Episode 1402
โจ Ramen Thanksgiving Kitsch
Sour Crude
November 24, 2021 ยท โ
Art by Tante Neel
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Episode 1402 โ Sour Crude
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0:00 Thanksgiving.
0:02 Adam Curry, John C. Dvorak. It's Thursday, 11/25/2021.
0:06 This is your award winning Gitmo Nation Media Assassination episode fourteen zero two. This is No Agenda.
0:13 Thankful for all of Gitmo Nation and broadcasting live from the heart of Texas Hill Country here in FEMA Region number 6. In the morning, everybody, I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley where this Thanksgiving's a sunny one, sunny and clear, I'm John C. Dvorak. It's Crackpot in Buzzkill. In the morning.
0:33 I kinda had to remind myself why we do this.
0:38 We do what? Why we work on holidays.
0:41 Instead of sleeping in? Yeah. This As a Wasting time. Wasting time when the world's spinning. It's spinning out of control.
0:49 There you go. That's the reason. No. That's not the reason. I remember why we started doing this.
0:56 Okay. Yes. Well, good. I to think about it. It was based on Ted Turner's WTBS
1:01 Superstation concept.
1:04 And It was? Yes. I thought we just did it because we had nothing else to do. Listen.
1:10 I'm telling you the history. Hey. I
1:14 like yours too though. That's probably true.
1:18 No.
1:18 If you recall,
1:20 what, TBS used to do is
1:24 I think it was when the when the evening
1:27 when the prime time shows came on, basically, every single time there was a a major time slot on traditional network television such as talk shows,
1:37 Saturday Night Live or the news. I think really the 10:00 news was was the big spot.
1:43 And people would watch the headlines. Okay. Let me see what the headlines are of the news. And then WTBS,
1:48 superstation, WTBS
1:50 would start a movie
1:52 five minutes after. Don't you remember that?
1:57 I really don't. Oh, yeah. That they may still do that actually.
2:02 And then from there, I think we extrapolate it into what is this all of Hollywood and all television goes on hiatus.
2:09 So we're not gonna do that. We're just gonna show up. And that was, of course, because we had nothing better to do, obviously.
2:15 And here we are. And Well, I I to be honest about it, yes, there is that, but that that holds true for all the shows.
2:24 I
2:26 think it's annoying
2:28 personally to watch television. They do it over the summer. Yeah. They do it they don't spread themselves out. Yep. And now they're doing the 10 episode thing where they go and work their asses off for a month, and then they're like, you know, union teachers. Rest of the year, they just take it off.
2:44 Yeah. And I really don't like the fact that you watch you know, you're regularly watch,
2:49 well, I do the three by three today. There's a bunch of substitutes that came in on that Mhmm. Including Becky Worley.
2:56 Mhmm. And
2:58 yeah.
2:59 Fly her out to New York during Thanksgiving.
3:02 We'll go take some time off. Right. It's like it's just annoying to me.
3:07 What's even more annoying is that the whole Thanksgiving is just,
3:12 kind of been destroyed around us.
3:15 Now the Friendsgiving thing that must have started five, six years ago.
3:20 Remember friendsgiving?
3:23 Well, yes. I do remember friendsgiving and that was that was lackluster.
3:27 Well, it's rampant still. People are still doing them. Oh, we don't do thanksgiving. You know, that's, we don't celebrate colonialism.
3:34 We don't celebrate, yo. Oh, yeah. Like, you think they brought turkeys for the Indians and got them some corn? Maize? I don't think so. He said, we're a bunch of colonial racists.
3:44 That's why we have to celebrate
3:46 died off. There's better things to bitch about than that, it looks like. I don't know. I don't know. Here's listen to Grey's Anatomy. Hi, mom.
3:54 Eyes will laugh. So sorry. It's okay. You tried to get here, and Thanksgiving isn't really a holiday we should celebrate. There's no actual evidence Native Americans were even invited to a feast. I think they cared more about being colonized and having their lamb stolen than mashed potatoes.
4:08 I'm sorry you're alone in eating peanuts, though. Love you. I love you, Zola. Love you.
4:14 Love you.
4:16 So what's funny about that clip is the besides the fake I love you, I love you Yeah.
4:23 Is the most insincere thing Pretty you can imagine much. Especially in that environment
4:28 is the phony yes. Well, you know, we had that I mean, I always promise to talk about this a little bit, but I was listening to NPR. I thought I had a clip, but I guess I didn't clip it. I ran out of clip room.
4:40 Your clip bucket was full.
4:42 Pocahtawan
4:43 Pocahtawak
4:44 Indians or some Indians from that era, and there's some woman that's trying to do their history, and they talk about how they the first year they came, the pilgrims
4:54 came and they were starving to death. The Indians didn't really do anything to help them right away, but then when they finally did, they showed them how to crack me up. I gotta I'll
5:03 bury the Next year. Next year, we'll do the clip. Sure. Is that that she says the Indians showed
5:10 him how to fish
5:12 because
5:13 you had to be shown how to fish.
5:16 Settlers were very stupid. Very stupid. And how
5:23 to farm because you know Farm?
5:27 Yeah.
5:29 So it was like yeah. Without that we would have died. I wouldn't be doing this podcast if they hadn't if the Indians had not taught us how to fish. And by the way, it's native Americans. American. American Indians. Oh,
5:42 they're now indigenous?
5:43 This is what this woman kept calling the indigenous peoples. Well,
5:48 it's a moving target. It's a moving target to see how liberal you are. Yes. I don't wanna belabor the point, but I do have one more quick clip because after the whole spirit of Thanksgiving I could listen to those. By the way, get more of those clips. I'll listen to those all day.
6:04 And by the way, I I noticed I was talking to Tina about this yesterday.
6:08 There's this subtle difference. Some people say Thanksgiving
6:12 and others say Thanksgiving.
6:14 Now Now do you notice the subtle difference in the
6:19 in those two?
6:20 I've never no. I never have. No. Because it's Thanksgiving. I just thought it was pronounced Thanksgiving.
6:27 Yeah. That's kind of the way I always thought it was. But my whole my whole family outside of the Curries in The Netherlands always said Thanksgiving.
6:34 And I always thought that was weird. Thanksgiving. Yeah. And it seems there's two two kinds never even wanna say thanks giving. My goodness. I've heard several times this week alone.
6:45 Blue
6:46 dress, silver dress.
6:48 So anyway, no
6:50 matter what we have to destroy all kinds of traditions because of this racist country. We might as well just get rid of
6:56 the priciest item on the menu since, this transitory inflation has hit us. And while we are on the topic of something that could be controversial,
7:05 perhaps forego the turkey.
7:07 Bear with me. I know that is the staple of the Thanksgiving meal. However, some people think turkey is overrated,
7:14 and so it tends to be the most expensive thing on the table. Maybe you do an Italian feast instead.
7:19 And I will say this. If you tell everyone you're having a Thanksgiving without turkey,
7:24 some guests may drop off the list, and that's a way to cut costs too.
7:29 You know what? Just don't invite him, you cheap bastard.
7:32 Well, what's really interesting is that for almost fourteen years on this show, we have finally reached that place
7:39 where it is so bad
7:41 that we, on Thanksgiving,
7:44 we don't have turkey
7:46 instead.
7:47 You slaves can get used to mac and cheese. Mac and cheese. Mac and cheese. Macaroni and cheap cheddar melted together. Mac and cheese. Mac and Mac
7:59 and cheese. Hey, everybody.
8:03 It's it was predictive. I have give away a family secret then.
8:07 The mac and cheese the family the family mac and cheese secret?
8:11 No. The the
8:13 offshoot family offshoot,
8:15 the
8:16 Schill family.
8:18 The also known as the Schills.
8:21 The Schills.
8:22 They,
8:23 they don't have turkey for Thanksgiving.
8:26 What?
8:27 Yeah. They have the more traditional Thanksgiving of cioppino.
8:32 What
8:33 what what's cioppino?
8:35 Cioppino's a the fish soup.
8:38 No.
8:39 Wait. That the Indians made for us? I believe base. Only the Indians used to make cioppino.
8:45 It turns out that Dee hates turkey. That's Dee, man.
8:50 So much. He hates it so much. Really? Just uses to have it anywhere near the house because it's yeah. Maybe it's a stench. I don't know. If you get heritage turkey, it doesn't sting so much, but there's some turkeys. I love turkeys. Stink. I love turkey. I do too. I think it's it's good. That's very funny. I've noticed that as I've gotten older, though, that I get heartburn from turkey.
9:14 Interesting. You're supposed to just get sleepy and pass out.
9:19 You know, I don't think it's just I don't think the I think the cheap,
9:23 Foster Farms turkeys are the ones that make you pass out.
9:26 I don't know what what
9:28 do they have in them? Some Bennies or something? What's going on there? You know, what do you have to do to fatten them up?
9:36 Ludes. That's what happened to all the Ludes. They're like, hey, man. The turkeys took the Ludes. Now it's time for three by three. Oh, yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Experiment
9:44 by JCD.
9:45 Who comparing stories from ABC,
9:48 CBS, and NBC.
9:51 The never ending That's right. Every single Thursday even on Thanksgiving. John C. Dvorak checks out the big three morning shows from the big three networks. And, John, what have you been learning today?
10:01 Well, at first, I expected there wasn't gonna be much to to report because it seemed to me that these guys would be doing just a bunch of Thanksgivings day special. Yeah. You'd expect. So they had live shows though because it isn't it the the the Macy's parade is today, which is NBC,
10:16 I guess. The NBC has the broadcast rights. I don't know because they, ABC is the one that cut to the parade at the end of their segment. Oh, okay.
10:25 Yeah.
10:27 Anyway, I don't wanna go into that, but,
10:29 so they so let's start with today's
10:32 show, which is the one that's on the ropes.
10:37 Wait a minute. It's on the ropes based on?
10:40 Nobody watches this show. Oh, okay. That makes sense.
10:45 And what I thought was interesting is that they had,
10:48 it was an uplifting
10:51 Thanksgiving show they're gonna do. It was a cancer
10:54 survivor report
10:57 on how this cancer survivor
10:59 meets her Olympic hero
11:02 Oh, no. Who happens to be the Olympic
11:05 weight? Hold on. One two three four five six
11:10 seven eight nine. There's
11:14 nine cars today on the Zephyr. Ladies and gentlemen special. Ladies and gentlemen, this is a holiday special report. Breaking news. Alert the boys over at Squawk Box CNBC. We have a nine car Zephyr. Nine car Zephyr.
11:26 Bitcoin currently at 58,935.
11:29 Oh
11:30 my god.
11:33 Listen to that horn. Things are looking up.
11:36 By now.
11:37 By
11:38 now. So this Olympic hero, she was a trap shooter. This girl is a trap shooter.
11:44 And having shot both traps and skeet,
11:47 I would recommend
11:49 skeet
11:50 as the better choice, but she's a trap shooter, which is hard.
11:54 And,
11:56 then they brought on they went to the set, and then they brought on Marlo Thomas who heads
12:01 goodness. Saint Jude. Not seen her forever. How does she look? How does she look? She must be 70, 80 by now almost.
12:08 For 80, she looks good. Yeah. If she's 80.
12:13 And she's getting a little gravelly voice in this. She's fine. But, you know, it was depressing segment. So who's watching this stuff? It's just Thanksgiving. It's not the day to be watching this. But meanwhile, they had I thought it was couldn't 83.
12:25 83.
12:27 Oh, she looks great for 83. Wow. Yeah. She's
12:30 She's at work time. For sure.
12:32 No doubt about it.
12:35 So they had Harry Smith over there and he's doing part of the reporting.
12:39 And Harry Smith,
12:41 look up Harry Smith's age.
12:43 He's also been around for a long time. Yeah. For sure.
12:47 He looks terrific, this guy. And he's still got the big he's got the pipes. He's just a dynamite guy, but he's always so I've always associated him with CBS.
12:56 Yeah. Well, he left CBS for NBC
13:00 in 2015.
13:01 2015.
13:03 He's 70?
13:05 Well, he's he's in great shape. He should move Nora out.
13:09 And I will mention this since this is a show we do an immediate deconstruction.
13:15 The girl that you have to keep an eye on,
13:17 and I have some clips from her later, they're minor,
13:20 is Kelly Evans. Now Kelly Evans was one of the hosts on one of the CNBC
13:27 fast talking show. It wasn't I know it was fast money or fast talking is the way I call it. They go from person to person. She was on there. She's a she's Power lunch. Power lunch.
13:37 Power lunch.
13:38 She is a beautiful woman
13:41 and she can present and I never heard her do the news before. So she's taken over from Shepherd Smith while he goes on hiatus because it's Thanksgiving. Hiatus.
13:49 I'll bet she's really good. I I watch her on CNBC.
13:52 I don't like the show, but I see her come by. Yeah. I'll bet she's really terrific as a news reader. And the thing is about her, she besides being she's got more facial expressions.
14:02 She's got Hold on. Let me let me just let me just explain to everybody who may be tuning in because someone hit you in the mouth. This is you're hearing television production producer talk here. So we talk about the length of her hair,
14:15 her posture. All the women on CNBC
14:18 have great posture. Admit that. They all have the straightest backs in They have good posture. Yeah. They got great great posture. Yes. Okay. Now And and she and she has a isn't she a lawyer? She's gotta be a lawyer. I don't. She seems like everybody's Co captain of the women's lacrosse team. Mhmm. Oh, yeah. Oh.
14:37 Hartford, Texas. So she comes on, and the thing about her, there used to be an evangelist on television. You don't see him as much anymore because he keeps getting busted by the government named Robert Tilton, and he's out of Texas, Dallas, I believe. And
14:51 Tilton, you'd watch him and you'd get you'd kinda get hypnotized
14:55 by the way he did just weird stuff with his lips.
15:00 Kelly does the same thing. Oh, really? She her lips she pronounces words and their lips go into kinda convoluted mood, and you can't keep your eyes off her lips wiggling around in some awkward way. And it's like you're just there. Okay. Here's here's the question. When she says bye, do you then do it?
15:19 Well, for CNBC,
15:20 probably. Yeah. Bye. No wonder it was a bull on that show.
15:23 So,
15:24 so she did and she is more personable. She should immediately
15:29 I don't think, you know, they they have to move them up slowly, but she should be in how Nora O'Donnell got the job she's got is beyond me compared to this girl. She's got better she's just more she just don't mind listening to her forever. Then and then a cohort
15:45 Wait. Wait. Let me let me let me just put some credentials to her.
15:49 Graduated,
15:51 magna cum laude from,
15:56 high school. Oh, no.
15:59 Not high school. George Washington,
16:01 bachelor's degree in business journalism.
16:04 Uh-huh.
16:05 Four time scholar athlete.
16:08 Oh my gosh. Oh, good for her. And she's married to Eric Cemi, the sports reporter
16:14 on CNBC. Sit around and watch football all day. No. They go to work together. He's also at CNBC.
16:19 Oh, that's nice.
16:21 Well, the other girl I've always liked at CNBC, who's a character called, Courtney Reagan,
16:27 who is just stuck at CNBC. She's a lifer,
16:31 and they should team the two of them up because when Courtney and Kelly work together, it's actually kind of fun to watch
16:36 because,
16:37 Kelly's expressive, but Courtney Reagan is so expressive she's never gonna go anywhere.
16:43 She is just
16:45 she's making more she is the Amelia
16:48 Clark of broadcasting.
16:50 Yes. But she'll She's making so many faces. Yeah. But she'll she'll never be on, on primetime network because of the nose.
16:58 Her nose is Is distracting. Know what's weird about distracting.
17:01 When I first met her We're horrible.
17:05 When I first met her, her nose was not that big. She's got one of those genetic traits where your nose just keeps getting bigger and bigger.
17:13 There's two kinds of there's people in the world whose nose just keeps getting bigger and bigger and other people whose ears.
17:19 I don't know if you have Oh my goodness.
17:22 Who who did I see who had huge ears? I didn't realize it.
17:28 Granholm,
17:29 the energy secretary.
17:31 Like she's got saucers on the side of her head. Granholm. Yeah. It's like I I was pulling some clips today. I'm like, holy crap, woman. Your ears are so big.
17:40 Yeah. She probably there's some people their ears just keep Keep growing. A local wine importer here whose ears are so big now. They're bigger than his head.
17:51 Sure.
17:52 Really? Does he have good wine though?
17:56 Right. Let's move on. This is getting creepy. I'm sorry I got distracted. I was promoting Kelly Evans while we came. Yes. Okay. That's fine.
18:05 So they went on to CBS
18:07 oh, I'm sorry. That was
18:09 was Today's show, which had
18:13 Marlo Thomas
18:15 on. So let's cut to CBS.
18:18 CBS has nothing more than a book promotion for a child's book,
18:24 and they never do a lower third or anything for this for the writer of the book who's the woman who owns all of the, what's the name of these stores?
18:33 Cake
18:35 don't even guy didn't write it down. There's some there's some it's a chain of sweet shops all over New York and elsewhere. Mhmm. And the book is called Every Cake Has a Story. If you look that up, we can get her name in. Milk Bar is the name of the movie. Oh, okay. Yeah.
18:50 Milk Bar.
18:51 And Every Cake Has a Story. It's a children's book about cakes. Cakes.
18:55 Yeah. Cakes. So
18:57 they're trying to stretch
19:00 this interview
19:01 with this woman whose name is never mentioned.
19:04 And so they say, the
19:08 interviewers go, so what's the children's takeaway?
19:12 Cake
19:13 this kids' book. Cake good.
19:16 Christina Tosi.
19:17 Christina Tosi.
19:19 Yeah. So I'm thinking,
19:21 why
19:22 does there have to be a takeaway for children reading a kids' book? No. That's a question that that a
19:28 that someone asks who has no question.
19:31 Like Yeah. Stupid to ask. I don't know what to ask anymore.
19:36 Tell me, David Bowie, now that I've asked everything I can think of, what's your take what what's people's takeaway of the album? What's the children's takeaway of the cake? What is the market's takeaway of the interest rate? I mean, that's just a it's a lame ass question you throw out there because the the floor producer is doing stretch,
19:52 stretch. You know, they do that like a stretching silly putty. Stretch.
19:56 Stretch.
19:58 So there's there was a takeaway that the author, who really doesn't have a lot to say, says,
20:04 you are who you are. Oh. Oh, deep deep thoughts. And then he goes on and then some of that said, well, that's the secret to life.
20:11 Okay.
20:14 So I could hear sets turning off around the country. This is kind of the antisocialist view of things. Don't know. So that was boring.
20:21 And so then I, okay, let's go to CBS. CBS. Wait,
20:25 so ABC,
20:26 I'm sorry to go back. I'm sorry, let's go to ABC. Yeah. That was CBS.
20:30 CBS had the book review
20:33 of the children's book.
20:35 Today had a cancer survivor that uplifted. Oh, another uplifting moment.
20:40 And so ABC, we go to ABC, there's Becky Worley. Ah, our friend Becky Worley.
20:45 So Becky's been shipped out of California,
20:49 leaving her wife,
20:50 she's married to a woman, leaving her wife and kids, she's got a couple of kids,
20:55 behind for Thanksgiving,
20:58 so whoever
20:59 it is, the other the dingy blonde that that does deals and steals can take a hiatus,
21:06 and Becky is now stuck in New York. I believe that they would not have flown out the whole family. I mean, it's possible that she could throw make that deal happen, but it seems unlikely. She has that kind of juice, but I don't think she would want to.
21:18 Yeah. It was. Because, you know, you're gonna be up early. It doesn't really make How is she looking? How is Becky looking these days? She looks good. Yeah. She always looks good. She's one of the best looking women on television. Yeah.
21:29 She's got the right size head and she's the big smile and she's very personable and she's fast with it. So she's got I don't know why she
21:38 just doesn't move to New York and get a job. And what and what people don't realize is that she's basically a dude. She's very, very funny, very fast, crude, and funny. Okay. So I okay. Here's the story. I this is gonna take forever to do this segment. So I
21:52 So Becky used to produce over at Tech TV, and I knew her pretty well. I still see her once in a while.
21:58 And she
22:01 was never more proud
22:03 than when she'd come in
22:06 and say, how do I look? And you say, you look fine. You do.
22:10 And and she says, well, here's what I really look like under all this makeup. And then she'd show pictures of herself
22:16 because she's a rugby player. Yeah. Oh, that's right. I forgot about that. She plays rugby.
22:21 Yeah.
22:22 She plays rugby.
22:23 And so she'd bring us some photos and check this out. And it was to be a picture of her face Completely. All black and blue. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Just beat up.
22:33 And I say, what is this?
22:36 She says, yeah. This is my match over the weekend. Yeah. We had a great time. Yeah. Great time. The scrum was awesome.
22:42 So so
22:44 okay.
22:46 That would that's basically Becky.
22:48 And Well, good for her. Good for yeah. She probably doesn't wanna live in New York.
22:53 She's there's obviously some reason because she can well, she can move to LA too and probably get work down there, but she does this she does I don't know what she does most of the time, but she's good she's good on both sides of the camera. Yeah. Now she on here,
23:07 they I have the sense of the following.
23:10 Now she took over she took I think this should have been deals and steals,
23:15 but no.
23:17 Had a segment
23:18 I turn right. I'm telling you, I flip right to this. There's Becky with strategic
23:22 savings.
23:23 Oh, it's a new kind. Oh, strategic. Okay.
23:27 Let me guess.
23:29 Tofurky?
23:31 No. There was nothing like that. It was mostly like Amazon had a had a, their television is gonna be on sale for $5.99.
23:38 I know they had Oh, so it's Deals and Steals just with a different label.
23:42 Yeah. And also without the codes and without the direct selling. And I think it's like Macy's, they had a Macy's deal and they had a Target deal. These are all high end stuff, but there was not direct selling.
23:53 And I I think the following.
23:56 Becky started off doing these segments on
23:59 ABC years and years ago, and they essentially
24:03 Took her up. Took her idea. Ridiculing
24:06 direct sales operations.
24:07 Oh.
24:09 She'd take on the ShamWow
24:11 guy, if you remember that. Oh, yes. Yeah. In fact, she gave me a couple of these things. She she picked up, like, I don't know, hundreds of these ShamWows,
24:19 and she's given them to everybody.
24:21 And she would talk about the ShamWow and how it works and if it's any good, and it was
24:26 kinda mediocre.
24:28 And and but it was always direct sales ridicule.
24:30 And I think she she she decided
24:34 that she's not gonna she's not gonna do direct sales, the kind of direct sales that she used to ridicule. No. Of course not.
24:42 And so they gave her this other thing.
24:44 So they oh, strategic. So that she well, the minute you pop up a QR code, you've gotta pitch it. That's where she walks away. I'm sure.
24:51 Like, I'm not sure. QR code was pitched anyway. You know that I once auditioned for QVC?
24:57 Oh, you would be perfect.
24:59 In fact, I thought I was.
25:02 It didn't work out. I can't remember if it is because they didn't offer enough or but it was weird doing that, man. What did they offer?
25:10 Not enough money. I don't remember exactly what it was but I would have to leave MTV essentially. I'm like, I
25:17 don't know about this career move. You gotta come up with a lot of cash for me to go from headbangers ball to the beaver shaving brush.
25:26 Which I thought in my audition, I said, I love the feel of beaver on my face in the morning. Well, that's probably why you didn't get it. That's why I didn't get it. When you delivered that line. That's that was my mistake.
25:38 They said, offer the guy less. He'll never take it.
25:44 Yeah.
25:45 Well, anyway, so that's my report of the, various segments. Yes. Long report, but, of course, that's A lot of inside baseball, and their people need to know. They like to hear this stuff. Well, this is how the executives talk about their, news models.
25:58 In this case, we discussed,
26:00 at least two, probably three who are all very highly qualified and,
26:04 highly educated and smart and good at it because I watch all three of them.
26:09 But, but Becky is is my favorite because you know that she's just sitting there and thinking different things.
26:15 We can see it. It's like, we we know we know what you're thinking about rugby with the girls. Come on. You don't wanna do these deals and steals.
26:24 Anyway,
26:26 well, why why don't we talk about, the most important thing probably
26:30 going on in America,
26:32 today as people are talking about gas prices.
26:35 And this show is uniquely positioned
26:39 to talk about this topic because I have the clips and you have the knowledge when it comes to oil and strategic reserves, etcetera. So we will start with the president's
26:49 announcement.
26:51 And I think it's important we do the full minute 20 because he bumbles through it and it's worth listening to what he's trying to say.
26:58 So today I'm announcing
27:00 that the largest ever release from The US Strategic Petroleum Reserve
27:04 to help provide the supply we need as we recover from this pandemic.
27:09 You know, at that first, already hit strategic. You already know that there's behind the stage going, oh, crap. I don't know if he can make it through this minute.
27:16 Oh, god. Lord, please help. They only put him out there for ten, so that was a plus. And then he walked right off the stage. Yeah. I thought, I think you pegged it at twelve as the max for him.
27:26 Twelve is think more like fifteen. I think twelve is all he can do before it really gets bad.
27:31 So, anyway, here we go. We need as we recover from this pandemic.
