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Richard Karn
Hi, I'm Richard Karn and you may have seen me on TV talking about the world's number one expandable garden hose. Well, the brand new pocket hose Copperhead with Pocket Pivot is here and it's a total game changer. Old fashioned hoses get kinks and creases at the spigot, but the Copperhead's pocket pivot swivels 360 degrees for full water flow and freedom to water with ease all around your home water. When you're all done, this rust proof anti burst hose shrinks back down to pocket size for effortless handling and tidy storage. Plus your super light and ultra durable pocket hose Copperhead is backed with a 10 year warranty. What could be better than that? I'll tell you what an exciting exclusive offer just for you for a limited time. You can get a free Pocket Pivot and their 10 pattern sprayer with the purchase of any size Copperhead hose. Just text water to 64,000. That's water to to 64,000 for your two free gifts with purchase w a t e r to 64,000 by texting.
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64,000 you agree to receive recurring automated marketing messages from Pocket Host. Message and data rates may apply. No purchase required. Terms apply. Available@pocket host.com terms the Medal of Honor.
J.R. Martinez
Is the highest military decoration in the United States. Recipients have done the improbable, the unexpected, showing immense bravery and sacrifice in the name of something much bigger than themselves.
Unknown Voice
The this medal is for the men who went down that day on Medal.
J.R. Martinez
Of Honor Stories of Courage. You'll hear about these heroes and what their stories tell us about the nature of bravery. Listen to Medal of Honor on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcasts.
Jack Armstrong
Broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio at the George Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty. Armstrong and Getty. And now here's Armstrong. Armstrong and Yeti.
Donald Trump
They should have looked. They should have made the deal. I had a great deal for them. They should have made that deal. 60 days, we talked about it and in the end they decided not to do it. And now they wish they did it and they want to meet. But it's, you know, it's a little late to meet. But they want to meet and they want to come to the White House. They'll even come to the White House. So we'll see. I may. I may do that.
Joe Getty
So Trump asked over and over again. He kept saying no matter what. The question was pretty much yesterday whether he was on the White House lawn or in the Oval Office behind the desk that Iran can't have a nuclear weapon. I've been saying it for 20 years. Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. Here's a little more Trump, Mr. President, on Iran. If regime change does happen there, if the regime falls, do you have a plan for what you think would happen there?
Donald Trump
I have a plan for everything, but we'll see what happens. At a ways to go. They should have made that deal 60 days. We talked about it, and in the end they decided not to do it. And now they wish they did it.
Joe Getty
Yeah. On all the headlines yesterday where Trump has signed off on the plan to attack the nuclear facility, but hasn't decided when yet.
Jack Armstrong
Did you see the denial from the mullahs? Might have been even the head guy that they were willing to talk and go to the White House. He said, we'll never crawl to the gates of the White House for mercy or to beg or whatever, meeting with them scumbags up and down, but he probably has to.
Joe Getty
Yeah, sure. Seems like the negotiating days are past us, right? I don't, I don't know. I don't know if they could pull the plug at this point. Man, it would take an extraordinary statement.
Jack Armstrong
Boy, I want to read this book when it comes out. But I could easily believe behind the scenes, the powers that be in Tehran made that overture to Trump, believing it would be top secret. And then Trump waved their, you know, waved it in their faces. You're begging me. You want to come to the White House. And they're freaking out. They're thinking, no, no, no, this has got to be secret or we'll lose the support of our ultra conservative supporters. And Trump may well be thinking, yeah, I don't care. That sounds like a you problem. This is all going to be out in the open now.
Joe Getty
Yeah. I don't remember if I asked this yesterday. Do you think we, we or Israel actually does know where the Ayatollah is? Like, has his location?
Jack Armstrong
It's entirely possible.
Joe Getty
Wow, that'd be something.
Jack Armstrong
Do we have a source in the Palace Guard or whatever the formal term is for that?
Joe Getty
I don't know. I was listening to a great interview yesterday with what? Let me find his name because I'm a fan. I've been a fan of his for years. Ken Pollock, he was in CIA, nsa, all those different kind of things in different administrations. And, and I've been reading this stuff and watching him be interviewed for years on a variety of topics. And he confirmed when asked that yeah. There almost has to be a fair amount of human intelligence in Iran for Israel to have pulled off what they've pulled off. So they have Iranians who have turned because they don't like the regime or they're just getting paid off or any of the reasons anybody ever turns on their own country.
Jack Armstrong
Maybe my sister got beat to death in a jail for showing her hair on the street. Yeah. I'm not a big fan.
Joe Getty
Right. So. And you know, who. How close that human intelligence is to the Ayatollah and could, you know, nail down where he is? We don't know. But he made the point that the reason we don't want to kill the Ayatollah is we have been in a unique position for a lot of years to where we're pretty much the only country in the world that has the technology to just snuff people anywhere on the planet when we decide we need to and then we do. And, you know, sometimes UN gets unhappy about it or some countries make some noise, but whatever. What are you going to do? We're the United States. Soon, like, very soon, lots of countries are going to have the technology to be able to strike somebody anywhere on the planet with a swarm of drones or whatever. And normalizing that is not going to be to our benefit when all of a sudden, and he used the example, Pete Hegseth is walking out of a restaurant and gets hit with a couple of drones and taken out. And China says, well, we had to because of blah, blah, blah, and the world gets mad about it. But what are you going to do? The United States has been doing it for years.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, boy. And then never ending tit for tat assassinations.
