
Tim, Phil, & Mary are joined by James Fishback to discuss South Park running a full frontal of Trump in their latest episode, a judge ordering the release of Abrego Garcia, a court blocking Trump's changes to birthright citizenship, and Democrat...
Loading summary
Tim Pool
Everyone's loving family freedom from T Mobile. We'll pay off four phones up to $3200 and give you four free phones, all on America's largest 5G network. Visit your local T Mobile location or learn more@t mobile.com familyfreedom. Up to $800 per line via virtual prepaid card typically takes 15 days. Free phones via 24 monthly bill credits with finance agreement eg Apple iPhone16128GB8999 eligible trade in eg iPhone11 Pro for well qualified credits end and balance due if you pay off early or cancel contact T Mobile.
Phil Labonte
After Colbert got canceled, it was announced that CBS Paramount was going to be giving $1.5 billion to the creators of south park, which kind of seemed insane to anybody who knows anything about numbers. $300 million a year. Well, they put out their first episode and it is mocking Donald Trump. I'm gonna give you my opinion right away. I know a lot of people thought the episode was funny. That's fine. The jokes were old. 10 years old. They don't make fun of Trump. They don't make fun of administration, they don't make fun of politics. They literally just have Trump be Saddam Hussein and then they say he has a tiny wiener. That's the whole episode, except for the fact that they show it for real. Just they show it for like 30 seconds. That's what they're going for. But in all seriousness, I think the strategy now of the anti Trump left, the liberals is going to be they got to go dirtbag left, woke was broke. It didn't work. But if you can be dirtbag offensive while being anti Trump, that's the edgy that they're looking for. So they give the South Park Raiders $1.5 billion, which seems to be the big story to talk about the current strategy of the anti Trump media. But there is actual big news. Birthright citizenship. Trump's executive order was struck down by an appellate court. Garcia has been ordered released. Wow. So we'll talk about that. Plus we got a lot more before we get started, my friends. We got a great sponsor. It is my pillow, guys. Go to mypillow.com tim. Use promo code Tim and buy pillows. They got the best. They got the Giza dream bed sheets 49.98. You need sheets. Never does these. My slippers are actually really, really awesome. I've got a pair myself. It is like walking on a cloud. I know. They're really. They really are amazing. But I got to tell you about this stuff right here. No joke. We've had this for while, this Rev7. I'm a huge fan. It's got no sugar, it's got no caffeine. They sell them on mypillow.com they got Rev7 energy drinks. You got green apple lemonade. And then you've got blueberry citrus. And it's a keto energy drink with a nootropic called cognizant in it. And it. It's just. It's ab. It's my favorite. It legit works. I mean, I love it. So shout out to Mike Lindell and MyPillow for supporting the show. Guys, make sure you go to mypillow.com sltim and also, don't forget, go to cast brew.com and buy coffee. We got 1776 Signature Brew. We got the birthday blend, of course, Appalachian Nights. Also, don't forget, we're going to see you guys this Saturday, right? DC Comedy Loft. Don't let them cancel us. We're doing this show. Smash that like button. Share the show with everyone. You know. We got a great show. We are joined today by James Fishback.
James Fishback
Great to be here, Tim.
Phil Labonte
Who are you? What do you do?
James Fishback
I started an investment firm. It's an anti DEI investment firm called Azoria. And we started an ETF that we launched two weeks ago that invests only in S&P 500 companies that hire on merit. Crazy idea.
Phil Labonte
Oh, wow. There was talk about this like a decade ago, companies that were introducing DEI policies. Yeah, I heard investors saying, short those companies right away because any company that's going to prioritize ideology over the function of their business will lose money.
James Fishback
That's exactly right. And so think of it this way, Tim, is if you knew a friend was going to start a coffee shop and. And you knew they were gonna only hire a certain race or a certain gender, you would bet, right, Phil? You'd bet against that coffee shop. Oh, well, I walk into the coffee shop and you're about to hand them a check to buy a part of their business. And they say, well, we don't. We don't hire everyone here. We only hire black lesbians. We only hire transgender dwarfs. What would that do to the business model? You wouldn't just not want to be long that business so as to profit from it. You would actually want to go short and profit from its decline. And so at the Azuria Meritocracy does The ticker is SP XM. It's an ETF that buys the same 500 stocks as your S&P 500 ETF. But it does not buy Intel, Starbucks, Airbnb, Nike and others that have just doubled down on these DEI quotas that say, look, we're not hiring on skill and merit anymore. We're hiring on race and gender. That hurts stock performance and our investors don't want. Want no part of it.
Phil Labonte
Right on. It should be fun. Thanks for joining us. We'll talk about this. Of course, the south park stuff. Mary is here.
Mary Morgan
Hi everyone. You can usually find me on Pop Culture Crisis here at Tim Cast. I'm glad to be here. And I would defin support a coffee shop staffed just by white straight males and.
Phil Labonte
And six feet tall, six figures and. And six pack.
Mary Morgan
No, that's not necessary.
Phil Labonte
I gotta have it at all.
Mary Morgan
Yeah.
James Fishback
Is there a dress code at all?
Mary Morgan
Straight. I don't really accept the word cis. That's not a real thing. But they could be straight white males.
James Fishback
What if they use the word sis?
Mary Morgan
That would be a deal breaker.
James Fishback
Okay, there you go, actually.
Seamus Coughlin
All right. Like you'd have to get like two weeks unpaid leave your you're off. Or two weeks like this. Hi. Hello, everybody. My name is Labonte. I'm the lead singer the heavy metal band all that Remains. I'm an anti communist and a counter revolutionary. Let's get into it. James. I'm going to actually. So you said the SP X M is the one that shorts or is that the one that you started the.
James Fishback
I started that one. And what it does is it excludes. So it excludes them because they're going to underperform. The research we did, Phil, is the 38 companies in the S&P 500 that have these woke DEI policies. Nike, Airbnb, Starbucks. They've underperformed the stock market by 20 points over the last two years. And so what that means is, is your S and P portfol, your s and P ETF, whether it's from BlackRock, Vanguard or State street, it could have been doing a lot better had those 38 not been in there. And so our goal at Azoria with SP XM is kick them out and let your portfolio ride just based on the companies that hire the best and brightest and never apologize for it. If you hire a white male for the job or an Asian male, don't apologize for it. Just do the right thing. And by the way, the right thing oftentimes will be to hire someone who looks a little bit darker than us. That's a meritocratic system, is to stand up for the dignity of every American. My mom's a legal immigrant from South America, and one thing that she always told my sister and I is that she would never apply to a job that had a big flashy affirmative action program. Mary. Because when she came home, she wanted to look us in the eye saying I got the job for the right reason, not because I checked some arbitrary Cornell liberals checkbox for diversity arbitrariness.
Phil Labonte
Let's jump into that story from Variety. White House bashes South park after Trump parody. This show hasn't been relevant for over 20 years and can't derail Trump's hot streak. Okay, look, this was a clever play. I literally don't care. It's pretty obvious that the idea was we're going to make fun of Trump and put the anti woke crowd and the edgy influencers and the podcast circuit in a bind. You're allowed to make fun of Donald Trump. They're going to do it poorly and you have no choice but to just accept it because it's just playful banter. Right? So I already had a lot of people telling me, oh, Tim, like, but come on, if you come out and say it was bad, you know what the left is going to say? They're going to say, hahaha, you're. I'm like, I don't care what they say. Yeah, they're psychotic. This episode was garbage. I watched the episode. It's one of the worst episodes of South Park. Not the worst. Remember when? I don't know how familiar you guys are with South Park. Scott Tenterman ate his parents. Yeah, like eight his parents. Cartman tricked his parents into being killed by a farmer, chopped their bodies up and fed them to their own son. South park was crazy. Now they did an episode where it's literally Donald Trump. And because they had Mr. Garrison as Trump and they just. There's no jokes. Now to be fair, there are jokes, but they're not about Trump. It's just they show naked cartoon Trump and everyone keeps saying it's a tiny penis. And then he goes, come on, I'm going to sue you, gang. Yeah, it's the same joke they made about Saddam. Yeah, they don't make any jokes about the administration about Trump's policies. It's jokes from 15 years ago. Here's my bet. Colbert gets canceled because they were, they were spending 40, $50 million a year on anti Trump commentary. But this straight laced goody two shoes BS does not work. They've been talking about how they need a liberal Joe Rogan forever. I'm willing to bet that these prominent liberal billionaires and corporate types were like, listen, why do people like Joe? Because he's edgy, he's off the cuff. He'll say things you're not allowed to say. How do we do this? Well, Colbert ain't it. Colbert is. Is straight laced and boring. It's on the nose. The South park guys, $300 million per year they got in this deal.
James Fishback
Wow.
Phil Labonte
How does something like that happen? Here's my, here's, here's my. Here's my vision. They go to Matt and Trey and they say, we want you to go full time south park, mock Donald Trump, make him look bad. And they went, why? And they were like, we will pay you a lot of money. What's a lot of money? We will give you 30 million a year. We don't need 30 million a year. 50 million a year, guys, we're rich. We don't need 50 millionaire. Okay? 100 million a year. Like, honestly, what am I gonna do with that? How about we give you 1.5 billion over five years? And then Matt and Trey were like, really? I imagine they were like, what do you want to do it? We want shock content that mocks Trump. I don't know. Give me a billion dollars. Done. And they gave him a billion dollars. Now, I don't know if that's actually what happened, but it seems pretty obvious. The only problem is they're phoning it in. They're phoning it in. Here's my pitch. I would have laughed my ass off if the episode started with Trump being asked about the Epstein files, panicking and shuffling all the press out of the room and banning them, saying, you're banned. I'm gonna sue you, and then runs to a bookshelf, pulls a book, the shelf opens up, he gets in an elevator, goes down to the basement, and there's Tulsi, Gabbard, Rubio, and Trump trying to resurrect Mecca Epstein because they want to use the files and use the blackmail or something like that instead of Trump's banging Satan. That's it.
James Fishback
Let's map out this week's amazing destinations and travel tips.
Unknown
Honestly, Will, I didn't plan any trips, but I did switch to T Mobile with their new family freedom offer.
Mary Morgan
That's not the itinerary we're following.
Unknown
Well, I'm departing from ATT and embarking on a new journey with T Mobile. They paid off my family's four phones up to $3200 and gave us four new phones on the house Bon voyage.
Tim Pool
Introducing family freedom. Our lowest cost will switch our biggest family savings all on America's largest 5G network. Visit your local T Mobile location or learn more@t mobile.com familyfreedom. Up to $800 per line via virtual prepaid card. Typically takes 15 days. Free phones via 24 monthly bill credits with finance agreement. Eg. Apple iPhone 16, 128 gigabyte $829.99 eligible trade in eg iPhone 11 Pro for well qualified credits end and balance due. If you pay off earlier, cancel contact T Mobile.
Phil Labonte
There's. There's no jokes about anything that's happening.
Mary Morgan
Yeah, it's funny that you mentioned that because I feel like Trump is doing enough to make a fool out of himself lately that Matt and Trey don't need to do any work on that front. And for 10 episodes a year at that, they scammed the out of it. What was it, Paramount?
Phil Labonte
Is that what it is? 10 episodes?
Mary Morgan
10 episodes a year.
Seamus Coughlin
I would check.
Mary Morgan
That is crazy.
Seamus Coughlin
I would take that check wild. I didn't watch the. The episode or I haven't watched the episode yet. The fact that it's just like redoing the Saddam bit is kind of like.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Seamus Coughlin
You know, because they are generally like, south park has been really funny and really creative and. And so like, I.
Mary Morgan
It's kind of like how bands sell out.
Seamus Coughlin
I. I mean, maybe I just lose.
Mary Morgan
That creative touch that they used to have for no explicable.
Seamus Coughlin
I mean, these guys have been doing it for now, what, 25 years or something.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Mary Morgan
You burn out since 97.
Seamus Coughlin
90.
James Fishback
So, I mean, 330 episodes in the show. Last time I watched it, I was in Middle School. School.
Phil Labonte
30 million an episode.
James Fishback
Think about that. $30 million an episode, Tim. And they. That's all they could pull together. The real way to think about a joke is if you can take that joke about Trump's penis or this, that and the other, and you can swap out Trump with any other person you want to mock.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah.
James Fishback
And it even remotely makes sense. It can't be funny.
Unknown
They did a great job.
James Fishback
That sketch that he just brought up, that sketch that. That's a perfect sketch because it won. It only would apply to Trump. You couldn't put anybody else in that sketch and it'd still be funny.
Phil Labonte
So what they used to do.
James Fishback
Right. So they used to do.
Mary Morgan
They've had their moments in the past few years. They did a really good job making fun of Kathleen Kennedy at Lucasfilm. And it was kind of nice to see that they were willing to punch at both sides.
Phil Labonte
But this is. You're making a good point based on what you were saying, James, is that the joke only applied to Kathleen Kennedy.
Seamus Coughlin
Correct.
Phil Labonte
Cartman is sitting in a room and they're like, we want to do a movie about dogs. Make it gay. Make it a chicken, make it gay.
Seamus Coughlin
Right.
Phil Labonte
And it's like that. That's what she was doing. That's what she's doing. Having Trump just shake around a tiny wiener and try to bang Satan. It was literally just Saddam Hussein.
James Fishback
I think I was accused of that in seventh grade. Having a tiny wiener and trying to bang Satan too. Right. It wasn't funny then to me, because it was so tired. But.
Phil Labonte
No, but I mean, like, that is.
James Fishback
The insult that gets tossed around. Right. Your mom is so fat. That kind of thing. It can't be funny because it's so cliched.
Phil Labonte
So I actually think they're trying to bait Trump into criminal charges because they've published to YouTube and in the episode AI video of Trump, total nudity, like full frontal, and he's looking down at his tiny wiener, and then the penis talks. And that's a violation of. What is it called? The Take It Down Act.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
To make sexual images using Deepfake and publish it is. Was bipartisan. It was legal.
James Fishback
Usher. By the First Lady.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. I think they're. I think they're intentionally trying to bait Trump to get him to take action against them. Instead, Trump just insults him and says, I don't know.
Mary Morgan
Yeah, but I do think it should be illegal to publish AI generated pornography of someone, regardless of whether it's a politician.
Phil Labonte
Well, you gotta be careful. And this. This argument, they'd say it's not pornography. Trump's is naked. Well, take it down. X has intimate images, so it covers what they did.
Mary Morgan
Intimate images, meaning you're you naked. Okay, well, there you go then. It's.
Phil Labonte
But the left would argue pornography is something different.
Mary Morgan
What makes it different?
Phil Labonte
Pornography is implied to be sexual acts, not just nudity.
Mary Morgan
The implication, I mean, most onlyfans pages these days are actually just naked photos. So, I mean, it's still pornography.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. The difference is the intention for sexual titillation. And if you argue that nudity, the intention with this was not to get.
Mary Morgan
People off, was mockery. I understand that, but still, I agree.
Phil Labonte
I mean, I don't know if Trump should take action against them. I'd actually say, like this. This is the law. It was bipartisan. Democrats and Republicans agreed on it. So why. Why would Trump not enforce the law. He's not. He's not banning TikTok. And he should if he's going to have personal reasons for not enforcing the law.
Mary Morgan
I guess on the TikTok front, I thought they were buying out the US assets and making it into MT.
Phil Labonte
Who's they, though?
Mary Morgan
I forget who the list of buyers included.
Phil Labonte
The point is that Trump has continually given them extensions despite the fact that it should have been shut down.
Mary Morgan
The decision was made, though. It was only a couple of weeks ago.
Phil Labonte
Right. And when the law was first enacted, Trump said, I'm not going to enforce the law. And then when the month was up, he says, I'm not going to enforce the law. And now they have a decision. Right. Trump makes decisions when he should or should not enforce the law. It's what the executive does. I guess in this regard, it violates the take it down act. Trump could just say, take it down, find them.
Mary Morgan
But then they're going to be like, when are you offended? Conservatives?
James Fishback
But that's what they want. They wanted bait us in that film. They want to beat us into that. Same people that yelled snowflake, cancel culture. Trying to cancel a comedy show.
Phil Labonte
That's why the episode's not funny.
James Fishback
Correct?
