Trevor McFedries

#2380 - Jordan Jensen

Jordan Jensen is a comedian, actress, and podcaster. She is the co-host of the podcast "Bein' Ian with Jordan" with comedian Ian Fidance, and host of her own podcast, "RIP Jordan Jensen." Her new comedy special, "Jordan Jensen: Take Me With You," is streaming exclusively on Netflix. Look for her in Bradley Cooper's film, "Is This Thing On?," in theaters December 19, 2025. www.netflix.com/title/81978275 www.youtube.com/@jordanjensenlolstop www.jordanjensencomedy.com Don’t miss out on all the action - Download the DraftKings app today! Sign-up at https://dkng.co/rogan or with my promo code ROGAN. GAMBLING PROBLEM? CALL 1-800-GAMBLER, ([redacted phone] or visit gamblinghelplinema.org (MA). Call 877-8-HOPENY/text HOPENY (467369) (NY). Please Gamble Responsibly. [redacted phone]/visit ccpg.org (CT), or visit www.mdgamblinghelp.org (MD). 21+ and present in most states. (18+ DC/KY/NH/WY). Void in ONT/OR/NH. Eligibility restrictions apply. On behalf of Boot Hill Casino & Resort (KS). 1 per new DraftKings customer. $5+ first-time bet req. Get 1 promo code to redeem discounted NFL Sunday Ticket subscription and max. $200 issued as non-withdrawable Bonus Bets that expire in 7 days (168 hours). Stake removed from payout. Terms: sportsbook.draftkings.com/promos. NFL Sunday Ticket: YouTube TV base plan (not included in this offer) required to watch Sunday Ticket on YouTube TV. Subscription autorenews yearly at then-current price (currently $378 for YouTube TV subscribers, or $480 for YouTube subscribers); cancel anytime. Terms, restrictions, embargoes and eligibility requirements apply. No refunds. Commercial use excluded. Addt’l terms: https://tv.youtube.com/learn/nflsundayticket/draftkings/. Offer ends 9/29/25 at 11:59 PM ET. Sponsored by DK. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices

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Published Sep 17, 2025
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0:01-1:31

[00:01] Joe Rogan Podcast, check it out! The Joe Rogan Experience. Train by day, Joe Rogan Podcast by night, all day! [00:12] Jordan. Hello. What's up? Oh good, I got my legal pad here. Yeah, in case you need to write notes. I'm going to take notes on what you're doing right and wrong. And I'll give them to you at the end. Tell me. Okay, I will. So I can figure out what the wrong stuff is and stop doing it. [00:30] fuck with all this stuff. I know there's so much shit. It's crazy. And people keep giving me new shit. [00:34] I know. I brought a little tiny figurine of a little thing on stage one time, and every single meet and greet, people give me these little tiny animals. And I have this giant collection of them. And I'm like, I don't like these that much. That's the problem. It's like everybody knows that I keep a bunch of shit on this desk, so people give me shit to put on this desk. And now it's getting kind of crazy where I'm going to have to have a shelf. [00:56] I had to get a shelf. I got one of those old typewriter keyboard things. Look, I have like mammoth teeth. This is a piece of art. Oh, somebody gave me one of these. Cut out of a woolly mammoth tooth. Oh, that's a don't blow it. I won't. I got one of these. A Mayan death whistle? Yeah, Aztec death whistle. Brian Callen blew one right before COVID hit. [01:17] I'm not saying he caused it. But there's a lot of videos saying he caused it. I get it. I get it. That would be a death whistle. I think it was technically I think when he blew it, it had already like caught on in China.

1:31-3:03

[01:31] Yeah. Unless we're in a simulation. Right. You're the COVID guy. I was listening to your podcast with... [01:38] What's the woman who got falsely accused? [01:41] - Of what? [01:42] of murdering her roommate. Oh, yeah. I was listening to that one, and I fast-forwarded it one moment, and it went from her being like, and then I was in prison for four years to you being like, well, the bat's been COVID. And I was like, how did we get here? [01:58] Yeah, that was a fascinating podcast. [02:00] Amanda Knox. She's got a Netflix series out right now where someone plays her, which has got to be super fucking weird. Yeah. Someone else plays her in like a dramatization of her getting wrongly accused at 20 years old of a murder where they had all this evidence that this guy who broke into the house fucking murdered her. His DNA was there and they ignored it because they didn't want to admit they were wrong. It's on Hulu. Hulu. Sorry. I don't really get how that happens. Because cops are cunts. [02:30] Right, but did they not check? Did they not see sperm everywhere? Oh no, the guy was like, "I fucked her." No, I don't know what he said. I don't know what happened, but I know that they had a narrative. Oh, that he was in on it. No, no, no. They had a narrative that she did it, that she caused the murder. Right. And the guy started with that and he stuck with it. And even when there was evidence that showed that there was a guy in there, and then the guy did it, and the window was broken, and somebody broke into the house. I'm like... [02:58] And then eventually he came forward and was like, this has nothing to do with her, the guy who did do it.

3:03-4:37

[03:03] Well, I don't think he eventually ever did anything. No, like she actually had a meeting with him, which is crazy. Like after the fact, like forgave him. [03:12] But [03:13] She's a white girl. She got tried twice. [03:16] Twice. I know. The Supreme Court? No, no, no. She got acquitted. She got released, right? And then they retried her in absentia. So she was in America while they were trying her in Italy again. [03:30] And then they said she's fine. Yeah, which is fucking crazy. Why was she in prison for so long? How about give her some fucking money? Also, the guy, Raffaella, was in solitary for six months. Yeah. [03:39] I can't. [03:41] Fathom that. [03:42] Yeah. The six months in solitude is so crazy to me. One day in solitude and I'm done. Well, I talked to a guy – [03:49] That had been in solitary for years. [03:52] What does that mean? Like you shit and piss in there? Yeah. [03:56] Yeah. What? Yeah, you get no contact. [03:59] You must be scrambly after that. 100%. [04:03] I feel like they, yeah, it's got to do some sort of weird brain damage thing where they come out. [04:07] Well, this guy Shaka that we had on the podcast, he was great. Was he normal? Yeah. Well, beyond. Like super smart. He wrote in there, educated himself in there too. Oh, you can read books in there. You can read in there. Yeah, you can read. That's good. Yeah. I mean, they don't just give you nothing, but you do go crazy. You go crazy. Human beings need human contact. Well, it's like when you don't do anything all day and then you get right up on stage. Have you ever done that? Where you don't talk to anybody and you feel insane? Yeah. The worst. The first conversation of the day. It's crazy.

4:37-6:00

[04:37] That's why I always bring friends on the road. You don't want to be like that weirdo in the hotel room by yourself. Yeah. And then you take a nap and the sun goes down while you're napping. That's the worst feeling. That, when I do that, it feels like I'm haunting the audience. Like, I'm like, you guys are in a different reality and I'm intruding on where you're at. The weird one is when you wake up and you don't know what city you're in. [04:58] Yeah, but that's why I got the dog. I was so sick of that feeling. I was so sick of waking up and being like, I've been abducted. Where am I? This place is nicer than my apartment, so that's good. But where am I? And then I saw my dog, and I was like... [05:09] Oh, we're all right. [05:10] That's not the only reason why you got your dog. [05:12] Yeah, and she rules. And she's awesome. She's really sweet. She's very cool. She's so cute. How long have you had her? [05:18] Two years. Oh, that's awesome. Yeah. Was she full grown when you got her? Tiny. Because I wanted to adopt the mom. Oh. But they were like, hey, the mom just had all this. We didn't know she was pregnant. She just had a litter of puppies. Will you take one of these? And I was like, okay. And I had no idea how hard it is to have a puppy. I've had dogs where you adopt them full grown, and it was great. I had this dog named Lucy. She was awesome. She was so sweet. And then I had another dog named Squeaky Fromm that was a real nightmare. [05:45] Maybe it was because I named her Squeaky Fromm after one of the Manson family members. Oh, yeah, that'll happen. She had a squeaky voice. She had been barking so much in the pound that when I got her out of the pound, her voice was like, and then eventually it got...

6:00-7:16

[06:00] normal again because she didn't have to bark 24 hours a day she just had worn out she had worn out vocal cords she had a totally normal bark but i was like oh my god her bark is like a smoker yeah yeah it was like that that's awesome like she was hoarse yeah you don't know what you're gonna get i mean when i got a rescue i was like i'm gonna get a small rescue so i hope it'll be fine but it was such a gamble everybody's like do not do this yeah we had a doberman once it was a rescue that we had to get rid of he had distemper [06:26] And he got really crazy. Like, in that, like, growling at us and barking at us out of nowhere. Yeah. [06:31] And I was a little kid. Oh, you really? And I was like, yo, we got rid of him. [06:36] We had a dog that ate the foot off of my... We had a pit bull that was a rescue, and my mom had this woman move in with us. [06:44] who she was dating and her kids moved into and my pit bull, [06:50] ate the foot off of the wife's cat oh my god the woman's cat oh my god and the woman was like hey you got to like choose between me or this pit bull my mom was like yeah get your cripple cat out of here and we kept oh my god she didn't give a fuck dude she was so attached to that dog that dog the amount of times would just like kill my friend was in the backyard the dog kills a cat and my friend's freaking out she's like we have to find the owner and my mom was like you will stay quiet

7:20-8:52

[07:20] It was nuts. She was obsessed with that dog. That's the only time I've seen her, like, really cry is when a dog dies. [07:26] Yeah, it's hard. They don't live long enough. I can't even think about it. They're your best friends. Yeah. [07:32] I have a dog named Marshall. He's a golden retriever. He's the best. And he's nine now. He'll be nine in a couple of months. And it's just like, oh, no. I've had him since he was a baby. Now he's nine. I'm like, he's only got a few years left. And he's so active. He's super healthy. He eats great. He's fit. He's not... [07:51] Retriever? Yeah. Oh, yeah. [07:53] The small dogs live for it. They get to be like 12, and that's kind of it. 13, maybe 14, and then they're really hurting. It's fucked. It's fucked. Apparently there's a drug that they've developed for dogs, like a longevity drug. [08:08] I don't know if they've released it yet, but I know that it shows promise and extend dogs' lifetime. Whitney Cummings the other day said that – [08:17] Her friend's, like, soul dog died the other day, and she said, when the dog dies, you, like, learn something. [08:23] about yourself that's very important. So I've been holding on to that kind of woo-woo thing. Like she's like, you kind of show up for yourself in a way you need to. [08:32] I don't know if I'd listen to Whitney. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. She does. She gets a little woo-woo-woo. I like how Whitney has something to say about everything, though. [08:40] rapamycin [08:41] Wrap them on ice, take them off. I've heard of rapamycin before because rapamycin is something that Peter Atiyah is a big proponent of for longevity.

8:53-10:33

[08:53] The guy who wants to live forever? No, no, that's Brian Johnson. Another study at Texas A&M University showed rapamycin could extend the lifespan of older dogs by up to 20%. Generally well-tolerated, however, it can cause side effects such as lethargy, lack of appetite. Oh, boy. [09:10] No, you can't do it. Interesting. [09:13] Is that it? Because I think there was something else. It was like a gene therapy. [09:19] let's talk about service titan the ai for the trades the trades are the backbone of this country and for the first time they've got technology that actually matches the work over 10 000 contractors already use service titan software to run their businesses built by two guys whose dads were in the trades this isn't some tech company guessing at solutions now service titan [09:49] workflows, not generic internet data. This is AI designed specifically for contracting work, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and more. It's booking calls while you sleep, dispatching your texts, helping you run your back office, growing your revenue. One platform, fully automated, always learning, always improving. Every other industry is still trying to figure out AI. The [10:19] Learn more at servicetitan.ai. This episode is brought to you by the Farmer's Dog. Here's a fun fact. Research shows that dogs who maintain a healthy weight can live up to two and a half years longer on average than dogs who are overweight.

10:34-12:06

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12:11-13:41

[12:11] to get $200 in rewards within 21 days. That's CodeRogan in partnership with DraftKings. The crown is yours. [12:36] What happened to the cloning thing? What happened to CRISPR? They probably already made clones. But why did we not hear about that? Weren't they cloning sheep and shit? Yep. And then we just stopped hearing about it? Yeah, they probably made a bunch of people already. Yeah, what is that? The people telling you about clones are probably clones. You ever see a person that looks exactly like another person and then you ask them their name and it's the same name? And you're like, no fucking way. You know the story about those two baseball players? [12:57] No. Oh, it's the nuttiest shit of all time. These two baseball players look exactly the same, have the exact same name and never met each other. [13:06] And they both play baseball. Let me see them. Oh, it's bananas. These two guys. Oh, my God. Yeah, like what? What in the fuck? Different parents. Why are they wearing the same glasses? And their name is Brady Feigl, right? So it's not even like a normal name. Yeah, and they both got the same injury. That's how they found out. They were going to the same doctor. Just imagine your name is Brady Feigl, and you meet another guy who's also Brady Feigl. You're both 6'4". You both have red hair. They're both really tall. You both have black glasses. [13:35] You both have the fucking same crazy name. That name is nuts. Maryland and Missouri is not far enough away.

