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Joe Rogan podcast. Check it out.
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The Joe Rogan experience.
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Train my day. Joe Rogan podcast by night. All day. Let's go.
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Let's go.
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Joey Diaz, ladies and gentlemen.
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What's up, beautiful?
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It's good to see you, my brother.
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Good to see you. That was great. The club was rare form last night.
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Oh, last night was packed. It's been packed all week. It's been really fun. A lot of fun shows. You know, Shane was there last night or the night before last. You know, you're there tonight. It's. It's been amazing. Coleman is on fire.
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He's crazy.
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Holtzman's on fire. Last night he was on fire.
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He is.
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Me and Adam Egot were howling. We were watching him from the balcony and howling. Such a good community, Joey. It's so nice out here.
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I bumped into Duncan for breakfast.
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The best.
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Like, we just looked at each other. He's like, what are you doing here? And we sat down.
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Me and Duncan are going to corner you and try to get you to move here.
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No, we're going to. We're going to figure it out.
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Yeah, you got. You belong here.
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Every time I come down here, I see something else that like, I had a great time last night.
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Joe Derosa's here now too.
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That's what I heard.
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Yeah, he just moved here.
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Is he going to bring the sandwich shop down?
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Yes, he is. We're going to open up a sandwich shop out here. He is rather.
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That's a good.
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I say we because I'm going to be eating.
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Yeah, he makes good sandwiches.
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He makes a very good sandwich. Very good sandwich. Yeah, he brought a bunch of them. What did he do? Was it Moon Tower last year that he brought him? It might have been. It was Moon Tower or South by Southwest, one of the two. Last year he brought like a ton of sandwiches. He had a pop up. So his. His restaurant did a pop up somewhere in Austin. I was like, bro, you got to open this up here. You'd be killing it. Especially if it's you and people know it's your business.
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Because I've heard this. Somebody else was telling me about the sandwiches.
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Very legit.
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I gotta go up there.
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Very legit.
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I just don't even know where it is. I don't know if it's in Brooklyn.
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I want to kidnap my man Giovanni and white planes bring him out here.
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Ye. He'll.
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He can't survive outside of Italian neighborhoods, though. That guy's the most Italian guy that's ever lived.
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And you know, they get their stuff up there?
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Yeah, they get everything. And it's all coming in right from Italy, you know, because a lot of it's imported. They use a lot of imported stuff. Imported mortadella, imported the peppers, all that stuff that they have, you know, sun dried peppers, sun dried tomatoes. They import all that shit? Yeah, they got to get that shit. You know, then it. Because if it goes there, then it's got a ship from the boat all the way to Texas. It's a little bit of a pain.
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Remember fucking Greasy Tony? He used to drive once a month to New Jersey and get cold cuts and fucking chicken cutlets. Poor Greasy Tony.
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We used to visit him every time we went to Tempe. He was our guy.
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Remember you said not to drink his Mountain Dew because he made it himself. You up for two days, he used to make. That was the strongest mountain fucking dew you could ever taste in your life. You up for like a day.
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Greasy Tony was such a character. He was such a character and he became our friend.
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Yeah, he was a good dude.
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When we first started going there, we were visiting for like 10 fucking years. You know, every time we would do shows in town, we'd go visit Greasy Tony.
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He had a $20 chicken cutlet sandwich, phenomenal, 15 years ago, which weighed like I was 400 pounds. And I would bring it home and try to finish it.
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Do you remember that steak sub that he would make? What did he call it? Trash Can.
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Yes, that's right, the Trash Can.
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The Trash Can. It was crazy. Peppers and onions and cheese and fucking everything was in that thing. It was crazy.
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And you know what?
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It's that thick.
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When I drove in yesterday, I'm like, this is how things change. I mean, we've been coming here since 95. I know. I. Yeah, right? Yeah.
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I think 99 was the first time.
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Yeah. I would do Houston and drive down here and do the lobby in the Cap City when they had.
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Oh, yeah.
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I still remember that. Driving through fucking Houston down here, not having any money, having to drive back because we couldn't get a hotel room. Drive back to Houston at the end of the night. And I was looking at this yesterday. Like, when I landed, it was 4:00 traffic. And I'm like, my God, this is how we're watching how past civilizations just changed.
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Yes.
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Something happened here and everybody moved here.
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Yep.
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And I'm not talking about four or five people. Everybody.
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Yeah.
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And that's how civilizations change. We just witnessed it after the pandemic. It's been fucking surreal.
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Yeah, it is surreal. Surreal. Surreal to see things change. Yeah, you know what? It's also, there's places that sort of rest on their laurels too much. And whenever that happens, it's easy for another place to rise up that offers something more interesting. So like Los Angeles was always Los Angeles. And like, when Gavin Newsom talks about California, he's like, you know, I'm very big on California, very bullish on California. California has all this industry. Heyo. They're all thinking about moving. The only reason why they don't move is because it's too difficult to move. If it was like every business could instantly pull up roots and replace everything and have everything running in a week at the other place, they'd all be gone. They'd all be gone. They just. It's too expensive. It's too expensive to leave versus what you would save and the regulations that you wouldn't have to go through and all the bullshit with all the permits and all that. What California does is over regulate everything. They get as much government involved as possible, they suck as much tax money out of you as possible, and then they still leave the place a mess. They still have homeless people everywhere. It's still a fucking disaster. It's still a woke shit show of virtue signaling at every level of the. Like, no course correction at all. They're going further and further into La LA Land. And you're like, jesus Christ, you guys. And so then a place like Austin becomes attractive, you know, because like, it's not like that here. And people are very reasonable. And Austin. The best thing about Austin is it's a blue city in a red state. So it's like balanced. Like this is a saying they have out here. Keep Austin weird and surrounded. So Austin is surrounded by rednecks with guns and like, it keeps the tone more medium. Like the Austin liberals, they're much more just left of center people like we are. You know what I mean? Like in some parts of the country, we're considered like far right. You and I, far right. It's crazy. It's fucking ridiculous. It's. But it's because everybody went nuts and everyone demanded a whole series of things that you have to agree to in order to be a good person. Like, off.
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You know what the real problem is out there? Let me tell you what the real problem. I didn't realize until I left.
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What?
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That everybody's too busy tapping themselves on the back.
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There's a lot of that every.
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When the fires happen, those street women or whatever, the. Yeah, the chief and whatever. I'm Looking at them, and I'm like, look at them. Y'all got gel in their hair. They all got a tattoo on their neck. God forbid, God forbid. They can't be cool for just one fucking minute. God forbid. And that's the problem you have out there. It's too many people. I'm so great. This is my idea, and it's great and it's gonna work. It's not working. You're right, but you're too stupid. Say, you know what? This ain't working. Their egos are so big, they don't have the heart to go, this ain't working.
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You're right. You're absolutely right. But I don't think it's entirely their fault. It is their fault, but the culture rewards that kind of behavior. This is the problem with having protected classes of people, whether it's gay, lesbian, whatever it is, whether it's your nationality. If you have a protected class of people where you're not allowed to criticize the protected class of people, then they become. You know, Vivek Ramaswamy talked about this in a very interesting way. He was like, it's the tyranny of the underprivileged. Or is that what he called it? The tyranny, tyranny of the marginalized? Or something along those lines. But the idea is that this group of people, whether they're trans people or gay people, they get above everything. Everything you do is amazing. Oh, my God, you're so fabulous. You. So, because no one wants to be think thought of as homophobic or transphobic, so you pretend that everything they do is incredible. And so you're going to be the best firefighter ever. Like, can you carry a burning man out of a building? Girl, you don't have to. If he was in that building, he. He shouldn't have been in that building in the first place. If I have to carry him out, we got other problems. That a literal firefighter said that in response to, could she carry her husband out of the building? Like, no, you know, you can't. And so you shouldn't be a firefighter. Just like you shouldn't be a bouncer. If you can't fight, you shouldn't be a firefighter. You shouldn't be a firefighter. If you can't carry someone out of a bill. If you can't run up a flight of stairs because you're £260 and five foot seven and a woman. No, no, you shouldn't be a firefighter. Should have to be in, like, really good Shape to be. Now if you're some crossfits game lady who's some beast, like, yeah, that lady could be a firefighter. Yeah, but it's like, like even guys, like if you're a guy and you're scrawny and you never work out and all you do is smoke cigarettes, maybe you shouldn't be a firefighter. You know, maybe you can, maybe you can't get up that flight of stairs either. It should be like it's a physical job where you're rescuing people. You have to be able to physically carry people. You have to rescue them. Firefighters when I was a kid were the fucking big brutal men.
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Beast down doors, fucking houses.
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They looked like former football players. There's this guy used to play pool with Ray the fireman. Because everybody in the pool hall, I was Joe the comedian. Everybody had a nickname based on what you did. Ray the fireman was a fucking house. He's just a big fucking like big Irish guy, you know, like, of course he's a fireman. Look at him. That guy is going to kick down a door, carry your husband, throw him over his shoulder, run through the flames, throw him on the lawn. He does it all the time. He's an animal.
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Like Veto's lover in the Sopranos. Remember he was a fireman. He was.
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Right, I forgot about that scene.
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Then he killed himself in real life.
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Yeah. Oh, did he really? After that show. Because they thought he was gay.
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I don't know, I read.
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I hope it wasn't that. I hope they didn't taunt him for being gay. You imagine you get your shot. Hey Joey, I got good news and bad news. Good news is you're gonna be on the Sopranos. Bad news is you gotta a guy.
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And you gotta swap spit with him.
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Yeah, swap spit on camera. Yeah, but you're on the Sopranos. What are you gonna do? Depends on what you want to do. If you're a regular guy and that's your first acting gig, I suggest you pass. I suggest you pass.
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I couldn't swap.
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You have to be like a Jared Leto type dude to pull that off. Died of a self inflicted gunshot wound December 16, 2008 at the age of 47.
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And he was a firefighter, a former firefighter.
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Who knows? I mean, when, when did he die? How long after the show? Go pull it back up again because it just said.
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So.
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He died in 2008. So the show was running in 2008, right?
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Yep.
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Was Soprano still on in 2008? No, no, it was off by then.
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I think. No. 2009, maybe. I don't know.
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Let's find that out and then we'll have an answer. But I would imagine if you're a guy, an Italian guy or whatever, and you go back to the neighborhood and you've been playing. It ended. June 10, 2017. 7. So right after it ended, I guess right after it ended, he waxed himself. That's so unfortunate. There's another beautiful thing about the comedy community. Like, nobody gives a if you're gay. Nobody. Like Tim Dillon. Tim Dillon. Just. He's just one of us. It's just we're all like the lesbians that come there and hang out. They're just one of us. No one gives a flying. It's just if you're not funny, nobody wants to hang out with you. If you're not funny, like, get out of the green room. You know what I mean? But if you're funny, who cares? No one cares.
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Do you remember the kid from Houston?
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Which one?
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The guy that used to always wear football shirts.
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Yes. Where? He did.
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He passed away. That was my brother.
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What was his name? God damn it. I loved him.
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I loved him.
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That's escaping my mind. With a little hat on, you're gonna remember.
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And he'd come up to you and give you a hug all the time.
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I haven't seen him in so, so long. When did he die? I don't know.
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Maybe 10 years ago.
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Did he talk about being gay on stage?
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No, but he told me he was gay all the time.
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Oh, yeah, well, he was gay.
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He would go to those army things just to men.
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Well, he just looked like a football player. Yes, like a big form. He looked like a Shane Gillis type dude. Yeah, like a big former football player. But he was gay.
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He was gay.
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He always wore football jerseys.
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Always football jerseys. That's how he trick him.
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Sweetheart of a guy. But again, same situation. Joey, that guy was one of us. He just hung out with us.
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No, I loved him to death.
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He just hung out with us.
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I love that dude to death. It didn't even matter to me that he was. Listen, that's never mattered to me. You got to remember I was a Judas Priest fan in high school. That dude just gay as hell. First time I saw, nobody knew.
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Isn't that funny?
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I knew in 79. Nobody comes out with a little hat. With a whip, you know. I saw him at the Palladium. Oh, my God. Did you ever read. You just have to try to read his book.
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Really?
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Jimmy Florentine gave it to Me. You have to try to read it.
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Is it crazy?
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I'll just tell you one story that there was a guy in Chicago, like a stylist that used to tell him he wanted dick always bust. You know, those people, those women. Come on, Joe, come on. You know, and you're like, come on, it's never gonna happen. And he said finally he got pissed off one day and he took the guy up in his office. He goes, I fucked him so hard, I blew out with his O ring. I had to go to the hospital. I'm reading this going, this is my type of fucking guy. I love this fucking guy. Guy.
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Well, you got to think what Rob Halford did when he was at the head of Judas Priest. He got all these straight guys to dress like they're in a gay biker gang because they wanted to be cool like Judas Priest. He changed the style of a kind of music.
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He really did. I loved him.
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How many straight guys dressed like gay bikers not even knowing what they were doing? They just thought, you know, this is how you dress for this kind of music. But it was because of Rob Alford.
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Rob. And he's still out.
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You know, I had him on a show once. There he is. That bad, you got another thing coming. I had a buddy of mine in high school who loved that song. And he used, like, a quote of it in his. In his yearbook. And I always remember thinking, wow, that's the coolest quote. Like, if you think you're gonna sit around, let you chip with me. But when my brain listen, I ain't fooling and you better think again. Out there is a fortune waiting to be had. You think I let it go? You're mad.
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You got another great album. Great shit.
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That kid never did anything, though.
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No.
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He never left the town.
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No.
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Fell apart.
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And here's the weirdest thing about Judas Priest.
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What?
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His writing. That's what I died about. His writing. Because he would write. And you're thinking he's writing about a woman.
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He's right about.
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He's writing about a man. And he has a song called Burning up that is so over the top. I know you feel the same. I know you feel the flame burning deep inside of you. Burning you up. It's called breaking you down. Breaking you out in a cold sweat. But when you lose control of your very soul. Your desire takes over. You'll feel the heat wave. You'll answer my way and suddenly you know that you're burning up. That is a bad month. When I heard that, I'm like, oh.
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Let me hear that. Jamie. We'll have to edit this out of the YouTube for the folks at home, please seek it online. Here we go.
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Listen to the way it starts. It's like a satellite.
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This is back before satellites, like before we had modems.
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Oh, this is 1980. This is on a hell bent for leather tour.
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You could let songs cook back then, you know, like time. Pink Floyd time. Oh baby, guess what just got added to the Spotify playlist. You keep me waiting so I'll play it dirty till your body is breaking.
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We've got to make love, the time is right.
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We got to make love tonight cuz we're burning up. You make me greed, you won't eat me my food but I'll make it easy cuz I see straight through you.
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You cool me off and hot me up.
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There you go. Hot, hot. Gay love.
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So when I coming at you, when I read those lyrics, I'm like, that's the most brilliant thing.
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That's a dark. The darkest thing about gay people today is that some of them are in the closet. Other than homophobia is that some other's are genuinely people that hate gays. But that's rare.
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Nobody hates gay. No, there's, there's 20, 25, I can't see you. You know, it's all around us. So if you're still hating, you got a problem there.
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There's guys that have been molested when they were young. They get angry at gay people. Not on. Not that it makes sense, I'm not justifying it, but I've met guys that had problems with gay people. They were like very scared around gay people. But it was because they got molested by a pedophile.
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Right?
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That happened.
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Pedophile and being gay, two different, fucking big difference.
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So I'm just saying, like there are people and there's very religious people that don't like gay people, but most normal people don't give a fuck. Most normal people don't give a fuck and they shouldn't. It's stupid. It's a dumb thing you think about.
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I don't.
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It's just like, if you're not having sex with me, what do I care? Like, who cares? This episode is brought to you by the Farmer's Dog. I've been asking dog owning friends what they feed their dogs and most of them are surprised by the question. And I get it. For decades, kibble was the only option. But as humans have been eating healthier companies like the farmer's dog started feeding dogs healthier. Too. Because when your dog eats freshly made human grade food, owners notice a bunch of positive changes, including weight loss and higher energy levels. Basically, happier dogs. Did you know that overweight dogs can live an average of 2.5 years less? And did you know that 60% of dogs are overweight? So when my friends say, I just feed my dog kibble or whatever, I tell them, no, you got to think about this one. You have to try the farmer's dog. Because no one, dog or human, should be eating highly processed food for every meal. So try the farmer's dog today and get 50% off your first box of healthy, freshly made food, plus free shipping. Just go to the farmersdog.com rogan tap the banner or visit this episode's page to learn more. The offer is for new customers only.
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Now, the way I grew up, you know, the Cuban men's side of me was supposed to. Right? The pre revolution Cubans, they like Italians, too. Catholics go in a room if there's a gay man in the room. I always thought that was the fuck you can't be in. I won't go in there.
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Why?
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Cause you're a machismo type of dude. But my mother was the one that goes, no, they're fucking. And then we had a gay guy in our neighborhood. I told you about this guy. He worked with my mother. He was a designer on Broadway for some plays. He would design the cow footage. But at night he sold coke. He was like, this is like 1975. And he would come to a bar, and I knew he was gay. His name was Matin. We called him Mating and Maricon because that's what that means in Spanish. Maricon means fag in Spanish. So that was his open name in the Cuban community. But one day he came into my mother's bar, and there was two bookies. I was like a kid. I was playing that shuffleboard. Remember when you play the sawdust and you sprinkle? I'm playing the shuffleboard. And he was right there. And the two bookies were in the corner. And the one guy goes, look who it is. Martinga Mari Kong. And this motherfucker pulled out a.32.
A
Oh, Jesus.
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And he goes, listen, I'm gonna tell the both of you that unless you suck my dick or I fuck you in the ass, you don't have the right to call me Martin the Fag. So say it again. I'm gonna shoot both of you. And my mom's yelling at him, martin, Martin, Coco's behind you. If they start shooting at each Other I'm right here. I lift my head up, I'm like, oh. And Martin's like. And all of a sudden Martin left. So the next day, I guess he called my mother to apologize and Martin. My mother made Martin come and apologize to me. And when he opened the door and he was like, I'm very sorry about pulling out the gun. I go, fuck that. You're my new Charles Bronson. I gave him a fucking hug. And he became my best friend after that. And I respected him because he was going through hate. Yeah, really hate in the mid-70s. He would come back once a week with a black eye or a busted lip. He went to a bar in the Village and there'd be guys waiting for him on the way out. And I always respected that dude. Like always respected him for that.
