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Jack Armstrong
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Unknown
Now broadcasting live from the Abraham Lincoln Radio Studio at the George Washington Broadcast Center, Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty Armstrong.
Jack Armstrong
And G. And now he.
Unknown
Welcome to a replay of the Armstrong and Getty show. We are on vacation, but boy, do we have some good stuff for you.
Jack Armstrong
Yes, indeed we do. And if you want to catch up on your ang listening during your travels, remember, grab the podcast Armstrong and Yeti on demand. You ought to subscribe wherever you like to get podcasts. Now on with the infotainment.
Unknown
This is a cop attacked by a turkey. Quacks at it like a duck and calls it a chicken. Here we go.
Jack Armstrong
Chicken, chicken, chicken. What? What is quack, quack? Oh, come on.
Unknown
Quack, quack.
Jack Armstrong
Get back up, back up, back up. Somebody better come get it. Clap. Yeah, Back up. Yeah.
Joe Getty
Here's your stuff back.
Jack Armstrong
I'll be right back, ma' am. Give me a second. So far I'm getting.
Unknown
I feel like it. I feel like.
Jack Armstrong
I can't believe this is happening. All the places you can come.
Unknown
I feel like it lived up to its explanation. That was a cop attacked by a turkey, quacking at it and calling it a chicken.
Jack Armstrong
Bro, put the turkey back. You.
Unknown
Need to spend a little more time at a navy area or something.
Jack Armstrong
Well, he's taunting the bird. That can't help. You know what? Good cop tries to de escalate. Our beloved newsman of the past, Marshall Phillips, would occasionally be confronted by aggressive turkeys during hot, hot turkey lovin season, which we are in.
Unknown
We have more turkeys in my neighborhood. I gotta believe I got more turkeys around me than anybody listening in America. It's shocking how many turkeys are in my neighborhood. The big giant wild turkeys. They're huge, for one thing. Absolutely gigantic.
Jack Armstrong
And mean as hell during hot, hot, sexy turkey time.
Unknown
When I drive home today, there will be six of them sitting on my roof, guaranteed.
Jack Armstrong
On your roof.
Unknown
Eight more in the backyard. They're all over the place.
Jack Armstrong
Wow.
Unknown
They don't cause any problems. Sometimes they're a little loud. They get into it, but okay, so I gotta handle this very delicately.
Jack Armstrong
Okay.
Unknown
I want to handle it delicately for this very nice mom who sent us.
Jack Armstrong
A text, I will switch into delicate mode on your advice.
Unknown
Combined with harsh mode I think is necessary. So this, this. Well, this is why we can't have nice things. As the cliche goes. This is why demagoguing issues in politics works, I guess. So in hour three, if you didn't hear it, get the podcast. Armstrong and Yeti on demand. Joe got into the whole big beautiful Bill Medicaid thing. We're getting ripped off like crazy with Medicaid. We're going to get into more of it tomorrow with Craig Gotwells, who's an expert in this, but we're getting ripped off like crazy. All kinds of healthy people, you're paying for their health care and. And other stuff for. For no good reason whatsoever other than that nobody keeps track of this sort of thing.
Jack Armstrong
And because it buys votes, that's. That's like, the entire reason you're paying for it.
Unknown
And Phil Graham, former senator from. From Texas, from back in the day, tried to run for president once, but he's way too smart to be president. Has a PhD in economics, wrote a piece about how, no, this is where the money is. You talk about Social Security, you know, and cutbacks and everything. Like, no, the money where we need to do something is in Medicaid. So we get this text, hey, I have a daughter who's disabled and on Medicaid and Social Security. And I get that you guys are trying to get people riled up and listening to your show, and I'm a strong Republican, but what you're missing is. And then she lays out the story of how her disabled daughter can't take care of herself at all. Never will be able to in her life. Unbelievable. What you're dealing with, I can't even imagine. And how she needs that money, and we don't have the courage to call her back and talk to her and get the facts on this story about her disabled daughter and how much she needs Medicaid.
Jack Armstrong
There will not be a single disabled person affected in any way by the proposed cuts. Not one.
Unknown
And there isn't a single person, us or anybody else arguing for someone like your daughter having their money cut.
Jack Armstrong
No, I would argue strenuously, 180 degrees in the other direction.
Unknown
This is why you demagogue these issues.
Jack Armstrong
Though, because even convinced her that, yes, her poor daughter and she will be left high and dry by the mean Republicans. That is 180 degrees opposite of the truth.
Unknown
You said they've convinced her. We convinced her. Even with you only talking about the scammers, right? Her takeaway was like, you and I are in favor of cutting her daughter's money. I mean, if that's the way it lands, no wonder politicians don't cometh on a hundred miles of even trying to stop the scumbag liars.
Jack Armstrong
Right? Yeah. It's unfortunate, isn't it?