13:41-15:19

[13:41] That's crazy. I think they also, once they found this out, they didn't immediately go meet each other. They waited for like two or three years maybe, I think. Oh, if the guy played baseball and I played baseball, I'd be like, bro, we got to hang out and freak people out. They're different ages. I thought they were the same age. Oh, how old? 32 and 27. Interesting. The first guy must be really pissed. [14:02] This motherfucker stealing my shine. That's bizarre. Yeah. But I just remember hearing so much about cloning. Yeah. And then it just stopped. Well, they do it with dogs. [14:11] They do it with people's pets. Like if you want to get your pet cloned, you can get your pet cloned. That's a real thing now. I think it costs $30,000. [14:19] But then they're cloned at the same age. No, no, no, no, no, no. They're a puppy. [14:24] Nice. Yeah. See, we could do that. You get to start from scratch. Yeah, otherwise you'd have like an 11-year-old. You'd keep like, bring him back. That'd be so mean. That'd be so mean. [14:34] He's got arthritis and diarrhea. He's like, please let me die. For the love of God. You waited too long to clone him. That's, dude, bring him back as a puppy, though. We could do that. Did you see that movie with Demi Moore called The Substance? Okay, I fainted in the theater. Bro. I fainted so hard. Bro, that movie is nuts. [14:54] It's nuts. I'm actually very pro that movie. [14:58] Like, I love the narrative. Oh, it was great. I love the idea of that when you get all that face shit, you're just keeping an old person alive. Yeah. I've tried to describe that on stage so much where I'm like, doesn't it bother you that when people are like, you look good for your age, you're just like... [15:11] hide it like you're concealing your death. Right. You know what I mean? Right. Right. And that movie portrayed that perfectly. Yeah. Where it's just a fucking.

15:19-16:58

[15:19] It's kind of ironic that Demi Moore, who looks insanely good at 62, played that lady. Yeah. You know, because like... [15:26] But I liked that because it showed like... [15:28] Even when you saw her weird old lady butt, you were like, that's Demise Moore's nice butt, but I'm still... [15:35] like in awe of the young girl's butt, which is unacceptable. It's unacceptable. You know what I mean? Like when she was doing the whole dance and you're like, why is this so intense? And you're like, because it's a young person. Right. I think that, [15:47] Did that director do... [15:48] No, that director didn't do raw. [15:50] But it was a female director. I don't know what else this director did, but that movie was awesome. I hit the deck, though. I faint so easily. Do you really? Dude, I just, blood and stuff, I faint. And I muscled through the gory part, and I was like, I'm fucking good. Like, I can't, I've cured it. And then the music, it's like when a movie starts going like, ha, ha, ha, like that, like on both sides. That gets you? I'm like a goat, dude. I got to the bathroom, and I passed out. I'm in New York, just on the ground, fainted. People are walking over my body. [16:20] that's hilarious that's so funny I used to date a girl that when if someone got a needle on the screen she'd faint yeah just like it didn't matter where she was if someone got injected it's so bad her dad had it too my dad has it and her dad was a dentist and she was [16:37] Which is crazy. The dentist makes me faint. When the kid, her brother, got crazy sunburn, like really bad, where he got blisters, the dad saw it and just fucking fainted. Dude, it's crazy. My sister called my dad once and she was working on cadavers. And she was like, I'm so interested in this. We cut into a cadaver today. And she just heard...

16:58-18:50

[16:58] thump on the other line and she's like dad dad oh my god he was done dude he's fainted so many times yeah from a phone call that's so wild he couldn't be in our births or anything oh my god that's crazy crazy [17:13] That's what is that? It's called vasovagal. Okay, but is that a psychological thing? Because it's obviously like your reaction to a thing. I wonder if you can temper that somehow. [17:26] Here's the problem with it. I used to think it was psychological. Me and my dad pictured things too well. We pictured it. Then you were going in. But vasovagal, sometimes I'll be putting an earring in. You just faint? Yeah. You should wear a helmet everywhere so you don't bounce your head off the fucking linoleum. It's so fucked up. So I think it is neurological. Well, I bet. But also triggered by high states of anxiety, right? Yeah. So that's what you would be able to control. [17:56] of anxiety. So, vasovagal response, sudden overreaction of the body's autonomic nervous system to a trigger such as pain or emotional stress... [18:06] or music that causes a temporary drop in heart rate and blood pressure. [18:13] There's a whole part of my special where I talk about me and this guy who was also a fainter having sex. Oh, my God. [18:20] You both fainted? A lot. Nice. Yeah. It's hot. Yeah. It was rough. It was rough. Because when you faint, it comes with sweating and seeing white. Like, it's brutal. And you probably hope the man doesn't faint. Like, he can keep it together. Yeah. That would be, like, a nice thing. Yeah, totally. Like a nice trade. He could faint on command. He could think of something. Oh, that's hilarious. Yeah. That's hilarious. I wonder what would happen if a guy like that got drafted in Vietnam. Done. Faint. That would have gotten taken out. Yeah. That's it. Yeah.

18:50-20:21

[18:50] My dad had a heart attack once and fainted. [18:55] And I saw him in the hospital. I was like, what happened? The heart attack fucked up your face? And he's like, I fainted on a fence. And I was like, that's crazy. Oh, my God. Yeah, he fainted so much. And he was a contractor, so he would always have cuts and stuff and be like, no. [19:08] and be out. It was crazy. That's nuts. Yeah, he jigsawed through his nose one time. Yeah. Because he fainted? No, but then he fainted. He, like, pulled the cord and then it cut through his nose and then he faints. It's crazy. Oh, my God. Oh, my God. I would wear a helmet everywhere if I was that dude. Yeah. I'd just wear a football helmet. It's just like I'm a fan. That's what we have to worry about all the time. Like, if I cut myself, it's not about the cut. Like, the stitches or not. It's that I'm about to hit the deck. It's crazy. It's so fucked up. Have you ever fainted right before [19:38] on stage? [19:40] Because I would think that's like a heightened state of anxiety a little bit, especially in the early days. I've panicked. Well, another problem is I get – I panic when I have really bad intrusive thoughts. Like I was around a famous person recently, and I was convinced I was going to bite – [19:54] bite her. I started getting a full panic, which makes you want to faint. But it's a different thing. But both lead to fainting. I knew a dude who was a warm up guy, you know, just do warm up. And he had a real problem with anxiety. He just would freak out. And he was a comic and just it never worked out for him because his anxiety would just overwhelm him. Yeah. And one time he's warming up for the Cosby show. And he got this idea in his head.

20:21-21:53

[20:21] that he was going to say the N-word. Of course. And he's like, don't say it. Of course. Don't say it. Oh, the Cosby show. Yeah. So he's warming up for the Cosby show. So he's basically in the crowd warming up. Okay, so in the next scene, Dr. Huxtable's going to come in. And all his mind is telling him is, don't say the N-word. He's not going to say it. He was never going to say it. But for whatever reason, he was overwhelmed by this fear of saying the N-word in this very predominantly black audience. [20:51] meltdown while he was doing warm-up. [20:53] Where he was panicking. Full panic attack. With my special taping, I thought I was going to hit somebody with a stool. Mine is violence. Really? I think I'm going to bite. I think I'm going to... Yeah, totally. Or on airplanes, I'm worried I'm going to pull the exit thing off. All the time. Mine is very violent. Or the person next to me, I'm going to... [21:09] bite down on... That's probably a better response than, like, shrieking and [21:14] Yeah. Falling to the ground. [21:16] I know, but I was the famous woman. I was like, I don't want to be the biter. But you wouldn't bite her. I know, but I thought. But I had so long to obsess about it. Can you tell me who it is? It was Laura Dern. Really? You thought you were going to bite Laura Dern? Isn't she an admiral in Star Wars? I love her so much. But she was being so nice to me, and we were sitting next to each other for so long. And I was like, what if I just bit Laura Dern? And my brain was like, you're not. And I was like, but this might be the time that you do the thing. [21:46] and I obsessed so long that I just jumped off. [21:48] I was fine. I landed and was fine. But I still was like, I did the thing.

21:54-23:26

[21:54] Oh, no. So since then, I've been like. How far was the jump? Not far. [21:57] Okay. That's the other thing I have to remember is I waited for the snow to come up and meet the chairlift way closer and then jump. So you want to. Yeah. Yeah, you're not crazy. You're not crazy. Just like a little thrill. Yeah. Just a little bitty thrill. Totally. Like biting her. Think about biting her. She was so nice. Her skin was so Hollywood, you know? I was like, oh, I could really. Her skin was Hollywood. Just so pure, so nice. Interesting. I got bug bites all over. [22:27] in the 90s. Okay. And they were doing some fucking game. They were playing some game. Her and her friends were playing some game with states, like figure out what's the Keystone State, that kind of shit. Yeah. [22:40] And I was helping her. But she was totally normal. Like, we never acknowledged that she's Daryl Hannah at Cantor's Deli. Playing a game. She was, like, super chill. That's so nice. Yeah. Her and her friends were having a sandwich, just laughing and doing some game about states. They're normal as hell. Matt Damon was at the cellar recently, and I couldn't. I was so fucked up. [23:01] I don't know how it was fucking me up so much. I do too many. I microdose too many of my dreams. But I was like, his arms and hands are so Matt Damon's arms and hands. Like, I knew them so well. And he was, like, gesticulating. And I was like, I fucking know those freaking arms. It was crazy. From movies, yeah. Like, just moving. It's weird to know somebody so well and never have spoken to them. It's disturbing. That is odd. Yeah. Your season, your shot.

23:31-24:35

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25:01-26:38

[25:01] NFL Sunday ticket offer for new subscribers only and auto renews until canceled. Digital games and commercial use excluded. Restrictions apply. Additional NFL Sunday ticket terms at youtube.com slash go slash NFL Sunday ticket slash terms. Limited time offer. [25:15] I met Matt Damon in Italy at a restaurant where he was sitting underneath a photo of himself. [25:22] That's weird. [25:24] Did he choose to sit there? No, no, no. The restaurant owner had him there before. It was a nice table. And there's photos all over the wall of celebrities that had been there before. And so Matt Damon went and sat down at the table and... [25:38] where the photo of this owner [25:41] Taking a picture with Matt Damon as... That's some meta shit. That's crazy. He seems really sweet. He's a very nice guy. [25:48] Super normal guy. There's a lot of them that are like super normal. The funniest always hold this thing like I doubt fucking crazy people. There's always like a thing in your head. You're like, they got to be out of their fucking mind. Totally. Yeah. What's the guys? Peter Dinklage. Oh, yeah, I am. Came into the cellar and threw a chicken wing. [26:09] at my friend's chest, just like out of nowhere. Somebody introduced him, like Gillis or somebody. Maybe it was Schultz who was like, oh, this is so-and-so. He's a good comic. And he threw a chicken wing at him. And I was like, that's the most... [26:20] Peter Dinklage... [26:22] Like just basically being a little Renaissance man throwing like his size turkey leg is crazy. It's crazy. A little Renaissance man just being like, away, Jessica. I was like, that's too on the nose. It's crazy. Problem is I knew him first from Elf.

26:39-28:25

[26:39] Oh, yeah. You know? So even though he's the Game of Thrones guy, to me, he's always the angry writer from Elf. I know him from the guy for Weddings and a Funeral or Wedding and a Funeral. I never saw that. I heard it was really good. It's really good. I heard it's really good. I never saw it. It's crazy funny. Yeah. That guy's great. He's great. He was so good in Game of Thrones. Yeah. [26:59] It was so good. That was a complicated role. Yeah. Complicated. That fucking show was so good. The new one, I'm trying to get into it, but like every season is like five years apart from the last one. You have to figure out who is this lady. Dude, Game of Thrones 1, I had to, I was like asking a thousand people. I was like, I don't understand which place is which. I had to like map it out. I could not figure it out. But it's so good. It opened up with the brother and sister. Fucking. That was so sick. I was like, let's ride. And then making a cripple out of the other brother. Yeah, it was crazy. Nuts. [27:29] And the just full-on rape of the Daenerys girl? They cut the fucking head off the king? You're like, no. Yeah. It was crazy. He's the best. He's the best. He's the king. They did a great job. Oh, that fucking show ruled. It was such a good show. Season one was, I mean, not season one, the real Game of Thrones. The new one's like, yeah, it's good. But, you know, you're Jay Leno after Johnny Carson. Yeah, totally. You get attached to the characters. There's a thing. You're just like, aw. [27:59] remember the last season. Oh, the last season was weird. Cersei rules. I was in Croatia. [28:05] And there's the place where they were King's Landing is. Yeah. Like that's where they filmed it. Oh, that's awesome. And they like sort of do tours where they show you where they film certain scenes. Yeah. And one of the scenes is when she was shame, shame. Oh. And she's walking on. The little cobblestone. That's pretty. That's right there. Yeah. You can actually see it.