27:36 In addition,
27:37 I brought together other nations who contribute to the solution. India,
27:41 Japan,
27:42 Republic Of Korea, The United Kingdom have agreed to release additional oil from their reserves, and China may do more as well.
27:49 This coordinated action
27:51 will help us deal with the lack of supply, which in turn helps ease prices.
27:56 The bottom line,
27:57 today we're launching a major effort to moderate the price of oil, an effort that will span the globe in its reach and ultimately reach your your corner gas station, god willing. God willing. We worked hard these past few weeks in calls and meetings with foreign leaders,
28:13 policymakers
28:14 to put together the building blocks for today's global announcement.
28:18 And while our combinate our combined actions will not solve the problem of high gas prices overnight Oh. It will make a difference. Forever. It will take time, but before long, should see the price of gas drop where you fill up your tank.
28:32 And in the longer term Longer reduce our reliance on oil as we shift to clean energy.
28:38 But right now,
28:39 I'll build my knees to get down the road. The price you pay at the pump
28:43 from the middle class and working families that are spending much too much and it's a strain.
28:49 And you're the reason I was sent here to look out for you.
28:52 That's my favorite. Hey, man. You're the reason I was here to to look out for you. And here, how am I doing?
28:59 Before I ask you to weigh in particularly on the on, on the strategic petroleum reserve,
29:04 first,
29:05 I find it interesting that
29:07 every president up until this one,
29:10 not even Obama, I don't think, it was always,
29:13 we want to reduce our reliance on foreign oil. Reduce our reliance on foreign oil. Then we got that done, and now it's reduced our reliance on oil.
29:24 It's just
29:26 oil. We just want don't wanna have oil. So, this clip, I think the clip custodian got this for me. This is from NTD Business,
29:34 Tom McNulty,
29:35 talking talking about the impact of the strategic petroleum reserve release. So joining us is Tom McNulty,
29:42 energy expert and the managing director of the Houston office of Value4Scope. Tom, great to see you. Thanks so much for coming on. Hey. It's great to see you. Yeah. Great to see you. Yeah. And, Tom, this new Good to be here, Paul. Biden administration to start releasing some of the strategic reserves.
29:57 I believe the idea was to help ease oil and gas prices, but today on the announcement, we see Brent crude up considerably.
30:05 What do you think is happening in the markets?
30:08 WTI is up as well. I think it's
30:11 you first understand what the SPR is for. It's really for emergencies,
30:16 and that means war, conflicts,
30:18 blocked canals, and also massive
30:21 storms like hurricane Katrina.
30:24 It's not really designed to move gasoline prices.
30:28 WTI traded up and Brent.
30:30 A couple of reasons, I think. I mean, it's it's not a lot in the scheme of things.
30:35 It might be less than the market was expecting, but really above all,
30:39 you know, the market doesn't is not going to reprice
30:42 based on
30:44 this amount of crude. And there's a lot of detail
30:47 in this. I mean, I think it's a lot of heavier sour crude. I don't know that our refinery complex
30:53 is set up at this time of year to crack that crude. I think a lot of it will wind up in China and India.
30:59 Energy is complicated. It's a global market. It's also very physical and very technical.
31:04 And I think this is
31:06 perhaps more of a political move than a physical technical move.
31:11 So in fourteen years of doing this show,
31:14 I've learned that when stuff is going the opposite direction of intended, particularly when it comes to oil, when we're talking Brent and WTI,
31:21 there's only one man I can turn to and that's you. What is,
31:25 going on?
31:28 Well, I'm not sure that his analysis of the,
31:32 nature of the strategic reserves is correct and that is sour crude. I don't think so. Well, he he kinda sounded like he didn't know how what what the mix was or
31:42 and and what is sour crude? Why would you reserve why would you save
31:47 the worst crap
31:49 in the world, which is sour crude,
31:51 as a strategic reserve? I don't know. Trump did it. Trump did it. Maybe he thought he was getting a deal.
31:59 Yeah. Well, so I I so I don't know about that. But the other part which is noted was also noted by Horowitz, which is that as soon as he announced the deal, the price of oil went up again. Of course. Both the
32:11 both the
32:13 WTI and the Brent, which is two different types of oil.
32:17 And,
32:18 I don't think I think it's just a joke, and I think the guy's dead dead right, which is that this is supposed to be used in cases of dire emergencies. That's why we have a batch of it, a bunch of it. You just don't dump it on the market to try to control prices.
32:31 That's just like a it's just grandstanding the way I think see it, the way and nothing's gonna come of it. Prices
32:38 will probably go up.
32:40 There were secretary
32:42 the energy secretary, Grand Oak, you know, the one with the saucers years. With the saucers. You gotta look at them. Once you see it, it's like, holy crap.
32:51 So she she did a a little bit of the press thing with the with Psaki,
32:56 and she got two questions that I wanted to highlight, which really just shows you
33:01 without her having to say it. Lots of people might have seen the clip of her saying, we're in the transition. This is just I think we might have even played it on the last show. But this kinda lets her tie herself up a little bit more with stupidity,
33:14 but it's important because she is,
33:16 in fact, in charge of energy in The United States. And I'm sure that these types of idiots are all over in every country, in every administration,
33:24 and it's April Ryan teeing up the question. April Ryan. You know? April Ryan.
33:29 And it has to be about poor people. How do we how is this helping poor people? You said your effort is,
33:36 primarily targeting
33:37 working and low income families. What do you say to those families who are feeling the pinch right now at the pump? The prices are Pinch at the pump. Yeah. No no doubt. This is why the president has been really thoughtful No doubt. About this. I mean, this is you know, we've looked at every angle of what the tools are to him. He feels so strongly
33:57 that all Americans are feeling the pinch as a result of gasoline at the pumps. And short term, we have to do everything in our power, and that's why we have the strategic petroleum reserve. But he also feels very strongly
34:09 that long term, the strategy really is Hold on a second. There's a tell in there. She has a a a a chuckle tell.
34:16 So I don't Is that a chuckle or a nervous a nervous
34:19 And let's listen because it could be the nervous reaction to the lie she just told that this will short she says short term, this will help at the pump. That's what she said. Maybe she's laughing because of that or what comes next?
34:30 Zoom in, rotate, enhance. We
34:33 have to do everything in our power and that's why we have the strategic petroleum reserve. But he also feels very strongly that long term, the strategy really is to go clean. I mean Oh, long term. Okay. Maybe that's it. He feels really strongly. Long
34:47 term, the strategy is She laughed right in the middle of strongly. She's laughing because she knows that this clean energy is laughable. To do everything in our power and that's why we have the strategic petroleum reserve. But he also feels very strongly that long term, the strategy really is Nice. To go clean. I mean, right now, the price, for example,
35:08 of
35:09 solar sounds nervous. Yeah. Well, hold on. But see, now this is where she starts to mess it up. Now she's gonna get into specifics. Listen to this. That long term, the strategy really is to go clean. I mean, right now, the price, for example,
35:23 of
35:24 solar and wind is cheaper than in most places in the country because it's free fuel. Okay. So okay. Let me just let me just make sure we're not conflating everything. Price is at the pump,
35:36 but it's free fuel from,
35:38 solar.
35:39 Free. She said free. Free fuel.
35:42 Than,
35:43 than more traditional sources of energy.
35:46 So he wants to bridge that time and
35:49 and double down on investing in clean while creating jobs, but do what we can within our power to lower the cost today. And notice the the term is now just clean. We're investing in clean. What are you doing? I'm investing in clean.
36:02 How do you heat your house, clean?
36:06 The clean is, is kind of the new the new hip way of saying or at least she's trying to introduce it, the dish head lady. But then,
36:14 you know, so she told all these lies
36:17 which she surely she must know that short term this will not affect the prices at the pump. I mean, even if it's just to if it has to get refined or I mean, petroleum is not some you can't just go to the strategic reserve and put it in your tank. Right? It's just it has to be refined. No. Yeah. You can't siphon it off. I mean, get a little bit of strategic reserve here. No. So so she knows that that can't even be true, but then it must have been Peter Doocy from Fox News. So he
36:44 so he came up with a a calculation.
36:46 Well, wait a minute. It's 50,000,000 barrels. You know, that's, that's not that much. Thank you, madam secretary for doing this. There's various Oh, no. It's not Doocy. It's someone else. This. I'm curious if you know how many barrels of oil does The US consume
36:59 per day? I don't have that number in front of me. Oh, so she this is right. How many barrels of oil does The US consume on a daily basis? I don't have that information.
37:08 Can't you get that from Wikipedia?
37:11 I could look it up right now. Yeah. We have the number in ten seconds. Okay. Nine.
37:16 Eight. No, I'm not doing it. Oh, okay.
37:18 I'm just saying. If you know how many It's lot. Yeah.
37:21 Yeah. It's it's it seems like something the energy secretary would know if there was a number top being of her head. Number being released. Know how much how much we pump and how much we have and what we Yes. That's kind of requisite
37:33 for the job, you think. She should know which refineries are not doing any work. They're down. Yeah. How many how many you do? What else does she have to do? Yeah. Just track the track the dashboard, lady. There's various figures about this. I'm curious if you know how many barrels of oil does The US consume
37:49 per day? I don't have that number in front of me. Sorry. Some suggest it's about 18,000,000,
37:54 which would suggest you're releasing less than three days worth of supply from the Why petroleum
37:59 is that enough?
38:01 Well Okay. So in case you couldn't hear,
38:04 So some suggest it's about 80,000,000 barrels a day, which would be your your release of 50,000,000 barrels is really for less than three days. How can that be enough to affect the price?
38:14 We what we are doing plus what other countries may be doing Humming a humming a humming a humming a humming they're Oh, no. You're gonna love this. You're gonna love this tap dance.
38:24 Which will be less than what we're doing because we have the largest
38:28 amount of Yeah. Strategic
38:31 got the biggest lady. Yeah. Ours is the biggest. Petroleum reserves.
38:35 We believe will be this bridge. I mean, the Energy Information Agency has said, for example,
38:40 that in December
38:42 this is what they have projected. Now again, probably more of an art than a science. Projecting is, subject to a lot of different, volatility.
38:49 Oh, you mean like you mean like COVID warming projections? Warming and vaccine
38:54 efficacy,
38:55 that kind of stuff. Yeah. Thank you. Global warming's even. But really, it's more of an art than a science. Oh, well, this is new miss miss clean.
39:03 That we're science science science. Science. No. No. It's art art art. The
39:08 this is what they had projected. Now again, it's probably more of an art than a science projecting is. Wait. What's the name of this agency? I got
39:15 was who were these? Yeah.
39:17 Clip is unbelievable.
39:19 Yeah. No. This is this is scary is what it is.
39:22 We believe will be this bridge. I mean, the Energy Information Agency has said, for example,
39:27 that in December
39:29 this is what they have projected. Now again, it's probably more of an art than a science. Projecting is subject to a lot of different
39:36 volatility,
39:37 but that in December, the price will be,
39:40 $3.19
39:42 a gallon, and then in January, continue to go down. So the Okay. So she's doing the craziest thing. Why would you ever
39:51 predict prices
39:53 down to the penny?
39:55 Down to the penny.
39:57 Yes. The end The US Energy She said by December? Yeah. 03/19. She's giving numbers. Two weeks. Yeah.
40:06 US Energy Information Administration,
40:08 Independent Statistics and Analysis.
40:10 Independent.
40:11 Mhmm. And right there, Today in Energy posted
40:15 today. Average US gasoline prices are higher this Thanksgiving than any since 2012.
40:20 Yay. Alright. Let's go back to the videotape. Volatility,
40:24 but that in December, the price will be,
40:27 $3.19
40:29 a gallon, and then in January, continue to go down. So this is really a question about a short term
40:35 strategy.
40:36 Oh, you heard it here. This is supposed to it's supposed to pay off short term. It's not even possible.
40:42 That allows us to make this bridge. So it's not we're gonna not supply all of the oil for three days, obviously. Oh. Oh, John. This it's gonna work differently. We're gonna spread it out. We wanna we will be releasing it over a period of time.
40:56 And It's like OxyContin. It's time released. We will, have a certain amount that,
41:02 each particular cavern
41:04 is releasing,
41:05 but we're not saying that we're gonna be supplying all
41:08 oil for the country. We're just gonna try to do what we can to temper.
41:13 And it's coming over several weeks then you said? Mhmm. It will be. It's well,
41:17 first of all,
41:19 they're not gonna release it all at once. Okay.
41:21 I love this. She has no idea, does she? She really doesn't know she doesn't know what she's talking She's in over her head. It's great. It will be thoughtfully done,
41:30 over the next Thoughtfully done. Thoughtfully done. Thoughtfully
41:34 it's I thought it was Science.
41:36 It's art.
41:38 Thoughtful art science. It's art science.
41:41 Thoughtfulness.
41:43 Thoughtfulness.
41:44 How
41:44 would you invest thoughtfully? We are not gonna release it all at once. It will be thoughtfully done,
41:50 over the next
41:52 bit of time.
41:53 Bit of time. And it will be dependent on bit? Bit of time.
41:58 Not Not the next
42:00 kills me. What kills me. Bit of time. The only thing that made it onto social media of this entire answer was the the point where she says, I don't know the price right now. And everyone's like, she doesn't know the price. She doesn't know the price. Look at this clip.
42:15 It's like, if you idiots would listen for five minutes to what this lady is actually saying, it's much more entertaining.
42:22 Of all,
42:22 we are not gonna release it all at once. It will be thoughtfully done
42:27 over the next
42:28 bit of time
42:30 and it will be dependent on those who bid.
42:34 So What? That takes a little bit of time to do. Okay. Okay. Wait. Wait. Wait. They're buying this stuff? No. What she's saying is they've got partners.
42:43 You see? They got partners to help them out.
42:48 You know, like Japan.
42:51 Yeah. Japan's gonna release their strategic reserves. I was saying to you just now, it sounds like you're saying price is gonna hit a certain amount in December
42:59 and then down into January.
43:01 Yeah. It'll be over few weeks. It'll be over So we're looking at increased
43:05 prices continuing through So you're gonna hang for this? We're hopeful that this will because it's increasing supply and it's the largest effort ever, we are hopeful that there will be a lid. Also, some of this honestly has there has been movement
43:19 on
43:20 oil. The price of per barrel
43:24 has dropped about 10%
43:26 since this conversation. Went up. Is that true? It went up. I don't know what what oil is she looking at? Did any of the oils go down? No. They all went up. She's lying. She said 10%.
43:37 10%?
43:38 Let's take a look at that. Ben, move this. Well, mean, it's not it's possible it did a dipsy dew, but I don't think it was 10%. Dipsy
43:45 dew? Well, then she should have said dipsy dew for extra points.
43:48 On
43:49 oil, the price of,
43:51 per barrel
43:52 has dropped about 10%
43:54 since this conversation. I think she means olive oil.
43:57 Started
43:58 and was out there. So we're hopeful that,
44:01 prices will be stabilized and start to move down. Oh. We are not saying that there is going to be some dramatic,
44:08 difference,
44:09 but we all She said you said $3.19
44:12 in December. 18. 8. Let's get it straight. I thought she said 19.
44:16 I think she said 18.
44:18 Also are recognizing it. Everybody needs to, I think, be a partner in letting people know that last year was an anomaly because dem Wait a minute. Everybody has to be a partner in letting people know. This is interesting talk. We
44:33 are not saying that Actually, that's a that's a tell. Let's listen again. It's like this telling you the media is like, you know Oh, you gotta be a partner. Oh, good catch. Hold on. Will be stabilized
44:43 and start to move down. We are not saying that there is going to be some dramatic,
44:48 difference, but we also are recognizing it. Everybody needs to, I think, be a partner in letting people know that last year Yeah. Wasn't an Wow.
44:57 Scary stories about the gas surprise you Get on board, you a hole. Be a partner. Be a partner in the messaging. Wow. You were so right on that. Dramatic,
45:07 difference,
45:08 but we also are recognizing it. Everybody needs to, I think, be a partner in letting people know that last year was an anomaly because demand
45:18 during COVID for gasoline was so low that the prices were so low. And when demand is high, the price goes up, and demand now has exceeded supply. And we are doing our part to make sure that we can alleviate as much of that pain as possible.
45:33 Well, she's gonna eat a lot of that.
45:35 No doubt. OPEC and Russia are already talking about pausing,
45:41 pausing production
45:43 just to jack up the price. They're not gonna Yeah. That'll do it. They're not gonna stand They for
45:47 these guys have been studying this for since the seventies, how to do this correctly so they don't lose market share. So they're all stupid. They know how to do it. That's so stupid. While
45:56 we're on this topic, we do have to go back to Biden because I went to say when he left, we talked about the ten minutes versus twelve minutes versus fifteen minutes. You know, it'd be up to so long.
46:06 I had to I did catch a clip of him
46:09 telling us why he had to leave this Oh. Conference.
46:13 I don't know if you caught this. This is the end. We're not.
46:17 No.
46:19 No. I'm sorry.
46:20 It's the I it's Biden ISO. Oh. I'm heading to a
46:25 food kitchen to serve meals right now. Thank you for your time and effort.
46:31 A food kitchen.
46:32 That's what he said at the end of his little speech there. And then you then after he left, they went nuts because he just walked off the stage, or I should say staggered off the stage. And it's not his gate. He he moved left. He moved right. He barely made it out. And then he heard this. When
46:54 will you answer our questions, sir? I couldn't understand it. What did he say?
46:58 Well, it was just a bunch of people yelling, and then at the then it was very clear at the end, why won't you answer our question, sir?
47:06 Well, he's gotta go to a food kitchen.
47:08 And so yeah. A food a food kitchen is where he eats.
47:12 Does he know that that's
47:14 I need to go to food kitchen for food. Food kitchen. Food kitchen.
47:18 So I'm thinking about this because the way they let that left that on the clip at C SPAN Oh. Was
47:26 notable because he used to always do that with Trump. They'd be yelling at him as he left. And
47:31 one reporter,
47:32 Jonathan Karl, would loudly ask some embarrassing question.
47:37 And so this guy did the same thing, and they left it on. And I said, well, that's interesting. So I guess they're trying to balance things a little bit because it's the way they handled Trump. But what was more interesting is when C SPAN went to the clips you just played from Granholm
47:50 Yeah. Who came in right after
47:54 Biden left Mhmm.
47:56 They left the end of the Biden thing on the on the clip.
48:02 So
48:03 they had Biden staggering off the stage, and then they had this little
48:08 little thing at the end. Why won't you answer our questions, sir? And then
48:12 they cut the Granholm and and,
48:14 Pisaki.
48:16 So it's a little Well, I got the Granholm from, C SPAN. I mean, you can't trust anything. There's so especially if you get a clip where you're laughing your ass off, like what an idiot.
48:27 You gotta go look at these things in full context. Get No, you do. Because, you know, it's so bad. We try to do that most of the time. No. It's it's hard.
48:36 And if you get the same clip from a whole bunch of people, you you can just over oh, this is great. And you overlook it. And that's where I run into trouble because I'm always like, oh, I'll clip this is great.
48:44 So I went I'm I'd have to go back to Seaspan whenever possible just to to get as much as I can. So all of this is predicated on,
48:52 on climate change, which is going to kill us.
48:55 Meanwhile, we have about a dozen ships stuck in the Arctic as the ice freeze came early. Oops.
49:02 Don't think we'll have many stories about that. I did like seeing I mean, no stories. No stories, please. No. No. No. Let me see who who published this. Ruins the long term narrative. We're we're hurting the people by telling these stories. Not good. It only fuels conspiracy theories. We should not be passing this information on.
49:20 But CNBC did a funny one.
49:23 The COP twenty six conference set a record for c o two emissions with air travel the main culprit. So they put the numbers to it. According to estimates, the two week COP26 summit, which ends on Friday, will emit about 102
49:36 and a half thousand tons of carbon dioxide,
49:38 the equivalent of a total average annual emissions for more than 8,000
49:43 UK residents.
49:46 That's a good one. Yeah. Because I won't get much press.
49:49 CNBC is a small market. No. This is their version of of humor. This is like a weekend holiday story. Hey. Let's laugh. Let's laugh what people might get upset about.
50:01 But meanwhile,
50:03 it is you know, they're starting to to ramp it up again. It might as well.
50:08 I have see, I have two clips here. Oh, yeah. This first one, this is David Suzuki.
50:14 I don't know if you remember David Suzuki. I think he's like a
50:18 activist, scientist,
50:20 you know, millionaire
50:21 television type guy. He reminds me of, Michikuchu,
50:26 our nut job over here.
50:29 The the guy the the string theory guy. Yeah. The string theory guy. So this is David Suzuki,
50:35 and he's in I think this might have been a protest in Ottawa. He's he's Canadian.
50:40 And, listen to what he says is next. Hundreds of people gathered in Downtown Victoria today holding a funeral for the future.
50:49 Protesters
50:54 marched from Centennial Square
50:56 Legislature in what they called a funeral procession.
50:59 This event comes after the COP twenty six climate change conference, and protesters say the talks fell short.
51:05 With this funeral for the future, extension rebellion Vancouver Island hopes to bring attention to the climate emergency
51:12 and are calling on the government to Did act on it
51:15 she say extension rebellion?
51:17 No. Exting I think she said extinction. I hope so. With this funeral for the future, extinction rebellion Nah. She kind of flubs it a little bit. Extinction.
51:26 Yeah.
51:27 We would call her into the office and tell her to work on addiction.
51:31 Yeah. No. Get
51:33 get her a coach. Get a what is it? A logo podiatry
51:37 logo Addiction coach is what it's called. Addiction coach. Coach. Oh, gee. With his funeral for the future, Extinction Rebellion Vancouver Island hopes to bring attention to the climate emergency
51:48 and are calling on the government to act on it now. Here he is. We're in deep, deep doo doo, and they've been telling us, the leading experts,
51:57 for over forty years. This
51:59 is what we're come to. The next stage after this is there are gonna be pipelines blown up if our leaders don't pay attention to what's going on. Now these two things combined
52:09 with the elites jetting off to the conference
52:13 with the clear threat of pipelines are gonna blow up. That is state of fear. That is Michael Crackpot's book right there.
52:23 Completely
52:24 on on message.
52:26 Interesting.
52:28 Because that's exactly what it was. They were there. They were going to sabotage,
52:32 an ice sheet and blow it up,
52:34 to have this huge ice sheet, you know,
52:37 move off towards God knows whatever.
52:39 And they were all justifying their private private planes because, you know, they're they're helping so many people.
52:46 And of course they had to kill him, Michael Crichton,
52:50 because of that book.
52:52 I don't know if that's true, but sounds sounds right. He seems kind of fishy dies shortly thereafter. He did die pretty quick after it. But then And he was a healthy guy. I mean, if you look at him, I mean, I've seen him interviewed quite a bit.
53:05 He's got I I actually tried to get a hold of him for something I was doing. Very
53:11 difficult to get a hold of. He's got a bunch of, like, layers and layers of
53:17 secretaries that won't let you get Well, you should have had layers and layers of something else.
53:22 Food tasters or whatever.
53:24 Food tasters. That would do it. So I don't know what happened to Boris Johnson. Well, we know he went into the hospital with COVID,
53:30 but
53:31 It came out of new Boris Johnson. Now he's gone ape shit so
53:36 bad that BBC did a full I'd only got like a minute and a half, but did a full takedown
53:43 of some speech he did,
53:45 which might have been, you know, I'm sure it was politically
53:48 connected, you know, whatever, but he's just I mean, it was what it it's in he's gone insane. He's gone climate insane.
53:55 These are important and pressing times for British business. Again, this is BBC. And today, in the Northeast Of England, the CBI's annual conference was addressed by the prime minister.
54:06 Good morning, everybody. It's fantastic to be here in in Tide Time, one of the big,
54:10 net exporting regions in the whole of the of The UK.
54:14 Was an orthodox start to the speech, but soon we were into more unusual territory. When presenting his 10 plan to support businesses going greener,
54:22 mister Johnson compared himself to Moses.
54:25 He also quoted Lenin
54:26 and then made this pitch for electric cars.
54:29 EVs may not burble like sucking doves, and they may not have that that
54:35 you love, but they have so much talk
54:38 that they move off the lights faster than a Ferrari. As the Daily Bell noted, mister Johnson attempted an impression of a traditional petrol engine issuing a series of guttural sounds to confuse delegates in South Shields.
54:50 Mister Johnson also began to list some of the policies he's promoting.
54:54 With safer streets,
54:56 with great local schools,
54:58 with fantastic
55:00 broadband.
55:01 But
55:02 at this point, the prime minister lost his place, and for twenty one long seconds,
55:06 couldn't find it again. I left it in.
55:12 He's
55:16 slipping out.
55:19 Forgive me.
55:23 Forgive me.
55:25 He's glitching.
55:29 No doubt to his relief, mister Johnson then returned to the script. And before he was finished, he wants to talk about a family day out. Yesterday, I went,
55:38 as as we all must,
55:41 to to Peppa Pig World.
55:44 I don't if you've been to Peppa Pig World. Who's been to Pads? I've been to Peppa Pig World.
55:48 Not many hands went up. Peppa Pig World is several 100 kilometers from South Shields.