A
The problem with bullies and bigots and all, people that attack people like that is all this is the same problem in all walks of society. It's weak men. It's almost always just weak men. Weak stupid men that want to find someone to pick on. Want to find someone that's not bothering them at all. And with them because they're weak. That's all it is. That's all it is. It's all. But that's all it is. That the woke people that scream at you and want you to do what they want. The people that want to like spray paint Swastik is on Teslas. It's the same thing. It's weak men, mostly weak men, a bunch of crazy women and they're all together in this big pile of suck that's connected to a political ideology. But most people, you know, you shouldn't care. And if you do care, you just weren't around. I was around gay people when I was really young. Fortunately, I lived in San Francisco when I was 7 years old and we were in the middle of gay land. I mean it was San Francisco in the 70s, dude. It was gay as during the Vietnam War in San Francisco. I remember I'd be walking down the street, my stepdad once and a guy whistled at him. I was like, oh, I got uncomfortable. Like he didn't freak out. He's just like, shook his head, shook his head like, what the.
B
When they whistle with a little kid.
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He'S walking with a seven year old and this guy whistled him down. That guy didn't give a about kids. He's not making any. He doesn't care. So we had these next door neighbors who these gay. This gay couple and my aunt used to smoke weed with them, and they'd get naked and play bongos. And she loved the fact that she could get naked with these guys because they didn't try to her. So they all just get naked together and smoke weed and play bongos. It was hilarious. They were really nice people. So, like, my experience with gay people was just like, they're everywhere. It's normal. So when I moved to Florida, I had a friend. My friend was Cuban. His name was Candy. His last name was Candido. We called him Candy. And Candy was with his dad. And his dad throws a newspaper down on the table. God damn it. And he's like, whoa, what's going on? It's like, these are trying to marry each other. And I remember I was 11 years old, and I was like, why do you care? Like, he was getting. He threw the newspaper at the table. Because the gay marriage. I'm like, why do you. I'm like, what a fool. You're a grown ass man and you care about that? Like, who cares if they get married? Yeah, I know. He was cute, but he was mad, bro.
B
But, oh, yeah, oh, yeah.
A
They want to try to get married because, you know, they've been fucking with gays with marriage forever. It's so wrong, man. It's so wrong.
B
There's nothing. Listen, I see it, and it doesn't bother me.
A
It's just like everything else. It's just there's a certain percentage of society that are just born gay, and there's plenty of them to hang out with each other and they should be friends. Yes.
B
No, the football player.
A
Oh, yes.
B
Scott. That's his first name. Now we got to work on his last name.
A
God damn it.
B
Scott.
A
Yeah, I need to call somebody. Otherwise, this is. Do you got Maddie Kersh's number? We should call Maddie Kersh. He would know.
B
No.
A
That'S gonna drive me nuts.
B
Somebody from Houston would know, because I don't want to call somebody online. I have to describe him. And then people go, you described Scott.
A
Well, what I was thinking, you were saying, was Jeff, Scott. Jeff Scott from the Comedy Store is another example of a gay guy who was our brother.
B
Brother. He was our brother.
A
That's it. Scott Kennedy.
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Scott Kennedy. Look at him with his New Orleans shirt.
A
Scott Kennedy was awesome.
B
Awesome.
A
Sorry, I forgot his name, but he's not around to be embarrassed.
B
I don't know. Look at him with Craig Ferguson.
A
He always had a football jersey.
B
Always.
A
I mean, that guy did not look gay. Like, he looked like a big old football player. Like, you could see him in the backyard, like. Like smoking a whole hog with a bunch of boys, drinking Bud Lights.
B
But here's the problem. Here's what I felt from Scott, because I met him in Houston and then we connected in LA, like, 2000. When he hugged me, I didn't feel threatened.
A
No, not at all.
B
When Jeff Scott hugged me, never. I never thought.
A
No, no, no, no, no, no, no.
B
I. I have to. Eric Rocher, when he hugs me, my. The kid at the Comedy Store, I hug him with all my heart. And I don't even feel that type of shit. I never felt that.
A
I've only felt that once ever from one comedian, and it was at the Montreal Comedy Festival. And he was drunk and he wouldn't stop. He kept touching me, too. Kept touching me and. Tell me. Wanted me to take me upstairs. Yeah, that was very unfortunate because he was just drunk, and I don't even think he thought I was gay, and I don't even think he thought I would do it. I think he was just trying to make me uncomfortable, you know? But he was definitely, like, last call for alcohol, like, hitting on people, and he was hammered. But I was thinking, like, imagine being a girl and this is happening where you fear for your life, because I threatened him. I said, dude, I'm gonna stomp a hole in your chest if you keep doing this. Leave me alone. And that was enough. But if you're a girl, you can't say that. If you're a girl, you gotta go, seriously, leave me alone. You gotta find authorities. You gotta go to the. Go to the front desk, go to the bar, like the. The check out people and say, can you guys call the police, please? This guy. I don't want to walk to my car. Can someone walk me to my car? You got to be worried about that? That sucks. But that's rare with guys that. That's happened to me once in 57 years where a guy uncomfortably hit on me. He wouldn't stop. One other time at the store, but that wasn't as. As blatant. It was just. He kept touching me. Like, stop touching me. You know, there's. There's gay guys that, like, push those limits. Like, if you were a girl and a guy kept putting his hand on your leg, he'd be like, hey, stop doing that. Like, why do you keep grabbing me? Why do you keep touching my body? Why do you keep touching my legs? Stop. That's weird. You're crossing lines, and I don't know what other lines you're thinking about crossing. So let's Stop this. But that's not most gay people. You know, I have these friends that I live next to in California. They're gay and they're super Republican now. It's hilarious. I follow them on Facebook. They're fucking super Republican now. They're. They're all in against the Dems. How they've ruined California because these guys are. They're conservative gay couple, they're married, they got a kid, and they're just like, enough of this.
B
The world is changing, brother.
A
Yeah, well, that. That's a good thing that the world is changing, you know, because there's. Do you know the guy who invented the Turing Test? You know what the Turing Test is? His name's Alan Turing and he's a scientist. He invented a test that they say AI has passed. And this test is where you can talk to a computer and not be able to tell that it's a computer, that it behaves like a human, it thinks like a human, it communicates like a human, where it's indiscernible. That's the Turing Test. AI has recently passed the Turing Test. Well, this guy, he was in England when this happened, right, Jamie? Where they forced him to take medication. He got arrested for being gay in, like, the 1950s. And they forced him to take medication that made him sterile, made him impotent so he couldn't have sex. Like, they. They forced him to take, like, hormone blockers that they give to sex offenders, you know, chemical castration, when they do that to sex offenders. And then he killed himself. The guy who invented the method of determining whether or not AI has become sentient gets murdered by dumb apes who don't like that he's gay. How crazy is that? I'm not fucking that story up, right?
B
I'm pretty sure that's your blockage to sexual offenders. When do they give you that?
A
Well, they don't always do it, you know, but it's called chemical castration. And by the way, it's the same chemicals, the same drugs that they use on kids when they give them hormone blockers. So when you talk to it, they're talking about a child getting puberty blockers, you know? Oh, it's totally reversible. The fuck it is. The fuck it is. That's the same shit. It's chemical castration. It's not reversible. That child is never going to fully develop. If they get on hormone blockers, then when they're 18, they go, you know what? I think I actually am a man. Too late. Too late. Because from 13 to 15. You suppressed your testosterone. Okay, here it is. Turing was later convicted by the advice of his brother and his own solicitor, and he entered a plea of guilty in the case Regina versus Turing. And Murray was brought to trial. On the 31st of March, 1952, Turing was convicted and given a choice between imprisonment and probation. His probation would be conditional on his agreement to undergo hormonal physical changes designed to reduce libido, known as chemical castration. He accepted the option of injections of what was then called stilbostrol, now known as diethylstilbestrol, or des, a synthetic ostrogen. This feminization of his body was continued for the course of one year. The treatment rendered Turing impotent and caused breast tissue to form. In a letter, Turing wrote that no doubt I shall emerge from it all a different man, but quite who I've not found out. Murray was given a conditional discharge. So Murray must have been the guy he was having sex with. That's so crazy, man. Arrested for being gay. 1954, at his house. Turing's housekeeper found him dead. Postmortem was held that evening, determined that he had died from the previous day at age 41, with cyanide poisoning cited as the cause of death. He had an apple lay half eaten beside his bed. Although apples not tested for cyanide, it was speculated this was the means in which Turing had consumed a fatal dose. So he fucking killed himself because they chemically castrated him. You know, founder of computer science and crypto cryptographer whose work was key to breaking the wartime Enigma codes. So this guy, like, helped the British crack codes. And what'd they do? They injected him with poison so that his dick wouldn't work, so he couldn't fuck guys anymore, which is what he wanted. He was. Imagine if they were. Everyone was gay. Everyone. And you were straight. And you're like, I don't want any dick. This is crazy. Like, guys keep trying to offer your dick. Like, no, no, no, no. Is there anything else? And then you meet girls. Like, oh, look, they're so soft and so pretty. That's what I like. I like girls and like, no, you don't. No. You're going to take this gay drug until you get that out of your system, or we're going to chemically castrate you. You can't be having sex with girls. But I. But they're so pretty. They're so lovely to be around, so attracted to them. No, no, no, no. Only guys. That's crazy. That's how stupid these people especially like when you get to like serious fundamentalist, rigid religions which want to throw them off roofs. This part of Middle east, they throw them off the roof, Round up all the gay guys, throw them off the roof, and everybody watches and cheers. Yay. Crazy.
B
Like I said, it's a different world out there, my friend.
A
It is a different world out there. But it's the world out there that could be just like the world here. It could go this way here. Like, this is what people understand. Just how Los Angeles fell apart. The United States could fall apart too, you know, like, look at Iran. We were looking at Iran the other day in photographs in the 1970s, girls had mini skirts, they all look really hot. The guys had no shirts on with six packs. Walking down the street, everyone's smiling. Looks like Europe. It looks like you're in Italy. And now it's a religious run country. It's run by a dictatorship like you. You criticize the government, they execute you. They executed an Olympic gold medalist in wrestling. Yeah. The UFC even tried to get them to stop. They plead, they pleaded to try to get them to stop. They tried to get Trump to get him to. Or was it during the Biden administration? The Trump administration, I don't remember. But they tried to get the President to somehow or another talk to Iran and not kill this guy.
B
He killed him because he spoke against the government, allegedly.
A
But you don't even have to really have spoken against the government. That's what's so scary. You just have to be accused of speaking against the government. I mean, to this day and age, any, like, a friend of mine's Twitter account got hacked and he got fished. They sent him an email and he didn't, you know, he's not that sophisticated with that stuff. And so he got fished, and then I heard he got fished. So I go to my Twitter just because I never check my DMs, but I did it just because I knew he got phished. And I went into my DM and it was him asking me for my email address after he got phished. So I was like, this motherfucker, he's trying to get me now. So someone could easily get your account and then. Or use, you know, some sort of code crack or figure out your code, then start posting stuff for you against the government, especially if you're in Iran. Like, they probably already have all your passcodes for everything over there. They've probably been like spying on everybody's computer from the jump. They probably just go to the database. What's Joey Diaz's Facebook password. Okay, Post a bunch of shit there about these government. The people in government should all be lined up and shot. They all suck dicks secretly. They're all eating babies. Just make them say something like that. And then let's go round them up. And then if you don't have any due process, that's the kind of shit that dictators do. They just round you up. This episode is brought to you by ZipRecruiter. It's not always fun to talk numbers, I get it. But it can be useful, like seeing how much you spend on groceries or entertainment in a month. That's good to know when you're creating a budget. If you run a business, you probably want to keep track of wages, cash flow, profit margins, growth rate, and so on. But here's another stat you may want to pay close attention to. According to Zipper Recruiter, 76% of employers plan to expand their headcount this year. That's a ton of time going into hiring if you're one of those businesses. Stay on top of it with Zip Recruiter. Their latest feature, Zip Intro, is exactly what you need. Try it for free@ziprecruiter.com Rogan Zip Intro lets you post jobs and start talking to qualified candidates the very next day, saving you time. It gives you the power to quickly go through top talent and set up back to back calls. Just pick who you want to talk to and a time and zip Intro will help make it happen. Save time hiring for 2025 with Zip Intro. Just go to ZipRecruiter.com Rogan right now to try Zip Intro for free. Again that ZipRecruiter.com RogAN Zip Intro post jobs today. Talk to qualified candidates tomorrow. Duncan scared the shit out of me. We were talking about this the other day about Ukraine and Russia. He's like, you know, there's people in Russia that are just in Russia because they tweeted against the government. And you know what they do with those people? They put them in prison. And you know what happens when the war breaks out? They give them the option like you could either be in jail forever or you can go fight in the war. And so they go to the front line and they get killed by American weapons guys who were tweeting against Putin. It's like you can use it to get rid of his political enemies. Crazy. And this is all while you and I at the same time hanging out in Boston or hanging out in Austin rather, eating barbecue, you know, like, it could go that way here too. Just like, it went that way in Iran, it could go that way in the United states. Just like LA fell apart, LA, 20 years ago was amazing. You remember L. A in 2005? We were having the time of our lives.
B
96.
A
Oh, my God. We were having the time of our lives. The restaurants were great, there was music playing everywhere. It was fun, There was a lot of great comedy. We had a good group of guys we were all hanging out with. LA was great. Yeah, there was still some traffic, but, you know, the weather was great. People were generally pretty nice. A lot nicer than they were on the East Coast. It's not even the same place anymore. And that can happen anywhere. That can happen in the United States. If something terrible happens in the United States, new laws get passed, new restrictions, that can happen anywhere. That's why I talk about it so much. People like, why do you obsess about it so much? Because you need to be paying attention. Because when it's too late, when they've already got complete control of what you could say on social media and they got you locked down, you're in trouble. You're in trouble because so many other things are coming that they're aware of. And the big one is automation.
B
Joey.
A
When automation comes. And this is what Andrew Yang was kind of running on when he was running for president, and I had him in, and it was a very interesting conversation because it was something that I hadn't considered, that all these jobs are gone. Do you know, there's parts of the world, like, there's ports in China now, where it's a hundred percent controlled by robots. There's a few people that run around, do maintenance and stuff, but everything, screens, everything is super efficient. These robots pick up the packages, they make an inventory of, everything's in there. Everything gets logged into the computer, they put it into these trucks, and before you know it, they're going to have electric trucks that drive themselves.
B
That's why the strike happened in Jersey, all over with the teamsters, with the longshoremen.
A
Yes.
B
Because they know it. They don't have much left.
A
They don't have much time left. They don't have much time left.
B
It's fucking crazy how industry has just dwindled in this country.
A
I know.
B
You know, And Americans really don't see that. See, because everybody's fucking into traveling and being cool. The gift that I had from doing comedy was I really got to see the country. I really got to see the ins and outs. And when I was a feature actor, I would ask questions, you Know like when you don't sit in a hotel all day and you just go out and you go to a movie theater and you ask questions and people tell you, oh my God, that's a great restaurant. Go there. You know, you look at cities like Cleveland, okay? I don't know if a lot of people know this. 20 years ago with all the jokes and shit, Cleveland had more Puerto Ricans than New York City.
A
Really?
B
Because there was a fucking car plant there and they were building cars there. You know, I remember being a fucking kid and going to Detroit for a basketball tournament or something stupid and seeing that city. It was 1976, 77, that city was fucking booming.
A
Detroit was one of the richest cities in the world.
B
Booming. It was the murder capital at the time.
A
Was it still even back then?
B
Yeah, yeah. When I met my Buddy in the 80s, he was from Detroit. It was the murder capital. But 75, 76, that city was booming, brother.
A
Yeah.
B
You know, Buffalo, New York, booming. Fisher Price, all these other companies left, you know, that's what I saw. Cleveland, Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh. Pittsburgh Steel.
A
Yep.
B
I went to Pittsburgh two years ago. Half the shit was closed down, brother.
A
Yep. You know, so when I think Youngstown.
B
What? No, it was downtown Pittsburgh, like just around that area.
A
No, but Youngstown was like that too, right?
B
Was it?
A
Youngstown was a much better environment than it is now. I believe. Tony told me. Tony's from Youngstown.
B
They have destroyed those parts of the country now. I don't know what happened in Nebraska. They could have had their own problems in Wyoming. I just know that little stretch, Buffalo, Cleveland, you know, fucking Cincinnati, all those towns that were booming have just disappeared.
A
They got gutted. All the jobs went overseas.
B
So if you're gonna bring this country back, it's gotta start with that. We gotta go back to that, that to make us strong again. And yeah, we're gonna have to fucking sweat it out for 10 months. But you know what? Three years, 10 years ago, I fucking was getting those hundred dollar a day movies and I said, I'm not doing them anymore for a year. I didn't work as an actor. Then finally I got a high scale movie because I kept saying no to the low movies. That's how you lift up a little bit. That's how you bump up by just saying fucking no. We didn't want to do this all of a sudden and we need to do this. We need to get this country hopping again.
A
The problem is they gave corporations an opportunity to make more money at the sacrifice of all those jobs in America. And, and the problem with corporations is they have an obligation to constantly make.
B
More money and labor.
A
Yeah, but. No, but that's the way you make more money is by having no labor. And not just that, no health insurance. This is, you know, Ron, not Ron Paul. What's his name?
B
Ross Perot.
A
Ross Perot talked about that. We were talking about with Ron White the other day that he was explaining that if you change these regulations and make it cheaper and easier for these people to go and make. He said, you're going to hear a giant sucking sound as all the businesses go south. And that's exactly what happened.
B
That's exactly what happened.
A
He called that in the 1990s.
B
That was my boy.
A
Yeah, I voted for him.
B
I love Rush Peru. Always did. Always. That's a real American right there he was.
A
They threatened him, dude. They, they threatened his, his family. Like, he pulled out of that. He was going to run again a second time, and he said he's not going to do it because his family was under threat and that he could. Considered serious. Yeah, he's dangerous because he, he could ruin the election. Like he. Bush, they thought was going to win a second term. But Ross Perot came around and conservative people that didn't really want to believe in the Republican Party anymore, like this party's just as full of as the left. They saw this Ross Perot guy and they went, oh, okay. He took a considerable amount of the vote and most of it would be against what Herbert Walker Bush would have got. And then Clinton came along and wasn't even supposed to win that year.
B
Bam.
A
Now he's in. Let's go.
B
Remember, they're paying for this with your money. Yeah, I'm paying for this with my money.
A
Exactly.
B
That was his classic. Yeah, that was hysterical.
A
Remember when he had that half hour show on TV where explained how the Federal Reserve works?
B
I don't remember that.
A
Yeah, he took over. He bought a half hour of regular primetime TV to explain to people how you're getting. He's explaining all the scams that you're. That are being run on you that you don't know about. This is why I'm running for president. I'm like, whoa, look at this guy.
B
That guy fucking did something that a lot of people don't know. Yeah, his employees got kidnapped and I ran and he went in there and took them out. And he hired like a, like a Marlon Brando from Apocalypse now to train his employees.
A
Really?
B
Yeah. He was a retired colonel, some badass Vietnam.
A
So it was his actual employees that went and got him out.