28:25-29:58

[28:25] That's really cool. It's pretty cool. Yeah, they filmed a lot of shit. We still do those shame things on Twitter. We do the shame, shame, shame. I just went through a horrible Twitter thing last night. Oh, no. Dude, I got dragged. [28:37] - [28:38] You can't read that stuff. I did. Dude, it was a fan hit me up and goes, don't go on Twitter. And I went on Twitter and it was so this crazy out of context thing where I was like talking. I was on Stav's podcast and I was talking about how. [28:51] I was talking about this guy who used the word, I'm not going to say it. [28:55] T-R-A, I don't know how to spell it, N-N-Y? [28:58] Okay. He used that word. And I was being like, that word is so fucking antiquated that at this point to me, it sounds like somebody is just calling like a drag queen that and everybody took it as me saying. [29:10] that trans people are in drag. [29:13] Oh, God. And it, like, dude, it was just, like, went at me. And, like, the crazy thing is I thought I was being woke on that podcast. I had, like, friends of mine being, like, [29:23] Fuck Jordan. Like, it was crazy. Friends of yours. I mean, friendly people, like people I work with. Yeah, those people can go eat shit. Those Pylon people, they can all go eat shit. But that was my, like, first big one. I've had one before, but that was, like. That kind of shit pushes people away from all the things you're trying to promote. [29:43] Like, [29:43] It doesn't mean that people hate trans people if they say something like that. That's not what you're saying. [29:49] I was saying the opposite. I was being like, this guy was such an asshole for using that word. Also, that word is so corny that I feel like at this point it's not even referenced to...

29:58-31:31

[29:58] to transgender people that it's like what we say for drag. Some people still use it. Totally. But it's, uh, [30:06] That's not the point. The point is, what are you trying to do? You're not trying to hurt anybody's feelings. So shut the fuck up. Everybody's just looking for a reason to be offended. [30:16] It's just trying to find anything that they can like. Green light, go. There's no reason. And just pulling it out. No nuance. Yeah, of course. [30:24] It's so crazy. Of course. It was so, and I'm just like reading all of them. And I was like, this is so many people that are just like this dumb bitch. One of them said, this is a fat retard talking to a skinny retard about me and stuff. And I was like, oh, well, that's actually really sweet. That's really nice. So sweet. You're skinny. Yeah, I love being skinny. Yeah, well, this is just what's going on online. And most of the people that are online are very upset. I don't know. I don't have Twitter. Oh, good. I don't have Twitter. I deleted it because I kept looking at my ex's tweets. And then I was like, I'm deleting this for sobriety, you know. [30:54] But then I went on it the other day and I was like, this is a nightmare, dude. It was crazy. And I hit up those people who tweeted and I was like, hey. [31:00] Why wouldn't you just text me, man? Like... [31:02] I care about you. You care about me. This was totally out of context. If you just asked me about it, I would have showed you the whole clip. And they were like, you're right. [31:09] That was crazy. It's a mental illness factory. Yeah. Twitter is just a giant cunt farm. Yeah. That's what it is. Everybody just is growing cunty thoughts. I just didn't know. I just am not even... [31:22] in there. Yeah, it's not good. I stay off it as much as humanly possible. I try to get on it in the morning to see what everybody's upset about, see what's in the news, what the...

31:32-33:06

[31:32] a UFO got shot with a Hellfire missile and they have footage today and Rep Luna. Yeah, they were talking about it in hearings today. There's a video of a... In hearings? Yes. There's a video of a UFO getting hit by a Hellfire missile and the Hellfire missile just blows apart and the UFO just keeps moving. [31:51] What was the UFO? What did it look like? It was like a dot on a screen. They always look like shit. I saw something weird coming down from the moon the other day. Do not know what it was. Look at this. So watch this. So... [32:03] Here's the UFO. There's the missile. Watch this happen. [32:10] It just knocks it around, and the thing just gets right back on track. [32:15] Which is bananas. Like anything that gets hit by a Hellfire missile usually gets fucking obliterated. Especially something that's literally the size of the missile. [32:25] It's cruising. [32:26] Yeah, it's flying. I mean, not fast enough that it... [32:29] could duck a missile. [32:31] So it was just kind of weird that it let itself get hit. [32:34] It's hard to see what happens. Right. Like, what is that little? Right. It's animation. What is that? It's fucking Pong. We're looking at Pong, you know? Yeah. It's like an old video game, a really shitty video game. This is why I have the hardest time getting excited about any of this stuff. It's like, I don't know what I just saw. You're telling me I saw a Hellfire missile hit a UFO. It's like, you know, you're reading Morse code to me. I don't know. [32:58] Well, AI has done that too, where now it's like I can't even go on Instagram. It's not even fun anymore because I don't know what's real or not. Oh, yeah. We get caught all the time.

33:06-34:52

[33:06] Really? Yeah, yeah, yeah. [33:08] Yeah, there's always something. There's always something that you think is real. Like Tim Walsh with the fuck Trump shirt on, dancing on the elevator. James is like, it's fake. I'm like, no, no, no, it's real. It has to be real. I'm like, I'm just past the age bracket where I can't detect it. It's crazy. Well, no one can detect it anymore. Because especially what looks like cell phone footage. Because cell phone footage is kind of shitty already. So they just make it kind of shitty. And you don't know. You don't know what the fuck you're looking at. My mom liked the photo on Facebook that a fake AI photo of me on the beach. Different tattoos. [33:38] with a man and she liked it. I'm like, Mom, what are you doing? Who do you think that guy is? You know that I'm single. She's like, you look beautiful in it. I'm like, it's not real. That's not my body. That's not the body you gave birth to. Boomers can't handle it. No. They're so removed from this technology that they're living in an alternative dimension. Yeah. Yeah. [33:55] Totally. I don't know what she does. They get their news on TV and that's a wrap. Yeah. Whatever the guy says in front of the camera. Yeah. That's the truth. My mom is my news source, which is nice. I didn't know the Epstein drawing had come out. Oh, yeah. So the drawing is a – was that the same as the one that had been leaked before or is it different? I appreciate that leaked one was someone took the description, put it in AI. Oh. So this is the actual drawing. Yeah, and this one, they actually got the book and someone leaked it. I'm going to grab it. [34:25] think when I imagined it. [34:26] that it was going to be like a weld. I was imagining like DiCaprio drawing a French girl. You know, when I saw that one, I was like, God, Trump, at least make her hot. What are you doing? But what was the transcript he had written out? He had it like. This is it. What does voiceover mean? It's like a script. It says, there must be more to life than having everything. Donald, yes, there is. So he wrote this? Supposedly. The voice, it says voiceover, like he's like a movie star. Yeah.

34:52-36:22

[34:52] Like he's in a script. Donald, yes, there is, but I won't tell you what it is. Jeffrey, nor will I, since I also know what it is. Who fucking talks like this? Donald, we have certain things in common, Jeffrey. Jeffrey, yes, we do. Come to think of it, Donald, enigmas never age. Have you noticed that? [35:10] Jeffrey, as a matter of fact, it was clear to me the last time I saw you. [35:16] A pal is a wonderful thing. Happy birthday. May every day be another wonderful secret. [35:21] Ooh. And then I like how he's got the signature where the bush is. Yeah. [35:26] I don't think that he meant for that, though. Oh, come on. He made it sound like he meant for that. I think he did. I think he just signed it. [35:33] Maybe. But I was imagining it being – But it's kind of ironic that it's right where the vagine is. I don't think Trump likes a hairy bush. That's what you're into. That's a dude. Okay? That's a dude with womanly hips. Yeah. Look at the boobs. They're weird. It could be a back. [35:47] Yeah, it could be anything. It could be a snail's smile. I don't get why he's writing a script. Yeah, very odd stuff. [35:54] It's quite strange. But it's also like the way... [35:57] like enigmas never age have you noticed that and jeffrey as a matter of fact it was clear to me the last time i saw you like if one of my friends sent me that i'd be like i'm getting a new number yeah yeah you need help number why didn't you just write happy birthday yeah what the fuck is wrong with you enigma happy birthday jeff that's all i want happy birthday jeff may we hang out soon well also like what year was this that he wrote this

36:22-37:56

[36:22] I think it was for his 50th birthday was the word. So. It wouldn't have been that long ago. [36:30] Well, it had to be because he kicked him out of Mar-a-Lago in like the 2000s, right? I think 2011, I think, is when they said that was. [36:37] That's when they kicked him out? I think so. I thought it was before that because I think that's when he got arrested. Yeah. [36:42] Yeah, I think it was related to [36:44] They kicked Epstein out. Can I touch this? Yeah. That is a recreation. That's a 3D printed recreation of these very strange vases that they find in Egypt that are part of an older dynasty that are so exact. And the way they did it is completely unknown. That is just a piece of plastic. But that's an actual 3D recreation of the original vase. That you think aliens did? No, no, no, no. I think a very complex ancient civilization was... [37:12] that was wiped out by some sort of a cataclysmic disaster that had very sophisticated technology. Because that was, was it diorite? [37:19] That that was carved out of? Right, yeah. Are you an alien guy or are you an agnostic alien guy? [37:25] I'm on the fence. You're on the fence? Yeah. You were alien guy? I've been back and forth, off the fence, on the fence. I've been over the other side. I go back and forth. I think it's highly unlikely that we're alone. [37:37] Highly unlikely. Yeah. And there's just too many stories – [37:42] of people having encounters with something... [37:45] for people have been writing these things down for thousands of years. I haven't had any experience, though. [37:51] Yeah. I think it's like a relationship. If you want it too bad, you won't get it. Other than psychedelics.

37:57-39:47

[37:57] Which makes me go, huh? You've seen guys? No, I've seen stuff. I've seen entities. Really? Yeah, 100%. I've had interactions with other beings. Tree entities or like... [38:09] space entities. I've had tree entities. [38:12] Things that didn't have like a form that was solid, their form would change and morph. [38:19] And... [38:19] They had consciousness. But, you know, it's like, what is what's really going on? Like, are you really is are you imagining this or are you tapping in what it feels like? But it might not be this. What it feels like is you're tapping into another dimension and you're interacting with. [38:36] Some disembodied souls like disembodied consciousness that doesn't have a physical form. That's what it feels. Yeah, but it feels highly intelligent and very aware of. [38:48] What you're full of shit about, what you're not, like what your thoughts are, whether your thoughts are positive or negative. It shows you negative thoughts and positive thoughts. Yeah, I was talking to Ari about that on his podcast about how like when I took acid, if I had a negative thought, all of the clouds would turn into skulls. And if I had a positive thought, they'd all turn into these dancers and I could switch it. I could just like switch and my entire visual would change with my mental. I had a very similar experience once. [39:16] where when I had negative thoughts, everything would go like – [39:20] black and pixelated and dark and then i would have a positive i would realize it like oh no no no this you're doing this and then boom it would blossom into these beautiful geometric patterns i was like oh yeah kind of in control of how you view things which is in control of how your life works that's the one thing that psychedelics wants you to get so hard and that's like the biggest that every time i do it it feels like it's making fun of me it's like bro this is all you like you

39:50-41:29

[39:50] Yeah, yeah, yeah. And every time I do it, I'm like, okay, I'll remember. And then the next day, I'm like, ah, somebody said I'm fat on Twitter. You know, it's crazy. I just had this big revelation the other day where I was like, [40:01] what if everything is all right? Like I'm writing and then this weird thing happened and I'm like, I want to die. Everybody. And I was like, oh yeah. Sometimes I feel like when you have those revelations, you get a little tested. [40:12] You ever feel like that? Like, I'll be like, when I'm like... [40:16] Okay. You know, like I was, my head was so big about the... [40:19] Netflix coming out. I dropped into the creek yesterday, do a new joke set. Bomb. Just bomb the whole way through. Sweating. Sweating in front of these people. They're like, they don't know who I am. They're just like, what are you saying? And I was like, just trying brand new weird stuff. Right. Because my ego is so big that I'm like, I don't even need to workshop this shit, bitch. And I do it. And they're just like, we don't understand you. And I'm like, anyway, watch the special. It's a lot better than that. [40:45] It is the most humbling thing to work on new stuff after you put out a special. [40:49] Yeah. [41:03] you know it's also hard when your brain is preoccupied with putting out a special I've noticed right you know like I'm editing I'm thinking about shit promotion and then I'm like have to [41:12] But that's why I think you have to take time. [41:15] A hundred percent. But the rush. People are like, aren't you so proud of yourself? And I'm like, no, because now I'm doing bad sets. You know what I mean? I don't have time to be proud because I'm going up on stage and being like, throw here something I was thinking, you know, and it never. I think that's a good thing for us.