55:53 The prime minister went on. Peppa Pig World is is very much my kind of place.
55:57 It it it
56:00 has a a
56:02 very safe streets,
56:06 discipline in schools,
56:08 heavy emphasis on new mass transit systems, I I noticed.
56:12 What happened? What happened?
56:15 That was very bizarre.
56:19 Yeah. I heard part of that. I didn't hear the the the missing pieces, and I just heard about the The Peppa Pig. Peppa Pig. Yeah.
56:27 Yeah.
56:28 Something's something's up. Yeah.
56:31 I don't I just I don't know what that was. That was really weird.
56:36 Well, I don't I I
56:38 think it's probably more common
56:42 than not his this whole nuttiness that he's been exhibiting.
56:47 So yeah. But this was a lot in but I don't know. For whatever reason, the BBC doing this seems like a big deal that they're gonna take down the prime minister, making him look like a buffoon, which he had a fine time doing by himself.
56:59 I just thought it Yeah. Wasn't gonna take a lot of work. That's interesting.
57:03 I thought,
57:05 unless you have anything else on climate change.
57:07 Oh, let's see what I got.
57:09 Because it is it is what's coming next.
57:12 Actually, that's not true. That's not true.
57:16 I know what's coming next.
57:22 Migrants,
57:23 I got NASA news, which is kind of interesting. Well, yes, let's do that. I have the clip. I have two clips for that.
57:30 I know exactly what you're talking about, but unless it's not climate change.
57:35 No, it's not. No,
57:39 I have got nothing on climate change.
57:45 Well,
57:47 let's do the NASA news for a second. Now to that breaking Two things that are going on, they got some two things that are happening. One, they're setting up a new telescope,
57:55 which just sounds like a fiasco waiting to happen. Do you have a telescope clip?
58:00 Ugh. This teles listen carefully to this telescope clip and tell me that this is not a fiasco waiting to happen. Well, meanwhile, NASA's about to embark on another historic mission, launching a new telescope
58:12 in the search for life on other planets. Its massive size and capabilities,
58:17 they say, make the Hubble Space Telescope look like a child's toy.
58:21 The Hubble Space Telescope has been beaming back images, transforming our understanding of the universe
58:27 for more than thirty years.
58:29 Now its successor, a telescope 100
58:33 times more powerful,
58:34 is just weeks away from launch.
58:37 The James Webb Space Telescope is designed to answer humanity's
58:41 most existential questions.
58:43 Are we alone in the universe,
58:46 And where did that first light in the cosmos come from? I think its greatest discoveries
58:51 are going to be answers to questions that we have yet to ask or imagine.
58:55 Webb's deputy project manager Paul Geither was hired by NASA thirty years ago to help fix Hubble.
59:02 It was the mechanical version of eye surgery. Endeavor's eleven day fix it mission in space was to install corrective mirrors so the nearsighted
59:10 and nearly $2,000,000,000
59:12 Hubble Space Telescope can do what it's supposed to do, see.
59:16 But once in space, Webb can't be repaired by astronauts.
59:20 It'll be too far away,
59:22 orbiting the sun at a distance four times farther from Earth than the moon.
59:26 The telescope is also so big, about the size of a tennis court, that it can't fit on top of a rocket fully intact.
59:34 We had to design it so it could be folded up
59:37 and then unfold
59:39 in space. So it's the Origami Observatory.
59:42 With more than 300
59:44 single points of failure, and each one could prove to be fatal to the mission's success.
59:49 Now the telescope's gonna launch no earlier than December 22 on a European rocket from French Ghana.
59:56 Well
59:58 300 points of failure
1:00:00 launching
1:00:01 with a European rocket in French Ghana. What could possibly go wrong? What could possibly go wrong? Well, I'll tell you what And it's gonna be sent into the middle of nowhere. This this is an incredible problem, this, telescope,
1:00:14 because they're going to name it,
1:00:18 the Webb Telescope
1:00:19 instead of something new and,
1:00:22 the
1:00:24 LGBT,
1:00:26 community,
1:00:27 LGBTQQIAPK
1:00:29 plus is is very angry because as we all know, James Webb,
1:00:35 was,
1:00:37 I have it here. James Webb, influential administrator at NASA during the sixties and seventies, worked in the Truman administration as undersecretary of state at the time when the department systematically
1:00:47 discriminated
1:00:48 against gay and lesbian employees. You see.
1:00:51 So,
1:00:52 because of that,
1:00:53 it cannot be named the Webb telescope, but they're going ahead anyway, which I think dooms it.
1:00:59 It is doomed.
1:01:00 They should rename it immediately.
1:01:03 It's they're going to get all the the bad LGBTQ
1:01:07 karma.
1:01:08 Yeah. You also get some one bad LGBTQ
1:01:12 employee,
1:01:13 nicking a wire.
1:01:15 Yeah. Anything is possible. Anything. Well, with 300 points of failure, I mean, come on. So on Monday,
1:01:23 and I and I wish I had come up with it Sunday on the show, it would have been much more impactful. But on Monday, I was saying to the keeper,
1:01:31 what can they do next? And that was kind of in context of, you know,
1:01:35 the vigilantes.
1:01:36 You know, nothing really scares the American public. COVID is no is no longer scary. Maybe it's maybe just not the American, but I think everywhere. People are done with being afraid of COVID.
1:01:46 People are done with being afraid of terrorism.
1:01:50 Because, know, it just it doesn't quite pan out the way the the fear was put in. It lasted too long and, you know, climate change, obviously, no one's afraid of that.
1:02:00 Wouldn't it be great if we could make people afraid again? And I've always been a fan of project blue beam, which would mean,
1:02:08 aliens would would come over us and tell us to shape up and the world leaders would say we should all agree and go ahead with the the new world order based upon what the aliens say.
1:02:18 Yeah. I would go along with anything some crazy alien told me to do. So I was kind of being on that. And then
1:02:25 I'm like, yeah. Let's have how about this?
1:02:28 And all of a sudden this pops up. Now to that breaking news overnight, the NASA mission that sounds something like out of a sci fi movie, a rocket on its way to crash into an asteroid and try to actually knock it off course. Kaylee Hartung is tracking the latest on this trial run, and that's the key. It's a trial run-in preparation
1:02:46 for a potential threat down the road. Kaylee, good morning.
1:02:49 Yeah. Good morning, Whit. This is a test. I repeat, this is just a test. It's NASA's first ever planetary defense mission, and the goal of this crash is to knock this massive asteroid off its path, which scientists say could prevent a truly catastrophic
1:03:04 natural disaster one day in the case an asteroid threatens this planet. So overnight,
1:03:09 NASA launching the DART mission. That's short for double asteroid redirection test. This SpaceX Falcon nine rocket took off from Vandenberg Space Force Base here in Southern California. And in about ten months, a spacecraft the size of a vending machine will crash right into an asteroid about 7,000,000 miles away from Earth at a speed of 15,000
1:03:28 miles an hour. Now this mission, it amounts to target practice, and the asteroid they're targeting, it's a rock the size of a stadium, 525
1:03:35 feet across. It's called dimorphous,
1:03:37 and it is not on a collision course with Earth. But after it takes this direct hit, NASA will be tracking it to see if it's knocked ever so slightly off its course. And if this works, scientists say this technology could save the world one day, guys. Oh. And, Kaylee, we appreciate that you reminded us it's only a test.
1:03:55 So
1:03:58 when it comes to COVID,
1:04:00 we had all this pre programming.
1:04:02 We had all this fear stuff that we, you know, outbreak and oh my goodness, some of Fauci even
1:04:09 advised on outbreak. There were many CDC people. We even laughed about that. And that came before
1:04:15 swine flu.
1:04:16 And there's just been countless examples of Hollywood. Now this already harkens back to, oh, don't worry about Bruce Willis isn't on this one.
1:04:25 But then
1:04:26 to solidify the thinking of could we make people very afraid of something, in this case an asteroid or a comet,
1:04:33 all
1:04:34 of a sudden Netflix comes out with this which is launching December 24.
1:04:40 While, you hear some of the sound, I'll tell you the cast. Jennifer Lawrence, Jonah Hill, Meryl Streep, Ron Perlman, Leonardo DiCaprio,
1:04:47 Kate Blanchett, Ariana Grande,
1:04:49 Tyler Perry. I hear there's I mean, this is one of the biggest movies ever. It's called Don't Look Up. Comet. Oh, good for you. It's headed directly towards Earth.
1:04:59 This comet is what we call a planet killer.
1:05:03 At this exact moment, I say we sit tight and assess.
1:05:07 Sit tight and assess? Sit tight. And then assess.
1:05:11 The sit tight part comes first, and you gotta digest it. That's the assessment period.
1:05:17 This is not worse than Anyway, so the
1:05:20 plot of this movie, which is just coincidence with the DART mission,
1:05:24 the plot of this movie is
1:05:26 these two
1:05:29 astrophysicists,
1:05:30 they figure out that this, comet is going to kill the earth. And when they finally get it up the flagpole far enough, they're in the president's Office. That would be Meryl Streep with Jonah Hill. And those guys like, wait a minute, there's trillions of dollars of, of riches and minerals on these things. And so, you know, I guess hopefully they save the planet. I don't know.
1:05:50 But it just seems like one of those things, like we're ready for it. Do you think we could scare the world with a with a comet, which would be easy to do video wise, of We've had a million of these. So you're telling me that you've changed your whole
1:06:03 your entire philosophy of life, not to to the point where we have a a a situation with NASA sending this stupid little,
1:06:13 rocket to knock knock this asteroid off off
1:06:16 kilter,
1:06:18 not to set up for the movie so we could sell more tickets? Well, that was gonna be my second question.
1:06:24 It seemed Well, that is the second question is what I think. Right. Well Now
1:06:28 Well, notice one thing. There's one twist. There's one twist. It's going up on a Elon Musk rocket, which and I noticed that. Yeah. But okay. So it's on an Elon Musk rocket.
1:06:38 I think that these all these Jamokes,
1:06:42 the Penis Mobile,
1:06:44 Ambezos'
1:06:45 rocket,
1:06:46 I
1:06:47 don't know if Branson is really a player. I think these guys really all wanna go after because we've heard these stories before. They wanna go after the trillions of dollars of minerals on the asteroid.
1:06:56 Think that's what this is about. For years. I think that's what this is about. And now Elon Musk is gonna go and do it.
1:07:03 Well, this, rocket that's gonna hit the asteroid is is a very strange situation that they didn't talk about the report you have there.
1:07:12 First of all, the asteroid is a small moon.
1:07:16 Yeah. They're gonna hit Right. The
1:07:18 Right. They're gonna hit the moon, and then the moon is supposed to hit the asteroid.
1:07:21 Well, no. They just hope it just knocks it out of its orbit. But since it's circling, it's it's not going in one direction. It's circling. It's go the whole thing, the whole
1:07:32 compound of moon asteroid are going in one direction, but this thing's spinning around. If they hit it wrong, they could actually knock
1:07:39 it into a pattern To hit us. To hit the Earth. To hit us. Has anyone questioned that part?
1:07:45 No. I have not heard that. Would be a really sucky movie promotion. By the way, I don't think this is gonna have any effect at all. And they also, it has to be it has to hit is they're not targeting this moon because it's spinning around.
1:07:56 They're
1:07:58 this thing,
1:07:59 this rocket has its own
1:08:02 self automated. It's like a self driving car adding a little more interest. I thought they'd pick up on that in the news stories. But the but it's a self driving car. Once it gets to a certain point, it has to find the moon. Oh, it has to go and and Target it and drive into it.
1:08:16 The video's gonna be great. All the CGI we get. That's
1:08:20 that's the only thing, man. The CGI you can do with spacecraft
1:08:24 is gonna is phenomenal because you'll believe everything. Because you've seen it all. You've seen the asteroid hurtling towards the earth.
1:08:31 Watch at Christmas.
1:08:33 Yeah.
1:08:34 How about your report? Is that the same? Was there anything different in there? Yeah. No. Mine was just another version of that. The best report, which I didn't record because it was too long, was from the NASA channel where they discussed all the aspects of it, including the then they showed, like,
1:08:48 the thing spinning around the other asteroid and the and
1:08:52 the self driving car nature
1:08:54 of the rocket. Yeah.
1:08:57 It turns out that the rocket will come and hit one of the freeway, barriers
1:09:02 like all the other self driving cars from Elon Musk do.
1:09:06 Okay. We need to work on the material. We couldn't work that We gotta work on the material. That was that was an ad. It wasn't bad, but we need to work on it. Well, but, yeah, it could have been better. If we just Talking about jokes, we wanna take a break,
1:09:17 I finally isolated the who's on first bit.
1:09:24 Abbott and Costello, who's on first so we could
1:09:28 understand better the, the thing we were talking about from Do wanna do that now? You wanna do a little more news before we do this?
1:09:36 Well, well, let's do it before the break then. Okay.
1:09:40 Because it'll be funny.
1:09:42 Well, it's it's it is it's amusing because it's
1:09:46 the the history behind this gag actually goes back pre Abbott and Costello. It was done as a various other who's the boss and all these other anything with the word who in it is a reference to these old jokes. Yeah, it's also racist.
1:10:00 Is it? Yeah, who.
1:10:03 Who was gonna be Chinese, of course,
1:10:06 or Korean,
1:10:07 so it's racist.
1:10:09 No. No. If you call it there's no is there any who Koreans? I don't think so. There should be. There's racist. There should be. Rooftop who Koreans. That's what it is. I get an Ask Adam, which is kind of newsy.
1:10:19 Okay.
1:10:20 Alrighty. Newsy. We go to this is just two of them.
1:10:24 Beginning and the end.
1:10:26 This is about the January
1:10:29 6
1:10:30 investigations
1:10:31 going on in Congress, and this is taken from the Shepard Smith newscast
1:10:36 with Kelly Evans
1:10:39 doing the news reading. And,
1:10:41 it's it's kind of interesting. Let's start with part one, and I'll ask you the question.
1:10:46 The house select committee is seeking documents and testimony from five more people, including Roger Stone, a high profile ally of the former president who urged his supporters to defy the election results.
1:10:58 In a statement Stone told NBC he had no advanced knowledge of the events that took place at the capital. Also, Alex Jones,
1:11:07 Alright.
1:11:10 I'm ready for the question.
1:11:12 How now we
1:11:14 Roger Stone was described as an ally of the president and some other stuff. Yeah. How is Alex Jones
1:11:20 Connected. Question. Adam. Mhmm. How is Alex Jones described
1:11:25 by Kelly Evans on this news report?
1:11:29 How is he described
1:11:30 by Kelly? Is he just I'll give you some options. Is he a podcaster?
1:11:34 Yeah.
1:11:35 Is he a news personality?
1:11:37 How is he described?
1:11:40 A conspiracy
1:11:41 theorist podcaster.
1:11:44 Wow.
1:11:47 Almost. Okay. Let's listen to the answer. Also, Alex Jones, a conspiracy theorist who reportedly helped organize the rally that preceded the attack on the Capitol. Okay. In a statement, Jones wrote, quote, congress's attempt to chill ordinary Americans in the exercise of these rights is terrifying.
1:12:04 Yeah. Yeah.
1:12:06 What's funny is when when when these news people are doing a podcast, it's like, hey, catch my pod. You know, my podcast. I've got the Todd the Toddcast. It's great podcast. It's really getting to the issues.
1:12:18 But when you wanna disparage someone, you go
1:12:22 podcaster.
1:12:25 Am I right?
1:12:26 Well, she didn't call him a podcaster. She just called him a conspiracy theorist.
1:12:30 And yet, yes, you are right. They always disparage podcasting,
1:12:33 and they they do it in a kind of a snide
1:12:37 a snide way like you just said. But when they describe their own great pod
1:12:43 Their own great pod is the is the bomb.
1:12:46 Yes.
1:12:48 I wanted to give the producers a little piece of audio, and you can get it in the show notes under,
1:12:53 all the clips.
1:12:55 Seven months of vaccine policy
1:12:58 in under a hundred and twenty seconds.
1:13:01 And and there's been different versions of this, and they and they at first, I was like, don't know if I like the music under it because it's a super cut. It's a mega cut, if you will. But when you listen to this specifically
1:13:13 and this just quote after quote after quote,
1:13:16 it might help you in breaking some of the mass formation that some of your loved ones or friends and family are in. You're okay. You're not gonna you're not gonna get COVID if you have these vaccinations.
1:13:28 These vaccines
1:13:29 are highly, highly effective.
1:13:32 Vaccinated people do not carry the virus. Don't get sick. Everyone who takes the vaccine is not just protecting themselves, but reducing their transmission,
1:13:41 to other people and allowing society to get back to normal. Get your first shot, and when you're due for your second, get your second shot. Our key goal is to stop the transmission, to get the immunity levels up so that you get almost no almost no
1:13:54 infection
1:13:54 going on whatsoever. When people are vaccinated, they can feel safe that they are not gonna get infected. If you're vaccinated,
1:14:02 you're not gonna be hospitalized.
1:14:04 You're not gonna be in ICU unit, and you're not gonna die. If you are fully vaccinated,
1:14:09 you no longer need to wear a mask. Anyone who is fully vaccinated
1:14:14 can participate in indoor and outdoor activities,
1:14:18 large or small,
1:14:20 without wearing a mask or physical distancing. But what they can't do anymore is prevent transmission. You know, we didn't have vaccines that block transmission.
1:14:29 We got vaccines to help you with your health, but they only slightly reduced transmissions. We need a new new way of doing the vaccine. The level of virus in the nasal pharynx
1:14:40 of a person who's vaccinated and infected is
1:14:43 the same level
1:14:45 as the level of virus in the nasal pharynx of an unvaccinated
1:14:49 person. Reports from our international colleagues,
1:14:52 including Israel,
1:14:53 suggest increased risk of severe disease amongst those vaccinated early.
1:14:58 And if you look at Israel
1:15:00 Mhmm. Which has always been a month to a month and a half ahead of us, they are seeing
1:15:07 a waning of immunity not only against infection,
1:15:12 but against hospitalizations
1:15:14 and to some extent death. The booster might actually be an essential part
1:15:19 of the primary regimen that people should have. Plan
1:15:23 is for every every adult to get a booster shot. Clearly,
1:15:27 one of the best investments I've
1:15:30 ever been involved in.
1:15:33 And there's video of it too.
1:15:35 Kinda shows you. What?
1:15:38 Did you play that clip? Because it had the punchline of the best investment I've ever been involved in. Yes.
1:15:44 I have a clip about the profits that are made. I let's see where you find it.
1:15:52 COVID profits, NPR.
1:15:54 The COVID nineteen vaccines are making pharmaceutical industry a lot of money. And while there are still millions more people to vaccinate and boost around the world, it's not clear exactly how long the boom will last. NPR Pharmaceuticals correspondent Sydney Lup karma reports. This year, Pfizer expects to bring in $36,000,000,000
1:16:12 from worldwide sales of its COVID nineteen vaccine.
1:16:16 That would shatter the previous record in annual sales for a single pharmaceutical product,
1:16:21 about 20,000,000,000 for the anti inflammatory Humira,
1:16:24 and make the Pfizer vaccine the best selling pharmaceutical product ever.
1:16:28 Moderna will deliver fewer doses but is still expecting up to 18,000,000,000 in sales for the year for its COVID-nineteen vaccine.
1:16:35 But the long term measure of financial success for the company's mRNA vaccines isn't so simple.
1:16:40 Here's Richard Evans of SSR Health, an investment research firm. The benchmark Humira has been
1:16:47 churning out tens of billions of dollars a year for multiple years on end.
1:16:52 And it's it's not entirely clear that the mRNA vaccines will do that. Evan says that just because Pfizer and Moderna are selling billions of doses now doesn't mean that will last forever.
1:17:02 The vaccines could work so well they eliminate the need for further boosters. Though
1:17:07 it's also possible COVID shots could become routine like flu shots.
1:17:11 Still, Evan says the uncertainty puts a premium on maximizing sales now.
1:17:18 Man.
1:17:20 Maximizing
1:17:21 sales now. You remember around
1:17:26 March, April, May
1:17:29 2020,
1:17:30 long before the vaccine,
1:17:34 when I played more Democracy Now clips, and there was all these organizations that were forming
1:17:40 in advance of the vaccine saying, do we want this? We want these vaccines. They need to be free.
1:17:46 Yes. Yes.
1:17:48 They needed to be released, and there's all these organizations that cropped up. Free vaccines
1:17:53 for the for the public, so everyone should get a free vaccine because it's so important. There's COVID. This is like your
1:18:00 commentary about,
1:18:02 you know, things are so important. Let's put it off a month.
1:18:05 Yes. January 4. Shit.
1:18:07 Yeah. Because the virus, the virus will wait. It's okay. The virus will wait for the mandates. It's fine.
1:18:12 And so, there was the same thing. It was like, we have to this is this COVID is so deadly
1:18:19 that we it's imperative
1:18:21 that the vaccine be developed and then be given to the public for free as a public service. Mhmm.
1:18:27 Whatever happened to that idea?
1:18:31 Well 36,000,000,000
1:18:32 in profit from
1:18:34 Well, I have I have some thoughts. I have some thoughts. First,
1:18:38 because they saw it going in the wrong direction and people developing heart issues, we just gotta say it. It's not even in The UK, They're now saying, hey, two more soccer players from the premier league dropped on the field. Is anyone gonna be brave enough to ask what's going on? So that's kind of sparking up.
1:18:57 Turns out
1:18:58 the mixing and matching of the vaccines may have been a
1:19:03 very evil ploy
1:19:05 as I have now come to learn
1:19:08 that breakthrough infections
1:19:10 after a mix and match of vaccines
1:19:13 are not counted as breakthrough because they can't tell which one caused the breakthrough.
1:19:20 What? In Germany, this is
1:19:23 in the in the news.
1:19:25 Mixed vaccines in Germany not counted in breakthroughs.
1:19:30 So all along first of all, let's let's do the timeline.
1:19:35 When they first started off with these vaccines, it was critical that you didn't mix and match. Not mix and match, that's right. It was a big deal. No, no, no, no, no. You gotta get this and then you gotta get the second one's gotta be the same thing.
1:19:47 And then out of the blue,
1:19:49 months later,
1:19:50 probably more than two It's a July. It was July 1
1:19:55 is when we had the, hold on a second, July 1 was the first report. And Eva, there's an unrelated new study out of The UK about mixing vaccines. What can you tell us about that? That's right, Robin. So this study looked at mixing Pfizer and AstraZeneca,
1:20:09 and it showed that mixing and matching the vaccine
1:20:12 does work. But Okay. There you go. July. New study from The UK. Reports of people talk the the the term topping off. Yeah. But wait. Right after that, the World Health Organization.
1:20:23 People who are,
1:20:25 thinking about mixing and matching The World Health Organization's
1:20:28 chief scientist on Monday advised against people mixing and matching There you go.
1:20:34 So
1:20:35 they came out and said mix in July, mixing and matching. Yeah. Study looks good.
1:20:40 World Health Organization, two weeks later, at least according to our clip timeline,
1:20:44 do not do this. It will create des.
1:20:48 And then and then Lina Nguyen,
1:20:51 our friend Lina Nguyen,
1:20:53 she comes back in
1:20:54 October.
1:20:57 October.
1:20:58 Well, I hope that when the FDA and CDC review data around the around Moderna and Johnson and Johnson that they will allow a mix and match approach. Okay.
1:21:09 And there was a bunch of other pro mix and match stuff in the public. Yep.
1:21:13 It was topping off was a term off. That came Well, if you had a Johnson, you should top off with a Pfizer. Which isn't even mixing and matching. That was, like, the boost.
1:21:23 Wasn't it? A boost, but there was all yes. They were using if you had a a Johnson and Johnson, they wanted you to boost,
1:21:30 although they used the term top off because it has a nice sound to it.
1:21:35 Except in California, we're not supposed to top off your tank, by the way. Yeah. You're not supposed to top off human beings in The UK. So they topped them off with this other thing. And and now if that's all part of a scheme to screw up the statistics, that's great. Very smart. This is genius. Well, at the same time in The Netherlands,
1:21:53 the the Dutch
1:21:54 telecom regulator,
1:21:57 has raised issues
1:21:59 with, one of the talk shows on the public television. So that's run by the government.
1:22:05 And I think I told you that they had the Pfizer,
1:22:08 medical director of Holland. He's kind
1:22:11 of the spokes guy now going around all the talk shows, similar to Scott Godley, board member of Pfizer.
1:22:18 And, what they said is he gave so much information,
1:22:21 so much solicitous information on this talk show that it sounded like he was actually marketing
1:22:28 the Pfizer
1:22:29 Plaxovid
1:22:31 COVID pill.
1:22:33 So when someone gets pulled back by the regulators because they think he's doing that, he's probably doing that.
1:22:40 And the Plaxovid,
1:22:41 we have a little more information,
1:22:43 is a combination of Pfizer's
1:22:46 investigational
1:22:47 antiviral
1:22:49 PF07-thirty
1:22:50 two-thirty one-thirty three-two and a low dose of Ritonavir,
1:22:55 an antiretroviral
1:22:56 medication traditionally used to treat HIV.
