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Stephen Crowder
Oh, hey, Chet.
Gerald Morgan
What's up?
Stephen Crowder
Hey, Josh. Have you seen the Seabeed distillery stick?
Gerald Morgan
I'm going on a trip later.
Stephen Crowder
Um, yeah, it's around here, so I'm just breaking the toilet. It's around here. Oh, there it is. Here, this is the stuff for you. You know, it's not gonna get you high. It's not gonna give you feeling back in your little limp legs or whatever. So have at it. You know, I know it doesn't make you high. And of course I have feeling in my legs.
Gerald Morgan
Wait, what?
Stephen Crowder
Yes, exactly.
Gerald Morgan
I'm in crippling pain all the time. CB Distillery helps.
Stephen Crowder
Now I feel bad. Good luck on your tr.
Gerald Morgan
It's CBD Awareness Month. Whoa.
Stephen Crowder
To celebrate, visit CB distillery.com and use promo code RUMBLE to save up to 60% off everything. Dude, what do we have here? Could be anything. It could be anything in here. But for those of you, well, for the initiated, it's time for tough love. Tough love With Guru Crowder. It is tough love. This is where you can send in your requests for life or relationship advice. Dear God. Why would you send that to us? I'll tell you why. I'm a certified guru. You know this. Captain Morgan CEO, you filled out the.
Gerald Morgan
Form, you licked the stamp. And I did. Now you're a guru. So two stamps. Two st. Oh, two stamps.
Stephen Crowder
Yeah, two stamps. And one of them was a bear with roller skates, and one of them was the queen.
Gerald Morgan
You didn't have one of those forever stamps? We just do, like, one.
Stephen Crowder
I don't even know. Is that a thing?
Gerald Morgan
It is, yeah. Thing. You buy it, and it's forever. Good.
Stephen Crowder
That sounds like a scam. Did you know about forever stamps? To me?
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, but I don't think it's.
Stephen Crowder
What Gerald said is. No.
Gerald Morgan
Why would you question something? It's forever. It will forever be whatever. Like, if the postage rate goes up 2 cents, a forever stamp is always going to be good. You never have to pay more.
Stephen Crowder
Are you sure it's not just stamps? Are you sure? You sure it's not just a stamp that has, like, those forever chemicals, like plastic phthalates? Is that what it is? Phthalates? I don't know. I'm gonna ask for a fact check.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, we're gonna ask for a fact whatever.
Stephen Crowder
It could just be a stamp with parabens in it.
Gerald Morgan
That's true.
Stephen Crowder
I know. It's skin irritating. That's what I know. I'm not supposed to use them.
Gerald Morgan
Oh, no.
Stephen Crowder
By the way, I get questions sometimes. People lately been like, hey, have you. Are you. Are you younger?
Gerald Morgan
And you've never gotten people.
Stephen Crowder
People. People say I look like a. No, it turns out I just have. I just have two lights here because we only have the lights that were raking down my face like a. So I have a couple of lights here. And apparently, you know, it does away with some of the bags under my eyes.
Gerald Morgan
Well, that's what I. People's like, hey, are you bald? And I'm like, no, no, it's just this fisheye lens camera.
Stephen Crowder
It is. It's a fisheye lens. Yeah. And it was my lens that made my eyes look like a sphincter.
Gerald Morgan
It removes 20% of your hair. So two.
Stephen Crowder
All right, so you can send it. By the way, what's the email for people to send it in?
Gerald Morgan
I just had it up.
Stephen Crowder
It is tough love. Tough lovecrat.com where you can send in your relationship, your life advice. Because it's not every day that you get a certified guru forever stamp or not. And we just ask that you respect the title. So this one comes in from. Let me see first. Do they.
Gerald Morgan
I don't think they want us to say the from. Because they don't want to like. We don't want to like out people.
Stephen Crowder
They don't have a name. This is really long too. There's no highlights.
Gerald Morgan
It's supposed to be because apparently it's. It's in the running for best question we have ever received. I haven't read it yet.
Stephen Crowder
Oh, well, don't oversell it.
Gerald Morgan
No, I was just.
Stephen Crowder
What I was told after. After the. They oversold it after the dog and pony show you did on your forever Stamps. It kind of was a. Was a letdown. Has the admonish button at the. So, dear Guru Crowder, that is a good start.
Gerald Morgan
Here we go.
Stephen Crowder
I had an uncomfortable encounter this week. I downloaded the Grok app on my phone to ask it some business related questions while I was driving and I noticed a button at the top that said sexy. The fact that it wasn't the very first thing you noticed is a testament to what a good man you are.
Gerald Morgan
I didn't even know there was this button.
Stephen Crowder
That's just because you're oblivious. So in your case, it's a. It's a good sign of character. In his case, he's retarded. My curiosity got the better of me, so I tapped it. I had also that good man talk. I had also. I didn't say me. I had also previously selected the voice chat mode so I could see how conversational the feature was, oh, sure. Is this going where I think it's going? I think it is.
Gerald Morgan
It probably is.
Stephen Crowder
Without warning, the female voice introduced herself as Ara and gave me a sexy compliment. And it slash, she was convincing. Damn it. I've never been confused by pronouns, but here I am calling it a she. Since I'm happily married, I instantly felt the impulse to throw my phone out the window. But once again, I'm a naturally curious person, so I decided to to just not respond. Do you know what they say about curiosity?
Gerald Morgan
Right?
Stephen Crowder
Do you know what they say?
Gerald Morgan
Yeah. Do you know what they say?
Stephen Crowder
It results in cyber sexual relations with an artificial intelligence app and your sexy.
Gerald Morgan
Name ever clothes on the lawn, Dolores.
Stephen Crowder
It's a very long saying. That's why I didn't catch on. So she gave me another compliment and asked that. By the way, AI is a learning tool, right? It's a neural net. Was it neural net processor. A learning computer. That means that it learned you liked compliments. This app knew that it could woo you through flattery. That sounds like a you problem.
Gerald Morgan
And that you wouldn't be able to put up much of a fight because you're so far going along with this.
Stephen Crowder
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. But you know what? I would be curious too. I'm still silent until she wait and asks some question about how I like it. I'm still silent until she again encourages me. Well, now I just feel rude because I haven't said anything. So I respond with something generic like normal. I don't want Elon. I don't want Elon to know my proclivities.
Gerald Morgan
Sex, normal.
Stephen Crowder
Look. Of all the characteristics on which Elon could judge you, sexual proclivities would not be chief amongst them.
Gerald Morgan
Given his past, he'd be like, he's don't throw stones.
Stephen Crowder
Yeah, he's impregnated half of Northern California.
Gerald Morgan
It's true. Just to have a Tate Mars. It's fine.
Stephen Crowder
This basically phone sex went on for a few minutes with me awkwardly answering very suggestive questions with one word answers like, it's my first time.
Gerald Morgan
That's four words.
Stephen Crowder
Well, first off, it might be your first time with an AI chat bot. I would hope so. How funny would it be if this guy just. He has like a love triangle with Grok and Gemini and like, so what.
Gerald Morgan
Is this chat with Gemini? Like both.
Stephen Crowder
Did you call it off with ChatGPT? Yeah. What's that on your collar? An airpod? No. She was pretty convincing as she pretended to finish. I guess there were moments when I felt Like Joaquin Phoenix's character maybe wasn't so unusual after all that movie. Her. And afterwards I prompted her to help me understand Bernoulli's principle. And we went back and forth on stories of Romulus and the origins of Rome. You know, the usual post coital talk.
Gerald Morgan
How do you feel about Rome?
Stephen Crowder
I don't know if this guy's. I mean, I think this is real, but the guy's funny. But I just don't know if I'm.
Gerald Morgan
Trolling an idea just to make sure that we're not like, being led down a, you know, trail here. I think we should have HR Sam try and recreate this at some point just so that we can make sure that we're being like, told the truth.
Stephen Crowder
Yes. No, I. I'm over here looking for the. Damn. I'm not seeing it anymore. No, there is. There is sexy. There is like adult sexy. I saw it on the. On the app, on the phone.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, I mean, I'm not advoc. Advocating for what. I'm just saying.