41:29-42:59

[41:29] It's a good leg reality check. Yeah. Yeah. [41:31] It's great. Yeah. Like every couple of years, you got to get smacked in the face and start from scratch again. It's really good. Brian Simpson did a brilliant thing. So what Brian Simpson did is he developed two hours. [41:41] So he put out one hour, and then when he went touring afterwards, he had another hour already. [41:46] Well, I thought he asked Ari. I thought he was like, can I put out both hours? [41:51] I put out all of it. Don't do that. Yeah. Yeah, I think what he did was perfect. When I did the half hour, I had that. I put a half hour out and I was fucking cruising. But this one... [42:00] And any fat that I had, I cut and was like, I hate, you're dead to me. Right. So all of the stuff I liked, I put in it. So then when I was touring, I was like, I've already decided that I hate that. Right. I can bring it back up, but I don't want to. Right. And then you feel like you're a fraud if you do. Yeah. Yeah. And if you're not interested in the subject, like if you're like, it's dead to me, it's over. Yeah. You got to let it go. Totally. It's crazy. And it's hard to be on stage and talking about what I want to talk about, which is how crazy it is. [42:30] to be putting out a special. You know what I mean? But I don't want to do that because I want to do evergreen material. [42:36] It's just not relatable. Not relatable. But you're like, I want to tell you guys about this. That's what's on my mind. Especially the people that don't know who you are. Then it's really not relatable. [42:46] Bill Burr was very inspiring because he put out that special about how he changed his mindset. You know what I mean? The most recent one where he was like, I'm not going to be an angry person anymore. And that was sick because I feel like...

42:59-44:38

[42:59] Sometimes I'll be like, maybe I should have a perspective shift where I am stopping such an angry person and against humanity. And I'm like, no, but that's not funny. So seeing Burr do that, I'm like, oh, I could have material about how like therapy helps, you know, instead of how my therapist sucks. You know what I mean? Like, and that was nice to see him do that. Where he was like, I'm going to stop harassing my wife. That was the whole special. It was like, my wife is like going to die someday and I'm making her life quite bad. It was great. [43:29] You should stray away from meditation or enlightenment or anything because it would get in the way of being funny. [43:36] Yeah, totally. Again, the way of chaos. I have that with relationships. I'm like, I'm going to keep this tumultuous relationship, and I'm just going to keep – like, that's how I thrive. Mining for material? Mining for material. Just keep myself in a state of, like, unknown constantly so that I feel – [43:52] Like I'm alive because I feel like I'll die if I have any comfort or stability. My studio is the size of this table. There's no reason I should live like that. It's crazy. [44:00] There's no reason. But I just keep myself in these little... Do you like living in New York like that? [44:05] I don't need to. I can live in a bigger place in New York. It's totally fine. So you're doing it to yourself? Yeah. I'm doing it to myself to be like, you have to struggle. Yeah. [44:12] And you don't even get to clean your tuna cans. You have to leave. It's crazy. It's crazy. At least you know it's crazy. [44:20] Yeah, totally. And I'm working on it. I am working on it. Oh, okay. I am working on it. You talking to a realtor? [44:24] I'm talking to two therapists. [44:26] Oh. And yeah, that's the other thing is I'm like, I don't want to get a bigger place if I'm going to buy a place in New York. Oh. You know what I mean? If eventually you're going to buy a place. Right. So I'm like, maybe just struggle. But it's a weird time for the real estate market right now.

44:38-46:21

[44:38] I bought a house in Ithaca. [44:40] Oh, yeah? Upstate? Yeah, upstate. Oh, you're one of them people that gets the upstate house. You go to visit. It's like five hours from New York. Yeah? Yeah, people are like, upstate? And I'm like, no, it's like paintball upstate, dude. So do you take a flight or you drive? There's a flight from JFK now, which is sick. Oh, and you go to Ithaca and what, just... [44:57] Watch TV. [44:58] I just – I mainly just work on the house and work on the – just do shit to get it up and running. I don't know what I'm going to do when it's done. So you just like being in a small town? Yeah. [45:08] Well, my family's there. Oh. Yeah, yeah. Okay, that makes sense. Yeah, my niece is there. That makes sense. Yeah. Okay. Because I was like, did she just pick Ithaca? I don't know. No way, no way. My whole family's there. And I was so sick of going home and having to stay with my mom the whole time. Oh, that's smart. Yeah, she walked in on me having sex so many times. Wow. It's so annoying. Just swinging over the door. Oh, sorry. That's her. Every single time. That's hilarious. Because she's deaf, so she can't hear shit. Oh, no. So she'll just swing it open. Oh, okay. It's fucking crazy, dude. [45:38] And her house just has holes in it because she's a contractor, so she hasn't finished it. Oh, no. So there's just like, she'll just be scurrying around and be like, there's a raccoon in here. I'm like, what? [45:48] All the time, dude. It's crazy. There's a chipmunk on my laptop. I'm like, get it away. [45:55] bats coming in constantly dad's fainting dad's dead now dad finally fainted his last faint oh no it was it was good he worked all day came home died it was we were happy about it really i mean we didn't want him to die but yeah he was he was like getting to a point where we were like he's gonna have to start going to the hospital because he smokes so many cigarettes and so unhealthy and we're like if he goes to the hospital it's game over he can't be around he'll faint if

46:25-48:00

[46:25] or die. Did the cigarettes get him? Yeah. Cigarettes and Dunkin' Donuts. Love Dunkin' Donuts donuts. Both of those things. Yeah. Very addictive. Very addictive. [46:37] *sigh* [46:38] He was a heavy smoker. That's why I want to kill Ian all the time. Because he smokes so much? Yeah, and he sounds like my dad, where you laugh and you go... Ian seems like he really enjoys it, though. [46:48] That's what everybody says until they're hacking up a lung and they have to leave a movie theater halfway through to go smoke. How much does Ian smoke a day? [46:56] I think he's down. I think he's down to like... [46:58] pack and a half. Oh, God. He's getting there. I need to get him on his ends, but he thinks that's gay. [47:03] Zins are gay? He thinks – What about all the stuff he talks about on stage? Yeah, that he thinks is perfectly regular and above board. Perfectly regular and above board. But Zins are gay. That's so silly. What a silly take. But so many people have that. That's like when people are like, I'm not going to enter recovery because I don't believe in God. I'm like, you were drunk last night praying. [47:25] that you could fuck, you know, Sidney Sweeney. Like, you're praying. You're doing weird stuff. You're delusional. [47:32] I don't want to believe in God. That's hilarious. [47:35] People say that a lot where they avoid AA because they don't believe in God. Yeah. What's weird is the guy who founded AA did it. He was an acid head. [47:43] He used acid to get off of alcohol. Yeah. But he doesn't... [47:48] Talk about that. Yeah. The thing is all about, you know. I used mushrooms to get off alcohol. [47:53] I've heard a lot of people do that. I use mushrooms to cure a huge amount of OCD. I was OCD-y.

48:00-49:31

[48:00] was dominating my life. Couldn't touch anything. Had to wash my hands constantly. It was like, and then I tripped hard and went into a room alone for six hours and was like, I will. And it was, I was tripping hard and I was like, I'm going to deal with this in this room and figure out what it is. [48:16] And what was it? It was that I fundamentally don't trust myself to make the right decision. And I realized that none of my decisions were up to me. [48:24] it was all just an amalgamation of experiences. Because I was like, who's going to stop me from... [48:29] biting or hurting or doing anything. So I was like, if I tap this, that'll stop me. And when I faced it and asked it, it was like, you think you're going to do bad things, but you're not because... [48:39] You have chosen the right path this whole way so you can trust yourself. [48:44] You know what I mean? Right. Three-year-old Jordan was not outside killing a cat. You know what I mean? She was fucking playing, right? So every step of the way, you're building this personality that you can trust. You know what I mean? Yeah. Because my whole thing was like, who... [48:59] How am I to know that I'm not a horrible – that I'm not going to do something horrible? [49:04] Which is a big OCD thing for people. Wondering whether you're going to do something horrible. Yeah, like a lot of OCD. Like I know a girl who she couldn't babysit because she was like, what if I am a... [49:15] Oh, my God. Because her OCD was so bad. Oh, my God. And then she was like, oh, this is OCD, and she was treated, and she was like, it's fine. But, like, a lot of people will have babies, and they'll be like, what if I freaking spin this baby's head off? Oh, Jesus Christ. I have that all the time, dude. I have that. Whenever my friends, like, hold my baby, I'm like, okay. Okay.

49:31-51:14

[49:31] Oh, my God. That's so crazy. But you don't do shit because it's like the ski jump thing. You're going to – That's interesting. I never thought of it that way. It's like you're not trusting yourself. Yeah. And I also used to be super fat. Like I was a fat kid. And I think there's a part of me that's like if you were able to do that, then you're able to do horrible things. [49:50] You know what I mean? If you were able to get fat? Yeah, like if you were able to binge eat like that as a kid, then you're not really to be trusted. You know what I mean? And I had to face all of that on this acid trip, and I came out of it and was like... Was it acid or mushrooms? [50:03] That was acid. Okay. Mushrooms I microdose. Acid I don't do anymore because of how crazy that was. But that one I did a lot and... [50:11] You got it. You're like, I got it. Got the lesson. I'm not going back to school. Yeah, totally. Totally. And I still have a little bit of OCD. I still have some things that I didn't get rid of, but for the most part. [50:21] I got rid of it, which is crazy. God, it seems debilitating. I've met people that have it. It's nuts. [50:26] Some people, it gets worse as their success grows, which is really crazy. Yeah. Like Howard Hughes type shit. Yeah. I loved that movie growing up because I resonated with him so much. It's weird. You've got to stop it. I mean, that's the thing is if you don't get in the way of it, it just builds neuronal grooves in your brain that become so... [50:49] Yeah. Like averse to plasticity like you can't get out of them. And that's what I remember, like this woman being like, I want you to bring in contaminated items. And I was like, go fuck yourself, bitch. I was like, absolutely not. I was like, then we'd have to burn my mother's car like there's no way. But you do every time something's contaminated a little bit, you have to like force yourself to do it, to touch it or whatever your thing is. Like contaminated food?

51:19-52:59

[51:19] I was worried that I would become... [51:21] like say you were like [51:23] I cheated on my wife last night. [51:25] And then you're like, you want to hit this vape or whatever? I wouldn't be able to touch it because I'd be like, he does bad things if I hit that vape. [51:31] I'll do bad things. Wow. You know, so if somebody was whack, they'd be contaminated. [51:37] And I couldn't go near them. [51:38] There's something to that. There's a little something to that. There's a little wisdom behind that. [51:45] Because people do kind of adopt the mindset of people that are around. [51:49] I mean, that's what I've had to learn recently is I'm like, you got to cut out. [51:52] whack people and get that that's not OCD. That's like healthy for you. Yeah. Whack people can ruin everything. Yeah. Really – [52:00] shitty human beings that you have kept in your life for whatever fucking weird reason they can just derail your whole life the thing that sucks about comedy is sometimes these people are so fucking funny i know and you have to cut out somebody who's so funny i know that sucks people at a desk job i'm like you're cutting out brian who's like kind of you know who's like just all right who brought you a cupcake once i'm cutting out people who are like the only people [52:30] You're like cutting out like a huge chord of my sense of humor. Right. And that, but I've had to do that recently. Just be like, dude, I can't. The vibe is too dark. This episode is brought to you by Traeger Grills. If you enjoy food, and I mean really good food, Traeger is a game changer. This isn't just a grill. It's the ultimate way to cook outdoors, delivering unbeatable wood-fired flavor thanks to the all-natural hardwood pellets that fuel everything you grill.

53:00-54:53

[53:00] smoke, or bake. That's it. Just wood and fire and flavor. And what's truly wild is how easy it is. Just set the temp, load the grill, and let Traeger handle the rest. Grill steak, smoke ribs, even baked pizza, all on one grill. If you're into fire, flavor, and doing things right, check out Traeger Grills. [53:22] This episode is sponsored by BetterHelp. Summer means fun and making memories, but it can also feel like you're in survivor mode with packed schedules, keeping the kids entertained, and chaotic routines. That's not so fun. You've got to make sure that you're taking care of you, and therapy can help with that. From setting boundaries to making a space to recharge, it can help make your summer more balanced and enjoyable. [53:52] online. You'll be matched based on your needs and can switch any time if it's not the right fit. With millions of clients worldwide, people are finding the support they need with BetterHelp. You don't have to say yes to everything this summer. Find guidance in therapy. Visit betterhelp.com to get started. That's betterhelp.com. [54:17] it's sinister it is a problem yeah there's people in your life that just for whatever fucking reason will never get it together [54:25] And at a certain point in time, try to rescue a drowning person. They'll drown you. Yeah, totally. They'll drown you. It's hard to watch other people do it and not cut people out. And you're like that if you could just cut. Like my friend's mom is just such a drain on her life. And I'm like, you've got to just. Did you see that fucking Netflix documentary about that little girl who was in a small town who's getting harassed by someone that turned out to be her mom? I heard about this, but I did not see it.