1:22:59 Hey, feeling good?
1:23:02 According to an interim analysis,
1:23:05 Paxlovid, Paxlovid, I think it is, reduced the risk of COVID-nineteen
1:23:09 associated hospitalizations
1:23:11 or deaths by eighty nine percent
1:23:13 in those who received treatment within three days of symptom onset.
1:23:17 The drug was also found to be effective
1:23:19 Just one percent of PSAI patients who received Paxlovid were hospitalized. Okay.
1:23:24 So
1:23:25 that may be on deck because this is, this is not working out very well.
1:23:30 In particular, if you listen to the nurses
1:23:33 and I have two nurses,
1:23:35 they looked like nurses, they were dressed as nurses, they were at a protest. So, they were angry about what's happening with their nurse dom.
1:23:42 This would they not be nurses? What kind of phony baloney is gonna come out? I mean, it'd be nice unless they were it was a setup so you could bust the setup and say, oh, look at these are phonies and, you know, the the vaccine is safe and effective.
1:23:55 Here is a nurse from Ontario.
1:23:58 She'll be talking about the number of stillborns
1:24:01 that she Oh, yes. This is a good clip. Eighty six stillbirths between
1:24:05 January
1:24:06 and July.
1:24:08 And
1:24:08 normally, it's only one it's only five or six stillbirths every
1:24:13 year. So about one stillbirth every two months is the usual rate. So to suddenly get to eighty six stillbirths in
1:24:22 six months,
1:24:24 that's highly unusual.
1:24:25 And she went on to say that every single one of the mothers was fully vaccinated.
1:24:30 Correlation perhaps, causation, we don't know. New Zealand was a little more clear. The bulk of the patients will be vaccinated.
1:24:39 If you're not vaccinated, you get segregated,
1:24:41 you get put in a different part of ED,
1:24:43 put into isolation.
1:24:46 And and people, they just I mean, I had one consultant on my last night. She stood in front of our big board with everybody, all the patients, and all these symptoms. And she said, what's going on? Why have we got so many patients? It's all cardiac, cardiac, cardiac, short of breaths,
1:25:00 you know, collapses, falls. And I just can say, tick, tick, tick. This is adverse reaction, adverse reaction. All of our wards are full.
1:25:08 You know, if of people having cardiac problems, people will clear up from their cancer. Like, you name it. It's just I guarantee a hospital is full of of vaccine damage. It's just people people are blind. People just cannot see it.
1:25:23 Mass formation. People are blind. People just can't see it, she says.
1:25:28 It's it's crazy.
1:25:30 I know. It's fantastic. Meanwhile, the world the World Health Organization
1:25:34 And by the way, there's nothing worse than a stillbirth.
1:25:38 And not only that, but it doesn't women really don't I mean, that really affects them because it's like they, you know, they give birth to a dead baby. This is not something that takes forever to get over that.
1:25:47 It's bad. Some never get over it. It's and dads have issues too. It's not easy for dads, for families. It's horrible.
1:25:56 Tedros says in many countries and communities, we are concerned about the false sense of security that vaccines have ended the pandemic and that people who are vaccinated do not need to take any other precautions.
1:26:09 No country or region is out of the woods.
1:26:13 Right measures are in place to avert the worst consequences,
1:26:16 oh, now I'm getting German, of any future waves. He called You you had a good Yeah. You a second.
1:26:24 Know, if The pandemic idea. If I listened to him, I could do it. Yeah. If you listened to him and maybe practice for five minutes, you know, so you could really nail it. Yeah. Well, there was no clip, but thanks for the advice.
1:26:34 You're welcome.
1:26:38 Okay. We got that.
1:26:40 There was another nurse in Slovenia.
1:26:43 I have a clip, but it's in Slovak,
1:26:45 so I won't bore you with it. Now she claims,
1:26:49 and this isn't being being played up as a scandal in Slovenia,
1:26:54 she claims that and she showed color codes on the
1:26:59 vaccine labels,
1:27:01 and there are,
1:27:03 codes
1:27:04 one, two, or three, in the, in the digits in the code.
1:27:08 And she had decoded these numbers. If you have a number one vaccine,
1:27:13 that is the placebo,
1:27:14 saline.
1:27:15 If your vial has number two on it, that is the RNA.
1:27:19 And number three
1:27:20 is an RNA stick
1:27:23 that contains the oncogene
1:27:25 associated with
1:27:28 adenovirus
1:27:29 adenovirus,
1:27:30 which contributes to the development of cancer.
1:27:33 I don't know if that's true, but I just wanted to put it out there.
1:27:37 Sounds sounds far fetched, but again, it was one of those nurses looking like a nurse out outside reading this, looking real worried about what happened. Well, the adenovirus is the one that's using the Johnson and Johnson shot. It's not unusual.
1:27:51 Oh, does it is it a known carcinogen?
1:27:55 Not that I know of. Oh, okay.
1:27:58 I don't know. I don't know.
1:28:00 What I do know is the new Botswana variant is coming. This is the one. This is the killer. 32 horrific mutations.
1:28:09 Mhmm.
1:28:11 And experts say it may have emerged in an HIV patient. I mean, this is they've got a lot of HIV Go connected to
1:28:17 wild. A lot of HIV connected to this. I'm telling you. It's a little crazy.
1:28:23 Let's see. Incidentally,
1:28:24 the new
1:28:25 treatment from,
1:28:27 Pfizer will help help that problem.
1:28:30 Yes. Because it's got the HIV drug in it. Yes.
1:28:34 The German health minister as Coincidentally.
1:28:38 No. I don't think so. We just need to look around the world what's happening because they're locking down tight. Germany is considered going one g, which would mean you're vaccinated.
1:28:46 Germany's got a screw loose. What's wrong with Germany?
1:29:02 Translation from the German health minister by the end of the winter, German people will either be vaccinated,
1:29:09 recovered,
1:29:10 or dead.
1:29:11 Those are your choices, Germany.
1:29:14 And this was a shock
1:29:16 that he said this. Europe is kind of like, woah. What did he what did he just say?
1:29:21 And they don't know how to parse it. You know? It's like, well, we're in all these lockdown conditions because they say it's so scary. And now he's saying we're going to die from it?
1:29:32 Well, he didn't say how they're going to die. Yeah. Well, no, that's true.
1:29:37 Let's go down under for a moment. The chief minister of Northern Territories Australia,
1:29:43 who as far as I know, were having a jolly good time hanging out, roaming around. They could go to sports games. Well, that has been shut down and locked tight. And this guy, he was having none of it. You either you either just you can't even say it. If you are anti mandate, you are absolutely anti vaxxed. I don't care what your personal vaccination status is. If you support champion, give a green light, give comfort to, support anybody
1:30:06 who argues against the vaccine, you are an anti vaxxer. Absolutely.
1:30:10 Your personal vaccination status is utterly irrelevant. If you campaign
1:30:15 against the mandate, if you campaign against the people being vaccinated in vulnerable settings, teachers and classrooms, I'll be really clear. At that point in time, people were actually supporting the idea of a teacher being unvaccinated in a remote community classroom
1:30:30 with kids who cannot be vaccinated. I reject that. I went I still reject it. And if you are out there in any way, shape, or form campaigning against this mandate, you are absolutely anti vaxx. If you
1:30:43 say pro persuasion, stuff it, shove it. We are absolutely gonna make sure as many territories as possible are vaccinated. That is our best protection against this thing. As you look at the voting volume, it's only come out since. This is if you double dose 80 in remote communities, five and up, I think you'll see our vaccine mandate is absolutely crucial to protecting lives, particularly aboriginal life. And I will never back away from supporting vaccines and anyone out there who comes for the mandate,
1:31:10 you are anti vaxx.
1:31:13 What is wrong with him?
1:31:16 And as if ant you know, it's time to take that someone speaks English doesn't mean that they have the same kind of thinking. Americans have a a distinct
1:31:27 form of thinking that is shows up in situations like this as being a little different than what you get there in Australia.
1:31:36 It's like, let's take back the term anti vaxx.
1:31:39 You know, if if you wanted to mean that, fine. Who cares? It's like, oh, you're really harming me by, oh, no. I'm an anti vaxx or whatever. People call you that anyway.
1:31:48 But these northern territories,
1:31:50 they're serious. If you look at the the videos of aborigines who don't want this and they're hunt kind of hunting them down and and, you know,
1:31:58 is beyond coercion. It appears Australians have been trying to kill off the aborigines forever. Finally. Finally, we have a chance. Here's a new here's a new gimmick. Let's try this. So what they're doing now is Are they gonna burn the villages too if they won't take the vaxx? Oh, yeah. They're gonna burn that Ayers Rock and torch that fucker.
1:32:16 They're
1:32:18 using the
1:32:20 their version of the FEMA camps, the quarantine camps. They're open for business and they're filling them up even with people who are just in contact tracing. Urgent action to escalate our response in these communities, immediately implementing a hard lock down. That means residents of Minjari and Rockhole no longer have the five reasons to leave their home. They can only leave for medical treatment in an emergency or if required by law.
1:32:44 It's highly likely that more residents will be transferred to House Springs today either as positive cases or close contacts.
1:32:50 We've already identified 38 close contacts in Pinjarri,
1:32:54 and that number will go up. Those 38 are being transferred now.
1:32:59 I contacted the prime minister last night. We are grateful for support of about 20 ADF personnel as well as army trucks to assist with the transfer of positive cases and close contacts and to support the communities.
1:33:11 So they're bringing in the Australian Defense Forces to transport close family and contacts
1:33:16 to the quarantine camps. Man, I'm glad we have guns.
1:33:22 This will be happening to us. I'm convinced of it. This is the plan.
1:33:28 And and New Zealand's even worse.
1:33:32 New Zealand's the worst.
1:33:35 But they
1:33:37 anyway, what what is interesting is you saw the note from, sir Mark and Dame Astrid?
1:33:43 Yeah. Boots on Japan boots on the ground in Japan.
1:33:47 Wanna read it? Yeah. I I think we should because
1:33:50 what's interesting is their takeaway is masks work.
1:33:54 Well, they've they've been a huge masks fan since the get go. Yeah. Well, Japan is a mask country. That's that's that's their culture. And and most of lot of Asia, if you if you travel a lot, you'd go there, especially if you went during the fall, that people be wearing masks the years ago.
1:34:08 They wear masks that they they wear masks when they're driving because of the pollution that which Yeah. The yeah. The pollution. I remember it was mainly for the pollution back in the day. At least that's the way I saw it.
1:34:20 Boots on the ground situation in Japan. Yesterday, there were seventeen new cases in Tokyo, a city with a population of 30,000,150
1:34:28 cases for the whole of Japan.
1:34:30 Population, 120,000,000.
1:34:32 So right there, I would say they probably are not using the dialed up PCR test.
1:34:39 So, you know, maybe they just don't want to terrorize their people the way everyone else is doing. But he just returned from The UK yesterday, and he gave us a little rundown of what it takes on arrival. Takes three hours to go through the entry process, which involves showing your papers,
1:34:54 waiting in line, checking your vaccine papers, checking your predeparture
1:34:59 PCR test, getting a new PCR test, installing three government apps on your phone,
1:35:05 checking all your app settings to give full access to your phone,
1:35:10 then you are released into a fourteen day quarantine at home or in a hotel.
1:35:15 No public transport from the airport, only private cars or special shuttle buses to designated hotels if you don't live in Japan.
1:35:22 You must answer three track and trace calls a day with video and location on.
1:35:28 And he says, compare this to The UK where there was no check at Heathrow, only a lateral flow test with what you must order before you travel and take it two days after arrival.
1:35:37 This may go some way to explain thirty thousand cases a day in The UK, only one hundred and fifty in Japan. Again, I'm just gonna say, I think the PCR,
1:35:45 if I went back in the show notes and I looked, you might see that Japan was a little more
1:35:50 normal about that.
1:35:52 But then, and,
1:35:54 what else is going on is everyone still wears a mask in Japan. No ifs, no buts. You cannot go anywhere without one. Peer pressure is enormous,
1:36:01 especially if you're a foreigner. The UK had pretty much given up on masks except for the underground where about 70 to 80% of people were wearing.
1:36:10 He says that the Pac five guys that went to Piccadilly Circus, no one had one on, only the staff. The vaccine program started late in Japan, July to August. About seventy percent were vaccinated
1:36:20 in the first two months, so it's still strong across the nation.
1:36:24 Ivermectin
1:36:25 is approved for use in Japan,
1:36:28 but sir Mark thinks this is more to do with aftercare
1:36:32 than reducing the spread.
1:36:35 So I don't know, ma'am. I mean, I I just I think the yeah. Of course, mask is gonna maybe help something when people are sneezing and snottering the flu around. I'm just not even really thinking you guys have any COVID there on the island at all.
1:36:50 It's just not there. No one in or out. Hard to get in. No one wants to go.
1:36:55 What do you think, John? Yeah. I mean You can't get in and you can't get out and you gotta be locked down for fourteen days
1:37:01 and ivermectin's
1:37:02 available.
1:37:03 Yeah. I'm sure that ZivPak or whatever that thing's called is all over place. Kit. Ziverto kit. Ziverto kit.
1:37:11 I'd like to know more about that. I'd like to know about specifically about the ivermectin use in Japan. He's he's been
1:37:18 of the belief that this doesn't mean anything, but we're of the exact opposite belief because reports,
1:37:26 not because of what we know and
1:37:28 the science. If you go to ivmmeta.com,
1:37:33 ivmmeta.com,
1:37:35 and look at all the research. Yep. And if you even go to the FDA site, they have another set of research, 75 studies being done on ivermectin even though it's horseworm,
1:37:44 or why are they studying it so much? Hello? Right. Why did the guy who discovered
1:37:48 the Japanese guy wanna do a study out of one of the schools and Merck
1:37:53 refused to do it? I mean, this whole thing is this ivermectin thing is that's a real scan that's gonna be exposed one of these days.
1:38:03 There's no doubt in my mind about that. It's got the
1:38:07 scam is, of course, not using it.
1:38:10 It's got it written all over it. It's just too much information,
1:38:13 man.
1:38:14 It's way too much information, man.
1:38:18 Appreciate it,
1:38:20 sir Mark.
1:38:22 I think we I only have two more clips, I think. You got any COVID stuff you wanna do? I just had that one COVID clip. Okay. The one
1:38:29 Yeah. I I wanted this is kind of a a cool com like a compendium
1:38:35 almost. It's Scott Gottlieb, former FDA commissioner,
1:38:38 on the board of Pfizer, total shill, CNBC. He's there all the time to hype up the stock.
1:38:43 He's going to talk about the breakthroughs
1:38:45 and,
1:38:46 and the, and the fix, and that will take us to the boosting. Well, look, think at this point, we need to accept that there's a lot of breakthrough infections happening for people, particularly people who are out a significant portion of time from their original vaccination. And there are people out almost a year at this point or coming up on a year, people who were vaccinated back in January, December and January.
1:39:05 So there's probably more infection happening among the vaccinated population, more spread happening in that population, the unboosted portion of that population than what we're picking up because we're just not systematically tracking this. There's gonna be retrospective studies that identify this, but we're not doing a good job of tracking this in real time. Yeah. And this is the argument for people to go out and get boosters. The effect of the boosters is almost immediate. The Wait a minute. Because they're not tracking million dollars. Wait a minute. Because they're not tracking it in real time or effectively. That's the reason to go out and get a booster? That's what he's saying. But we're not doing a good job of tracking this in real time. And this is the argument for people to go out and get boosters. The effect of the boosters is almost immediate. The original
1:39:45 premise of the vaccine in terms of the 95% protection is restored. And the final point here is that I also think we're not making effective use of the antibody drugs. For people who are truly vulnerable,
1:39:54 who are immunocompromised,
1:39:56 who we know aren't gonna develop a very robust immune response from the vaccine because they're on steroids or they're on chemotherapy,
1:40:03 we could be using these antibody drugs as a prophylaxis to prevent them or reduce their chances of getting an infection and getting a severe infection. I know plenty of people who are doing this.
1:40:12 Sophisticated physicians Slow down. Less coffee. But listen to what he's saying. Listen to this. Reduce their chances of getting an infection and getting a severe infection. But he's he's marketing. That's why. I know plenty of people who are doing this. Sophisticated
1:40:25 physicians who are, you know, unfortunately,
1:40:28 on chemotherapy or other immunosuppressants are doing this. The the problem is it's not available to the masses. You have to be in the know to know that these drugs are available for
1:40:37 What this guy is now doing?
1:40:39 He's saying sophisticated
1:40:41 doctors listen to this to the wording sophisticated doctors
1:40:45 are prescribing something off label which I'm sure is a Pfizer product. It could even be the Pfizer pill
1:40:52 because they kind of know they're in the know, they know what they're doing and only only people who are in the know
1:40:59 can can get a hold of this because, you know, it's I mean, sounds a little bit like they what we were doing with ivermectin
1:41:06 only somehow this in the know drug is not is
1:41:10 not being outlawed. Using these antibody drugs as a prophylaxis
1:41:14 to prevent them or reduce their chances of getting an infection and getting a severe infection. I know plenty of people who are doing this,
1:41:20 Sophisticated physicians who are, you know, unfortunately,
1:41:24 on chemotherapy or other immunosuppressants are doing this. The the problem is it's not available to the masses. You have to be in the know to know that these drugs are available for that kind of use. Regeneron is making them available on a compassionate use basis. The FDA is currently considering an emergency use authorization, but we should be getting on the ball trying to make these available to immunocompromised
1:41:42 patients. So he's marketing Tell us specifically what's he talking about. What doesn't he say?
1:41:48 He oh, I'm sure he why doesn't he say the Pfizer pill?
1:41:52 No. Why doesn't he say, well, is it the Pfizer pill? I think that's exactly what he's talking about. Well, mean, that's probably what it is, but is it They didn't ask.
1:42:00 That's the yeah. Hello? They didn't ask? I know. It's like, holy crap. For asking. Holy crap.
1:42:06 I mean, if I was the guy doing the interview, although these are these are rigs, these interviews are fixed. They're like Yeah. Like, give give me a number, man. Who do I call? Who do I how do I get in this club? So the guy would the interviewer would say, well, specifically,
1:42:21 what are you talking about? Just tell us Yeah. Specifically,
1:42:24 because you're just generalizing
1:42:27 here. Let's Yeah. Be specific. What exactly
1:42:30 are you talking about? Yeah. Just Name names. And they you know? And he either would he did not do it, which he probably wouldn't because, I don't know, I I since I'm a board member, I can't start promoting my own stuff. This is like the same guy you got busted in The UK you brought up. The Netherlands.
1:42:46 Where's our government? This
1:42:48 is bullcrap. Where's our government? Go back and watch Dopesick, everybody. I can teach you how it works with pharma and the government. Two clips left. This is, we might as well get the the words straight from the horse's mouth. I'm I'm so sick of listening to the guy, but Fauci was on ABC. Pfizer CEO Albert
1:43:05 Bourla recently said there's a high chance boosters would be needed annually.
1:43:09 Do you think that's a possibility, or do you believe it might be even sooner, like every six months? Yeah. You
1:43:15 know, we follow the data, and there's always it's so easy to predict,
1:43:20 Martha, about how often you would need it. We would hope and But did he say it's so easy to predict?
1:43:28 Let's start over. You know, we follow the data, and there's always it's so easy to predict,
1:43:34 Martha, about how often you would need it. We would hope, and and and this is something that we're looking at. How do you say it's so easy to predict and then say we would hope? Well, this is the double speak of the week.
1:43:46 You know, we follow the data, and there's always it's so easy to predict,
1:43:51 Martha, about how often you would need it. We would hope, and and and this is something that we're looking at very carefully Oh, carefully. That that dirt shot with the mRNA
1:44:01 not only boosts you way up, but increases the durability
1:44:05 so that you will not necessarily that work. The dirt is the brisades
1:44:09 What is this? A magic pill? How does it how does it increase the durability?
1:44:14 This guy is so full of crap. Why is he on the air?
1:44:20 Useful idiot. They not only boosts you way up, but increases the durability
1:44:26 so that you will not necessarily need it every six months or a year. We're hoping it pushes it out more. Uh-huh. If it doesn't
1:44:34 and the data show we do need it more often,
1:44:37 then we'll do it. But you wanna make sure you get the population optimally protected,
1:44:43 and you do whatever you need to do to make sure you do that. My my hope as an immunologist,
1:44:48 as an infectious disease person,
1:44:50 that that maturation
1:44:51 of the response
1:44:53 increasing
1:44:54 its strength and power will be followed by a greater durability. That's what I'm hoping for. If it doesn't happen, we'll act accordingly.
1:45:01 This is a new term,
1:45:04 durability.
1:45:05 We have never heard the vaccines about the vaccine's durability, and I'm not even sure I know what it means.
1:45:12 Durability.
1:45:13 What does this mean? It's not efficacy.
1:45:17 Right? It's durability. Does that mean it I mean, it lasts longer in the fridge?
1:45:23 For
1:45:24 all practical purposes, that's what it means. That's what I think. Only your your body's the fridge. So the thing is in there, and it's lasting. It's doing its job,
1:45:33 whatever that is,
1:45:35 and then it starts to do less and less of a good job, and it's it just falls off. It's just not durable.
1:45:42 I I understand what it means. You know what it means. It means it's just what it really means is it's no good. Yeah. It doesn't work at all. I'm only identifying
1:45:51 that they're using a new term. So there's reasons why you use a new term and durability
1:45:57 is something that I think is easier to grasp. This is a marketing thing. It's a change. Yeah. So get you to take take the booster. Durability. At the end of the clip, the only clip I had was the clip on sales. And at the very end, it says we gotta figure out some way to to keep the sales going. Well, let's talk to the head sales guy one more time. Scott Gottlieb now in CBS face the nation. The labor department's OSHA division,
1:46:21 said it's suspending enforcement
1:46:23 of that Biden requirement to test or vaccinate business employees.
1:46:27 We also saw Disney halt vaccine requirements in the state of Florida after the governor there said businesses
1:46:34 can't,
1:46:35 carry out that kind of mandate.
1:46:38 In both cases, you have the government telling businesses what to do. If you're a business owner,
1:46:43 if you're an employee, I mean, what should you be doing right now?
1:46:48 Well, look, I think it's not inappropriate for businesses to mandate vaccines in certain businesses absolutely should be mandating vaccination in their workplaces, health care settings, settings where you can't protect employees with other tools other than to make sure that you can keep the infection out of that setting. So settings where you have a lot of employees working very closely together is hard to work in a masked environment in perpetuity.
1:47:08 I mean, this is the unfortunate consequence of government officials getting into these private decisions. If we ultimately left these decisions to mandate vaccines up to states, local districts,
1:47:18 private businesses. I don't think you'd see this be a political fight at a national level. Now it's become a political fight at a national level, unfortunately. You're gonna see some governors trying to position themselves on this issue like you've seen in Florida, and you're gonna see the federal government, the Biden administration now fighting those states and fighting to implement these OSHA rules. The the end result is, like, businesses that we're gonna move forward on mandates have moved forward, and businesses that are reluctant to do it are probably gonna wait in place and see what happens with the outcome of this litigation involving OSHA. By the time this lawsuit ends up getting resolved, probably will be through the, surge that we're seeing right now, this delta surge, and maybe on the back end of the pandemic here. And for that, you will need to be fully vaccinated. That needs to be determined.
1:47:59 You've already seen governors in in Connecticut and New Mexico say three doses
1:48:04 is fully vaccinated. Should the CDC
1:48:07 say you need a booster to be considered fully vaccinated?
1:48:11 I think at some point they're going to, but not this year. I think eventually,
1:48:15 this will be considered a three dose vaccine, but I I would be hard pressed to believe CDC is going to make that recommendation,
1:48:22 anytime soon, in part because of this debate about whether or not younger people who are at less risk should be receiving that third dose. In states where governors are looking to do this, and I think some local communities will do it. Some businesses are probably gonna do it quite soon. Mhmm. I think in cases where entities are going to mandate three doses for people who are six months out from the second dose, they're doing that because they're using the vaccine as a way to control transmission and try to end this pandemic. Transmission? You know, there are people the public health community who don't think that that's an inappropriate way to use the vaccine,
1:48:51 but this is a debate that's going on right now in the public health community. And CDC's sort of stuttering approach to how they've embraced boosters is reflective of that debate. Yeah. They just want the the corporations to mandate it. Do it.
1:49:04 Do it. Three now. Did you notice the little thing you slipped in there? Which one? The three the three dose vaccine?
1:49:10 If it's a three dose vaccine Then you need a fourth as a booster.
1:49:14 Yes. Exactly. Isn't that cool? Or a sixth. And my question is, what's your number? Sixth. What yeah. You know, what's your number? The help the Passe Sanitaire in France,
1:49:24 now we know it it expires
1:49:27 seven months
1:49:29 after your second dose until you get a booster. And there's gonna be a fourth, and there's gonna be a fifth, and and the sixth may be something that you don't really think is good for you.
1:49:39 What's your number?
1:49:45 What's your number, John?