Phil Labonte
It was. It was. There were a few chuckles. Cartman is upset that Woke is dead and he has nothing to do anymore. So I guess they're mocking like anti woke media or something. And. But. And then he says, you know, he threatens to kill himself and Butters. And so there. There were a little bit of chuckles there, but it's kind of weak, but I will give him that. Cartman being upset that Woke is dead was an actual joke on satirizing the current state of affairs. Yeah, that he had nothing to do anymore. His activism was over. The Trump stuff was literally just. It was dejected. It. It jumped from scene to scene. That made no sense. Like one scene is at a party. It's. And there's a weird song saying Christ makes money. Christ makes money. And like a big component of the show is they're mocking Jesus. The issue that the citizens of south park are angry with at Trump. The reason why they want to riot is because Trump mandates prayer in school and Stan won't. He says, we don't have any room at our table for Jesus. So politically correct principle is now power Christian principle. And they ask him why he's a Christian and he says it feels right. Then they show Trump at a pool where it's singing a song where they're going, chris makes money, Christ makes money. And then for seemingly no reason, Trump is now inside the White House where Pam Bondi says, your supporters are mad. Then he, Saddam Hussein voices, gets on the phone. They threaten him for some reason, but none of it really makes sense as to why they're mad at him. Because it's not about Epstein. They don't, they don't say anything. It's almost like the episode was made before, like this week, and they knew it was going on in the news cycle. You know, South Park Notorious was famous for getting all their episodes done in four days or something like that. This one didn't address anything or mock anything in particular. They just kind of. And then at the end, Jesus shows up and stands in a giant loaf of bread and then is talking under his breath about how he has no choice but to come to the people of south park and perform a sermon because Trump's threatening to sue him. And then the people of south park panic because Jesus tells them Trump will sue him. So they agree to settle with Trump. And in the settlement, they have to make a PSA about how great Trump is. And it's just an AI video, live action of Donald Trump fully naked, and you watch him walking buck naked to the desert and then he stares at his penis for like 30 seconds.
Mary Morgan
This sounds like a fever dream.
Phil Labonte
Sounds like they didn't actually want to do anything and got $30 million. So here's a question for you guys. If they offered you $1.5 billion to do this, would you do it?
Seamus Coughlin
To do what? To make South Park.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, I mean, but intentionally, like, you have to mock Trump in every episode.
Seamus Coughlin
Oh, no, no.
Phil Labonte
$1.5 billion.
Mary Morgan
Better ways to mock Trump.
James Fishback
So, yes, how would you mock Trump?
Mary Morgan
I mean, I think that he's making a fool of himself lately. And there are plenty of opportunities to.
James Fishback
Like, what's one example?
Mary Morgan
Write jokes out of that. I mean, I don't know, I'm not.
Phil Labonte
Matt and Trey, but amnesty on farm workers.
Mary Morgan
Disagree.
James Fishback
No, I do disagree. Yeah. So the amnesty on farm workers point, I think we can talk a bit about that. But I think look at what Salazar tried to do a week and a half ago with the so called Dignity Act. Right? You've seen this, of course, right. Maria Salazar, the Republican congresswoman from Florida, she's trying to pass a bill that says that if you've been in this country for even upwards of 30 years illegally, you only have to pay $7,000 fine and you get to stay here indefinitely. The President's opposed to that. And so the idea that we would give amnesty to anyone to allow, to be allowed to stay here, to continue to take American jobs, take American benefits, whether it's Medicaid or education or health care. I think the president's against that.
Mary Morgan
Well, I was trying not to say the E word, but I was more so referring to the Epstein related.
James Fishback
What would you want him to do on Epstein a little bit differently?
Mary Morgan
Literally everything. How about not lie?
James Fishback
What did he lie about?
Mary Morgan
He's outwardly lying to the American people, saying that it's a hoax and then telling them that they are traitors to his movement for asking very reasonable questions. Are you, do you really feel like totally okay with the way he's handled this situation?
James Fishback
Look, I think that I would lay the blame at Pam Bondi for setting expectations a certain way. When she said they're on my desk and handed out a bunch of phony binders to a bunch of influencers, that's laughable.
Mary Morgan
I think Pam Bondi is getting scapegoated. Like, okay, sure, she looks idiotic, but the buck stops with Trump. And he overpromised and knew that he was overpromising on this. When did he over prior to the election, he was asked, are you going to unseal the JFK documents? Are you going to unseal the MLK files? And then once it got to Epstein, he said, yeah, but like, you know, there might be some innocent people in there. You know, we want to kind of, you know, have a common sense approach, you know. And then I could tell from that moment on that he wasn't going to follow through on that promise. And it's gotten worse than just not following through because they shouldn't have even addressed it if they weren't planning to follow through. It shouldn't have even been mentioned. It's also not a popularly like, it's not a voting issue. No one voted on it. And now we've gotten to the point where they are just piling lie on top of lie on top of lie. And it's kind of pathetic to watch Trump doubling down every single day, as well as his supporters, some of whom are trying to maintain their, the access they have to him and the rest of the White House. People who either have jobs there already or want jobs there.
James Fishback
Sure. Look, I, I get where you're coming from. It's frustrating. What I will say is this, though, when we say what the. And by the way, that interview is Fox News. Rachel Campos Duffy asked President Trump in that interview. He went Fox, went jfk, mlk, and then asked about the Epstein Files. Here's the issue with the Epstein files for just a moment. You have grand jury transcripts, you have FBI transcripts where all things. All sorts of things were said. I'll give you just one example. Matt Gaetz, as we all know, was investigated by the Department of Justice and the FBI for allegedly sex trafficking teenagers across state lines. Federal sex trafficking law. He was not charged. Do you believe that they should release the Matt Gaetz files, the doj.
Mary Morgan
Okay. Are you saying that those are comparable situation?
James Fishback
I'm not saying at all. I'm not saying at all. But what I am saying here is that in both of those cases, we're. One is not being charged. The other is beyond the statute of limitation. So give me an example. If we had video right now that conclusively proved that Bill Clinton, who is an absolute sick man, did in fact sex traffic young girls. The statute of limitations on that is eight years.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
James Fishback
Right. You cannot bring a case against that individual for that.
Phil Labonte
Then they should publish the videos.
Mary Morgan
Well, so no one. No one was really expecting.
Phil Labonte
Not, not, not videos of the traffic.
Mary Morgan
Clinton charged past statute of limitations. That proper evidence.
Phil Labonte
That's this. The reason for wanting the files to be released is for exactly this point.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
So if there's video of Clinton abusing girls. Yeah. We're not going to release that.
James Fishback
Sure.
Phil Labonte
If there's video evidence of him doing some kind of business transaction and loading girls into a van or whatever. Absolutely. You blur it and you release it.
James Fishback
Absolutely.
Phil Labonte
So that's why people want the Epstein stuff released also.
James Fishback
No.
Mary Morgan
I get child abuse. The child abuse aspect of it obviously is horrific, but I almost think that it is being used as the salacious tabloid version of what we're really talking about, which is a blackmail ring that allegedly controls the policies and statements and votes of all of our leaders. And child abuse just happens to be the vehicle for it. So I think there's maybe a little bit too much focus on the salacious nature of it and not on the substance of the issue. Which is.
James Fishback
Let's map out this week's amazing destinations and travel tips.
Unknown
Honestly, Will, I didn't plan any trips, but I did switch to T Mobile with their new family Freedom offer.
Mary Morgan
That's not the itinerary we're following.
Unknown
Well, I'm departing from AT&T and embarking on a new journey with T Mobile. They paid off my family's four phones up to $3200 and gave us four new phones on the house.
James Fishback
Bon voyage.
Tim Pool
Introducing family freedom. Our lowest cost will switch our biggest Family savings, all on America's largest 5G network. Visit your local T Mobile location or learn more@t mobile.com familyfreedom. Up to $800 per line via virtual prepaid card typically takes 15 days. Free phones via 24 monthly bill credits with finance agreement, eg, Apple iPhone 16, 128 gigabyte $8,029.99 eligible trade in, eg iPhone 11 Pro for well qualified credits end and balance due if you pay off early or cancel contact.
Mary Morgan
T Mobile is a blackmail operation run by Epstein, who is allegedly an intelligence asset for some government, probably Mossad. That's the substance of the issue.
Seamus Coughlin
So that. Well, that. I mean, that's what people believe, or that's part of what people believe. But is that what you. Is that what you believe as well?
Mary Morgan
I don't know. I'm not going to claim to know. I'm not going to sit here and claim that I know anything, especially because they haven't released these and they won't.
Seamus Coughlin
That's why I asked if that's what you believe, not what you not. I'm not asking.
Mary Morgan
I believe there's strong evidence for it, but I'm sorry, certainly no expert. But neither are any of the people who are rightfully demanding this information.
James Fishback
What if the FBI interviewed a Democratic operative, someone who hated Trump, in, say, 2015, 2016, who lied, knowingly lied to the FBI about all these salacious allegations that would be released under the Epstein files, as well as an FBI interview that was undertaken by someone who was knowingly lying. Right. And look, the President asked this grand jury transcript to be released in the Southern District of Florida. The judge denied that from being unsealed. I'm with you on this. We need to get to the bottom of it. But I think the question is, what do we mean by the Epstein files? What does that actually mean? So if we drop that PDF on your computer, what's going to be in there? What type of documents?
Mary Morgan
Okay, no one thought that. That Epstein had an Excel spreadsheet on his computer that had, like, my clients, number one, Bill Clinton, number two, Donald Trump. Like, nobody thought there was a spreadsheet of clients, but this guy was inviting politicians and public figures and celebrities to his home and had cameras rolling the entire time.
James Fishback
This is.
Mary Morgan
And had prostitutes there who were underage.
Seamus Coughlin
This is a. Well, this is a point that I make, that I made the other night or whatever. Like, when people say Epstein list, what they're conceptualizing differs significantly from one person to the next into the correct. Some people believe that it's a list of people that actually engaged in sexual activity with minors. Some people think it's a list of people that are being blackmailed. Some people think that it's just a list of people that have been to the island and a list. And some people think it's just a list of people that's. That have flown on his jet and that's actually even already. Already been disclosed. I don't know which one is right, but I do know that there's a wide variety of what people conceptualize when it comes to Jeffrey Epstein.
Mary Morgan
We should have the unredacted files of, of each totally of those categories well mentioned.
Seamus Coughlin
I don't think that there. I don't think that there. I don't think there is unredacted files of all of those. I think that there's some kind of list of associates, but I don't know that they're a list of people that he was blackmailing. I don't know if it's a list of people that had. Had engaged in. In sexual activity with minors. I don't, you know, rape of minors. I don't know what it is. I'm just saying that people have a different conception of what has actually happened. And I think that there are two groups of people, and I've said this before, but there are two groups of people that are really passionate about it and they're small groups of people, but they're extremely vocal. There are the people that.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, I just, I feel like we've said this exact same thing 700 times over the past 3 weeks and. Sorry to interrupt, but it's fine. The question I was having is would you accept $1.5 billion in order to insult Donald Trump? Mary said yes. The question was, what are the, you know, what could you mock him for? And then it turned into a debate over the Epstein files again.
Mary Morgan
So I just would mock him for that.
Phil Labonte
Yes, I agree. I agree. Trump could be mocked over the Epstein files. And that's my principal complaint with the south park episode, is that they didn't mock him over. Correct.
James Fishback
I mean, I think that's low hanging fruit. I think I would have mocked Pam Bondi for having these binders, that information that was six, seven years old and having influencers pose with them. That'd be a really funny scene to mock.
Phil Labonte
They could have. They could have made fun of the. The list is on my desk.
James Fishback
Yes, they could have.
Phil Labonte
They could have had Eric, Stan, Kyle and Cartman go to the White House and walk out holding up the binders.
James Fishback
And exactly that have been hilarious.
Phil Labonte
And it would. Inside the binders, it's just pictures of crudely drawn crayon cats like Trump made. They could have, they could have done a bunch of stuff of the, you.
James Fishback
Could have had the, the Wall Street Journal so called letter. Right. And joked about that. But Mary, I see where you're coming from and I share the frustration. But if you're, if you care about, and I know that you do, about this issue of transparency. We have a president who's taken more questions in the last 48 hours than it seems like Joe Biden did in four years. We have a president who shut down the southern border where tens of thousands of women every single week were being trafficked into sex slavery. This has been a president who stood up for women. I want to see more done on the Epstein files, but I agree with Phil. We have to understand first and foremost what that means. I grew up in South Florida. There was a world in which I could have easily crossed paths with Epstein and had lunch with him as I was soliciting a donation for my nonprofit or my hedge fund. He was, you know, had I not. I don't run background checks on folks before I meet with them. So I think there's a world in which we're gonna end up hurting people who end up getting lumped into these files. Oh, the files are anybody who ever emailed with Epstein over the last 10 years prior to him being killed. And make no mistake, he was killed. Jeffrey Epstein was killed. There's no doubt about that.
Seamus Coughlin
I mean, if you ask.
Mary Morgan
Since we're talking about south park, though, my question is, is that something they wanted to write? Is that an episode that they wanted to write but were told explicitly by executives at the network that they were not allowed to write? Because I think that's plausible.
Seamus Coughlin
I mean, I do, I, maybe it was, but I, I, I take, I will like. Tim's point is well taken. They did have a plethora things that they could have talked about other.
Phil Labonte
Seamus does it all the time.
Seamus Coughlin
Every what once Freedom.
Mary Morgan
Seamus is independent. They are not. Could you imagine of this network that probably wouldn't want them to touch certain subjects?
Phil Labonte
I think, I think they're lazy and checked out and these old boomer fogies. I'm not blaming all boomers. Calm down. I'm saying there's a bunch of boomers who are like, we don't know how to be funny and edgy. Let's hire the south park guys. They're young and fun. It's like they're 60 or whatever. I don't know.
Mary Morgan
For real?
Phil Labonte
I don't know. What are they, 50s?
Seamus Coughlin
They're in their 50s. They're probably. I think they're older than me, so they're.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. And they were like. They're funny. They were funny in the 90s, dude. When did that show start? 94 or something?
Seamus Coughlin
97 or something like that. 96.
Phil Labonte
97. 97. And they had a good run in the early 2000s, and it's been all downhill since then, and they've got some good episodes. The. The Obama diamond heist was funny.
James Fishback
Yeah. Remember Kanye?
Phil Labonte
Yeah. Sticks.
James Fishback
Hilarious.
Seamus Coughlin
Sticks.
Phil Labonte
Yep. They had a bunch. And. And the. The point of that was that he couldn't understand what they were saying in the joke, and he was taking everything personally.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
They don't mock. And. And you know what? At most, it was a unique joke to. Yay.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
With Trump. They were just like, I don't know. He's got a small dick.
James Fishback
Right?
Phil Labonte
Just show it.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
It's like, guys, you could be funny, you know? But let's jump to this next story. We got this from Politico. Judge orders Kilmar Abrego Garcia released from criminal custody. Well, that's insane, though Immigration enforcement officials signaled that he's likely to be redetained when he arrives in Maryland. I love this, because my question is just like, look, guys, I don't want to be pessimistic. I do know that we have a lot of great victories. The Trump administration, but holy crap. Come on.
Seamus Coughlin
Well, I mean, to be fair, this can't be laid at the feet of the Trump administration.
Phil Labonte
Why not?
Seamus Coughlin
Well, because this.
Mary Morgan
Nothing can be.
Phil Labonte
They brought him back.
Seamus Coughlin
No, these are the people that are releasing him. I'm talking about this particular thing, the release of him.
Phil Labonte
Trump brought him back.
Seamus Coughlin
Yes, fine, that can be laid at the feet of the Trump administration, but the release of him can't be. They should have left him at seacot or whatever it is down. Down in.
Phil Labonte
Of course this is his fault. The immediate assumption is if you return the Maryland man to the United States, they're gonna release him. Trump's DOJ knew that. Are they this weak that they can't deport a guy charged with human smuggling, a Known Member of Ms. 13? They can't deport a guy back to his home country. This is absolutely insane.
Mary Morgan
This is what's so frustrating. It's like, nothing can be Trump's fault, and nothing can be Trump administration's fault. That's how it feels These days. So it's scrolling through the timeline is all of these people making excuses.
Seamus Coughlin
I disagree. I think that most people that are talking about specifically the Epstein fight, stuff like that's. Everyone is calling it Trump, the Trump administration's fault. But when it comes to, like when it comes to this, yes. Okay, so fine. If you want to lay this at Trump's feet, the Garcia stuff, fine. But it's not like they're not deporting people. Now, I understand that you have a problem. I know, roll your eyes because you don't think they're deporting enough. But like they've done really, really significant work at the border. There were like no crossing.
Mary Morgan
Last point was always just 14,000 in a month is not enough deportations. And it's not even like a fraction that if we kept going with numbers like that, that would be way less than a million in his entire term.
James Fishback
We have a million self deportations.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah.
James Fishback
A million people logging onto the CBP Home app, CBP1, taking the thousand dollar check and saying, I'm going to take my trip back. You know why?
Phil Labonte
Because they have not what anyone voted for, but they've.
James Fishback
We voted for them to leave. We didn't vote for them to leave in a certain way.
Phil Labonte
They've not formally published that. They've only, I think only Trump has said it. Trump and Christine, they've not formally, through records in the dhs, drafted the report of like the total.
Mary Morgan
We don't, I don't think ICE is published.
Phil Labonte
We tried fact checking this and we couldn't find anything other than a quote from, I think like Christine Omen Trump.
Mary Morgan
No, like everything Trump does is so great.
Seamus Coughlin
Like, no, no one's saying that. Like, it's just, it's.