B
Yeah, that's the story. He trained, he made his employees. It's a. We're a family. Whoa, we're going on. And he made a promise to the people's families that he would have them back by Christmas. And he had him back by Christmas. Wow. And Kissinger kept giving them fucking a hard time. A bunch of people kept giving him a hard time. He did not give a fuck. He goes, I'm doing it. I gave those people my word. His word was word. How much money was he worth?
A
Billions. Yeah. He was a billionaire back then.
B
In the 90s already, I believe.
A
So how much money was Ross Perot worth? Yeah. Which back then. So 1990 billionaire. It's probably like. It's probably just double the billions, whatever it is. Probably something like that. Or maybe triple the.
B
Did he get oil money at the time?
A
92. He was the 13th wealthiest man in America. Net worth around 4 billion. So what is 4 billion from that time worth today? Let's guess. Let's guess.
B
Eight billion.
A
Eight.
B
Yeah.
A
I'm going say nine. I might be way off, though. I'm just. I'm completely guessing just under seven.
B
There you go.
A
Both wrong. That's a lot of money, though. Still. It's almost double, dog.
B
What about the chief of police? My hometown. This on his desk?
A
Yeah. Why'd he do that?
B
I don't know.
A
Was he proving a point? What was the. What was up?
B
You know, man, I heard he's a good dude, but he's a prankster. Oh, he's like a prankster type of dude. He sends.
A
So he's like Ari Shafird.
B
Yeah. He sends like packages to your house and he's one of those dudes, you know? And I don't know. That's. I guarantee. It was like a joke and it just blew up. Now it's national. Now you got nowhere to go.
A
Oh, God. Do you see what Ari did once? We shoved a note up his ass and he it out on stage and read it. Look at your face.
B
I don't want nobody to read a note out of their ass.
A
I don't want you in the room with me. What kind of parasites and bugs?
B
Oh, he's got hemorrhoids. He's got.
A
All sorts of stuff is flying through the air. Every breath you breathe is Ari gas flying around.
B
He's a nut.
A
He's so crazy.
B
He has not stopped at all. Like, it is not ending. No, I'm going to his thing next week.
A
He's never growing up.
B
No, no, he's never growing up.
A
It's not happening.
B
He's getting married, right? He got married or something like that?
A
He's already married.
B
Yeah.
A
He's got a little celebration.
B
Yeah. Party and shit. I don't even know what the fuck it is.
A
It's going to be a fucking carnival of psychopaths, dog.
B
I was telling you the other night, I got really high. I got home and I couldn't sleep and I started watching old fights. I even watched a Pepino Cuevas fight.
A
Oh, yeah, that dude was fast. Yeah, he was good.
B
He was good and I watched.
A
You ever see him versus Tommy Hearns?
B
No.
A
See if you can find Pepino Cuevas versus Tommy Hearns. Well, I was 90. Sure. That's. I'm talking about.
B
Pepino Cuevas was, I think, a little.
A
Thinner of a guy, wasn't he, at 47? Maybe I'm wrong.
B
Thomas Hearns was a 47.
A
Yes. He started his career at 47, went all the way up to light heavyweight. Yeah, but Pino Cuevas versus Tommy Hearns. One of the most memorable moments of the early days of Tommy Hearns is like, when he was, like, at the peak of his powers. Tommy Hearns was nuking people, man. Just nuking people. He had such a reach and such width for 45. He was such a physical freak and he was big, but he had cr. I mean, long and skinny but crazy power, which like, generally, like thin guys don't have, have the same kind of power as, like, the muscular guys. But Tommy Hearns was kind of like Deontay Wilder. He was both thin and muscular at the same time. And so, you know, real skinny legs, man. But, my God, the torque that guy had in his punches. You gotta think of the leverage because his shoulders are so wide. So it's when he twists his hips and he's got those long arms coming your way with all those back muscles and the core engaged. Balam.
B
Hey. Blam. When was the last time there was a fight like this? From Detroit?
A
Well, Tommy's from Detroit.
B
No, no, but I'm saying they don't even have fights like this in Detroit.
A
They're so cool. Now, is this. Was this in Detroit?
B
Yeah.
A
Oh, wow. Well, that's Tommy's hometown. You know, he was hunting people. You ever see him knock out Roberto Duran, dog?
B
I watched it. That's what I was watching. I watched. Listen to the triple feature. I watched. I watched Duran Hagler. Hagler.
A
Oh, yeah, back that up a sec. Back that up a sec. Look, he's measuring him with his Left. Watch this. He's measuring them. And watch this. Boom. Oh, my goodness, son. Oh, my goodness. Oh, my goodness. That Tommy Hearns. That kind of power was crazy. Yeah, you better stop that fight. My goodness. Tommy Hearn was awful. He was a one hitter quitter. Face plant. Roberto Duran, bro.
B
Him and Hagler roll.
A
What a crazy fight.
B
How to stop and roll it back. Keep rolling it back.
A
The crazy thing about that fight is they did not box at all. They went to war. There was no boxing slipping. There was no fainting. Marvin Hagler just said, you and ran at him. He just ran and just, just started smashing.
B
It was non stop.
A
Yeah, there was a hit.
B
It was non stop.
A
Tommy broke his hand in the first round. So in the first round when they first come out.
B
Yeah, the greatest round of boxing. Look at this. Yep.
A
God, Hagler was good. He's another one who died right after the vaccine. Look at this. Right away, right hook to the body, just charging, charging forward, charging forward. This, this boxer on the outside. I'm trying to get in there. Boom. To the body again. Boom. Right hand. Boom. Just going to war, dude. Right here. I mean, high profile. Two world champions completely throwing it all out the window. Just wailing on each other.
B
Holy Joe.
A
Boom. Left hand. Boom, Boom. The thing about Hagler was his discipline was supreme. Man, that never got. That guy never got out of shape. He always could break. Guys break their will. Boom, boom, boom. So by this time, Tommy probably already has a broken hand. So he broke it on Hagler's head somewhere in the first. So now he's throwing the jab. So I bet his hand's already broken. See, it's all left hands now. He threw that right hand, but he was weak, you know, he didn't, he didn't really hurt him with the right hand. He's like pulling it back as he's throwing it. See, he's just trying to touch him with that right hand. That, that left hand is all he's got left. His right hand is cooked. And Hearns has decided to start moving and boxing, which is not like his style, see, like even when he's landing that right hand, he's got no power behind it now. And Sugar Ray Leonard's talking in the commentary.
B
Both fighters are unbalanced.
A
Hagler could take a shot too, better than anybody. He only has one knockdown accredited to him his entire career, but it wasn't a knockdown. He fought Ron Roldan and Ron Juan Roldan like kind of cuffed him in the back of the neck and like, pushed him forward and Hagler fell forward and touched the ground. And the referee mistakenly called it a knockdown. The only time he's ever been down. Took bombs from the greatest punchers in the division. Beat everybody except Sugar Ray. And I think the only reason why he lost to Sugar Ray was. I think the fix was in that fight, Son, I watched that fight many times, Many times. Yeah, there's something about it. Something about it. And then Haggard leaves and goes to become a movie star in Italy. Come on. And his trainers are the Petronelli brothers in Brockton, Massachusetts. Come on, shut the up. You know how much money was on Hagler to win? Probably, you know, there's probably some sort of a deal. Like, look, the odds are very favorable in Hagler's direction. And we can get a bet on Leonard. We can clean up here. We can get Marvin to just like, you know, don't put him away. Just touch him a little bit. Touch him. He never has him hurt. Never has him hurt in the whole fight. Just. He was so good. I just. It didn't seem right. It seemed like almost. He was like sparring sometimes. Hard to say, though. Sugar was so good too. The guy could come back after all those years off. You know, he had one fight, got dropped, said he was retiring, and then comes back and decides he's gonna fight Hagler. And then he wins. And then Haggar's like, I'm done, I'm done. I'm gonna go to Italy and make terrible movies. You ever see those Marvin Hacker movies?
B
No.
A
Oh, you gotta see some clips. No, Joey, they're the dumbest movies of all time. Hagler punches people. They go flying through the air.
B
No, I'm not watching that. I love Marvin Hagler too much?
A
No, they're fun. Look, he was having a good time. I bet he was a huge star in Italy, but that's that. To me, it's like everything seems fishy. The fight seemed fishy to me. The decision seemed fishy to me. And then Hagler goes off and becomes a movie star. And I go, okay, in Italy. How does that happen? How do you get connected? How does that happen? Look how bad this movie is.
B
Clint Eastwood called bad.
A
This movie is the power of Commando.
B
The world has to know what's happening here. It's the thrill packed feature action fans are waiting for.
A
I want those indos.
B
Marvelous Marvin Hagler returns from the original Indio Indio 2. The revolt. The jungle is shrinking.
A
Highway through our jungle by the mile.
B
And greed is spreading. You better start praying to your God that we finish the highway before the rainy season. Here only one man is mean enough.
A
I know many of us may die.
B
But it is better to die than to live like slaves. Mad enough. Tell them the days of running and hiding are over.
A
This is your land. Will you lead us, my friend? Sometimes it's hilarious.
B
I. I see one Italian. There's not one Italian.
A
That guy with his mustache, that was Sergio. I gotta be in this movie.
B
You get.
A
You hit me with a left hand. Come on. I got one scene. Hilarious.
B
Wow. I didn't even know that.
A
Yeah, that guy was my hero when I was a kid.
B
And they didn't even make him, like a shaft or anything. They made him go into, like, the mag. I can see if you put them.
A
With another Italian movies. It's an Italian movie. They made them in Italy. There's a lot of movies being made in Italy. That's why they call those spaghetti westerns.
B
Right.
A
You know that.
B
Did you ever hear of those stories? Like how interesting that is, the Sergio Leone movies? Well, I just saw something about it maybe eight months ago, but there's a thing in my Channel 11 in Jersey on Saturdays called I Am, and every week they have somebody else on, and it's brilliant. Joe. I am Bruce Lee. I am this. I am that. Brilliant. And they had. Who we just talking about?
A
Marvin Hagler?
B
No, they had an IM about somebody. Oh, Clint Eastwood.
A
Clint Eastwood.
B
And it was how he would go and shoot the movies and then they would send him the films and he'd have to do ADR in la.
A
Oh, really?
B
Interesting. I didn't know anything about this stuff.
A
So why did he have to do 80? So, ADR. What does that stand for?
B
It's voice work.
A
What does it stand for, though? Automated Dialogue Replacement. Thank you, audio engineer.
B
When he shot the movies, he was just talking, right? So then when he'd get them, after they put them together, he would lay the American in them.
A
Oh, I see.
B
And how. You know, he would send them back and they would send them back.
A
And so when he shot the movies, he wasn't even speaking. He had to speak over it or something. Yeah, because. Wow. They probably had it dubbed in Italian.
B
But you got to remember all the. That listen, I'm a big fan of that era of movies. That's my era of movies. Those. Those people. And Doug, you know, I watched the other night. You haven't seen this movie in 30 fucking years. None of you. Put it on. You're gonna. One Flew over the Cuckoo's Nest.
A
I haven't seen that in Forever dog.
B
They got seven stars in that movie. Like you a Babbitt, Charlie Babbitt, Martini. The guy from Jersey. What's his name? The. That was in Taxi. A little guy. He's still around. Oh, Danny, you know, was in that dog.
A
Really?
B
A dude with the big head.
A
Look at the cast on Christopher Lloyd.
B
Wow, bro.
A
Look at Sampson.
B
Oh, that's the dude. That's our boy.
A
Yeah.
B
The outlaw Josie Whale.
A
Jeez. Are my words of life.
B
Yeah.
A
That's also my words of how the fuck.
B
He made three movies. This outlaw, Josie Wales, and fucking some other movie. He was in three fucking brilliant movies then, dude.
A
That guy was in a lot of movies, bro.
B
This movie is hilarious. Don't make a bit of sense to me. This will never happen again.
A
That guy, by the way, is a normal guy in today's society. Who, Jack Nicholson?
B
Yeah.
A
Like, you couldn't ever get him in a mental health. He'd be like, this guy's fine. Let him out. Like, there's more up guys right now than that guy that are attending bar on 6th street right now.
B
And this movie starts Politically Incorrect. Like, they couldn't make this today like this? No. And I'm surprised they haven't tried to remake this movie.
A
Well, you know, they're the. The guy who made Home Alone said that he wanted to cut Trump from out of the scene, but he's worried that he'd get sent in prison if.
B
He did because he keeps getting aggravated, people annoy him.
A
And I think they cut it out of it in Canada. I think the Canadian version of. Is it Home Alone 2? Yeah, Home Alone, too.
B
You know how many TV shows Trump did over the years? I've seen. I see him once a month on something.
A
They have to say that. They have to. It's part of their liberal identity. You have to be united.
B
But like I was telling you that the people that I grew up liking and so do you, that's what I liked about them, that they had to go somewhere else to become stars. And when they came back to the United States, they were like, we're fucking you in the ass now. That's Clint Eastwood, Charles Bronson, Steve McQueen, not as much. He just wanted to fuck everybody in the ass. You know, Steve McQueen was just like, you sucking my dick. Either way, I'm doing what I want. You know, they don't even have that. Like, when was the last time you. The worst thing we've had in Hollywood in 20 years is when Brad Pitt made the movie with Angelina Jolie. And he never came back. Like, poor Jennifer Aniston was waiting with flowers and slippers. That motherfucker never came back.
A
She's a temptress.
B
The first one was when Steve McQueen took that girl from the head of fucking.
A
Oh, yeah.
B
And then did a movie under his fucking nose. That. That. That is something that. They will cancel you. They couldn't. Can't. They couldn't do nothing to it.
A
Well, he was one of the rare movie stars back then. When there's a. An actual movie star in 1979, like, there's not a lot of those people. You need them to sell tickets. People don't know new people. They're not online, you know, you gotta, like, know, oh, It's a Steve McQueen movie, and you go see it. But if, like, who's the. Who's the star of the movie? I never heard of the guy. This movie. Oh, look over here. There's a Clint Eastwood movie. Let's go to see that. Like, stars were everything. Everything, everything. It's interesting because some great movies now don't have any stars in them. Like Mel Gibson when he made Apocalypto. You don't know anybody in that movie.
B
That's a great movie.
A
It's a great movie, and you don't know anybody in that movie. It's perfect. It's perfect because you really believe the characters that way. I don't have to go. I was Robert Downey Jr. Always doing a great job, pretending to be that scientist, you know? No, it's some guy that might actually be a scientist, you know?
B
Yeah. I don't know. But no, they didn't do anything to Steve McQueen. Charles Bronson, same way. He was a prick on those movie sets. They wanted everything. They took everything. Joe. Yeah, it just came out. I'm sure we discussed it last time. They just got released to Steve McQueen writers from his movies.
A
The writers. Yeah. Riders are different for people that don't know. That means, like, all the things that you get when you're on the set. Like, I would say, I want MMs in my green room. I want, you know, Pink Floyd albums, whatever.
B
Insane. Yeah, his was insane. His suits had to be a certain cut. They had a cost, a certain way. Well, he ain't worried. It's Steve McQueen.
A
Some comics have that kind of. Where you have to have size 11 Jordans waiting for them.
B
Yeah, but you pay for it. Comics are. Yeah, I'm not going in there to. I got my size 12s. Well, pay for it. What's the big deal? Well, yeah, they gave me some sneakers. No, you didn't. You bought those sneakers, stupid.
A
It comes out of the price.
B
Yeah, they think that. Oh, they bought me sneakers. Cause I'm special and shit.
A
Yeah, But I think it's a thing where you want to be. You want to be feeling like you're being taken care of, even though you're paying for it.
B
Even though you're paying. I don't need. I'll bring my own sneakers. I'm gonna show up, and there's a box of sneakers. Oh, you got me white sneakers. I'm not gonna perform. Cause that shit started happening.
A
Oh, really?
B
Yeah. People were like, I want black Jordan. And all of a sudden, they're white. I ain't getting on stage till I get my black Jordans. Now they gotta run around town.
A
I've heard people turn limos back. Yeah, back in the day. Because it was the wrong color.
B
Yeah.
A
I ordered a white limo. What is this?
B
And who drove you when you lived under that bridge? Just getting a goddamn car, Sucker.
A
People love making demands, right? Like, it has to be this way, or that's it. I walk. People love making demands, and that's what.
B
Happens in that town, in Hollywood. And people go, okay, no, go yourself. You want that? Bring it yourself. And once you start doing that. Listen, I understood what you said before about Austin, and it makes sense to me now. It's like the day I took my daughter to school and there was moms hugging trees in Studio City, crying. If I was a redneck, I'd show up with a shotgun that day and just shoot it and watch those moms just fly. That's where the guns keep the liberals in check. Okay? That's when you come in and go, you want to hug trees? Boom. And fucking start shooting off, dog. They were hugging trees right in front of the school.
A
My daughter and Birch went, why were they hugging trees?
B
Because they were gonna cut the trees down. We went to the school, and the cops were there, and women were hugging the trees, holding each other's hands, crying. This is why I had to get the fuck out of there, crying. And that's where a guy with a gun would have been. Perfect. A big fucking gun. You guys like trees so much. Boom. And those bitches would have been running to that fucking coffee shop crying. They didn't know what happened. Fuck those trees, Jack. That's what you need, a gun in California to tell these motherfuckers, shut the fuck up. You go on Facebook now, and I see people I used to hang with in California, and they're talking about other people. Everybody's so talented and everything's so gracious. And to work with such a great bunch of talented individuals. Thank God they've let my creative juices work. Shut the fuck up. Shut the fuck up. What are you talking about? I hate to smack you now or smack you later. It is.
A
It's so very pretentious.
B
Very. And that's what I don't. I don't miss any. Listen at all when I watch it in a movie now I can't even stand small talk. Like, that's what. I didn't even know what small talk was. You know, it was like the night you did a show. I'm talking to you about fear before Fear Factor. You did a show maybe at the Wooltern one night.
A
Yeah.
B
And we left a bunch of people there and they circled you, like Ann Maney and a bunch of other people. And they were talking to you about a deal or something. And it was like, oh, my God, your set was so great. And you're supposed to stand there like, thank you. I fucking hate that shit.
A
Yeah. They love kissing people's ass.
B
We loved it. Oh, my God, Mimi and I loved it. Mimi, Victoria and I loved it. We're so happy you invited us. And you don't have to sit there and go, come on. I'm not. Get the up.
A
That was in the deal days.
B
Yeah.
A
I'd still be shopping around deals.
B
Yeah. Well, they come up to you and talk to you. You had to be like, yeah, hi. Yeah, so how is that? How did that feel?
A
Yeah, well, you still connected to the system. And that was how I was making most of my money. So I'd make some money from stand up, but I would make, like a couple hundred thousand dollars on these deals. That would be my year's money. And then I'd be working with some schlub making a sitcom that sucked. It never went anywhere. I did that for a couple years. So I did that from like 99 to 2001. And then Fear Factor started.