Unknown
It is highly unfortunate. You could stand and we've seen this. We've been doing this for a long time. You can, as a politician, stand up in front of a crowd and say, look, Nobody here currently getting Social Security that's over the age of 65 will see any a dime of that cut in their lifetime. But. And then everything after the but gets portrayed as you as an old person are going to starve.
Jack Armstrong
Right. And it works.
Unknown
There's just no getting around it, apparently.
Jack Armstrong
Right. Right.
Unknown
Man, I feel for you, ma' am. What a rough situation you're in. Doing God's work, trying to deal with that. But nobody, us or anybody is suggesting cutting the program for people like your daughter. Nobody.
Jack Armstrong
Right.
Unknown
We would have more money for people like your daughter if the freaking healthy 28 year old dude playing video games and laughing at us wasn't getting all his stuff paid for.
Jack Armstrong
Right.
Unknown
I don't know what you do with the reality of this.
Jack Armstrong
I think if you were to sit down with Karl Rove and James Carville. I'm trying to be bipartisan.
Unknown
Maybe Donald Trump.
Jack Armstrong
Donald Trump. Charles Krauthammer, Jesus and John Wayne. They would.
Unknown
That's quite a crowd.
Jack Armstrong
They would say, Jackie boy, Joseph, here's the story. That's what politics is. Grow up. You always talk about trying to frighten or entice the herd in one direction or another as if you're too good and too smart for that. That's politics.
Unknown
I understand what you're saying. That they're politicians go out there and try to frighten you on this stuff. What I'm saying concerned about is we made it clear we weren't trying. We weren't claiming they're coming for your to take your disabled daughter's Medicare. Politicians will say that sort of stuff. Medicaid.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah.
Unknown
We weren't, we were saying the opposite and it still landed as if we were. That's what troubles me.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. I think that's squarely in the department of things. I can't do anything about. It's, it's striking. I, I totally get your being troubled by that.
Unknown
Like I said, if you're a politician, you get up on stage and make it clear that I'm not interested in cutting your Social Security. But people walk out of the room thinking they're going to take my Social Security.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah.
Unknown
Well then we're done here then, I guess.
Jack Armstrong
Yes. Correct. This doesn't work as a, as a country even. Yes.
Unknown
Or as a system of government people. Well, self governance doesn't work. That's my point.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. Well, the great Scottish philosopher. What's his face with the, you know, the republic will last only until the populace realizes they can vote themselves money from the treasury and, and what he didn't suspect is that. Or maybe he did was that there that politicians would be able to convince virtually all of the population that any effort to rein that in was indeed an attack on them and their well being. So yeah, it just. It doesn't work. The great, you know, overarching Jogeti principle there are actually several of them, many of them contradict each other is that all systems can last only until those who had game the system win over those who would protect the system. And it's like, you know, the constant battle between hackers and cybersecurity experts. There comes a point in a like a governmental system where a combination of manipulating the voters and then manipulating the systems behind the scenes becomes so sophisticated that the like immune system of a democracy is insufficient. It's like a septic infection in the bloodstream. So monarchy now. I don't know. I'm old. Y' all figured out. Good luck.
Unknown
If you're old already, nobody is gonna touch your Social Security, period. No, if you are actually disabled, nobody's gonna take your money, period.
Jack Armstrong
Nobody wants to.
Unknown
Nobody's even suggested it.
Jack Armstrong
Right? And yet it is the easiest sell in the world. If any Republicans say we're going to rein in Medicaid waste, fraud and abuse, they're going to come take the money out of the mouths of your disabled children. And people believe them. So what are you going to do? I'm in an accepting mood today. I have accepted it probably because I'm excited about my new political partner party, the F y' all Ikins.
Unknown
You gotta have AI design a logo because that's a good. I like the FE All.
Jack Armstrong
Capital F. Yeah, capital Y apostrophe A L, L dash I dash cans F y' all agains.
Unknown
I like it.
Jack Armstrong
We need an animal though. Maybe the turkey, the donkey and the elephant are taken clearly. Maybe we have the turkey. As heard in a previous clip, which.
Unknown
Ben Franklin wanted to be our national bird.
Jack Armstrong
So enough politics. I've got a couple of stories about business, about personal wealth, that sort of thing. Number one. So you're a crypto zillionaire. I'd start carrying a gun, hiding a guard and keeping your fingers hidden. Secondly.
Unknown
Yipes.
Jack Armstrong
Who's making the real money? What's the way to wealth? Become one of the stealthy wealthy.
Unknown
The stealthy wealthy.
Jack Armstrong
It's doable. And better yet, it rhymes.
Unknown
I also, I watched the Minecraft movie with Henry over the weekend. I want to talk about it. Yeah, I want to talk about a couple notable things that I think might be the Future of motion pictures. Jack Black is so fat and greasy and doesn't care. That's what's interesting about him. He's got to be one of the biggest movie stars in the world. Very, very big in terms of making money.
Jack Armstrong
Seems to be unbathed.