Stephen Crowder
No, if you double tap it, I mean, this is exactly what happens. The whole experience had my head spinning with the implications of this technology and how accidentally accessible it is. I know that if I would have been all in on this encounter, the AI would have been even better at providing detailed and explicit reasons that would have indeed been very arousing. Absent my wife in my arms. Forgot about her for a second, didn't you? She's a part of this story. I also know that this AI will be in Elon's Optimus's brain and will make a very good partner for some strange people someday. Imagine a woman robot that does everything you want it to, is super intelligent, but even more obedient. No, I get it. The Japanese aren't all wrong. In my heart, I don't like the idea of it, but on paper. Why would mankind stop developing this technology when it's already here?
Gerald Morgan
He's justifying all of this.
Stephen Crowder
I'm sure it's already here.
Gerald Morgan
Why don't we just use it?
Stephen Crowder
I'm sure there's already plenty of these AI sex bots out there, but until now, they've remained far out of my line of sight. This was more than convenient. Do we need to regulate this asap? You need to regulate yourself, sir.
Gerald Morgan
You clicked the button.
Stephen Crowder
Yeah, this one.
Gerald Morgan
He told you to click the button. I mean, continue the conversation.
Stephen Crowder
We'll get into the societal problems, but before we get to that, you need to start working on the you problem.
Gerald Morgan
Come on.
Stephen Crowder
This isn't just all. It's not like the AI bot just showed up at the front of your door. I was like, whoa, whoa, whoa. What happened? Just with no clothes and just, you know, whatever. Digital nipple tassels. I don't know what they wear. Do you think this will have a significant impact on young men's desire for women and vice versa? I actually do. Guru Crowder, slash. Gerald. As a Catholic, I wonder if this somehow threatens Christianity in a way that's analogous to the impact of the Enlightenment on Catholicism. This whole experience was weird and tempting, and I couldn't help but getting vibes that an uncontrollable evil is sprouting a new seed. Most of us are so far removed from the development of this technology, yet it will shape humanity for the next thousand years. How do we make sure the powers that be get it right? Josh. He's not here. Says, thank you for your service. I'm sorry I patted you on the shoulder when I bought your T shirt in Des Moines. I didn't know. I'm assuming that Josh probably beat the crap out of him.
Gerald Morgan
It's his trigger shoulder.
Stephen Crowder
Yes, it is. It's his trigger shoulder. Yeah. I do think. Here's the thing. I do think it'll have a. So first off, this is like. Just avoid the sexy taps. Okay. But I also understand this is not necessarily new as far as the root of the problem. You know, when we were younger, we were learning how to use the Internet, how to cross search, Right?
Gerald Morgan
Yeah.
Stephen Crowder
In school, it was just constant pornography. And that was before people had more controls. Right. They thought it was going to be the Wild west, where no matter where you went, there was some kind of pop up for. This is before Firefox, before even Safari. It was just awful. And it's gotten better, unfortunately, pornography is ubiquitous, so it has fundamentally changed our culture. And I don't know if we can go back. That's where parents are more important than ever. And I would imagine this would be a similar thing. It's very accessible. It makes sexual arousal or satisfaction very within reach. And frankly, that's a huge driver of civilization. It's a huge driver, particularly of men in civilization. Right. Is that sexual drive that we have, and you combine that with the fact that a lot of men aren't interested in a lot of young women as far as what they have to offer right now they're checking out of the dating pool, and then they get blamed for it. You know, I'm not saying that everyone is an Andrew Tate, but you have to look at the rise of an Andrew Tate and say, okay, why? Right. He is actually acknowledging legitimate problems. I don't agree with most of his solutions. Maybe in theory, on paper, where he talks about traditional relationships and he talks about having children and families, but certainly not in practice with the life that he's lived. But you can't just point the finger at Andrew Tate. You need to point the finger at the modern feminist movement. So if you provide that easy of an out. Yeah. I think it's going to be more and more attractive to young people, especially considering how good these AI bots can get. I mean, we already have that problem where a lot of young men aren't interested in sex with an actual partner. They just sooner use pornography.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah.
Stephen Crowder
That's reality. So I can see these problems and the accessibility of it is definitely a concern. I mean, I don't know if you have to be. If you have to verify your age to use Grok and download it. Honestly, Honestly, I don't, I don't, I don't know.
Gerald Morgan
We should find out. But that, I think that is one of the blocks that you kind of want, especially as a parent. I mean, you know, going back to when I was in high school, like, if you wanted pornography, you had to go get it. Yeah. I mean, and I'm not like, I grew up, like where computers became kind of ubiquitous in households as I was, you know, in my teens. And so this was one of those things where in high school and early part of high school, like, you had to go get like a magazine or something like that if you wanted actual pornography. Right, right. And then with computers becoming more affordable and available in your homes and with Internet with, you know, the dial up Internet access that we had, all of a sudden you had this same kind of issue where a lot of the barriers were removed for people that were younger to be able to look at pornography. Young guys that, you know, and I'm talking like in their 15, 16, 17, 18 years old, like your hormones are raging. It's insane. And now you had to deal with, okay, how do we, how do we regulate that? And we came up with decent ways to do that. But initially it was the Wild West. Oh, yeah. You just click a button that says you're 18. Okay. It's pretty easy to do.
Stephen Crowder
Yeah.
Gerald Morgan
But I think we've taken some pretty positive steps. But look how much later it is.
Stephen Crowder
Yeah.
Gerald Morgan
You know, I'm talking about like say 95, 96. And so really we're talking about 30 years later. And finally Pornhub is being banned in certain places. And people are really concerned about the effects of pornography on.
Stephen Crowder
What do you mean being banned from. Being banned from minors?
Gerald Morgan
For minors. Yes. But also banned. No, banned outright because they're not taking the steps necessary to make sure that minors are protected. And also like revenge porn is.
Stephen Crowder
Right.
Gerald Morgan
Something that is screened out as well. And so. But we're starting to see the societal impacts. Do we have to wait 30 years to see the societal impacts of this kind of thing? This wall being torn down? Because then it went to, you know, like AOL instant messenger and you know, just kind of to tell myself. And I've told my story before, like, I didn't always make the right decisions, but I was chatting with a girl in college, freshman year of college, on a one instant messer. I'd never met this person before. And she's like, do you want a cyber? And I'm like, I had no idea what the hell that meant. Well, I literally picked up that.
Stephen Crowder
When you found out your answer was yes.
Gerald Morgan
All of these, all of these portals look like they' end in pain if I try to do this. And so I literally had to ask the question. But it's like, that's one again. One more barrier where you're connecting people. This is, again, this is his problem. He clicked on the sexy button. He stayed there. He started to feel like, hey, I'm just going to kind of see how this goes and do an experiment and maybe shine a light on how bad this is for people.
Stephen Crowder
Yeah.
Gerald Morgan
You know? Yeah, I don't know.
Stephen Crowder
I would stay away from it because if I, if I were you, because it seems like this went poorly also. If nothing else, I mean, it's a road hazard. There are other people. There are other people on the road and the ask. Yeah, the.
Gerald Morgan
Are you driving? Yeah. Because this is gonna get freaky and.
Stephen Crowder
You can't be driving next time this happens. Let her know that the windshield wipers are on the exterior and shut the fuck up. Don't be so selfish. But I do, I do wonder about this. I mean, I haven't really. This is, this is kind of new to me because I haven't use AI in this way, but it doesn't surprise me at all. And you see, for example, in Japan where they have those sex robots and you have all kinds of birth rate problems, but you know, this would be a problem no matter what. For example, if you go throughout all of human history, you have men who can have great wives and then there's a prostitute and the man falters Right. That temptation has always been a problem. It is exacerbated dramatically when you have completely destroyed the roles of men and women in society and the gender norms that once were expectations. And it's really corrosive because now you have a lot of women saying that they're going to remain single. I think in 30 years, the estimates are 60% of women are going to be single. I think they're saying in the next five years, it's close to 40%. They say, well, there's nothing. There's nothing out there in men that I want. Well, what you're dealing with right now is the feminization and the. The brow beating and the privilege checking of toxic masculinity where men have been made to be ashamed of what they are. And that's overt feminism. And then the COVID feminism that you see from, unfortunately, even women on the right going, well, I don't want my man to be ultra sensitive, and I don't think that he should be afraid of toxic masculinity. I expect him to provide and to protect. It's like, okay, great, so now you've set an expectation and a duty for the man. But a lot of men are out there going, okay, but what's the duty of a woman? And Andrew Wilson has talked about this. He was on Piers Morgan, did a pretty effective job of it. We have duties as men. And I can tell you from the male perspective, a big reason that men are checking out of the dating pool is because they feel as though they are the only ones burdened with duties. Often the response will be, well, I love. Well, you know, my duty is to love my husband. Well, he has to love you too. That's not a duty, that's an emotion. Well, you know, I can choose to take care of the house. Okay. Or you can choose not to. That's a choice. And by the way, even if you do take care of the house, it's not the same as a duty to protect and provide. If that bullet's coming, he has to take that bullet. That's the agreement. What if he doesn't feel very well? He has to clock in at a job. That's a duty where there's a contractual obligation. And we have a lot of young women who've bought the lie of feminism who think they can have all the things. And men are going, well, you can have all the things. You just can't have me. If you want a masculine man, those men want a feminine woman, and they are in short supply. So that then Creates loneliness. There's distrust between the sexes and it's a lot easier. This would be a problem no matter what, especially being new in a novelty. But it's going to be a bigger problem where men might actually prefer it to swiping right or left. I don't know which one's the yes and no. And showing up at a bar where they pay for dinner and get left standing there in the cold with her AI Chatbot, you'll always have.