B
News radio's on at 8:00.
A
It's everywhere. My kids watch it.
B
I watch it.
A
It's hilarious.
B
I watched my favorite episode a couple weeks ago when he was playing the piano on the fucking. Phil Harmon was. He was playing the piano on the elevator and it kept opening.
A
Oh, that's right.
B
Talk Out.
A
That was a fun episode. That was a fun show. But that show ruined me for other sitcoms. Doing a sitcom after that show, like, why? What? It's not gonna be the same. It's gonna suck. You need the. It's a. Like a very rare combination of people to put together a really good sitcom.
B
That was a very good show. It was just. I know that you told me over the years that they kept moving you and never found a home or something like that.
A
Yeah, they moved like, nine times. The show really became popular after it was in syndication. That's when it became popular. It became popular when it was on, you know, 7:00pm on ABC or whatever the fuck it was. NBC affiliate, you know, when they were just showing the syndicated reruns. That's when it became popular. Way more popular after it was canceled than it was when it was on the air. One of the writers, Lou Morton, every day we come to the. To the table read. He would have a T shirt, like a white T shirt, and we'd write a number on it, and that number was our rating. And one day he came in, it was like, 85. I was like, 85. Really? It's like, we're like, 85th. We're the 85th show.
B
That's good.
A
Terrible. What good is number one?
B
Oh, no, I just didn't know. I thought it was like a rating system.
A
No, no, no, no. It's the ranked shows in the country. We were like, 85 or 88, something like that. It was real bad. Real bad. We were, like, on the verge of being canceled.
B
I know you're watching some good shows now. Yeah, I'm watching one show and I watching. There's some people who are dangerous, and then there's Helen Mirren.
A
What are you watching? Oh, the 1923 show.
B
Both of them. Oh, yeah, Mobland.
A
Oh, yeah, I heard Mobland's great.
B
She's fucking great.
A
Yeah. I have not seen that yet.
B
The Italian Mafia movies, they're done.
A
Really?
B
Yeah, they're done. De Niro just put Aldo Nights Out. They took it out of the movie theater in two fucking weeks.
A
He put what out?
B
He put a movie called Outdoor Nights out, where he plays two roles. He plays Frank Costello and somebody else. Vito Genovese. I don't know. Exactly.
A
Somebody should have taken De Niro's keys away when he wanted to go out and do political speeches.
B
Well, no, I think that. Listen, you're not gonna ban a movie because of his political beliefs.
A
No, but people aren't gonna take him seriously because of his political beliefs.
B
Well, the way he acted, he dropped some people. Okay, and I get it. But to make $2 million your first week, that's not good. And then like 3 million after that, and Then they just yanked it. I tried to go just to watch it.
A
It's called Alto Nights.
B
Because I heard.
A
Have you heard of it, Jamie?
B
Nobody came and went. Came and fucking went.
A
The problem with these. When people who want to be taken seriously as actors talk a lot about politics and talk a lot and give out opinions, they think that their opinions are very important and that it's important that they speak out. But the problem with that is, like, you ruin your acting for other people who now think of the stupid that you've said instead of thinking you as this character. Let me hear a little of this here. This is the guy talking. Hey, come on.
B
Where do I start?
A
You're going down a very dangerous road. And we ain't been down dangerous roads before.
B
But that's the risk you take. Take me, I take. But you're not where I am. I give the charities, I pay my taxes.
A
Actually looks good.
B
I put you where you are today. It's because of me, Mr. Good Citizen. You want to be like them?
A
Come on.
B
You ain't like them. They own this country. They're bigger gangsters than we ever could be.
A
All of a sudden you want to be hasten.
B
Half hot, half the racketeer.
A
You can't have it both ways. You're either in.
B
No, you're out.
A
That looks good.
B
I'm telling you, that looks good.
A
I'd watch that.
B
The movie is not bad.
A
I'm telling you. It's because Dairo talks too much.
B
I think that we're not. We're so out of going to the movies every Friday and every. Like they said, nobody knew it came out. I didn't even know it came out.
A
Well, Covid killed the movie theaters.
B
Oh, it's.
A
It's a shame because they made movies way quicker out on streaming now. All I have to do is wait a month. I can wait a month. One month later, I can watch it at home. I don't have to like, see somebody like texting people right in front of me with their phone. Blinding white people talking. What did he say? What did he say? Do you want any popcorn?
B
I go to show there. Not a soul. I've never seen anything like that. I usually go to the last screening on Thursday night. Not a soul.
A
I mean, most movie theaters people are polite, no.
B
Very nice where I go. Very. I can't believe it.
A
Risk that. Risk of one douchebag who it up for everybody.
B
I don't. I won't go see a popular movie. I'm not a top rater like that. I Like, going, see. I see a movie, I go, you know what? I want to go watch some movies I could watch at home that I want to watch in the fucking thing. Anything with 3D, like wicked or whatever. I go, I take my mushrooms. I take my daughter, I sit there, she enjoys it, and I fucking have a great time.
A
Wicked was great.
B
Wicked was great. The only thing was, don't go on mushrooms.
A
No.
B
I was so fucked up. The chick is black and green. I couldn't deal with that right off the bat. Where's the black people? Raise your hand. What the fuck? I'm feeling like a racist in here. She can't be black and she can't be green. Then Ariana with no eyebrows, that killed me. She had, like, those blind eyebrows. I'm on fucking mushrooms. And this movie won't end well. It won't end.
A
It's a long movie.
B
It's a long movie. But I'm looking at her and she's having such a great time. When you look at your kids and they're having such a great time, you're like, I don't give a fuck.
A
I enjoyed it. I. I enjoyed the Barbie movie.
B
I never saw it.
A
I enjoyed it.
B
I went.
A
I went with my kids. They had a good time. I thought it was funny. Everybody was, like, complaining. It's, you know, it's political. It's against the patriarchy. Like, listen, here's my position. A movie's allowed to be political. Like, if you make a good movie and it happens to have a political slant to it, I don't care. Is it a good movie? I don't care. I don't care. Like, it's not going to change my opinion in a movie. Like, this is your opinion. This is how you're going to do it. Like, okay, so this movie is, like a pro feminism movie. People were saying they were complaining. I'm like, what do you. It's a Barbie doll.
B
Can we just make a movie? And nobody raised their fucking hand. And police. That's all it is.
A
But the thing is, everybody has to, because they have to have a hot take on everything. Everybody has to have a hot take. There's a market out there of people where all they do is look for something to point out that's a disaster or a failure or, here's my hot take and why this sucks. And that's what they do. All they do is, like, find things that suck. And they very rarely talk about things that are awesome.
B
No.
A
Which is crazy because there's so much I don't awesome shit out there.
B
I hate all that shit.
A
You know what's great on Apple? Plus slow horses.
B
Okay.
A
Have you heard of it? You know what it is?
B
No.
A
It's. It's Gary Oldman.
B
Oh, yeah, yeah. My wife watches that.
A
It's a British.
B
Fucking. Tremendous.
A
It's fucking great.
B
Tremendous.
A
Really good show.
B
I've been watching the one with Jon Hamm.
A
Which one?
B
He has a show, Jon Hamm, where he becomes a thief in a rich neighborhood.
A
Oh, really?
B
He loses his job.
A
There's too many shows.
B
Yes. Too many shows.
A
There's too many shows. You just can't. You can't watch them all. You want to watch a show that you shouldn't be on. Mushrooms. Severance.
B
I heard that's very. Well, good, anyway.
A
Yeah, it's a very good show. Don't watch that on mushrooms, though. You'll get.
B
I watched that movie with Demi Moore where they.
A
I heard about that. I didn't see it. Is that a show or a movie? It's a movie.
B
That is the weirdest movie I've seen in years.
A
It's a movie where, like, she gets young again and goes back and forth. Old and young. Yeah.
B
It was a little too substance.
A
Did you see it, Jamie? No, I was gonna see it. I don't know why. It's like a black mirror type movie, and that just came back out, too. Black mirror. Yeah. I heard the new ones are great.
B
Do you watch 1823 or though?
A
Yes.
B
You liked it? You enjoyed it? I enjoyed all of them.
A
Love it. Yeah.
B
I enjoyed all of them.
A
Landman's good, too. See Landman. That's very good.
B
Funny.
A
Yeah. That Billy Bob's man. I love anything.
B
They're shooting already.
A
Yeah, right.
B
They're down there shooting?
A
I believe so.
B
Yeah. Because they were looking for vehicles or something I saw last year.
A
Well, Taylor likes to do everything down here when he can. You know, he's got that giant ranch out here. Taylor Sheridan?
B
Yeah.
A
Four sixes. He's got that ranch. And, you know, I mean, that guy can't lose everything.
B
He's doing a really cool job. Yeah.
A
You ever met him?
B
No.
A
Great guy.
B
No. I have mutual friends that tell me you should meet him.
A
I had dinner with him and Bert in Vegas recently. All our wives together after the fights, after the UFC fights. And a bunch of my pool player friends came by, and Goggins. Goggins was there with his wife, too. Great time, great dinner. So much fun. We're all laughing, having fun. Good time. But Taylor Sheridan's great. Just the guy can't lose. And, you know, he made Sicario, bro. You know, go watch that.
B
I watch it.
A
I love that.
B
Again, the first and the second one.
A
Sicario is a banger of a movie. It was on TV the other day. I was like, that's right. This movie's. That's a banger of a movie.
B
You know, it's a shame that. I don't know, maybe before the pandemic had started with, like, really bad movies. It's just a shame, you know, it really is a shame that we gotta wait for shows this long. Like, fucking.
A
There's so much to watch.
B
Yeah. The Adams family never came back with Jenna Garcia.
A
Was it supposed to come back?
B
Yeah, Netflix never. And I worked with one of the dudes, and he goes, yeah, we already shot it. It's still fucking been like, three years.
A
Why they come back?
B
My kid's gonna fucking not even remember. She didn't remember that anyway.
A
Are they doing anything with it?
B
I've never heard anything again.
A
Huh. Why would they do that? That doesn't make any sense.
B
Netflix is off the. You know, they don't know. They. They just. Netflix has so much on there.
A
There's so much.
B
So much. If I see one more Pablo Escobar thing they got. If you watch, like, a murder thing one time, forget it.
A
You know they're talking about doing the Ufc on Netflix.
B
Yep.
A
Yeah, apparently. I think the UFC's negotiation period with ESPN ended.
B
Yeah. So.
A
So what that means is they could talk to other people.
B
That fucking thing. That night when everything fell apart, that was a bad night.
A
What? Which night?
B
When the ball dropped. Not this card, but the one before that, when the pay per views. When all the disasters started. It was about pay per views. One night that nobody was getting the pay per View, UIC fighters.
A
The app failed.
B
Yes, the app failed. It was too overwhelming for the ufc, I think, because shit happens. But every. This must have been bad, because what fight.
A
What fight card was that, Jamie, where there was a failure, I want to say would have been. I don't. Was I working that? How do I not know that that happened?
B
I don't think you were working that. That one.
A
Let me see. 3:13. So two events ago, May, March. Where was that? Where was it? Was that Adesanya or uncle of decision over prayer? Oh, okay. So I was working that one.
B
You did work it.
A
Yeah, I was working that one for sure. Was Uncle Live when he won the title over Pereira? So the. The pay per view, what happened? It went down, or it was partially went down.
B
It Partially went down. I couldn't order the car. Oh, it was a bunch of shit going on. Then I went on Twitter and I saw Frankie Edgar and a bunch of other guys, fighters saying, what the fuck is wrong with mine? I'm like, okay, it's not just me. And then I heard the riff raff that night. And then the next day they were talking about. And then Monday, Dana was hot. I know he did something. He said something about it.
A
Well, I think in general, the pay per view numbers are down as well because the casuals aren't buying as much because you don't. First of all, the UFC is not like boxing. Like a boxing pay per view is like, oh, Canelo's fighting in four months. And then you get gear up and you buy the Canaveral Canelo Alvarez pay per view. If you're a big boxing fan, you might buy one once every couple months. If you're like hardcore, you, you're watching all of them. You're on Dazn and you're on ESPN plus, you're watching every boxing match there is. But there's not a lot of pay per views. The UFC has a pay per view every week or, excuse me, every month, and then they have a fight every week. So it's like getting people to shell out 70 bucks for this card. And also, like, some of the great fights are on the undercard. And you already, before the pay per view starts, you already have, you know, three and a half hours of great fights you could watch for free. And some of them, they're trying to lure you into buying the pay per view. So some of the best fights are really on the undercard sometimes. Like guys who, you don't know their names yet.
B
There's always one good fight that I want to watch on the undercard. I go, I'm going to watch the undercard two fights or something, always. And then you guys start talking about the fights and then you get, you know, and then you order it.
A
Yeah, I mean, the big fight clearly this last weekend was Volkanovski versus Lopez. That was the fight I really wanted to see because I really wanted to see if Volkanovsky could pull it off. All time great featherweight champion, one of the for sure greatest fighters of all time shoe in for the hall of fame. But he's 36 and he got knocked out two times in a row and he's fighting this animal in Diego Lopez. It was a great fight though, and Vogue pulled it off. But the fight that I really wanted to see was Bryce Mitchell versus John Silva, right? Because John Silva is a dude. That guy looks like a world champion.
B
He looks like he choked him with a darts.
A
Yeah, well, he choked him like a ninja choke, okay. And was like, no, no, arm in it. With the Darcy of the arm in. And you cinch it up. That was just all neck and put him to sleep. He tapped and then he went out and to do and to just beat him from pillar to post the entire fight. And was smiling and laughing and looked like he was never threatened and never in danger. Just like he was on another level, like, way above Bryce, like, looked like a world champion. Like, even guys that have beat him before that beat Bryce Mitchell before, except Josh Emmett, who just KO'd him with one punch. But, like, even Ilya Toporia, like, he got to get a hold of him first. Like, John Silva looked like he was never a fight. Like, almost like he was having fun. He was trying to get him to touch hands at the beginning of every round. He wouldn't do. He's like, come on, touch hands. He tried. He's like, touch hands. He wouldn't touch hands. And then finally just put him to sleep. He's an animal, man. That guy is that whole team, apparently, the fighting nerds. I was talking to John Anick about this. He said they have data scientists that work for the team. Data scientists who analyze techniques and they, like, break things down. Like, what's effective in patterns. They find patterns. Patterns of opponents, what the person does when they do it.
B
Where are these guys at?
A
Brazil, bro. That's a team of fucking savages.
B
Who else is there?
A
Kyle Barlio, who's one of the top 185 pounders, who might be the best in the world. I mean, when. When he fights Dricus Du Pussy, eventually we'll see, but he's just storching that division. I mean, he's one of the best contenders in that. And then you have Mauricio Ruffie, who's one of the baddest lightweights alive. Gigantic lightweight, tall and long wheel. Kick Bobby Green into another dimension. Or you got that guy. You got Carlos Protest, who's a killer, stone cold Muay Thai killer, who's really hard to take down. And he's just 100 finishing rate in the UFC. I believe he just knocked out Neil Magni. Like, he's. He. Everybody up.
B
He's.
A
He's a sniper, like, super, like, skillful and slick Muay Thai guy. So their whole team is just killer, killer, killer. Killer is all killers. Just like a team of, like, brilliant, up and Coming killers. See, these guys are learning now. It's not just about training hard. It's not just about sacrifice. It's about thinking hard, too. It's about learning. It's about, like, really going over your game and, like, what. What can you improve upon? And how do we. How do we make this better? How do we seal up this part of the game? Amazing.
B
I think the guy that led that for me was gsp.
A
Oh, yeah.
B
I was always very impressed with how every fight he showed up with something different.
A
Yeah.
B
While his opponent was still like, yeah, GSP has got skills, but I still got this right hand. Okay. You talk about your right hand.
A
Always learning.
B
He was always learning. He was in the city with the kickboxing guy. He was over Phil Nurse.
A
He was with the Phil Nurse and the watch. Yeah. And then he would go with all the Greg Jackson guys.
B
Wild Card.
A
He would go over Wild Card training.
B
Remember when he fought? I think it was Josh Kotchuk, and he was jabbing. Was that the fight where he fucking broke the jab out and he had trained at Wild Card?
A
Yeah. His jab, it fucked Josh's eye up so bad that Josh couldn't fly home.
B
I remember that. I remember all that shit. And that's what I liked about him. His training was another time. You know, you're watching, and he's doing gymnastics. Yeah. Where's gymnastics in all this? Play a game.
A
Well, he just realized that gymnasts are so powerful because they have such control of their body. And he's like, well, I'm gonna get better control of my body. So he learned how to do both.
B
Swimming, doing this, doing that. And meanwhile, you're still going, well, my jiu jitsu game is elevated. This motherfucker just went and worked on every part of his game, but focused on just one. Really.
A
You know what's really crazy about him? He still does the same thing. He's really a martial artist. He comes to Austin all the time to train with John Donahue and Gordon Ryan. All the time. He's here all the time. I see him, like, every couple months. He comes down to train, and then he'll go somewhere else to train, and he'll go somewhere else to train. No desire to fight. He doesn't want to fight anymore at all. He's just a martial artist. He's so happy and content. He's like the best example of a guy who retired with millions in the bank and is living, like, his best life. He's a real martial artist.
B
He really is.
A
He just wants to Learn and, and grow. Like, why would he come here and train with gorgeous Jordan Ryan? Why would train that animal if you're, if you're not actually thinking about competing? But for him it's just all about growing. It's all about growing. And this martial arts journey that he's on for his whole life, it's really amazing. It's very cool. You know, when he, he would come to 10th planet Jiu Jitsu and he would learn stuff from Eddie too. He came down to learn the turning sidekick from me. Like, he just wants to learn from everybody. He wants to learn everything. He's always constantly seeking out.
B
Yeah, very smart, very smart, very smart.
A
And you'll see him, he's in all these different gyms. You see him, oh, look, he's in Thailand. He's working with Muay Thai guys. He's over here, he's over there. He's just enjoying his life and training martial arts all over the world. It's incredible. Incredible. It's beautiful. Because the saddest thing for me is when a fighter stops fighting and they lose their identity. George has never lost his identity. He hasn't gone through some, some weird phase where he doesn't know what to do with himself.
B
I am not impressed with your performance. That was one of the funniest things I've ever heard.
A
Yeah, that became a, like a meme before memes.
B
I was not impressed with your performance.
A
Nicest guy, Nicest guy in the world and really smart man. Really interested in all kinds of like always, like reading stuff and fascinated by things. Just, just a guy, just a curious guy who wants to learn. And he's just going through his life just having a good time. Now he doesn't have to think about business, you know, it's just training. It's kind of awesome.
B
It's awesome. It really is awesome.
A
It really is. Because like, with no, no goal in mind other than growth. Other than growth and getting better. And he's still rolling hard, man. I'm watching a roll with these guys. He's rolling with assassins, you know. He's still doing Jiu jitsu with like top flight black belts, man.