1:49:47 My
1:49:48 number is private
1:49:49 my own personal business.
1:49:52 Blood out. With that, I'd like to thank you for your private courage and say in the morning to you, the man who put the sea in the sour crude. Ladies and gentlemen, mister John C. Dvorak.
1:50:03 Okay. So we're not gonna do who's on first.
1:50:06 And here we go with who's on first. John, tell us about who's on first. Let's do it. No. I no. I said it's a timing
1:50:14 thing. Let's let's do the do the I'm sorry. I I completely forgot. I completely forgot. But we we spent twenty minutes talking about Becky Worley.
1:50:22 I wanted to make sure we got some some news in.
1:50:26 Introduce this segment again so I can And with that,
1:50:29 I'd like to thank you for your courage to say in the morning to you, the man who put the sea in sour crude. Ladies and gentlemen, mister John C. Dvorak.
1:50:37 I need a morning to you, mister Adam Curry. In the morning to all ships at sea.
1:50:43 Boots on the ground, feet in the air,
1:50:50 subs in the water, and all the Dames and Knights out there. And in the morning to the trolls in the troll room. Let's get right to it and let's count these trolls. See how many we have today. Alright. Hands up, trolls. Alright.
1:51:01 Hands up. Let's see what we got. Yeah.
1:51:04 Yeah. I figured it'd be a little low. Sixteen twenty five. That makes sense on on a holiday. But we're here. That's that's low, especially it's a holiday.
1:51:13 People should be, listening to the show Yeah. What's wrong? Sunday. What's wrong with them? Twenty two. They're not listening to the show. What I said in the newsletter. I think we're back to normal normalish.
1:51:22 And that and we did have a kind of a a slow day Mhmm.
1:51:27 Which is one of the things that never didn't happen during COVID, that 2020 was a banner year for the for everyone being around. Yeah. But this is normal. Everyone's taken off. They've all they're on their cars. They're driving here and they're driving there and paying $5.50
1:51:40 of gas out here in California, at least for premium. I am completely happy with people being with their family, not listening to the live show because I know that half of them will be listening to it during the football.
1:51:51 Like, ugh, hate football,
1:51:53 and the other half will be, listening to it drunk. Listening to watching football saying they hate football.
1:51:59 No. Well, the family's watching football. You know what I mean? Oh, yeah. A lot of people don't like football. That's what I just said.
1:52:05 I
1:52:06 think it was just you expressing your own feelings. No. I love football. I love watching Oh,
1:52:11 no. I love the army navy game. I love the Super Bowl. I love you know, I'd I'd like to see if anyone falls down from the Vax.
1:52:20 I don't really wanna see it. Did there we yeah. You know, it happens in soccer. Soccer is bad. Soccer, the guys are dropping. Happening, in our sports. Because the because player drop. Listen. I'll tell you why.
1:52:32 First of all, in Europe, the European Union, but in the it's happening in The UK,
1:52:38 they are, they're compliant, and they and and they do whatever they're told to do.
1:52:42 The sports teams, the franchises in The United States, let's just think about it logically for one second. You and I own a football team, an NFL football team. We are multibillionaires.
1:52:54 Alright? We have wives, but we got we got wives who have wives. We're just we're we got everything. We got planes. We got the whole everything's happening.
1:53:02 And we're going to risk
1:53:04 these assets
1:53:06 with some
1:53:07 crazy
1:53:08 vaccine that we know nothing about,
1:53:11 millions of dollars each individual player? No
1:53:15 way.
1:53:16 Uh-uh.
1:53:17 Get the saline.
1:53:19 I don't believe they're vac they're vaccinated at all.
1:53:23 Well, if that were true, you'd have to explain the situation with Kyrie Irving. He has a
1:53:29 a turf toe.
1:53:31 Oh, no. That's, that's not that's that's Rogers. That's Rod. What Kyrie well
1:53:37 He's the basketball player that Oh, no. I don't I don't know. But I don't think the players know.
1:53:42 The players can't know. The owners know. The owners. I see what you're saying. You're saying it's like a deep conspiracy
1:53:49 where they're shooting these Why would you? These players are worth hundreds of millions of dollars.
1:53:54 You're not gonna jab them. Get your franchise every you're not gonna jab them? No way. Do the players think ways to get them steroids that are all totally illegal and they're all roided up. Yeah.
1:54:06 So
1:54:08 but in The UK and in Europe, they're dumb.
1:54:13 They're dumb. They don't get it. They they they bought into it. Listen. If you and I had a team, I know we'd have had that conversation. What we with the outcome, I don't know. But I'd say a high likelihood I think you're I think, you know, if we if you and I Yes. Knowing what we know and knowing the but we do a lot of research.
1:54:31 But knowing what we know and I I'm sure a lot of these
1:54:35 guys like Robert Kraft who own the Patriots. These are anti vaxx guys to start with. Guys are pretty yeah. They're pretty
1:54:43 skeptical about stuff like this. How much money how much money do could arrange it? You could arrange it to get a bunch of saline shots repackaged.
1:54:51 No. You just you just get the COVID with the number one ID number.
1:54:54 Don't take the two the two or the don't take the three.
1:55:00 Yeah. Alright. Well, whatever the case is, they're dropping like flies, but not here. Anyway,
1:55:05 we do wanna thank the trolls for being here, the ones who are here, and thank everybody who is, joining in the conversation at noagendasocial.com,
1:55:13 which is a Mastodon
1:55:15 social network. No algos. It's connected to the Fetaverse
1:55:18 so that, anybody from anywhere can, can come in, flow in, get the flow in, get the flow out. All you have to do is follow someone over there. And and even if I think if you boost a post, then it all starts flowing boost boost. You boost the post.
1:55:34 Follow Adam at noagendasocial.com
1:55:36 or John C. Dvorak at noagendasocial.com.
1:55:38 Unmasted on is easy. It's free. It should be free everywhere. You can always set up your own instance and make it work. It's beautiful.
1:55:45 We have some people to thank for, well, we need to thank our artists for episode 14 o one. We titled that Boost or Baste.
1:55:53 And this is a very controversial piece that Tantanal did,
1:55:58 Tantanal,
1:55:59 which was the beautiful Dutch Delfts blue tile
1:56:02 Yeah. With a Dutch, boy masked throwing a bicycle.
1:56:06 Yeah. This is your this is a piece you you identified and and promoted.
1:56:10 I did. And and
1:56:12 some Dutch person on Twitter took offense to it
1:56:16 and started threatening my daughter.
1:56:19 What? Yeah. He said, oh, Curry, you think that's funny? Well, we know where your daughters live where your daughter lives.
1:56:25 See if you think that's funny.
1:56:26 And I reported it to Twitter, and, of course, they said, sorry. No violation here.
1:56:33 That's that's a threat. Of course, it's a threat.
1:56:36 And they said, no. That's not a for his complaint.
1:56:41 That that, that apparently,
1:56:44 we were glorifying
1:56:45 protests,
1:56:47 which I don't think we've ever done.
1:56:49 What? Yeah. I'm just telling you. This is crazy.
1:56:52 People are going nuts, man.
1:56:57 Are you Well, this was a very pretty piece. It was a
1:57:04 It was a Delft tile
1:57:07 and it which is a type of tile that's done in the town of Delft.
1:57:11 Well, this Delft it's the Delft blue. And I if I
1:57:15 well, if I recall correctly,
1:57:18 the reason tourists
1:57:19 in the seventies used to just buy up as much as they could. It was really expensive. It was, oh, I got a tile.
1:57:25 Yeah. There's something about the color, I believe, of the blue
1:57:29 that was made with some Which is called Delfte Blue. Yes. Delfte Blue. They're made with some ingredient only, you know, specific to the the Delft process.
1:57:39 And people used to be crazy about it. I don't know if they still are, if it's still a collectible thing, but and I don't think it's that identifiable with Holland anymore the way it was. So for me, it was, yeah, it was nostalgic. I liked it a lot.
1:57:52 Yeah. I like I like you put a bike in there. You know? Just throwing a bike
1:57:56 the the Dutch and the stupid wooden shoes and the and the little guy's got a mask on. The shoes wooden shoes aren't stupid.
1:58:03 They're very useful for cows not stepping on your feet.
1:58:07 Yeah.
1:58:08 Okay.
1:58:10 Steel toed shoes work too for that kind of thing.
1:58:14 They're very hard to walk in.
1:58:16 Well, have to huge.
1:58:18 Nice.
1:58:20 No, John. That's that's the tourist shoe you stood in with two feet. No. You the they're not difficult to walk in, but you need to have the gray
1:58:30 wool
1:58:31 socks.
1:58:34 I think they're goat hair, actually. Is it that's that's the the proper sock. You gotta have really thick ones to wear the wooden shoes. Do you have a pair of wooden shoes at the house? I used to. I used to. Bullcrap. Oh, yeah. Oh, when I was a kid, we walked in wooden shoes sometimes.
1:58:50 When I was kid, kid, young, not not anymore. Then they came out with the clogs, and I was like, that's ugly.
1:58:57 Anyway, we had there's a lot of art that was potential here,
1:59:02 we could have used. It was a I like the piece from, Kenny Ben, which had a running,
1:59:08 turkey and a head chopping thing and a thing. The problem with that piece is it's a it's a stolen art.
1:59:15 Oh, that's right. That's right. We did we looked at it, didn't we? We checked it. Yeah. Was gonna pick the piece because it was probably the one of the prettier pieces. It had some action going in a lot, and then I looked it up. It's a t shirt art somebody had, developed. Now it's possible because
1:59:32 Kenny Ben is a professional,
1:59:34 I believe. It might've been his to start with.
1:59:37 His or hers. Yeah. This was the the liver dye, the the booster based. He had the whole thing in there. Yeah. It's a he it's a she, isn't it? Oh, yes. She.
1:59:46 I'm sorry.
1:59:48 You're misgendering people. I'm sorry.
1:59:54 But that I I just didn't feel it was
1:59:57 it was probably technically usable, but I didn't feel comfortable with it. So
2:00:02 and I felt the same way with the comic strip blogger had a rooster. I know he didn't draw that rooster.
2:00:09 Or I'm sorry, not rooster turkey. There's no way.
2:00:13 So those didn't get picked. And I would
2:00:17 like to inform artists, do you know
2:00:19 you can do most of your stuff. I mean,
2:00:23 round Roundy did a piece, which was it wasn't that exciting, but he had two hands and pulling a wishbone.
2:00:29 And his hands are
2:00:30 I'm pretty sure he those are the ones he I'm sure he drew those. I don't think he used clip art,
2:00:36 to be honest about it.
2:00:38 I'm sure he has plenty of hands around.
2:00:41 And there was nothing really nothing else that was that
2:00:44 Did he have that on did he have that on the previous episode?
2:00:48 The happy Thanksgiving? Yeah. It
2:00:51 was there. Oh, don't remember that. I I don't think I'm trying to think if there's anything else. Well, we we had already I I recall we had agreed on the Kenny Ben,
2:01:01 and I was already making different sizes until you and you were going to research it. And then you said, no, no, no. It's it's it's it's too blatant, this one. Something like that. Yeah. It was a it was a t shirt. Yeah. Somebody has a t shirt with that thing around it. Yeah. So, no, that was that was eliminated. And I would dissuade future
2:01:19 use of these some clip arts if you're not really doing something.
2:01:24 Or you own the clip art, but that clip art came out was on a T shirt. I I have to I didn't see it for sale. Now it's possible that most artists have a lot of clip art. They just buy it. Mhmm. And and you can use that. That's legal, and it's possible this was legal, but since there's no way of knowing,
2:01:41 we
2:01:42 just went with the other piece, which was actually somewhat more creative. Adam was all jacked up about the Delft piece,
2:01:50 and,
2:01:51 I
2:01:52 was not, but then, you know, after a while, I decided it was probably was the most creative of the pieces,
2:01:59 even though it resulted in a threat of life.
2:02:02 Well, there's your creative briefing, everybody. Thank you for participating in this round of, get the album art for The No Agenda Show. It is very,
2:02:11 important
2:02:12 piece of the Value4Value
2:02:14 model that The No Agenda Show maintains.
2:02:19 Employee.
2:02:20 Employees. Thank you. Time, talent, treasure, and this is some big talent and time too. People have to do this when they're listening to the show live because we,
2:02:29 post produce pretty quickly, get it out within, thirty minutes usually.
2:02:33 Around thirty minutes is about what it takes. Now,
2:02:36 I will say this, if you're an artist listening to this show, because you're listening to the live stream, I can't think of anything better to do with your time than Doodle around. Amounts to doodling to a professional.
2:02:47 Let me just you know?
2:02:50 Because, what else are you gonna do? You could knit?
2:02:55 It seems to me that the artists have got you know, this is like a great thing to do while you're listening to the show, which is do something Yeah. Other than sit there passively. Yeah. Really. Why should we even thank him?
2:03:05 I mean, we're we're doing him a favor, really. Screw him. Tell him to Neil. Thank you so much.
2:03:12 And, check out all of the, artwork that we discussed and a couple more as, Dreb Scott puts the chapters together. Get you have to do it on a new podcast app,
2:03:20 which will also help protect and extend podcasting,
2:03:23 newpodcastapps.com.
2:03:25 Now on to our,
2:03:27 treasure supporters for episode 14 o two. We have a nice list, and I will kick it off with Dame Dame from
2:03:36 Healdsburg, California. Was this our our our our our wine day? No. No. It's a different day. In the morning, gents. Oh, jingles, orange scream, China's asshole,
2:03:46 switcheroo and split between
2:03:48 two and a b day list.
2:03:52 Please credit $611.57
2:03:56 to my husband Chris Spralding in honor of his 30 birthday.
2:04:02 Alas, he can find alas. Alas.
2:04:04 Alas.
2:04:05 But alas, isn't it like sadly?
2:04:08 No. Alas. Well, you know, it's funny when you say ask that because
2:04:13 alas does have a kind of a sadly,
2:04:17 kind of a a feel to it. Thought I thought alas you alas, he could not attend.
2:04:22 And so this is alas, he can finally join his dame at the round table. I guess it means at last.
2:04:28 Alas?
2:04:30 I don't know. I don't know what yeah. It was you got a lot of Well, it sounds like she's sad. It sounds like she's sad he's she's joining him.
2:04:39 But he also means kinda means finally. Okay.
2:04:43 So now it's kind of a reduces up finally. He can finally. I'm gonna think she she wants him there. Please knight him, sir. Crush a lot of Sonoma wine count country.
2:04:52 The remaining a $153.86,
2:04:55 please credit towards the damehood of Mary Anne, mom-in-law of the Monterey Peninsula. Please give her a proper dedouching. You've
2:05:04 been dedouched.
2:05:05 Now we we do it on the honor system, Dame Dame, so, you can track all of that. You do your own accounting. Round table request, Dame's braised beef raviolis and smoke wagon.
2:05:17 Happy birthday to the keeper of my heart. Aw. There is no better gift to myself than to elevate you to knighthood so my purse is no longer holding your seat at the round table. Kidding aside, I could not ask for a better partner in life. Cheers to the best that is yet to come. Alright.
2:05:34 China is asshole. There you go.
2:05:37 That's the kind of birthday wishes I love to hear.
2:05:42 Andrea Cody's next on the list from Houston, Texas.
2:05:46 She writes,
2:05:48 and that's $500.
2:05:50 And she writes, I would like to invite you to a party.
2:05:53 Oh, that's a funny note. Yeah. That would not exist were it not for No Agenda. I was hit in the mouth in 2020 by my producer friend, Eva Shay.
2:06:03 Karma be upon her.
2:06:05 No Agenda provided data and insight that confirmed my conviction that the whole thing was a scam,
2:06:13 which gave me the confidence to create jobs, jobs, jobs for Houston dancers
2:06:19 that were otherwise being hit hard by the fear mongering. Wait a minute.
2:06:24 Are we helping the dance community?
2:06:28 It seems like a 99, but these are the high end, this seems like the ballet dancers Yeah. That she's talking about. Yeah.
2:06:34 As opposed to the dancers I always associate with Houston, which is a slightly different group of dancers. Mhmm. Calling all No Agenda producers, you are cordially invited to the Nutcracker party. Oh. It's a Christmas
2:06:47 family special of the famous holiday show. It's available on Vimeo and Amazon Prime Video
2:06:54 from $1 and for $1.99.
2:06:58 Dance Houston tells the classic tale
2:07:01 with the new moves.
2:07:04 Oops. I tried this. I just jumped out here. With the new moves.
2:07:08 The new moves to Tajczewski's
2:07:10 Nutcracker Suite rearranged as hip hop, Latin, country, reggae, and more. It's the Nutcracker Hamilton.
2:07:16 It's a nut exactly. It's the Nutcracker Hamilton. I love it. The amazing soundtrack is also available on all music streaming platforms. ITM jets, I started listening in 2011
2:07:28 and haven't missed an epi that's that's
2:07:31 a while. It's a decade. And
2:07:33 haven't missed an episode since. It is truly the best podcast in the universe, and it seems to be doing some good for this community of of dancers, and this is proven by
2:07:45 what's going on, and you can check it out on, Amazon Prime. Yeah. What's it called again?
2:07:50 It's called the Nutcracker Party. Nutcracker
2:07:55 Party. Here's one of the dancers.
2:07:59 Straight from Rosita.
2:08:01 Here she is. Raven.
2:08:03 Give it up.
2:08:05 And here's the karma to bestow upon her. You've got karma.
2:08:09 I
2:08:11 think I may watch that.
2:08:13 Ella. I'm sure it's interesting. Ella Cobbistecki,
2:08:17 03/1934.
2:08:19 Happy Thanksgiving, John Adams. Today is my 30 birthday. It's also my Dame Day. Hey. Hey. Accounting attached.
2:08:26 I have forced kismet.
2:08:28 I'd be like to known as Dame Noodler Noodle Nuker.
2:08:32 Dame Noodle Nuker. Blowing minds one day at a time. And I'd like to request a bottle of Robert Cinsky Blanc and thinly sliced prosciutto at the round table.
2:08:42 Is there any other kind?
2:08:45 Of the prosciutto or the or the blanc? Of the prosciutto. Are you familiar with the Robert Sinsky blanc?
2:08:51 Yeah. I've heard of it. Is that is it what it what's so special about it? I've never had it. I can't say. I hope you both have a glorious day celebrating with your families. Love is lit. No jingles, no karma, and we shall see you at the round table. And I will have your
2:09:04 Robertson
2:09:06 Cinskey blanc and thinly sliced prosciutto.
2:09:10 Brian Burgess
2:09:11 in Pelican Rapids, Minnesota 333
2:09:14 Dot 33.
2:09:16 ITM,
2:09:17 GenSci, started listening in 2011, another 2011 listener. This is interesting.
2:09:22 Kind of a there's your random number at work. Yep. And haven't missed an episode since is truly the best podcast in the universe. Another coincidence.
2:09:32 Today's donation brings me to knighthood accounting below. What better way to get my knighting than on turkey day, tofurk to Tofurky day.
2:09:41 Tofooky day. Whatever. You know what it is. We know what you're talking about. We know what he's talking about. If you please, I'd like to be knighted as sir Minnesota Styx.
2:09:50 I'd also like to request Creighton and Clonies?
2:09:54 Clonies? Clonies? Clonies? I think it's At the Cratum and Clonies.
2:09:59 Like Klondykes, maybe?
2:10:00 Oh, that gotta be that's gotta yeah. Crate Kratom is a the drug. Drug.
2:10:05 And some Clonies to wash it down. Yeah.
2:10:09 Jingle request, bite and hold load, whoopee, get out of my vagina, wash your hand after touching any raw meat.
2:10:16 That's true and tooted the head of the I'm gonna give you the whole load today.
2:10:22 Them. Of them.
2:10:24 Out of them.
2:10:28 Out of them. That's ridiculous. Get out of my
2:10:31 vagina.
2:10:32 And wash your hands after touching any raw meat. That's true.
2:10:36 I
2:10:38 screwed up the toot to the head.
2:10:40 Sorry. I can still shoot you. Thank
2:10:45 you, Brian.
2:10:46 Dame g Money, 33333.
2:10:49 This year more than ever, I am grateful for Adam, JCD,
2:10:52 and all the producers in Gitmo Nation. Thank you for your courage. R two d two karma, please. Thank you very much, Dame g money.
2:11:01 You've got
2:11:04 karma.
2:11:06 Sir Kerry's Viscount of Greater Boston 33333.
2:11:09 ITM Jensen, thank you for your courage. Happy Thanksgiving and karma to all producers.
2:11:14 Few jingle requests,
2:11:16 which include get vaccinated,
2:11:18 Obama,
2:11:19 you might die, and a Hillary laugh.
2:11:22 This is another little story. Thank you for all you do, sir Carries Viscount of Greater Boston. You
2:11:28 you might die.
2:11:32 That wasn't the one that wasn't the one I expected, but that's what you get. Oh, and a little bit of karma to all the producers, of course. Of course. You've got karma.
2:11:43 Paxton Sanders, 03:33 thirty three Madison, Alabama. My birthday falls on Thanksgiving this year just as it did on the day I was born fifty years ago. It's
2:11:52 been a while since I became a knight. I hope this donation makes amends.
2:11:57 Of course, I'm thankful for my wife and children and all the karma is for them. Karma for them.
2:12:04 You've got karma.
2:12:09 And we move to, Andrew Johnson.
2:12:12 K I 7 Y L G 73 is in Tigard, Oregon 33333,
2:12:18 and he has a a card. I think it's Andrea Johnson. An actual card. It's a she. It's a she. It's Andrea Johnson. Oh, Andrea. I saw it said Andrea. Yeah.
2:12:27 Oh, Andrea. Well, I never that's funny. I'm I'm being sexist. Yes. You're being very sexist. You misgendered her, dude. I did. I misgendered her. I apologize for that. It's the worst thing you can do to anyone. And Pretty much.
2:12:41 And I just
2:12:43 stupidly assumed
2:12:46 that
2:12:47 I didn't even think of read reading the name correctly. I think I was I was
2:12:52 pushed into it by the fact that you're a ham
2:12:55 who I always associate with men,
2:12:59 and that's very sexist of me. Yes, very wrong. Happy fourteen hundredth episode.
2:13:04 Ah, ah, ah, it's a late donation. It has to be a woman.
2:13:09 There there's the Dvorak. We all love and know. There he is. Alright. Thank you. You've made amends. You're good. Can I get a big,
2:13:19 a big round of jobs karma for all the people who are jobless because they decided against
2:13:25 accepting the vaccine into their lives?
2:13:28 I love the show she writes.
2:13:31 Andreas,
2:13:31 k j seven.
2:13:33 Unless it's k j. I said k oh, it is k j. K j seven.
2:13:37 Y L G Seventy Three is Newburgh. The People's Republic Of Oregon. Yes. 73. Skew to five alpha Charlie Charlie. Jobs.
2:13:45 Jobs.
2:13:46 Jobs. And jobs. Let's vote for jobs. Jobs. You've got karma.
2:13:52 I do not believe we have a note from Dan Bull.
2:13:55 I don't believe we do either. He's in Olive Branch, Missouri,
2:13:59 333. We thank you very much for that, Dan. He's our last executive producer for this Thanksgiving
2:14:04 episode number 14 o two. Our first associate is Dweezil
2:14:08 from Detroit. Dweezil. That's
2:14:11 right. The Dweezmeister,
2:14:13 aka the Dweezes of Hazardous.
2:14:16 250
2:14:16 Detroit, Michigan. The in the morning, dear mister Curry, mister Dvorak. Dvorak, Detroit here. I'm making a donation to be officially de dooshed and to grease the rails of forgiveness from mister Curry. You've
2:14:29 been de dooshed. It seems that I inadvertently had a
2:14:34 moment at the Michigan Local one meetup after a couple of pops and mistook Adam for another eighties, nineties long haired icon in the process.
2:14:42 And while doing so, my shout out.
2:14:45 I have no idea what he's talking about, but alcohol was involved apparently.
2:14:50 I was recently punched in the mouth in August by my friend Steve in Ferndale. I anxiously await each episode. You shouldn't be anxious.
2:14:57 You should be anticipatory.
2:14:59 I anxiously await each episode and I'm excited to begin my journey to knighthood. Well, you're on your way. I do need to call out Duncan and Roseville for being a douche at this time. Douchebag.
2:15:09 In this season of giving, I would like to give jobs karma to all producers and listeners facing the mandate and some jingles to get us by in the ways of noodle boy and much resist.
2:15:19 Thank you very much for your courage, gentlemen, and happy holidays.
2:15:23 Dweezil aka Dweezus of hazardous.
2:15:26 Yes. You want a noodle gun and a little bit of sharpen resist and the jobs karma. I'm a gonna shoot you in the face with my noodle gun, you racist
2:15:35 piece of shit.
2:15:39 I got to my pasta glock locked and loaded. But resist,
2:15:44 we much.
2:15:45 We must
2:15:47 and we will much
2:15:48 about
2:15:50 that
2:15:51 be committed. Jobs,
2:15:53 jobs,
2:15:54 jobs, and jobs. Let's vote for jobs.
2:15:58 You've got karma.