54:53-56:23

[54:53] Oh, I saw this on Instagram and I thought it was not real. It's nuts. She was getting bullied by her mom? Her mom didn't have a job. The father thought the mom had a job. The mom was just all day trolling and fucking with her daughter for years. And you know what the girl said at one point in time? She's like, I miss my mom. [55:15] Because her mom was there to protect her from the bad world. But really, the only bad world was her mom pretending to be someone else. Wait, she said, I miss my mom. Because she thought her mom was a sweet person that protected her. And she found her mom was a fucking monster. Oh, so later after she found out, she was like, I miss my mom. Yes. Oh, that's brutal. Brutal. That's like when somebody breaks up with you and you're like, I just want to talk to them about this bad breakup. Well, that's that thing that some crazy people do. It's Munchausen's by proxy. [55:45] So she was, is that Munchausen's though? Munchausen's I think is being like you're sick. You hurt them. You hurt them so that you could help them. Oh, she was doing that. She was being like, who's your... She was the one who was trolling her own daughter. She was someone else online attacking your own daughter, calling her a whore, calling her horrible things. And being like, P.S. your mom's a babe. [56:07] That's crazy. Your mom's an enigma. Your mom's really hot. You should go talk to her. Your mom's an enigma. Yeah. [56:15] an igloo. I think you noticed that too. So the moment I saw you, I noticed it. That's crazy. Crazy. It's so sad. Is she in jail or something?

56:23-58:03

[56:23] I don't know. I didn't get that far. I can't. With stuff like that, when people are mean to their kids, I'm like, I can't do this. I love that shit. I can't. I don't love it, but I fucking fall asleep to that horrible shit. It's hard. If you love your kids... I love my kids. I can't... I've seen someone being... It's not just... It's fucking evil beyond belief. How old are your kids? She torched that... I have a 28-year-old daughter. I have a 17 and a 15. Wait, if you were... [56:51] If you have a 28-year-old, you were... [56:53] Well, it's not my biological. Oh, okay, okay, okay. Yeah. So did you have any kids where all your kids had after you were financially good? Yes. Really? Yes. You think that's the move? I don't know. [57:06] There's something to be said for growing up poor. [57:10] Yeah. You know, I grew up poor. I think. [57:13] It's good. [57:14] I think I understand hard work. You know, I understand... [57:17] what it's like to have to have a job to get stuff. Like, you know, you want to buy a new pair of pants? You need to get a fucking job, you know? You need to get a car? Well, you have to save up. But all those things you're describing you can do. You can do. [57:29] Growing up poor for me is like growing up watching your parents... [57:34] fight over who is going to pay the child support. You know what I mean? I think you can grow up fine and still work. Well, my parents didn't fight. My stepmom and my – excuse me. My stepdad and my mom have been together for a long time, and they have a very good relationship. So that modeled for me when I was a kid. My parents got split up, my biological dad and my mom, when I was five, and my mom married my stepdad when I was like seven. Where's your dad dead?

58:04-59:56

[58:04] We don't talk. Oh, we don't talk. I don't know. [58:07] But my stepdad's a great guy. So you have good parents. They modeled a good relationship when I was a kid of people that don't yell at each other, don't fight. That's nice. Get along. They have disagreements and stuff. That's why you can be in a loving relationship. Yeah. They have disagreements, but they're nice to each other, kind to each other. [58:26] If you see that when you're a kid, [58:28] you go, oh, this is possible. But if you see like chaos all the time and everyone's fighting and screaming and yelling at each other, you're like, keep me the fuck away from whatever this is. Yeah. You know, because I remember I watched my grandmother and my grandparents. My grandmother was always yelling at my grandfather. I was like, oh, don't stay married, whatever you do. I was like, when I was a little kid, I was like, you got to get out while you can. Yeah. I think that's why there's so many avoidant men right now is because I think there's so many of those like lazy boy dads [58:58] dissociated looking at a TV that isn't on. And every time they try to like, you know, every time you're like, hey, Jim, how's it going? Their wife flies in and is like, don't talk to him for us. There's so many couples like that. Well, there's a lot of cucked out men out there. Cucked out by their job. Cucked out by life. You know, you just stop being a man. And then you stop getting any respect from the people that know you because they know you're kind of a bitch. The people that really know you, like your wife and your kids really know you. Like, oh, Harry, [59:28] Harry's a fucking bitch. Yeah, there's so many boomers like that, though. There's so many where it's the dad is so quiet and so distant and the mom is just so up everyone's ass. Well, Thoreau wrote about that. Like, what? Whenever he wrote this, he said most men live lives of quiet desperation. That's fucked. Yeah. That's fucked. That's fucked, but that's real. But why does that happen? Well, there's a whole bunch of reasons. Because you stop challenging yourself or you never did.

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[59:58] And you don't have any character. You don't exhibit a strong will. And you don't have discipline. And then you're emotionally disconnected from the life that you've chosen. And then you have a job where you have to pretend to be someone you're not for eight hours a day and work for a boss who's a piece of shit. And then you lose the job because the job becomes irrelevant. And then you don't have your identity. You're a broken man. And then you're like 46 years old. And they're telling you to learn to code. Yeah. Like, oh, great. Yeah, yeah. That's fucked. [1:00:28] they don't know what to do and they didn't get good advice when they were young. They didn't get a good direction. You know, they didn't find something that they could focus their energy on and realize like, oh, if I focus my energy on something, whatever it is, I can get better at stuff. I'll start off sucky, but you keep working at it and eventually you get – some people never learn that. Well, it would be nice if they could also focus on being a parent. Like I feel like the women stay – [1:00:53] loud because they're like, "I'm a mother! I'm Mama Bear!" You know, so I'm like, it'd be nice if the dads would get off the lazy boy and be like, "I'm gonna help raise my kids." Well, there's, you know, it's just fucking, some people are just beaten. Like, yeah, just they wanted to be spider-an. Yeah, yeah, totally. They wanted to be cool. They wanted to have a good life and life just fucking cracked them in the dick every time they made a move. Yeah. You know, they got their car repossessed. Oh, Jesus. Credit cards. There's gotta be something biological, though, that makes a man not [1:01:23] Like you have the pride. Bert Kreischer, I just talked about it. Like you guys have the pride in your children.

1:01:29-1:03:15

[1:01:29] Like, as soon as I met you, you showed me a photo of your daughter. You know what I mean? Like, but I do feel like there are a lot of men who are like, that's not my responsibility. Oh, that's crazy. [1:01:38] That's crazy. Well, maybe it's the way they were raised, you know. [1:01:42] Um... [1:01:43] But maybe if you had lost your job, if you weren't in comedy and you were tired and – [1:01:48] didn't have your passion, maybe you wouldn't be as gung-ho about being a dad. Or maybe you'd feel like a failed dad. Maybe that's what it is. Maybe they feel like a failed dad. Perhaps. I don't know. I would have figured it out. Yeah, totally. I just don't believe that. If I lost my job doing something, I would find another job. I would figure it out. There's other paths. You don't just stay still if the path doesn't work out. And some people do. Some people do. I didn't know that until recently, that some people really do stay still forever. Oh, they quit. [1:02:18] of unemployment because they could just get a check and just still and just wallow in depression. Yeah, but there's so many people who are against unemployment that still... [1:02:25] That still stay still. That are like, fuck unemployment. I'm not using government. Yeah, well, that's even sillier, I guess. I don't know. [1:02:32] Yeah, people are weird. [1:02:34] You know, just... [1:02:36] If I quit comedy right now, there'd be like three jobs that I would be... [1:02:40] almost just as stoked about. What would those be? I would love to be a full-time contractor out in the sticks. I would be... [1:02:48] A philosophy professor or a therapist. Really? Yeah, all of those sound sick. Which one sounds the most sick? [1:02:55] philosophy professor. Really? Because you kind of become a therapist when you are a professor. You know what I mean? You have those kids that are fucked up so they're reading philosophy and they need to help. Like me, I was going in there being like... Or the guys that are trying to get laid. Yeah. Trying to become a philosopher. It's a lot of dorks. Bet. It's like, I was the only girl major in my class and the rest were

1:03:15-1:05:00

[1:03:15] Dorky guys? Dorks who wore ties to class, yeah. Well, philosophy itself is a strange thing because you're just... [1:03:21] thinking about a structure of how you interface with the world. Yeah. It was the only thing I could study well. Everything else I was like, why would I study something that's already been known? It's crazy. But philosophy was like, no, they're all just trying to figure out life, which I was like, okay, I get that. And none of them are correct. And they're like, none of them are correct. I was like, great. [1:03:41] Because I would study science and I'd be like, we know the exact measurement of how to find out this thing. I'd be like, why do I want to study that? There's nothing new here. My favorite book of philosophy I started reading when I was like – I guess I was 16. [1:03:53] is The Book of Five Rings by Miyamoto Musashi. He's a samurai who killed 60 men in one-on-one combat with swords. [1:04:02] But he was all about the way to become a great sword fighter is you have to be balanced. Like you can't have any holes in your game as a human being. You have to be an artist. You have to be a poet. You have to learn calligraphy. You have to be completely balanced. And you have to see the thing for what it is. You can't have any bullshit. You can't have any fat. Right? We were talking about fat and bits. No delusion. You can't have any bullshit. There's no bullshit when you're sword fighting. Right. [1:04:26] But sometimes do you ever feel like you're in that flow state in your life where you'll be like, I have all these moving parts and I have it down. And like, like I recently had this where I was like. [1:04:35] I'm oil painting. I'm doing stand-up. I have my friends. I'm in this groove. And then something will happen where I'll just have explosive diarrhea or something. Something will happen where I'm just like, Jesus Christ, I thought I was fucking suave. I had this shit. I used to do that with poker where I'd be like, I have this whole poker game on lock and then something would happen. It's almost like one of those swords that you have to have in balance is also...

1:05:00-1:06:17

[1:05:00] humility like you also have to be like and i'm a person who still has a butthole you know right [1:05:05] And things can go sideways, always. Yeah, because I would be like, I'm going to get in this flow state, and then I'd mess up a word on stage, and I'd be like, I'm an idiot. So I have to keep that also, be like, you also are fallible. Well, that's what's a good thing about stand-up. It's like it smacks you every time you do it wrong. [1:05:23] Yeah. You got to do it right. It's crazy how true it is that you're only as good as your last set. You are. It's crazy. Yeah, that's why. Like, if you have a bad set, you can't wait to get on stage again. Like, get me up there. Dude, I was like, I'm doing no sets in Austin. Bomb last night, hitting Rebecca up. I'm like, what do you got? It's crazy. Let me bust out some old jokes. I should have hit up the mothership. Yeah, come tonight. [1:05:44] What are you doing tonight? My show. [1:05:46] Oh, okay. Can we do it? What time is it at? Seven. [1:05:50] Yeah, that would actually be good. Let's fucking go. Let's do it. I was, dude, there's a clip I wanted to post about that's really funny about your club, where I was like, you get in here, and there's a guy who's like, my name's Kyle. I'll carry you up this flight of stairs. I have a PhD in MMA. I'm going to pass you up to Derek. Derek has an AK-47, and we get in the green room, and I'm like, they're like, do you need anything? We'll kill people for you. And I was like, could I have some, like, almonds or snacks? And they're like, no, we have smelling salts. I was like, wait.

1:06:20-1:07:56

[1:06:20] I was like, is there any just like water bottles? No, we have neurotropic dust. It's so funny. Neurotropic. We were in the green room the other day and someone had called us like some alt-right white supremacist club. I was in the room with Brian Simpson, who's black, Derek Poston, who's black, Asana Mottos, Muslim. It was Tony Hinchcliffe, Ron White and me. I'm like, this is a pre-diverse lineup. What are we talking? This is so silly. You're looking at comments. [1:06:50] It's hard. It's hard to not look at these fucking things. No, it wasn't. It was a video. It wasn't a comment. It was a video of someone that one of the guys was playing. It was like, look how fucking stupid this is. The idea that this, like, that you had to be, like... [1:07:03] And I'm not even a Republican. Like I voted for Trump because I thought we were going in a terrifying direction where there was not really a president for four years. And the same people are now going to be running the government like let's. Weren't you like a Bernie bro? Yes. So I've only voted Republican once in my life. The idea that you have to be a Republican to get in at that club is so ridiculous. That club is filled with gay people, black people, straight people, white people, Asian. No one give us a fuck. [1:07:33] You're just doing comedy. You're just doing comedy. Whoever you are, whatever you believe. We have tons of lively discussions. I will say one time I was there and Jordan Peterson walked through and I was like, you can't be here. That's two on the nose. That's crazy. It is weird. Yeah, that's crazy with his daughter. Oh, yeah. He came with his daughter. Yeah. He's been there a few times. Yeah. He even did kill Tony.