B
Would you ever consider going back to Taekwondo now?
A
No, no.
B
Just going to a school once a week and just going in there with a bunch of guys and throwing some kicks and shit.
A
I worked out on my own.
B
I am. No, no, you're not feeling me.
A
What do you mean?
B
Anybody could work out on their own. Could you imagine now at your age, like, I've been thinking about it. There's a purple belt at my jiu jitsu school. He's 68.
A
Oh, wow.
B
He came from a fucking Shotokan karate background. And he goes, I teach in the Bronx. Every Wednesday night, he goes, this was my school. I sold it. But I still go up there on Wednesdays. Come with me sometime. I'm like, wow, how cool would that be?
A
That would be cool to take a class.
B
That's what I'm saying. One time a week. Like something that you. What's the long.
A
Didn't have to spar.
B
No, no, no, no. But you do those. You know, like, when you do taekwondo, they have one steps, one step. Like those little chic they run, I think they call where.
A
Yeah, it's drilled.
B
And that. That's what you need. You're not gonna die. You're not gonna. You're not gonna spar and go crazy.
A
But drills are really important. They're really important, and people don't like to do them because sparring is so fun. Same with jiu jitsu. Like, Eddie Bravo always say that, like, drills are terrible. They're so boring, but if you can do them, it'll make your jiu jitsu way better. Like, the biggest leap that I ever got in my. Like, when the beginning of my jiu jitsu journey was when I became friends with Eddie. We would train in my garage. I had mats in my garage. And we would just drill for, like, an hour and a half.
B
What would you like?
A
He was showing me a lot of his rubber guard stuff, like, the early stuff, but we would just drill, like, different positions, how to escape certain positions, how to finish from certain positions, what to be careful of. And then we just go through paths. Like, path was, you know, pass into half guard, push on the knee, move into side control, side control, head and arm. Secure the arm, finish the arm triangle. And what would do is, like, if he was doing it to me, I would resist. Like, 40, maybe, you know, you just kind of, like, sort of resist, and they secure it, and you kind of resist, and they finish it off. So it's like, basically, you just. You're doing it as if that you're doing the same pathway with the same things that a person would do to resist. But then they're not trying to really stop you. They want you to tap them. Like, this is the idea of the drill. So I'm just. I would get my hand in, but it's just so that you could push my hand down and then lock it over.
B
So that's big now.
A
Yeah. Drilling is everything.
B
People are flow rolling. People are selling it more. Even Tom de Blas is like, dog.
A
Listen, it's a way to get better. It's really the way to get better.
B
But the problem is you got to keep a motherfucker flowing. And that's the problem, that after a while you're like. And also the next thing you know, it's not a flow no more.
A
Right now you're going to try to keep going.
B
And that's the problem. It always starts off with a flow for a minute and a half and then it goes off the reservation.
A
That's always the same with kickboxing, sparring too. When I was training at the Jet center, there was this one dude that I used to love to train with. He was an older guy, so I was probably 26 back then, 27 maybe. And he was maybe like closer to 35, 40. Like it had some fights just like to stay in shape. And we would spar. And he knew I was an actor, comedian, whatever, I was on a TV show and I didn't want to get hit too much and he didn't want to. So we would spar. We just touch each other.
B
Yeah.
A
And I knew he wasn't going to try to knock me out, but other guys, I knew, like, we're fighting, like we're sparring, this is a fight. But with him I knew and I got so sharp because of that, because he and I would work out a couple times a week and I, I noticed like my timing and everything was like much sharper because I was going through those pathways and not tents, you know, I was going through those pathways, so sharpening those lanes so like punch, come, slip, counter. All these things were like flowing in my head because we weren't hurting each other. But it's so hard for young guys to understand that to get better is to like be playful with it. You want to. Like the Thai guys, they just, because they fight every week when they spar, they don't hurt each other at all. They touch and they, they laugh like, oh, they're like playing a little game with each other. You ever seen tigers?
B
Yeah. Yeah, they have a good time.
A
Like you watch like one of the, the, the best things to watch is like two elite high level Thai guys just spar with each other. Just, just sparred, playful, light. Because they're joking around and laughing and they're touching each other, but they're really working on that timing, they're really working on those moves, working on like seeing what's coming, how to stop it, how to get in on them, but they're not hurting each other at all.
B
You know, it's weird that I'm older and I love doing crazy shit. Like, I love it. I don't have much in the daytime no more. So I'll try to catch a boxing class or Jiu Jitsu and all that shit. And Jiu Jitsu is the toughest one for me. Like, I haven't been to Jiu Jitsu since November because I've been sick, you know, I had a bunch of problems and I was on antibiotics. I was having a hard time fucking breathing. But I can't wait to go back. But now I'm gonna go back and do it a little bit differently. Flow, flow a lot more flowing. There's one guy that'll flow with me, he's a cop. And drilling more. Yeah, they have a blue belt class. It's basically a lot of drilling. You fucking burn a lot of calories in there.
A
Drilling is so important.
B
But you have to go in the daytime. They roll a little bit more at night. The classes are so shut that you don't have time to roll that long. So I would rather drill a long time and then roll once and get the fuck out of it. That's perfect for me, you know, so even with boxing, when I go box, I don't fucking and go crazy. I hit the speed bag a little bit two rounds and I hit the bag that moves around, that burns a ton of calories. Then I hit the hard bag and I'm out of there. 7, 8, 3 minute rounds and I'm good.
A
You know what I like to do? I like to put on the Wu Tang Clan and just fuck that heavy bag.
B
I love it. I love the earphones. I love all. And I'll tell you what else I got into now that I'm older. Because when I went to that hospital, it taught me a lot, Joe. It reminded me that I wasn't a kid no more. Like, we around and we have a good time and we think we're bad.
A
But you want to stay healthy.
B
Yeah. Ever since I come out of the hospital a month ago, everything's changed.
A
Come out here, Joey. Get you on that. Ways to. Well, get your.
B
I thought we're going tomorrow.
A
Come on, we're going tomorrow.
B
Are you busy tomorrow?
A
If you're here, I'm not busy.
B
All right, let's go.
A
Come on, let's go. We're good.
B
I like that blood thing they did.
A
Yes. Get a IV bag.
B
Yeah. No, it was a little one. It wasn't a big idea.
A
So you're talking about a stem cell Push, Push. Yeah. IV stem cells. Yeah. I just got that. Tuesday I brought Rich Voss in.
B
How was he?
A
He was great. I love that guy today.
B
I love him, too.
A
We had a good time. We had a good time at the club, too.
B
We see. I see him a lot, you know. Yeah, I see him everywhere.
A
He's Jersey too, right?
B
Yeah. Every Wednesday we meet up and do a show.
A
Sweetheart. I love him to death. So he's been having a problem with his rotator.
B
Yeah. People.
A
So I brought him down to Brigham. Brigham's got this crazy thing. I'll show you this, Jamie, because it's fucking bananas. He's got this crazy thing where he's got an AI that you ask questions to. Have you seen it, Jamie? It's fucking nuts right here. I'll send this to you, Jamie. So Brigham has this new beautiful facility where ways to. Well, is a great view.
B
Oh, they were.
A
They moved. They have a new facility.
B
Okay.
A
They bought a building and renovated it. And it's incredible, but one of the things they have is this big screen with this alien. And you touch the alien and ask it a question. And it uses AI like so it has an AI Large language model based press. Listen, press it.
B
Hey, can you tell me the history of testosterone and prostate cancer?
A
My doctor said he's worried it's going to cause prostate cancer.
B
What do you have to say?
A
So the alien, like, thinks about it. The concern stems from a 1941 study by Huggins that suggested testosterone fueled prostate cancer. But this has been thoroughly debunked by modern research, particularly by Dr. Abraham Morgenthaler. Current evidence shows no causal relationship between testosterone therapy and prostate cancer development. In fact, many men with prostate cancer have low testosterone levels. The outdated theory misunderstood how testosterone interacts with prostate tissue.
B
And numerous studies now show properly monitored.
A
Testosterone therapy is safe for most men.
B
Even those with a history of prostate.
A
Cancer in some cases. Isn't that wild?
B
That's amazing. That's the future.
A
And it can answer any question. It could analyze your blood work. You could tell it, hey, you know my vitamin B12 level? Is this my testosterone level? Is that my. What would you suggest I take? What I suggest is a protocol of. And it would just, like, rattle off things that you need. You need some niacin in your system. What do you take? Magnesium. Before you go to bed, you know how much REM sleep are you getting per night? Are you monitoring that? And start talking to you. Isn't that crazy? It's an app, too. It's on your phone.
B
What were these people talking about last night at the club? They go on Chat GPT or some.
A
You don't know what that is?
B
No.
A
Chat GPT is AI. It's like it's on your phone. Like you can ask it a question. You know, like I can. Like, give me a good question.
B
Who was the composer of Swanee River?
A
Who is the composer of Suwannee River? So you see how my phone has all those rainbows on the outside like that? That means it's searching for the answer. And boom, gives me the answer. Can you go on Chat dpt and tell me more about Stephen Foster, the composer of Suwannee River? Bam. And then it goes on Chat GPT. I'm an AI design assistant. Feel free to ask anything. What Disney movies are the most racist? It's working with Chachi PT right now. It hung up on me.
B
The reason why I asked Joe, that is.
A
Chat GPT told me to go find myself. Joe, it disconnected.
B
One of the greatest episodes. You were talking to me a couple weeks ago. We were talking about you watched the gleason interview on 60 Minutes Later. You know, I watch the Honeymooners every Saturday.
A
Do you really?
B
Every Saturday at midnight there. I don't have time for anything else. I gotta be home by midnight on Saturdays. Okay. And then the reason why I said Suwannee river to you is that is one of the best episodes that Gleason ever did. He was going on the $95,000 question, and you have to go up levels and they ask you questions. He picked music. So he had his buddy Norton get all the sheet music, and Norton would play music for him and go, who is this? And he would have to say. And then the Italian lady, Ms. Manicotti, would come down and it was a great episode. But there's one scene where Norton would play and he'd go, norton, why the fuck do you.
A
There it is.
B
Why the fuck do you play this? Watch this.
A
Come on, look at me.
B
This is my last night to brush up on the songs. Now, let's not waste any time. Get going. All right. Will you wait a minute, please? Why must you always play before you go in and play the song? I'm trying to guess.
A
If I told you once, I told.
B
You a hundred times, it's the only way I can warm up before I play the piano. A pitcher warms up before he pitches a ball game.
A
I gotta warm up that way before.
B
I play the piano. I hope I don't have to tell You. This again.
A
Are you ready?
B
Go ahead and play. All right. Now go to the end so Joe could see it. So he goes. Time's running out. Hurry up. You better take a guess. No, play the song for him. So he sees. Are you ready? I certainly am. All right, Mr. Cramden, for $100, who is the composer of Swanny R? Look at his face, bro. Swanee River.
A
That's right.
B
Swanee River. Can we have a few bars of Swanee River, Jose? That's Swanee River. That's right. Now, who's the composer? Your time's running out. Hurry up. You better take a guess. Haman I, Ed Norton. Oh, I'm terribly sorry, Mr. Cramon. No, the correct answer is Stephen Foster, but thanks so much. You've been a wonderful contestant and a swell sport. Goodbye, Mr. Cron. His face dog.
A
The 60 minute interview was great, wasn't it?
B
It blew me the away.
A
It was great just listening to him talk. That was when he was just playing golf and drinking. He had that crazy golf cart that he would drive around in and.
B
What's the book I read where he. He taught Richard Pryor how to smoke pot? Like how to hide it. They did a movie, the Toy. Right. Didn't they do this?
A
He taught him how to hide it.
B
Yeah, because Richard Pryor let a joint up one day and he's like, what are you doing? Come on, you gotta have some clutch glass.
A
So how do you hide it?
B
You know, under your hand and. Oh, mix it with the cigar. He thought Richard was smoking it out. And Jackie Gleason goes, what are you doing, man? Come on. Nice. Smoke it like this. Richard Price like this. Taught me how to smoke a joint.
A
So he would tuck it away.
B
And he was 20 years older.
A
Yeah.
B
You know, Jackie Gleason was a beast, man.
A
That guy partied.
B
Beast. Dawn.
A
He did it all partying. He died fairly young, you know.
B
How old was he?
A
I want to say close to 60, I think. It was a couple different kinds of cancer. How old was he when he died, Jamie? Yeah. Oh, was he. Oh, he's 71. Oh, that's not.
B
Which is still. No, that's still the national. I was 74, right?
A
Yeah. I thought he died younger than that. No, but, yeah. Hard living.
B
Hard living, yeah.
A
Do you ever hear a story about him and Richard Nixon?
B
No.
A
Richard Nixon, him were getting drunk one night. Richard Nixon goes, you want to see some UFOs? And so he. They get on Air Force One and they fly to one of the Air Force bases where they have this Crashed UFO and alien bodies on ice. Jackie Gleason apparently becomes obsessed with UFOs after this. Has a house built in upstate New York that looks like a ufo. His house was a flying saucer. He had a house built that looked like a ufo. And the story's unsubstantiated. It's hard to know if it's true, but it was like his ex wife told it in some magazine. Right? But it tracks. It tracks with if you believe these people that say that there was some sort of a crash, that they did recover and they do have bodies. So this is his fucking house. He has a house built. That's one image of it. But there's other images of what looks even more like a flying saucer and wild. That kind of looks normal like a house there though. But the guy built the flying saucer house. Nixon and him got hammered. I'm hoping that's gonna happen with me and Trump. But Trump doesn't get drunk. You imagine you're hanging out with Trump. He's like, you want to see the ufo? Can you keep a secret? Yeah. There he is hanging out with Nixon. And they supposedly do have something that crashed and they supposedly do have biological entities that are on ice somewhere, according to these whistleblowers that work for the government. Now we're talking about. I just don't know what's real. It's hard to know. And you talk about it, you feel like a moron, because it's like, there's.
B
Got to be something out there. Okay, we got to assume there's something out there. Whether or not I don't even know. Right.
A
But should we assume that that something's been here? Yeah, yeah, yeah, I think so.
B
Yeah. They've been here.
A
Well, I would come here if I was from somewhere else and I was like, what? You know, imagine if you're like from some super advanced civilization that's completely abandoned war. There's no thievery. Everybody reads everybody's minds. There's no unfairness because they've worked all that stuff out. And it's just superior intellect because everybody's evolved for a million years past where we are now. And you get the opportunity to see what a breakthrough civilization looks like. Right when they're figuring out nuclear power, right when they're figuring out flight and war and cell phones and like that. Like, that would be like you and I going back and, and going and visiting the real wild West. Like being in a, like a gold mining town in 1830, you know, you know, nuts. That would Be, you know, crazy. Be one of the minor 49ers in 1849, going all the way to San Francisco and these animals stabbing each other in saloons. Like, you know what that would be like? The kind of barbarians that took a chance with wooden wheels getting pulled by a horse and went across mountain ranges to try to get to the gold. That would be like us going to visit that. Of course we would visit that. Of course. Like if you had a chance to see what it would like to see Christopher Columbus land in the Bahamas, to see what that must have been like. Of course you would want to see it. It. If you could go literally back in time and see primitive humans. Well, if they're just like us, but they're like us millions of years from now, of course they would want to visit us. It would be so interesting. You imagine if there was a planet where we could go where we could see cavemen? Would you imagine?
B
Must get us in an hour.
A
Yeah. Well, you can see guys making arrowheads with, with flint for the first time and strapping them to sticks. Giant fucking heads and big teeth covered in hair. Just figuring out tools. Oh my God, we would be fascinated by those people.
B
The way I think about it is, listen, since I'm a kid, we're talking about Martians and aliens, right? Since I'm fucking, yeah, six, seven. I've been hearing about this. The moon landing was in 69, so I was 6. So it started after that. Like I heard more and more about it. So what you mean to tell me is in 55 years we haven't found out more information about it? We know. We know what's going on. We know. NASA's not stupid. They know something's out there. They play with us a little bit from time to time, but there's something out there, my friend.
A
I think so too.
B
There's something out there.
A
I think the other problem with the President knowing, you know, can they keep things from the President? Of course they can. The President is only there for four years and then he has to get in there again. And if he wins, he's only there for four more years. These fucking people have 30 year careers, 50 year careers in the Intelligence Agency. They know if they know something, and they've known something since, you know, Gerald Ford. Why? Why would they tell you? Why do you need to know? We've already been hiding this from the population for so long.
B
And those old timers didn't need a. What's that when you have to sign something?
A
NDA.
B
NDA. Like NAD whatever the. There's no NDAs back then. So there was something to it. Yeah, there was something to it. You know, you got that place in New Mexico, you got Hudson county discussed before with the Martians landing. You have all these places that have a higher volume. I wonder what's number two in UFO sightings.
A
I wonder what's number one. What's number one? Is it Hudson Valley?
B
Yeah, Hudson Valley, by the George Washington Bridge. That whole thing.
A
That's crazy.
B
That's number one. I wonder what number two, number three, and number four is.
A
It's interesting that a lot of them are over near where the ocean is, is, because that's, that's one of the big theories that they have bases in the ocean. Because the reality of the ocean is no one's looking. You know, if you have something on Earth, satellites can see it. Like if you have something that's in the middle of Nevada in some deserted area and you have buildings, satellites can see that, they can see the structures. So you have to hide them. But if you have something in the ocean, nobody sees anything. We've only explored what. What is the percentage of the ocean floor that we have explored? I think it's like 10%. I think it's somewhere around 10, maybe 20%. So that means that 80% of the ocean floor is undiscovered. We have no idea what's down there. And it's, you know, a mile, two miles deep in some spots. If you're from a super sophisticated civilization that's millions of light years away and you can come here instantaneously and you have the ability to traverse in these what they call trans medium craft, which means they can go through air, go through water, just, just. It creates a gravity bubble around it and go through everything. That's what they think these things are doing. That's what they can go 500 knots underwater. Like nothing we have could do that. And if they have bases under the ocean, it makes sense that these sightings are all near the ocean. It just totally makes sense.
B
A lot happens in the ocean. That ocean's stronger than what you think. Yeah, I love going to a beach and just. Jamie, the beach, watching the ocean.
A
2030 seabed, 2030, what they've mapped out, they've gotten 30% mapped. They're trying to get the whole thing done by 2030. Oh, really? Oh, interesting. Oh, what if they find a base? Yeah, what if they get down there and they find bases? What is all that stuff? What are those lines? I'm guessing that's where they probably sent their drones. Probably looks a pool scrubber, you know. Oh, that's crazy. So there's scouring the ocean floor to try to get them. That's why the aliens are going to come out.
B
Wow.