2:16:02 Anonymous comes in at 23456.
2:16:04 A fave.
2:16:06 Please keep me anonymous. Okay? We just did that. Thanksgiving greetings, Crackpot and Buzzkill.
2:16:12 Would you please play the following jingles?
2:16:14 The Jill Abramson
2:16:16 vocal fry,
2:16:18 fact check false,
2:16:20 orange,
2:16:21 and stay safe followed by an r two d two else karma. Thanks for keeping me anonymous.
2:16:27 Oh, that's interesting. It's two two times in this program that,
2:16:32 orange has been requested, and months and months and months have gone by without that. You know, obviously,
2:16:38 I re I read the New York Times, like, all day
2:16:43 mainly on my iPad app. Fact check false. Alright.
2:16:48 Good to see you. Please stay safe.
2:16:51 You've got
2:16:54 karma.
2:16:57 Okay. Let's see. We got Cheryl M from Loomis, California 02:33
2:17:01 thirty three in the morning, Adam and John.
2:17:03 So hoping this makes Sunday's show fourteen o one. Well, this is Thursday's show 14 o two for a birthday shout out to Travis m celebrating
2:17:11 his 20 on the twenty third. Two days late, but here we are. He's the greatest douchebag any douchebag boy any mom could ask for.
2:17:22 Thanks for hitting me in the mouth, son. I submit this donation as a birthday gift to him requesting his de douching. You've
2:17:30 been de douched.
2:17:32 This is a great mom. I would also like to request some vaccine mandate karma for the boy so he can keep his much beloved job at the Shut Up Slave Railroad.
2:17:42 If you could please play OMG,
2:17:44 listen to that horn clip in in honor of my Foamer boy.
2:17:49 I know I've asked for a lot, but believe me, he is worth it. Thank you for your biweekly therapy session.
2:17:55 Now that's a nice mom who does stuff like that. Oh
2:18:00 my god. Listen
2:18:02 to that horn.
2:18:05 Beautiful.
2:18:07 Alright.
2:18:09 We've got sir Mark of the Midwest with $202.11
2:18:14 in an extremely
2:18:15 long
2:18:16 note. Well, he has he has basically a report, which I don't think is is Yeah. I think we'll just read them. Okay. Boots on the ground report COVID
2:18:24 restrictions in San Francisco. Well, I'm here.
2:18:27 Background, I'm 63 years old, live in the Midwest, and have been in the meat industry for forty years.
2:18:32 We're not we have no other meat experts.
2:18:36 I recently accepted a job with a software startup. That makes sense around here. Well, he's no longer a meat expert then. Yeah. We lost our meat expert. Our meat guy. That was him. We lost him.
2:18:46 I would like an explanation to the popularity
2:18:50 of single muscle butchery,
2:18:53 which is the trending thing in all the high end meat shops. Single
2:18:57 muscle
2:18:58 you have Mitch the meat cutter,
2:19:00 So he might be able to answer that. Mitch might help. Mitch the meat cutter. I need some write ups on this. Why it's become so popular? What is this? What what what is going on with this? Well, this is where instead of for example, with a chuck roast,
2:19:13 if you have a chuck roast and you see a nice like, say you have a big chuck,
2:19:17 and you look at it, you'll see there's a number of different,
2:19:20 like, muscles in there. This it cut it cuts
2:19:23 across a bunch of muscles. Mhmm.
2:19:26 So that's when you're eating a chuck roast, have, oh, this is a really tender piece. They said the tenderness varies
2:19:32 on something like a chuck roast because of its nature, which has maybe five or six different
2:19:38 muscles within the crosscut.
2:19:41 Single muscle bushy only cuts out the individual muscles.
2:19:47 So you would have, like, you get that, whatever that long strip is that's within the chuck stays, one long tender strip of something. I don't know what it's called, but they have different names. Has a whole different name nomenclature.
2:19:59 And it's a whole different way of cutting meat, but that is that people seem to prefer, or some people do, but it costs more,
2:20:06 which is probably why people are Because there's probably more that isn't usable after that maybe?
2:20:12 I again I don't know. We need a meat expert. I can I can add lib, but I can only get so far Alright? Well, Mitch, the meat cutter, can probably tell us.
2:20:21 He just I recently accepted a job continues,
2:20:25 our our guy.
2:20:27 I recently accepted I kinda don't have his name in front of me. Sir Mark. Sir Mark of the Midwest.
2:20:32 I recently accepted a job with a software startup in San Francisco directly related to the media. Said, oh, okay. Well, there's a connection. We're back. He's back. We're back.
2:20:42 The president we don't we should read these in advance. The president of the company is in his early thirties, which is typical,
2:20:48 and the entire company is woke. Of course. San Francisco. Come on.
2:20:53 My reason for taking the job and creating this crazy situation are quite quite entertaining, but not relevant to the boots on the ground report. Okay. He has he has he has yeah. It's quite a long story
2:21:05 about how he circumvented some
2:21:07 some mandates, which is Yeah. Is just a little bit long. But, Mark, let us know about the about the single muscle cut.
2:21:15 Cross muscle what did you call it? Cross muscle cut? Single muscle
2:21:19 butchery. Single muscle butchery.
2:21:22 Yeah.
2:21:23 Well,
2:21:25 if he's working at a meat industry software company, he'll be three three d printing some soy pretty soon is what I'm thinking.
2:21:33 You know, now that you mentioned it, what else could it be? Right?
2:21:37 Yeah.
2:21:38 Now now we got a new industry die. Three d printing Yep. You mean single
2:21:45 muscle. This would be single soy.
2:21:48 Single
2:21:49 soy with a side of cheap cheddar.
2:21:52 Yummy.
2:21:53 I would Anyway, I'll just read this last graph, which says the last night of our meetup
2:21:59 our meeting, we all attended the San Francisco Giants playoff game at Oracle Stadium. It would be which has been a while ago. It would be the ultimate test of vaccine mandate
2:22:08 chicanery.
2:22:09 By the time we walked into the stadium visiting several bars, including one long I was ready. I presented my Iowa concealed carry permit as ID
2:22:18 and flashed my trusty Alibaba receipt and was promptly waived through.
2:22:25 No jingles, no karma. Okay. So he he has some I I'm gonna have to go back and read this. It sounds like he has an interesting way to to to to circumvent
2:22:35 Yeah. Vaccines past. Yeah. Exactly.
2:22:38 Basically shows flashes his gun. Let me give you a goat karma for that. Thank you very much, Samar. You've got
2:22:46 karma.
2:22:47 I'll do these two. Anonymous 20102,
2:22:50 a palindrome.
2:22:51 Thank you.
2:22:52 In the morning, no jingles, no karma. Also, I do hope you I
2:22:56 hope you do find your exit strategy.
2:22:59 Because you suck. But that
2:23:01 but you would also keep doing the show.
2:23:04 That's not much of an exit now, is it? I
2:23:08 mean, the whole point is the is the of the holidays, the Sundays,
2:23:12 the the constant grind,
2:23:14 the the numbness
2:23:16 that you Couldn't receive from watching you're getting. I think you're MSMBC all day, and you're trying to to follow what's going watch MSMBC. I don't. It's mind numbing.
2:23:28 Samantha Hoffman,
2:23:29 associate executive producer, $200.
2:23:32 Please credit my husband, Brandon, pinball wizard of the freak show with this donation
2:23:36 in honor of his birthday on Friday. Let's go, Brandon. I'm sure he's hating that shit right now.
2:23:42 Brandon. Okay. I was hoping to request a let's go Brandon jingle. Oh, well, maybe
2:23:48 we're, maybe we're right, right in the right spot here.
2:23:52 But I don't recall hearing any. I have one. Maybe someone with talent can create one. Until then, can one of you say let's go Brandon followed by the kazoo? Thank you for everything you do. Have a wonderful Thanksgiving.
2:24:04 Thanksgiving and holiday season sincerely from Sammy. No. I actually have,
2:24:09 where is it? It's, I have two kids doing that. Yes. Here we go. This this will suffice. Let's go Brandon.
2:24:16 And it's cute. I like that one. It is kinda cute. Yeah. She's got a cute little voice on her. Do you have your kazoo handy?
2:24:23 Yeah. Okay. Do you have your kazoo handy? No. I don't know where my kazoo is.
2:24:28 Oh, man. The kazoo a slide whistle for a company, man. No. No. No. No. No. No. We do we just she just wants the kazoo. Let's not overproduce.
2:24:36 Let's go Brandon.
2:24:41 Okay.
2:24:47 Onward with, who do we have here? Lindsey Fox.
2:24:50 Ah, Lindsey. Lindsey's here. Lindsey Fox, $200. She's in Thorpe
2:24:56 Thorpe,
2:24:57 Wisconsin. Not Thorpe.
2:25:00 ITM, so many good things to be thankful for for the past year, and what a year. What a year it was. Yet we persevered,
2:25:08 learned a little bit about standing up and speaking out, and we're all still here fighting the good fight. Oh, the Nolicek Meats family. Yes. Of course. Oh, Nolicek. Yeah. We just had the bacon, by the way, they have is absolutely fantastic.
2:25:21 And the regular the regular they have all these we went through all their meats except a couple They only do pork, though. Right? They don't do beef. I think they only do pork. Am I wrong? I don't know. I thought You might not be. I could no. I could be wrong. I could be wrong. Well, yeah. They do a beef that beef stick.
2:25:39 My favorite, the beef stick.
2:25:41 Yeah. They use sticks. The sticks. The people in Wisconsin eat those things. Mhmm.
2:25:45 Meat on a stick is great.
2:25:48 Their bacon is outstanding and so is their their just their stock.
2:25:52 They have all these cheese filled,
2:25:55 brats. They definitely do beef. I'm sorry. They got it. They got cheese. They got sausage, bacon, ham, specialty meats.
2:26:02 Yeah. Damn. Anyway, go
2:26:05 they're fighting the government now. Go, go buy their stuff by mail order.
2:26:12 Anyway, we persevered.
2:26:13 An update regarding Nolachek's meat, the case with the USDA, FIS notice 44Dash21.
2:26:20 Our story reached the Liberty Justice Center, a nonprofit constitutional law firm, and we are working with them to move forward with litigation.
2:26:28 This is the same law firm that received
2:26:31 the indefinite stay on the vaccine mandate in the Fifth Circuit Court. Oh, good. You got the right guys and gals. You got the right guys. So inward and upward. Wishing the entire No Agenda Nation a happy Thanksgiving. And thank you, John and Anna, for bringing us the best damn podcast in the universe, jingles.
2:26:47 You've got karma.
2:26:49 And if you're including
2:26:51 or if you're looking for Wisconsin Brat sausage or the best bacon by the way, the bacon is stunning.
2:26:57 It's a holiday, and it's got a nice hickory flavor. It's not overdone. It's very
2:27:02 good.
2:27:04 Visit nolachekmeats.com
2:27:06 to shop from the comfort of your home and receive a commemorative ornament with with each order. I'm
2:27:14 going for that. I'm gonna pick up on that item.
2:27:17 Asterisk, some restrictions may apply. Please visit website for details.
2:27:21 We
2:27:22 just got our freezer, so we're gonna order. We just got our freezer. Oh, you bought it. You got finally got a Texas sized freezer. Sixteen sixteen cubic foot? 16? I don't know. I can't 16. We have couple of freezers. You can put a you can put a cow in.
2:27:36 Oh, if you can put a cow in, that's the right size.
2:27:39 Gotta chop its head off, though. Otherwise, it won't fit. Now is it a horizontal
2:27:43 vertical or you just dump stuffing? It's a it's the one with the lid that opens from the top.
2:27:48 Oh, okay. So then you put stuff in and die. You know,
2:27:52 I have a couple of those. It's the kind that kids get in and die. That's the kind?
2:27:56 Well, you can kick the door open pretty easily. They're just old fashioned locking. I'm just kidding. It had it had that sticker on it. Kids, don't sit in here.
2:28:06 But to
2:28:07 be honest about it, I've got two of these kind of things we opened from the top.
2:28:12 The stuff goes starts to very
2:28:15 slowly gravitate toward the bottom. You never get it out.
2:28:19 Yeah. But You can get a big vertical one. You don't you don't know my wife.
2:28:25 Well, maybe. She will she there's nothing gonna be stuck at the bottom like the Dvorak's.
2:28:31 No. No. No. We got stuff stuck at the bottom. We got it from Costco. The whole thing out every once in a while. Oh my god. I I knew I bought this thing.
2:28:40 I knew I bought this duck.
2:28:43 It's at the bottom. Duck. And then do you still cook it up?
2:28:46 Well, it depends. You open it if it's all freezer burned and damaged, but but most duck is probably nicely wrapped. So
2:28:55 why don't you go into the These are our associate executive producers, executive producers for show 14 o two. I wanna thank each and every one of them for helping us out on this show, and I'm gonna go find
2:29:04 out who's calling me as is desperately calling me. You know, professional
2:29:07 podcasters,
2:29:08 you know, like the Toddcaster
2:29:10 with his pod, they turn off their ringer when they do their podcast. But no. I know. You're putting us in the podcaster group, making us look all unprofessional. What an amateur. Thank
2:29:21 you to these executive and associate executive producers, and happy Thanksgiving to you. We give thanks to you. You give thanks us. It's the Value4Value
2:29:28 model. It has kept us going. We'll be able to continue doing this as long as the value flows in both directions. And we'll thank more people in a little bit. If you'd like to be an executive producer or even an exec an associate executive producer, just go to this website. Dvorak.org/na.
2:29:45 And thank you for bringing your time, talent, treasure for episode 14 o two of No Agenda. Our formula is this.
2:29:51 We go out.
2:29:53 We hit people in the mouth.
2:29:59 Order.
2:30:02 Shut up, slave.
2:30:05 Shut up, slave.
2:30:10 We should probably give a little bit of a
2:30:13 Thanksgiving advice for everybody when you got the family coming over.
2:30:17 You know?
2:30:18 Let's say like you're really, you're really worried about the COVID?
2:30:23 You've been hearing all this advice that's been given on TV?
2:30:26 No.
2:30:27 Yeah. It's really good. Here's ABC.
2:30:29 What are the general safety rules for 2021? Well, I think first acknowledge that there are people with considerable amounts of stress this holiday season about the pandemic, know, is our second Thanksgiving during the pandemic. So there are some steps that I think people can take. The tests, as you mentioned, are really number one because they're much more readily available. They can be kind of pricey. They can be about $24
2:30:52 in most retailers for two tests. But the tips really to kind of increase that safety buffers. Yes, you can ask people to do these rapid tests right before they come into your gathering or party. You know masking obviously when not eating or drinking if especially if people are high risk or if they feel more comfortable
2:31:11 distancing when possible so maybe you're not going to cram people in around the table like we used to
2:31:17 And then lastly, if you use these tests and you get a positive result,
2:31:21 believe it. Get down now. Positive and do not go in or stay safe obviously if you're feeling sick with anything, not just COVID. So do it before. Don't make it, like, part of the No. Exactly. No. It's not for the dessert.
2:31:33 Now this is interesting because Where did you get this clip?
2:31:36 It's ABC.
2:31:38 These people should be ashamed of themselves. It's good morning America, doctor Jen Haston. Promoting
2:31:43 fear. Well, not only that,
2:31:45 but this test, this, it's they're talking about the Binax test that's made by Abbott Labs,
2:31:51 and this is now becoming a thing. They're pushing it,
2:31:55 and and people are really enjoying the idea of Tina went somewhere
2:32:02 end of last weekend
2:32:04 and she and it was gonna be, I don't know, 15 people. And so they all agreed that, you know, because some were nervous,
2:32:12 that you would get a test and and this, and it's $14. I don't know why she said 24. That's interesting. Maybe the price is going up. There's two tests in it and it's, you know, you stick it in your nose, you swirl it around, you just jam it in the thing and it has two lines just like a pregnancy test and it says COVID or not COVID. And and people are completely accepting of that result. I mean, you could have put it in the dog's nose. I mean, you could do anything. You could do it from home. You could it's it's completely spoofable,
2:32:40 but this is becoming a cultural thing,
2:32:42 specifically with the Binax from Abbott Labs. I'm not quite sure
2:32:47 The marketing. But it's good because it no long if it's not a PCR, you don't have to go through the so called official lab test. Sure that validity is mediocre. No. That's not the point. That's not the point. They pay to have that spot. I'm guessing this was a native ad. Yes. Yes, it is. But I'm trying to understand or trying to
2:33:06 see if you're curious why they are moving away from the laboratory
2:33:10 official test,
2:33:11 and will we soon be able to just bring our $24,
2:33:15 Abbott lab test to the airport?
2:33:18 Will they all or would they have a proctor service? You know what I'm saying? Have to watch you do it. They can't just have you come in with a little tab. But people are already now they're getting them used to this. I don't know. I've look. I I don't have the answers. I'm just identifying things that are out of the ordinary. Think it's just possible that they would have the instant thing there. You can give them $20.
2:33:38 Sounds like another way of making some cheap money. Deal.
2:33:42 You can be tested at the airport.
2:33:45 How long does it take for to get the results? About ten minutes.
2:33:49 Jeez. Yeah.
2:33:52 We need an Insta test.
2:33:56 You and I could make one very easily.
2:34:00 Insta test. We just market it. Apparently, they'll they'll they'll as long as you got the you can buy the ad space, you can put anything on the market.
2:34:07 Yeah. That's what I'm thinking. There's money to be made. I got an interesting note about this Belarus Poland thing.
2:34:16 Yeah.
2:34:17 And
2:34:17 part of it was actually was
2:34:20 was an article
2:34:22 that
2:34:23 these immigrants
2:34:25 who the Iraqis
2:34:28 who have been you know, who fly into Belarus then try to get across the border, they're just flying home now that it failed, which is kind of suspicious for refugees.
2:34:38 Do you think? Refugee migrants.
2:34:40 And from what I understand,
2:34:42 this is Erdogan.
2:34:43 Erdogan is the one sending the refugees.
2:34:47 And I'm not quite sure how all the the the dots fit together,
2:34:52 but maybe why he's in the outs right now. Well, there's other yes. And listen to what's happening to Turkey. Joe, yeah, we have some charts that you don't see that often. Turkey providing the world a lesson this morning of what happens when a central bank loses its independence.
2:35:06 Take a look here. The Turkish are crashing this morning against major currencies after Turkish president Erdogan applied pressure on the central bank to cut rates, and the central bank, of course, complied several days ago. And now it takes oh, what is it now? 12 something. It's that's going down. I'm looking at it the other way. 12.7 Turkish lira to buy a dollar as recently as September was around 8 and change.
2:35:27 Now this one you don't see often either. The central bank has cut rates by 400 basis points or four percentage points since September,
2:35:34 while inflation has risen from 8% to nearly 20%. They don't usually go their separate ways on policy rates and inflation. The largest move in the lyric since the previous central bank chairman was dismissed back in March, and it comes after Erdogan called for lower race. He said in an interview overnight, I reject policies that will contract our country, weaken it, condemn our people to unemployment, hunger, and poverty.
2:35:57 Said he wants a lower exchange rate to spur exports and investment. Of course, it means higher inflation and sharp declines in people's standard of living as foreign goods become dramatically
2:36:08 more expensive. A place where remember that, Joe, when I lived in Moscow? You go to work in the morning, a Snickers were 25 rubles, and then it would be 50 when you got back home. I hesitate to use the term, but let's unpack this.
2:36:22 What the hell is going on with the lira?
2:36:24 I mean, is this is he trying to inflate him his way out or de deflate? I mean, do you have any idea what's happening? I have no idea. I've been trying to follow it. I understand what's going on. There's something
2:36:37 something's amiss. Now I know that that they're on on deck to buy the s 400,
2:36:45 anti aircraft
2:36:46 guns from Russia.
2:36:48 That could be part of it. And so then you have Russia,
2:36:51 you know, Belarus, Russia, and I'm sure there's
2:36:55 problems with the gas supply,
2:36:57 you know, their their transit just like Ukraine.
2:37:00 Russia now
2:37:01 seems like everyone's saying, oh, they'll be invading Ukraine any day now.
2:37:06 Yeah. Sure.
2:37:07 That's what that's what that's what Washington is saying.
2:37:10 Let me see. I had producer Bart.
2:37:12 Producer Well,
2:37:14 he no. I'd be if they were ever gonna do it, it would be a good time. Here we go. Producer Bart is in Poland.
2:37:20 In the case of Belarus,
2:37:22 he even spells it that way, Belarus,
2:37:25 and Russia, there's one aspect I'd like to mention. At the end of twenty twenty two, the contract between Poland and Russia, Gazprom,
2:37:32 for natural gas deliveries will expire.
2:37:36 At the same time, the Baltic pipeline has been finished and starting October
2:37:40 2022,
2:37:41 Norwegian gas deliveries will start. I don't think Putin's very happy about that.
2:37:48 So this is what may be going on.
2:37:51 Well, something like that. That's for sure. Yeah. Remember the Nord Stream two got shut down by the Germans. That we can't overlook that. For no apparent
2:38:00 reason. Well, political.
2:38:02 So this has gotta all be related. And maybe maybe Erdogan is how about this? Putin's pissed Putin's pissed.
2:38:10 So he gets his little boy Erdogan. He says, hey. I'll give you those a the those s four hundreds, a s four hundreds. That would be funny. I'll give you this s four hundreds,
2:38:19 but you gotta start sending them some, some towel heads over there. I'm just talking the way Putin would talk. Right? Towel heads. Come on.
2:38:27 That's how he's talking. Misgendered
2:38:29 early in the show how you're doing this.
2:38:32 And these accents.
2:38:34 Oh my god. It's but the show is no good. It's hurting the show.
2:38:41 How about that? Something along those lines. You know, we can speculate all we want. There's something's up is all we know for sure. No. We can't expect Erdogan,
2:38:50 and I think, I don't know. It's beyond me. I mean, I'll I'll keep looking, trying to find out, but I don't think I'm gonna get anywhere. Yeah.
2:38:57 I do have two associated
2:38:59 clips about the Rittenhouse situation. Yeah. You know, holy crap. Is this thing,
2:39:06 like, a psy op the way they put this all together? I think there's some psy op aspect to it. That's for sure. I mean, he I wanna play
2:39:13 con
2:39:14 an inter I don't. I'm apologizing in advance for playing anything from Tucker Carlson since he's banned from the show,
2:39:23 but
2:39:24 I wanna play overview one Rittenhouse,
2:39:27 and this is Tucker Carlson's
2:39:29 roundup
2:39:30 of the media coverage, and we've pretty much followed it closely. And the media coverage of the Rittenhouse thing was slanted,
2:39:37 and it was bullcrap, and it was lies. And let's listen to Carlson's rap. In retrospect, it's remarkable
2:39:45 just how dishonest, how thoroughly and intentionally dishonest the media coverage of the Kyle Rittenhouse story turned out to be. All of it was a lie. Rittenhouse was not a white supremacist.
2:39:54 He was never in a militia. He never crossed state lines with a firearm.
2:39:58 The protest in Kenosha was not peaceful. It was a riot, chaotic and violent. Many of the rioters, by the way, carried guns. Rittenhouse was hardly alone.
2:40:06 Rittenhouse didn't go to Kenosha looking for trouble. His father lived there. Rittenhouse himself worked as a lifeguard in Kenosha.
2:40:12 On August 25, Rittenhouse went downtown to stand guard over a car lot. Here's the context, the night before police in Kenosha had done nothing as the mob burned businesses including another car lot all the way to the ground.
2:40:25 So the business owner needed Kyle Rittenhouse's help. He was looking to a 17 year old for help, if that gives you some perspective on how bad things were, and he asked for it.
2:40:35 As Rittenhouse stood there, rioters threatened his life. Then they attempted to kill him. In the end, Rittenhouse shot three attackers as he tried to run to the safety of the police. A number of media outlets claimed the men Rittenhouse shot were black. In fact, all three were white and all three had serious criminal records. We could go on. Again, the media coverage was from beginning to end a tapestry of lies. If you watched the trial last week, you know that.
2:41:00 Yes. I saw this episode. That that's a very good agree that the media is and I blame, by the way, not the media necessarily. I blame the New York Times. They were the ones who triggered this whole Yes. Barrage of nonsense lies. They are ground zero of the media. They're ground zero for shit like this. Yeah. Yes.
2:41:19 So I just that that now the media has perpetrated
2:41:24 a lie, and the result of it is kind of frightening, and I think it's irresponsible.
2:41:30 Well, it's obviously irresponsible because I wanna play a clip now
2:41:34 from,
2:41:35 Colbert,
2:41:36 from his monologue,
2:41:37 and I want you to listen for the memes
2:41:40 that Colbert has in here about the crossing the state lines, this and that. Mhmm. And then the audience reaction.
2:41:50 And this is just the beginning of it. He goes on and You know what's what's funny? You say the audience reaction and I'm literally looking at the waveform of the audio and I'm like, mhmm.
2:41:59 How sick is that? I can see the waveform and hear it in my head.
2:42:03 You can. And he goes on after this to to
2:42:07 be even worse, but this is the gist
2:42:10 of the whole thing.