1:07:56-1:09:54

[1:07:56] Oh, he was on it? Yeah, he was on Kill Tony. [1:07:59] It's crazy. [1:08:00] Oh, yeah. So was Post Malone. Post Malone had no idea, and I brought him on stage. He had no idea what the show was, no idea what anything was. I just brought him up there. [1:08:09] Really? I did that twice. Once with Post Malone and once with Tucker Carlson. [1:08:13] I was having dinner with Tucker Carlson. I'm like, you want to go by and go see Kill Tony? And they were there, and I told Tony, and he's like, bring him on stage. I go, I'm not even going to tell him what it is. So I go, dude, we're going to go on stage. And he's like, what? Oh, my God. He was great. Was he good? Yes. He was funny. He was, like, laughing. He was cracking jokes with the comedians back and forth. Wow. It was really – [1:08:33] It was surprisingly great. Wait, you're not Republican. You used to be Bernie, bro. Yeah. [1:08:39] Are you Bernie, bro? I am. Look, I think the idea of socialism is wonderful if everybody had their shit together and everybody was disciplined. Yeah. But it's not the case. And I think that human nature, unfortunately – [1:08:53] You're going to need some socialism, though. [1:08:56] Right. You're going to need the fire department. Like this is one of the things that I point to all the time. People say, oh, socialism doesn't work. The fire department is an entirely socialist idea. Like we all pay into it and they take care of everybody's fire. Right. You can't have only the rich people have a fire department and the poor people, their fucking house burns down all the time. That's crazy. Right. We all agree to that. Well, that should be the same with education. That should be the same with health care. Are we a fucking community or are we not? And if we're a community, you have to take care of the downtrodden and you have to do it because you're going to be a part of the fire department. [1:09:25] It's bad for them, and it's also bad for you. We're all in this together. So you have to have a social safety net. I believe in all that. But I also believe you can't just give people free money because then they rely on it, and they become dependent on it, and then it takes away their ambition, and then they don't do anything. That's true, too. It doesn't mean you're not compassionate. I don't like either one of these parties. I don't think there's a solution that's correct. I think you have overcorrection after overcorrection.

1:09:55-1:11:29

[1:09:55] goes one way and then it swings hard the other way. Yeah, America's back. And then it swings the other way. Now we're the new America and America's this way. It's like, [1:10:05] Everyone's so tribal and everyone's so locked into their idea that they're the good guys and these are the bad guys. We've got to get them back and we're going to get them in the midterms. We're going to get them in the fucking next elections. [1:10:18] It's crazy. And it's all accentuated by Twitter. That's how comedy is too, swinging back and forth like that. [1:10:22] Yeah, sort of. It's all in who you talk to with comedy. It's like there's a lot of bitter people out there. [1:10:28] you know, [1:10:29] That's that old expression. I forget who said that. [1:10:32] We brought this up before that [1:10:34] All criticism is the tragic result of unmet needs. [1:10:39] Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. It's a paraphrase, but there's a lot of that there. There's a lot of like... Yeah. I don't like how Jordan is like, why does she have a fucking Netflix special? She middled for me once and she didn't even do good. Yeah. Did somebody say that? No. [1:10:58] Dude, I'm just somebody who... I mean, I fucking... I'll date a libertarian and become a fucking libertarian. Somebody will talk to me about Israel... [1:11:06] I'll listen to fucking one Sam Harris episode. Now, all of a sudden, I'm fucking Zionist. I'll talk to... I talked to John Marco the other day. Now, I'm fucking all pro-pals. Like, whatever it is, I switch back and forth, and then I do podcasts, and people are like, you are... And I'm like... [1:11:18] I'll tell you what I am. [1:11:19] I'm an idiot, dude. I will switch. I will move. But I do think that's what makes a comedian is somebody who can try on so many different perspectives. And it is hard that people are looking at.

1:11:29-1:13:10

[1:11:29] comics like politicians. You're not an idiot. Because both sides have points. [1:11:33] That's why you can be swayed one way or another. I'll double down. Yeah, but I mean doubling down is just going down the rabbit hole of whatever that ideology believes because, like, they probably have a really good pitch. Yeah. [1:11:43] Yeah. And then, you know, if you talk to the socialist, they probably have a real good pitch. Yeah, totally. It's just but I double down in a way that's like I'll be like, this thing's fucking bad. And then the next day I'll be like, actually, it's like I'll I'll stop eating meat and being like anybody you eat to meet sucks. And then somebody would be like, you want to buy this burger? The iron or hit me. And I'll be like, fuck cows, dude. Like I go too hard in the paint on both sides. And I do. I remember, though, I remember in college, these girls would bully me. [1:12:13] They go, you just have too strong of convictions. [1:12:16] And I was like, oh, interesting, because I always thought that was a good thing. And I think for comedy, it is to be like you get up on stage or you do a podcast and you go, what if I just try on this idea hardcore? And that's like an interesting thing to do, as opposed to being like, oh, I see. This is kind of good. And that's good, too. You know, like there is something about comedy just being like. [1:12:37] What if this is the truth right now? That's an interesting thing to say to someone. You're too strong with your convictions. I'll never forget that. I'll never forget the girl who said it. Did the girl give you an example? [1:12:48] It was just I would talk the way I talk where they'd be like, you know, I'd be like, women need to stop wearing dresses. High heels are ridiculous. Or I'd be like, men need to do this. Or women, you know, or I'd be like, I'm going to go ahead and say diners need to go. You know, like whatever it was. Right, right, right. I'd be in or out on topics immediately. Right.

1:13:10-1:14:51

[1:13:10] And they'd be like, you're just like too intense with your thoughts. And I'd be like... [1:13:15] Yeah, totally. Every – I mean this is like why I would be bad in Nazi Germany. I mean hopefully it would be okay, but I know I'd be somebody who'd be like, wait, no, wait, no. It's crazy. Well, I mean there's got to be some sort of a psychological reason why all those people went along with that. [1:13:32] I mean, yeah, they went along. I think a lot of it was... [1:13:36] Yeah. I mean, I think a lot of it was just kind of dissociation, right? Well, there's a little bit of that. But then there's also there's a tribal mentality that kicks in. Like there's a default switch that happens to people. Yeah. And in this country, you saw a lot of it during covid. It was like the vaccinated people were hating on the unvaccinated. They should have their children taken away and like put them into camps. Like, do you hear yourself? Do you hear yourself? It's so weird because it's such a different like I was with so many anti-vaxxers like I was they were they're my friends. [1:14:06] But I was like, oh, I'm getting vaccinated because number one thing that's important to me is comedy. I have no idea if the vaccine gave me long COVID, if COVID gave me long, whatever the fuck. But I just have to perform. That's... [1:14:18] My health comes second. Did you get long COVID? [1:14:21] Bro, my shit is fucked up. [1:14:23] I can't – like those Ubers that have those smelly trees, I have to get out of – I get immediate migraines because my smell is fucked up. Your smell is fucked up. Like if you have deodorant that has like chemicals in it, it's rancid to me. Really? Yeah. That's it, though? If so many people are coming up to you – That's your long COVID? Do you just smell things? Smell – it's bad, though. I don't think you can call that long COVID. Really? Long COVID – yeah, long COVID is people that are exhausted and they have like heart palpitations and – yeah. I got a synapse off.

1:14:51-1:16:22

[1:14:51] I got a synapse. You just got to upgrade in your nose. This episode is brought to you by LifeLock. Lots of places can accidentally expose you to identity theft. Doctors offices, online retailers, insurance companies. The list goes on. Thankfully, LifeLock monitors hundreds of millions of data points a second for threats to your identity, which is way more than anyone could do on their own. LifeLock keeps an eye on your personal information, credit applications, [1:15:21] finances and more and if they find anything suspicious like new loans or changes to your financial accounts they'll alert you right away all through text phone email or the lifelock app even better alerts are automatically activated the moment you become a lifelock member no extra work on your part get the alerts that could make all the difference don't wait join lifelock now visit [1:15:51] 30% your first year. That's lifelock.com slash J-R-E for 30% off. Terms apply. [1:16:00] When you're a small business owner, you're always looking for the next big thing. Whether you're a gym owner looking to expand, a store stocking up for a busy season, or a restaurant owner planning a new menu. [1:16:11] you'll always need capital to grow. [1:16:14] But traditional banks are making it harder than ever to secure a small business loan. [1:16:18] That's why thousands of business owners trust Cardiff for same-day funding.

1:16:23-1:17:55

[1:16:23] Their online application takes less than five minutes and won't impact your personal credit score. [1:16:28] With over two decades of expertise, it's no surprise business owners keep voting Cardiff, America's favorite small business lender. [1:16:36] If you've been operating for at least a year and are earning at least $20,000 a month in revenue, [1:16:41] Apply now for up to $500,000 in same-day business funding at cardiff.co.rogan. [1:16:47] Again, that's cardiff.co slash rogan. Cardiff. Borrow better. [1:16:53] Yeah, but it sucks, dude. If somebody's wearing cologne, I'm like, I gotta go. Perfect. Yeah. I would take, you got a wolf nose. I got a wolf nose. Yeah, that's great. Some people. You gotta change the way you look at it. You're right. Yeah. I thought I had long COVID and then I stopped eating sugar. [1:17:08] I thought I had the bad one. And then I stopped eating candy, and I was like, well, hello. It's crazy what it is. Bro, candy wrecks your shit. Isn't it nuts? And I was... [1:17:19] A whore. A little candy slut. Ooh, a little candy slut. I wasn't eating anything. I wasn't saying long COVID can cause altered smell. There it is. Parasomia where things smell distorted, foul, or different than they used to, even if the initial COVID-19 symptoms have passed. So did you get this after you got, like, when did this start happening? Did you get COVID? [1:17:40] Yes, I got COVID like six times. Of course you did. Because you got vaccinated. People who didn't get vaccinated got it once or twice. Really? Yeah. Shit. Yeah, they fucked you. They fucked everybody. They fucked everybody with that goddamn stupid thing.

1:17:55-1:19:36

[1:17:55] I got it hard. See, I'll talk to you about this. And then tomorrow, my liberal mom will be like, the vaccine is good. And I'll be like, yes, mommy, I agree. It's a long conversation. It would take a long time to explain what was wrong. But it all boils down to the same thing that it always does, which is money. They distorted the facts. They distorted the research. They distorted the efficacy. They distorted what it was actually designed to do just because they wanted money. That's it. [1:18:21] Did we pay them for the vaccine? Oh, fuck, yeah. They made a shit ton of money. It might have been free for you. I like the idea of money, but isn't your camp in on, like... [1:18:32] control, mind control, not mind control, but knowing where we are, like anti-vax people? I'm not an anti-vax person. Where are you? No. Give yourself a label. No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. I believe that... [1:18:45] all medications should be subject to scrutiny. They should all go through rigorous, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials to find out. [1:18:58] what the side effects are, what the efficacy rate is, what's the real facts behind it. But then they'll just lie about that. But this is why. This is why. Yeah. The problem is pharmaceutical drug companies do their own research. [1:19:10] Not only do they do their own research, but they do their own research that they hide. So they'll do multiple studies that show no efficacy. And then they'll rig one study where they can show just like a little bit of improvement, and then they just sell it, and they start going with it. And they've done that before. They got sued because of Vioxx. Vioxx killed 50,000, 60,000 people, and through internal emails, the pharmaceutical drug company was saying,

1:19:40-1:21:34

[1:19:40] including strokes. [1:19:42] We're going to have these cardiovascular problems, cardiopulmonary problems, but whatever the wording was, I don't want to be quoted on it. [1:19:49] But – [1:19:50] it will be good for us financially. [1:19:53] We'll do well with this. It's in the email? Yeah, in the email. We'll do well with this. It killed 50,000 to 60,000 people. A friend of mine got a stroke. He got on Vioxx because he had knee problems. It was an anti-inflammatory medication. [1:20:08] Sometimes there's fishy shit like that. Like sometimes I'll take Prozac from one place and from a different place. Very different thing. Yeah, because it's from Mexico. It's got fentanyl in it. Some weird shit going on. Yeah. What do you think about Ozempic? We talked about that the other day with a guy who runs a pharmacy. The problem with it is that when they're dosing it out to people, they're giving everyone the same dose. And it should be dependent upon like how much weight are you trying to lose? What is your body weight? There's a bunch of different factors. [1:20:38] holds on to poop? [1:20:40] It doesn't seem to be good for you. Poop is sitting in your body? Poop stays in your body a little longer, and food digests slower. And it kills your appetite. But... [1:20:50] If you're morbidly obese and you might die from that, this is probably a good solution. So it's not – it's like don't throw out the baby with the bathwater. I don't want it. I don't need it. Yeah. But if I did, if I was 600 pounds and I was in this – and someone said, look, and I can give you this thing, it will kill your appetite. Like fucking please. Yeah. Please. Totally. [1:21:09] So it's beneficial for that. And then there's a problem with muscle loss and bone density loss. But my friend Brigham, who was on the other day, the episode's out now, he was saying that the issue is that they're giving them too much of a dose. And if you mix it with other peptides, you can actually eliminate those problems. So there's a way to dose it out for people that are and you would just lose nothing but fat. It is possible to do. It just has to be done correctly.