Unknown
He does not care at all. I think he just shows up to he. He doesn't care how he looks at all. Doesn't comb his hair. He doesn't find a shirt that fits. He doesn't wash his face.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, it's weird.
Unknown
Anyway, more on that later. Stay here.
Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty. The Armstrong and Getty Show. Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty. The Armstrong and Getty Show.
Joe Getty
Multiple cameras rolling as a ship strikes the Brooklyn Bridge.
Unknown
Why is the Mexican navy attacking our bridges and why have we not fired back?
Jack Armstrong
Well, they're not very good at it. Great Scott. Anybody who's seen the video? Man, I just saw one from a different angle. Oh, grizzly. There are a bunch of guys, Mexican sailors up in the riggings that got knocked down when they hit the Brooklyn Bridge. Oy, they.
Unknown
So it was a really tall ship. So as they were heading toward it, weren't there people? Weren't there. Weren't the people up there saying, well.
Jack Armstrong
That looks like that's about eye level. I'm getting held down. I don't care if I got ordered to or not.
Unknown
Have we thought this through? Because that looks like we're not gonna fit under there.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, I think they lost power or something like that. I've just heard sketchy reports. There's a lot like when that cargo ship bashed into the the bridge in Baltimore.
Unknown
Speaking of boats, are you familiar with the premise of the television show Gilligan's island from the 60s? Because some of you might not be. There's a bunch of helpfully laid out.
Jack Armstrong
In the theme song every week. If you needed a reminder back in.
Unknown
The old days, they would say, I.
Jack Armstrong
Don'T remember why these people were on that. What circumstances caused them to be so stranded.
Unknown
Just sit right back and you'll hear a tale. Back in the old days, they would lay out the premise of the show every week in the song for you. That was very, very handy. You take the take, you good, you take the bad. The facts of life. Whatever the show was, they would tell you.
Jack Armstrong
But anyway, here's the story of a man named Brady.
Unknown
Exactly. But so you got. You got this boat that ran into an island and they got stuck there. And the whole show is about. They're stuck on this island and Dealing with each other and, and, and you.
Jack Armstrong
Got cannibals and disconcertingly ineffective efforts to leave.
Unknown
Anyway, I thought this was really good. From James Lindsay, who were big intellectual fans of on Twitter. He said, I think we often overestimate how much worse some things are now than they were in the past. And he linked this story about Gilligan's island, which says at the height of Gilligan's island popularity, which was 1966, the US Coast Guard received 2,500 letters a week asking why the castaways hadn't been rescued yet. Oh, wow. With James Lindsay's point being, see, we've always been a bunch of morons or had a lot of morons.
Jack Armstrong
I've got to take a moment to absorb that. Yeah. And I assume the they mean sincere letters, not like trolling by mail.
Unknown
I don't think trolling was a thing back then. Certainly you wouldn't take the time by mail.
Jack Armstrong
2500 a week.
Unknown
A week. Asking the Coast Guard why they hadn't rescued Gilligan, the skipper. And well, in particular, if I'm a Coast Guard male, a young 22 year old, the Coast Guard. I'm. I'm rescuing Marianne and Ginger right off the bat.
Jack Armstrong
Sure. Women and children first.
Unknown
Or is that guy from that 70? What's that? That Twitter feed? Everybody likes the 70s something.
Jack Armstrong
Oh, oh, Super 70 sports. Yeah.
Unknown
He said, as you get older, you look at Mrs. Howell and realize there's a third viable option on that alley.
Jack Armstrong
She was a. An attractive woman. Yeah, absolutely.
Unknown
Yeah, exactly.
Jack Armstrong
Well, so many questions. How is the skipper still obese after being stranded at an island for years? What's going on there? Metabolism problem.
Unknown
But.
Jack Armstrong
So he did some wegovy.
Unknown
The ultimate point being, and I think James Lindsay makes a good point, we do overestimate the. The percentage of people that are dumb or don't pay attention or whatever. Well, it's not like Everybody in the 60s or the 1850s or whenever we're.
Jack Armstrong
Lear Latin and studying the Constitution like Thomas Jefferson. Yeah, right, right. Yeah. Yeah. So true.
Unknown
Dear Coast Guard, why haven't you rescued Gilligan?
Jack Armstrong
Signed poor people are desperate and desperately incompetent. They can't even build a raft.
Unknown
What is my tax money going? So you thought every TV show you were watching was a reality show in.
Jack Armstrong
The 60s and they didn't like ask, why don't the camera people rescue them? That didn't even occur to them. No kidding. Boy, that is really dumb.
Unknown
Or the orchestra playing the music when you come back from commercials. They could have Helped, couldn't they?
Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty. The Armstrong and Getty Show.
My son got so excited the other day. Our Omaha Steaks package arrived at the front door. He said yes, he knows. He knows. He knows the burgers, he knows the steaks. He's, he's really amped up for this weekend.
