [2:38:27] I agree. But I think that having him in America and making a deal with him, look, bitch, we already kidnapped you. We killed all your guards. I think he's I if I could get if I could out Kurt Kurt, I would bet this. I would bet a lot of I would not be surprised. I'm not going to bet that he's this is already a deal.
[2:38:47] They told him, either you come to jail with us, wink, wink, or we'll take you out. [2:38:53] And he's like, you're not fine. I'll retire in America. [2:38:55] That would make more sense to me. [2:38:58] They did some wild stuff over there. They used some sound weapon to incapacitate everybody, and they went in and executed them all. How much of that's confirmed? Not a single U.S. soldier was shot. Right. Right. [2:39:09] And everybody was down. Like the people that are talking about it that were on the ground saying it was crazy. They shut off all the power. Right. They shut off all the radar systems. And then all of a sudden, fucking helicopters, drones, everything was there. This sound weapon was used. Everybody was incapacitated. They came in gunned down. How many people did they kill? [2:39:27] I forget how many people he killed. It was like 100, wasn't it? He killed a lot of people. But they killed him with no resistance. But I thought it was very clear that we had some kind of inside information. [2:39:36] I'm sure we had that as well. Yeah, someone on the inside was working with us in terms of where he is. I'm sure there was that as well, but there was this – [2:39:42] When I saw a photo of him... [2:39:45] getting arrested. [2:39:46] I thought it was AI. [2:39:48] Because it looks so crazy and ridiculous. And if I went a year ago and said Trump's going to arrest Maduro, I'm like, arrest him for what? It's just like I don't know what's real anymore. Right. Here's an article from The Guardian from November 2025. [2:40:03] Okay, Trump's DOJ investigating unfounded claims. Venezuela helps steal 2020 elections. So how do you know it's unfounded until you investigate? This is these fuckers. The Guardian is pretty bad with that kind of stuff. Yeah, they're gross. This stuff is where it's interesting because this guy works for the CIA, I think, and he has a quote down here where he says he doesn't deal with bullshit, kind of. I don't dabble. So he thinks it's bullshit? Well, I was just trying to have you read it because – Yeah, he says, I don't dabble in conspiracy theories.
[2:40:30] Hmm, sure you don't. You're in the CIA. Right. We don't dabble. We make them. Okay, who knows? [2:40:37] This is what Kurt believes. This is not my theory. Keep scrolling down. I want to see what he's saying the Venezuela did. [2:40:44] Yeah, what is the accusation? [2:40:47] Yeah, keep scrolling down. Honestly, there's nothing about what they did. [2:40:51] Well, that would be contributing to the conspiracy theory. Yeah, I guess. [2:40:54] Mr. Mouse. Yeah. [2:40:56] They don't want to do that in The Guardian. [2:41:00] Who knows? Why would they need – we'll find out. Another awesome chapter of Game of Thrones. I mean I still don't understand – [2:41:10] It was – a lot of people were butthurt correctly that we shouldn't be doing regime change, but the regime didn't change. Right. We just got rid of one guy and kidnapped him and brought him to America. But like if you get rid of Trump – [2:41:23] Vance becomes president. You're not changing the government at all. Right. So what are we doing here? I don't know. [2:41:29] Here's a discussion in the Journal of Democracy about how Maduro stole Venezuela's vote. That is very widely accepted as real. I'm seeing these keywords that are popping out as like the same stuff I'm hearing in our election dispute, ballot receipts, people checking voter polls. [2:41:46] Mmm. [2:41:47] Later that evening, people were saying that that's not what I did. I don't know. [2:41:52] It's a lot. [2:41:53] Right. [2:41:54] The other question is what's going on with Iran? [2:41:56] Well, it looks like we're about to go in. Are we? Are you sure? Well, they're preparing. But, I mean, that's always great to shake your fist. Shadow. Yeah. Right. Saber rattling. So it's like – like it's –
[2:42:10] I feel like all of us are like looking around being like, what's happening? What the fuck is going on? Yeah, every day. Every day is what the fuck is going on. Right. And you're just trying to like live a normal life. [2:42:20] Yes. Which is what everybody really wants. But they're preventing you from doing that with constantly being assaulted by new information that scares the shit out of you. And it's also there's no context for us to understand this. Like we we understand the Saddam situation, right? You go in, you conquer country, kill a lot of people. It's a nightmare bloodbath that was unnecessary. Saddam gets hanged. We know that story. Like we're just going to come in, pull out one guy who's the president and his wife and his wife and everything will go back. [2:42:50] say to this? This has never happened before. Yeah, I don't know, man. I'm just overwhelmed. I think I share the feeling that most Americans have right now, which is every day like, what the fuck is going on? But I feel like it's escalating. [2:43:04] It wasn't this crazy during his first term. No, no, no. The world is escalating. Yes. What is this? Venezuelan oil gets – Yeah, I'll show you that. [2:43:13] Gets shipped to Israel for the first time in years. Oh, boy. That happened last week. So as I'm just looking up, we assumed control of the country, I think, in some way. Did we? Like, I think we got their oil, right? They found a better way to have people run it, but I don't know that. Well, that was the other thing that Trump said. What are we going to do with the oil tanker? We're going to keep it. Yeah. It's like, what? Like, how do we get to do this? [2:43:35] Like if you are sending the oil to Israel. So Venezuela is saying it's fake. Venezuela plans to send its first shipment of crude oil to Israel in 17 years, as part of opening up the country's exports following the U.S. abduction of President Nicolas Maduro.