Phil Labonte
No, Trump can't do anything wrong. When will you understand this, Trump?
Mary Morgan
I need to understand this. I need to go to the reeducation camp. I need to go to Alligator Alcatraz.
Phil Labonte
Well, the point of Alligator Alcatraz is, is truth and good incarnate. And that means if he does it is true and good.
Seamus Coughlin
Maybe. Look, maybe, maybe I have a different perspective because I am looking at what is going on in comparison to what the option was. Right? Like if the option is Donald Trump or Kamala Harris and four more years of Democrats and four more years of unlimited immigration and more years of, of more, you know, DEI programs in the government. The, the things that have changed since Donald Trump has been elected are massive and it is significantly better than the option. And we only had two options. It's not like there was a third option that we could have gone with.
Mary Morgan
We should compare Trump and the actions of his administration not to what could have been if Trump, if Kamala won, but what he promised. We should compare Trump to Trump. He should compare Trump's actions to Trump's words.
Seamus Coughlin
He should be compared realistically. Realistically, considering you're talking about Politics in Washington, D.C. he should be compared to every single president before him. How much has any other president gotten done in the first six months?
Phil Labonte
And they're all on the Epstein list.
Seamus Coughlin
Fine. But like, legitimately, like the, the. I understand that you're saying, well, Trump made all these promises and he hasn't done enough to make me feel like he's, he's actually following through. Fair enough. Okay. But you also have to deal with the fact that, like, there is a way that things get done in D.C. like, no one wants to look at how sausage is made. And this is something that I've talked about prior to Trump getting elected or early when he got elected. Like, we only have a narrow major majority in both the House and the Senate. Right. You have to, you can't get a bunch of stuff passed if you don't have 60 senators. And there are not 60 senators. They have three. They have, it's 53 with J.D. vance and two of them are as wishy washy as it comes. Right. And then in the, in the House, I think they have like 10, I'm not sure what the lead is, but eight. So there's, there is a process that must happen in the House and in the Senate before things can get done. Trump has done a significant amount of stuff through executive, executive order. The government has never has not been smaller in 30 or 40 years. I don't, I think since the creation of Homeland Security and since the, since the, since 9, 11, at least, there are significant things that have happened. Now I can totally respect the idea that he's not doing as much as you want or as much as he promised, but to say that he's, he's not doing things or to say that there's like, he's a failure when he's six months in and has done more than any other president in this amount of time, I think that's not, I.
Phil Labonte
Just don't think that's 26,000 IRS agents.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah, that's one of the things that he's done. So again, you can be, I understand people that are critical in saying that, oh, he needs to do more, but the idea that, oh, he's not done anything he's terrible. Blah blah blah. Like that is just not true. Especially when you compare him to the reality of what other presidents have done and the resistance that he's getting in.
Mary Morgan
Washington D.C. i don't know if I'm even saying he's terrible. He fails at everything, blah blah blah. As you were saying, I just want to consider that six months is a longer time than you seem to be framing it. Especially considering that as soon as the clock strikes 12 for 2026, all anyone is going to be thinking about is the midterms.
James Fishback
Lets map out this week's amazing destinations and travel tips.
Unknown
Honestly Will, I didn't plan any trips, but I did switch to T Mobile with their new family Freedom offer.
Mary Morgan
That's not the itinerary we're following.
Unknown
Well, I'm departing from ATT and embarking on a new journey with T Mobile. They paid off my family's four phones up to $3200 and gave us four new phones on the house.
James Fishback
Bon voyage.
Tim Pool
Introducing Family Freedom. Our lowest cost will switch our biggest family savings all on America's largest 5G network. Visit your local T Mobile location or learn more@t mobile.com FamilyFreedom up to $800 per line via virtual prepaid card typically takes 15 days. Free phones via 24 monthly bill credits with finance agreement eg Apple iPhone16128GB $829.99 Eligible trade in eg iPhone 11 Pro for well qualified credits end and balance due if you pay off early or cancel contact T Mobile and then by.
Mary Morgan
The time those are over, all anyone's gonn be thinking about is who's running in 2028.
Seamus Coughlin
You're 100% right and that's something that, that I have we've talked about here. 18 months, that's all he's got. And I've said multiple times if he's.
Phil Labonte
Going to go after Obama it has to be in the next couple of months.
Seamus Coughlin
I'm not when it comes to the Obama stuff, I've the I've been reading some of this stuff and I'm not 100% sure that there's an actual crime. It's immoral and it's bad. There is I'm not sure what the what the actual statute they charge him on.
Phil Labonte
So I'll tell you Phil, it is Trump looks at the statutes, figures out which one makes the most sense, tells a jury to pick the crime that they want and they charge Obama with it like they did to Trump. Then the standard that was created by Democrats is they can bring anybody that went to court and tell the jury we have no evidence of any underlying crimes. You decide if a crime was committed and then tell if it's he's guilty or not. And then when they do it in West Virginia, and everyone goes, sure, he's guilty of, I don't know, jaywalking and murder and whatever else. So that completely doesn't matter what the crime is. All that matters is you agree Obama's guilty.
Seamus Coughlin
I'm completely comfortable with that because. So that was the standard set by the Democrats.
Phil Labonte
So first, as Mike Davis pointed out, you have potentially conspiracy against rights. That is in the documents that were released. Let me tell you what CNN has been doing. There's two IC assessments. There's a 2016 Russia interference interference assessment, and the 2020 post Russiagate assessment. The 2020 assessment says that Barack Obama knew that the intelligence they had was raw and bad and did not meet the standard for publishing as it was. It was uncorroborated, and it was a sentence fragment they could not corroborate, but ordered Brennan to publish it anyway. What did Brennan do, despite all of everything they were saying? Now you can make the argument, oh, okay. Well, you know, never attribute to malice that which can be explained by incompetence. Obama's just dumb. Nobody's gonna believe that.
James Fishback
Nobody's gonna believe that.
Phil Labonte
No sane, rational person is going, obama was just a bumbling moron. No, Obama. Obama intentionally had them release that information as a predicate for the Russiagate hoax, which resulted in the arrest of several of Trump's associates, falsified evidence against Carter Page, Ukraine, leaking damning information against Manafort, and then, not to mention Flynn, Papadopoulos, and Trump himself, who they targeted him for three years as a potential traitor to this country. If that's not a crime, you want to tell me that there's some dude who, like, bashed an ATM opens going to jail? I got to tell you, the dude, the dude who grabbed $73 out of a cash register to bodega, did substantially less damage to this country than Barack Obama did.
James Fishback
The J6ers who peacefully walked around the Capitol for 20 minutes in the velvet ropes. Exactly. So behave themselves.
Phil Labonte
Unlike blm, conspiracy against rights is the easiest if you're trying to be a paladin. If you want to be a rogue, who wins, it is, I don't know, pick and choose. We can probably get him on a lot of things, but, look, the nature of politics is. This is. This is what irks me about The Republican Party. The Republican Party pretends that the nature of politics is. Well, let me take a look at this. Your piece of paper. Let's see, we got here. It says here that we can't charge Obama. Drats. After everything he did, looks like he got away with it. Democrats go. Like the law says that anyway. Arrest him. That's how the Democrats run.
Seamus Coughlin
I'm, I'm in 100% agreement with, with. If they, if they can come up with something, then I'm perfectly fine with it because. Go ahead.
James Fishback
What they can do, Phil, right away is they can subpoena Obama to appear before Congress. Obama will lie under oath as he has time and again and then hit him with the same thing he hit everyone else with. All this, all the perjury traps. By the way, Foushee, we know he perjured himself.
Seamus Coughlin
Yep.
James Fishback
Before the House committees on the question of gain of.
Phil Labonte
Why aren't they arresting him?
James Fishback
Why is Cash Patel not at Fauci's door in Glover park with an FBI squad taking him into custody?
Seamus Coughlin
They should.
James Fishback
How many conservatives are they thrown in prison because. Because of that. Right. And so Foushee charged him tomorrow, but Obama just subpoena him. Can you imagine, by the way, House Republicans and Senate Republicans grilling Obama, the optics of that, having to explain himself? It'll be the most watched congressional testimony and the second true. They said something. Have cashed him. Have cash and Dan Bongino take him into cuffs right after the meeting is over.
Phil Labonte
They won't do it.
James Fishback
Why?
Phil Labonte
Mike Cernovich made a great point today. He said with, you know, Thomas Massie, he's got this picture of him with his binder on the Epstein files. How come none of these people, these Democrats or Republicans who want the Epstein files released have had any hearings on Epstein and called in the prosecutors, Comey's daughter perhaps, or even people like him to testify as to what Epstein was doing.
James Fishback
That's right.
Phil Labonte
So I, forgive me if I'm gonna be a little pessimistic. I know Trump has done a lot of really great things and I still think he's the best president of my, of my lifetime. Cuz he's gotten things done. But I don't think the system is going to change. I don't think they're gonna go after the corruption. I think it's, you got two high profile, powerful, you know, high seats of power in politics. They're basically saying, I don't feel like the fight. Foushee should be in jail.
James Fishback
Yes.
Phil Labonte
Even Newsweek published he lied to Congress and lied under oath. Rand Paul has reiterated numerous times and referred him to the doj. There it is. It is the simplest case.
James Fishback
It's simplest case.
Phil Labonte
It is in public he did this and he lied about gain of function research. He said they weren't doing it. They were doing it. Great. Pam Bondi could have a warrant for his arrest overnight and they won't do it.
James Fishback
Why?
Seamus Coughlin
Well, the reason is because that just like Aaron, Aaron McIntyre, our friend says, is they just don't have the courage. Right. Like if you don't exercise power when you have it, which is what the Republicans should do. But if you don't exercise power when you have it, your enemies absolutely will. And that's what the Democrats have shown over and over and over. They arrested Trump, they arrested all of his law or they, you know, prosecuting all of his lawyers, et cetera. All these people, they've got the, the mug shots and stuff. They will do it if they get back into power. So the Republicans absolutely have to do this stuff or else, you know, the American people are going to totally lose, lose faith in that they have the ability to actually make changes.
James Fishback
Correct. And make no mistake, Barack Hussein Obama is a treasonous criminal, but Anthony Fauci is a murderer. Anthony Fauci's death count is well over 5 to 10 million people because of the gain of function. China virus.
Phil Labonte
Right.
James Fishback
He lied about that. And so the time they spent, Tim, that little intern of Pam Bondi's printing those binders and putting them together and bringing them to the east wing of the White House, they could have written the four page indictment. That's all you need is four pages. On this date. He said this. That was a lie according to Exhibit A. Therefore, we are charging him with US code title 18. Boom. Take him into custody, Bring him before the court.
Phil Labonte
Indeed. Let's jump to this next story. This is from the New York Times Appeals court blocks Trump's attempt to restrict birthright citizenship. The ruling from the U.S. court of Appeals in the night for the Ninth Circuit brings the White House's theory of citizenship closer to a full Supreme Court review. In the meantime, of course, Trump is being blocked. And you know what I was thinking, we have another story here. J.D. vance pushes for automation of agricultural industry. No. Amnesty for illegal immigrant farm workers. Uh, I'm gonna put on my conspiracy cap for a second. If you knew the history of say, like the Luddites, how automate automation took their jobs away, this was largely what they opposed was the automation taking away their work and leaving them destitute you would plan for AI and automation. What's a clever way to deal with it? Mass migration. That's create the problem, the people react to it and then you offer them the solution. You know what we're going to do? We're going to deport all of those people took your jobs. And you know what we're going to get? We're going to replace them with robots. If your, if you just said we are going to fire our farm workers or replace them with robots, you'd have riots. Yes, but if you replace the workers slowly over time with illegal immigrants, piss off all the people, you know about the jobs being taken away.
James Fishback
Correct.
Phil Labonte
Then J.D. vance says we're going to get rid of them and replace them with robots. Now there's no one to protest.
James Fishback
Correct.
Phil Labonte
So maybe that was the play, I don't know. Conspiracy theory.
James Fishback
Well, it's interesting one, right, because it's the, it's. They're both bad. But to your point, the way it was sequenced out, right, you have Kilmar picking the strawberries or more appropriately the 10 year old who's forced to pick Chelsea Handler's weed so she can the people. He was picking the people and transferring them in his trunk. Look, automation should not be opposed for automation's sake. The reason though we've had that we've automated car factories for the past 70, 80 years is that actually in some agricultural spaces, like strawberries for example, it doesn't make sense to automate. These are delicate fruits that humans need to pick. You don't need migrants do that. You don't need slaves to do that. You can pay Americans a dignified living, fair market wage and they'll gladly do that work.
Phil Labonte
Tim?
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah, I mean I've heard that they, that the part of the reason why they don't have an automated strawberries is because the low pay workers are an option.
Phil Labonte
They're cheaper.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Cheaper than the robots.
Seamus Coughlin
Well, not only that, but they haven't create, made the robots because they have robots that can do agro sorts of.
Phil Labonte
Things, agrobot, octanean and harvest crew pick strawberries. But it's cheaper to have slave labor.
James Fishback
Well, it's cheaper to have slavery, there's no question about that. The question is whether it makes sense for some, for some places to make that large upfront capital investment for robotics versus even paying folks 20, $25 an hour. So it's not, it's not a clear cut thing.
Seamus Coughlin
Sure, right.
James Fishback
Some places have kiosks like McDonald's. Some places actually like in N out burger. You walk up and you order your burger and fries.
Seamus Coughlin
So how far out do you think? Like automated, like, like, you know, humanoid robots like Optimus? How long do you think until those could do the job that, like immigrant workers are doing now?
James Fishback
So I spent a lot of time thinking about this because I run an investment firm and Tesla is among our largest positions. So we have out and model out Optimus. So as we speak right now, Optimus is serving popcorn at the Tesla Diner in la.
Phil Labonte
Really?
James Fishback
Yes, serving popcorn totally autonomously. You go up to it, hands you the thing, puts it in there, hands it over. That's incredible.
Phil Labonte
I don't believe it. They had that party with the Optimus bots and it turned out they were remote control.
James Fishback
But they admitted that. What they've said now is this is actually an autonomous Optimus. That was eight months ago. It's now been trained on the model. Even better. Now it's not talking to you in a. In a coherent way, but it's just. It's. All it's doing is grabbing the popcorn, putting it in hand.
Phil Labonte
Though they have rock.
James Fishback
I mean, they can add rock to it. They're not a grok to the Tesla. To your question.
Phil Labonte
No, because I have. I have Android and it used to be the big speed digital assistant. I would just press the button and say weather, and then it would just. It would pull up a window showing the weather. Now it's some weird guy going, hi, Tim, the weather for today is going to be. I'm like, shut your mouth.
James Fishback
Just give me the weather.
Phil Labonte
Just give me a picture I can look at.
James Fishback
Correct.
Phil Labonte
Now it just goes, today's weather is going to be a high of. And I'm like.
James Fishback
But that's.
Phil Labonte
It takes longer.
James Fishback
That's why ChatGPT is really impressive. What they're building out at OpenAI is because they have what's called memory and they have context. So if you tell Chat GPT once, Tim, I only want you to give me the weather or show me an image, it will remember that across all your devices.
Phil Labonte
Well, do you guys know who Gunther Eagleman is on X?
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah, I do. Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Brock says that he killed a guy. Yeah, something like that.
James Fishback
And Robbie Starbuck was defamed by a chat bot, you know?
Phil Labonte
Yeah, I think. Who is it? Was it GPT?
James Fishback
It was a meta.
Phil Labonte
Oh, it was met. I was meta.
James Fishback
He said that he stormed the Capitol.
Phil Labonte
Yep, yep, yep. And so I saw this, this thread. Gunther Eagleman is like, you are wrong. I did not kill anybody. And it was like arguing with him, it was like. I don't know, it's like a police report saying you did. And then I. He. He posted a picture of the police report. It was a different guy with. With a similar name.
James Fishback
Interesting.
Phil Labonte
And then Grok was like, I hereby retract all statements. I was wrong. And I thought, that's really interesting. Like, what. Why would it just assume whatever he sent was real? So I opened up the Grok app and then I typed it in. Did Gunther Eagleman kill a guy? And it said, yes, he did. It said, there are conflicting reports. However, a man of the same name did slash someone in the neck, killing him or something like that. I don't know if he killed him. And there was like. Though he has disputed this in the past. And I'm like, whoa, wait, you can't just say that about somebody. Yeah, now he's a public figure to a certain degree. I. I don't know what the law would be on that in that regard, but it is wild that two things in this. We know they lie about everybody, and we know that they hallucinate and make things up. But it was really rather shocking to me that on X, he posted an image of the police report, and it immediately rewrote its own memory and backtracked everything it was saying. And I'm like, so anybody can just make fake stuff and feed it into the AI? Yeah, there's a. There was an article written about me claiming that Tim cast Iro makes $175 million a year because I was mocking Colbert and made a joke. A news article gets written about it, and now it's a fact.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
The AI is going to ingest that news. And so then I went to, I think, like, GPT, and I said, how much does Tim. Tim Cast IRL make? And it said, conflicting reports. One report suggests he makes $175 million per year. Although that number seems, you know, very high for a. For a podcast. Typical ranges are estimated between, you know, 5 and 8 million a year or something like that. And I'm like, no joke. Somebody literally saw a gag tweet from me.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Wrote a story about it. It got ingested by the training models of. Because they're online. And now it is legitimately telling people that it's possible we make $175 million. It's amazing.