Joe Getty
Right.
Jack Armstrong
The dachshund drone. Huh?
Joe Getty
I'm not against any of this, but we have been in a unique situation where, you know, I never can pronounce his right name. Right. Soleimani, the Iranian general.
Jack Armstrong
We just take him out.
Joe Getty
He's a bad guy. Other the reason other countries don't do that. They can't. They just have never. They haven't been able to.
Jack Armstrong
Well, invert. We're very, very restrained about it.
Joe Getty
Yes, we are. But it's still a heck of a thing. Imagine living in a country where somebody just all of a sudden can get vaporized by China or Russia or North Korea or whoever thinks that they're evil.
Jack Armstrong
Yikes. And then you got the murders of those poor legislators in Minneapolis. Who's to say? Or Minnesota. Who's to say? It will just be malevolent foreign actors. That'll you know, hop on the I don't like them, I'm going to rub them out train.
Joe Getty
Yeah. So I don't know if I believe that or not in this case, that that's a good reason to not take out the ayatollah or if any. That's on anybody's mind.
Jack Armstrong
But, man, every day I'm reconvinced that the Internet and AI is like handing a chimp a loaded revolver. That'd be a bad idea.
Joe Getty
That seems like a bad idea.
Jack Armstrong
I mean, I haven't read my point. I haven't thought about it for more.
Joe Getty
Than a couple of seconds. But a chimpanzee, I'm thinking it through. Yeah. Yeah. You could get unforeseen consequences out of that.
Jack Armstrong
A chimp with a loaded revolver, maybe machine gun would be a more apt metaphor, honestly, given the amount of damage that could be done quickly.
Joe Getty
Yeah. So Trump said. He said he's gonna make his decision at the last second, he said, because things can change when it comes to war. You know, you gotta wait till the last moment to make the decision. I don't have any idea if it's gonna. He at some point, said yesterday, you know, could be soon, could be a week, maybe sooner. So I don't know. For some reason, I was pitching sooner than a week just based on the fact that we closed the embassy in Tel Aviv for the next three days. You know, all the big meetings they've been having, that sort of thing. I just. I've been assuming it's going to happen, like today or tomorrow. That hint from the Israeli ambassador that you're going to see something on Thursday or Friday that makes the pager attack look like nothing. That's got to be an overstatement, doesn't it? Almost has to be.
Jack Armstrong
I don't. I don't sell the Israeli.
Joe Getty
Sure. So every expert that I've listened to on a podcast or interview say, says this, the Israelis have to have something up their sleeve to deal with Fordo. There's no way they went into this without the ability to take out Fordo and just counting on the fact that the United States would do it for him. There's just no way. They had to have some plan to, you know, destroy it with a computer virus or get, you know, commandos in there or something. There's got to be something going on there. So that's what we're probably going to see in the next couple of days or week.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, but I could see, you know, both kind of sort of being true in that an enormously expensive. And in terms of lives, commando attack, special forces attack, I mean, lots of boots on the ground over and that period of time that was so costly.
Joe Getty
Oh, yeah, yeah, you could lose a lot of guys.
Jack Armstrong
But in so you'd be hoping the.
Joe Getty
US Would step in Israel's mind, it would be worth it. But yeah, if the United States says we'll bomb it for you, then you don't have to do that, I guess, is your point. Let's listen to Senator Mark Wayne Mullen. We've had him on the show, kind of interested in what he has to say. Clip 65 there.
Mark Wayne Mullen
Michael, keep in mind this isn't just one facility. The Iranian regime had spread it disproportionately across the country and specifically five separate locations. And we know where those locations are. We have pretty good intel. The Israelis have also shared intel with us. And so if there's a reason for us to make sure that they can know never achieve a nuclear weapon, then that is in the United States interest.
Joe Getty
So if you're old enough to have lived through the whole build up to the Iraq war, he is still smart a little bit from the whole we have solid evidence, mobile chemical labs moving around the country making, you know, all kinds of disastrous gases. And none of that turned out to be true. But the senator goes on here with the intelligence saying the US Intelligence community.
Mark Wayne Mullen
Is saying that Iran is close. I'm saying the assets that we have now, the information we're receiving that we're using with our partners in Israel and the information we're receiving from the intelligence community is that they are very close. In March, the different, the information was quite different. But who told you the information has changed?
Jack Armstrong
Who told you that about the intelligence community? Because just the ranking Democrat on the.
Mark Wayne Mullen
Senate Intelligence Committee, Mark Warner, said that.
Jack Armstrong
His understanding was that the intelligence community's assessment was still today what Tulsi Gabbard said in March.
Mark Wayne Mullen
Well, I will tell you, and I can't I've got to walk careful to how far I can go with this because obviously if I'm getting read in on programs or if we're getting briefed in a, in a classified briefing, there's very little information I can actually come out. I'm telling you the information that we've received will tell you that they are very, very close to it.
Joe Getty
Do you have concern about this, that it's being overstated how close they are to a nuclear weapon? And then I've got a response.
Jack Armstrong
Not a lot, just because I've been following the various estimates and projections through the years and the full range of them, from the very hawkish to the dovish. And this does not seem, it's like, you know, a poll comes out that's an outlier, that you're like, wait a minute, how does Trump all of a sudden have a 38% approval rating? He's at 52 last week and every other poll. This does not strike me as an outlier. Given everything that's happened, it seems like a logical point to have progressed to. I have one more point I want to make about China, but if you're driving towards something, go ahead.