Jack Armstrong
And so appropriate to talk about fathers and sons and daughters because Father's Day is coming up. I know my dad absolutely loves the Omaha Steaks packages we send every year because he doesn't need stuff. He needs Deliciousness grilling deliciousness.
Unknown
Shop Omaha steaks.com and give dad the legendary heartland quality he deserves. Plus, our listeners get an extra $35 off with the promo code Armstrong at checkout.
Jack Armstrong
I am not ashamed to tell you I'm a steak snob. I don't eat bad steak. And Omaha Steaks quality is fantast. And I mean, gosh, it's more than steaks, it's incredible burgers, these gourmet hot dogs, the apple tartlets. Oh, I love them so much.
Unknown
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Hey, we're Armstrong and Getty and I don't know if you know about Shopify. You do, actually. If you've ever used our store like Armstrong and Getty T shirts and stuff like that, that's because of Shopify that we have that website. They're the platform so we can just concentrate on the funny t shirts.
Jack Armstrong
Starting your own business is intimidating, can be lonely because you have to wear so many hats. Shopify is there for you as a business partner to get you started. So helpful.
Unknown
Yeah, Shopify is packed with helpful AI tools that write product descriptions, page headlines, they even enhance your product photography.
Jack Armstrong
And Shopify is the commerce platform behind millions of businesses around the world and 10% of all e commerce in the US from household names like Mattel and Gymshark to brands just getting started.
Unknown
Yeah, you can get the word out about your product like you've got a giant marketing team behind you and it's Shopify.
Jack Armstrong
Turn your big business idea into With Shopify on your side, sign up for your $1 per month trial and start selling today at shopify.com armstrong go to shopify.com armstrong wasn't that delicious? So good. Your bill ladies.
Unknown
I got it.
Jack Armstrong
No, I got it.
Joe Getty
Seriously, I insist. I insisted first.
Unknown
Oh, don't be silly.
Jack Armstrong
You don't be silly.
Unknown
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Jack Armstrong
Okay. Rock paper scissors for it. Rock, paper scissors, shoot.
Unknown
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Jenny Garth
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Unknown
The Armstrong and Getty Show Joanna Stern.
Jack Armstrong
Writes about tech for the Wall Street Journal. She's very clever, as you're about to hear, and sounds down to earth, and I enjoy her writing. The opening bit of this article tells it all. I've been wearing a wire everywhere since February. I've got all the transcripts, important meetings, arguments with my kids, chats with disgruntled employees, late night bathroom routines. There's plenty more that I can't share if I want you to keep liking me. She has been willingly wearing a $50 B Pioneer bracelet that records everything she says and uses AI to summarize her life and send her helpful reminders. Getting back to the Article. I also tested two similar gadgets, the $199 limitless pendant and the $159 plaud note pin. These assistants every dumb, private and cringeworthy thing that came out of my mouth. Is this the dawn of the AI surveillance state? Absolutely. Is it also the dream of hyper personal, all knowing AI assistance coming to life also? Yes, absolutely.
Unknown
Yeah. It's funny, the first thing I thought of was and usually I'm, I'm my first go to is surveillance state. But my first thought was wow. If I had AI reminding me, hey, remember you're going to work on that getting your real id. The deadline's coming up. I would love that.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, and I was just going to say if y' all are sitting there thinking what the hell good with this. To me she gets to that and it's pretty cool. Let me read more of her piece. Within hours of wearing the Bee again, one of the three devices she tried, I was blown away at how quickly it turned ramblings and random chatter into useful, actionable information. Yet allow me to quote myself from February 24th at 5:15pm wow. Quote this bracelet is really effing creepy. So here's how they work. And she mentions that all the denials we've heard through the years that social media apps are secretly listening to us too hard, too intensive, too much data, blah, blah. Yeah please. But all those devices do that. They detect dialogue, especially your voice, and they stream the audio to your phone via Bluetooth, then to company servers where it's transcribed. AI models take the transcription and generate summaries which appear in the apps within minutes. Now, one of the devices does not save the audio, all it has is the transcriptions. The other one, limitless, keeps the audio letting you play back full recordings of everything you've said. Boy, oh boy, oh boy.
Unknown
But it's a little weird for us because I have full recordings of what I say four hours a day, five days a week, the past 30 years, but so it's not as foreign to me, but why that'd be something.
Jack Armstrong
But you and I also have a heightened awareness of the difference between when the mics are on and when they're not true. And more than one good career has been ended because a mic was on, somebody thought it was not.
Unknown
I've had a few disagreements.
Jack Armstrong
Dodge that bullet a couple of times ourselves.
Unknown
Yeah, I've had a few disagreements in my my life like minor to major, where it would have been kind of handy to be able to go back and say I'm pretty Sure. You didn't mention that to me. And they said, yeah, I did.