James Fishback
Well, imagine what an investment algorithm would do. And if you had a stock and then all of a sudden it knew you made $135 million, it could bid your stock higher on that false Information. Right. But I think this goes to the point, Tim, that we are not automatically inferior to AI because we would look at that at first blush and say, Tim's smart, he's wealthy. But that doesn't make a lot of sense.
Phil Labonte
Except there were tons of people responding, being like, Whoa, you make 175 million? And then people respond with like, wow, what do you spend that money on? And it's just like, oh, my God. Yeah, that's crazy.
Seamus Coughlin
It. I mean, it is, it is still hallucinating, but it's still like an infant technology.
James Fishback
It is.
Seamus Coughlin
You know, whether, like, whether it be AI or whether you're talking about robot robotics actually are not infant, but having robotics that can, can.
James Fishback
Let's map out this week's amazing destinations and travel tips.
Unknown
Honestly, Will, I didn't plan any trips, but I did switch to T Mobile with their new family freed offer.
Mary Morgan
That's not the itinerary we're following.
Unknown
Well, I'm departing from AT&T and embarking on a new journey with T Mobile. They paid off my family's four phones up to $3200 and gave us four new phones on the house.
James Fishback
Bon voyage.
Tim Pool
Introducing family freedom. Our lowest cost Will switch our biggest family savings all on America's largest 5G network. Visit your local T Mobile location or learn more@t mobile.com familyfreedom. Up to 800 per line via virtual prepaid card. Typically takes 15 days. Free phones via 24 monthly bill credits with finance agreement. EG, Apple iPhone 16, 128 gigabyte 82999 eligible trade in EG iPhone 11 Pro for well qualified credits end and balance due if you pay off earlier. Cancel contact T Mobile.
James Fishback
Do they train themselves on its own neural net where you go to Optimus and Optimus has never picked up books and put them on a bookshelf before, but knows through its training through the neural chat.
Phil Labonte
GPT says Gunther Eagleman stabbed the guy. Wow. Even though he wasn't. Yo, this is crazy. Gunther, you gotta, you gotta sue. I gotta pull this up.
Seamus Coughlin
This is a crazy story, Gunther. I'm sorry to hear that. But. But yeah. So you're saying that, that Optimus actually is able to train itself? Because I know that they. Some of the ways that they have been working with the, the, with the AI is basically they would put Optimus in a room with like toys and it would literally play with toys. That's right. So they've gotten to the point where it can actually interpret, like, put these on, on the shelf. And it'll do that stuff.
James Fishback
Exactly. And so the idea is use those model experiments to build out the physics engine of optimus to train itself. But you, for example, if we had an optimist here, it would never have been necessarily trained on putting books and taking the covers off and putting them on a bookshelf. Never have been explicitly trained on that, but could still render that task. That's the power of it.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah.
James Fishback
Is you never have to train it to take out your trash or to pick something off the lawn, but it intuitively knows how to do that.
Seamus Coughlin
That's impressive because I was under the impression that essentially they were training it to do things. And then once you trained one optimist how to do things, everything, then all of the optimists would know how to do this one task. But it's actually able to learn.
James Fishback
Correct. And in the real world. So train it to do say 5% of all things. So for example, I have never had to do the task of taking a book that is hardcover and putting the, the covers back on it. I've never done that in my life on a large enough task. But I know how to do it. Right. And so the point is, how do you get optimists as aggregate intelligence to be able to do tasks that it's never done before, but it can intuitively iterate and figure out how to do it on the fly.
Seamus Coughlin
This is actually smarter than plug the plug in in the Matrix where you plugged in and learned a certain task or whatever.
James Fishback
Correct. And I have, you know, I have a Tesla car. And it's the same thing, that Tesla car. I live in rural Florida, about 20 miles south of the Georgia line. That car has never been trained to drive in rural Florida.
Tim Pool
Never.
James Fishback
It's never trained on my block, but it's been trained in San Francisco and other places as well. To where it's built out this end to end neural net that even if it's never driven on those roads, at those intersections, on those roundabouts, at those U turns, it intuitively neurally knows what to do next. That's how you scale it. Now, Waymo, that's the Google technology that they have. It's fixed to a geofence so that same Waymo that can drive brilliantly in San Fran or LA or Phoenix, you put it here in West Virginia, it could not move 10ft.
Seamus Coughlin
Okay.
James Fishback
So because it has not been expressly trained.
Seamus Coughlin
So they give Waymo the map.
James Fishback
Exactly.
Seamus Coughlin
Knows where it is on the, on that map. Okay.
James Fishback
But it knows nothing else. And so now what you're seeing play out is Waymo and Tesla's robo taxi in Austin in a very similarly sized geofence. But Tesla can scale like that. Think of it this way. Austin has 1500 Uber drivers in the Austin metro area. Tesla produces in its Texas factory 1500 model threes and model Y's every single day. That means that in one day, Tesla could totally take over and be bigger than Uber in just Austin. And then you have the fact that there are millions of Teslas all over the country that, with a software update, fill could become this robo taxi and pick people up. That is a massive deflationary force. I'm also excited about it because it means that rural America can actually have a real form of transport to get around. They need to get around. A third of the country lives in rural America. But Uber doesn't exist out there. Public transit doesn't exist out there. And Robotaxi can help getting people to church, to jobs, increase labor mobility, wages, et cetera.
Phil Labonte
You know, the funny thing is, there was a viral post where a guy worked for Lyft. He posted how much money he made.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
And then he posted his yearly maintenance and repairs. He lost money.
James Fishback
Yeah. You cannot make money on Lyft.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
James Fishback
You literally cannot make money online.
Phil Labonte
Any of them.
James Fishback
Yeah, you can.
Phil Labonte
The driving apps, what they've basically done is trick people into stripping the equity out of their vehicles, thinking that they're getting money, but they're actually losing.
James Fishback
Correct.
Phil Labonte
You'd be better off just selling half your car to somebody and then using that money and then owing them or something.
James Fishback
That's right.
Seamus Coughlin
Can. Can. Do you think that robotic taxis will be profitable or can be profitable?
James Fishback
Absolutely. Absolutely.
Seamus Coughlin
Can you go ahead and can you.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Seamus Coughlin
Unbox that?
James Fishback
Sure. So the biggest reason why is because they can run 24 hours a day.
Seamus Coughlin
Right.
James Fishback
The second reason why is that it's cheaper to power an electric car than it is to power a gas car. It's about 80% cheaper. So a lot of that cost is going to come out. The third is the maintenance. The average internal combustion engine car, ICE car, has over 10,000 moving parts. The average Tesla has 90. So think about the maintenance cost, the, the energy cost, the scaling cost going down by a factor of 1, 100. It's 100 times.
Phil Labonte
So you're saying, buy Tesla stock?
James Fishback
Saying, buy Tesla stock. I'll go even further.
Phil Labonte
Financial advice.
James Fishback
That is financial advice. I want to be careful there. I believe you should buy Tesla stock, but I'll take it a step further. We are Launching at Azori, my investment firm. Tim, you're familiar with call options, right?
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
James Fishback
So we are launching a Tesla fund, the first of its kind ETF that buys both Tesla stock and call options. On Tesla stock, we think Tesla's going to $1800 a share. It's 330 right now. It's going to 1800 by 2030.
Phil Labonte
Can you explain long short call?
Seamus Coughlin
What's that ETF called again?
Phil Labonte
People don't understand.
James Fishback
Called TSLV. It's coming out in two weeks. Very simply, to your point on what a call option is. A call option allows you to own more of a stock than you want to put money into. So if a stock like Tesla were to go up 20%, you could buy a call option that would only risk 1/20 of that amount of the Tesla stock, but your call option would go up 30, 40, 50%.
Phil Labonte
What is the mechanism of that?
James Fishback
It's an option. So it's a listed option where you're essentially going to another person saying, I want to pay you X amount of money to be able to buy Tesla above a certain price. You will sell me that because you're short, because you think Tesla is going to go down. There's a lot of people who think Tesla is going to go down. A lot of short sellers that allows you to get leverage on the Tesla stock. And so what you've seen. And you know Cathie Wood, I met with her about this recently. You know, she's the big investor who's been long Tesla for a decade now. She made so much of her money early on just by buying Tesla call options. Because if you told me right now, you guaranteed to me that Tesla was going to go up 40% in the next 12 months, I could put together a portfolio of options on Tesla call options that would go up 400% if I knew that it was going to go up when.
Phil Labonte
When Elon started flirting with buying Twitter.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
The stock plummeted.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
And I'm reading the news and we always talk about on the show that we read the news the moment it happens.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
And then the stock is actually behind because most people don't learn as quickly as we do because we're on the forefront. So when the Tesla thing happened, I thought to myself how insane that Tesla stock would go down because people are political about Elon.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
So I bought a bunch and doubled my money.
Seamus Coughlin
Nice.
James Fishback
That was very smart. Yeah. And. And the same thing happened with the Doge stuff. Very, very early on. Stock got down into the, the low 200s. The thinking was that he was going to somehow hurt his brand. Now that's the case. Mary, if you believe that the company actually sells EVs as a business, that their job is to sell cars. Their job is to sell. Their AI, is to license out their AI to build out the Optimus program. No one's going to own a car probably in 20 years. You have the right to. Right, but why own a car when you can have a robo taxi pick you up for $3 and take you across town?
Seamus Coughlin
Because my Model S is sick.
James Fishback
It's a great freaking car.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. It's the, the, the planned feature for robocars. They. They made a video. There was a viral video about this like a decade ago.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Is that nobody owns a car. You. You think to yourself, we're gonna go to a restaurant. And then you take your phone and you just hit the ride share button. And then you walk outside. And literally within two minutes, the car is there. Because every car, everywhere is automatic. There will never be traffic again. Because as your car is about to enter the highway, it's communicating with the entire network of cars. And they all can adjust. They can accelerate and decelerate the exact same time and they can space out to make room for you to merge in perfectly. So it's seamless.
James Fishback
Yes.
Phil Labonte
One of the funny thing is there was a mythbusters episode on traffic where they had a bunch of cars driving a circle and they created traffic jams. And it was unavoidable because at a certain you. You can't. You have a reaction time. So when the car in front of you stops, you stop. When they start, it takes a second to start again. If all the cars are synchronized, they can all start at the same time and stop at the same time. Never be traffic again.
James Fishback
Yeah. Think about how much time that's going to save people. Right.
Mary Morgan
This sounds deeply unappealing though, because it means that people are going to have less. Less self determination if their ability to get transportation is controlled by a corporation.
Phil Labonte
You mean when you say a naughty word and they ban you from driving? Yeah.
Mary Morgan
Or who knows what else.
James Fishback
Not debanking. It's de. Driving.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Mary Morgan
Yes. Yeah.
James Fishback
So you're right, Mary. I mean, there's reason to be concerned about it. I think as long as you willingly partake in the system now, you should still be able to have the right to drive. Of course, no one should be subjected to this. Claus Schwab, you know, the year is 2030. You own nothing and you're very happy. Right. But if you go out of your way and like, tell you, my grandmother, she passed in September. She didn't have a means to transport herself for the last 10 years of her life. She would have killed to be able to have a car pick her up and take her out. And I think a lot of people are like that as well, who want to have a better job, who want to earn a better wage, but don't have a means to get across town or even the next county over Serge and say, look, I want to be able to do that. And for $2, $3, I can do that on the Tesla Robotaxi network. Now there's going to be competition. It won't just be one company. Google will be in it, Tesla will be in it and others. But that's a really exciting future for a lot of people, I think.
Seamus Coughlin
Phil, look, I'm, I'm not, I'm not particularly put off by AI or robotics or anything like that. I think that it's, it's extremely exciting and I think that it's gonna, it's gonna be obviously disruptive.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Seamus Coughlin
But I don't have like a doom and gloom outlook on it. I think that, that, that there will be benefits that outweigh, significantly outweigh the, the cost and the, the negative factors.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Let's jump to this next story. We've got this viral video going around. Law enforcement in Florida is warning of extremely dangerous door kick challenge. Check this out. So he's a bunch of people that walk up to the door ring camera with airsoft guns. Yep.
Seamus Coughlin
So dumb.
James Fishback
At night.
Phil Labonte
I. Guys, you know, whenever I bring up social discohesion or whatever, people always go, this stuff always happens. It's been happening forever. It has never happened that rogue bands of teenagers took fake guns that sound, I don't want to say real, but to someone who doesn't know what's going.
James Fishback
On, they look real.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, they, they look real and they sound like something.
Seamus Coughlin
Sure.
Phil Labonte
And for the average untrained person, it has never existed that this kind of stuff was happening and so, so frequently and so commonly.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah. People will say, oh well, you know, everyone, everyone knows ding dong ditch and, and, yeah. Etc. And I mean, even I have played that when I was a teenager, when I was a kid. But we weren't going with masks on and we weren't going with, with toy guns trying to, you know, scare people. And we weren't doing it in Florida. Right. Like worst.
James Fishback
My state, the worst state to do it in.
Seamus Coughlin
The location does matter. Like if you're doing that in Massachusetts, you will get one reaction from people. If you're doing that in Florida or in West Virginia or in. In any other red. Any of. Other. Of many red states, you will get a totally different reaction. And the results for the homeowner will not be as catastrophic. Because even if they did, God forbid, they actually shot a kid. If the. If the. If the. The defenses. Look, these kids were banging on my door, and I saw them outside with a gun, even though they didn't know, even though it was airsoft.
James Fishback
Nobody would get convicted for that.
Seamus Coughlin
It's likely that they would be. Not be found guilty of. Of homicide, you know, or it would be just. They would consider it justifiable. So don't do this. This is dumb.
James Fishback
Don't do it. It's like the YouTube Pranksville, where they pull out a little fake revolver.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah.
James Fishback
Except it looks real. How would you know? And they try to rob somebody on the New York subway.
Phil Labonte
They're doing that.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah.
James Fishback
There's been videos of this done. Right. And one guy shot. What was that one prank in New York. He shot and he was acquitted. Right. Because in that moment, there's no expectation that you can differentiate between an airsoft gun. Like, it's not a toy gun. Right. A Nerf gun is a toy gun. It's yellow and it's purple. It looks like a real gun. And so it's going to end in tragedy, sadly. Probably one of those kids was going to have to get shot for this whole thing to end. I hate to say it, but not.
Phil Labonte
But you don't even need a gun. There was the story out of the. The mall just down here. Which one was it? The Dulles Center. Dullestown center, where some YouTube prankster was getting in the face of some guy holding up a phone. So the dude drew his gun and shot him in the stomach. Yes.
Mary Morgan
And when that kid ended up in the hospital, he came to his senses and told everyone he's gonna keep chasing his YouTube dreams. Doesn't care.
Seamus Coughlin
Good Lord.
Phil Labonte
And YouTube should have banned him.
James Fishback
It should have been him. But remember, if you question the 2020 election on YouTube, you were literally banned.
Seamus Coughlin
Well, for. For a while it was that way. I mean, that jury got acquitted.
Phil Labonte
That was several years ago.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah, I mean, it's poor.
Phil Labonte
That poor delivery driver dude.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah. I mean, look, I. I can't.
Phil Labonte
Or cook. That should. That dude should be banned from all social media.
Seamus Coughlin
As a very pro second amendment guy that. That, you know, carries a gun and stuff. I cannot. I cannot, you know, emphasize more strongly. Do not do this stuff.
James Fishback
Do not.
Seamus Coughlin
It is. It is only gonna end with a. With bad things for everyone involved. Because even if you. Even if you're the. The person that, you know, God forbid, shoots a kid, your life is gonna be hell for two years. And it's gonna cost you no winning $250,000 to half a million dollars to defend yourself. And look, you're gonna have to.
Phil Labonte
It looks like this dude did quit YouTube.
Seamus Coughlin
I hope so.
Mary Morgan
Okay. Yeah, well, that's. That's a positive update. I mean, no one, no one who would do something like this would hear someone say, don't do it and not do it. That's the problem. They don't think that's 100% right.
Phil Labonte
I know.
Mary Morgan
They just act. They're just.
Phil Labonte
This is the social decay is all of these people who are desperate for attention, they want to be seen and they don't know how to be seen. And it's driven by these short algorithms, these TikTok Instagram YouTube algorithms. So they're just trying to figure out how to be crazier and crazier and crazier. Like the people who go to Walmart and dump milk on their heads.
Mary Morgan
These kids weren't even filming and posting any of this. This was just.
James Fishback
That's right.