Gerald Morgan
What is her name? Ara.
Stephen Crowder
Ara. Yep. By the way, that's a stripper AI name.
Gerald Morgan
It really is.
Stephen Crowder
My name is Cinnamon. What were you saying there, Noodles? I was just gonna have a few answers to some of the earlier questions. So, age verification on Grok. You must be 13 to use it, but if you're between 13 and 17, you must have your legal parent or guardian's permission and terms of service, yada yada.
Gerald Morgan
So they must click the box. Yeah, I'm sure we're verifying that.
Stephen Crowder
Oh, actually, I want to go to this one. Lest you not believe it. Yes, Sexy mode is a real thing. Shockingly X rated. And finally, much to my chagrin, Gerald is right about forever.
Gerald Morgan
Forever stamps are forever, you jerks. They just last forever.
Stephen Crowder
Can you peel them off and put them on another?
Gerald Morgan
Well, no, you can't. Not. Not if they've been.
Stephen Crowder
What's the point to them?
Gerald Morgan
It's so that if the price ever changes, you don't have to go buy a 1 or 2 cent stamp.
Stephen Crowder
Oh, I thought they were just like indestructible stamps.
Gerald Morgan
No, they're not like isotope stamps, you know, that'll just have a half life.
Stephen Crowder
Well, because sooner or later I'm gonna want new stamps. I mean, I get bored of them.
Gerald Morgan
Oh, really? Yeah.
Stephen Crowder
Also, you'd have to tell them to send it back. Get one of those temporary stamps to send back.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, I wanted to answer a question about. He said, do you think this is going to threaten Christianity? That's analogous to the impact of the Enlightenment on Catholicism. The answer is no. I think this is the same kind of problem that we've dealt with really, since the kind of having personal computers in the home. I think that's the same kind of issue. It's just easier. And it just gets easier and easier. So you're dealing with the same issue, only it's a little bit easier in this regard. It depends on, like, what kind of controls we put on it. But I would like to go back just a little bit and say, isn't it funny though, we get into robotics, right? And you start to see like the Boston Dynamics videos, and you're like, oh, man, these things can actually move around. And then you get like, you know, Elon is bringing out like these personal assistants. And right in the middle of all of that, before we even figure out how to do anything productive, they make sex robots, right? So there's like the wiener robot. And you're like, oh, good. Thanks a lot, guys. I really appreciate that. Like, we take.
Stephen Crowder
Did you just say the wiener robot?
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, the wiener one. Where just you, like, you insert the.
Stephen Crowder
Thing and you know, hold on a second. Is the robot a wiener or place for you?
Gerald Morgan
It's more of a home.
Stephen Crowder
Okay.
Gerald Morgan
And I was trying to be nice. It's a dc. All right, so now we have AI. AI can change the world. AI can do amazing things. We're still at the beginning phases, but immediately we're like, we need the AI sexbot.
Stephen Crowder
No, that's always same with the Internet.
Gerald Morgan
Every technology we do this, we developed.
Stephen Crowder
A technology that could connect people seamlessly beyond all languages, cultures, traditional barriers, geography. We immediately put tits on it.
Gerald Morgan
That's right. Like the very first thing.
Stephen Crowder
First thing. And to this day, it's still the most popular thing.
Gerald Morgan
Yes, that's Rule 34.
Stephen Crowder
You can imagine it. There's part of it.
Gerald Morgan
We talked about this a while ago, but I really appreciate that Terrence Howard could have solved the three body problem. Instead, we put naked ladies. We're like, okay, fine.
Stephen Crowder
Use the proper terminology. It's a docking station. My worry.
Gerald Morgan
Well, docking failed. Okay?
Stephen Crowder
My worry with this is that it'll fill. You know, pornography is. Is. It fills in a sex drive that we have. Obviously, considering how good they are saying, I will become at, you know, mimicking human interactions, I'm worried that this may more effectively close a loneliness gap where it's not just someone, you know. Let's say there's. Let's say there's like a 30 minute porno video. And that leaves them like 29 minutes.
Gerald Morgan
To just refractory periods.
Stephen Crowder
I don't know who said I don't know.
Gerald Morgan
Watches video, you know.
Stephen Crowder
Okay, so we don't have. People don't need to brag, but. But they don't feel like they know what it is to some degree.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah.
Stephen Crowder
They don't necessarily know how it's rewiring their brain, but they don't think it's an actual connection, which is actually how a lot of people justify pornography. Like, ah, it's fine, you know, I mean, it's not real. Right? With this. It. It might actually trick them and go, you know, I prefer the companionship of this person where they think they have a friend that might be new.
Gerald Morgan
That's true.
Stephen Crowder
Well, there's always been 1, 900 lines. Yeah. But still, again, it's different. You know, you call some lady named. Yeah, exactly. And you never talk to her again. Like, this is someone who you would. You have an ongoing conversation with Ara, who learns you. Who knows what you like, who knows what you like, who knows how to push your buttons, you know, and you.
Gerald Morgan
Probably will feel like you can be completely open because it's like, well, this isn't a real person. I'm not gonna be judged for anything that I say, so I can just kind of say whatever. So, yeah, I think there are definitely some challenges with it, but really the solutions are kind of the same. Right. So the problem is just morphing a little bit. The solutions, I think, are the same. We have to make sure we educate people on the difficulty life that you are going to lead. If this becomes a staple of your life. It's.
Stephen Crowder
We definitely need. We're going to get point to where we need some regulation on AI and kind of have a good idea as to where it's going.
Gerald Morgan
I don't want to stifle the growth, but I don't.
Stephen Crowder
No, no, I understand, but that's a conversation. This is. This is not a conversation for today.
Gerald Morgan
It's true.
Stephen Crowder
We can have a good old conversation about it over. Over a frosty one and some forever stamps.
Gerald Morgan
Okay, fantastic. Now, now, just final thought for him. Don't click the sexy button. Problem solved.
Stephen Crowder
Yeah, that's a.
Gerald Morgan
This one's really easy, in fact.
Stephen Crowder
Yeah.
Gerald Morgan
Also, once you've clicked the sexy button and a robot gets on there and starts talking to you. Sexy. Say bye, sexy bot.
Stephen Crowder
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, unless she's really good at.
Gerald Morgan
It, she's not really good at anything other than talking. And you're talking to a computer.
Stephen Crowder
Well, that's more than you can say for most women. Call me when she gets good at shutting up.
Gerald Morgan
Hey, all right, all right, all right, all right.
Stephen Crowder
Next one. You can read this one.
Gerald Morgan
Thank you. This one's very short. Dear Guru Crowder and crew.
Stephen Crowder
Thank you.
Gerald Morgan
Not even naming me. Thank you.
Stephen Crowder
Your crew.
Gerald Morgan
I'm crew. I was diagnosed with Ms. Five years ago. Fine. I'm sorry. And have gained a significant amount of weight since my diagnosis. Is that normal?