Jack Armstrong
It's like those great commercials. Who is it? An insurance commercial guy? I can't remember. Let's go to the tape. And they go under the hood.
Unknown
Right? Right.
Jack Armstrong
Like NFL referees. Yes. Yes.
Unknown
Katie, I. I'm just thinking this sounds like a wife's dream. The amount of times I'm like, I.
Jack Armstrong
Told you we have dinner tonight at 5. No, you didn't.
Unknown
O.
Jack Armstrong
Go to the tape. Let's go to the tape, sir.
Unknown
Oh, that's fantastic.
Jack Armstrong
Then she gets into some of the technical ups and downs. And Katie, we'd love to have you comment on this to your heart's content, but. And she gets into how AI Is nothing without data. It needs data. So when you feed it everything you've said for days, weeks and months, it gets infinitely more useful. Also, yes, it becomes a lot more like a Black Mirror episode, but we'll get into that. She writes with massive transcripts of your life. The AI in these apps can summarize. They recap your conversations, often reading, like, a bad biography. This is great. The B Device summary from April 9, Joanna's Day, was a blend of familiar responsibilities and intense professional engagements. She ended the day listening to music by Sting. Riveting stuff. Can't wait for the movie adaptation. Wow.
Unknown
There'd be some days. Excuse me. There'd be some days where you'd be a little disappointed. In the summary, you worked, you came home, you scrolled through Twitter, you ate crap and went to bed.
Jack Armstrong
Mind your own business, AI Jack has.
Unknown
Eaten his 27th double quarter pounder in this week. Yeah. Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
Thanks for keeping track. Yeah, who's counting? I am. The transcriptions themselves aren't all that accurate, but the summaries usually are. Well, except for March 24th. Conversation with Johnny Cochran about trial evidence. Yep, just a casual chat with a deceased celebrity lawyer. And she says in parentheses, I was watching the new OJ Documentary. That's funny. But, Jack, to your prescient point earlier, some of the ways that they're helpful is summarizing things and reminders. Turns out I promise to do a lot of things without putting them on a to do list. B listens for action items and adds them to suggested lists because they understand the verbiage in an action item. It's repeatedly reminded me of important tasks like calling the plumber or following up on work stuff. But it also hilariously adds things I'd never put on a list, like, quote, check in on your sick son or schedule a follow up with your hairstylist to discuss your haircut. Let's see, it analyzes.
Unknown
God, how great would that be? I'll bet this happens soon. And like a lot of things in life, we can't remember what it was like before it. Where. Where, you know, in 10 years would be. Remember when you. Like now, where I often think, you know, I go somewhere and I think, how did I used to get to places? I don't even remember how I used to get to places. Did I pull out a map or how did I even do it?
Jack Armstrong
Ask friendly strangers, right?
Unknown
Well, yeah, Sometimes you'd pull into a gas station and say, you know, I'm looking for the sporting goods store, which I know is around here somewhere, but I could see here in a couple of years would be like, do you remember when you used to have to remember things or write them down on a post it note instead of having AI tell me, remember, your son's got the volleyball game, so you got to pick him up from school early. That sort of.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, right. I can't be the only person assembled friends who is not great at making to do lists. And how many times have I said.
Unknown
Let me just think of it. Make to do list.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, I won't bother. I'll remember it. I'll remember to make to do lists. How many times have I said, when I think of it, I don't have time and when I have time, I don't think of it?
Unknown
Correct.
Jack Armstrong
Anyway, here's another thing. It does both Be and Limitless have chat bots you. So you can ask about your recorded life. I asked B for a detailed breakdown of my cursing habits. Daily average, 2.4. Curses, please. You're not even trying, sweetheart. But it can be.
Unknown
What are you, a nun?
Jack Armstrong
Yeah.
Unknown
2.4 a day.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. Well, it's impressive. Well, she has kids. Good for you. Yeah.
Unknown
Well, yeah. What? You're never in the car alone.
Jack Armstrong
Get out my blanking way. But then she says it can be genuinely helpful. Like, quote, look through my chats with Ethan from B and tell me what AI model it uses. So reminders of factual things you heard in a conversation that are a little fuzzy now.
Unknown
God, I'm starting to think I might. So all of this surveillance stuff we've all opted in, we've all decided we're going to carry around a tracking device with us all the time. And we all know that. We just feel like the advantages outweigh the possible disadvantages. I think this might end up being true. For recording everything, I say that the advantages Will outweigh the. You know how it could be misused. God, if you could quickly. You wouldn't even have to listen to the conversation. If AI could go back through the transcript and it would say, yeah, your wife did tell you that you had dinner tonight at 5. Crap. Or no, they didn't. It might be handy.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. I tell you, I would describe myself and again, I have a feeling I'm not unique in this is busy, well meaning and absent minded. And if my whatsits could say to me, hey, remember you agreed to play golf with Gordy tomorrow afternoon. I'd be like, oh shoot. Right. Because, you know, that's one of my great weaknesses.