Mary Morgan
The sheer thrill of making someone think that they were about to get shot.
Phil Labonte
This is behavioral sync. You know, idle hands, the devil's playground. When. When you are worried about winter coming and you starving to death, you don't do this.
James Fishback
No. Well, if you have a father in the home, you don't do this either. Let's be honest. Let's be honest. If you have a two parent household, if I would have pulled something like.
Phil Labonte
That, I don't know, I think that Tanner Cook guy might have two parents. Like bad people do bad things sometimes. I. I think. I think we. We want to easily say two parents is an important thing. It is. But I think socially, regardless, of course, it's behavioral sync.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
We are at the point where we don't struggle anymore. And so people are sitting around thinking, what gets me attention? Well, you know what got you attention back in the day? Doing something heroic.
James Fishback
Yep.
Phil Labonte
You guys know the story of the Iditarod, that people were dying, needed medicine, and so they were like, we have no choice. And they're like, you'll never make it. You're crazy. Those dogs can't make it that far. And then they did. They did it because it was about saving lives. Now it's like, oh, well, just get a helicopter okay, yeah, we got tons of them. We got too many actually. You know, we'll leave one there. And so people are sitting around being like, where's my great journey adventure? How do I prove myself? Well, the only way to do it on social media nowadays, not the only but the fastest and easiest way is to be a nut job.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah, yeah.
Mary Morgan
There was a whole separate case of this in a different area in Florida with two teens caught on camera kicking in a neighbor's front door and one hiding in an attic and the other admitting we were.
James Fishback
Lets map out this week's amazing destinations and travel tips.
Unknown
Honestly Will, I didn't plan any trips but I did switch to T Mobile with their new family freedom offer.
Mary Morgan
That's not the itinerary we're following.
Unknown
Well, I'm departing from ATT and embarking on a new journey with T Mobile. They paid off my family's four phones up to $3200 and gave us a four new phones on the house.
James Fishback
Bon voyage.
Tim Pool
Introducing family freedom. Our lowest cost will switch our biggest family savings all on America's largest 5G network. Visit your local T Mobile location or learn more@t mobile.com familyfreedom. Up to $800 per line via virtual prepaid card typically takes 15 days. Free phones via 24 monthly bill credits with finance agreement eg Apple iPhone 16 128GB829 99 eligible trade in eg iPhone 11 Pro for well qualified credits end and balance due if you pay off early or cancel contact T Mobile just being stupid.
Mary Morgan
Clearly they're all visibly black by the way and that should be noted because their levels of violent crime are absolutely out of control and we need serious law enforcement response to it. It's outrageous.
Seamus Coughlin
Well, I mean look, the, the, the idea that this is entertainment, you know, that this is, this is something fun. I, I, I understand your point. Like the, the people that are likely to do this are not going to be the people that are going to be listening to me or take my advice. But you know, you've, you, this is so, I can't, I can't, I just can't emphasize enough like this is so dangerous and such a stupid idea. Just don't do this, don't do it. And I, there's not really a whole.
Mary Morgan
I mean they should be tried as adults and oh absolutely, I'll be locked up for life because what is the charge behavior you see early on in someone who ends up up being a serial murder?
Phil Labonte
Do we charge him with like aggravated. No, no, no. When you bring a fake gun to someone's house, so.
James Fishback
Yeah. So. Well, the fake gun is something entirely different. But attempted murder, well, it's certainly attempted burglar trying to break into someone's house.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah.
James Fishback
Right.
Phil Labonte
I. I wonder what the charge is for make. So in. In Illinois, it's interesting because assault is, I forgot how they phrase it, but it's making someone believe they face an imminent threat.
James Fishback
Sure.
Phil Labonte
That means in Illinois, in New York, assault is actually touching someone and causing damage. If there's no damage or visible injury, they don't charge. In Illinois, assault would be flinching at you walking up to you. Yep. And battery is when they make contact in a way that injures or embarrasses. So I'm curious, if Florida has a charge about what would you charge someone with if they point a gun at your head? Right. Would you get attempted murderer because you're making someone fear they're about to die and that's what these guys are doing.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah. I'm not sure what the actual statute would be and I imagine that it would probably be different depending on which state you're in.
James Fishback
Sure. Well, let's put it this way. Right now you should expand the reckless display of a firearm statute to include anything that a reasonable person would perceive to be a legitimate firearm. Right. So Serge, if you come up and you pull out an airsoft gun and try to rob someone and carjack them, we're going to charge that as if it's armed carjacking.
Seamus Coughlin
Absolutely.
James Fishback
End of story.
Phil Labonte
In Florida would be aggravated assault would be if the victim reasonable, reasonably believes the weapon is real. It will be felony to the third degree up to five years in prison.
James Fishback
Right. And in the meantime, unless the AI.
Phil Labonte
Is just hallucinating and making it all up. But it probably is.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah. I mean, but look, I mean, Tim, you've mentioned this yourself. Like kids that might do this kind of stuff. Like oftentimes they're looking to go to jail or they'll go to jail and they'll only get, you know, they'll, they'll look at. Okay, well, I'll get my street cred and I'll come out and I'll have, I'll have people that will look at me as if I'm a tough guy or whatever. So, I mean, why.
Mary Morgan
I'm saying the 15 year old and the 13 year old were arrested facing felony burglary charges.
James Fishback
That's in Florida too.
Mary Morgan
13 is crazy.
Phil Labonte
That's why I've been saying in Florida you make them wear diapers and Baby bonnets and marched on a main thoroughfare while saying I'm a big baby Boo.
James Fishback
Boo.
Mary Morgan
Oh. Deputies said the. The girl's mother was furious after learning what her daughter had done. And you didn't know where your 13 year old girl was in the middle of the night, 1031 of them on a Friday night, a 15 year old boy and a 13 year old girl in Deberry, one of those commercials.
Phil Labonte
It's 10 o'. Clock. Do you know where your kids are?
James Fishback
And there's a personal responsibility aspect to this as well. There's no question. Right, but I mean just. And you know, you touched on it. Mary. But there are, are obviously implications in particular racial subsets. When you don't have two parents in the household, you tend to see more reckless behavior. It's just the truth.
Mary Morgan
I've scrolled through every ring camera video that is available. Literally every kid doing this is black. And that should be talked about it.
James Fishback
Should we be honest about it? And that's. That probably has something to do with the fact that 70% of black kids growing up in America right now don't have a dad. And that's not because of marijuana laws.
Phil Labonte
I don't think that the dad issue is the reason why across the board we see all sorts of action like this.
James Fishback
No, I don't disagree with you on that at all. But what I would say is this, is that if you have a black kid who's got two parents and a black kid with just a mom who is more likely to pull this crap?
Phil Labonte
The person without two parents. Right, right. But that being said, the trend of psychotic Internet pranks.
James Fishback
Oh, agreed.
Phil Labonte
Is being done by literally everybody is.
James Fishback
Elevated sort of black culture. It's unacceptable.
Phil Labonte
I don't, I don't disagree with you on all. If, if the. So here, here's the first thing I would say. You're looking at all the videos that have come out about it and everyone doing it as black. But I'd like to actually see the reports. Yeah, Actual hard data on who's doing it. I don't think you're wrong to bring it up. I'd say before we start taking enforcement action or looking into cultural and social issues as to what's going on, is it the videos we have are showing black people doing it or is it statistically like we have the data that it is only black people doing it?
Mary Morgan
Well, it's the former, but we also have crime statistics to help us out here with context clues.
James Fishback
Don't bring up 1350, Mary.
Phil Labonte
But. Right.
Mary Morgan
What and it's not even 1350 because it's actually mainly the males who are committing violent crimes. 6%. Really.
Phil Labonte
The question then is in what neighborhoods are they doing it? Are they doing it in their neighborhoods? Are they going to other neighborhoods?
James Fishback
They would get shot in the neighborhoods if they did it.
Phil Labonte
I don't know if literally.
Mary Morgan
Do you know these neighborhoods? Like, would you.
Phil Labonte
I don't know.
James Fishback
That doesn't, that doesn't look like.
Phil Labonte
But here's the other, here's the other issue. If we're talking about general crime, the question is this is a specific kind of weird crime that they don't get money from and they're not filming.
James Fishback
It's. What do you call it? Behavioral sink.
Mary Morgan
They're calling Tick tock Challenge. But I'm not seeing any of these kids holding phones up and recording it like, or posting it. I haven't seen any examples of that. It's literally all just ring footage. So it's literally just for the sheer thrill of making someone believe that they're in danger for their life. Yeah, that's it. And who knows what would have happened if the homeowners tried to confront them and how it would have escalated?
James Fishback
Well, the homeowner would have argued a de.
Phil Labonte
Escalate. It's not even about the homeowners either. It's. Sooner or later someone's going to be walking down the street in Florida strapped as they're allowed to, and they're going to see, and they're going to see two guys wearing masks with guns go to a house and they're going to scream and draw their guns and say freeze. And those guys are going to start and they're going to get shot.
James Fishback
Yeah, well that would solve that problem.
Phil Labonte
There's a. I don't think, I don't.
James Fishback
Think it would, I think it would seriously deter that kind of behavior.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, I don't think so.
Mary Morgan
This is, this is suicide.
Phil Labonte
I don't, I don't think so. Because in Chicago it never has in 50 years.
Seamus Coughlin
I just put a link in the, in the slack about an 18 year old Virginia high school senior died in a shooting early Saturday that may have resulted in it from a tik Tok prank.
James Fishback
Wow.
Phil Labonte
This is back in May. We covered this back in May.
Seamus Coughlin
Oh, is it, was it the May. Yeah. Okay. May 6th.
James Fishback
What was the context?
Phil Labonte
There is ding no ditch. Oh yeah, we, we covered this back when it happened. It was. They were doing a ding dong ditch and I think they arrested, yeah, they arrested the guy. And, and, and, and we called it out. Like what?
James Fishback
That make any sense?
Phil Labonte
Yep.
Mary Morgan
There's crazier stuff.
Phil Labonte
I wonder what happened to this guy.
Mary Morgan
That'S more overtly suicidal. Like the subway Surfer challenge. Like they're trying to recreate the mobile game and run on top of trains in the subway system in New York. And I think at least one kid died.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
You see now look, I got to tell you that the, the kid who was doing the ding 3am ding dong ditch was white and the homeowner shot him. Was black.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Mary Morgan
In May.
Phil Labonte
This was back in May. And this homeowner should not have been charged. It is, it is sickening that he was charged.
James Fishback
It was drawn.
Phil Labonte
I don't know yet. This is back in. This is from May, so yeah, I don't see it. So let me see if I can find the guy's name. Actually, like you're at home, it's three in the morning.
James Fishback
Oh, I'm shooting.
Phil Labonte
And, and, and strange, Strange people are on your. Are doing something on your property. You know what. Now, I don't know the full context, but apparently it wasn't a Ding Dong ditch. It was some other kind of prank. So we, it's been a while since we covered the story, so I need to look, look at, you know, pull it back up. They're saying they were recording Ding Dong ditch pranks for TikTok videos, but there was something about it where it wasn't. It was like you try to open their door. You check to see if doors are open or something like that. It was something like that. Let me see if I can find it.
Seamus Coughlin
God. It's fine to like play pranks and stuff like that, but trying to enter people's houses or whatever.
Phil Labonte
It was an attempted home burglary.
James Fishback
Yeah. I guess the question to Tim is is this a convenient excuse when you're trying to. They charge a bunch of juveniles. No, it was just a joke. When they were actually trying to break in to steal property, it was just a tick tock joke. Right. Is that just the excuse afterwards to not charge us?
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah. And in the context that Tim's talking about, even if they weren't trying to steal anything, the fact that they were trying to open the door, that's attempted burglary. If you, if you try, if you go through any barrier. Tim's mentioned it before because of, of the, the bir. The, the barriers that are set up around here. If you go through any barrier, that's burglary. You know, you've, you've, you've committed the act of Burglary just by entering in a place where you're not supposed to be. So the idea of trying to pull on a door, you're trying. You're. It's attempting to burglarize out.
James Fishback
Correct. Or what if the next challenge is try to steal your kid in the mall? Our goal is to go grab, grab a toddler. Are we doing that too?
Phil Labonte
Yeah, they, they, the kids who survived said they were just doing a ding dong ditch, but the homeowner called 911 to report a burglary. So I don't believe a 3am Ding dong ditch. I wouldn't be surprised if they was actually a burglary. So. So one of the pranks is you try and open doors.
James Fishback
Right.
Phil Labonte
Because people leave their doors unlocked. There was one video out of the UK where they were entering homes that were open. You see that video?
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
You just walk up to a house and then go inside and the people would be like, oh geez, what are you doing? Yeah, bro. If you're in West Virginia and you walk in the house, no one's going to ask you what you're doing.
Seamus Coughlin
No.
Phil Labonte
They're going to scream at the top of their lungs and point a rifle your face.
Mary Morgan
Let me, let me make it a race thing again because the guy who was doing that was a streamer named, I think Mizzy, and he ended up going on Pierce Morgan's show to interview about what happened and him literally jumping people going in their houses and he tells Pierce, like, you're racist.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Mary Morgan
You're criticizing me for committing crimes. That means you're racist and you just hate black people.
Seamus Coughlin
The. I have a, a.
James Fishback
It's messed up.
Seamus Coughlin
A former police officer friend of mine just text me and he's like, they're training for home invasion. Which is completely realistic to think, you know, tempting to. To see what they, you know, to see if they can get inside and where the line is drawn for the, for that kind of behavior, you know?
James Fishback
Yeah.
Mary Morgan
Like car picking, you know, and just think about it.
Phil Labonte
They were at the sliding glass door of his house. It was not a prank.
James Fishback
It's not a prank. This is their excuse. We got caught. So we're going to. We're going to cry. TikTok. Right?
Mary Morgan
This is why people are hiring Uber for personal security. Not Uber, but basically.
James Fishback
Oh yeah, la. Right.
Mary Morgan
We're going to get to the point where like, you're going to have to have the purge style home security system that.
Phil Labonte
You mean like South Africa?
Seamus Coughlin
Yes, like South Africa.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Mary Morgan
Right. But like leveled up even More like metal barrier over every entrance to your home overnight.
James Fishback
Let's map out this week's amazing destinations and travel tips.
Unknown
Honestly Will, I didn't plan any trips but I did switch to T Mobile with their new family free freedom offer.
Mary Morgan
That's not the itinerary we're following.
Unknown
Well, I'm departing from AT&T and embarking on a new journey with T Mobile. They paid off my family's four phones up to $3200 and gave us four new phones on the house.
James Fishback
Bon voyage.
Tim Pool
Introducing family freedom. Our lowest cost will switch our biggest family savings all on America's largest 5G network. Visit your local T Mobile location or learn more@t mobile.com FamilyFreedom up to $800 per line via virtual prepaid card typically takes 15 days. Free phones via 24 monthly bill credits with finance agreement eg Apple iPhone16128 gigabyte $8,029.99 Eligible trade in eg iPhone 11 Pro for well qualified credits end and balance due if you pay off early or cancel contact T Mobile.
Phil Labonte
Yep.
Mary Morgan
And even in interior.
Phil Labonte
There'S no updates on this guy. That's.
James Fishback
Dude, that's messed up.
Seamus Coughlin
It's a. It's just a terrible idea, you know and it, it can only end in tragedy.
James Fishback
I mean for either to your point. Even if the person you to put the. The defendant through that lose his job, lose his family.
Phil Labonte
They issued a statement. They said, our family is united in support of Tyler Chase Butler, who acted out of genuine fear for his safety and for the safety of his mother. Tyler found himself in an unimaginable situation, forced to protect his home and his loved ones. In the early hours of the morning. We are aware of the profound loss experienced by the loved ones of the young man who lost his life. Our thoughts are with them during this difficult time. We urge the public and media to avoid speculation and allow the facts to be fully examined. Tyler is a young man who responded to an immediate threat and we stand by him as the truth of the situation comes to light. This is a challenging time for our family and we, we respectfully ask for privacy as we continue to support one another. I want to know what the details were because apparently some details came out. People online are saying that they were at a sliding glass door. They weren't just doing a ding dong ditch. There were three people. You don't go up to the house, ring the doorbell and then stand there and wait for a guy to come to the door. They were doing something. I've heard some rumors that the prank that people were doing is they go to houses and try and open the doors and then see if they can get inside.
James Fishback
Well, you can get shot for that.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, he'll die. West Virginia man is no joke, by the way.
James Fishback
It doesn't matter if you're black, white, Asian. If you do that in West Virginia, you're going to get shot.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
West Virginia is one of the few states that allows you to defend open property. So in Maryland, if you are. If, let's say in maryland you have 10 acres of farmland or something, and someone crosses onto your property and screams that they intend to kill you, you are legally required to flee to your home. Once in your home, if they try entering your home, you're allowed to defend yourself. Lethal force. In New Jersey, you're never allowed to do it.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah. In West Virginia, you have to run into Pennsylvania.