Richard Karn
Yeah.
Joe Getty
So my thinking is it might be being overstated now in Bremer, among other people think that Bibi's doing this for political reasons over emphasizing how close Iran is to get in a nuclear weapon. Bill Clinton said it on the Daily Show Tuesday night, made no news. I didn't hear about it till today. So that shows you how much people respect Bill Clinton's opinion. At this point, I kind of feel like. But I, my belief is, yeah, it might be overstated. Maybe they aren't days away from a nuclear rapid, maybe it's longer. What difference does it make? Ted Cruz's point to Tucker on that contentious interview was there is no disagreement anywhere in the world that Iran is trying to get a nuclear weapon and going as fast as they can, there's never going to be a better time to take that program out. So whether they're a week away or six months away, since that's their intention and it's only going to get harder six months from now, why the hell wouldn't you do it now? That's where I am.
Jack Armstrong
Right. Well, we need to take a break. And so my point about China, which, believe it or not, is tied into this, will firmly establish my credentials as a cold warrior lunatic. But I think it's, it's indisputably true. What I'm going to tell you, though you don't hear it anywhere else. Plus, the to your point, the famous Tulsi Gabbard, Iran is not building a nuclear weapon. That was half of her statement that day.
Joe Getty
I don't know that we're going to.
Jack Armstrong
Play the other half as well.
Joe Getty
The Lakers got sold the most viable sports franchise in America or the world.
Jack Armstrong
The world, I believe. 10 billion bucks, pretty big deal.
Joe Getty
We'll talk a little bit about that, among other things on the way. Stay here.
Jack Armstrong
Armstrong and Getty.
Richard Karn
Hi, I'm Richard Karn, and you may have seen me on TV talking about the world's number one expandable garden hose. Well, the brand new Pocket Hose Copperhead with Pocket Pivot is here and it's a total game changer. Old fashioned hoses get kinks and creases at the spigot, but the Copperhead's pocket pivot swivels 360 degrees for full water flow and freedom to water with ease all around your home. When you're all done, this rust proof anti burst hose shrinks back down to pocket size for effortless handling and tidy storage. Plus your super light and ultra durable pocket hose Copperhead is backed with a 10 year warranty. What could be better than that? I'll tell you what an exciting exclusive offer just for you. For a limited time. You can get a free pocket pivot and their 10 pattern sprayer with the purchase of any size Copperhead hose. Just text water to 64000 that's water to 64000 for your two free gifts with purchase w a t e r.
Unknown Voice
To 64000 by texting 64000 you agree to receive recurring automated marketing messages from Pocket host. Message and data rates may apply. No purchase required. Terms apply. Available at pockethost.com Terms the Medal of.
J.R. Martinez
Honor is the highest military decoration in the United States. Recipients have done the improbable, showing immense bravery and sacrifice in the name of something much bigger than themselves.
Unknown Voice
This medal is for the men who went down that day. It's for the families of those who didn't make it.
J.R. Martinez
I'm J.R. martinez. I'm a U.S. army veteran myself, and I'm honored to tell you the stories of these heroes on the new season of Medal of Stories of Courage from Pushkin Industries and I Heartbroken podcast from Robert Blake, the first black sailor to be awarded the medal to Daniel Daly, one of only 19 people to have received the Medal of Honor twice. These are stories about people who have distinguished themselves by acts of valor going above and beyond the call of duty. You'll hear about what they did, what it meant, and what their stories tell us about the nature of courage and sacrifice. Listen to Medal of Honor on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Mark Wayne Mullen
Keep in mind this isn't just one facility. The the Iranian regime had spread it disproportionately across the country and specifically five separate locations. And and we know where those locations are. We have pretty good intel. The Israelis have also shared intel with us. And so if there's a reason for us to make sure that they can know, never achieve a nuclear weapon, then that is in the United States interest.
Jack Armstrong
So I've been reading about Israel's many year long effort to somehow prevent Iran from getting a nuke. Having, you know, the Iranians having vowed death to Israel about a zillion times. And part of that has been identifying, like Mark Wayne Mullen there, senator from Oklahoma, is talking about five significant nuclear facilities across the country. And the Israel, the Israelis have not only identified those five facilities, but like all the ancillary facilities, the, the support facilities, that sort of thing. And they've also identified who runs them and who are the project managers and who are the scientists in charge of X, Y and Z. That's how some of them have met their unfortunate ends recently and years ago. And they've been doing this over the course of many, many years, not knowing exactly when and how they would use that information. If you don't think that's precisely what China is doing right now to us, I was going to say you're a fool, but maybe you're just busy with your job and don't spend a lot of time thinking about it. So. But that is unquestionably what China is doing right now to the United States. Why do they, why do I care that they collect all my data through TikTok and blah blah, blah? You know, maybe it doesn't matter for you, but they are trying to understand who everybody is, what they do and how they can be exploited for the communist Chinese gain, same way the Israelis do. And if the poo ever hits the fan, there are going to be a lot of people running around saying, oh my God, oh my God, how did this happen? Jack? I know. Go ahead. You're going to make a point when.
Joe Getty
The S hits the fan. Where does that expression come from? Anybody I know?
Jack Armstrong
It's a great question.