1:21:35-1:23:18

[1:21:35] So he was explaining that. And right now it's willy-nilly. Well, right now everyone's just getting on it instead of just going to the gym. There's people that need to lose 20 pounds. They're getting on those Zempi. That's crazy. You can lose 20 pounds in a couple months. The thing that's frustrating is because I used to be so fat. I used to have type 2 diabetes, and I got rid of it, which is crazy. [1:21:54] And you were still eating all that sugar? Dude. Well, that's the thing is I can eat sugar exclusively, lose weight if I only eat the candy. Like it was like this bizarre diet I would go on. And then I just had to like switch my mind. But that mental switch of being like, this is not for fun. [1:22:12] This food is not for fun. You've had your fun. Right. Like you did that. You did the candy. You did the pizza. You did all that. Now we're using food. [1:22:19] as like the same way we use sleep, where it's like, I feel better when I get eight hours, right? Right. And once you do that switch... [1:22:26] It feels like things click into place. So with people on Ozempic, I'm like, if you could just get that. [1:22:32] turn of your brain, it would help so much. If you could just... [1:22:35] It does feel like a switch where you're like – Right, but think about what you had to go through with acid to get off the OCD. It's like now imagine you're 600 pounds and you've been eating candy for 35 years. Yeah, right. [1:22:47] That's, you know, it's a big switch. It's a battleship. Yeah. You can't just fucking. I think recovery. Turn that motherfucker around. Did you see a sugar diet going viral earlier this year? Yeah. I know. Mark Bell was really into that. Unlimited sugar, restricted protein ever be a good thing. [1:23:04] What is the good about it? What? Literally, I swear I was paying attention to what he said. I was like, there's no way you're saying just eat candy. It's not just candy. I thought he was fucking around. No, it's like fruit, but he's like, if candy's all you got, it's not the worst thing. But it's low protein, right?

1:23:18-1:24:52

[1:23:18] Yeah, it's like a certain amount of protein. There's a video of him explaining it if you want to watch that. So he weighs 95 kilograms, which is what is that, like 225 pounds? Yeah, the video I just saw you said he was like 207, 210. He was going to get under 200. Does he have a face? Can we see his face? Oh, he's a handsome guy. Good looking guy. [1:23:34] But it doesn't work with him because he's really fit, and he's been doing a bunch of different stuff his whole life. My face is fucked up on that shit. Like he was carnivore dying for a long time. It's not... [1:23:44] No, dude. See the deep sunken lines? That's sugar. He's like 50 years old. [1:23:48] No, this is the new thing. He was always like this. This is what he looked like forever. And he used to be gigantic. You know what pisses me off? He used to be like a power lifter. This is a woman we'd be like, that's anorexia. Because when I told people I was only eating sugar, they were like, that's anorexia. Hold on. Show what he looks like, Jamie. Go to his Instagram and wait. You see how fit this guy is. Like, this guy is in tremendous shape. No protein? Oh, the veins are getting me. Well, he's always had those. But that's my point. Like, click on that one on the right-hand side. Like, look. That's what we're talking about. [1:24:18] big jack dude. So for him to do this diet and say, you know, look, I've got this body. Well, bitch, you always have that body. I don't know. [1:24:28] No, I mean, I've gotten very skinny off the all sugar diet, but it has effects. Yeast infection all the time. Deep, dark circles. From sugar. From sugar. Yeah. Fucks up your sleep. When did you stop with the sugar? [1:24:42] Like two months ago. Oh. But I'm having ice cream today because my special came out. [1:24:47] But we've been planning. We have been planning. We're going to Amy's Ice Cream and we're going to have it too. It's a great spot.

1:24:53-1:26:27

[1:24:53] Yeah, but I've been off sugar. It just helps a lot. I've just been doing fats and stuff like that, which is great. And I can eat as much as – it used to be like I had to – everything I ate, I had to do a tiny amount. And now it's like I can eat as many eggs and avocado. Isn't that nuts? It's crazy. It doesn't even seem like it's real. I know. If you just ate nothing but steak, you would lose weight. Everyone's like, no way. Like, yeah, because your body would regulate correctly. When you're done, you're done. Like, if you sit down and you have a 16-ounce steak, if you really only need 12 ounces – [1:25:23] 12 ounces, you'll stop eating. Yeah. That's all you're eating. But if you have mashed potatoes there and then a bowl of pasta and then an ice cream and then a cake. Yeah. Try eating cake after you ate a whole avocado. You're like, bleh, I'm good. Like you don't. The fat gets you. It's so crazy. Also, your gut biome switches and your gut biome doesn't crave sugar anymore. It's that candida. The candida is what I did, the candida diet. Because every time I got my period, I had a yeast infection. And then it was just, I was itchy. [1:25:53] going on? And I was like, I had brain fog and I chachibetida and it was like, oh, you're riddled with candida. [1:25:58] And I was like, oh, I'll try the diet. And then I immediately started thinking faster and was not itchy at all. Isn't that bizarre that your gut biome has an effect on your personality? It's fucked up. [1:26:09] Well, we are a literal ecosystem. We want to think of ourselves as a person. But we're really like... [1:26:15] a life form that houses life forms. Yeah. I think it's because our control panel is up here. [1:26:22] makes us think that we're this like unit that we can fuck with. Like, I think if our eyes were here,

1:26:28-1:28:04

[1:26:28] we would maybe be like, this is a whole collective system, but this fucks us up. Like I was watching this fat, huge, tall guy eat an ice cream cone the other day, and his arm was like this, and he was like 6'7", he was just licking it. And I was like, it looks like this little man is eating this ice cream cone, unbeknownst to this giant body down below. Like it looks like this little guy is just riding this big guy. And I think that if we could just slide this fucker down. Yeah, body awareness of what you are as a whole. But that's also a lot of people don't do anything with their body. [1:26:58] truck that they drive around right and we do have a mouth i have a vagina which is a mouth you know what i mean we have the fucking more face down there there's great the uterus is a fucking another head [1:27:07] and the gut and everything. We just don't have eyeballs there, so we forget about it completely. [1:27:11] Really? It's a head? [1:27:12] I think so, yeah. It's a fucking whole thinking thing. Your gut is freaking all these brains. It's definitely thinking. Your heart thinks too. There's neurons in your heart. But the serotonin in the gut and the brain and stuff, it feels pretty balanced. It's just the eyeballs fuck us up. [1:27:25] Well, [1:27:26] If we could have an understanding that you're an actual system – [1:27:30] It would be a lot better for people. [1:27:32] Because so many people just think like, oh, I don't want to worry about my body. I'm worried about my brain. Like they think it's almost like vain to think about your body. Yeah. And vain is stupid. [1:27:40] Yeah. It's okay, but there's no virtue in being a weak piece of shit. That's not good for you. Yeah. And it just impacts your brain. Yeah, it's not intelligent to not take care of your body. Stupid. Yeah, it's crazy. It is. Yeah, and the second I stop working out, it is so weird how much pent-up energy, and then I'm lethargic, and then I have to eat sugar, and it all gets fucking crazy. Also, you start getting anxiety. You're like, oh, start freaking.

1:28:10-1:29:19

[1:28:10] like anytime I'm neglecting some part of my life you can like smell it on me the second I walk in I'm like hey sorry I shouldn't be you know I have this whole air and it's like I just needed to do my dishes [1:28:21] I would have been fine. That's Miyamoto Musashi. [1:28:24] Oh, that's the sword. So, like, literally, that's his book. It's like you have to be balanced. You have to balance everything. [1:28:30] That's good. But then sometimes, don't you go sicko mode where you go, fuck it? Yeah. Yeah. [1:28:35] Kind of, but not for long periods of time. Do you drink? Yeah, but I don't. I haven't drank in a long time, but I will. Yeah. Like, I'll have a glass of wine. But it's been like... [1:28:46] It was many months before I had anything, and then I had like a margarita. I was like, okay. And you felt... [1:28:52] Nothing. I mean, I didn't do it because I was an alcoholic. I did it because it's bad for you. I was like, why am I doing this? Because I drink at my club. I'll have a couple of drinks at the club, a couple nights a week, and then I'll go out with my wife, have a drink or two, and then maybe I'll do a podcast with someone who wants to have a drink. And so we'll have like a little whiskey, clink glasses, and we're talking, get a little tipsy. After a while, you're like, you're poisoning yourself.

1:29:22-1:30:55

[1:29:22] 15 drinks in a week. Yeah. Like, that's not good. Yeah. [1:29:26] And then I stopped. And I was like, oh, my God, I feel so much better. And then I felt stupid. I felt stupid for not doing it. I did the same thing. I'm a sugar addict and a love addict. I am not an alcoholic. But I was like, I can't. [1:29:38] I can't be having extra sugar where I'm not, where I don't need it. Oh, that's funny. Because I'm eating so much candy. So you got off the alcohol because of the sugar. I had to choose. I was like, it's Swedish fish or alcohol. I had to make the decision. And I was puffy all the time. I couldn't stand the little puff. That's not good either. Yeah, the puffy's bad. And then you have a glass of wine because you're like, I can treat. And I'd be like, just like. [1:29:58] fully retarded. Instantly, right? Yeah. Because your body's not used to it. Yeah. And so I was like, well, this isn't that fun either. So I'll just not do it. [1:30:06] Yeah, I think a lot of people more now than I think ever before are abstaining from alcohol. There was just a study recently about young people, about alcohol consumption in young people is downed by – [1:30:18] What was the number? I think it's something crazy, like 25%. Well, it's because they're not having sex. Is that what it is? I mean, Gen Z. I need to touch this. [1:30:26] You need to touch that. That's Harlan Williams' snake. I love Harlan Williams so much. I love him too. It was on the table when Trump was here, and he got so happy at his snake. So he had that snake in his pants the entire time he was doing a podcast, and he told me that he got a tapeworm. And then he named his tapeworm Dimitri. And I'm like, you have a worm? Yeah, I got a worm. I picked it up. It just was a gag. And at the end, he's like, the worm's coming out. And he reaches in his pants. He had it the whole time. The whole time.

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[1:30:56] his fucking snake and he puts it on the table and it's been there ever since so when i had trump on the podcast he was so happy that dimitri the snake was on the table his little snake pants that's awesome that's such a look at this that's i love dude harland was talking to us about rocket man and how they didn't put out rocket man because there's a song in it where he imitates being chinese like he does it with everybody he does it with german where he's like i last is i lieben in [1:31:26] And then he does a Chinese accent where he's like, right? [1:31:31] They just like buried it like it that came out with Tarzan. [1:31:35] And they buried the shit out of Rocketman and let Tarzan take the... [1:31:40] And I was like, I looked it up. Tarzan is like based off... [1:31:43] Seriously racist. [1:31:45] original story. Was it really? Yeah. [1:31:47] Which is so interesting. Edgar Rice Burroughs? The original Tarzan? [1:31:52] Was it Edgar Rice-Barrows? [1:31:55] is tarzan the one where it's like and we'll be yeah yeah tarzan look up tarzan racist ties it is there [1:32:02] So from the original book? I think so, yeah. Like the original, original. [1:32:06] Well, it was old. [1:32:08] It was an old story. Yeah. A white guy who lives with the chimpanzees and figures it out. [1:32:12] He lives with the apes, becomes the king, of course. Yeah, but I think even before then it was more racist. I mean, this was a Google. This could have been one of my things. Oh, maybe. I don't think I've ever read it. I think I've read the comic books. [1:32:23] I've seen the movies. I don't think I've ever read Tarzan, the Edgar Rice Burroughs novel.