Phil Labonte
In West Virginia, if they enter your open property and are threatening you, you're allowed to defend yourself with lethal force. What that turns into is a lot of cases in West Virginia is the police are called, there's a dead guy, a living guy, and the living guy says, it's my property and he threatened to kill me.
James Fishback
End of story.
Phil Labonte
End of story. There's no one, there's no witnesses. It doesn't matter. You. So, so the issue then becomes you can't just kill anybody throwing your property because a lot of property is open. For instance, like we have a big open field and nobody's got. It's 50 plus acres. So there's no fencing around the other properties. Some do. And sometimes people will cross through ours. You can't just shoot them. Unfortunately for the people who do this without realizing it, if you die, there's no crime. The police are going to come to the homeowner and they're going to say, hey, threaten me. And the cops can say, okay, what are they going to do? It's your property, that person isn't supposed to be there and you were threatened. End of story. Don't trespass. Be very careful. I've had people come out to West Virginia and I can't remember where we were, but it's a big open field that was clearly private property. But like, you could walk through it.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
And I can't remember. It was like two years ago. They were like, let's just cross through here. I think we are somewhere near Berkeley Springs. I don't know. And I was like, nope, that's, that's, that's not, that's not a public thoroughfare yeah. And they're like, yeah, but it's like, we're just gonna cross it. No, we're gonna drive around because you, you walk through that field and someone might be like, like, what are you doing on my property?
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
And then you say, I'm just trying to cry. No, you go back the way you came. Yeah, yeah.
Seamus Coughlin
It's the only thing, the only option when someone's, you know, has a rifle pointed at you, you know.
Phil Labonte
Let's jump to this story, my friends. We got one more for you, Fox News. One year after Biden's unprecedented exit from 2024 race, Democrat poll numbers hit rock bottom. That's it, man. I, I don't know where the, how the Democrats come back from this. You know, we were talking about south park earlier, and it seems like they're gonna try and be anti woke, edgy.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
And mocking Trump and they want to belittle Trump. They're trying to win back the podcast comedian circuit. They're trying to win back the Joe Rogan types. That's why they went for South Park. But I don't think Democrats can recover this unless they abandon gender ideology and critical race theory, which I don't think they can.
Seamus Coughlin
The more progressives have been trying to double down on that kind of stuff. I heard Ayanna Pressley talking about DEI and how DEI was extremely important. This is just today. I heard a clip of her talking about DEI and how it's super important and that without dei, the we, we won't make any quote, unquote, progress and stuff. The progressives are going to double down on it. The smart Democrats like Fetterman, like Josh Shapiro, they will actually. They seem to be moving away from this stuff.
James Fishback
Buttigieg, dare I say not, I'm not his biggest fan, but he can read a room a lot better than these Democrats can.
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Seamus Coughlin
And I don't think, I personally, I don't think that Buttigieg has much of a chance, but it is a good point to point at him about this stuff. The smarter Democrats are moving away from this stuff because it's not popular with the American people overall. Again, this is something that's a very, that's a small group of people are very passionate about it, but the rest of America's like, man, I don't even care. Like, I don't. I'm worried about, and I've said this a bunch of times, I'm worried about kitchen table issues.
James Fishback
Do.
Seamus Coughlin
Is the economy good? Can I pay my bills and I get a mortgage?
James Fishback
Can I buy a new home.
Seamus Coughlin
After all the inflation that we've had, wages still have not caught up. And you know, people don't under. People seem to not understand that wages are a lagger and inflation is a leader. That's part of why there was such a massive wealth transfer. That's part of why there's such income inequality that people talk about. People that have money can get loans when there's 0% interest rates or 1% interest rates. Those people have businesses. The people that don't have, have money. The people that have, you know, that took the, the, the Biden bucks or the money that Donald Trump handed out, they take that money and they spend that money. Who are they buying things from? The people that have money. This is not super complex, but it takes a while for wages to catch up.
Phil Labonte
Exactly. For the same reason as like the same reason why a lot of regulation. A huge corporation can, can easily absorb the costs of new regulation and they use regulation and granting new regulation in, in the government in order to squeeze and destroy small businesses and medium sized.
James Fishback
Businesses because they can absorb just massive.
Phil Labonte
Cost increases or, or regulatory increases, et cetera. They can't stomach that. They can't handle it. They'll just, they'll just go put it.
James Fishback
Happens all the time happened in 2022.
Phil Labonte
If you didn't see it happening in your own town. So you're lying to yourself like it.
James Fishback
Happened all the time happened in L.
Phil Labonte
A. I saw it happen personally, but yeah, you're exactly right on.
James Fishback
And search one of those regulations that's popular even amongst Republicans is what's called occupational licensing. I got my hair cut a couple of weekends ago.
Seamus Coughlin
Crazy.
James Fishback
It's insane. 1800 hours to become a barber that benefits the super cuts and the haircutteries of the world. Regulation is always the friend of big corporations. It is always the enemy of small businesses and entrepreneurs. Louisiana Tim. It wasn't just until two years ago that in Louisiana you needed a license to pay a fee and to pass a test, to be a florist, to assemble the daisies and the tulips. But again, that was the big floral lobby.
Phil Labonte
But I mean think about how hard it is if you were just your run of the mill old, you know, I don't know, biologist or scientist trying to take viruses from one animal and then contaminate other animals to force the virus to become more potent. You can't even do that in the United States.
James Fishback
You can't even do that.
Phil Labonte
You have to go to Wuhan, China, do something like that.
James Fishback
Correct.
Phil Labonte
Can you believe this?
James Fishback
And then when you do it, blame it on the bat soup, because that's definitely not race.
Phil Labonte
Right?
James Fishback
Right.
Phil Labonte
Yes.
James Fishback
But it's racist to say it came from a lab and to come full circle. Arrest Foushee. Arrest him. What are we waiting for?
Phil Labonte
Well, we were talking about regulation, and I made a joke, but now we're on Foushee. But anyway, to regulation. I don't. I think a lot of people don't realize how insane regulation really is. Yeah. And how some of it's good. I'd say most of it's bad.
James Fishback
Most of it's bad.
Phil Labonte
It is. It is psychotic. How insane regulations are good. Like, you can't put, like, lead in people's water, but they do that anyway. Some places do. There's. There's pretty simple ones that, you know, we think some. Some are good. We think some are bad. Like. Like, you know, liberals don't like the regulation of marijuana. So if you're a business and, you know you're going to be serving food to people and they say the content of rat feces in the food must be below a certain number, I'm actually okay with that.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
But when they say in order to get certified to clear your restaurant of rat feces, you first have to go. We're only open once a month.
Seamus Coughlin
Correct.
Phil Labonte
You can come down with your paperwork. Unfortunately, if you make any mistake, they'll come back next month. And then once you come in, we'll submit your files to the Rat Feces Assessment Bureau, who will then give them a few months to go through this. They'll get back to you. And then once you have that paperwork, you can then go to city hall and file for your tax permit to get your certification, because it has to go through the tax office to get the final certification. And then once you have that, you can apply for the display permitting, which is required to open your business, which takes another six months. Thank you, and have a nice day. Closed. Worst part is, that person also is earning a salary, and they're also getting all these benefits, and they're going to have. What's the word for the. A stipend at the end of the year or at the end of the service.
Tim Pool
I forget what that's called.
Phil Labonte
Basically, the. The issue we had with the building for our coffee shop was it's a historic building, so any changes has to go through the historic society, which meets once a month.
James Fishback
Interesting.
Phil Labonte
And we were like, okay, well, that shouldn't matter because we don't have much to change. Right. Well, unfortunately, the fire escape door that you have connects to the. It connects into a back portion of the building with stairs, which now means that it's a single floor as far as occupancy goes. Oh, and that means you need access for the handicap to get the second, third, second, and third floors. And so we said, okay, we'll just close that door off and do a new door. Ah, okay. Well, then you have to go to the historic department to alter the building to that degree. So we said, well, then we will, because we don't want anyone going to the second floor. And they said, okay. And then, unfortunately, the Stork Society said, first month, we're gonna have to take a look at this and figure it out the next month. You know, the dude who was supposed to be here to work with us on this isn't here next month. And it went on and on and on until we said, okay, can we just use the elevator in the building to qualify for the handicap requirements? And they said, well, actually, the elevator is a historic elevator, and it's not up to code because it's from 1908, and if you want to get it up to code, you gotta go to the Historical Society. And so we said, okay. And then after basically, like two years of all of this, we just sold the building.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Bye.
James Fishback
Think about the employees you could have employed there, wages they could have earned, the money that we'd have spent in their local community.
Phil Labonte
And the locals told us it was all the same thing. The people who are there and who have businesses, like, worked full time for years to get final approval. Martinsburg is now saying, we're going to relax a lot of this, probably because I've been complaining about it and people are mad at me, but we did. We are still partnering on the shop, so we don't own it anymore, but there will be a shop. So that's awesome.
Mary Morgan
That's exciting.
James Fishback
What are you going to call it?
Phil Labonte
Casper Coffee. Cool. Yeah, it's our coffee company. We have. We have a bunch on the way. I can't speak too much, but this stuff takes forever. There's like, if you want to start a franchise company, it's like a year of federal regulation before you're allowed to do anything. It's psychotic. And I don't think it's an accident. I think the US Government intentionally uses regulation to stifle business on purpose.
James Fishback
Agreed.
Phil Labonte
I think that the government's attitude is we don't want a certain. We don't want too much growth. Growth. And I'd Imagine the argument is if we grow too rapidly, we can create a period of instability where if we can't sustain that growth, we can retract too rapidly. So let's sludge everything up so we can make sure it only grows a little bit over time. I think they do it to. I think they won't tell you this. They'll constantly talk about how they want to hit good numbers, but they want to slog up the system intentionally.
James Fishback
Yeah, well, they definitely. They want growth, but they don't want high volatility growth. They don't want GDP of 10% then GDP of negative 9.0.
Phil Labonte
So they want to control it.
Seamus Coughlin
Correct.
Phil Labonte
Federal Reserve. They want to control the flow of money. They want to control population. So you know what happens to any species when they. They reach the maximum point of resource distribution? They become sickly and starve. So if you take a look at the deer population in Aria last year, the deer were all starving because people weren't hunting them.
James Fishback
Okay.
Phil Labonte
You ended up with this massive deer population. They ate all the food, right? And then although they had this massive population, they were all sickly and starving. So the idea is if humanity grows to the point where we strain all of our resources, we reach parity with resource. We all become angry, sickly and starving because there's enough to get to that population. So powers that be in the US Government are like, no, no, no. We should always make sure growth can't exceed a certain amount of excess. So they will restrict you intentionally. And they probably. I believe they use regulations for that on purpose.
James Fishback
Yep. They definitely do it because businesses want them to do it too, because they want to get rid of their competition. You know, what does it say? When I got my hair cut in college, I got my hair cut from a roommate who lived down the hall and he charged eight bucks. The barber shop charged $60. That was down the street. And so of course, you want to create a regular. Let's map out this week's amazing destinations and travel tips.
Unknown
Honestly, Will, I didn't plan any trips, but I did switch to T Mobile with their new Family Freedom offer.
Mary Morgan
That's not the itinerary we're following.
Unknown
Well, I'm departing from AT&T and embarking on a new journey with T Mobile. They paid off my family's four phones up to $3200 and gave us four new phones on the house.
James Fishback
Bon voyage.
Tim Pool
Introducing Family Freedom. Our lowest cost. Will switch our biggest family savings all on America's largest 5G network. Visit your local T Mobile Location or learn more@t mobile.com familyfreedom. Up to $800 per line via virtual prepaid card. Typically takes 15 days. Free phones via 24 monthly bill credits with finance agreement. EG. Apple iPhone 16, 128 gigabyte $829.99 eligible trade in EG IPH for well qualified credits end and balance due. If you pay off earlier, cancel contact T Mobile.
James Fishback
It says that that guy is going to charge 8 bucks. Has to go through 1800 hours of barber training and all sorts of nonsense.
Phil Labonte
I want to do a quick review for the Fast and the Furious for the Fantastic Four.
Mary Morgan
Oh, yeah.
Phil Labonte
I don't know why I said that.
James Fishback
It's because natural alliteration with the F.
Phil Labonte
Well, no, it's because I like that movie better.
James Fishback
Okay.
Phil Labonte
And I'm a huge.
James Fishback
You don't like this one, do you?
Phil Labonte
Oh, this was one of the worst movies I've ever seen. It is one of the worst movies I've ever seen. Pedro Pascal was the worst casting choice imaginable. It is the most miserable acting I've ever seen. I like Pedro Pascal in a lot.
James Fishback
Of stuff I didn't really.
Phil Labonte
And they. And they overuse him. Yeah. So I'm not going to spoil the film for you. It's. It's mostly spoiled already because there's no story. The movie is a two hour long trailer. And what I mean by that is when you watch the trailer and it jumps from plot to plot, like, because they're not trying to tell you the full story.
Seamus Coughlin
Right.
Phil Labonte
That's two hours of this. So without spoiling, I'll give you an example. The movie starts with a montage explaining who they are. The next scene is a minute of them being like, we're having a baby. I'm not spoiling. That's actually in the trailer. Then it's a montage of superhero nonsense. Unrelated plot points. Then you get a scene where in the trailer, like, I'll put it this way, every everything of the movie that you've seen in the like, the movie is the trailer. What you saw in the trailer is the movie. There's nothing else. Thank you and have a nice day. Shala Ball arrives. That's the name of the Silver Surfer, which is again, in the trailer, she says, I herald his beginning. I herald your end. I herald Galactus. And then they go, oh, man. Montage. Basically every time something happens, you get a voiceover showing a bunch of stuff happening in a time shift. There's probably 20 or 30 voiceover montages. Stringing the movie together because there's no actual movie. Reed Richards never uses. He uses his power one time at the end. The Thing uses his powers one time at the end. Human Torch uses his powers quite a bit. Sue Storm does quite a bit. But usually for just like I'm being a woman moments. So like, I don't want to spoil plot points, but basically, mostly when you see her user powers, it's because of some like, she's embarrassed about something or angry and she turns invisible, like naturally fighting. And then a good example is basically it's like, Galactus is coming. What do we do? And reads like, I don't know. And then all of a sudden it goes, the Fantastic Four did a bunch of stuff and things happened. And then it shows him getting on a spaceship and they're like, let's go faster than light. Then they go faster than light and it's like, okay. Then they're at Galactus again. This is all in the trailers. Then Galactus is like, I'm evil. And they go, oh, run. And like, I'm like, why? What's happening? Why? Why is, why is any of this going on? And then they go back to Earth and they're like, we are going to die. And everyone's like, why? And it's like, I don't know. And I was like, okay. And then they're like, how do we stop Galactus? And then he's like, I have a plan. And then they have a plan that makes no sense and has nothing to do with the movie. And then it time skips and it goes, all of the nations of the world had a plan for Galactus. And then the Silver Surfer fights and doesn't make sense. Then Johnny is like, I don't get too much too spoilery, but he like is talking to the Silver Surfer for some reason, which has no impact on the plot. And then at the end, they never defeat Galactus and the movie ends and you don't really know what happened or why.
James Fishback
And then coming up, you think they set it up?
Seamus Coughlin
Yes, well.
Phil Labonte
And then there's an after credit scene in which you see a green cloak and that's it.
Seamus Coughlin
So the, the green cloak part, the Reed Richards is supposed to be the new leader of the, the New Avengers and the green cloak is Dr. Doom, who's played by Danny Jr. If this is a flop, if this movie doesn't go, I don't see how they're going to have Pedro Pascal.
Phil Labonte
It's getting, it's getting great reviews.
Seamus Coughlin
Is getting great reviews.
James Fishback
This is part of MCU.
Phil Labonte
Yes, but they're in a standalone universe. Universe 828, which is Jack Kirby's birthday, I guess.
James Fishback
But it's. It's the.
Phil Labonte
That's what they did at the end of the movie, though.
James Fishback
Marvel Studios, though.
Phil Labonte
Yes.
James Fishback
And they put together that crap.
Phil Labonte
This is like. I'd love to spoil it to a certain degree, but the easy way I could explain it is that, you know, like, in a lot of movies, like Fast and the Furious is a good example. Dom is washing his car, and then, like, the rock pulls up and he goes, dom, a super spy has stolen a submarine. And he's like, we're on it. And you're like, oh, okay, a thing happened. And then he gets in the car, then he goes to the airport, then he gets on a plane. Then he meets with the CIA and Mr. Nobody. And Mr. Nobody's like, we're gonna use you, Dom, to stop this bad guy. And you're like, following a chain of events. This movie was a thing happens, and then a voiceover montage explains something else happens, and then a thing happens. Like, why did they go to outer space? None of it makes sense. There's no story whatsoever. Okay, I'm gonna partially spoil this because it's the key unique plot element from the comics, which is already well known and is already in all. On all the forums. Galactus wants their baby. They don't explain why. It makes literally no sense. And they're. And it's just like. Galactus is like, I will have your baby. There's only one point in the film that I really liked, and it was just one line from Vanessa Kirby when Galactus is trying to take the baby and Silver Surfer is there. She goes, johnny, kill her. And I was like, wow, that was awesome. That's the only thing I liked in the whole movie. When Sue Storm orders Johnny Storm to kill the Silver Surfer. Because I'm like, you don't get that in. In the superhero movies from Marvel. Like, the superhero saying. Like, the way she said killer. And then he actually shoots her in the face. I was like, all right. You know, okay. Doesn't do anything to her. But, you know, is that the only.