A
That's Hawaii. Whoa. Oh, that's not why it's over here. It is. What's that? One of those islands in the middle? Is that Catalina? Yeah. Oh, I see. Oh, you were zoomed in. Yeah, yeah. Oh, okay. I see what this stuff is. Oh, I see. I think these little light colored brown spots are what's sticking up and the rest of it's underneath.
B
Wow. I gotta pee real quick.
A
Go ahead, dog. We'll pause. Yeah. We'll be right back, folks. Whoa. And we're back. What were we just talking about?
B
Aliens and whatnot.
A
And whatnot. Yeah.
B
You know, I feel that we know we're just not gonna, you know, it's like everything else, man. We knew who shot Kennedy. We're not gonna release it, you know, we're gonna play with us. That's what they do. I think that they would be. I think even after all the alien talk and everything, I think Americans couldn't really handle.
A
Well, there was actually a discussion this guy Hal put off, who was a physicist that worked with the US government, told me that during the Bush administration, they actually wanted to talk about the potential of disclosure to the American people what would be the pros and the cons. And so they listed what could be disrupted. Well, the economy could be disrupted, religion could be disrupted, government could be disrupted. What would be the positive aspects. And they started looking at the positive aspects, like scientific development, the understanding that we're not alone. And then they weighed it all out, and the cons outweighed the pros by a significant number. And so they decided not to disclose it. This is what Hal Puthoff says. So he is a scientist that's worked with the government for decades. And he, you know, I had dinner with him and Jacques Vallee. Jacques Vallee is the guy who, the character in Close Encounters is the Third Kind was based on. The French guy, the scientist. Jacques Vallee has been studying UFOs since like, I think the 50s. Brilliant, brilliant guy's written tons of books on, on the subject and the stories that he knows that he's aware of, the historical stories, which really gets crazy is when they get into like the 1700s and the 1800s and the early 1900s, there's the same stories, people are seeing the same things. The same kind of things are happening. These people, the people that are Encountering the crafts and encountering the beams. They're reporting the same stories. They're real similar to the point where you're like, what's going on? And if it's real unique in, like, you know, I haven't been. I haven't seen ufo. I haven't seen aliens. You haven't. Jamie hasn't. But what if one of us did? Like, if there's millions and millions and millions of people and one guy is fucking walking his dog in the middle of a field, and all of a sudden this thing just lands right in front of him and no one's around. And then these things get out and they look at you and they're talking to you with their mind. And then they get back in their ship and they fucking disappear. They zoom off so fast you can't even follow with your eyes. And then you're sitting there going, what the fuck do I tell anybody? Who's gonna believe me? Who's gonna believe this? I should probably not tell anybody. And then you're lying in bed at night, you're all freaked out because you can't believe you know something that other people don't know. You know the most incredible things, that not only are they real, but they can do things that we can't possibly do. They cannot be us. There's something different. It's a different life form.
B
I think when they came here, maybe somebody painted them as green or whatever. Me, I feel that if they're here, they walk around looking like us. They're a more intelligent life source. Like the movie Cocoon.
A
Right.
B
That's in my mind. And to. But just. I'm the type of guy. I'll talk to you about.
A
Invasion of the Body Snatchers.
B
Yeah, Invasion of the Body Snatchers. I'm the type of guy I'll talk to you about. Just talking to you just now about somebody, the government, telling me that aliens exist. It would knock me down, because I know they do, but not really.
A
But not really.
B
But not really. I know they do, but not really. And that's, I think, with everything.
A
Yeah.
B
So it would even shock me a little bit to find out. But I think that, yeah, Cocoon type people.
A
Jacques Vallee is of that opinion, too. Like, what's interesting about him is he really maintains scientific credibility after all these years, despite, like, studying UFOs back in the time where if you studied UFOs, you were a crackpot, but everything he looked at was just based on logic. This is what we know and this is what we don't. Know, this is what we can prove. This is what we can prove. And we estimate that there's a certain percentage of these experiences, whether it's 5% or what, that are legitimate. There's a great number. The vast majority of things that people see in the sky are not UFOs. No.
B
I guarantee we do see things.
A
Yeah.
B
That we think is something else. And it's a UFO. Yeah, I could see that 100.
A
Oh, yeah. People see the Saturn. They think Saturn's a UFO. They think, you know, they. People see things too, you know, and then there's also weird phenomenon that's real, like ball lightning. Ball lightning is a type of lightning that, like, juts around like a ball. Like a. Like a giant softball of lightning just darting around the sky. And then it goes away. And it's just. It's just a weird form of lightning that is. Has been documented. But if you saw that, if you were in the middle of, like, New Mexico by yourself, camping, and you saw that, like, man, you think it's a fairy or something like that. Oh, my God, man. Angels matching on mushrooms. And you see ball lightning goes like, what? The man you're seeing traces behind the ball lightning. You would 100 believe and feel like you came in contact with an angel. You would believe and feel like something from another planet communicated with you. You'd probably fill your head up with all this important that it told you that you have to tell people. I've got to tell people, man. We're doing it all wrong. We're all one, man. We're all one. We can't be fighting these wars. It's so foolish. And they want us to know. They want us to take care of Mother Earth. Meanwhile, you just saw ball lightning while you're on mushrooms.
B
You know, when I lived in Boulder, I got into a hole one time. I was talking to some guy. He's talking to me about mermaids.
A
Oh, God.
B
At a coffee shop. And it drove me fucking crazy. It drove me so crazy. I didn't have a computer back then, but I actually had to go to the library and I went down a hole. And maybe 10 years ago, I went online one night and got high and was reading about mermaids. Like, that's something I believed in.
A
The dumbest thing about mermaids is they have a fish from the waist down.
B
Right? But weren't they actually spotted in the 1800s somewhere? Or is this a lie?
A
It don't even make any sense. Like, fish don't have sex, you fucking idiot. That means it's the Most beautiful one in the world from the waist up. And all she do is give you blowjobs because fish don't have sex. That's okay.
B
That's not my problem. I'm not. I'm not looking to have sex with a chick, but people are.
A
They want to fall in love with the mermaid. But like, that's the craziest person to fall in love with.
B
Is there any evidence? No, come on.
A
No, no. They're manatees. These people saw manatees. Probably their eyesight sucked because they all had scurvy, you know, they were all fucking starving to death. They all had syphilis. Their faces are falling off. These rotten scumbags that are on these boats together and then they. They're so horny that they want to fuck manatees. They see manatees in the foggy water flopping around. I swear it's a girl with a tail. And they want to hop off. They're like. Like a guy in the desert that sees an oasis that's not there. I see water and you just try to drink the sand. That's what it is. It's guys that are.
B
There's got to be a murder.
A
These horny scumbags from like Europe in the 1500s, these monsters, they're on this boat together for four months and they. They think they see women in the water.
B
Damn it, you just ruined everything.
A
They were probably on opium. They probably had syphilis. They were drunk.
B
That's why you gotta love the 80s, animals. That's why I love the 80s, because two guys actually went into the studio and go, look, we got a movie about a guy who falls in love with a mermaid. And the guy's like, come on, how you gonna do that? All of a sudden it's, let me tell you something, that's another good movie.
A
You know, Joey, that's a good point. Like, this is one of the reasons why America became. What it is is that everybody who moved here initially took a crazy chance. You ought to take a crazy chance. You ought to get in a boat in the 1700s and make your way across the Atlantic Ocean. You have no idea if storms are common. There's no fucking weather document. You, you don't even know what it looks like over here. Cuz they don't have pictures yet. Someone's going to draw you. This is what I saw when I visit Maryland.
B
I told you there's a mermaid.
A
You look at that fake thing. He sewed a fish bottom onto a monkey's body or something. Oh, Jesus Christ. That's Hilarious. That's one of the reasons why America became so powerful. The two things, the Constitution, the Declaration of Independence, the Bill of Rights, like that stuff, all the laws that gave you freedom of speech, the right to bear arms, right to practice your own religion, all those things are incorrupt. But also the type of people that moved here, crazy risk taking motherfuckers that were willing to get their kids and get on a boat and make it across the country. So everybody that came over here was just gung ho. They're all wild folk, wild, dangerous people trying to get jobs on the East Coast. That's still to this day, why the east coast is so crazy, so chaotic and so fun. Because that, that was like the echoes of these pioneering monsters that travel their way across the ocean. The crazy people desperate for anything. Europe just sucks so bad. Like we gotta get the out of here. Whether it's from Spain or Ireland or where they. Boats, just boats, Italians, boats. And then they make their way across the land and then, you know, cover the whole thing eventually and in a few hundred years. It's a crazy story, man. And we gotta be careful of this place. You can't sacrifice the things that made us so great in terms of our freedom just for political gain. Because then we're going to give the whole thing away. And we could go the same way Iran's going the same way. They, they were, they had a, like a European style country and now it's a dictatorship and now it's Islamic. And you know, there's no getting out of that now without some crazy revolution, right? It could go that way anywhere, man. If there's people anywhere on Earth in 2025 living under the thumb of tyranny, there can be people here. It's just a bunch of things have to go wrong. We saw a few things go wrong during COVID that should have woke a lot of people up, that the fabric of society is more fragile than you think it is. And that's why the founding fathers are so wise. They put into play protections to keep tyranny from taking over. They had a bunch of checks and balances that you can't get through. You don't have ultimate power like a king. You have Congress, you have the Senate, you have, you know, you have the Supreme Court. It's gotta be like that. You can't change that just because you want your side to win. Everybody has to be aware of that. Everybody gets shortsighted. Democrats get shortsighted on this, Republicans get shortsighted on this. You can't have that happen. It's not good for anybody. It's not good for us. If you think your opinions and your beliefs and what you know is more beneficial to the American people, state your case. That should be the only thing we do. These people should be able to state their case. Explain how what you can do. We should demand that and all that other shit. Stop it. Just get rid of it. Get rid of all of it. Get rid of all of it. No one should be pro crime. No one should be letting people off the hook for violent crimes. No one should be like letting gang members live in some sanctuary city from another country that come over here just to cause havoc and create crime. Because we have weak policing and because we let them in. Like no one that we know. No side should want that. No side should want the country to be more dangerous, you know? And no side should want people deported to El Salvador prisons that aren't really gang members either. No shot. No side should want no due process. No side should want. Want the ability of the government to like, imagine like you're a person who's over here illegally, but you're not a criminal. You're just a guy who doesn't have paperwork. And then they send you to prison somewhere. Someone decides because of your tattoos that you're in a gang. So now all of a sudden you're in a prison in another country and you haven't even been to trial. We can't let that happen either, you know.
B
Did you see that prison where they took them to Nicaragua? Whatever.
A
That place in El Salvador.
B
El Salvador where they house them 40 and that. That's fucking insane. That's insanity, bro.
A
And apparently they have unmarked graves. They, you know, people die, they get strangled, whatever. Take them to the back. Unmarked grave, you know, it's. It's complete dehumanizing of people as a over correction to having too much crime and gang violence. So too much crime and gang violence, then you throw all due process out the window, Round everybody up, throw them all in jail. And if you're going to do that, a certain percentage of them are pro. I mean, I mean it's gonna be effective. You're definitely gonna curb crime, but you're also gonna victimize a few innocent people. A certain percentage of innocent people, like undoubtedly, especially if you have no due process.
B
Listen, man, we know that like this is.
A
This can't come to America, you know, and if we're sending our prisoners over there, how much different is that than the other stuff that we hate, like sending jobs overseas where People work for a dollar a day and don't get health care. We would never allow that in America, right? Well, we would never allow this kind of a prison in America either. So should we really be involved in sending people to this kind of a prison if they're from another country? You know, it's a, it's a. It's an interesting question.
B
Do you think you've got an interesting.
A
I think it's. There's something. There is a bit of a problem, right. If you come from one country and then they put you in a prison in another one without a trial. If they say you're a gang member and you're in Ms. 13, you come from Mexico, you make your way into America, and all of a sudden they put you in El Salvador prison, you're like, yo, what happened here?
B
They took a lot of. They took a handful of people that had weird tattoos and stuff like that.
A
That's what I've heard. But I don't really know the truth.
B
No, you don't know the truth because.
A
You know, they were saying that they keep talking about this guy in the mainstream media, saying he's a Maryland father and this and that, but then that Tom Homan guy says, no, he's a member of Ms. 13. And so. Okay, who's telling the truth? And they were saying that if he got deported and came back into this country again illegally, we would round him up again and do it all over again. We didn't make a mistake. Okay, well, who's telling the truth? Is he just a man? That's mistaken identity.
B
And where's his police record?
A
Yeah, right.
B
Let me see his police record. If the guy has a tattoo and he's got no police record and he's got a family and a wife, it's like, remember we used to take me for chicken?
A
Which place?
B
By your old house. Twenty years ago, you used to always invite me for chicken.
A
Oh, chicks, the Spanish guys. Oh, how good was that place? He had that, that wood fired rotisserie.
B
Absolutely.
A
Only cash, no credit cards. That's what killed him.
B
So think about this. What if he had that for 20 years? Great guy. Because I always went up there with you and he was very nice to us.
A
Great guy.
B
What if they came and got him because he didn't have a green card?
A
He was. He was illegal.
B
No, no, but he was illegal.
A
He was legal. He was legal. You know, there's people, second generation, okay.
B
There's people that came and, you know, they're here before I send.
A
Actually, I think it Was more than second generation.
B
Yeah. I want to make sure that this guy had roots in the community. I'm not gonna just put him on a fucking.
A
Yeah, it's. But the. I think what you got to do is just get rid of criminals only. But the only way to know if someone's a criminal is to have due process.
B
But it's not over a fucking tattoo.
A
No.
B
It's due process all I want.
A
Because there's a lot of kids get stupid tattoos.
B
Yeah.
A
And then you have them. You know, when I went to Japan, I couldn't work out in the gym, in the hotel. They made me go up to my room, put a long sleeve shirt on because of my sleeves. You can't have open tattoos and work out at, like, a nice place because it's connected to the Yakuza.
B
Yeah.
A
So, like, you have to. You have to follow their rules. You know, they demand that you follow the rules.
B
That's crazy.
A
Yeah.
B
I can't. I can't throw somebody back in a fucking prison like that just because of a tattoo. I gotta see something. Yeah. See something. He did something to disrupt the system.
A
Yeah. I just. See, the thing is, I don't know. I really don't know. I don't know the truth of these cases because you get a biased take from one side oftentimes, and then you get a biased take from the other side, and they're duking it out to shape reality for you.
B
Now, in 85, I lived in San Francisco and I teamed up with a bunch of Cubans that came in 79, the Mario boat lift. And, you know, you went over there every day. And I had to buy the old guy, the guy that ran the corner, I had to buy him a little bottle of rum, a half pint, and he would let you operate your game, whatever your game was selling weed, whatever. But my point of the story is that I remember this specifically, but from the time I got there to the time I left, there was probably 80 Cubans on the block. Maybe 20 of them got arrested. In those days, you got arrested, you got deported. Like the following week, if you got arrested, they put you in jail. If you didn't have paperwork or you came in that Cuban thing, it would take you, right. Immigration would come get you within 72 fucking hours, and you'd be right back in Cuban. Fidel would shoot you.
A
See, it's one thing if you arrest someone for a crime.
B
Yes.
A
And then you deport them. I get that. But it's another thing when you're rounding up people because you think they look suspicious. Like during the first Trump administration, there's this dude who was a contractor who was doing something from a house and he was army veteran, I think he was in for 20 plus years and worked at a management position at a big construction firm. So he did like a prestigious job. He was like a legit guy. So he's at Home Depot and he's dressed nice, you know, polo shirt on, nice slacks. He looks like a guy who has money. These ICE guys pull him over and demand that he show them their paperwork. And, you know, he's like, what the are you guys doing? And he says that to them. And then he pulls out his, you know, Army ID and, you know, his, his driver's license. Like, you can't do this. You can't just come up to people goes, I'm a fucking American citizen. He goes, I was born in America and I served my country for 25 years. And you fucking idiots are just gonna harass me in the parking lot because my family, Emily is of Spanish descent. The away from me. And, you know, he was hot. And he came to the house right from there. It was telling me about this. I was like, God damn. Because here this guy is like gentleman, businessman, like sweetheart of a guy, wonderful to talk to, great to do business with, have a conversation with him. Great guy. They just looked at him because he's brown, like, that's it. There's no way you could make any other way. You're going to point to that guy and think he's an illegal. That guy's driving a brand new Silverado with a construction logo on the side of it. Shiny clean car, polo shirt, slacks, clipboard in hand. Fuck you. That's what I'm worried about. I'm not worried about guys that get.
B
Arrested when they came to Jersey. I didn't go out that week. I didn't do much. I'm a ds.
A
I'm glad they didn't deport you.
B
I didn't. No, but you never listen, right?
A
But if you did get arrested for a crime, you probably now would say, yeah, you should get deported. Like if you did a violent crime.
B
Yeah, yeah, take me back.
A
But there's a difference between getting arrested for a violent crime and just going to Home Depot because you're brown. That's crazy. That's crazy.
B
And on this hole, this ice hole, listen, you're picking up, I don't know how many thousands of people. Correct? How many people did they pick up on this?
A
I do not ship back. I do not know Dog.
B
You're gonna have a couple clerical errors.
A
Well, you're gonna always.
B
If I listen more than that, even the computer will pick them. You know, it's just a clerical error.
A
But there's also just be big enough.
B
To say we made a clerical error. Don't keep saying that. I know you're a gang member because you got a with that too long.
A
Well, the thing is like that we don't know what's correct. Right? But there's not just clerical errors. If you don't have due process, you also have the potential for people to potentially falsely accuse someone on purpose just so they could arrest them because they don't like them, or they have a bad business dealing with them, or there's some reason why they want to send this to show him to El Salvador. People are crazy. They do like that all the time. If you're just rounding people up and you. This guy that you hate happens to be from Nicaragua, and you just fucking sick, sick the dogs on them. If you got a hotline when people can call and rat on people. People are rats. There's a lot of rats. Especially if you just have a wild number that you can call. Wild number. To turn people in. Remember during COVID like they were. They were giving people rewards for turning people in for having parties in la and the mayor was saying, normally snitches get stitches, but now they get rewards. Do you remember that?
B
Yeah.
A
That retarded mayor that they had in LA during the entire. The entire time. I don't even remember. He was such a high.
B
Los Angeles. Los Angeles. Oh, wasn't that guy?
A
Yeah. My favorite thing was when Black Lives Matter protested in front of his house like, you're never woken up.
B
Well, this is my problem. This guy?
A
Well, yeah, that guy. What the. His name? Oh, God, what a tool. Does he say the snitches usually get stitches? Say in the beginning. See, it's. I think it's in the beginning. Everybody continues to let us know where those folks are. If you've observed recurring violations of the safer at home order, please continue to let us know at Coronavirus, llc. Business violation. You know the old expression about snitches? Well, in this case, snitches get rewards.
B
We want to thank you for turning.
A
Folks in and making sure we are all safe. You should go to jail for saying that.