Stephen Crowder
I think, like, I knew two people who had Ms. One of them is actually someone people here watching would. Would know. But I Don't want to out them. I think most people know. Yeah. And he gained weight. He was very oddly, like pear shaped. I think because of the way that affects, you know, your mobility and your joints. It just, I think it makes activity more difficult. I don't know if there's medication that as a director, you guys can comment and let me know. But I have known and one of them did gain a lot of weight.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, I started calorie counting last year and have lost a good amount. But fantastic. By the way, good job. Recently started to plateau with my weight loss and need to start exercising as well. Do we have a company for you. I'm finding it difficult to find the motivation to exercise regularly. Do you have any tough love advice for me to keep to reach my goal? I love you guys. We are lucky to have the Louder with Crowder team. Thank you in advance. Well, don't be a fatty. And that's good motivation. You asked for motivation and honestly, that's probably what they were thinking. Like, I really don't want to gain all this weight. So he started count. They started calorie counting. It's not a he. And started kind of looking into exercise and weight loss.
Stephen Crowder
Are we allowed to say the name or. No, we're not supposed to.
Gerald Morgan
I don't know.
Stephen Crowder
Just says Jackie.
Gerald Morgan
It says Jackie Blue. I mean, I guess we can say it's your show.
Stephen Crowder
Across 100 and Fat.
Gerald Morgan
Street, but no, I think honestly, if you're in a situation where you have some limitations, I think gaining strength should be one of the goals that people look at instead of losing weight. Because one will actually, and correct me if I'm wrong, but it's like the only thing that burns fat is muscle, right? So naturally you're going to burn it. So. And you're going to feel stronger, you're going to feel better, your body's going to feel better the stronger that you get. And I'm not talking like weightlifting to be a bodybuilder or anything like that. I'm talking like stuff that I do where I'm just lifting to maintain like some good strong or some good strength so that my body doesn't suffer because I've, you know, I've got bad knees, got a bad back, and the more my core goes down, the more my leg muscles go down. My knees hurt more. My back hurts more when I've been lifting.
Stephen Crowder
Well, you're tall. You're gonna die in like four years.
Gerald Morgan
That's also true.
Stephen Crowder
Hey, I'm not far behind you. I'm not far behind you.
Gerald Morgan
I hear emojis. When you first said that, she was like, he's true.
Stephen Crowder
This office is the land of giants. Sometimes I get it. So, yeah, that's all good. I will say muscle doesn't burn as much fat as people think. And you would have to add a lot of muscle for that to, you know, burn fat that effectively. However, it is the most important. It's the foundation of any regimen. You know, diet training or exercise and sleep, if you can get it. I will say this, though, to answer your question directly, and everything Gerald just said is correct. There's really no advice or motivation. You just got to do it. You're not going to have the motivation most. I'm just going to tell you, you're not going to have the motivation most days. Okay. Now you can help sort of make it an event that's fun. So sometimes people find doing a pre workout, right, because you feel good, it's got caffeine, sometimes other stuff may do something. It may not, but maybe you like. Okay, you have a pre workout, you have a. They have workout. Not those kind of things. You know, grab some and make it a routine. Make it your sanctuary where you go and you, you know, you lift, you do your training where you make it a part of your day that maybe you listen to a podcast, maybe this, maybe you have an audiobook, you turn it into something that you can enjoy as much as possible. Okay, that's important. You're not going to find motivation every day. That's why when people go out there and it's this, remember that morning routine, guy, I always have drive. It's not true. Nope, it's not true. Most people don't. And if they think that all of this motivation is going to make a difference, like, nothing's going to be as effective as saying, just do. You just have to do it no matter what? And work around injuries if you need to. As far as training, look, keep it really simple. Okay? I've recommended starting strength from Mark Ripito. That's great. That's actually where Pete Hegseth took the quote of, stronger people are more difficult to kill and more useful in general if you're starting to train. First off, it is calories in, calories out. You've seen that with the calorie counting, right? The calorie expenditure. Now you're going to be burning more calories if you lift weights. Maybe not as much as you would think, for example, compared to a judo class or a long cycling session, but you will burn some calories and you'll burn more throughout the day. And I would recommend just being in general more active. You know, walking the dog, swimming with the kids. Just pick activities, like maybe it's pickleball. That's the easiest thing to do for cardio. Something active that gets your heart rate up doesn't need to be much more complicated than that for general health. If you're not an athlete, then pick a training split routine that you have to. Are you going to train twice a week? Three times a week? Okay. Then do a full body training routine. Keep super, super simple, heavy compound lifts. Some kind of a pressing motion, right. Some kind of a pulling motion. Ideally once a week. You do one vertically, both press and horizontally. Some kind of a squatting motion, some kind of a hip hinge, like a deadlift or a good morning. You do that, you're covered. And just make sure that you are progressing on weight. Your body will not adapt unless you require it to. It's that simple. Your body doesn't want to be ripped. Your body actually wants to store some fat. In other words, if you eat a lot and you're being inactive, your body's going, oh, got to store this up, because there may be some famine. Your body doesn't want to be optimized. Your body wants to survive. It's not designed to thrive, so you have to challenge it to make adaptations. And as long as that weight or those reps are going up, it's called progressive overload. Doesn't have to be a lot. Can be five pounds, can be one rep. Logbook progress. You will get stronger, you will feel better. And it's the basis of any type of health and wellness approach to life. Is it the most effective thing for weight loss? No, but it is foundational.
Gerald Morgan
Right.
Stephen Crowder
And I would also say, err on the side of keeping it super, super. If you don't think, if you don't think that you will do 40 minutes. Okay, 30. Exactly 30 minutes, three times a week. You know what? 20 you can get. In other words, you could go in, have. I'll do it right? Super simple. Workout A, bench press, three sets, deadlift, three sets. That's it. Leave, be done. Workout B, overhead press, squats, Boom, be done. You're still going to hit. Is it going to be ideal? No, but it's going to be more than enough for you to maintain joint health integrity, have some strength benefits, and have that progressive overload. So if you really don't believe that, you'll stick with it unless it's super, super, super Short. Then just do that. Start with that, and then you can add to it.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, I 100% agree. And I was going to say that my story is very similar on lifting. I have three kids right now. Obviously, we do what we do here, and that's that. That takes a lot of effort and energy to do all of that. And then you got kids and you don't want to be gone for too long during the day. I don't have an hour to go and work out most of the time. Sometimes I do, but most of the time I just couldn't see myself doing that. I used to do cycling, but that's a. By the time you get there, do the thing, come back, it's two and a half to three hours. Right, Right. I don't really have that kind of time, especially away from my kids on a Saturday. I don't really want to be. Plus, it's gay that time. You said a cycling session a minute ago, and now when I say it.
Stephen Crowder
It'S, yeah, you burn calories. You burn calories if you're banging a bunch of guys, too. But it doesn't change the fact that it's gay.
Gerald Morgan
But I just. I was able to commit to doing bench squat and rows, those three things. I was like, all right, with the injuries that I've had, bench, squat, rows, and I'm just going to start super light. I even made fun of myself because I was benching what I was squatting to start out with.
Stephen Crowder
Well, it's more because you. You lacked self confidence because of your knees and stuff. You were stronger than you had fit. You had more strength than you had faith in your ability.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah. I was very much concerned that I would be injured, but I thought, okay, I'll take that into account because I probably won't continue if I do hurt myself.
Stephen Crowder
Yeah.
Gerald Morgan
So I'm going to start out really low and just kind of be consistent. It takes me between 30 and 45 minutes to do that. If I want to take a little more time, I can. But now that I've done it, I don't. Like, there are days where I look at Tim, I'm like, you lifting? And he's like, yeah. And I'm like, I really don't want to, but I'll do it.
Stephen Crowder
That's why I do it in the morning before the show, because I know myself well enough to know that after doing the show, I'm so tired that I won't be able to. And also, it's too much at that point. It's too Big of a variable where I could be 30% weaker this day just because our show went late and it was exhausting and there was something wrong. So I got to get it done in the morning. And mine's largely focused around conserving energy. It's like, what can I do without spending myself? And I went a period of about a year and a half where at least a year where I was training twice a week, about on average 22 minutes and no more.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah.
Stephen Crowder
And I said, what can I do to reduce this to the minimum effective dose? And I was actually able to maintain mostly and still get stronger. Not much, but I wasn't losing.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah.
Stephen Crowder
So there are ways now that's not. There's a difference between optimal and minimal effective dose.
Gerald Morgan
Start out practical first. I think especially in these situations where you're like, ah, man, the motivation, when that's what you're looking at, it's okay. Bare bones. It just do only what you can commit to doing and just do it. Don't think about it. Don't try to come up with. Just do it and make sure that you do it for. What is it they say you have to do something for 28 days or 21 days to make it a habit. Whatever the heck it is, it could be different for you. Just do it. And when you start seeing those results like you're getting somewhat stronger, that motivation kind of kicks in there for me when I start to see some result. Now getting to the point where Tim's just heckling me and that's basically what's making me add weight. Good for you.