[2:43:51] I did have to go to probably not a great source of the Middle East. I don't know. Well, Bloomberg's a rep. Yeah, but that's the one I couldn't get past the. [2:43:58] Oh, but it seems like it's the same story. Jerusalem Post, yeah, they're not going to be lying about this stuff. First shipment to Israel. [2:44:05] Well, I think all they're saying is they've restored relations between Venezuela and Israel. Well, they probably control relations now. It's essentially the U.S. is probably in control of their oil distribution. I think that's explicit, isn't it? Yeah. Yeah. [2:44:16] Yeah. But it's still like – Well, that was the other thing is bringing in all these companies. They're all going to do – but apparently their oil is like very difficult to acquire. Is that right? Yeah. Their oil is not like simple like Texas oil, dig a hole in the ground, pull it out. It's like it's all – it has to be processed with all these chemicals. It's apparently like the consistency of asphalt. Okay. And it has to be broken down. [2:44:39] It's very expensive. This is why – was it the CEO of Exxon? One of the companies said that it would never work. Oh. Yeah, that the infrastructure is not in place. Yeah. [2:44:50] And then Trump was upset at him for being a negative dancey. I just – I think any time you start – did you really? Whenever you start talking about regime change, that's something that's very scary historically. And always turns bad. Yeah. Like Libya and all these other places. Yeah, Iran, Iraq. Yeah. So it's just like – [2:45:13] But then at the same time, we're like, what do we do? [2:45:17] Okay. [2:45:18] Like what's plan B? Gavin Newsom? Do you know what I mean? What's he going to do? Right.
[2:45:30] indefinite is weird in quotes. [2:45:32] Secretary of State Marco Rubio claiming that the Venezuelan acting government headed by Delce Rodriguez needs to submit a budget request before accessing the country's oil proceeds. Whoa. [2:45:47] So we just took over Venezuela essentially. Yeah. No, we just took over their oil. Yeah, but also the country. Aren't the people still being oppressed as hell? Yeah, but the government essentially is like we're running that government. I don't think we are though. We probably tell them what they can and can't do. [2:46:02] That's the thing that they're still – It's just the oil. Right. Can I talk about something fun? Yeah. [2:46:09] I'm finishing a project I've been working on for 25 years. Whoa. Yeah. So I'm excited to talk to you about it. What is it? So there was this band from the 80s who were called Rubber Rodeo that combined punk and country, right? And I was looking at this compilation that I got in 1994. I sent Jamie the picture. [2:46:32] heads or tails of this band because, can you pull it up? - Yeah, yeah. - It's, it's, you'll show you the photo, you'll see what I mean by it. 'Cause there are a bunch of kids in these like kind of, [2:46:42] square dancing uniforms with no affect on their face whatsoever. And the singer, she's in this Dolly Parton wig and this big square dancing dress and just staring right at the viewer. I'm like, are they joking? Like, what's up with these people? And I met them and they were art school kids. They were not joking. They were, there it is, that photo. So you see, I'm staring, I'm like, are they kidding? Are they not kidding? Her name's Trish. And this is from the 80s? This is from the
[2:47:12] day as Bon Jovi by the same guy and he said I'm taking you both to number one so I wrote a screenplay about them because it's kind of like a spinal tap story because they're on stage at punk clubs doing jokes like hey Bob I I'm exhausted why are you exhausted Bob oh the couple the next hotel room were up all night eating candy bars candy bars yeah she kept yelling oh Henry oh Henry [2:47:33] Right? So it's this complete, like... [2:47:36] What are you even doing here? But the guy who did the keyboards for the – [2:47:43] band did the animation for american splendor and through him i met harvey picar uh who later wrote a book about me in 2006 is he that guy that went nuts on letterman [2:47:56] I'm so glad you know who Harvey is. Yeah. So Harvey started the idea. He's a comic book guy, right? Right. He started the idea of writing autobiographical