B
I'm gonna explain something, you fucking monster. Due process has been my problem since all this shit started. And it started with even the cancel culture, okay? Due process. You got to come at me and let Me know everything just because you opened up your mouth. I said that 22 years ago at a party. I kissed you. I tried to kiss you. That ain't good now. That just ain't good enough. Well, I went home and called my girlfriend Diane. We'll get her on the fucking stand, too. But I don't. I believe in due process. I'll do whatever time you want me to do. Prove that I did it. Just don't open up your fucking mouth.
A
Absolutely. But when you have something like. Like, I'm asking for you to turn people in for anything, people are going to go nutty and start ratting on people. That's just what they do. You can't get away from that. You can. Snitches get rewards. Like, if you have that for immigration, you got a real problem. You got a real problem because there's legit scumbag racists out there that'll find people and start targeting them. People SWAT people all the time. That. You know what that is. They fucking call 911 and say, someone's being held hostage at Joey Diaz's house at gunpoint. And then the SWAT team shows up and you might not know what's going on, so you might pull out a fucking gun and get shot.
B
Yeah, I've heard of that. What? College students are doing it.
A
People are doing it all the time. It happens. There was a bunch of conservative online people that were getting swatted recently. It's wild, dude. You know, you give people this ability with social media, or even more so, if you can, like, anonymously tip people that people are immigrants here illegally. Like, boy, that's gonna be a problem if that ever happens.
B
And that could just be a woman who owns a fruit stand and a Mexican owns a fruit stand down the corner. And she could just call and go, listen, this guy's a leader.
A
There's people that are excited that people are getting deported. Like, be careful. Be careful what you wish for. You don't want just more people searching for people to lock up. And then here's the thing. Like any other business, once you start getting numbers, you don't want those numbers to drop off. You don't want the job to go away. You know, you got a quota, right? If you got a quota, there's. If there's a quote, I don't know if there is a quota, but if there's a quota for how many immigrants we got to send back, you gotta have a problem. Because then now you've made it a game, and now I'm trying To score points. And if Joey gets 30 guys, I want to get 50 guys. Joey, yeah, I got 50. I think a few of them might not be guilty, but it. Who cares?
B
Who cares? I hit the bonus.
A
Cadillac.
B
I hit the bonus.
A
Yeah, them, they should all go back anyway.
B
Agreed?
A
Agreed. Yeah, there's a lot of idiots in this world. There's a lot of people that they're short sighted. And by giving, if there is. I'm not saying there is a quota, but if there is a quota, you're giving people a game to play. Now you don't want to play games with people.
B
Well, I think even on ticket quotas, there's a percentage that they know they're gonna get beat on it. Like, yeah, if I give you 10 tickets, eight of them are gonna be good. Two of them are gonna be. He's gonna come up with an attorney and write this. The wind was blowing.
A
And you know, I always said that, like, what would you do? See, this is a problem with the government that they exposed with this department of government efficiency. And I had heard about this before from my friends were that were in the military that like, if you get a budget for the year, if you don't spend all of that money, your budget's going to be reduced next year. You don't want that to happen. So you spend money wildly, completely inefficiently. And I think that's part of the problem that, that we're facing here. It's like they don't want to lose out on any of this money. They've been getting this money this way for so long.
B
You're right. If they don't use it. That's right. The budget goes down.
A
Yeah, the budget goes down.
B
They call that something.
A
Bullshit. I don't know. What is it called? What is it called? I had a point, but I forgot what my point is. But it's just that, you know, we're in a weird time here where people are arguing about whether or not we should abandon core principles that made this country great. Like very intelligent liberal people with degrees are talking about the First Amendment should have restrictions. Like, no, no, no, no, no. You don't get to decide. You don't get to decide because without free speech, I don't know who's right. And I can't just go on narratives. It's too. That's whatever. That's how religions work. That's how cults work. They make you go on a very specific narrative. And you can't go outside the lines. If you want the human Race to evolve. If you want people to evolve culturally, if you want people to communicate better, they got to be able to say whatever they want. And then you decide if you want to communicate with people that speak differently than you. And if you think that they have an egregious position, you're allowed to say something about it and you talk about it. And everybody has to figure out who's right and who's wrong. And unless that's able to go on, you're never gonna get to the truth. And if you just cut that off for things that you find offensive. The problem is, maybe I don't find it offensive. And you can't decide what I can take in and not take in. You're not allowed to because I don't know you and you don't know me. This is nonsense. Like, you gotta give human beings the ability to discern for themselves. The only way for them to truly do that is they got to be able to communicate openly. And they were trying to stop that during the Biden administration. They were putting the fucking brakes on all kinds of shit that people are allowed to talk to. And everybody's like, yeah, we got to stop disinformation. Like, you're. You're signing your own fucking death warrant. You don't even know it. You're giving away the only thing that we have left.
B
Taking a vitamin. It's called cardio nad. I'm taking something else that's called, like, colon. They gave it to me after my lung thing, and my lung feels a lot better. You know what the doctor told me when he told me to take the one supplement?
A
What?
B
They took it off the market during.
A
COVID Why'd they do that?
B
Because it's such a great lung supplement. Like, I feel a lot better since I've been on it for five weeks. They took this off the Internet and everything. They shut down their website for three years.
A
Oh, my God. So that sounds so crazy that if you had said this to me before COVID I would like Joey's crazy. Stop talking like that, man. I was so pro pharmaceutical drugs back then, like, as the cure all to everything. And modern medicine and vaccinations are so important. And Covet woke me the up when I found out that they were trying to stop doctors and take away their licenses if they prescribed Ivermectin. Take away your license. If you just prescribe off label a drug that people say is beneficial in certain trials, but you're, for some reason you're not allowed to do it for the first Time ever. Doctors are prohibited from prescribing something off label that has no negative side effects. It's never happened before. Never happened before. Where there's a public psyop where they're trying to pretend that it's horse dewormer so nobody will take it. It's bizarre. And they did it right in front of our face and they just did it for money. And the fucking media went along with it and so did the liberals. The liberals went along with it and they parroted out everything they say. Safe and effective. Saved millions of lives with no look. People are dropping like flies to the left and the right of them. People are stroking out on the subway and everyone's pretending that nothing's wrong. Everyone's pretending this drop in all cause increase in all cause mortality isn't crazy. That's not weird. It's not weird that cancer is on a skyrocketing rate. That's not weird to you? Everyone's pretending. And if you bring it up, you're a kook. They tricked everybody into being the cop. Everybody is calling that Garcetti hotline. Everybody's a little rat. They're all little rats. They're little rats working for the man and they'll rat on each other. And then if something happens to them because of it, they keep their mouth shut because they don't want to hear it. So they, like, do the work of the man for the man because they're suckers. Isn't that wild? And that. That what we're talking about is the problem with this disclosure of aliens. Those people are gonna fall apart. The people that fell apart in Covid. Oh, Jesus. They're gonna be wearing silver jumpsuits and sucking alien dicks. The moment those guys arrive, they will jump on Team Alien. They'll be rounding up people and using us for slaves. They'll do whatever the aliens ask. They'll be like vampire familiars. Remember those, where there was like, a guy wasn't a vampire but wanted to be one so he'd do anything the vampire asked. That's what those fuckfaces would do. All those. All the people that got nine boosters, all those morons. They'll. They'll be like on Team Alien, 100%. It is imperative that the human race perish. It's imperative. We're a blight on the world. And the Anunnaki are gonna help us. Those fucking idiots. They'll sell us right down a river.
B
It's crazy what's going on in the world today, my friend.
A
It Is. But there's. It always has to be crazy. So we realize it's crazy. So people snap out of it. Like, this is the, this is a part of society. It's like there's not a linear path to success. What happens with societies is things go really well and then they go terrible and you either adjust or you don't. And if you don't, the civilization dies and then a new one emerges. But if you do, then you recover. And it's like, how many times can you do that? How long can you keep this thing going on? Because you're gonna have like great prosperity, which makes soft people, you know, hard times makes hard men. Hard men make soft time. Soft times make soft men, Soft men make hard times. And everybody knows that. That's what it is. It just is get it, go. And it's just a matter of recognizing that it's happening. So you course correct. Correct. Which is why everybody's leaving California. They're not course correcting. They're going into madness. And they're like, no, we're progressive and no, no, you're going into the rocks. No, no, the rocks protect us. No, you're gonna die, you're gonna hit the rocks. It's gonna be over. Just like there's no more Rome, is going to be no more LA like you morons, right? This, the. The world is littered with civilizations that lost their way. You can go and find the ruins everywhere. You know, there's the gods, they went away. That's how it happens. Stupid. And you're doing it right now. And we recognize that or we don't. And if we don't, it's not good. But I think we will. I think we have a different, you know, a different way of communicating now because people can talk so much online. You're gonna get a lot of stupid shit online. You get a lot of dumb things online, but you're also going to get a lot of conversations that make you think, that make you go, that actually makes sense. Like, why are we assuming that the way we're doing it so far and the way we've been doing it is the only way to do it? What is wrong with this system? How do we get the money out of it? How do we get money out of politics? How do we get the number one corrupting factor out of figuring out what's best for all of us? How do we do that? Smoke weed, eat mushrooms, talk to aliens.
B
That's it. I don't get involved in none of that.
A
It doesn't bother Me, I do sometimes when I think about it, because I don't. I go down roads I don't want to think about. I want to just enjoy my life.
B
I'm scared for my daughter in the future. Everything else. I gotta take a chance every goddamn day. You know what I'm saying?
A
Yes. Well, that's also one of the benefits of a society with children. A society with children wants to make sure that the future is safe. A society of people without children making rules, don't give a fuck about kids. And some people actually openly disdainful of children. And then they get into positions of government and power. That's not good. I think something happens to you when you have children that I think is an important biological, sort of spiritual, developmental cycle. There's something that happens to you when you realize this little person you love more than life itself, and you're taking care of them now. And then you want the world to be a better place. And then you start thinking, oh, all these people around me used to be babies. They used to be ba. This is what. We're all on this weird journey. And, like, maybe we could all be a little nicer to each other, you know, if that doesn't happen to you and you don't have kids, you don't have something that you love more than life itself. Yeah, it's a different. That's a different kind of thing. And if you want power when you're that person, that's a different kind of thing too. And especially if you're into war, if you're a war hawk and you don't have any kids, like, Jesus Christ, you're willing to send other people's kids overseas to die for some nonsense, and you don't even know what that is. Like, that's kind of crazy. So we're in a society right now where we have a popular. Except for Elon, we have a population decline. People aren't having as much babies as they used to. It just doesn't seem like it because there's so many people. But. But it's like when they look at the numbers for the future, we're in a kind of a weird population collapse thing. Like, Japan is fucked. Have you seen any of that stuff on Japan? See if you can find anything on the Japanese population crisis. They're having so few children in Japan that, like, in three generations, they could be in real trouble. Like, the number of people that will have grandchildren right now is significantly lower than it ever has been before.
B
That's your question?
A
Yeah.
B
The fuck's it got to do with me. I don't give a fuck about the Japs. What the fuck is wrong with you, Joe?
A
Well, I think about it with us. Because I think about it with, like, civilizations collapsing. I think about it what we've been talking about the whole day.
B
Yeah, but we don't have to worry about.
A
I know, I know, I know. We don't have to worry about.
B
Right?
A
You're right.
B
The first podcast. I'm done.
A
That.
B
I'm scared. You know what I'm saying? What the fuck is wrong with you? You're right. Enough with this.
A
You're right.
B
And politics. Enough. Covid is over. If you took the needle, you. If you didn't. Now they just found out the. The flu shot don't work. I could have told you that.
A
25 does not work. It makes you 25 more like, come on.
B
And I'm a GED type of. So knock it off. I hate all this. I'm scared. You know what I'm saying? The.
A
I'm scared too.
B
Yeah, about Japanese. Listen, man, that's what the problem is. We're worrying about. This is what. The Internet fucked us.
A
That's true.
B
This is why we have retards walking around believing everything. Because I forgot what I was gonna tell you.
A
The Internet fucked us.
B
The Internet fucked us. It's too much information. It's like this. I was in the hospital and I get on a fucking elevator and there's two, three doctors, you know, half a fags in my world, okay? And they're like, oh, my God, we can't wait till the Kennedy report comes out. Well, how is it going to make a difference in your world? It's like these idiots with the Epstein list. How is it going to make a difference in your world if Tom Hanks is on that list?
A
I'll tell you.
B
Do you not have to go to work tomorrow? Do you have to do all the same shit? It doesn't. That shit doesn't matter to me. I don't give a fuck who's on the Epstein list. I don't give a fuck who went to Diddy's house. It's got nothing to do with me. But in today's world, because of the Internet, it makes us think it's got something to do with us. Had nothing to do with me, man.
A
It's a show. That's what it is.
B
What's the fucking show? I don't want to watch that show. So now I gotta wait here. 60 years we've been watching the same footage. He got Hit it clocked back, you know, Lee Harvey, but now we want to really fuck with these fucking peanut nimble headed dummies that are. Well, I want to see what's on there. Then two days later, the Jews did it. Yeah, just worry about paying your fucking credit card bills, you fucking idiot. That's what you should worry about. Did you see what happened this year in this country? Fucking millionaires are selling off fucking property before to pay taxes to get capital. Are you fucking kidding me? And people are worried about the fucking Epstein list. Like, how is it gonna change your life? Who fucking Tom Hanks was fucking in the ass? Who? Doesn't matter. And do you really care at the end of the day, do you really care about that 16 year old girl? No, you don't. So shut the fuck up. Nobody cares. It's just a fucking show.
A
It's a show.
B
It's a show. It's like I told you about la, you know, I was watching.
A
It's a compelling show.
B
What's that fucking show with the crazy stoner guy? Seth Rogen, he just.
A
Oh, I haven't seen it.
B
The studio. Okay, not a bad show. Not a bad show at all. But I was watching that show and it let me realize what I hated. Short small talk. That shit we were talking about before where people just like, well, the other day a contractor came over. I love this guy. Came over to my house, going to do the garage. And there was a moment of 10 minutes that it was him and his son and me and my wife. And we're just standing there. And it just takes one guy to go, all right, back to work, everybody. Because if not, we'll sit there for three hours. So how did it feel? Great. How was your trip? How was the hospital staff? Listen, it doesn't fucking matter how my hospital stay was. Get in your truck, get the fuck out of here, and I'll get the fuck out of here. I go my way. You. You know, my wife, I hate her around when people come over because she always throw that curveball in, like, tell them to look at the room. No, they don't need to look at the fucking room. Leave them in the fucking garage. If not, you're gonna confuse these motherfuckers. You gotta assume everybody is confused. You go to a restaurant, you get something wrong. Everybody is not cooking on fucking. You know, it's something I've never seen before. Every time I go somewhere, I'm like, how could they be that stupid? Yeah, how could they not do this? You go to cvs, there's anywhere you go. It's like they're not even training people anymore. Not even training people anymore. You know, you go to. I went somewhere the other day. I was at the mall. My daughter was on. I go to P F Chang's, PM Chang's. Those type of restaurants. They used to train people for two weeks. You don't get paid. You're in there learning shit. It's not like a regular restaurant where they're like, follow Joe Rogan around for a day and then fucking come back tomorrow and you're on your own, dog. Nobody's fucking. They don't know anything. These young kids, they don't know anything. Nothing.
A
You know, a lot of them aren't even getting driver's licenses. They just Uber everywhere. Kids don't want to learn how to drive. I don't want to learn how to drive. They don't care.
B
My friend was telling me his son's got a license for two years. He's home every night. We got a license. We left the house before we had the license.
A
We were driving to New Hampshire.
B
Yeah, we had the car before we had the license. Yeah, but listen, I had, you know, people. I went to a comedy show and a guy comedian was talking about kids. And I'm like, I'm not gonna do that no more. Because that's all of us. We all talk about when I was 40, right. When I was 28, you know, I did this and I did that. But these kids today are different. And I've accepted it. I've accepted it. In my neighborhood, when I went back, I was pissed for a few fucking months.
A
How come?
B
Because there's no kids playing. There's kids all over my fucking street. And my little cult is sacked there. I got like eight fucking kids. Mr. Softy comes. We're the only ones out there. Four in the afternoon. We're the fucking kids. And then I start.
A
Kids don't feel comfortable being unsupervised. You know, you hear too much about kids being abducted and weird things happening to kids. It's not like they could free range like when we were kids. It's like there's that. That narrative's out there everywhere. And then some neighborhoods just aren't fucking safe. Your kids shouldn't be out.
B
Nah, there's a lot of safe neighborhoods. Kids don't play. Our neighborhood wasn't that safe. But in unity, there was strength.
A
There's a real problem with video games. Video games are so good that kids don't want to go outside.
B
That's a Fucking cell phone.
A
That too. That too.
B
Cell phone. The computer.
A
That too.
B
It's so many things, but I'm not. I don't have a problem with it no more. That's what I'm trying to say to you. It's who they are now. It's who they are. You know, I was reading something. I just put this together. It's the truth. Remember a couple, maybe a year ago, they were talking about how low testosterone in these people?
A
Yeah.
B
Kids don't play no more.
A
Well, they don't play. They don't go outside, they don't run, they don't jump. They don't jump. And then they're eating garbage.
B
So what do you think testosterone levels are going to be?
A
And they have plastic in their brain. They said that they studied a bunch of people to see how much microplastic they had in their brain. And some people had as much as a plastic spoon. What? Imagine that you have so many microplastics in your brain that if they extracted it all, you could make a plastic spoon. So of course that's gonna wreck your fucking testosterone, too. And then I saw this thing about Call of Duty. Some fucking insane statistic about the amount of time that in total that's been played in. Call of Duty is like, more than human civilization. Like the amount of minutes that people have logged, like millions of people playing Call of Duty is like, if you put it all together, it's longer than human civilization.
B
And I've never played a video game, Joe.
A
Good.
B
Is that the craziest?
A
You'd love it. Stay away from them. They're crack.
B
I just never felt the need to sit down a fucking computer and shoot at people. I'd rather shoot at people for real. I'd rather steal a car for real. Or roll a fucking drug dealer.
A
Well, it's definitely more fun to shoot at things for real. But video games are very fun. There's. They're not. These people playing them aren't morons. They're fun. They're really fun.
B
I know.
A
What is the long. What is the amount of time spent? It's. I. This goes back. There's a Reddit post from 10 years ago actually repeating the exact same thing. So 10 years ago, it was that much. There's. You could probably pick a video game, though, and say the same thing, right? Grand Theft Auto, right? Yeah. Any really popular game, right? Yeah. How about subway servers? 25 billion hours played. This was 10 years ago. 25 billion hours. That's. That's so crazy. That's so crazy. That's so many hours of people playing that game 10 years ago at the same time. So World of Warcraft has 6 billion years played. 6 million. 6 million.
B
6 million.