Joe Getty
I'm going to ask while you're talking chat GPT and find out because I am curious.
Jack Armstrong
I think Katie may be on the. The task.
Joe Getty
Yeah, Katie's on it because I can't say the word so I got to turn off my microphone to say it.
Jack Armstrong
To chat GPT in like you're there in a cattle yard, an indoor cattle facility, and he got big old fans, exhaust fans running, and sometimes the cows turn their hind end toward the fan.
Joe Getty
I got the answer.
Jack Armstrong
Okay.
Joe Getty
When the S hits the fan is a colorful idiom meaning a situation suddenly becomes chaotic, problematic or disastrous. We knew that.
Jack Armstrong
Yes.
Joe Getty
Usually because a hidden issue is exposed or something goes terribly wrong. It likely dates back to the earliest 20th century, first appearing in print around the 1930s. The literal image, feces hitting a spinning fan and splattering everywhere correct, is meant to convey a sudden uncontrollable mess once something bad is let loose with. The earliest printed version seemed to me from the 1939 novel Singing the Blues by Hal Doby, in which he uses the phrase then the S hit the fan. That was a pretty clever little expression.
Jack Armstrong
Wow. It caught on like Shakespeare invented a lot of expressions we still use today, but way to go Harold Dobie.
Joe Getty
Similar phrases all hell broke loose, the wheels came off, it blew up in their face.
Jack Armstrong
My favorite use of the term in Warren Zevon's Lawyers, Guns and Money.
Joe Getty
Yeah yeah, yeah, yeah. By the way, chat GPT is amazing. It's so much better than googling something. If you want an answer, we got much on the way. If you missed a segment, get the podcast Armstrong and Getty on Demand.
Richard Karn
Armstrong and Getty hi, I'm Richard Karn and you may have seen me on TV talking about the world's number one expandable garden hose. Well, the brand new pocket hose Copperhead with Pocket Pivot is here and it's a total game changer. Old fashioned hoses get kinks and creases at the spigot, but the Copperhead's pocket pivot swivels 360 degrees for full water flow and freedom to water with ease all around your home. When you're all done, this rust proof anti burst hose shrinks back down to pocket size for effortless handling and tidy storage. Plus your super light and ultra durable pocket hose Copperhead is backed with a 10 year warranty. What could be better than that? I'll tell you what an exciting exclusive offer just for you for a limited time. You can get a free pocket pivot and their 10 pattern sprayer with the purchase of any size Copperhead hose. Just text water to 64,000. That's water to 64,000 for your two free gifts with purchase W A T E R to 64,000.
Unknown Voice
By texting 64,000 you agree to receive recurring automated marketing messages from Pocket host. Message and data rates may apply. No purchase required. Term supply available@pockethost.com Terms the Medal of.
J.R. Martinez
Honor is the highest military decoration in the United States. Recipients have done the improbable, showing immense bravery and sacrifice in the name of something much bigger than themselves.
Unknown Voice
This medal is for the men who went down that day. It's for the families of those who didn't make it.
J.R. Martinez
I'm J.R. martinez. I'm a U.S. army veteran myself. And I'm honored to tell you the stories of these heroes on the new season of Medal of Stories of Courage from Pushkin Industries and I Heart podcast from Robert Blake, the first black sailor to be awarded the medal to Daniel Daly, one of only 19 people to have received the Medal of Honor twice. These are stories about people who have distinguished themselves by acts of valor going above and beyond the call of duty. You'll hear about what they did, what it meant, and what their stories tell us about the nature of courage and sacrifice. Listen to Medal of Honor on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts or wherever you get your podcast.
Joe Getty
I was Talking to the lieutenant, I said, I don't think in 23 years I've ever heard of anybody who managed somehow to get married to someone who wasn't present for a ceremony. I've talked to the victim and he's going through a significant process to try to have to fix this at this point. Someone who got married to someone who wasn't present at the ceremony. What does that mean?
Jack Armstrong
A 36 year old woman is being held on felony stalking charges in a bizarre case.
Joe Getty
She's being killed, she's in jail.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. Where a wedding was held without the groom present and without his knowledge. Well, you can call it a wedding. Isn't that like saying I held a horse race without a horse being present or the horse's knowledge? Or I had a, there was no horses racing.
Joe Getty
I had a birthday party for somebody that doesn't like me anymore and they weren't there. I can have a birthday party for somebody, sing Happy Birthday, get a cake, wear a little hat, but if they're not there, I'm not sure it makes any difference.
Jack Armstrong
So the chief of police there in Beverly Hills, Texas, said his office was contacted by a 42 year old fella who said he found a package from his ex girlfriend at his home which included a copy of a marriage certificate showing that he was married even though he didn't marry her and thinks she's a nutjob.
Joe Getty
So she did she falsify his name or something?
Jack Armstrong
Well, the cop says at first we were really considering that it may be some forged documents. However, once we made contact with the reverend who ended up signing the actual ceremony showing that they were unified, he basically, you know, solidified the fact that yeah, the groom was not present when that occurred.
Joe Getty
You know, Joe and I learned this when we were. We've conducted a couple of weddings, been the officiant, and we got our minister license online from the Church you like? You look confused there, Katie. We got our minister license online from the church Universal Life. And then so Joe and I were ministers and we did a couple of weddings and they were actually married because who officiates your wedding? Has nothing to do with it. It's the wedding license you get at the courthouse and people signing off on that. That's what makes you legally married. Not.