Unknown
And you're built that way or you're not. It's so obvious because I got two kids that are completely different. I got one kid that's very close to me on terms of that stuff. Kind of like you just described my other kid. It just. It's just all locked in his brain all the time. He knows where everything is. He knows what's on the schedule today. He knows. It just. It's all there all the time. Yeah, but I can't. I can't try harder and be that way.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. One of the reasons my wife and I have escaped financial ruin and other bad fates is she's meticulous. And so, you know, when she like pays a bill late, it's alert the media, you know, it's just what. Anyway, how they're creepy. February 23, 5:15. In a conversation with my mom. This bracelet has nothing to do with fitness. It records everything that's being said as her mom was asking her. Nobody I talked to over the past few months would have known I was recording them if I hadn't told them. A little fun, like I'm a low budget Ethan Hunt. I don't. I don't get that reference, despite some sort of. Mostly, though, I just felt like a creep.
Unknown
Yeah.
Jack Armstrong
And depending on the state, I might have been breaking the law.
Unknown
Yeah. That's the other side of this, all that conversation stuff. Both ends of it should be as into it as maybe I would be because otherwise you're recording all your friends conversations. That's. And family. That's pretty dicey.
Jack Armstrong
And then some of these are just hilarious because they have transcripts and summaries. Right. Of your various conversations. This one's labeled Interaction with Pet Dog Browser. I think it's Bowser, but maybe it is browser. That's a very writer y thing to name your dog. Here's the transcript. Someone scolded browser for chewing something. Speaker 1 Browser. What are you doing? Speaker 1 Again. Can you not chew your. Whatever. Speaker 1 Again browser.
Unknown
Good transcripts.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. Oh, that is some useful stuff. Most of my recordings were in New Jersey and New York, which are one party consent states. And I'd agreed. But if I were in one of about a dozen states that require two party consent, I need permission from everyone in earshot or end up with a possible civil liability.
Unknown
Yeah, that's. I don't know how that's going to work. And states where you got to have two party consent.
Jack Armstrong
And then she quotes a lawyer, Jack, who surprisingly says, you better not. Which is what lawyers are paid to say. More specifically, he says, I would make sure everyone has consented verbally. And while the risk might be low, he adds, we would never recommend people take that risk.
Unknown
Well, geez, I mean, if somebody walks up to me and says I. I wear a device that records all of our conversations, just want to make sure that's okay with you. I'd be an automatic no, no, you're.
Jack Armstrong
F. All the way off. Exactly how far away can you get in the next 10 seconds? Get there.
Unknown
How does this benefit me in any way? There's only downside.
Jack Armstrong
So any thoughts, usefulness, hazards, etc, drop us a note. Mailbagarmstrong and getty.com we'll hit them around the same time tomorrow during the show.
Unknown
They kind of reminded me of stuff though, because it remembers what I said. That'd be cool.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, if they could refine it to promises and actions. And of course, you know, in the scenario we've, we've talked about a couple of times, it would have to be recording my wife saying, don't, don't forget we're having dinner with the Joneses next Tuesday.
Unknown
But it. Does it also record. Remember the other night when you said you'd blink my blank?
Jack Armstrong
Of course. It'd be good to have a transcript, honey. Right here in black and white.
Unknown
Right? Yeah. See, it's here.
Jack Armstrong
Not trying to be argumentative here, but read the transcript.
Unknown
8:17 on April 3rd. I mean, it's just, it's just a fact.
Armstrong and Getty.
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Jack Armstrong
Wasn't that delicious? So good. Your bill, ladies.
Unknown
I got it.
Jack Armstrong
No, I got it. Seriously, I insist.
Joe Getty
I insisted first.
Unknown
Don't be silly.
Jack Armstrong
You gonna be silly.
Unknown
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Jack Armstrong
Okay. Rock, paper, scissors for it. Rock, paper, scissors. Shoot.
Unknown
No.
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Joe Getty
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Unknown
The Armstrong and Getty.
Show, a shadowy network called 7764 whose goal is to spark violence and chaos around the world, in part by luring in unsuspecting teenagers. 764 targets kids on social media and gaming platforms, extorting them into sending violent and sexual content. The FBI is warning parents to pay attention to who their kids are talking to on social media and gaming platforms. The FBI is investigating more than 250 suspects tied to 764 with every field office involved. Well, that's just dandy. I am a parent of teenagers who'd never even heard of that in my life until two seconds ago, so that's just great. Let's just put that on the long list of things you can be concerned about if your kid's got a phone.
Jack Armstrong
Not so fast. There's more to be concerned about if your kid has a phone. I was just reading that the hacker ring that you may remember put Vegas out of commission. What was that, six years? Six months ago? A year ago. I don't know. Time flies when you're old. But they brought down all those casinos for a time. That is a very loosely assembled group of bored, malcontent, mischievous youngsters who call themselves the Khan or something like that. And this specific subgroup of the subgroup calls themselves Scattered Spider, I guess. And they just. They hack into various corporations and companies and government institutions and stuff like that for fun and misunderstanding. Jif. And sometimes they steal, but sometimes they just screw with it.