James Fishback
Redeeming scene, you think it's because she's like.
Phil Labonte
The only thing redeeming about the film is that one point where she's like, I have a baby, and I will kill you if you touch me. The rest of the film just.
James Fishback
Is just pronatalism.
Phil Labonte
It's so bad. It's so insanely bad.
James Fishback
Anything Woke.
Phil Labonte
No, no. It's just really bad. I, I, I, I don't know. I got.
Mary Morgan
Guys, we're starting to remember that we used to have, like, movies that were just bad.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
As opposed to. This is. This is Daredevil, Ben Affleck bad.
James Fishback
Oh, wow. Okay.
Phil Labonte
That's a little bit worse, actually. It. I wanted to walk out. No joke. I'm.
James Fishback
You didn't. You did not leave. You watched.
Phil Labonte
I did not leave.
Mary Morgan
I didn't catch your thoughts on Superman.
Phil Labonte
I liked it.
Mary Morgan
You liked Superman?
Phil Labonte
Yeah, Superman. I give, like, a B. I think it was a generic Superman story. And if you like Superman and the Lex stuff, it was very basic. Wasn't woke, wasn't political, wasn't about immigration. It was literally Lex being Lex and being like Superman.
Mary Morgan
And, I mean, James Gunn said it was an immigrant story.
Phil Labonte
So that was. But that was. They, they, they baited him into it.
Mary Morgan
I know, but it's like, shouldn't you be smarter than that by now?
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Mary Morgan
Born Yesterday, this movie.
Phil Labonte
Okay, let me just stress this again. It's not a superhero movie at all. There's no superhero stuff in it. The only superhero stuff is the opening montage where they're like. It opens with a fake TV show documentary about the Fantastic Four to prep the audience for who they are. And then the whole movie is like, There's a weird plot element where, dude, this is the creepiest thing thing. The thing, like, is walking down the street for some reason and then meets a schoolteacher briefly and then leaves and then is in love with her for the rest of the movie. Makes no sense.
Mary Morgan
Was Pedro Pascal believably heterosexual?
Phil Labonte
No, it was. He was awful. It was really bad. And again, I, I, it was a fruit. Well, I don't know about that, but he's not Reed Richards. And it was poorly, poorly done. Like, it, it was like watching, oh, I can't even. I can't. Ben Affleck's Daredevil was better than this. Like, when he's fighting Elektra, at least something is happening. He talked like this the whole time. I was like, what is he doing?
Mary Morgan
He's also in Eddington, which is at the moment.
James Fishback
He's everywhere.
Phil Labonte
He doesn't. They don't use their powers ever. I'm like, when will Mr. Fantastic actually be fantastic? Never. Dr. Doom is not in it. The, the, the, the end credit scene makes literally no sense because Sue Storm does, like, a lightsaber thing with her, with her powers. I was like, why is she doing. What is she. What is this? What yeah, like Sue's powers, she makes force fields. And then at the end, when they do the end credit scene, she's like walking into the living room and then she goes with her hand and then you see a green cloak and it just ends. And like, we get it. You're stupid.
Mary Morgan
You don't see Robert Downey Jean, because you can't pay for that.
Phil Labonte
They could have just used a scene from Doomsday. They've already shot with Robert Downey Jr.
Mary Morgan
They're in the middle of shooting it. It's supposed to come out in December next year, and that's after a delay. It was supposed to come out next spring. And they're currently in the process of writing it while filming it.
Phil Labonte
And they don't have.
Mary Morgan
They're not done writing it and they're filming it.
Phil Labonte
It's bad. And the second after credit scene is a waste of your time. Don't even bother watching it. It's not.
Mary Morgan
Believe people even. Like, that's just terrifying that, like, you can brainwash people into sitting there past the credits twice.
Phil Labonte
You know, what's remarkable to me is you can just look at what they did with Iron Man, Hulk, Captain America, Thor, and understand why it worked and how the MCU was working. You make a standalone movie about the character. It is an origin film. And then at the end, the after credit scene promos the next movie. They then realized with Guardians of the Galaxy, they were like, hey, James Gunn recently did an interview where he said. I was like, can we just say other things in the movies are Infinity Stones? And they were like, oh, okay. And so we have these after credit scenes. We can now combine them and do the Infinity Gauntlet thing. And it. They. They. They had all these standalone movies and they brought them together. Now every single movie is just like the end credits scene is fan service. That doesn't mean anything for any other movie. They're not. They're not previewing anything. But I just. I just gotta say, I wanted to walk out. It's one of. There's only. It's. It's. I would argue that it's worse than Last Jedi.
James Fishback
Really?
Phil Labonte
Yeah. Yeah, yeah. Was it. Was it Last Jedi? Yeah, yeah. Last Jedi was where Holdo did the Holdo maneuver. And it was like, you know, what was it? Admiral? Gender Studies?
Seamus Coughlin
Yep, yep.
Phil Labonte
Like, the thing about that.
James Fishback
What?
Seamus Coughlin
The whole second act was completely and totally unnecessary. They went to the. The casino planet and they were just crapping on capitalism and rich people.
Phil Labonte
I would. I gave this a 3 out of 10. I think that's probably being generous. The reason. So the thing about Last Jedi is that Snoke dies, but there's a. There's a story that you're following. This movie has no story. It makes. It's nothing.
James Fishback
Did you find the Palpatine thing believable, though, at the very end?
Phil Labonte
No, no, that was Rise of Skywalker. Skywalker, which is also really bad. But Jedi was worse than both of them.
James Fishback
Okay, Yeah.
Phil Labonte
I can't believe how bad it was. Just read.
James Fishback
Killing Snoke was a good scene, though.
Phil Labonte
I made no sense and it kind of ruined it. But to be fair, the sequel movies were garbage anyway. That made no sense. So whatever. But I don't recommend this film. I recommend you wait till it comes out if you truly want to see it. It's not a Fantastic Four movie. It. Johnny doesn't even burn his clothes. Like, it's. Yeah. Like, one of the things about Johnny Storm is that he's on fire. Nope, not in this movie. Like, he can. He picks people up. They're not burned.
James Fishback
What?
Phil Labonte
Yeah.
Seamus Coughlin
While he's on fire?
Phil Labonte
Yes.
Seamus Coughlin
This is ridiculous.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. Yeah, nice. He's on fire and he's, like, carrying kids around and saving people. But there's no real superhero stuff. Yeah, it's. It, it's just. It's. It's so bad. It's remarkably bad. They dated Galactus 30. They did Galactus Real dirty, man. He's Galactic Galactus in the movie. Is. Is. Is like. I put his IQ at 73.
James Fishback
Oh, wow. Room temperature. Yeah.
Mary Morgan
Did you, did you watch Thunderbolts?
Phil Labonte
Yes.
Mary Morgan
Why do you keep going back to the MCU like a battered housewife? Like, why do you keep expecting it to be good? It's.
Phil Labonte
Well, it's. I, I. We also saw Superman, and it's because depending on the films we go see them, the ones we did, we didn't see was Final Reckoning, which I wanted to see. I'll see that when it comes out on video. But I go see. I go see big movies that are. That are culturally relevant, expected to be significant with Doomsday coming out. This is supposed to. Okay, so at the end of Thunderbolts, the Fantastic Four ship breaks into the mcu. Not in the movie at all. Nothing. Nothing. And everyone's going. But the ship in, in that movie has three. You know, three. What you call it nacelles. And in the Fantastic Four trailer, it's got four. So, so what is this ship? And then people are showing, like, the chalkboard in Fantastic Four where you can see diagrams of wormholes. And they're like, whoa. Reed Richards develop jobs, Internet, interdimensional travel. And this is what's going to lead to. Nope, none of that never happens. The movie was miserable. I thought what was going to happen is Galactus is going to destroy the planet. And again, this is in the trailers. So in the trailers, Galactus wants their child and he refuses to give them up. What I thought was going to happen is Dr. Doom was going to be in the film Robert Heney Jr. And he was going to say, you have to give up your child. Don't destroy our Earth. And I thought the movie was going to end with Galactus destroying the planet and Dr. Doom chasing after him, being like, you let our entire planet die for yourselves and then tried escaping to another Earth where you could live out your lives. I thought that would be his motivations. Nope.
James Fishback
Nope.
Phil Labonte
Anyway, we're gonna read your chats, smash the like button, share the show with everyone you know. Rumble.com Timcast IRL for the Uncensored Call In show coming up at 10. If you'd like to call in, become a member of our discord@timcast.com but for the time being, let's just read what you guys have to say. In the old chats. S.H. wilder says, do we think anything is going to come of the DOJ Strike Force investigation of Obama or is it going to be a case of, as Mary would say, nothing ever happens, which is to say that nothing ever changes? Yes, Mary's correct.
James Fishback
Correct.
Mary Morgan
I'm glad everyone's coming around. Feels good.
Phil Labonte
I don't, I don't know if I actually would give that 100% because Trump got arrested and nobody believed that could happen.
James Fishback
Nobody believes.
Phil Labonte
So there's a possibility, especially if the argument is Trump is in the Epstein files and he's becoming desperate, then wouldn't the liberal argument be that Trump will do anything to prevent the release, including a mass distraction of, say, arresting Obama?
Seamus Coughlin
Maybe. I was thinking, actually, I don't have a lot of faith that Obama will get arrested, but I do think that it's more likely that someone like Clapper or Brennan or Comey might see some kind of ramifications, but I don't know what. And I don't think that it's going to be jail time.
Mary Morgan
I believed it was just a rhetorical distraction. I didn't. I don't see Obama getting arrested in our future.
Seamus Coughlin
Matt Taibbi seems to believe that there's a lot of there there. And Matt Taibbi is not particularly partisan. You Know, he's not a guy that was, you know, would be a Trump cheerleader. Right. But yeah, I'm still of the opinion that because there's no specific statute that they can point to that was, that was broken or violated, the Republicans don't have the gumption to do, like Tim was mentioning earlier, and, and actually create something which, I mean, if you're, if you're, if you believe that what's good for the goose is good for the gander, they absolutely should.
James Fishback
But no one's against the. No one's above the law.
Phil Labonte
Right.
Seamus Coughlin
No one's above the law.
James Fishback
Obama said it. Every single Democrat said it. If he committed a crime, he should be charged and convicted. It's that simple.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah, I don't, I'm not. Just not sure what the crime is.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Seamus Coughlin
You know, what the statute is.
James Fishback
And if you go, the FBI could always call him in and have him just interrogate him for eight hours and he'll lie to a federal agent at some point. There's a statute for that.
Seamus Coughlin
I'd love to see it. You know, I don't know that it will, but I'd love to see it.
Phil Labonte
Let's grab this. We got j huge. Please read. I need help. I've had five lung collapses in 1.5 years. Surgery is in September, but can't afford it. Asking listeners to help no gives and go, but cash app is Jennifer Huig he Please help. Love the show, y'. All. Best of luck. That's H u I g H e you. Sorry to hear about it. All right. Guardian says California Kaiser Insurance is not covering sex changes anymore. But how many kids are going to die?
Seamus Coughlin
Zero.
Phil Labonte
Oh, okay. Well, I'm not mad anymore. I identify as tax exempt. Says the new south park is a fine example of the difference between forced and organic creativity. Yeah, I think I got to call Seamus and be like, can we do a parody of the south park parody where we actually make fun of Trump in a way that's funny that people.
James Fishback
Will get do it with AI. It's really easy. Make music with it.
Phil Labonte
Right. Well, Seamus does this every week.
James Fishback
It's true.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. I just make one. All right. Shane Wilder says Matt and Trey aren't stupid. When you're given $1.5 billion, told to mock Trump, you'll do it even if it's the tired humor of a 12 year old boy. Even if it tanks, they get paid. You know, it's easy for me to say that I wouldn't do it because, you know, we're successful here. I'VE got money or whatever, but I think, man, 1.5 billion. I think I'd have to do it. You know what I mean? Because with $1.5 billion, seriously, $10 million can fund a massive newsroom which would greatly benefit this country. And, you know, in a positive way.
Seamus Coughlin
Run it into the ground. I'm sure the show. Because I have no idea how to make a South park comedy.
James Fishback
But yeah, he had a better sketch with some of that stuff with the files and going down into the basement. That was.
Seamus Coughlin
Tim's got an incredible imagination.
Phil Labonte
Mecca Epstein.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Or. Or just Epstein's alive.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
And then they could have made Epstein, like, and Trump friends. And then, you know, like, that's the whole play in the. In the press that they were buddies. And then Trump says, no one can find out that I smuggled Epstein out of the jail and I'm keeping him alive or something like this. I don't know. There's tons of things to make fun of.
James Fishback
Cartman waving the binder would have been cute too, right?
Phil Labonte
Yep. Having Stan, Colin, Cartman like, holding up the binders and I'm saying, going to.
James Fishback
Look for the Epstein files in Pambot on her desk where she said they were.
Phil Labonte
Huh. And her desk is a mess.
James Fishback
Yeah. And then a bunch of makeup and lipstick and Fox News scripts, Right?
Phil Labonte
Yeah, Fox News.
James Fishback
That'd be hilarious.
Phil Labonte
Yep. Yeah. Or her desk is just a. He goes into her office, and her desk is literally just a makeup desk.
James Fishback
That's it.
Phil Labonte
There's no files at all.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah.
James Fishback
It's just a giant mirror she's doing.
Seamus Coughlin
Is just, you know, pruning herself.
Phil Labonte
They weren't even trying. The funny thing is, like, even Trump supporters would laugh at that. What if Matt and Trey were like, we like Trump, so we'll take the money and then just do a really bad job. Job.
James Fishback
Yeah.
Phil Labonte
All right, what else do we got here? Crash Bandit says, show me the list, then show me the bank records. Then let us figure it out for ourselves. That too much to ask? Indeed. L. Smith says south park could easily make a bromance makeup breakup saga with Elon and Trump. Town can be mad about milk and eggs and solve it on their own. Easy. 30 million, please. I mean, so the. Look, if they're gonna keep doing this where they keep making fun of Trump. They did it with Garrison. Now they're doing Trump directly. Conveniently, after being given $300 million a year, there's so much stuff to make fun of. That's not tiny penis.
James Fishback
Yes.
Phil Labonte
And full frontal. It's like, maybe the idea was if they show the full frontal, nobody would wanna watch it.
James Fishback
Well, they also mock him for his weight, too. We didn't talk about that either. They made this giant fat Trump guy.
Phil Labonte
I can't play the video on YouTube because they have a morbidly obese, 300 pound Donald Trump, fully nude and crawling through the desert, and then he looks down at his dick for 30 seconds.
Mary Morgan
Just listening to you talk about it is funnier than the actual.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, think about that.
James Fishback
Think about that.
Phil Labonte
But the joke here is how pathetic it is. You know what I mean? When you actually watch it, you're like wincing the whole time, like, well, I don't want to see this. Like, Trump gets naked and then goes, come on, Satan. Satan's like, it's too small. Hey, hey, I'll sue you. It's like, we get it. He said, I'm Hussein. This is the joke you did in 2003 or whatever. Just, just. They should. CBS should give Seamus $1.5 billion.
Seamus Coughlin
I agree.
Phil Labonte
Yeah. All right. Identifies tax exempt. Says, that's not the first ring video from that porch. It was an. It was in another one a few months ago, but I don't remember the context. I recognize the architecture in the background. Fox463 says, I'm in the hospital with my wife and baby boy three. Please welcome Luke Thomas Fox to the world. Right on. The one thing that I liked about that, only the one scene in Fantastic Four is when. So basically, again, it's in the trailer. Reed Richards is like, he wants my child, but I won't give it up. That's. That's literally the trailer. So when. When Sue Storm is like, kill her. It was the only actual believable acting in the whole movie where I was like.
Mary Morgan
Like, it's because she's pregnant in real life, that's why.
Phil Labonte
She is, yeah.
Seamus Coughlin
Now she is. Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Oh, really? When she was acting, I believe she.
Mary Morgan
She was pregnant for some of the scenes.
Seamus Coughlin
Maybe some of them, yeah.
Phil Labonte
It's pretty remarkable how, like, it's such a pathetically bad plot. The plot is they have to give their son to Galactus, otherwise the Earth is destroyed.
Mary Morgan
Someone we know is actually staying at the same hotel as Pedro and Vanessa Kirby at the moment. And there are rumors flying that they've got some.