comics in the 70s. From off the streets of Cleveland, Here Comes American Splendor. It's an ironic title because his life was not exactly very splendid. He was a file clerk, kind of a miserable person. He hated being called a curmudgeon. [2:48:18] And amazingly, when the film came out in 2000 and – was it 2000? I think it was something like that. [2:48:26] Thank you. [2:48:26] He flew back to New York to do Stern. [2:48:29] And the producer of the film, Ted Hope, sent out an email that said, Harvey's in town with nothing to do. If you want to hang out with him, this is your chance. And I'm the only person who took him up on it. [2:48:40] And I go there and he's on his bed and he – spoiler alert, he died in 2010 on my birthday, which was not a fun email to get. Anyway, and he's like, yeah, he's got this really weird way of talking. He's like, I'm really fucked up, man. And I pointed out to him, since everything in his life was a disaster, his movie –
[2:48:59] got a wide release the weekend of the blackout. There was this big fucking blackout. He's like, oh, god damn it. And that was the weekend I had a fish tank. And I'm trying to keep them alive with no electricity. And it did not work out. So he wrote a book about me. [2:49:15] And that screenplay fell by the wayside. [2:49:18] But because it's kind of like Spinal Tap, you know, it's this kind of funny story about, you know, when you're young and anyone out there who's listening to this when you're young, go for it. [2:49:27] Be stupid. If you're going to fail, it's okay. It's still something exciting to try and to do, which they certainly did. And now I'm like, wait a minute, this converts to a graphic novel. [2:49:37] very easily. There's a guy named Eric July who has this whole kind of empire. He did a Kickstarter. He made like a million for his first one. It's called The Ripperverse. And now they're at a point where you don't have to go through DC or Marvel to produce your product. So I'm super excited about it. Again, I started this in 2000 and now it's finally 26 years later coming to fruition. So UnwantedBook.com. All right. I'm just really kind of, it's very intense. [2:50:07] I was at Gold, and I had basically what was the opposite of a nervous breakdown where all the parts of my brain slid into place where I realized this story I wrote in 2001 – [2:50:21] What happens if you do all these things, try to be original and go nowhere? Like those are my fears. [2:50:26] When I was starting out, what if I end up like them, have nothing to show for it? And 25 years later, that experience has been run. You know, I could pay my rent as a kind of creative person. And if they were around today, they could probably pay their rent because it's much easier as a band to kind of build an audience. But it's a very funny story, but it's also a very dark one.
[2:50:45] And it's largely true. [2:50:47] All right. So I'm just stoked that I get to – We'll end it on a happy note. Yeah. Thanks, buddy. Thank you. Always good to see you. Always a pleasure. Congratulations on the face paint. Wait till we see the next one. Oh, no. Bye, everybody. Bye-bye. [2:51:14] This episode is brought to you by the Farmer's Dog. Here's a fun fact. Research shows that dogs who maintain a healthy weight can live up to two and a half years longer on average than dogs who are overweight. [2:51:25] Isn't that wild and also kind of obvious at the same time? So why is feeding vague scoops of ultra-processed kibble still the status quo for most dog owners? Healthy alternatives exist, and trust me, I know. [2:51:39] I buy one, the Farmer's Dog. I use it for both my dogs. They love it. They eat it up quick. It smells good to them. It smells good to me. It's human-grade food. The Farmer's Dog makes fresh food for dogs, and my dogs love it. Their recipes are made with real meat and fresh vegetables that are gently cooked to retain vital nutrients. They also portion out the meals to your dog's nutritional needs, which helps avoid overfeeding and makes weight management easier. [2:52:09] best friend something every dog owner wants the answer to that is yes obviously so try the farmer's dog today and get 50 off your first box of fresh healthy food
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