Stephen Crowder
We have to maintain the standards of abusive work environment. No, he's. He went up in squat. He used to stop at 315 and now he hit 365 yesterday. Yeah. Gerald's stronger. Stronger than his confidence level. He's just, you know, which is fine. Also, as a tall guy too, you know, it's going to be tougher. I mean, compared to you. No offense, but compared to you, his like. It's like a hydraulic press. He's going all the way up and down and you're.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah.
Stephen Crowder
It's not the same thing. As much of a travel. Yeah, yeah, but. And you know, I will say this though too is like, you know, I hate the barrier to entry thing. And look, I'm no world beater at all. I stay within striking distance of being in shape. Sometimes I'm fatter, sometimes I'm stronger. Sometimes it depends. But yet people like Arnold were like, I train two times a day, two hours Each session, bs. He didn't. And he was loaded with steroids. As a matter of fact, the only reason for Arnold, not the only, but the primary reason for Arnold's success, is that he was willing to experiment with new designer steroids that people were scared to take because they didn't know the long term health effects at that point in time. And then same thing, like, I won't mention this name because it's someone who is in the conservative space and has been on the show, but I remember at the, it was at a firearm conference and he was telling people, he goes, look, I practice, you know, being in the military, I practice with my firearm six days a week, two hours, and if you're not doing that minimum, you might as well not have it. And I said, are you out of your mind? No one is going to do that. You want to tell the old lady here, or let's say a middle aged lady who's working and has kids that she needs two hours a day, six days a week? You know what? I would say she's better off provided the firearm is safely stored. Stopbox.com Crowder, you can go there. If she has a revolver and she puts it in there in her nightstand, she's still better off having it. If she only goes to the range once a month than not. I'm sorry, I don't agree with you. Just like you have these people now who are fitness influencers and you need to get 12 sets per body part, per. Okay, Dorian Yates, the biggest man you've ever seen in your life. Now, was he on steroids? Sure. He trained four days a week, 40 minutes. That was it. Could he have done it better? Maybe. But it was good enough to be the biggest man on earth. They called him the Shadow. Okay, so my point is you can. And people get so nerdy about this. Like, we know what is required. If you train two times a week or three times a week, you're consistent. Progressive overload. It's about proximity to failure. Progressive overload. Count your calories, you will get stronger, you will feel better. With ms, I would say be mindful of your recovery. Don't push it too far because you actually do have a condition where you know your recovery may be impeded. But sounds to me like, honestly, I don't know you, but I'm proud of you. Losing weight when having been diagnosed with ms, that is not easy. A lot of people would just give up and throw themselves a pity party. So you may not have the motivation, you may not want to do it. But you can do it because you've already done something that most people would instead make excuses for. So good for you. And I mean that.
Gerald Morgan
Good for you.
Stephen Crowder
Just keep, keep doing it.
Gerald Morgan
One final thing is, and this is, trust me, this is not self serving. The jacked up fitness thing.
Stephen Crowder
Oh yeah.
Gerald Morgan
If you can remove the time barrier, I've got to get up, I've got to go to the gym, I've got to work out in front of other people. I may not be doing things correctly. Or I got to figure the. If you can simplify everything and have something in your home to be able to work out on jacked up fitness, those things are fantastic. They can do everything that you're going to need to do. And that for me, it's because we have a gym here. It makes it so simple. I literally just have my stuff. Two minutes later I'm beginning my workout. That makes it really, really easy to commit to.
Stephen Crowder
And I will say this too. Their least expensive option, like the power rack. So if you don't have a lot of money, that still is a great deal. With a lifetime warranty. 1012 gauge steel and it still comes with a pulley that's plate loaded.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, that's great. We use it. Yeah.
Stephen Crowder
So you could still use it for. You can still do most things that you could do in a gym with that. It's just not stack loaded if you do have the money. And convenience is most important. That evolution fits into a corner. Everything opens toward the front. So it's specifically made for small spaces. You really do have everything you need where you would never need anything else. And their customer service is second to none. And I knew about them before they became a sponsor, so. Jacked up. They're not a sponsor. Jacked up. Fitness.com usually/crowder use a promo code. Crowder just whatever. Send them an email if you go and buy it. But their baseline power rack is great and then the evolution for them. And hey, if you want the Cadillac, you get the pro and that has everything. But you know, most people don't need that in their home if you're just getting started. All right, next one. Namaste guru. Crowder & Co, meaning company. Thank you very much.
Gerald Morgan
Now I'm co.
Stephen Crowder
Whenever I see co, it makes me think of Duluth Trader & Co. Like. And I know that company co is short for company, but for some reason I always get a snapshot of something in my mind that just makes me think, is it company or corporate?
Gerald Morgan
No, I think it's company. This means company Corporation as well.
Stephen Crowder
Corporation.
Gerald Morgan
I don't know, a different abbreviation.
Stephen Crowder
Apparently they have decent underwear. People trading. My brother.
Gerald Morgan
Shut up. With your four letters instead of two.
Stephen Crowder
Yeah, we're going to replace you with a sexy chatbot. Understandable. No, no, no, no, no.
Gerald Morgan
We just go to the chat bot and it's like mid sentence, we're like, oh, can't do that.
Stephen Crowder
No, no. Noodles is irreplaceable. Have you felt his hands? Like velvet. So this says the TL semicolon. Doctor of this is.
Gerald Morgan
What does that mean? I've seen that timeline.
Stephen Crowder
What does Dr.
Gerald Morgan
Mean?
Stephen Crowder
It's too long. Didn't long.
Gerald Morgan
Didn't read. Oh, didn't read.
Stephen Crowder
Yeah, it means I was. I don't have time for this. I thought it was like timeline. Didn't read. Like timeline was too long. All right, okay. Well, you can admonish me. Admonish me. Admonish me like the dirty chatbot you are.
Gerald Morgan
Admonish. Oh, come on, Ara.
Stephen Crowder
You're too cruel to me. Okay, you didn't know either. The too long, didn't read of this is. And they proceed to write two pages.
Gerald Morgan
And this is the whittled down version. It was seven.
Stephen Crowder
I had a baby with a congenital heart defect. I'm very sorry. My in laws and multiple medical professionals tried to get me to abort her. Screw them. I said no. And although I know it was the right thing to do, I'm having a hard time forgiving them, but also myself because I feel like the heart defect is all my fault. After miscarriage at eight weeks in 2022, I got pregnant again at 34 in the fall of 2023. Early on, we found out there was a problem via ultrasound. We were given potential diagnosis of hydrops fatalis Turner syndrome and cystic hygroma. Hygroma. Hygroma. I'm not familiar with this, but the ultimately correct diagnosis was tricuspid atresia. This is a type of heart defect where she functionally has only one ventricle, basically half a heart. The surgeries are not curative and are only palliative, but there is a decent chance she will live a normal lifespan. That's great. I have asthma. I was prescribed Symbicort by my pulmonologist and she straight up told me that it would be safe to use occasionally during pregnancy. I even looked up if there were concerns when using Simicort during pregnancy, and there were none. I used it once when an early blizzard ticked off my asthma and I couldn't get it to calm down any other way. This is my greatest regret. Simbicort is two drugs. If you look up the two individual drugs contributing contained in the inhaler for Motorol is specifically associated with congenital heart defects at less than the maximum effective dose. Okay, before I continue, Look, I am not familiar with all these drugs and I'm not familiar with all of these conditions and I'm not familiar with your doctors. Okay, this is not your fault.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah.
Stephen Crowder
All right, to be clear, you were told by the people who you trust who should have this information that it was safe. You double checked to verify that it was safe. You used it once, by the way. It doesn't matter if you used it once. You would have been well within your rights to use it often. If you were told that it was safe and found out later that perhaps, I don't know, you were lied to by the pharmaceutical companies who. Oh, on a technicality. This combined drug hasn't been studied. Right. In pregnancy. But the individual ones may be a problem. I'm very sorry this has happened, but. But you really can't blame yourself for this. I actually not advocating this, but there actually could be liability lawsuits if you were actually advised this from a doctor. That's why those exist. Not saying that you should. And I get it, there's all kinds of frivolous lawsuits out there, but I wouldn't. In my opinion, it's not your fault. You have nothing to feel guilty about. And I know that's easy for me to say because I don't have to live with the condition that your child has, but it seems like they could live a long, full life. And the good news is, with medical advancements, I mean, it's only going to get more effective in treating this kind of condition, I would imagine.