Jack Armstrong
And the officiant signs it saying, yeah, the two were there, they exchanged these vows. They're, they're doing it willingly. And here's their first, middle and last names.
Joe Getty
But the minister or the disc jockeys or whoever who say I do, I now pronounce you man and wife is not the legal thing there.
Jack Armstrong
Let's see. Chief Martin explained how this situation has been a rare occurrence and how they've been handling it. He's been going through the family code looking at sections on marriage. There was only one caveat that I could locate which was, you know, active military overseas, unable to make it. You still had to have a proxy stand in. And that also has to be part of all the licensing stuff is, is part of the stuff there. So the groom should have been there. A proxy wouldn't have worked without that caveat. So anyway, the, the minister ought to lose his fake Internet license, I'll tell you that.
Joe Getty
Anyway, she's a full on nut job.
Jack Armstrong
Oh yeah, yeah, she's. Yeah, absolutely full.
Joe Getty
Florida, how did you think this was going to work, lady? Do you think he was going to get the word that you're too married and say, well, I guess I got no choice but to move in with her and love and cherish her for the rest of her life. What am I going to do?
Jack Armstrong
I think anybody listening or perhaps on the show who has unfortunately gotten intertwined with a wackadoodle and realized it. There's no reasoning necessary or that would be successful. And what she was thinking is probably.
Joe Getty
Wacky doodle issue and a fair amount of short term thinking.
Jack Armstrong
Yes, yes. And governed by the emotions and not the intellect. So here are a handful of headlines all about the world of work in the economy and that sort of thing. They're going to all be kind of flowing in one direction, you might notice, or at least several of them. Microsoft plans to cut thousands more employees. Companies layoffs are expected to start around the start of July and will target sales and other departments.
Joe Getty
Is it because of the two letter menace?
Jack Armstrong
Indirectly, they're continuing their costly push into.
Joe Getty
A two letter menace. I'm talking about, of course is, oh, I was Talking about vd.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, no, no.
Joe Getty
So much venereal disease that they had to let people go.
Jack Armstrong
Stop it. Stop it. So, latest round of layoffs come on top of the roughly 6,000 roles the company eliminated in May across product and software developer roles around the world. And more to come. Companies ranging from retail to pharmaceuticals have been drawing up plans to consolidate positions, looking to do more with leaner staffs and relying on technology for additional tasks. Wow. Including Amazon got a fair amount of attention. I want to come back to them in a minute.
Joe Getty
When does this, when does this like, really, really start to hit? Is like, I mean, we got a war thing going on right now.
Jack Armstrong
So.
Joe Getty
Obscures a lot of news. But when does this really start to hit? Is like a. The drip, drip, drip really starts to get to people. When you're constantly hearing about big companies eliminating thousands of positions because of AI. Like, it could be later this summer, this fall.
Jack Armstrong
I was going to say 2026 or 2027. If I had 2028 in a pool, I'd be pretty convinced I was going to miss out on the money. But, you know, certainly could be completely wrong. Another headline, this one from the Wall Street Journal. Many. I'm sorry, more of us are putting in extra hours after the workday employees days are bleeding into the evening data.
Joe Getty
Shows I am not.
Jack Armstrong
Thanks to a growing load of meetings, emails and yes, actual work. It's easy to imagine. I think a lot of us do that. We do that. I get that you're, you're making light as you're making your wacky little joke.
Joe Getty
That's what you think.
Jack Armstrong
But anyway, according to Microsoft, which apparently still has a few people to analyze this data because they can see when people log on all of the Microsoft products.
Joe Getty
Right?
Jack Armstrong
And they say the number of people logging on after 8pm over the 12 months through February were up 16% from the year before.
Joe Getty
Huh. So people have more work to do or they're more worried about getting replaced by AI. Or what's, what's, what's going on?
Jack Armstrong
Yes, I would say yes to both. And, and they've also. Now two people are doing the jobs of three, or one is doing the job of two, or one is doing the job of four, depending on industry you're in.
Joe Getty
No kidding.
Jack Armstrong
In a similar vein, Americans, by the.
Joe Getty
Way, and poorly, by the way, because it is. It's a physical Newtonian impossibility for one person to now be doing three people's jobs and do them as well. So poorly is how they get done.
Jack Armstrong
Unless you're Some like state government agency where everybody's lazy and doesn't do any work. Not only one chimp could do the job of four people.
Joe Getty
Talking about the real world, not the chimp world.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, yeah. Americans are side hustling like we're in a recession. Goes another story. The two job trend these days is about necessity not pursuing a passion. The share of working Americans holding down multiple jobs rose to around 5.4% during the first five months of the year. We haven't seen that since the great crash of 0809 according to the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Hmm.
Joe Getty
Well that probably is. You know what follows the news that we had last year in the last six months that people have maxed out their credit cards. You max out your credit cards and then you go get a side job to try to catch up, pick up.
Jack Armstrong
A shift 7 11. Yeah. Holding one job at a time is on the way to becoming antiquated or a luxury for emerging generations. I think part of this is just that they're younger but because it's funny, I hadn't thought about this for years and years and years, but we both have had side hustles. Early in our radio career.