Unknown
That whole keep track of who your kids talk to on social media and everything like that sounded a lot easier before. Before my kids got old enough to be involved in that world. And as far as I can tell, I'm more strict than a lot of my son's friends parents are. And it's still. It's just. I mean, there's just so many opportunities for them to be involved with bad people. I mean, unless I'm going to be over his shoulder all the time, right?
Jack Armstrong
Yeah. I was a very big fan as a parent partly for that reason. And I completely support the idea of trying not to. Trying to eliminate opportunities to do bad things 100%. But I realized at one point what you're talking about. And so I just really emphasized the underlying principles behind doing some things and not doing some things and how extremely important they were to me as their dad and their mom, certainly. But how important and fundamental they are to being a good person and a bad person. And then when they're loose on the town and they're presented with temptation you hope and pray they make the right choice and. Or if they make the wrong choice, it's not a disaster. Right?
Unknown
Which has a lot to do with their friend group and everything else, which has always been true. But then the opportunity to get in trouble is exponentially greater now than it was 20 years ago. I mean, it's just a completely different world. You couldn't order heroin and a machine gun from any. Any tiny town in America when I was in high school or come across a, you know, an international pedophile sex ring. It just wasn't going to happen.
Jack Armstrong
Yeah, I know, I know. I was going to bring up a kind of vague philosophical theme about the modern world. Don't really have time to get into it now, but has to do. And I can't get into specifics in my little world, really. You'll have to forgive me for that for now. But a friend of mine characterized kind of a mood as the slime from the Ghostbusters movies. The. The original Ghostbuster, the early 80s classic. Early 80s. Like 83. When was that out?
Unknown
Something like.
Jack Armstrong
Anyway, you may recall that when all the ghosts were running wild in New York City, one of the things they did was like, spread this green slime around.
Unknown
I ain't afraid of no ghosts.
Jack Armstrong
The effect it had was not just, you know, green slime is effect enough. Ick. But. But it caused New Yorkers to be angry and disagreeable and turn on each other and. And we were discussing a very local context and also the angst and unhappiness of youth and the fact that incumbents all over the developed world are getting tossed out of office. And the parties that have been fairly stable and in power, you know, they switch places now and again, but they're just getting tossed aside. There is a near global feeling of angst and unhappiness that I don't ever recall before.
Unknown
True that.
Jack Armstrong
What do we do with this information? Do about it?
Unknown
We get used to it. Do we settle into some. Or. Or it just keeps getting worse.
Jack Armstrong
Buy heroin and machine guns on the Internet like you were discussing earlier, the.
Unknown
Armstrong and Getty Show? Get more Jack, more Joe podcasts and.
Joe Getty
Our hot links@armstrongandgetty.com for some of us, personal finances aren't just personal. They include a lot more people than ourselves. Loved ones, neighbors, the communities we call home, and the causes we hold in our hearts. At Thrivent, we help plan your financial picture with the bigger picture in mind. Because even though our business is helping guide your finances, our ambition is to make it mean so much more thrivent where money means more. Connect with us@thrivent.com.
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You're listening to an iHeart podcast.
Podcast Summary: Armstrong & Getty On Demand – The A&G Replay Friday Hour One
Release Date: May 23, 2025
Host/Author: iHeartPodcasts
In this engaging episode of The Armstrong & Getty Show, hosts Jack Armstrong and Joe Getty navigate through a diverse array of topics, seamlessly blending humor with insightful discussions on local wildlife antics, national policy debates, technological advancements, and pressing societal concerns. Skipping the usual advertisements and intros, the episode dives straight into content that both entertains and informs.
Timestamp: 03:26 – 05:20
The episode launches with a humorous recounting of an unusual incident involving a police officer being unexpectedly attacked by a turkey that quacks like a duck, leading to widespread confusion. Armstrong humorously narrates the scene, setting a light and amusing tone for the show.
Jack Armstrong (04:16):
"Bro, put the turkey back. You..."
The duo shares laughs over the absurdity of the situation, highlighting the unpredictable nature of wildlife interactions. This segment serves as a relatable and entertaining start, drawing listeners into the hosts' charismatic banter.
Timestamp: 05:20 – 13:24
Shifting from local humor to national issues, Armstrong and Getty delve into the contentious topic of Medicaid cuts. They discuss the implications of proposed budget reductions on vulnerable populations, particularly focusing on a caller’s distressing account of her disabled daughter who relies on Medicaid and Social Security.
Caller (06:16):
"I have a daughter who's disabled and on Medicaid and Social Security. And I get that you guys are trying to get people riled up and listening to your show, and I'm a strong Republican, but what you're missing is..."