2:42:12 Big news on Friday was that after being accused of crossing state lines, killing two people, and wounding another last year during a Black Lives Matter protest,
2:42:21 Kyle Rittenhouse was acquitted on all counts.
2:42:24 Okay. Yeah.
2:42:27 Okay. Cards on the table. I'm not a legal expert. So I can't tell you whether or not Kyle Rittenhouse broke the law.
2:42:33 But I can tell you this, if he didn't break the law,
2:42:37 we should change the law. Yo.
2:42:40 On message.
2:42:44 That seems simple.
2:42:46 That seems simple.
2:42:52 Yep.
2:42:53 Yes. This is why I say a psychological operation. I have a I could just analyze it from what I see.
2:43:00 And Colbert is right on message,
2:43:03 and holy crap, did it work.
2:43:06 I mean, that sounded like more than just a Rent A audience that was happy, don't you think? That sounded pretty sincere. Oh, no. It was sincere, and the audience was whooping it up. Yeah. Sincere. They boo they boo the name Kyle Rittenhouse, and they clap when Colbert says we need to change the law. Law is fine. I give And
2:43:23 and it it's really disgusting because it's not that these people aren't
2:43:28 instance or they're they're phonies or or even Colbert.
2:43:32 Well, Colbert is a phony. He's an actor. But
2:43:36 they're sincerely they sincerely believe this because they've been brainwashed by they've been reading the New York Times
2:43:43 and getting this information this way. And it's like a lot just just outward lies
2:43:49 that are I don't know what the point of it is. I do. And Okay. Steve Stephen Colbert just just hit it the nail on the head. This is I'm gonna give the Democrats credit.
2:44:00 The Democrat party of the United States, America,
2:44:03 had a long term operation set up. This was planned. These court cases all scheduled around the same time. Everything was set up beautifully.
2:44:14 We had,
2:44:15 the media had their script, so it didn't even matter
2:44:19 what the outcome would be. The prosecution was aired incessantly,
2:44:24 on MSNBC
2:44:25 and CNN.
2:44:26 Actually, I don't even think I think Fox did cut away from time to time because the op is on all sides.
2:44:33 Then when the defense came up, MSNBC
2:44:35 stopped carrying it live as did CNN. That's when Fox News went in. So this was this is creating this division.
2:44:43 And the whole plan,
2:44:45 the the talking point of cross state lines,
2:44:49 vigilantes,
2:44:50 kids with guns,
2:44:52 this is all about new laws, new
2:44:55 legislation. It's gonna be introduced any day now. It was set up perfectly.
2:45:00 Problem.
2:45:02 The president is an idiot. Can't speak right. Can't do anything. Can't appeal. Where's Obama when you need him?
2:45:08 And then
2:45:09 to make matters worse,
2:45:12 this happened. This morning, the family of Obama I'm sorry. This happened. We're gonna begin tonight in Waukesha, Wisconsin,
2:45:19 a close knit community that is reeling in grief following a horrific attack at its annual Christmas parade.
2:45:25 So they had the Rittenhouse set up. They had the Aubrey trial set up, which is true vigilantism,
2:45:32 and I think that's a correct verdict,
2:45:35 guilty. And everyone sees that. But because
2:45:38 of the they they went too far.
2:45:42 They went too far, and people are seeing two things. One, they're seeing that they
2:45:47 were being misled by the media or their own misreading of headlines. Even Anna from Young Turks,
2:45:54 she said, holy crap. I thought it was black guys. I thought this was guy was clearly like, you know, a Trump murderer.
2:46:01 She's I have to evaluate my sources.
2:46:04 People have seen that. People are also seeing Anna said that? Yes.
2:46:08 Yes.
2:46:10 And she actually so she was at the point where she thought they the guy had shot black guys? Yes.
2:46:16 How out of it do are you to think that? But more importantly,
2:46:20 she's one of the 40% in the mass formation who just went, holy crap. Or maybe she was one of the 30% and woke up. Something happened. They broke it with this. And now now people are seeing with this parade attack attack,
2:46:34 with these killings, with the murder,
2:46:37 people are seeing the difference in the coverage. They're seeing all the differences. It came so quickly. It's classy. And the legal system
2:46:45 look. If you got money in America,
2:46:48 you're gonna be okay in the legal system. I think people saw that too.
2:46:52 Look at OJ.
2:46:56 So this has broken something,
2:46:58 and they almost had it right.
2:47:00 They and and Well, I don't think it was they. I don't think I don't think it was they.
2:47:05 I think it was the Democratic party. They I think they totally had this schedule. I'm not talking about that. I'm talking about the guy in the SUV plowing through the parade. That wasn't part of the scene.
2:47:16 Maniac. That's what I'm saying. That broke it.
2:47:19 That broke it.
2:47:20 Yeah. I know. But when you say they almost got it right, it's assumes within the sentence structure that this has something to do with it. No. No. It says that that interrupted it. They almost got it right. This interrupted it. That's what I said. They did it just screwed it up. Yeah. But they're they're they're doing everything they can.
2:47:39 It is this is actually fun to watch the scramble. Yes.
2:47:42 The scramble. He was being chased by the cops, and, you know, all these things are trying to come up with him. None of them make any sense. And and what are we learning?
2:47:51 He had just tried to mow down his girlfriend with a car that he was let off. He was he was By the low bail by one of the low bail guys. Uh-huh.
2:48:00 And this is now starting to come to a head when you look at what's happening in context of California.
2:48:08 Well, we have some riot I got some riot coverage here. Yes. I'm talking about the mass robberies. Do you mean the organized
2:48:15 crime. It's organized crime. Crime because of low bail. They just let people out, and this is not work. This we do know that the the Seattle,
2:48:23 DA, one of the pioneers of this Nut Jabberama.
2:48:28 Got kicked out, and now we still have this guy in San Francisco that everyone's irked about. But here's a couple of interesting points. Here's the a news crew in the middle of the day in Oakland, which has also got this problem with the with the soft DA,
2:48:44 KRN news journalists, they get jumped in the middle of the street. Listen to this. Last month. Now that break in happened on Monday night. It was today just before 12:30.
2:48:53 A news crew from Cran Television was here to cover that burglary
2:48:58 when an armed robbery crew pulled up. Now I spoke with two eyewitnesses who did not want to appear on camera. They say the gunman ordered the news crew and their guard to get on the ground, and it was just a few moments after that that shots were fired and the guard was hit. Now Oakland police
2:49:14 have not released any details on the shooting other than to say that the guard was hit in the stomach and no one else was injured. As you know, it has been an extremely violent week.
2:49:25 We are asking if you are in the area, have a business, or live nearby to please check your surveillance footage as you may have captured the crime before,
2:49:34 during, or after it occurred. The guard who was shot works for Star Security. That's the same agency used by KPIX and other Bay Area television stations,
2:49:42 a precaution that was started years ago after a string of robberies
2:49:47 targeting television news crews. We're here in Oakland. Wilson Walker. KPIX five.
2:49:53 I have a clip from the lieutenant
2:49:56 the lieutenant Tracy McCray from the San Francisco Sheriff's Department.
2:50:01 This it comes from Fox News, but she is speaking on behalf, I presume, of law enforcement.
2:50:08 Thought it was,
2:50:10 quite lucid. So you had the Walgreens, you had the Nordstrom, now you have Louis Vuitton,
2:50:17 Burberry,
2:50:18 Yves Saint Laurent, all of these high end places just getting
2:50:22 hit by mobs of people who are organized
2:50:26 to to do this.
2:50:28 And there is no fear
2:50:30 of any type of repercussions.
2:50:32 So people are coming into the city and just causing havoc knowing that they can get away with it. And they covered up their license plate numbers. Do you think that any of these people will ever be tracked down and prosecuted?
2:50:45 I mean, I'm hopeful. We did catch eight people that night,
2:50:49 but that level of sophistication, what you just said, covering their license plate.
2:50:53 Right? No ordinary
2:50:56 crook or criminal is going to do that. Right? Right. So here you have
2:51:01 a very sophisticated
2:51:03 network of thieves knowing what they're doing, targeting what they want to go after. You know, the big lie here is about, you know, Prop 47.
2:51:12 When the ACLU supported that and said, Oh, we'll make your neighborhoods and schools safer.
2:51:18 No. They didn't. Thieves have figured out what the game is. You mean I could steal up to $950,
2:51:25 and I can only get a citation if I get caught, and those citations will never be prosecuted.
2:51:32 And this, by the way, helps when you have a group a group in the case of the San Francisco robbers, a 100 people. Yeah. They all take a thousand dollars worth of stuff
2:51:41 Do you or $9.50 as it were. Do you think similar to parents who have children being taught things they disagree with that San Franciscans
2:51:50 and others, but San Franciscans certainly
2:51:53 of all political persuasions will start to realize that there's something wrong with the system?
2:52:00 Well, let's hope. So here's I have the crime spree update, which is about the San Francisco robberies,
2:52:06 and there's a couple of kickers in here. The late details in that retail crime spree. Within the past hours, suspects arrested for robberies in San Francisco's Union Square went before a judge. KPIX five's Max Adaira live in San Francisco with more of the details for us. Max?
2:52:23 Yeah. The just concluded less than an hour ago, and what we found out is five of the defendants listed in the Louis Vuitton crime spree pled not guilty to all felony charges that they have been charged with. Take a look at some of the video reminding you what the scene looked like just over the weekend in Union Square.
2:52:40 Ivan Speed, Tamiko Miller, Francille White, and Kimberly appeared at the same time. These four defendants all face felony charges related to burglary and theft. A judge ruled two of the defendants, Miller and Speed, are not to be released from custody, citing their extensive criminal histories. He did not set bail for them. The judge did set bail at $5,000
2:52:59 for the two other defendants, White and Cherry. The judge said since this seemed to be a purely financially driven crime, setting bail for these two defendants seemed appropriate as an incentive to get them to return to court when they're asked to.
2:53:13 I just sold just stole $20,000
2:53:16 worth of, Louis.
2:53:18 Yeah. They don't care.
2:53:20 Well, they said, well, it's because it's a financially
2:53:23 It's financial. Yeah. Please. Most
2:53:26 crimes except murder,
2:53:28 And even murders often is a financially incentivized
2:53:31 crime? Pretty much.
2:53:33 So what difference does it make?
2:53:36 And so then they also said, there was also in that report, he says, well, we get a little bail that might might encourage them or or will encourage them to come back.
2:53:46 Yeah. That's Not after you told stole 20, just leave. Be that says to me that these no buy oh, no. No bail. No bail. No bail. Let them go. They're not coming back. They're just going. Yeah. They'll leave. They'll leave the state if they have to. This is crazy.
2:54:00 And there's all these left wing district attorneys who run for these offices in these cities.
2:54:06 They had it in mind. They're gonna change things. That Tlaib woman just did an interview with I have it. I have it. I have it. Well, let's let's bring this maniac. Now this is about the Breathe Act, which comes from the, I can't breathe,
2:54:20 Michael say his name. I can't remember his name,
2:54:24 in New York, and he suffocated.
2:54:26 So this is the Breathe Act, and this is Axios interviewing her about it,
2:54:31 reading verbatim from the act.
2:54:34 But, also,
2:54:35 Axios is more
2:54:38 left wing, leaning than right leaning, and they they're astonished. Even they're Astonished.
2:54:44 Dumbfounded.
2:54:45 In 2020, you endorsed as the Breathe Act, which is a series of proposals to transform
2:54:51 America's criminal justice system
2:54:53 and create, quote, a road map for prison abolition. Abolition. The Breathe Act proposes
2:54:59 emptying federal detention facilities within ten years.
2:55:03 To what extent have you wrestled with
2:55:06 any potential downsides
2:55:08 of releasing into society every single person who currently in a federal prison. Yeah. Again,
2:55:14 I think that everyone's like, oh my god. We're gonna just release everybody. That's not what the facts is. But did you see how many people are mentally ill that are in prison right now? No. I know. But the act that you endorsed actually says release everyone. In ten years. But think about it. Who released it? Like human traffickers Oh, I know. Child sex. So but you're saying, do you mean that you don't actually support that? Because, yes, you endorse the people. I endorse the Breathe Act and looking at federal the policies and how we incarcerate. Absolutely. But it says in there But you cannot you cannot
2:55:45 you cannot just blankly say, oh, look. She wants that's not what I'm But that's like in plain text. But what I'm saying is look at
2:55:52 who's in prison now.
2:55:54 No. Look at the folks that are mentally ill. They have substance abuse problems. I'm not disagree with you that there are people who Yep. Why are you asking me about them? You're asking me about the criminal human traffickers and others that should I'm trying to understand. What I'm trying to understand is your your proposal is so sweeping.
2:56:09 It does it does release everyone.
2:56:11 And what I'm trying to say to you Within ten years, and, obviously, there's a process of looking at how can we get away from mass incarceration
2:56:18 Sure. And move towards care first. But what I'm trying to understand, because it is such a sweeping concrete proposal, do you believe that there are still categories of people who who should be behind bars? There are absolutely
2:56:29 folks that
2:56:32 don't under you know, I don't know because right now the way the prison system is supposed to be, like, rehabilitating, you know, it's supposed to be rehabilitation.
2:56:38 Right? Oh, really? That's how they I understand. Yeah. I don't think there's any rehabilitation happening right now for those that might actually have, you know, and again, majority, there's so many that have mental health issues, other struggling issues. Do you think old people can be rehabilitated?
2:56:52 I don't think so. I've been very clear about that. Okay. Okay. I know exactly what happened here.
2:56:57 And it's not so hard to figure out.
2:57:00 She didn't read it.
2:57:02 She didn't read it.
2:57:04 Someone told her, hey, you know, you gotta get on board with my thing here. You know, we wanna, you know,
2:57:09 Because crazy people out she didn't know that It says everybody gets released in ten years. No. And and that's that's part of the problem is all laws are written by lobbyists, and people just go along with it. And, you know, it's like us not finding the whole clip.
2:57:25 You get burned, and she got burned here.
2:57:30 Yeah.
2:57:32 Yeah. She's gonna regret this interview. Oh, yeah. Especially when she's,
2:57:37 her head is shaven and she's being marched naked down Main Street. I'm gonna show my school by donating to No Agenda. Imagine all the people who could do that. Oh, yeah. That'd be fab.
2:57:48 Yeah. On No Agenda
2:57:52 in the morning.
2:57:54 Yeah. We do have a few people to thank for show fourteen o one, not including Bud Abbott and Lou Costello. Josh Jackson's on the top of the list. A $132.
2:58:03 Thanks for a great Thanksgiving. He's got a wish well wisher.
2:58:06 Ian
2:58:07 Field, a 100.
2:58:10 Oh,
2:58:12 Netherlands.
2:58:13 Dvorak,
2:58:16 a $100 from Holland.
2:58:18 Matthew Smith in North Royalton, Ohio, 9999.
2:58:22 Sir Chris Gray of the Isle Of Wight,
2:58:25 Queens
2:58:26 the queen owns that island.
2:58:29 8888
2:58:30 in Covington, Louisiana.
2:58:33 I guess he lived at the Isle Of Wight at some point. Yeah.
2:58:37 Andre,
2:58:39 another
2:58:40 Hollander, thank you, and he's in Rizviq. Pichu. Rizviq. Rizviq.
2:58:47 Rizviq.
2:58:48 Rizviq.
2:58:50 Rizviq. He's Rizviq.
2:58:54 Andre
2:58:54 Pichu.
2:58:56 Pichu. It's something like that. Andre Pichu in the Isle Of oh, not the Isle, but the town of Rizvijk.
2:59:05 Rizvijk.
2:59:10 Sir Kevin McLaughlin,
2:59:11 Duke of the Luna. That's what I'm thankful for this vac this Thanksgiving is that.
2:59:18 Sir Kevin McLaughlin, Duke you know, there's a lot of people that can't do that bit. They can't do the r roll. Well, that's why we did it instead of Abbott and Costello.
2:59:27 My my wife is one of them. She can't do the
2:59:32 I don't think my daughter can either. Oh, interesting. I could even do the Cardi B version.
2:59:38 Sir Kevin McLaughlin,
2:59:39 Duke of Luna, lover of America. Wait a minute. This is sir Kevin McLaughlin again? Every single show, man. He's he loves the boobs.
2:59:48 He does. Eight zero zero eight from him. Bill
2:59:52 Heine
2:59:52 Heinegler
2:59:53 Heinegler
2:59:54 in Henderson, Nevada
3:00:40 Forrest Martin, fifty o five. And by the way, Dustin's
3:00:44 got a birthday call out for somebody,
3:00:46 and he wants a biscuit for his birthday, and so does Tori.
3:00:51 Oh, but Dvorak Web.
3:00:53 By Bojork web. But Dvorak was oh, I don't know. In Mission Viejo.
3:00:59 You just you gave up, man. You gave up on that.
3:01:03 I I did. It's a de douching for her dad, Erin.
3:01:09 You've been in doozy? O one
3:01:12 in Mission Viejo. And then finally, we got the $50 donors to shortlist today. You should note
3:01:17 for Sunday so we can maybe pick it up.
3:01:20 Nobody will be around because they're all traveling around. Pamela Nyman
3:01:24 in Amsterdam.
3:01:26 Jesus Allen in Austin, Texas.
3:01:29 Patrick Macom Patrick Macom, and he's he's a sir. Sir, Patrick. He's in New York. New York. New York.
3:01:36 Aaron Tanner,
3:01:38 Alexa
3:01:39 Delgado in Aptos,
3:01:41 Simon
3:01:42 Shong in
3:01:44 Lawrenceville, Georgia,
3:01:46 Gregory
3:01:47 Elder,
3:01:49 Leland Smith, Todd Grubb in Kappac,
3:01:52 Kappac, Michigan,
3:01:53 Sir Allen Bean up there in Beaverton, and last but not least, Leanne Shipley
3:01:59 in Covington,
3:02:00 Washington,
3:02:01 Worshington,
3:02:02 50. I wanna thank these folks for making this show possible.
3:02:06 Yeah. Thank each and every one of them and the people that came in with lesser amounts too.
3:02:10 Yes. And let me see. We have some housekeeping
3:02:14 here.
3:02:15 The make goods. Well, first of all They always give me a biscuit on my birthday. For those who needed that biscuit. Robert Winter.
3:02:23 No. We have Mike from
3:02:25 yes. Robert Winter. This is a make good.
3:02:28 Mike from,
3:02:29 Makaquita.
3:02:30 Makaquita. Hit me in the mouth about a year ago. I thought that it would be a good opportunity to make my first donation for show number 1400 and my 40 birthday in 11/19.
3:02:39 For payment, I used my smoking hot wife's credit card and saw a comment box after entering the card information thinking that this is where I should leave my note. I proceeded to type in a short message only to find out during the show that the donation was credited to my wife, Jennifer Winter,
3:02:53 and no note was received.
3:02:55 Please correct the name to Rob Winter and add me to the birthday list. I would also like to ask for a de douching,
3:03:00 and, he says, stay safe. You've
3:03:04 been de douched. I mean, a real man would have said, hey. You know, it's okay. My wife can have it because I love her. It's up. We'll change it for you.
3:03:12 Yeah. That's the way to go. And, Cody Arden,
3:03:17 that was weird. We had two Cody's on the last show and there were some note mix ups and, Oh yeah. Well, you had too many Cody's. We had too many we had the Cody Coodies.
3:03:26 And so Cody Arden, should have been knight. We did read Cody's note, but we didn't knight Cody. So I think that makes Cody a black knight.
3:03:35 Yes. It's our screw up. He's a black knight. And he shall be, sir Leadbelly of the digital dystopia.
3:03:40 There you go. So,
3:03:42 all fixed, all sorted out. Thank you very much everybody for supporting.
3:03:47 You have more? You have more? No. There's this I've got I'm looking at unfortunately, this thing's not bed. Bed. You bed. You bed. Bed. Yeah. This slow down is Robert Basshole,
3:03:57 and I don't see it.
3:03:59 Robert Basshole should be on the birthday list. He's down there. Somebody's
3:04:03 calling him for a birthday and way down on the spreadsheet.
3:04:08 Bass hole in Shelton, Connecticut. Happy birthday. 36.
3:04:11 He's gonna be thirty six one of these days. Hold on. What number is he then?
3:04:16 He's 36. No. I'm way down on the spreadsheet. I need to if I Oh, the number it's just it's it's in the the donation. I'll tell you the donation amount.
3:04:26 It's way down there. It says $15
3:04:29 from
3:04:30 someone in Beacon Falls, Connecticut.
3:04:33 Okay. Well, gee, I wish we had done this earlier.
3:04:37 Spread oh, here we go.
3:04:40 Okay. Robert Basshole.
3:04:44 Okay. Robert Basshole.
3:04:46 And he will be 36. Okay.
3:04:49 Well, we don't wanna disappoint anybody now, do we?
3:04:53 And was there was there any further notes we had to read? I just wanna make sure we get everything in because it's it sucks. Yeah. Do have a note for someone. This was a note that with no money attached. It was just a card for one of our listeners.
3:05:06 And I thought it would be worth reading.
3:05:08 Says it's very complimentary
3:05:10 and heartfelt.
3:05:11 And
3:05:12 I think this person has donated before, because otherwise she wouldn't be Dame,
3:05:17 Dame Jennifer Weeder. Oh, Jennifer Weeder. Of course. We know Dame Jennifer. She says, I'm so thankful to have you. And it's a nice little card too. It says it's a Thanksgiving card that says happy Thanksgiving. And you know it's real. Yep. Or you wouldn't be able to do that. It's official. Wishing you all the love, joy, and gratitude that make Thanksgiving so special, says the card, and she says, I'm so thankful to have you and No Agenda in my life, John and Adam.
3:05:39 Your work is so vitally important in this world of madness,
3:05:43 and I am a healthier and happier woman
3:05:47 for you.
3:05:49 For you. Oh, for it. For it. Love you both,
3:05:53 Jennifer, and she got a little heart.
3:05:56 Oh, we love you too, Dame Jennifer. And and and all the producers of Gitmo Nation. We this show would not be happening without you. You're the ones that bring it. We really appreciate that. Also, the people we didn't mention under $50,
3:06:09 Although we are bringing up one guy with his $15 for you. It's a birthday. We got it for you. And if you'd like to participate for fourteen o three, our next episode on Sunday, go to to vorak.org/na.
3:06:23 And
3:06:29 here is the full birthday list as we have it documented today. Rob Winter, 47 on the nineteenth. Cheryl M says happy birthday to Travis M, 27 on the twenty third. Bill Heng
3:06:41 Hengler,
3:06:42 74 on November twenty third twenty
3:06:45 third. Congratulations,
3:06:46 Bill. Ella Cobbistecchi,
3:06:48 34 today. Paxton Sanders turns 50 today. Samantha Hoffman says happy birthday to her husband, Brandon, celebrating tomorrow.
3:06:57 Robert Basshole in Shelton, Connecticut will be 36. Dustin Rude
3:07:01 celebrates tomorrow. Tory
3:07:04 Happy birthday to her father, Aaron, celebrating on the twenty eighth. And finally, Derek Allison, happy birthday to Travis Bagert celebrating on the twenty ninth. Happy birthday from everybody here at the best podcasting in the universe. It's your birthday out. We got a couple of knights and dames. Actually, one, two, three. We have one dame and three knights. So
3:07:24 Oh, you got one dames three knight blade. That's beautiful. By story. Time. You got to use it.
3:07:30 Alik Cobbistecchi,
3:07:31 hop on up. Chris Spaulding,
3:07:33 Spradling.
3:07:34 Chris Spradling. Get it straight, Curry. Brian Burgess and Cody Arden, all of you have supported the No Agenda show in the amount of $1,000
3:07:42 or more. Thank you very much for that. And allow me to welcome you to the round table by pronounciating the Dame Noodle Nuker, sir Crashalot of Sonoma wine country,
3:07:51 sir Minnesota Sticks, and Black Knight, sir Lead Belly of the digital dystopia for you, gentlemen and lady. We have Hookers and Blow, Rent Boys, and Chardonnay.
3:08:00 We got Dame's braised beef raviolis and smoke wagon, a bottle of Robert's Cinzynski Blanc and thinly sliced prosciutto,
3:08:08 Kratom and Clonies.
3:08:10 I need a lozenge and, of course, mutton and mead. So if that Kratom doesn't work, the mutton and mead just might. And while you're chowing down, go to noagendanation.com/rings.
3:08:21 You can select exactly what you need, the size,
3:08:24 maybe even the colors of your ceiling wax. And with that, let Eric De Schell know by hitting submit, and we'll take care of it for you. Get it out. Thank you very much for becoming
3:08:33 one Dame and three nights of the No Agenda round table.
3:08:37 No Agenda
3:08:38 meetups.
3:08:41 It's not your holiday.
3:08:44 Well, the meetup reports are back. People getting more creative. This is, something that is becoming increasingly
3:08:50 important in today's world where you need to be able to have human contact and not worried about what you're saying.
3:08:57 Have open honest conversations.
3:08:59 Have a beer.
3:09:00 Dogs and kids welcome typically.