A
Six million. Jesus Christ. So 6 million. That's pre civilization.
B
I was a model guy. Weren't you a model guy?
A
Yeah, I used to make little Star Wars Millennium Falcon models, model cars.
B
I used to do all the superheroes.
A
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. Remembering you could paint them.
B
Yeah, I used to paint them. And the whole thing, that was my. That's the only thing that kept me.
A
That was fun.
B
Until one day my mom goes, stop painting those things. Get out of the house.
A
How much paint fumes were we just getting in our bodies? Glue.
B
Paint. Listen, everybody's got their problem.
A
These people talk about rubber, cement, glue. Remember that stuff when you would crack it? You had the brush attached to the lid.
B
Oh.
A
And you pull it out and the smell, you'd be like, woo. And you tell your friends, smell this. You all be smelling markers. Everybody be sniffing markers and sniffing glue.
B
I was thinking of sniffing glue again just to see how we feel now.
A
Probably not good. I would imagine we have some. We have some smelling sauce. Should we wrap this up with a smelling salt? Jamie, how many of those are fresh? They're all stacked. Is there any order to those? The way they're stacked? That's the last Freshie. Chuck that baby this way.
B
You got one to go for me? Yeah, of course I have one to go.
A
You really want to take it with you? Okay, here we go. Oh, this is fresh. Fresh. This one hasn't been opened yet. Oh, you hear that? Melted back on or something. Oh, boy. Whoa, this is a good one. Here we go. Oh, oh. Oh, boy. Wow. Yeah, them fresh ones. Oh my goodness.
B
I got to get the right side.
A
Are we. Are we giving ourselves brain damage or what?
B
Hopefully.
A
Let's find out about that. What else will we find out about? We figured out the numbers. Was it one other thing? Yeah. Jesus, these fresh ones are brutal. Are we giving ourselves brain damage? I need to know. I can't afford any more brain damage.
B
I cleared my ears.
A
Yeah, let's put a lid on that thing. Keep it fresh.
B
Oh, my God, Joe.
A
Keep it fresh as you overuse may damage nasal passages or lungs. Oh, well, that's not good.
B
What does it do?
A
What's overuse? Overuse can damage nasal pass. I don't think it's getting to my lungs.
B
Use both. I got damaged my patch already and lung, hair and bro, you're.
A
You're the inside of your Nose is scarred over. It's like a cauliflower ear.
B
Look at this. That was a good whack.
A
That was good.
B
That was a very good whack. That affected something.
A
Yeah. Cleanse you out. I've never tried it before lifting weights, but that's what it's for. That's what they do those powers for.
B
Strength lifters.
A
Yeah. The real power lifter guys, they like to take a jolt of that right before they.
B
What's the pros and cons of this shit? Like, what are the long.
A
I don't think there's any pros. It's all cons. This is not good. We just did this.
B
The one we just did now is just a higher strength of the stuff they used to put in your nose.
A
It's the same stuff. It's exactly. It's smelling salts. It's just a whole jar of them. It's ammonia. Right, Jamie?
B
Now if you get knocked out, you put that on them. What happen?
A
They used to be able to do that to boxers in between rounds. They stopped allowing them to do it, you know, because I guess it'll wake you up if you got a concussion a little bit. Just enough for you to get more of a concussion so Tommy Hearns can hit you again.
B
And I got this. Loris. Not Loris. Fishburn. Who's the other guy? The guy I like a lot. He's in the Godfather of Harlem.
A
Forrest Whitaker.
B
Forest Whitaker. Eye now. Oh, did you see it?
A
No. What's going on with dry?
B
I don't know. It droops.
A
Only when you get high. That's hilarious.
B
Yeah. Right here over this. So I gotta put, like, Scotch tape over this.
A
Did you ever see Forest Whitaker in the Color of Money?
B
Tremendous.
A
He hustled Paul Newman. It was beautiful. Can I ask you a question? You think I need to lose weight?
B
Yeah.
A
He says that after he robs him, he tricks him, he pretends he sucks at pool, and then slowly but surely, Paul Newman realizes he's getting hustled.
B
Sorry, I'll throw this away.
A
And there's a scene where he gets angry and he asks him, are you a hustler? He's like, you. You can quit if you want to quit. It's one of the best.
B
That was a great scene.
A
One of the best. It's one of the best scenes in the movie because that's really how it works. It's just this, for your clarity. A doctor says this about smelling. Oh. What does it say? If you're stuck in a room that was filled with ammonia Gas, you would get lung toxic toxicity. Potentially, you get airway injury, you could potentially die. But breathing this stuff in a few times over a few hours isn't really going to lead to any significant complications. He had that. The FDA warning is mostly a regulatory issue about misbranding and mislabeling. Okay, so we have to worry. There's no way we could worry because those power lifter guys, they've been doing it forever.
B
It's like that Hicks joke about, you know, when you smoke cigarettes, they're on the side of labels.
A
Oh, yeah. Low birth weight.
B
I could live with that.
A
Just pick the ones you like. Yeah. Ironic that that guy got pancreatic cancer and that's a side effect of cigarettes. That's one of. I mean, you can't for sure say that that's what caused it, but that is one of the things that comes from that. Renewed interest may have come after the appearance on the Joe Rogan Experience. Oops.
B
Yeah. People blasting themselves. What's going on for Jersey? Who's on that card? Kyla against the Venezuelan.
A
Let's pull it up. The main event is Sugar Sean O'Malley and Marab Dwavish Willie. The rematch, which would be absolute chaos. Juliana Pena versus Kayla Harrison. Who's the most jacked female that's not on steroids walking the face of the earth? Kayla Harrison is. I mean, she passes all her tests, but. Good Lord, that lady's jacked. Bruno Silva, Joshua Van. This is like, they haven't made the full card yet. These. This Kelvin Gasland. The fight with Joe Pifer, that was rescheduled. Joe Piper got real sick in Mexico City. So did Daniel Cormier and so did John Anick. They all got really sick in Mexico City.
B
Cheetos on that card.
A
Oh, let me see that. Yeah. Okay. Who is Cheeto fighting? Okay. That Kelvin fight is a very good fight, by the way. Kelvin. And Joe Piper. Joe Piper is a terrifying dude. Mario Bautista, that's a very good fight. Mario Bautista is. Is rock solid, man. That's a serious dude. And Marlin is a monster, too, because that's. That's a very good fight. Marlin's got the bigger name, but Mario Batista is a killer. Great card, but it's not fully formed yet. This is just a few fights. Generally speaking. There's usually. It's around 13 fights. You know, John and I were talking about that the other day. Like, there's nothing like calling the UFC fights because you start, you know, if it's on in Vegas time, you're starting the fights at 3pm and you're going all the way through to the pay per view. You're doing like six hours plus of commentary. And then you got to find times to run to pee. Sometimes it's like I have to tell the truck, can I pee? And then you got over because I'm drinking monster energy drinks and I'm taking nicotine pouches and I'm fired up and I'm drinking a lot of water too. I'm drinking my hydrogen water and I have to pee so bad. There's nothing worse when you have to. When you're trying to form a sentence and you have to pee, you can't think.
B
It has been brutal for me.
A
Brutal.
B
When I eat mushrooms, I gotta pee every 20 minutes.
A
Why?
B
And if I'm in a car, I gotta pull over and pee and I gotta make sure I'm not in the sexual fucking territory. Like, I don't pee.
A
Oh.
B
Like close to school, churches, fucking parks. Because then they throw you under the bus for sexual whatever.
A
Yeah.
B
And you gotta be careful. But dog, I'm in a world where there's some weeks are better than others. I don't get up at night to pee. But in the daytime, especially if I work out and I start drinking that water and drinking that water, oh, baby, I gotta start peeing. And when I got sick, this was the beauty of it. Every time I had a pee, I'd get anxiety. I would get a panic attack. I couldn't even make it to the bathroom to walk. Really. I was peeing my pants on the way to the fucking bathroom. Joe, you have no idea. The last week of February, when I went to the hospital in March, that was possibly that Saturday night, my blood pressure was 212 over 100 and my oxygen level was at 86. And I wouldn't go to the hospital because I didn't want the ambulance coming to get me at four in the morning in front of my daughter. So I waited till 8 and then I drove myself to the hospital. I was fucked up, bro. Wow. That was a fucked up couple months, man. I didn't know what was going on.
A
And what did they determine it was?
B
It was at heart. Congenital heart failure when you have fluid in your lungs, edema, whatever. I was retained, bro. I went. I walk around right now. I'm 278. I was 265 all summer because I was really happy. Every day I would go, look, I could fight in the UFC. When I walked into the hospital, I was 319.
A
Oh, you got Big.
B
I got big in a month. Like a month. And I wasn't eating in the hospital, nothing.
A
What were you, Was it like Italian food? Like, what did I eat? Some big.
B
I was just retaining water Edema's. When you were draining the water.
A
Oh, like that much water.
B
Oh my God, Joe. And my lungs was getting the water so I couldn't breathe. And then when I would not, it got to. It became. It went from me just having to stop. Like if I would walk from here, I wouldn't make it to your bathroom. Couldn't make it to your bathroom. I would have to stop in between and take like a five minute breath, meanwhile holding my peeing.
A
Oh, Jesus.
B
And your fucking stress level's going up and up because you're holding your fucking peeing. It got to the point I would walk into Shoprite, get what I had to get, but now I gotta stand there because I gotta fucking pee from the walking.
A
Oh no.
B
And the bathroom's a mile away. There's no walking. Just take your dick out and pee. There's no.
A
Oh my God.
B
In those days, it wasn't even getting the container from the car. Because I started bringing the container in the car. There was no time. You just get out, open the car door and make believe you're waving at somebody and you take your dick out. You're peeing or you. I make believe like I'm getting something from the back of the car the whole time I'm peeing. Oh, wow. Yeah, man. So as soon as I went in, they put me on these fucking things for three days and I lost like 20 pounds of fluid. It was fucking amazing. I was peeing one of those full things. One an hour. Really couldn't even make it to the bathroom. I would just get up and fucking pee in it, fill it up. And they did a nuclear blood test and they had to take out, I don't know, fucking six tubes of blood in 45 minutes. And that's when they came back and they go, you got 65%, you're overloading on fluid in your body. You're retaining that much water and your blood cells are off the charts. So we got to start draining. I started draining. They were taking I don't know how many tubes from here every three hours of blood. Wow. Arms they banged up.
A
Wow.
B
Heroin junkie. So when I got out, I started taking it. Listen, when you end up in a hospital, there's a problem, okay? There's a problem. Yeah. You cut a stitch, that's not a problem. You had a Situation. That's how I looked at it. There's a problem here. We got to get to the bottom of this.
A
And what is the bottom of it?
B
What's the cause of it? I was taking MK677. What is that? And it's a. It's a amino acid peptide which mimics growth hormone in your brain. And it had a lot of dumps. Like it do insulin dumps and all this type of shit. And it was raising my sugar. It was doing a ton of shit. I didn't even know it, but this ain't the first time it happened. It happened when I was doing testosterone when I was 50. I had a rush of red blood cells and I had to go to. I was in D.C. and had the worst migraine headache for days. And they took blood out and they go, you got too many red blood cells.
A
Wow.
B
So that's why I can't do any of that. And it's like the man said, if you're gonna do growth, do growth. Don't get something that's gonna mimic growth.
A
What ways to well can do for you. What ways to well could do for you will change your life.
B
Yeah, no, we get you a full.
A
Blood panel and figure out what's going on. Adjust your nutrition, adjust your.
B
I love. I love vitamins. A good man.
A
He's the best.
B
And he loves what he does.
A
He does.
B
And that's what the key is. Like, he's jerking off all over that Martian. He loves it.
A
He loves it. It took forever to build that thing. He was telling me he was having that thing made two years ago, and I was like, wow, what are you doing? Now that he got it, like, oh, okay, I get it. It's pretty cool.
B
It's pretty really.
A
It's really cool.
B
But that was what I have going on, man. When I came out.
A
We're gonna see what we could do.
B
Yeah. I quit smoking pot. And I was like, come on, man. After about a month, I'm like, come on, Joey, this ain't what fucking puts you in the hospital. You know this. So I started slightly. I would just do one hit in the morning because that's all I need is the morning. The rest of the day is bullshit. I just like to be high in the morning with that coffee. That's my world. That lets me know what I'm doing that day.
A
You think about life.
B
No, it's not what you're doing. It's like what Bill Heck said, marijuana don't make you lazy. It just makes you realize that what you're gonna do ain't worth doing.
A
Okay.
B
That's the way I look at it. You know, I gotta drive into the city, do that podcast. Only 18 people listen to it. I'm not going. You know, that's what happens, and that's what happens with me. I smoke pot in the morning. I'm like, I ain't doing that today.
A
I love you to death, Joey. Let's wrap this up.
B
My brother, thank you for having me.
A
I'm glad you're in town. Let's have some fun. Happy Easter, everybody.
B
Stay black. Cock sucks.
A
Bye, everybody.
Summary of "The Joe Rogan Experience, Episode #2309 - Joey Diaz"
Release Date: April 23, 2025
Host: Joe Rogan
Guest: Joey Diaz
In episode #2309 of The Joe Rogan Experience, comedian Joey Diaz joins host Joe Rogan for an extensive and candid conversation. The episode spans a wide range of topics, from personal anecdotes and friendships to societal critiques, technology, and political observations. Rogan and Diaz engage in a lively discussion, blending humor with serious reflections on modern life.
The conversation begins with Joey Diaz and Joe Rogan discussing recent live shows they've attended or performed at. They reflect on the vibrant comedy scene in Austin, Texas, praising fellow comedians and performers who contribute to the lively community atmosphere.
Crowded Shows and Strong Performances:
[00:22] A: "The club was rare form last night."
[02:23] A: "Such a good community, Joey. It's so nice out here."
Local Entrepreneurs: The hosts talk about Joe DeRosa's new sandwich shop, highlighting the entrepreneurial spirit within their community.
[01:09] B: "Is he going to bring the sandwich shop down?"
[01:16] A: "He makes very good sandwiches."
Joey shares heartfelt stories about friends and acquaintances, emphasizing the importance of camaraderie and mutual support.
Encounter with Duncan:
[00:56] A: "Me and Duncan are going to corner you and try to get you to move here."
[00:58] B: "No, we're going to. We're going to figure it out."
Memories of Greasy Tony: Recalling his times with Greasy Tony, Joey highlights memorable moments and the impact of Tony's unique offerings.
[02:32] B: "He used to drive once a month to New Jersey and get cold cuts and fucking chicken cutlets."
[03:27] A: "The Trash Can. It was crazy."
A substantial portion of the episode delves into societal changes, political correctness, and the decline of traditional industries. Rogan and Diaz express concerns about the fragility of modern civilization and the potential for societal collapse if current trends continue.
Critique of California: Joe criticizes California for its overregulation, high taxes, and social issues, contrasting it with the more balanced environment in Austin.
[05:47] A: "They get as much government involved as possible, they suck as much tax money out of you as possible, and then they still leave the place a mess."
Civilization’s Fragility: The hosts draw parallels between the potential collapse of the United States and historical examples like Iran, emphasizing the need for vigilance and course correction.
[06:46] B: "This is why I talk about it so much. Because when it's too late, when they've already got complete control…"
Rogan and Diaz engage in a deep discussion about LGBTQ+ issues, societal acceptance, and the ramifications of protecting specific classes within society.
Tyranny of the Marginalized: Joe expresses concerns about the overprotection of marginalized groups, arguing it can lead to inflated perceptions and a lack of critical discourse.
[07:30] A: "If you have a protected class of people where you're not allowed to criticize them, then they become… everything you do is amazing."
Personal Experiences: Joey recounts interactions with friends like Martin and Jeff Scott, illustrating the complexities and personal impacts of societal attitudes towards LGBTQ+ individuals.
[12:58] B: "He was gay. He would go to those army things just to men."
The duo delves into historical anecdotes, such as the persecution of Alan Turing, highlighting past injustices against LGBTQ+ individuals and their lasting impacts.
Alan Turing’s Tragic Story: Joe narrates Alan Turing's persecution, emphasizing the devastating consequences of societal and legal discrimination.
[28:18] A: "Imagine if you're a guy, an Italian guy or whatever, and you go back to the neighborhood and you've been playing. It ended."
Rogan and Diaz explore advancements in technology, particularly artificial intelligence, and its implications for society and personal health.
AI in Healthcare: They discuss how AI can analyze blood work and assist in medical decisions, reflecting on its potential benefits and ethical considerations.
[93:56] A: "How was he?"
[94:04] B: "He was great."
ChatGPT and AI Interaction: The hosts experiment with an AI assistant, showcasing the integration of AI in everyday interactions and medical inquiries.
[96:37] A: "Chat GPT is AI. It's like it's on your phone. Like you can ask it a question."
Joey shares his recent health struggles, detailing experiences with congenital heart failure and the impact of certain supplements on his well-being.
Hospitalization Experience: Joey recounts a severe health crisis involving heart failure, describing the hospital procedures and his journey to recovery.
[167:12] B: "It was a bunch of shit going on."
The conversation touches upon various elements of pop culture, including movies, TV shows, and famous personalities, often critiquing their content and societal impact.
Movies and TV Shows: The hosts discuss classic and contemporary films and TV series, analyzing their cultural significance and entertainment value.
[57:00] A: "The 60 minute interview was great, wasn't it?"
[59:02] B: "That's it. What..."
Towards the end, both express fears about the future of society, emphasizing concerns about political decision-making, cultural erosion, and the potential for civilizational collapse.
Civilization’s Path: They discuss the cyclical nature of societal prosperity and decline, warning against complacency and the loss of core principles.
[144:37] B: "It's crazy what's going on in the world today, my friend."
[147:43] A: "It is a different world out there. But it's the world out there that could be just like the world here."
On California’s Overregulation:
Joe Rogan: "If it was like every business could instantly pull up roots and replace everything and have everything running in a week at the other place, they'd all be gone. They just. It's too expensive."
On Alan Turing’s Persecution:
Joe Rogan: "Imagine if you're a guy, an Italian guy or whatever, and you go back to the neighborhood and you've been playing. It ended."
On Due Process:
Joey Diaz: "I believe in due process. I'll do whatever time you want me to do. Prove that I did it. Just don't open up your fucking mouth."
The Joe Rogan Experience episode #2309 featuring Joey Diaz offers a raw and unfiltered conversation that navigates through personal stories, societal critiques, technological advancements, and deep-seated fears about the direction of modern civilization. Through a blend of humor and serious reflection, Rogan and Diaz provide listeners with a comprehensive and engaging exploration of contemporary issues, emphasizing the importance of maintaining core societal principles and vigilance against cultural decline.
Note: This summary captures the essence of the podcast episode based on the provided transcript. Given the informal and candid nature of the conversation, some strong language and mature themes are present, reflecting the genuine dynamics between Joe Rogan and Joey Diaz.