Joe Getty
When I was 23, shortly after I got out of college, I had three jobs.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, yeah, I did all sorts of stuff anyway. Roughly 4 in 10 millennials and gen zers have side jobs, according to new research by Deloitte. Again, I don't know, I mean the rate has increased a little bit actually.
Joe Getty
When you and I started working together when we were 25. Good Lord.
Jack Armstrong
I had such beautiful dreams, Katie. I had such aspirations and here I sit.
Mark Wayne Mullen
You both had great hair.
Joe Getty
30 I never even did. Then 35 years later we're still stuck. But I had a side job then and kept it. I was working on weekends at a country bar DJing because it paid really well and you know, why not? So yeah, it's not crazy to have a side job. Especially pre kids.
Jack Armstrong
I have just an only fans.
Joe Getty
Right. Michael's on foot finder.
Jack Armstrong
It's tasteful stuff. Just feet feed erotica. Yeah, it's very nice. I had a club DJing job as well, except it was an oldies club and they would yell at me all the time because I like the music from the 70s a lot better than like the 50s and 60s doo wop stuff. And I played two much of that. So yeah. Oh well. Not cut out for the gig. The biggest companies across America are cutting their workforces. That's another article. Yeah, that's plenty of that. And Then the real message. Andy Jassy, the Amazon chief, the real message he's sending to employees on AI. Amazon chief Andy Jassy had a chilling message for employees this week. AI is coming for your jobs. But things at Amazon are more nuanced than that. Writes Dan Gallagher in the Wall Street Journal. The company is unique among its big tech peers. Amazon's business model requires a huge number of warehouse workers and delivery drivers. Company reported 1.56 million full time employees in its last quarterly filing. Nearly seven times the total of the next largest mega cap tech giant. You know, it's kind of obvious, but I hadn't really thought about that, that Amazon among the tech giants has seven times the number of employees of the other tech giants.
Joe Getty
Yeah, that should be pointed out more often as opposed to lumping them all together.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, that's actually up 43% from three years ago. Blah, blah. It's also the lowest of that efficiency measure of any tech company producing more than $100 billion in sales. That's revenue per employee. So Jassy's memo likely has the aim. More tech leaders are propagating the view that job security in the age of AI means learning to use it fast. Said Nvidia's chief executive quote, you're not going to lose your job to an AI, but you're going to lose your job to somebody who uses AI.
Joe Getty
Well, that's, that's a good thing to know, man. I had my greatest chat GPT experience yesterday. I'm looking at buying a bicycle, like a good bike for, for exercise. And I was comparing two different gear changing systems on two different used bike size. Looking at, and I just, I just thought, I just thought it can't do this. This is too complicated and too obscure. But I just put in there this set of letters and numbers versus this set of letters, letters and numbers for expensive gear setting chain systems for bicycles. And it printed, it gave me back in a second like a rundown from all the top cycling magazines, benefits, pros, cons, how hard to work on, what kind of riding you do and everything. It was amazing. I mean it was absolutely amazing. Something that Google could have never, ever done. And it did it instantly. And it would have taken me hours to come up with that on my own, if it was even possible.
Jack Armstrong
Right? Yeah.
Joe Getty
And you can do that all the time with, with anything. And so yes, it's going to eliminate a lot of jobs.
Jack Armstrong
So one final note from Mr. Jassy there at Amazon, he echoed that belief in a memo to workers this week. Imploring them to, quote, be curious about AI. Those who do, quote, will be well positioned to have high impact and help us reinvent the company, he wrote.
Joe Getty
Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
By effectively threatening a pink slip to those who don't, Jassy at least guaranteed that the AI workshops in Amazon's offices will be. Humm.
Joe Getty
Yeah. I think at the very least if you mess around with it like we have, like what I did last night, you realize, okay, it can do this sort of thing and, and if I did that sort of thing, I'd realize my, I'm gonna, I'm gonna lose that. You know, it would help you better prepare for what's coming as opposed to, you know, you're just gonna ignore it and hope for the best.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. I remember in my early days of employment, Gladys, there I was a fresh faced boy, great hair. As Katie helpfully pointed out, I didn't.
Joe Getty
Have great hair even when I was.
Jack Armstrong
Younger working at an ad agency. And the art director, who is just a gifted artist, oh my God, he was so good. He recognized computer graphics and computer art coming on the scene and he did not whine, he did not moan, he did not drink himself to death. He dove into it. He just became an enthusiast. He's not going to lose his job to computer graphics. He's going to lose his job to somebody who's good at computer graphics. So maybe that's the way to approach it.
Joe Getty
Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
Unless you're an accountant, like a low level accountant, you're just going to lose your job day. Yeah.
Joe Getty
Nobody's going to need you ever again for anything.
Jack Armstrong
Even in your nobody likes you either. You're a bad person. No. Too far. I'm sorry, that was too much. Too much.
Joe Getty
Okay, stay with us.
Jack Armstrong
Armstrong and Getty.
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J.R. Martinez
Honor is the highest military decoration in the United States. Recipients have done the improbable, showing immense bravery and sacrifice in the name of something much bigger than themselves.
Unknown Voice
This medal is for the men who went down that day. It's for the families of those who didn't make it.