James Fishback
Let's map out this week's amazing destinations and travel tips.
Unknown
Honestly, Will, I didn't plan any trips, but I did switch to T Mobile with their new family freedom offer.
Mary Morgan
That's not the itinerary we're Following.
Unknown
Well, I'm departing from ATT and embarking on a new journey with T Mobile. They paid off my family's four phones up to $3200 and gave us four new phones on the house.
James Fishback
Bon voyage.
Tim Pool
Introducing family freedom. Our lowest cost will switch our biggest family savings all on America's largest 5G network. Visit your local T Mobile location or learn more@t mobile.com FamilyFreedom up to $800 per line via virtual prepaid card. Typically takes 15 days. Free phones via 24 monthly bill credits with finance agreement eg Apple iPhone 16128 gigabyte $8,229.99 Eligible trade in eg IPH for well qualified credits end and balance due if you pay off early or cancel contact T Mobile sort of thing going on.
Mary Morgan
And I'm like, who's going to tell her.
Phil Labonte
Pedro Pascal is the worst, worst choice for Reed Richards. What were they thinking? And for pretty much everything I assume they were. They were. They tried to make what's her face, Brie Larson the Next Robert Downey Jr. And that was stupid. They're probably thinking, we need. We need the. The. The lead guy who's going to replace Robert Downey Jr. And the reason they chose Pedro Pascal for Reed Richards is because Pedro Pascal is so big in Hollywood right now and they thought we're going to get the big name to be the lead.
James Fishback
Sure.
Phil Labonte
Who can carry the franchise after our Robert Downey Jr. But he's not it.
Mary Morgan
He's not mentioned the, the question of, like, why Galactus wants the child.
Phil Labonte
I know why. What is in the movie? It makes no sense.
Mary Morgan
What's their reason in the, in the movie.
Phil Labonte
Okay, spoiler alert. He says the only thing he says is he has the power cosmic and can feed and satiate my eternal hunger. Okay, so in the comics, I understand why he wants Franklin Richards in the movie. It makes no sense. And it's like Galactus is going to destroy the Earth. Then only because they went to Galactus does he find out about Franklin Richards and then tries extracting it from her body.
Mary Morgan
The child has the ability to create universes.
Phil Labonte
That's the comic.
Mary Morgan
Okay, And.
Phil Labonte
And Galactus wants his universe back.
Mary Morgan
And none of that is explained.
Phil Labonte
No, in the movie. In the movie, he simply says he. He. He, like, he basically says, he will inherit my throne and end my insatiable hunger. It's stupid. It was pathetic. It would have actually been good if they filed the comics. And he said, my universe was destroyed and now I am this thing Your son can bring back my universe. They could have done so much clever stuff that it was just miserably bad. It was bad. Anyway, I'd love to spoil more because of how bad the ending was. Like, the end. The ending is so bad. It's just ridiculously bad. I wanted to leave so bad, man. All right, one evil chef says update for culture War. The fat electrician is coaching angry cops on how to beat arguments about communism and anarchy from Michael Malice. Though, if you open the invitation, Nick the Fed electrician would probably make it more entertaining. Oh, if he wants to come, sure. Absolutely. Who do we get in? Get him in touch with, I'll shoot him. Sean, you got him. All right. Absolutely. Donnie Rock says, Tim, turtles need skateboards. Ask the ninja ones. Little Turtles. They put them on a fingerboard and then they slide it on, you know, across the ground. Yeah, yeah, Wicked. Free Bird says, Tim. Please read this in the Hulk Hogan voice. Well, rest in peace, Hulk Hogan. People are saying it always comes in threes, but haven't we had five deaths now? Yeah, Chuck Mangioni died, right? Yeah. I can't do a Hulk Hogan voice. I gotta be honest, though. I did just see him. I think I saw him in December when I was at ufc. He didn't look good. He was having a hard time walking. If he was. If he. If he was walking a little bit better, I would have tried to meet him, but I don't want to bother him because he seemed ill. Yeah. There's video of him, like, yesterday, saying he was really tired, he'd been flying between the coasts, and so whatever. And then apparently that was one of the last videos you put on the Internet. But, yeah, his heart stopped. Yep. Trump thinks that your body is like a battery, and if you work out too much, you'll die earlier because you're draining your energy.
Seamus Coughlin
You know, Donald Trump is wrong.
Phil Labonte
He's wrong. So I, I. This. I knew this dude who was morbidly obese once, and I said something like, you know, a candle that burns twice as bright last half as long. And then he was like, whoa. Really? And I was like, this is a saying. And he was like, oh, yeah. Like, he was thinking, wow, by being lazy and overweight, you know, I'm. I'm saving my. And that's not what I was saying, dude. That's not what I was saying at all. And so people have asked this question. If your heart has only a certain amount of be beats till you die, wouldn't exercising with a really high heart rate make you die? Faster. And the answer is no, because a fit heart beats less. So when you. When you exercise, you increase your heart rate and do diminish a certain number of beats. But then for the rest of the week, your heart is beating very slow. I don't know if I should be alarmed by this, but, like, three days ago, my resting heart rate was 38.
Seamus Coughlin
Nice.
Phil Labonte
Is that good?
Seamus Coughlin
That's very good.
Phil Labonte
It's getting really low.
James Fishback
Low.
Seamus Coughlin
Yeah, very low.
Mary Morgan
What is it supposed to be?
Phil Labonte
The average person, I think, is 60.
Mary Morgan
The average, but then the ideal is 40. 40?
Phil Labonte
Yeah. That means you're fit. And so 40 was normal for most of humanity for men because they were always working and being fit. Now it's like getting upwards of 80.
Seamus Coughlin
Which is crazy because people are fat right now. It's. AI says the average resting heartbeat for adults is typically between 60 and 100 bpm.
Phil Labonte
Jeez.
Seamus Coughlin
However, a healthy resting heartbeat for most adults falls. Falls between 55 and 85, with the lower end of this range being more favorable. For highly trained athletes, the resting heartbeat can be as low as 40 bpm due to increased cardiovascular efficiency.
Mary Morgan
Being fat is hard.
Phil Labonte
Yesterday I was 46, and it gave me a warning because it's above 45, and that's atypical for me. Wednesday was 41, 44, and then I got pretty worried because it was like, 40. Yeah, there was. There was this funny thing online where everybody was posting their. Their watches showing their resting heart rates. Yeah, they were like, look at mine, look at mine. I'm fit. I'm in shape.
Seamus Coughlin
The Michael Malice and Angry Cops is on the second, correct?
Phil Labonte
Yes.
Seamus Coughlin
Just want to make sure.
Phil Labonte
And we've got, I think for Gavin McInnes and Matan Evan, we have Pisco, the liberal lawyer who'll be joining us. And if you guys know anything about Pisco and his last appearance, you are going to very much enjoy him versus Gavin McInnes. This is going to be very, very fun. Funny. I don't know what my ton's gonna do. I imagine it'll be very funny as well. But this Saturday, D.C. and then do you guys know if we have the afterparty set up, or is that set up supposed to be like a hundred people only Tim cast members. Yeah, it's gonna be fun. Let's. Let's grab one more here. What do we got from Diesel Super Jits? Ledla says south park bit. Trump refuses to release the Epstein files because there's a picture of Trump bald in them. And they try to find it, but then figure out that Trump's toupee is an alien that was controlling Epstein the whole time. I mean, honestly, that's better than what they did.
James Fishback
Not particularly funny, but it's way better than what they did.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, it actually would be funny if the Epstein files has. It's. It was like Epstein at a party that Trump was at, and Trump's fake hair fell off, and that's the only reason he doesn't want it released. And they find out. And then Trump complains that if people find out that his hair isn't real, you know, it'll. It'll ruin his chances in the midterms. They could have made fun of him for any one of these things.
James Fishback
I know.
Phil Labonte
And said they were like, picture of.
Mary Morgan
Trump in a T shirt. You can't.
Seamus Coughlin
Can't.
Mary Morgan
You can't even visualize it, really.
Phil Labonte
I don't think I'm in a polo, though, a lot. Do you think Trump has ever walked a mile?
Mary Morgan
Yeah. Wait, what?
Phil Labonte
Do you think Trump has ever walked a mile?
Seamus Coughlin
If probably not.
Mary Morgan
Yeah, sure. Yeah.
Phil Labonte
Golfing golf carts. I. I'd be willing to bet that Trump.
James Fishback
Continuous mile.
Phil Labonte
Yeah, Continuous mile, straight.
James Fishback
It's probably harder because people have debated.
Phil Labonte
This before because he's. He's been wealthy his whole life.
Tim Pool
Life.
Phil Labonte
And so he probably walks out of a building in New York and gets right into a car.
James Fishback
Sure.
Phil Labonte
He. But of course he's walked a mile. I mean, how is it possible that he didn't?
James Fishback
Well, he has. It's just a question of when's the last time he did it.
Phil Labonte
Right.
James Fishback
Last 10 years.
Phil Labonte
No.
James Fishback
Miles straight.
Phil Labonte
Walking through New York.
Mary Morgan
Maybe stays at a svelte £220.
Phil Labonte
That's right, a svelte. All right, everybody, smash that, like, button. Share the show with everyone. You know, we're gonna go to rumble.com timcast irl for the uncensored call in portion of the show. You don't want to miss it. You can follow me on X and Instagram at Timcast. James, you want to shout anything out?
James Fishback
Yeah. So we just launched our anti DEI ETF spxm. It's available anywhere you buy stocks. As I mentioned earlier, Phil, it's a way to buy the S&P 500, minus the 38 companies, Nike, Starbucks, Airbnb and Intel that are doubling down on DEI hiring quotas that are stupid but also hurt your portfolio. So we're proud to launch it. And we sued the Fed today.
Seamus Coughlin
Oh, yeah.
James Fishback
Sued the Federal Reserve and Federal court today. Just got on the way over here. I learned that we have a hearing first thing Monday morning. We sued them, Mary, because they are hiding behind this weird exemption that says they don't have to actually conduct their business in public. Every other federal agency, ftc, fcc, CFTC is required to conduct official business with public observation. The Fed doesn't do that. They have a meeting next week, Phil. They've been, as President Trump has said, too late. They're refusing to lower rates from 20 year highs. So we sued them in federal court this morning. Azoria v. Powell is the lawsuit and we're suing them to make clear that next week's meeting to demand that next week's meeting be happen happen in public. In public view.
Seamus Coughlin
I have a question that I'll ask you after the when we get to the to the uncensored part. So sure.
Mary Morgan
All right. You guys can go subscribe to Pop culture crisis on YouTube and also rumble and we go live every Monday through Friday at 3pm Eastern. You can send me validation on Instagram at Mary Archived. Or you can send me Hate on X that is also Mary Archived and help me get TikTok famous that is also Mary Archived.
Seamus Coughlin
I am Phil that remains on Twix. The band is all that remains. You can follow the band on Apple Music, Amazon Music, Pandora, Spotify, YouTube and Deezer. Don't forget the left lane is for crime.
Phil Labonte
We will see you all over@rumble.com TimCastirl in about 30 seconds. Thanks for hanging out.
Timcast IRL Podcast Episode Summary
Title: South Park Runs FULL FRONTAL Of Trump In Gross Parody After $1.5B Paramount Deal w/ James Fishback
Host: Timcast Media
Release Date: July 25, 2025
In this episode of Timcast IRL, host Phil Labonte engages in a robust discussion centered around the newly released South Park episode that parodies former President Donald Trump. The conversation delves into the implications of Paramount's $1.5 billion deal with the creators of South Park and explores broader themes of political satire, media strategies, and current legal battles.
Phil Labonte opens the discussion by critiquing the recent South Park episode, questioning the effectiveness and originality of its portrayal of Donald Trump.
Phil Labonte [00:42]: "...the jokes were old. 10 years old. They don't make fun of Trump. They don't make fun of administration, they don't make fun of politics. They literally just have Trump be Saddam Hussein and then they say he has a tiny wiener..."
Labonte argues that the episode lacks depth, recycling outdated humor without addressing current political issues or Trump's policies. He speculates that the substantial financial investment by Paramount is part of a larger strategy by the anti-Trump media to co-opt edgy and independent voices for political gain.
Phil Labonte [08:56]: "...if they offered you $1.5 billion to do this, would you do it? I think I'd have to do it. Because with $1.5 billion, seriously, $10 million can fund a massive newsroom which would greatly benefit this country..."
James Fishback, the founder of Azoria, joins the discussion to introduce his anti-Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion (DEI) investment firm and their newly launched ETF, SPXM.
James Fishback [03:12]: "...we started an ETF that invests only in S&P 500 companies that hire on merit. Crazy idea."
Fishback criticizes DEI policies, arguing that they prioritize ideology over business functionality, leading to poorer stock performance. He highlights that his ETF excludes 38 companies deemed to underperform due to their DEI hiring quotas.
James Fishback [04:36]: "...the research we did, Phil, is the 38 companies in the S&P 500 that have these woke DEI policies... They've underperformed the stock market by 20 points over the last two years."
The podcast touches on the recent appellate court decision striking down Trump's executive order on birthright citizenship and ordering the release of Kilmar Abrego Garcia from criminal custody.
Phil Labonte [32:23]: "...garcia has been ordered released. Wow..."
The hosts express frustration over perceived leniency in immigration enforcement, questioning the effectiveness of the Trump administration's policies and the broader judicial system's handling of such cases.
A significant portion of the discussion revolves around the elusive Epstein files, exploring allegations linking political figures like Trump and Obama to Jeffrey Epstein.
Mary Morgan [23:58]: "...the substance of the issue is a blackmail ring that allegedly controls the policies and statements and votes of all of our leaders."
The conversation delves into the complexities of releasing sensitive information, the potential for unfounded accusations, and the political implications of such revelations.
The hosts discuss the problematic nature of AI, specifically referencing incidents where AI chatbots generate false information or defame individuals based on misleading inputs.
Phil Labonte [50:49]: "...Gunther Eagleman is like, you are wrong. I did not kill anybody. And it was like arguing with him..."
They highlight the dangers of AI validating false claims and the broader implications for misinformation in the digital age.
James Fishback shifts the focus to the agricultural industry's automation, linking it to immigration policies. He suggests that the push for replacing illegal immigrant farm workers with robots is a strategic move to mitigate social unrest and economic disruption.
James Fishback [47:35]: "...they're gonna replace them with robots. If you just said, we are going to fire our farm workers or replace them with robots, you'd have riots. But replacing them slowly with illegal immigrants reduces protests."
The discussion emphasizes the economic and social efficiencies of automation while critiquing the reliance on immigrant labor as a crutch.
The podcast addresses the alarming rise of dangerous social media challenges, such as the "Door Kick Challenge," where individuals pose threats with airsoft guns, leading to potential real-life violence.
Phil Labonte [65:26]: "...they look real and they sound like something. And they try to rob somebody on the New York subway... Do not do this. It is only gonna end with bad things for everyone involved."
The hosts stress the urgent need for societal intervention and stricter regulations to curb these perilous trends.
Phil Labonte and James Fishback discuss President Biden's unprecedented exit from the 2024 race and the resulting plummet in Democratic poll numbers, reflecting deeper issues within the party.
Phil Labonte [86:56]: "...Democrat poll numbers hit rock bottom. It's pretty obvious that...the only way to recover is to abandon gender ideology and critical race theory."
They critique the Democratic Party's commitment to progressive ideologies, arguing that such stances alienate mainstream voters concerned with economic stability and practical governance.
The conversation transitions to the detrimental effects of excessive regulation on small and medium-sized businesses. The hosts argue that overregulation serves as a tool for big corporations to stifle competition and maintain market dominance.
Phil Labonte [90:42]: "...regulation is always the friend of big corporations and the enemy of small businesses and entrepreneurs."
They cite personal anecdotes and broader economic trends to illustrate how convoluted regulatory processes hinder business growth and innovation.
The hosts wrap up with a critique of recent film releases, particularly South Park's lackluster parody of Trump and Marvel's Fantastic Four movie. They express disappointment with the perceived decline in storytelling quality and character development.
Phil Labonte [117:38]: "...I'm not going to recommend this film. It's nothing. It's stupid."
The discussion underscores a broader concern about declining standards in mainstream media and entertainment, reflecting frustrations with formulaic and politically driven content.
Towards the end, Phil reads through listener comments, reinforcing the episode's themes and encouraging audience engagement.
Shane Wilder [Last Chat Segment]: "South Park could easily make a bromance makeup breakup saga with Elon and Trump."
The episode concludes with final remarks, reiterating the need for critical analysis of media content, proactive political engagement, and vigilance against societal decay.
This episode of Timcast IRL offers a critical examination of contemporary media portrayals, investment strategies targeting DEI policies, ongoing political and legal battles, the ethical dilemmas posed by AI, and the encroaching influence of automation on the workforce. Through incisive dialogue and expert insights, Phil Labonte and his guests advocate for a return to merit-based systems, heightened political accountability, and vigilant societal safeguards against emerging threats.