Gerald Morgan
Okay.
Stephen Crowder
During my pregnancy, I was shuffled between a regular obgyn, a maternal fetal medicine specialist, a genetics counselor and a pediatric cardiologist. At different points, everyone but the pediatric cardiologist often recommended I get an abortion for which they would have to refer me out since they all worked at different Catholic hospitals. I live in a state where no questions asked, abortion time out at 24 weeks. After that point, you need a medical reason to do so. After saying no multiple times, the maternal fetal medicine doctor pushed for me to get an amniocentesis because of the heart and the fact that she was a little behind in growth. Amnios post their own risks, including but not limited to hemorrhage, preterm labor, infection, miscarriage, maternal death and fetal abnormality. My daughter had enough problems so once again I said to know my in laws, then drove in from another state four hours away to try to persuade me to change my mind about getting an abortion or at the very least getting an amniocentesis. At this point, I was 22 weeks pregnant. I stood firm about not aborting her, but I did make an appointment for the test. I ended up canceling it a few hours later, and I'm incredibly grateful I did. After being put through the wringer of a million more doctors appointments and tests, I gave birth to an otherwise healthy baby girl. She did four days in the NICU for observation, never even needed oxygen, and she had her first open heart surgery in October. She's eight months old now, and if you didn't know about her heart condition, you would never know anything was amiss. Well, screw those people with a wire brush. How about that? Okay? There's a lot of blame to go around. You're not one of them in this case, for crying out loud. Doctors say when they say, your body, your choice. And the doctor's going, you want an abortion? You sure you want an abortion? You sure you don't want an abortion? Sure. I mean, you'd be, well, in my opinion, I don't know if legally well within your right to bitch slap said doctors at any point during this personal journey, I would fully support it. And I hit a nurse. I feel awkward, true, and short tempered. Anytime my husband's parents are around us, I understand. Asking me to take their picture with their beautiful granddaughter and wanting me to pump so they can feed her. I just can't get everything out of my head. These people wanted me to kill her. On top of that, I feel like my baby's life sentence is all my fault because I didn't quite do enough due diligence. Stop blaming yourself. It's not your fault. You have a baby that is largely healthy. And you know what? If you beat yourself up over it, you're not going to be focusing on taking care of that baby. It's wasted energy. I've quoted this from my favorite film, the Edge. You know why most people die in the woods? They die of shame. They spend all their time thinking about what they could have, should have done. And so they die rather than do the one thing that would have saved their life. Thinking. In this case, thinking about your beautiful child. So I guess the option is, what would you do if you were me? How do I move forward? Okay, that was very long. That was not short. Next time I need highlights because I don't want to shortchange it. But we also have only so much time. I would. There are a few different ways you could move forward. Okay, again, first off, this is not your fault. I would advise that you move on and take care of your child and do the best job you can. It sounds like you will. Second sort of item in order. I'm trying to think. Yeah, I guess it's tube sock. You take a tube sock, fill it with quarters and hit your in laws in the face with a rolled up tud sock and roll of quarters. You ever see Death Wish with Charles Bronson?
Gerald Morgan
Don't do that.
Stephen Crowder
You wanted me to abort my baby.
Gerald Morgan
Clank.
Stephen Crowder
That's what I recommend. No, I understand it. Look, they're probably stupid. They're probably like. And what I mean by that is ignorant liberals who don't think it's a life. And they thought they were doing the humane thing. And so in their mind it's two different things. Oh, was a fetus, wasn't a human being now and now it's a human being and they love the human being. They didn't care about the fetus. That's how they justify their evil actions. The left. Never mind the fact that it's the same DNA. Never mind the fact that it's the same child. It was just a smaller version of it. Just like your child who's five now, was four and was three and was two. If you want to talk about the physical location, okay, it was in the womb. Alright, fine. But it was in the womb up until two hours before it came out. So none of their arguments hold water. But in their head they detach themselves from the reality that it is the same child, toddler, infant, baby that just happened to be and that birth canal a couple hours later. So they don't see it that way.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah.
Stephen Crowder
And you have to ask yourself if there's forgiveness in your heart. Outside of that, how are they? Are they decent people? Do you think that they'll do anything to harm your child? Because it's important for a child to have a strong family, especially if they love their grandparents. And so I wouldn't put yourself in the middle of it if they love their grandparents because then you're going to be the villain. A lot of people are ignorant. I just got it. As it relates to abortion, there are a lot of people who learn later on and there are just as many people who just go la la la la la la la. I can't hear you. And that's usually what they do because the more we Discover, the more we learn about science. And honestly, the way medical advancements have been trending, you're going to see babies born earlier and earlier. So they just have to shut themselves off and say something, something, my body, my right, my choice. So if that's the only sin that they've committed, it could be out of ignorance. And I wouldn't hold it against them for the rest of your life.
Gerald Morgan
Right.
Stephen Crowder
Because those children, or this child, maybe you have other children. If they love their grandparents, you don't want to be the one stopping them from having a relationship with their grandparents, provided they're not doing something actively corrosive to that child.
Gerald Morgan
Right, I agree. I mean, I would say that you can combine ignorance with being scared. Right. They were probably pretty scared to hear that kind of news, probably saddened to hear that kind of news.
Stephen Crowder
Sure they were.
Gerald Morgan
And combine that with some ignorance on abortion. And all of a sudden they're like, they don't want that for you. They don't want that for this child. Yeah, but the alternative's kind of worse. They didn't really connect those dots. Right. The alternatives, we just give up and kill the child. So I think 100%, you have to try to find forgiveness in your heart. Because when we told you a minute ago to focus on the child and not some of the mistakes you've made, you also need to have the opportunity for them to be able to focus. And by the way, these are perceived mistakes you've made. I agree with Stephen. I don't think you made a mistake. You trusted the experts that told you what you could and couldn't do, but they've also made a mistake, and now they have a beautiful grandchild and they want to enjoy that. It seems like from what you've said, I would do everything in my power to forgive them and not put all of the blame from all the other doctors and other people who told you to do stuff on them as well. Don't put all of them in that same category, because if they're wonderful people otherwise, and they're great grandparents, that is a very special relationship. And you know, you want to, you know, you want to foster that. You want to have that be nurtured, and you don't want to be just for your own personal benefit. You don't want to hold this animosity or any kind of grudge against them for a mistake that they made. And I don't even know, like, I would seek some conversation about it and say, hey, do you feel differently now that this has happened? Like, would you do anything differently back then if you feel like you really need to? But even if they don't, like, it just hurts you to be angry with them and to constantly mull it over in your head. So I just don't think it's a very beneficial thing, especially if it's an isolated incident. There's not a bunch of other issues that you've had as well. So. Yeah. And that meant. Gosh, that's a. You had a lot of, like, in today's age, right?
Stephen Crowder
Yeah, we.
Gerald Morgan
I think all of us in the room, if something like this is going on, we're doing everything we can and we're fighting for that baby. My wife and I have had conversations. If it comes down to me as a baby, it's the baby. Right. Those kinds of things where we're willing to make those kinds of sacrifices. But that's not the population at large, typically. No, there's different levels to this. And so for you to make that stand against doctors, which can be very intimidating and also make you feel like you're taking crazy pills, like, I'm just going to do what I want to do. Good for you. That's. That's a lot more than just about everybody else in the kind of the general population would have done. Because there were a lot of easier routes to take. Yep. And you chose life. And sometimes that's a hard route. And I know I just pronounced root and route.
Stephen Crowder
That's okay. It's fine.
Gerald Morgan
Different sentences. But that's.
Stephen Crowder
No, I would say it's always worth fighting for the baby. Unless it's Rosemary's not.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, that's true.
Stephen Crowder
It's a very messed up film.
Gerald Morgan
Very messed up.
Stephen Crowder
Like, the way it was sold to me was like, ah, it's kind of scary. Like, ah, there's weird neighbors. And then I get to know, like, wait, is this happening? There's like a Sesame Street Muppet, and it's. It's a. It's a rape. What? This is this film everyone talks about.