Jack Armstrong (07:23):
"There will not be a single disabled person affected in any way by the proposed cuts. Not one."
Armstrong passionately counters misinformation, emphasizing that real people’s lives are at stake. Joe Getty (08:24) adds depth to the conversation by highlighting the disconnect between political rhetoric and the actual needs of the disabled community.
Joe Getty:
"What you're dealing with, I can't even imagine. And how she needs that money, and we don't have the courage to call her back and talk to her and get the facts on this story about her disabled daughter and how much she needs Medicaid."
The hosts critique the manipulative tactics often employed in politics, where fear is used to sway public opinion against essential programs. They advocate for informed discourse and policy-making that genuinely addresses inefficiencies without harming those in need.
Timestamp: 13:24 – 15:10
In a lighter segment, Armstrong and Getty pivot to discussions about personal wealth and business strategies. They humorously explore the concept of becoming "stealthily wealthy," advising crypto enthusiasts on the importance of protecting their fortunes in a digital age.
Jack Armstrong:
"If you're a crypto zillionaire, I'd start carrying a gun, hiding a guard and keeping your fingers hidden."
This playful exchange underscores the broader theme of financial security and the lengths one might go to safeguard their assets, blending humor with practical advice.
Timestamp: 16:36 – 19:37
The hosts reminisce about the classic TV show "Gilligan's Island," using it as a springboard to discuss public perceptions of intelligence and societal expectations. Referencing James Lindsay’s commentary, they examine how audiences in the 1960s sent thousands of letters questioning the lack of rescue for the stranded castaways.
Unknown Speaker:
"James Lindsay makes a good point, we do overestimate the percentage of people that are dumb or don't pay attention or whatever."
Armstrong and Getty reflect on the timeless nature of public misconceptions, suggesting that intelligence and critical thinking have always been varied across the populace. This segment blends nostalgia with a critique of modern societal attitudes, offering listeners a thought-provoking perspective.
Timestamp: 24:08 – 37:19
A substantial portion of the episode is dedicated to the growing concerns surrounding AI surveillance devices. The hosts discuss Joanna Stern’s Wall Street Journal article about gadgets like the $50 "Bee" bracelet, which records and transcribes users’ conversations, raising questions about the future of privacy and AI assistance.
Joanna Stern (24:08):
"Is this the dawn of the AI surveillance state? Absolutely. Is it also the dream of hyper personal, all-knowing AI assistance coming to life? Yes, absolutely."
Armstrong and Getty dissect the duality of such technology—its potential to enhance personal productivity versus the inherent risks of privacy invasion. They debate scenarios where AI can be both a helpful assistant and an intrusive overseer, highlighting the ethical and legal implications of pervasive surveillance.
Jack Armstrong (35:58):
"Depending on the state, I might have been breaking the law."
The conversation emphasizes the importance of consent and the varying legal landscapes across states, urging listeners to consider the implications of adopting such technologies in their daily lives.
Timestamp: 40:23 – 43:33
In the final substantive segment, the hosts address the alarming rise of online threats targeting teenagers. They discuss an FBI warning about a shadowy network known as "7764," which aims to incite violence and chaos by exploiting social media and gaming platforms.
Unknown Speaker:
"The FBI is warning parents to pay attention to who their kids are talking to on social media and gaming platforms."
Armstrong and Getty explore the challenges parents face in monitoring their children's digital interactions without infringing on their privacy. They highlight the sophistication of modern cyber threats and the critical need for education and proactive measures to protect the younger generation from online predators and malicious entities.
Jack Armstrong:
"There is a near global feeling of angst and unhappiness that I don't ever recall before."
The hosts emphasize the importance of open communication and vigilance in an increasingly interconnected digital landscape, urging parents to stay informed and engaged with their children's online activities.
Jack Armstrong (07:23):
"There will not be a single disabled person affected in any way by the proposed cuts. Not one."
Jack Armstrong (13:24):
"If you're a crypto zillionaire, I'd start carrying a gun, hiding a guard and keeping your fingers hidden."
Unknown Speaker (16:36):
"James Lindsay makes a good point, we do overestimate the percentage of people that are dumb or don't pay attention or whatever."
Joanna Stern (24:08):
"Is this the dawn of the AI surveillance state? Absolutely."
Unknown Speaker (40:23):
"Parents to pay attention to who their kids are talking to on social media and gaming platforms."
Throughout this episode, Armstrong and Getty masterfully balance humor with serious discourse, offering listeners a rich tapestry of topics that are both entertaining and enlightening. From light-hearted wildlife encounters to deep dives into policy and technology, the hosts provide a well-rounded and engaging listening experience. Their ability to transition smoothly between topics ensures that the audience remains captivated, finding both laughs and valuable insights in equal measure.
For those who haven't listened yet, this episode serves as a testament to why The Armstrong & Getty Show remains a favorite for its blend of wit, wisdom, and genuine concern for pertinent societal issues.