J.R. Martinez
I'm J.R. martinez. I'm a U.S. army veteran myself and I'm honored to tell you the stories of these heroes on the new season of Medal of Stories of Courage from Pushkin Industries and I Heart podcast from Robert Blake, the first black sailor to be awarded the medal to Daniel Daly, one of only 19 people to have received the Medal of Honor twice. These are stories about people who have distinguished themselves by acts of valor going above and beyond the call of duty. You'll hear about what they did, what it meant, and what their stories tell us about the nature of courage and sacrifice. Listen to Medal of Honor on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Unknown Host
Did you guys see this? Several states just sued the company 23andMe to challenge its sale of more than 15 million DNA profiles. The profiles even include some people in the news and you could tell why they don't want the info getting out. California Governor Gavin Newsom is 40% German and 60% Golden Bachelor. Up next, President Trump is 1% Irish and 99% McRib. And finally, Elon Musk, 100% is the father.
Unknown Voice
There you go.
Joe Getty
That was a pretty good premise. That was pretty good premise for a comedy bit. Comedy routine. My son and I are going to go to the Dodgers game at Dodger Stadium tomorrow night. And so I was buying tickets on StubHub and a parking pass thing came up. I'm working my way toward the Lakers because the same guy that owns the Dodgers now owns the Lakers and one of the biggest deals ever. More on that in a second. But parking pass, do you spend $76 from pretty close parking pass, which they call the best value on stubbo. But $76 is a lot. Yeah. Or do you spend $19 which is the cheapest parking pass. But it's a 35 minute walk. 35 minutes is quite a walk. Perfect weather. I could use the exercise. As you can tell by looking at me.
Jack Armstrong
Katie. Yeah, that's.
Joe Getty
Well, you walk.
Jack Armstrong
Go ahead, Katie.
Mark Wayne Mullen
I vote for the walk.
Richard Karn
I don't mind the walk.
Mark Wayne Mullen
A mile and a half.
Joe Getty
I don't mind the walk there. I'm just thinking about the walk back after I've had three chili cheese dogs and a churro and a milkshake.
Jack Armstrong
Those are the denizens of the night are about.
Mark Wayne Mullen
The guys with the bicycles and the little carriages will be out. You can take one of those back to the car.
Joe Getty
That's not a bad idea. Yeah, I'll go with the cheapest. Always best to go with the cheapest. Anyway, the same guy owns a Dodgers now owns the Lakers, right?
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. 10 billion. He was a longtime minority owner of the Lakers but he bought it from the Buss family for a little over $10 billion, making it the richest deal in sports history.
Joe Getty
$10 billion.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah.
Joe Getty
He owns a whole bunch of different teams. A long list of teams. I don't even know some of the sports involved.
Jack Armstrong
Oh yeah, yeah. Let's see. He owns the. The Dodgers and the LA WNBA team. Co owner of Chelsea in the English Premier Soccer League.
Joe Getty
Okay, that's.
Jack Armstrong
And also co owner of the newly formed Cadillac Formula One team.
Joe Getty
Oh, okay. That's car racing. There you go.
Jack Armstrong
Really into the sports. I told Judy yesterday at dinner I saw this headline said should have saved all our money and bought a sports franchise. But you would have said no. You buy a house.
Joe Getty
Ownership matters in sports. Anybody who is a fan of a team that never seems to win. So I wonder what this guy's dedication to. I mean we've seen his dedication with the Dodgers to putting together a team that wins it all. Is he going to do the same thing with the NBA where you just throw pretty much unlimited money at the idea of let's have all the best players and freaking win this thing.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, I wonder that's. Many have tried that in basketball. Sometimes it works, sometimes it doesn't.
Joe Getty
Right.
Jack Armstrong
Having an all star team, essentially. I suspect he'll give it a try. Yeah, give it a good try. In other Los Angeles news there's quite a piece in the Wall Street Journal about how filmmaking is pretty much in everywhere but Hollywood. It's a smallish minority of production, sound, recording. Anything that actually happens in the LA area. It's just too, too expensive. If LA county were a country, its economy would be among the world's 20 largest.
Joe Getty
Wow.
Jack Armstrong
Just LA county, but that economy is ailing. Payroll employment is 1% lower at the end of this year than 2019. It's up 5% for the country as a whole.
Joe Getty
We do a lot of segments and hours. If you miss any of it, get the podcast Armstrong and Getty on Demand.
J.R. Martinez
Armstrong and Getty the Medal of Honor is the highest military decoration in the United States. Recipients have done the improbable, the unexpected, showing immense bravery and sacrifice in the name of something much bigger than themselves.
Unknown Voice
This medal is for the man who went down that day.
J.R. Martinez
A Medal of Honor. Stories of Courage. You'll hear about these heroes and what their stories tell us about the nature of bravery. Listen to Medal of Honor on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get your podcast.
Unknown Host
This is an iHeart podcast.
Armstrong & Getty On Demand: "A Chimp With A Loaded Revolver" – Detailed Summary
Release Date: June 19, 2025
In the episode titled "A Chimp With A Loaded Revolver," hosts Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty delve into a range of pressing topics, from international politics and technological advancements to economic trends and peculiar local news. This summary captures the essence of their discussions, highlighting key insights and notable quotes with corresponding timestamps.
Discussion Overview: Jack and Joe initiate their conversation by addressing former President Donald Trump's comments on the Iran nuclear deal. They explore the ongoing tensions surrounding Iran's pursuit of nuclear capabilities and the potential actions the U.S. and Israel might take to counteract it.
Key Points:
Trump's Position: Trump criticizes past negotiations, expressing regret that a deal wasn't reached to prevent Iran from acquiring nuclear weapons. He hints at possible meetings and interventions, although it's uncertain.