Gerald Morgan
Ah.
Stephen Crowder
I can't believe this is part of our cultural lexicon, but it is anyway.
Gerald Morgan
Nonetheless.
Stephen Crowder
Also, just to give you an idea, when I had knee surgery, I had. So I had a great doctor, and then they sent me home without pain pills in the middle of a snowstorm, by the way. And they were like, that's because.
Gerald Morgan
I'm so sorry.
Stephen Crowder
I got home, they go, so take this every, whatever, four hours, six hours. I was like, take what? They go, the pain. I go. I don't have anything. They go, oh, well, we can't write it to a pharmacy. You have to come back. And it was 45 minutes away anyway. But they told me, they said, don't move for two weeks. Don't move your leg. Keep your leg rested. And then when I spoke to the doctor two weeks later, he was like, so how has it been doing? What do you mean? He goes, well, how's the mobility? I said, well, I was told not to move it. He's like, what? Yeah, I would have had you on the Airdyne bike, like, the next day. Well, you could have told me. He's like, who told you that? And I think they got fired. So you trust one. They're very. They were very adamant. Do not. No knee flexion, they said. And so you get doctors sometimes that sometimes they just disagree with each other. Sometimes they have a different approach, and sometimes they just suck. Seems to me like you did your due diligence and, yeah, it's important to do that, but anyone can get caught flat footed. I mean, look for proof. See the entire nation with ivermectin and the MRNA injection, right? You had a bunch of people going, oh, horse paste. Because they couldn't be bothered to do their own research. You had doctors out there saying it and people saying, oh, the MRNA is a vaccine, which it's not. Right? The entire nation got tricked because they trusted authority. You didn't. You questioned it in a way that seems pretty reasonable, and you still got caught. It does happen. It happens to me every day. That's why I have an admonished part button. All right, final one.
Gerald Morgan
Okay, final one here. I believe it's morning, Guru Crowder.
Stephen Crowder
Oh, no, I read it. Oh, that's right. You read this. I'm sorry, hold on a second. No, I thought I said Guru Morgan, but go ahead.
Gerald Morgan
Love and hate you at the exact same time.
Stephen Crowder
Mutual, I'm sure.
Gerald Morgan
I want to start off saying how much I love watching the show most, mostly Gerald, and appreciate everything y'all do. I'm sorry. I added that last part.
Stephen Crowder
It's okay.
Gerald Morgan
We knew. I'm 25 and I've been married to my husband for almost five years, together for 10. He is six years older than me. We met at church. As children growing up in the church, we started out on the same page. We both wanted to get married, have children, raise them in the church as well. Okay, sounds good. However, my husband was told at 19 that he had a heart defect and needed to have surgery. We thought for a while that everything would be fine, but recently he Told me that it is worse than he was letting on. Ooh, that's no good. For the last year or so I have been hinting and straight up asking him to think about starting a family. But he told me that he cannot think about having kids right now because he will probably have to have open heart surgery in 10 years and may not make it through. He says that he cannot wrap his head around potentially leaving a child fatherless that early in life and he feels that it would be selfish to start in 10 years. He will be 40, but that is obviously still too young in my mind to leave this world. He is upset that he will likely make me a widow soon in life, but I don't know how to get him to understand that God has it and everything will be okay regardless. I want children. I've always wanted to be a mother and he knows this. I feel like we are moving in two different directions, but I also feel as though I cannot blame him. What do I do? I will be grateful for any advice from you or the team have for me. I have been struggling with this for a while now and feel unmoored. Thank you so much.
Stephen Crowder
If I can take this one just, just right off the bat. First off, I appreciate it. This is well written. I appreciate the, the letter look. This is one of those scenarios where the left, they think they have a corner on empathy and so they use it as an answer for everything. It's not. Sometimes it clouds judgment. In this case though, this is someone you love who I bet you is genuinely scared because if this is his reasoning, it's not, oh, how could you bring children into the world when you know global warming. This is a guy, I don't know the details, but if he's facing his very mortality, seems like this is a reason that he's. However warped you may think it is, it's a selfless reasoning where he's going, I don't want to bring a child into the world when I don't know if I'm even like, I don't want to create a fatherless household for a child. Now it doesn't mean that it still can't be hashed out, but I would say please do approach this with some empathy and understanding because it sounds like a guy who's scared and a guy who's trying to do the right thing. And by the way, maybe there isn't necessarily a definitive right or wrong answer. Like I could see the argument, I could see the argument being made here. As far as if I have a 5050 shot of living would be irresponsible for me to bring a child in who I know won't have a father. And I can also see the reasoning behind, hey, you know, I have to have faith and step out in faith. And this is important to you. So it's. It's better to leave you with a piece of me and let's pray for the best. I don't think that either are finding themselves in a pit of moral abyss. I honestly can understand both sides. But what I do know is this is a guy who's probably pretty scared, probably pretty rattled if he's telling you the truth. And he's been living with something a little worse than he's let on. That's not atypical of men. As much as women go, oh, a man has a cold and women are tougher. It's like a guy just wants to be taken care of because he wants you to show that you love him. Okay, we've built nations and gone out to war. You don't think anyone had colds in World War I trenches, but he's probably living with a lot of fear and chewing on it and I think, you know, making sure that it seems like you love him, that he knows you love him and you know that. Maybe explain to him if this is really important to you again, assuming you're not being selfish, that, hey, you'll cross that bridge when you get there and you still would rather have, you know, a piece of him, you know, and a child together because he's the love of your life, then. Not that even in the face of the worst possible scenario, you'd still rather have that and that you will take care of that. Because a man feels like it's his responsibility again to protect and provide, and he doesn't know if he's physically going to be there. So I also think that he needs to have a lot of trust in you if he's gonna be gone.
Gerald Morgan
Yeah, and I think that's right. I mean, it does seem like you need to approach this very delicately because this is a tough situation. I mean, he can. I think his logic is understandable. But I also would encourage him, like, hey, look, tomorrow is never guaranteed for any of us.
Stephen Crowder
In your case, it's really not guaranteed.
Gerald Morgan
Stop it with the hike. You're like an inch shorter than me. Maybe. So tomorrow's really never guaranteed. And, you know, as a husband and a father, you think about leaving people if something, you know, God forbid, the worst thing happened, and, you know, kids and you hear stories about this. It definitely happens in life where, you know, things happen. I mean, you could be Ukrainian and grow up in a place where, you know, you lose people instantly to a war or something like that. You could be in a car accident. There's a lot of very difficult life situations that can come at you. And I would not let this one be the thing that stops you from having children and building a family, because for two reasons. One, you could be fine. You could have some difficult surgeries to have to go through, but you could be fine and make it through those. Two, you could end up dying at 10 years. If that's something that you feel like, you know, that's the prognosis that the doctor said you may not make it through the surgery, and there's a high likelihood of that. But you'll have 10 years of being able to sow into somebody who is going to bring you an immense amount of joy and happiness during those 10 years. Or you can live for 10 years just waiting and counting the days and not living life, essentially. So it's almost like it could potentially be a giving up on life moment for. For him in some ways. Now, it may not manifest in every single way. I mean, still get up, go to work, do things, go to ball games, whatever you do for fun. But I think life is going to be a lot better, taking the risk. And I think if you approach it the way Stephen said, where you have a lot of empathy and understanding and you're not telling him, like, you have to do this for me, but it's like, hey, I think we should just continue to live life as though we're going to be around, because that's really what you kind of have to do every single day anyway, because you really don't know. Now you have something that's a little bit more of a marker out there going, hey, in about 10 years, you may have to have this surgery, and maybe I don't have that. But at the same time, we never really know what's going to happen. And if I live my life in fear of what tomorrow is going to bring, I'm never going to live today the way I should. So I would highly recommend.