3:09:02 It's just a good time. It's completely producer organized. We have a Knight who came up with the whole noagendameetups.com
3:09:08 website.
3:09:09 You need to try one of these out. Just as an example, listen to the meetup report from the TMI evac zone. In the morning from Sir 737,
3:09:18 10 miles west of 3 Mile Island. This is missus Sir 737.
3:09:23 And, John, I love the three by three. No joke. In the morning from Snob Knob. This is Chris here with my two human resources, and I'm not afraid to exploit them. Don't drive me too blind. Globalize
3:09:34 the devil. Residential spook Maxwell Reeves. Adam, to who are these podcasts already? This is sir t checking in in the morning. In the morning, John and Adam. Thanks for your courage. Let's go Brandon.
3:09:46 Wanda, in the morning, try RCP.
3:09:48 John, check your pot money. And, Adam, could you please give a dedouching to everyone here? They all bought a drink.
3:09:54 Yeah. We can dedouch everybody. You've
3:09:57 been dedouched.
3:09:59 Just for this one time, don't put that in every single report. And we always encourage exploiting your children. Make sure you run a separate recorder because it's usually the stuff you don't rehearse with them that is great.
3:10:11 One of our OG meetup groups is Michigan Local one. In the morning, John and Adam, this is Trish reporting from the meetup, literally roller skating. This is Vic here with my two human resources
3:10:21 and my husband, Dan. In the morning, John and Adam, we're at this meetup. I don't see any spooks, though. Adam,
3:10:28 John, having a good time here at the Michigan local one.
3:10:31 This is sir looking for an exit strategy. No one's playing with Camilla.
3:10:36 My name is Aurora. This is Trish from Ferndale, Michigan. Thank you for all you do. Let's go, Brandon. Yo. This is Nick, dragon of the four domains. The beaches are back open. Woo hoo. In the morning to you. This is of hazardous.
3:10:48 I have not been de dooshed yet. I will be soon as soon as I can sell off the rest of these fake vaccination cards. Thanks for the job that you do. Your Michigan Local one meetup brought to you in part by Oops, I Crap My Pants. You can also skew excrement just like our spokesperson.
3:11:04 Come on, man. You two can do it too. Where's Jill? What's your name? My name is Joe Biden. Let's go, Brandon. Duncan. My name is Annika. I'm eight years old, and I have a joke about Joe Biden. So if he went for an interview in California,
3:11:16 he would get off the plane and say, where am I? I want the checks.
3:11:20 Wow.
3:11:21 My head is spinning. And to make matters even more interesting, that would the organizer of that Michigan Local one apparently has a private roller rink where everyone Which is like, I Michigan Local ones. I could have gone for Yeah. That I like the idea of that. And then we have the lowlanders.
3:11:39 My goodness. They are fighting the good fight there, speaking their own truth and meeting up against all odds and obstacles in Amsterdam.
3:11:51 On the outskirts of the crime capital of Gitmo Lodi,
3:11:55 Amsterdam.
3:12:00 Hello. This is Dame Bam Bam at the Amsterdam Super Spread event.
3:12:05 Hi. This is Owen, and we're having a party.
3:12:09 This Sebastian, host of the meetup.
3:12:12 Let's go, Hugo. Let's go, Mark. Thank you for your courage in the morning.
3:12:17 In the morning,
3:12:19 speaking from Amsterdam,
3:12:21 the crime capital of Holland. So see you soon in the next meetup.
3:12:24 In the morning, this is.
3:12:26 We had a great family time. In the morning.
3:12:30 Hi.
3:12:31 This is Arnold.
3:12:32 It it was a nice birthday meetup.
3:12:35 It's Johnny here again coming to you from Amsterdam with a fantastic meetup from Sebastian. Thank you. And everybody remember, cats, cats, cats. Thank you very much.
3:12:44 It was very nice here in Amsterdam. We see the ducks in the morning, ducks.
3:12:50 In
3:12:54 the morning, it's dangerous.
3:12:56 Coming to you live from Amsterdam
3:12:58 Meetup. Thank you for your courage.
3:13:01 In the morning. Morning.
3:13:03 Thank you, everybody. Don't forget to take your b 12.
3:13:10 There you go. That's what that's a meetup report right there. The Dutch having a good but everyone's having a good time. That's what's so cool about it. And you can too This Saturday, if you're in Oregon, the Local thirty three Richard's Early Patty Party meets a Dick's Primal Burger.
3:13:25 The owner is also a producer, that's in Portland.
3:13:28 We have,
3:13:30 on Sunday, the twenty eighth, the Sydney Freedom Meetup, 01:00 Sydney Australian time. I think it's actually already Sunday, 01:00 Australian time there.
3:13:39 And there's a lot of details on the No Agenda Meetup website,
3:13:43 as to how to get there where it is, and you can imagine why because it's going to probably be completely outside of all legal boundaries down under.
3:13:52 FEMA Region nine's first monthly meetup, 02:00 on Sunday, the twenty eighth at the Santa Maria Brewing Company.
3:13:58 Also thankful for No Agenda five zero five in Albuquerque, New Mexico. Sir Jeffrey Tuhig is hosting that. Good good friend, good pal of the pod at Urban three sixty Pizza.
3:14:09 And the Makem Michigan meetup, 07:00 at Manigans Irish Hut,
3:14:14 Mount Clemens, Michigan.
3:14:16 And that will be on Sunday as well. And, if you are looking for something to do in December, we already have at least 20 diff maybe even more,
3:14:25 meetups lined up and scheduled. It is something to be a part of. If you can't find one near you in that corner of the globe, all you have to do is set one up yourself. It's easy. You can do it at noagendameetups.com.
3:14:37 Just like a party.
3:14:59 Well,
3:15:01 vacation,
3:15:03 holiday, and we're still long. Don't know what happened.
3:15:08 I have Yeah. I really only have let me see if I have any ISOs. Like, twenty minutes over. Let me see what I have here. What is this? Build your brain better, man. Come on. What? I'm doing ISOs. That's what I'm doing. Oh, I thought you said you were playing clips. No. ISOs. Build your brain back better, man. Come on. Oh, that's no good. Someone
3:15:28 sent me this, a classic. Silent brain is people.
3:15:34 Too long. And this one. In the morning.
3:15:36 I like her. I like that little Dutch girl.
3:15:39 That's all I got.
3:15:41 Alright. I got two. But besides the Biden one, which is too long, and I'm not gonna even suggest it.
3:15:48 Is dark
3:15:52 Why are we here in the dark?
3:15:54 Yeah.
3:15:55 It's a show ending. Mhmm.
3:15:57 But I think this is a better show ending, lawyer.
3:16:43 At an event in Boston, Jamie Diamond quipped that JPMorgan
3:16:47 would outlive the Chinese regime.
3:16:50 I made a joke that the Communist Party is celebrating its hundredth year,
3:16:54 so is JPMorgan.
3:16:56 And and I'll make I'll make you bet we last longer. I
3:17:00 can't say that in China. The
3:17:04 Chinese regime didn't directly respond to the comments, but Diamond clarified this morning that he was only trying to stress JPMorgan's
3:17:12 longevity
3:17:13 and that he was sorry for his comments.
3:17:16 I mean, is that power?
3:17:20 Oh, you know, we got the word that, you know, some of my friend, the she guy was, like, unhappy
3:17:27 with what you had to say. Not asking for an apology or anything, but, you know, wouldn't hurt.
3:17:34 I just find that,
3:17:35 like, of all the people to have to grovel, Jamie Dimon.
3:17:40 That is the cake taker. That's No doubt about it. Pretty high on pathetic. That's as bad as,
3:17:47 with that actor
3:17:49 No. John Cena. John Cena. John Cena. Yeah. He's another good example of a guy had to grovel because he said something they didn't And he and he groveled in Mandarin fluently.
3:18:00 Hello? Yeah. Made it even more pathetic. Hello?
3:18:04 So what are you doing for for the cooking for Thanksgiving?
3:18:08 I'm doing a spatchcocked
3:18:10 turkey.
3:18:11 Spatchcocked
3:18:12 turkey?
3:18:13 And on the side barbecue
3:18:17 and then JC
3:18:19 is doing a competitive spatch cocked turkey in his oven, and we're gonna see what what works better. It's a spatch cock off. This is interesting. What is a spatch cock off? Yeah. What is a spatch cocked? Oh,
3:18:32 this is this oh, this is the thing. See? This is what the the millennials, that's all they talk about now is spatchcocked. And I've talked I've mentioned on the Horowitz show, he's doing a spatchcocked turkey too. I feel left out. What is a spatchcocked curt turkey?
3:18:47 It's cut.
3:18:49 It's a turkey that's cut along the the the, bottom and then split open, so it's kind of a flat, big thing. It's, like, flat. You cook it on you know, it's more like a,
3:18:59 a butterflied
3:19:01 Oh, really?
3:19:02 Yeah. It's a butterflied turkey. You need a really big pan for that then?
3:19:06 You need a big pan or,
3:19:08 well, I got a barbecue. I got a a Texas grill. So I Oh, you do it on the grill?
3:19:14 I'm gonna do it no. Not at the grill. I mean, it's a Texas bar it's a Texas barbecue side cooker. I got a big giant
3:19:20 lot of space in there to put a spatchcock turkey.
3:19:24 Well, Horowitz is doing he's a chef. Do people know that he's a chef? He's a maniac.
3:19:32 Yes. He's a really good cook. No. He's a maniac. Let's leave it at that. He's a maniac.
3:19:38 I'm thankful for you too, Andrew.
3:19:40 I'm not out I'm not out spatchcocking
3:19:43 Andrew.
3:19:46 And I'm thankful for you, John C. Dvorak.
3:19:49 And
3:19:50 I am
3:19:53 going to tell you what's coming up next on noagendastream.com,
3:19:57 which is, oh,
3:19:58 MOFAX with Adam Curry episode 71.
3:20:01 Brand new.
3:20:04 End of show. We're gonna keep it short. We got one from it's because we only got one. Tom Starkweather, but Tom Starkweather, man, when he when he does his
3:20:13 historical stuff and tell it gives you the timeline of the week, you know it's gonna be good.
3:20:18 And I'm coming to you from the heart of Texas Hill Country here in FEMA Region number 6 and all the governmental maps. In the morning, everybody. I'm Adam Curry. And from Northern Silicon Valley where I remain. I'm just checking the traffic out. It looks like a lot of people on the road, but it's not jam packed. I'm John C. Dvorak. We return on Sunday
3:20:37 with episode 1,403
3:20:40 of the best podcast in the universe.
3:20:42 Please remember us and support us with Value4Value
3:20:46 at dvorak.org/na.
3:20:48 Until then, adios of bothos.
3:20:52 Such.
3:20:55 You know, I oftentimes experimented.
3:20:57 I'd have some people in. I'd give them absolutely
3:20:59 perfect drugs, tough cookies, rough cookie. And by the way, I'm heading to a a food kitchen. It's a big one, not a small one. Bottom up and the middle out, not the top down. Let's do that. No way. Are you an idiot? Wind is ruining our beautiful prairies and our beautiful fields and lands and everything else. And by the way, jobs. Jobs. Jobs. Rough cookie. Tough cookies. Space force. Space force. Russia. Russia. Russia. Fake. Fake. Right now,
3:21:30 as I speak, high gas prices. The bottom line, high gas prices. This is a problem. It goes for everything from bicycles to ice skates. Are you an idiot? Are you an idiot?
3:21:40 We're spending money and just like throwing it out the window. People working. Jobs. Jobs. Jobs. Abdul.
3:21:47 They come back. Abdul. Abdul.
3:21:49 Drugs. And if so, will they cost me an arm and a leg? The latest model still in the boxes. Let's do that. I would have done all of that. And I'm heading to a
3:22:00 food kitchen. Magnificent.
3:22:02 And I have to devote time to that. People working. Jobs. Jobs. Jobs. And by the way, people should have their freedoms. No mandates.
3:22:10 This is a problem. Are you an idiot? Right now,
3:22:14 as I speak, high gas prices. People working. Jobs. Jobs. Jobs. Tough cookies. Rough cookie. No. No. Abdul. I mean it. They've left.
3:22:23 He would often come to the White House trying to get
3:22:26 goodies. This is a problem. It's terrible. Let's do that.
3:22:34 For the best podcast
3:22:35 in the universe.
3:22:38 Adios,
3:22:39 mofo. Dvorak
3:22:40 dot org slash n a.
3:22:44 I'm calling my lawyer.
Producers of this episode
A genuine show-notes credit, earned by a producer's giving to this episode.
- Dame Executive Producer
- Andrea Cody Executive Producer
- Ella Cobbistecchi Executive Producer
- Andrea Johnson Executive Producer
- Paxton Sanders Executive Producer
- Kerry's Viscount of Greater Boston Executive Producer
- g Money Executive Producer
- Brian Burgess Executive Producer
- Dan Bull Executive Producer
- Dweezil Associate Executive Producer
- Cheryl M Associate Executive Producer
- Mark of the Midwest Associate Executive Producer
- Rob Winter Associate Executive Producer
- Lindsey Fox Associate Executive Producer
- Brandon, pinball wizard of the freak show Associate Executive Producer
Donations $6,544.12
- In the morning, gents. Jingles, orange scream, China's asshole, switcheroo and split between two and a b day list. Please credit $611.57 to my husband Chris Spradling in honor of his 30 birthday. But alas, he can finally join his dame at the round table. Please knight him, sir Crashalot of Sonoma wine country. The remaining $153.86, please credit towards the damehood of Mary Anne, mom-in-law of the Monterey Peninsula. Please give her a proper dedouching. Round table request, Dame's braised beef raviolis and smoke wagon. Happy birthday to the keeper of my heart. There is no better gift to myself than to elevate you to knighthood so my purse is no longer holding your seat at the round table. Kidding aside, I could not ask for a better partner in life. Cheers to the best that is yet to come.
Details
โ๏ธ Knighted as: Sir Crashalot of Sonoma wine country
๐ birthday: for her husband Chris Spradling
๐ต Requested: orange scream, China's asshole
$611.57 - Happy Thanksgiving, John Adams. Today is my 30 birthday. It's also my Dame Day. Accounting attached. I have forced kismet. I'd like to be known as Dame Noodle Nuker. Blowing minds one day at a time. And I'd like to request a bottle of Robert Sinskey Blanc and thinly sliced prosciutto at the round table. I hope you both have a glorious day celebrating with your families. Love is lit. No jingles, no karma, and we shall see you at the round table.
Details
โ๏ธ Knighted as: Dame Noodle Nuker
๐ birthday: for herself
$334.00 - ITM, GenSci, started listening in 2011, and haven't missed an episode since is truly the best podcast in the universe. Today's donation brings me to knighthood accounting below. What better way to get my knighting than on turkey day, Tofurky day. If you please, I'd like to be knighted as sir Minnesota Styx. I'd also like to request Kratom and Clonies. Jingle request, bite and hold load, whoopee, get out of my vagina, wash your hands after touching any raw meat.
Details
โ๏ธ Knighted as: Sir Minnesota Styx
๐ต Requested: bite and hold load, whoopee, get out of my vagina, wash your hands after touching any raw meat
$333.33 - g Money ๐ต KarmaThis year more than ever, I am grateful for Adam, JCD, and all the producers in Gitmo Nation. Thank you for your courage. R two d two karma, please.
Details
๐ต Requested: Karma
$333.33 - ITM Jensen, thank you for your courage. Happy Thanksgiving and karma to all producers. Few jingle requests, which include get vaccinated, Obama, you might die, and a Hillary laugh. Thank you for all you do.
Details
๐ต Requested: get vaccinated, Obama, you might die, Hillary laugh, Karma
$333.33 - My birthday falls on Thanksgiving this year just as it did on the day I was born fifty years ago. It's been a while since I became a knight. I hope this donation makes amends. Of course, I'm thankful for my wife and children and all the karma is for them.
Details
๐ birthday: for himself
๐ต Requested: Karma
$333.33 - Dan Bull ๐ Olive Branch, Missouri$333.00
- Anonymous ๐ต 5 jingles
Please keep me anonymous. Thanksgiving greetings, Crackpot and Buzzkill. Would you please play the following jingles? The Jill Abramson vocal fry, fact check false, orange, and stay safe followed by an r two d two else karma. Thanks for keeping me anonymous.
Details
๐ต Requested: Jill Abramson vocal fry, fact check false, orange, stay safe, Karma
$234.56 - In the morning, Adam and John. So hoping this makes Sunday's show for a birthday shout out to Travis M celebrating his 20 on the twenty third. Two days late, but here we are. He's the greatest douchebag boy any mom could ask for. Thanks for hitting me in the mouth, son. I submit this donation as a birthday gift to him requesting his de douching. I would also like to request some vaccine mandate karma for the boy so he can keep his much beloved job at the Shut Up Slave Railroad. If you could please play OMG, listen to that horn clip in honor of my Foamer boy. I know I've asked for a lot, but believe me, he is worth it. Thank you for your biweekly therapy session.
Details
๐ birthday: for Travis M (the twenty third)
๐ต Requested: Karma, OMG listen to that horn
$233.33 - Mark of the Midwest ๐ต KarmaBoots on the ground report COVID restrictions in San Francisco. Background, I'm 63 years old, live in the Midwest, and have been in the meat industry for forty years. I recently accepted a job with a software startup in San Francisco directly related to the media. I would like an explanation to the popularity of single muscle butchery, which is the trending thing in all the high end meat shops. The president of the company is in his early thirties, and the entire company is woke. The last night of our meetup, we all attended the San Francisco Giants playoff game at Oracle Stadium. It would be the ultimate test of vaccine mandate chicanery. By the time we walked into the stadium I was ready. I presented my Iowa concealed carry permit as ID and flashed my trusty Alibaba receipt and was promptly waived through. No jingles, no karma.
Details
๐ต Requested: Karma
$202.11 - Anonymous
In the morning, no jingles, no karma. Also, I do hope you do find your exit strategy.
$201.02 - Please credit my husband, Brandon, pinball wizard of the freak show with this donation in honor of his birthday on Friday. Let's go, Brandon. I was hoping to request a let's go Brandon jingle. I have one. Maybe someone with talent can create one. Until then, can one of you say let's go Brandon followed by the kazoo? Thank you for everything you do. Have a wonderful Thanksgiving and holiday season sincerely from Sammy.
Details
๐ birthday: for her husband Brandon (Friday)
๐ต Requested: Let's go Brandon, kazoo
$200.00 - Ian Field ๐ Netherlands$100.00
- Matthew Smith ๐ North Royalton, OH$99.99
- Chris Gray of the Isle Of Wight ๐ Covington, LA$88.88
- Andre Pichu ๐ Rijswijk, Netherlands$88.88
- $80.08
-
Details
๐ birthday: for himself (November twenty third)
$73.00 - $50.05
- $50.00
- Bo Bjork ๐ Mission Viejo, CADe douching for her dad, Erin.$50.00
- Pamela Nyman ๐ Amsterdam$50.00
- Jesus Allen ๐ Austin, TX$50.00
- Patrick Macom ๐ New York, NY$50.00
- $50.00
- Alex Delgado ๐ Aptos, CA$50.00
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- $50.00
- $50.00
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- Allen Bean ๐ Beaverton$50.00
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- Birthday shoutout, will be 36.
Details
๐ birthday: for himself
$15.00 - Anonymous$0.00
- Anonymous$0.00
- Anonymous$0.00
Red Book
- No red-book predictions in this episode.
Jingles
Tip of the Day
-
Spatchcocked Turkey
Try cooking a spatchcocked turkey for Thanksgiving โ the turkey is cut along the bottom and split open so it lies flat (butterflied), then cooked on a grill or in the oven.
ISOs
- โ Why are we here in the dark? chosen
- Build your brain back better, man. Come on.
- Silent brain is people.
- In the morning (little Dutch girl)
End of Show Mixes
- Tom Starkweather โ End of Show Mix
Notable quotes
-
"So what's funny about that clip is the besides the fake I love you, I love you, is the most insincere thing you can imagine, especially in that environment is the phony yes."
โ John ยท wry media critique of fake sincerity
-
"By the end of the winter, German people will either be vaccinated, recovered, or dead. Those are your choices, Germany."
โ Adam ยท stark paraphrase of the German health minister
-
"It's got the scam written all over it. It's just too much information, man. It's way too much information, man."
โ John ยท signature ivermectin skepticism catchphrase
-
"We're going to risk these assets with some crazy vaccine that we know nothing about, millions of dollars each individual player? No way. Get the saline. I don't believe they're vaccinated at all."
โ John ยท vivid conspiracy theory about pro athletes and vaccines
-
"She didn't read it. She didn't read it. Someone told her, hey, you know, you gotta get on board with my thing here."
โ Adam ยท blunt read on politician endorsing a bill she hadn't read
People mentioned
- Becky Worley ร12
- Kyle Rittenhouse ร9
- Joe Biden ร8
- Kelly Evans ร8
- Jennifer Granholm ร6
- Recep Tayyip Erdogan ร6
- Boris Johnson ร5
- Stephen Colbert ร5
- Alex Jones ร4
- Courtney Reagan ร4
- Elon Musk ร4
- Harry Smith ร4
- Michael Crichton ร4
- Scott Gottlieb ร4
- Tucker Carlson ร4
- Vladimir Putin ร4
- Andrew Horowitz ร3
- Anthony Fauci ร3
- David Suzuki ร3
- Donald Trump ร3
- Jamie Dimon ร3
- Marlo Thomas ร3
- Albert Bourla ร2
- Christina Tosi ร2
- John Cena ร2
- Lina Wen ร2
- Nora O'Donnell ร2
- Rashida Tlaib ร2
- Robert Tilton ร2
- Roger Stone ร2
- Shepard Smith ร2
News clip sources
- CNBC 5 clips
- ABC 4 clips
- CBS 3 clips
- FOX 3 clips
- C-SPAN 2 clips
- NBC 2 clips
- NPR 2 clips
- Axios 1 clip
- BBC 1 clip
- MSNBC 1 clip
Buzzword tally
- in the morning ร18
- karma ร14
- producer ร10
- no agenda ร8
- round table ร7
- climate change ร6
- de douching ร6
- let's go brandon ร6
- best podcast in the universe ร5
- gitmo nation ร5
- hit in the mouth ร5
- thank you for your courage ร5
- troll ร5
- boots on the ground ร4
- jobs karma ร4
- value for value ร4
- mass formation ร3
- shut up slave ร3
- deboonk ร1
- fact check false ร1
- m5m ร1
- narrative ร1
- project blue beam ร1
- smoking hot wife ร1
- switcheroo ร1
Around the world this episode
-
United States
Biden's release from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve to ease gas prices
-
Japan
Boots on the ground report on COVID restrictions, masks, low case counts, ivermectin use
-
United Kingdom
Boris Johnson erratic CBI speech; loose COVID restrictions; soccer players collapsing
-
Australia
Northern Territory anti-vax mandate crackdown; quarantine camps; ADF transporting aboriginal contacts
-
Germany
Health minister says Germans will be vaccinated, recovered, or dead; mixed vaccines not counted in breakthroughs
-
San Francisco, USA
Organized retail crime spree / mass robberies at Louis Vuitton, Nordstrom due to low bail
-
Kenosha, USA
Kyle Rittenhouse trial and acquittal, media coverage criticism
-
Turkey
Lira crashing as Erdogan pressures central bank to cut rates amid high inflation
-
Belarus
Migrant crisis at Polish border, Iraqi refugees flying in then home
-
China
Jamie Dimon apology for joke about outliving the Communist Party
-
Israel
Waning vaccine immunity data cited
-
New Zealand
Hospital segregation of unvaccinated patients
-
Oakland, USA
KRON/KPIX news crew jumped, security guard shot during armed robbery
-
Poland
Border migrant situation; gas contract with Gazprom expiring, Baltic pipeline finishing
-
Ontario, Canada
Nurse claims 86 stillbirths among vaccinated mothers
-
Slovenia
Nurse claims color-coded vaccine vials with placebo, RNA, and oncogene variants
-
Waukesha, USA
SUV plows through Christmas parade killing people
Books, movies & media
-
tv Grey's Anatomy
Clip of a Thanksgiving scene questioning the holiday's history
-
tv Today Show
Part of John's three-by-three morning show comparison; cancer survivor segment
-
tv Power Lunch
CNBC show where Kelly Evans was a host
-
book Every Cake Has a Story โ Christina Tosi
Children's book about cakes promoted on CBS morning show
-
movie Milk Bar
Mentioned alongside Christina Tosi's cake shop chain
-
book State of Fear โ Michael Crichton
Adam ties climate activist's pipeline threats to Crichton's book
-
other The Nutcracker Party โ Dance Houston
Hip-hop/Latin Nutcracker show on Vimeo and Amazon Prime, promoted by donor
-
movie Outbreak
Mentioned re: Fauci/CDC advising on pandemic Hollywood pre-programming
-
movie Don't Look Up
Netflix comet-apocalypse film discussed as predictive programming for the DART mission
-
tv Dopesick
Adam recommends rewatching to understand pharma/government collusion
-
other Who's on First โ Abbott and Costello
Comedy bit Adam and John planned to play but ran out of time