Israel's Involvement: The hosts emphasize Israel's proactive role in identifying Iranian nuclear facilities and key personnel, suggesting that Israel has been actively working to impede Iran's nuclear advancements.
Notable Quotes:
Jack Armstrong [02:49]: “Iran cannot have a nuclear weapon. Here's a little more Trump, Mr. President, on Iran.”
Joe Getty [05:30]: “...they are very close to it.”
Mark Wayne Mullen [10:28]: “...they are very close to it.”
Discussion Overview: The conversation shifts to the implications of advanced technologies, such as drones and AI, in modern warfare and intelligence operations. The hosts debate the ethical and strategic ramifications of these technologies being accessible to more nations.
Key Points:
Drone Warfare: The ease with which drones can be used to target individuals raises concerns about potential abuses and the escalation of covert assassinations.
AI as a Double-Edged Sword: While AI offers significant advancements, it also poses risks akin to “handing a chimp a loaded revolver,” highlighting the potential for unintended and disastrous consequences.
Notable Quotes:
Jack Armstrong [07:53]: “Every day I'm reconvinced that the Internet and AI is like handing a chimp a loaded revolver.”
Joe Getty [08:17]: “That seems like a bad idea.”
Discussion Overview: Armstrong and Getty delve into the transformative impact of AI on the job market. They examine statements from industry leaders, such as Amazon's Andy Jassy, and discuss how AI is reshaping employment across various sectors.
Key Points:
Amazon's Approach: Andy Jassy warns employees that AI could replace their jobs unless they adapt by embracing and utilizing AI technologies effectively.
Personal Experiences with AI: Joe shares his positive encounter with ChatGPT, underscoring AI's potential to enhance productivity but also hinting at its role in automating tasks that were once human-dependent.
Future Projections: The hosts predict significant job displacement due to AI, emphasizing the necessity for workers to acquire new skills to stay relevant in the evolving job landscape.
Notable Quotes:
Andy Jassy [34:12]: “Be curious about AI. Those who do will be well positioned to have high impact and help us reinvent the company.”
Joe Getty [34:12]: “It's going to eliminate a lot of jobs.”
Discussion Overview: The hosts address the wave of layoffs sweeping through major companies and the increasing necessity for individuals to adopt side hustles. They analyze the factors driving these economic shifts and their implications for the average worker.
Key Points:
Corporate Layoffs: Companies like Microsoft and Amazon are reducing their workforce in response to technological advancements and economic pressures.
Side Hustles Becoming Normative: With job security diminishing, more Americans are taking on multiple jobs to compensate for financial strains, a trend reminiscent of post-2008 economic behaviors.
Generational Shifts: Younger generations, including Millennials and Gen Z, are more likely to engage in side jobs, not just for additional income but also as a response to a volatile job market.
Notable Quotes:
Joe Getty [27:15]: “I kind of feel like...there is no disagreement anywhere in the world that Iran is trying to get a nuclear weapon and going as fast as they can.”
Jack Armstrong [30:02]: “Americans are side hustling like we're in a recession.”
Discussion Overview: Transitioning to lighter topics, Armstrong and Getty discuss the acquisition of major sports franchises, highlighting the record-breaking purchase of the Los Angeles Lakers by a prominent businessman.
Key Points:
Record-Breaking Deal: The buyer paid over $10 billion for the Lakers, marking it as the richest deal in sports history.
Impact on Team Dynamics: The hosts speculate on how such significant investment might influence the team's performance and management strategies.
Notable Quotes:
Jack Armstrong [41:16]: “It was a longtime minority owner of the Lakers but he bought it from the Buss family for a little over $10 billion.”
Joe Getty [41:59]: “Ownership matters in sports.”
Discussion Overview: In a departure from their usual topics, the hosts recount a peculiar local news story involving a woman holding a wedding ceremony without her fiancé's knowledge or presence, leading to felony stalking charges.
Key Points:
Case Details: A woman in Beverly Hills, Texas, orchestrated a wedding ceremony for her ex-boyfriend without his consent, resulting in legal repercussions.
Legal Implications: The incident raises questions about the legality of such ceremonies and the responsibilities of officiants in verifying the presence and consent of all parties involved.
Notable Quotes:
Jack Armstrong [23:21]: “A 36-year-old woman is being held on felony stalking charges in a bizarre case.”
Joe Getty [25:14]: “What does that mean?”
Miscellaneous Topics: Towards the episode's end, the hosts touch upon various other subjects, including the challenges of filmmaking in Los Angeles and the economic downturn of the region despite its significant GDP.
Notable Quotes:
Jack Armstrong [42:26]: “If LA county were a country, its economy would be among the world's 20 largest.”
Joe Getty [35:14]: “...it's going to eliminate a lot of jobs.”
In "A Chimp With A Loaded Revolver," Armstrong and Getty provide a comprehensive analysis of current geopolitical tensions, the disruptive influence of artificial intelligence on the job market, and economic trends reshaping the workforce. Their discussion is punctuated with insightful quotes and real-world examples, offering listeners a nuanced understanding of these complex issues. Additionally, lighter segments on sports and unusual local news stories add variety to the episode, making it both informative and engaging for a diverse audience.
For those who missed any segments or wish to revisit the discussions in detail, the full episode is available on the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you access podcasts.