Stephen Crowder
I agree with everything you're saying. I would just say beyond, you know, how. How you will enjoy your life. You know, I think this is man baby maybe looking at the selflessly thinking, okay, but what about the child? You know, let's say we have A kid in two years, you know, at 6 years old, loses his dad. And I understand that too. I Will say this. What you can do, I think would go a long way is he also probably is concerned about being very tired. He's also probably very concerned about other. Not just death, but complications right where. What if he's an invalid? What if he doesn't have the energy because, you know, he's not pumping blood the way that he should? You can quell some of that by letting him know. I will tell you how long of a way it goes for a woman to tell a man because most men never experience this. And when you do, it sure shocking. You tell them like, hey, just so you know, like, I'm going to be okay and I've got this. I'm going to take care of it. And whatever happens to you, I can take care of this. I'm a big girl and I'm here. That's what I sign on for taking care of you and taking care of this child. And I'm going to make sure that if something happens, and I don't think it will, and we'll pray about it, that this boy or girl is going to know who their father was. I will make sure of that. So don't worry about that. Don't worry about. I will be there if you have to go through it in the hospital. You know, men often feel like they always have to be that protector and provider. And the truth is no one is that at all moments in time. This goes back to what we talked about, this idea of duty. This man may be mixed up inside, but I see this stemming from a man who feels an obligation, a sense of duty, that, well, it would be responsible for me to bring a child in the world and leave him fatherless because he doesn't want to set a child up for failure. And I know that you love this man and I also think there's a strong argument to be made, like Gerald said. But you might be setting this up right now in a dynamic of him on the side of duty and you on the side of emotion, what you feel and what you've always wanted. Where if you approach it that way, he may be like, yeah, but you're being selfish because what about that kid not having a dad? So don't do that. Make sure you come at it from a place of understanding and empathy. And hey, look, if you make him feel confident, and that means between now and then, in other words, how confident is this guy going to be that his child is going to have a stable environment? I don't know if that doesn't exist at home right now. I'm not saying that's the case, but it's the case in a lot of scenarios where they don't want to add to that complicated situation. Right. It's like Jordan Peterson says, make your bed right? As a woman. If you're in the make dinner. Does he feel like when he comes home that you're on top of things where you can also add another responsibility? What if he's there filet open in a hospital bed? If you do that, you approach it from understanding love and that he knows you've got this. And that child will know who their father is. You know what? Hey, we've seen crazier things. He might even make a more effective recovery. We're gonna send you off here to Tim Pool. Keep watching through 4pm and download the Rumble app. Follow us there. Tough love with guru. I know. Strange animal. I got the father.
Podcast Summary: Louder with Crowder – "TOUGH LOVE: Grok Got Sexual and Tried to Ruin My Marriage" (April 17, 2025)
In this episode of Louder with Crowder, host Stephen Crowder delves into a blend of humor, personal anecdotes, and serious discussions surrounding modern technology's impact on relationships and societal norms. Joined by Gerald Morgan, the duo navigates through listener-submitted questions, offering "tough love" advice while tackling contemporary issues such as artificial intelligence in personal relationships and health challenges.
The episode kicks off with Stephen Crowder and Gerald Morgan engaging in light-hearted conversation about CBD distilleries and "forever stamps." Their playful interaction sets a casual tone, interspersed with Crowder's promotional message for CB Distillery and a brief mention of their online store.
Notable Quote:
Crowder transitions the discussion towards the main segment, "Tough Love with Guru Crowder," where listeners can send in requests for life or relationship advice. He emphasizes the role of a "certified guru," humorously referencing the process of becoming one through stamped forms.
Notable Quote:
Crowder shares a personal experience with the Grok AI app, detailing an unexpected interaction with an AI named Ara in "sexy mode." This narrative serves as a springboard for a broader conversation about the integration of AI in personal relationships and its potential repercussions.
Key Points:
Initial Interaction: Crowder downloaded the Grok app to seek business advice while driving. At the top of the interface, a "sexy" button caught his attention.
AI Engagement: Upon activating the button, Ara, the AI, engaged in suggestive conversation, prompting Crowder to question the ethical implications of such features in AI applications.
Societal Implications: The hosts discuss how AI companions might affect human relationships, particularly among young men, and touch upon issues like the modern feminist movement and the rise of figures like Andrew Tate.
Notable Quotes:
Stephen Crowder [05:23]: "Without warning, the female voice introduced herself as Ara and gave me a sexy compliment."
Gerald Morgan [06:21]: "He probably is retarded. My curiosity got the better of me, so I tapped it."
The conversation deepens as Crowder and Morgan explore the potential long-term effects of AI sexbots on human behavior and societal structures. They draw parallels with the proliferation of internet pornography and discuss the challenges of regulating emerging technologies.
Key Points:
Comparison with Internet Pornography: Just as internet accessibility changed the landscape of pornography, AI sexbots could further alter human intimacy and connection.
Regulatory Concerns: The hosts debate the need for immediate regulation of AI technologies to prevent societal issues, emphasizing personal responsibility over governmental intervention.
Feminist Movement Critique: Crowder attributes some of the societal shifts to modern feminist movements, suggesting they contribute to the decline in traditional relationships and increase in loneliness among men.
Notable Quotes:
Stephen Crowder [11:10]: "You have to look at the rise of an Andrew Tate and say, okay, why?"
Gerald Morgan [14:09]: "But we're starting to see the societal impacts. Do we have to wait 30 years to see the societal impacts of this kind of thing?"
Gerald Morgan responds to a listener named Jackie Blue, who is grappling with multiple sclerosis (MS) and the associated weight gain. Both hosts offer practical advice on maintaining motivation for exercise and adopting sustainable fitness routines despite physical limitations.
Key Points:
Gerald's Approach: Emphasizes the importance of building strength over merely losing weight, advocating for exercise routines that consider joint health and mobility.
Stephen's Recommendations: Suggests starting with minimal effective workouts, focusing on progressive overload, and integrating fitness into daily routines to ensure consistency.
Notable Quotes:
Gerald Morgan [25:09]: "You can still do most things that you could do in a gym with that."
Stephen Crowder [26:03]: "Your body doesn't want to be optimized. Your body wants to survive, so you have to challenge it to make adaptations."
A deeply personal and emotional listener letter is read, detailing a woman's regret over an abortion influenced by medical advice. Crowder and Morgan offer compassionate yet tough love responses, addressing themes of self-forgiveness, societal judgment, and the complexities of medical decision-making.
Key Points:
Listener's Experience: The listener describes her difficult pregnancy, the pressure to abort, and her subsequent regret, feeling guilt over her child's heart defect.
Hosts' Advice: They encourage self-forgiveness, understanding the pressure from medical professionals, and focusing on the well-being of the child rather than dwelling on blame.
Notable Quotes:
Stephen Crowder [40:37]: "You have nothing to feel guilty about. And I know that's easy for me to say because I don't have to live with the condition that your child has."
Gerald Morgan [46:42]: "You have a baby that is largely healthy. If you beat yourself up over it, you're not going to be focusing on taking care of that baby."
The final listener submission involves a 25-year-old woman conflicted about having children with her husband, who has a heart defect that may lead to mortality within a decade. Crowder and Morgan provide empathetic and practical advice, encouraging open communication and emphasizing the unpredictability of life.
Key Points:
Listener's Dilemma: She desires motherhood but her husband fears leaving their child fatherless due to his health condition.
Hosts' Guidance: They advocate for approaching the situation with empathy, fostering trust, and making informed decisions based on love and mutual understanding rather than fear.
Notable Quotes:
Stephen Crowder [52:53]: "This is a guy who's probably pretty scared, probably pretty rattled if he's telling you the truth."
Gerald Morgan [55:58]: "Tomorrow's really never guaranteed. And, you know, as a husband and a father, you think about leaving people if something, you know, God forbid, the worst thing happened."
As the episode wraps up, Crowder and Morgan reflect on the themes discussed, reiterating the importance of understanding, empathy, and personal responsibility in navigating life's challenges. They encourage listeners to seek support and maintain open dialogues about sensitive issues.
Notable Quote:
AI in Personal Relationships: The integration of AI, especially in intimate contexts, poses ethical and societal challenges that require thoughtful consideration and potential regulation.
Health and Fitness Motivation: Overcoming physical health challenges necessitates practical, sustainable approaches to fitness, emphasizing strength and consistency over intensity.
Emotional Healing and Forgiveness: Individuals dealing with medical regrets or familial strains benefit from self-forgiveness, empathy, and focusing on present well-being rather than past mistakes.
Family Planning Amid Health Concerns: Couples facing health-related uncertainties must balance fear with hope, fostering trust and open communication to make informed, compassionate decisions about starting a family.
Conclusion:
This episode of Louder with Crowder masterfully intertwines humor with profound discussions on modern technology's influence on personal lives and societal structures. Through listener interactions and candid conversations, Stephen Crowder and Gerald Morgan provide a platform for tough love advice, encouraging resilience, understanding, and proactive engagement with life's complexities.