1:32:28-1:34:08

[1:32:28] No, I haven't read that either. I think this was pre that, though. [1:32:32] But this could have been me Googling and finding it and being like, see. But Rocketman is so good. And if I had seen that as a kid, I would have been so stoked. So it's one of Harlan's comedies? [1:32:43] Yeah, yeah, his first. Okay. So it's his first movie, and he's so goofy in it, but he does all these voices for different nationalities, and at one point he does Chinese. [1:32:51] And it's such a funny scene. [1:32:54] 1997. Yeah. Wow. [1:32:57] I don't even think I knew about that movie. I didn't know about it either, but we had Harlan on the pod, and Ian was like, I'm obsessed with this movie, so then me and Ian watched it. [1:33:06] And it's like the best. That's crazy. It's like exactly what you want your kid to see. It's like a doofus who makes it as an astronaut because he's smart in his own way. But they fucked up with the Chinese thing, huh? [1:33:16] It was the one accent that you can't make fun of. One accent. He did all the other accents. So weird. I don't. [1:33:23] get that. Why is that the one? We live in a bizarro time. It's very weird. It's a very weird time. It's also funny because Disney was like, yeah, the scene goes in, we approve it. [1:33:33] And then they're like, wait, actually, that's fucked up. Well, you know, people approve dumb shit all the time. [1:33:39] Yeah. Fear factor. They improve people drinking cum. [1:33:43] What? Dude, I was obsessed with your podcast. And piss. [1:33:47] I was about to say, did you ever watch it again? I'm like, you're on it. But those people do not... [1:33:52] I used to think they were like hot people. They're like... [1:33:55] trash little trash like growing up when i was watching i was like oh my god i want to grow up to look like her and then i look back and i'm like this is white dreads crazy lunatics i was obsessed with that show well they made them drink cum but it wasn't a bowl cum

1:34:09-1:35:57

[1:34:09] It was donkey. [1:34:10] Oh, yeah, Donkey Cum. Donkey Cum and Donkey Urine. They had to play horseshoes to see how much Donkey Cum and Donkey Urine. What did they say, cum? Oh, sperm. I think we said sperm. No, no. [1:34:22] And they aired it? Well, not really. See, that's what got the show canceled. Imagine drinking the cum and not having your episode aired. I know. Well, people drank the cum and didn't win. The cum is not a problem for me. [1:34:34] I would have drank the cum. Urine would be more of a problem? Urine, fine. For me, it was the spiders in the mouth. The gals chose the urine over the cum. [1:34:41] Or the cum, rather, over the urine. Oh, yeah, okay, okay. [1:34:45] would rather. Hilarious to think it's gay. Donkey Juice. The episode's called Donkey Juice. But I don't know if that's really what it's called. See, the thing is, it never aired. I think Donkey Juice was like the internal name for the episode, or the stunt. [1:34:58] But – so it did air in other countries, though. That's why you can still watch it on YouTube because it aired in – I think it aired Denmark or some shit. They had to just jerk off a bunch of donkeys? No, no, no. [1:35:09] How did they get the cum? I used to – I had a bit – [1:35:13] about it in my act. They take a paddle prod and they shove it up the donkey's ass and they shock their prostate. [1:35:22] Yeah. Oh, yeah. They just bust. They love that shit. Yeah. Yeah. [1:35:27] That's cool. That is donkey rape. [1:35:29] It's more than that. It's kind of... [1:35:32] alien. You're an alien. You're abducting this donkey and forcing it to come. That's brutal. I know. With electroshock. Oh, my God. And then, you know, they got like a. This episode is brought to you by Uber Eats. This summer, soccer is here and the watch parties will be going back to back to back. But don't worry. Uber Eats has your game day essentials

1:36:02-1:37:25

[1:36:02] general all the snacks and groceries to keep your crowd happy delivered straight to your door like chips dips wings guac and fresh ingredients for the perfect game day spread order in so you can stay locked in on the game all the hosting none of the hassle order now for 30 off your game day snacks and grocery order only on uber eats for a limited time offer eligible for 30 off entire [1:36:32] offer valid through July 5th. Product availability varies by region. Exclusions may apply. This episode is brought to you by SimpliSafe. One thing you probably don't think about when you're planning the perfect summer getaway is protecting your home. But if disaster strikes, you want to be prepared. Even better, if it can be stopped before it happens. So check out SimpliSafe. They're the smarter option when it comes to home security because their systems help [1:37:02] before it starts. There's also no long-term contracts and no technician appointments. You can get a custom system and set it up in one afternoon by yourself or even sooner. It's one of many reasons why millions of people continue to trust and use SimpliSafe. Everyone deserves to have peace of mind, which is why I'm happy to partner with SimpliSafe again and offer an

1:37:32-1:39:08

[1:37:32] slash rogan that's half off at simply safe.com slash rogan there's no safe like simply safe the tube in the end where they're collecting it all for a show that we had buckets of it and the donkey doesn't even get paid how many donkeys got jacked off because there was buckets of it look no no yeah yeah oh yeah you know what i always assumed that was fake oh no it was super real yeah 100 yeah [1:37:56] That's crazy. There's laws. Like, there's laws, which was really good because, like, people say, how do I get on Fear Factor? Like, if you've ever met me, you can't get on the show, so you can't talk to me about it. [1:38:06] If you want to get on the show, you can talk to me right now. Yeah. And it will get me out of conversation. That's good. Yeah. [1:38:11] Nice. That's really good. Yeah, because I can't help anybody get on the show. But there's laws. Like, you can't say it's Donkey Kong when it's not Donkey Kong. It is come. You're drinking cum. Yeah, otherwise your show's not a game show anymore. How'd they get all that stuff? All the worms? So many worms. The worms. [1:38:28] Worm farms. Oh, yeah, for bait and stuff. And then cockroach farms where the people that eat cockroaches, you had to put them on a specific diet for X amount of time before they're allowed to be consumed by people. Yeah, you can't just have them eat garbage and rotten meat. And the spiders in the mouth where they were climbing out, that was the one that me and my sister would watch to torture ourselves. Where they couldn't get the spider in the mouth because it was climbing out. Yeah, it was brutal. [1:38:54] Ridiculous show. I literally signed up for it because I thought it was going to be canceled immediately and I'd have a lot of material. Were you able to... [1:39:01] Tell jokes on it? No. No, they limit the shit out of you? No. If I said something that they thought was controversial –

1:39:09-1:40:39

[1:39:09] most of the time they would edit it out. Did Jackass come... Jackass was after Fear Fist? No, I think it was before. [1:39:14] It was like stirring, I guess. Was it? I don't think so. [1:39:18] Okay. I was obsessed with. The first one was Survivor. Survivor was the first one on TV. Where you're like, yo. Which is still on the air, which is crazy. That is good. I thought the Osbournes. [1:39:28] Well, that was a reality show. There was ones before that, right? There was Totally Pauly. That was kind of a reality show. Oh, okay, okay. You know, but... Totally Pauly? Was that Pauly Shore? Pauly Shore, yeah. He had a very famous MTV reality show. [1:39:42] Totally Polly. Where he just fucked around? Just traveled around, met people. That's cool. It's a reality show. [1:39:50] I'm not wrong, right? Wasn't Survivor the first one of those kind of shows? A game show? [1:39:55] You know, like a game show, but a reality show. Reality game show. [1:39:59] think so. I mean, it definitely caught [1:40:01] There was that wave. That came out around the same year as American Idol. What year did Survivor start? I think it's like 90s. I was in high school. I'll check. It was like 2000-ish, 99, 2000. Yeah. [1:40:13] So Survivor was the first one. Yeah. That was the big one. I just can't believe it's still in the air. That's nuts. Was Fear Factor... 2000. 2000. May 31st, 2000. Oh, so it was only like a year before Fear Factor, because Fear Factor started in 2001. They're going to do a new one now. [1:40:28] That who the hell's hosting it? Wait. Johnny Knoxville. Yeah. [1:40:33] Survivor? It comes full circle. No, Fear Factor. I think there's a new Fear Factor that Johnny Knoxville is going to host.

1:40:39-1:42:31

[1:40:39] That's awesome. So it all comes full circle. And you hated it. [1:40:42] No, no, I didn't hate it. It's just like... [1:40:46] It was a job. You were really sweet to the people. I was trying to be. You were very nice to them. I try to be nice. I remember being like, that's a comforting... You'd be a good acid person to trip acid. You know what I mean? Maybe that's how you got good at... I mean, that's a fucked up trip to be like, you're going to put these... [1:41:03] fucking things in your mouth. There's that, but I would also... [1:41:07] Some people would be scared to do a stunt and I'd be like, look. We have to make money. You 100% can do this. You know, people that have never really completely challenged themselves are not sure of where their boundaries lie. And they get really scared when something new and crazy is about to happen. They get overwhelmed by anxiety. And you can get them and go, hey, listen to me. You know that voice in your head telling you not to do this? Fuck that voice. You can do this. And when you get done, you're going to be so happy. You're going to be so happy. [1:41:37] But you just have to do it. It's not going to be nearly as bad as you think it is. Just force yourself to do it, and you can do it. [1:41:42] Then they would do it. Yeah, because when I was a kid, from the time I was 15 years old, I was teaching martial arts. [1:41:50] I am used to coaching people. I bring people to tournaments and people that were scared and they were going to have to fight and compete. And I would coach them. In the corner? Oh, yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I just went to the Serrano. [1:42:02] Katie Taylor. Oh, did you really? It's a great fight. Dude, I have, can I say, I am straight as they come, but Katie Taylor, man. You get some of that? Dude, I just think she's the most attractive woman. The way she goes, and I fight for the Lord, and she's like, dude, when they're all fucking brain fucked afterwards, and she's like, I just want to go ahead and thank everybody for coming. And you're like, nobody knows what you're saying. Right. The brain damage, though, is crazy. I box, and I am not. You still box? Yeah.

1:42:31-1:44:04

[1:42:31] Yeah, I box, but I don't. I mean, when my trainer is in town. But even sparring, I'm like, we got to do this occasionally because I'm fucking fucked up afterwards. Yeah, I have friends that still spar. I'm like, stop doing that. [1:42:43] Yeah, a lot of people aren't sparring at all. They just fight. [1:42:47] That's rare. Most fighters spar. [1:42:50] There's a few that don't. Max Holloway for a while wasn't sparring because he was trying to preserve himself for fights. But then when he had to fight Dustin Poore or when he had Justin Gaethje, I think it was. Justin Gaethje was like, I've got to start sparring again because I'm going to fight someone who's really dangerous. You can't have any. It's just so – when I started boxing, I was like, I'm never going to spar. That's crazy. And then a month in, I was so addicted and it was so much fun. It felt like you were training so that you could spar. It is fun to do. [1:43:20] like, I say, and I'd be like, oh, we can't do that. We can't do that. And you listen to Serrano and Katie when they're like fighting in those like press conferences, and it sounds like two drunk kids. Like they're like, no, she fucking said that we're going to, and you're like, this is. [1:43:38] I cannot be doing that. Well, the real rough one is you talk to guys that are in their 50s. [1:43:43] And they've been retired for years and they're slurring their words. You barely understand what they're saying. Yeah. You're like, fuck. Yeah. And they have so much money, but what do they? Well, some of them don't even have the money anymore. Usually they go through a few divorces because they're crazy. Yeah. No one can stay with them. They're out of their fucking mind. Yeah. And they're probably alcoholics because their brain's completely shattered. Yeah.

1:44:05-1:45:42

[1:44:05] Do they get, do men get more aggressive? [1:44:08] When they get brain damage? They definitely can. It depends entirely on the individual. Do women get CT? Oh, yeah, 100%. Yeah, they can get aggressive too. Really? They get real impulsive, men and women, that have brain damage. They get impulsive. They can't control their instincts, their impulses rather. They have addiction problems because they feel off, right? Oh, yeah, a little manic. So they want to drink alcohol to calm down or do cocaine. A lot of them wind up doing coke. [1:44:38] You're fried. Your brain's cooked. Your endocrine system's all fucked up. Your pituitary gland's been bouncing around inside your fucking skull. Is your brain fucked? Probably a little bit. Yeah. Probably just the right amount. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Just the right amount. When did you stop? Well, I stopped fighting when I was 22, I think, was my last fight. And I stopped sparring when I was like 27 or 28. Yeah. [1:45:00] Oh, good. So you had the gummy kid brain. I did a little bit of sparring later when I was in my 30s. Do you do jiu-jitsu? Yeah. Do you grapple with you? Yeah, but that... [1:45:09] The brain damage you get from that is rare. Maybe I should do that. My mom always tells me that I would like that. Kim Condon does it. [1:45:15] Ask her about it. Okay. I just, the boxing, the hitting. Yeah, don't do that. But I like, but even just training with mitts. I have such a rage issue that beating the shit out of something feels, even when I go to the gym and just beat the shit out of the bag, I feel so much better. Oh, yeah, it's super good for you. There's nothing better to, like, relieve stress than hitting the bag. Yeah. It's the best. Don't stop doing that. I mean, definitely keep hitting pads, but don't get any brain damage. You know what I'm worried about, jujitsu? What? The fainting. Because you're going to get choked out.

1:45:45-1:47:17

[1:45:45] to choking you out yeah if anybody does something to my wrist and getting no any artery touching triangle you're just gonna fall asleep and they're gonna be like i did a good job yeah yeah yeah totally because i have friends that do it and they're like yeah and then my bone was up against mine i'm like i'm done they're not no yeah talk to kim it is rough but it's super addictive once you do it and you get used to it it's very addictive [1:46:10] It's addictive because of a puzzle. It's a game. Yeah, you're playing a game. And you get better at the game the more you play it. Okay. [1:46:17] The game is get somebody in an arm bar. Right, but the arm bar is – all of it is slightly representing breaking them, right? Oh, yeah. Yeah, that makes me not – Oh, yeah, you have to tap. Oh, God. You have to tap so your arm doesn't get broke. The idea of overextending somebody's body part is brutal. It is brutal. [1:46:32] That's so gross. Yeah. [1:46:34] It's gross. [1:46:35] But it's very – but I think that – It's a useful skill. Very useful skill. I know. I know. But the boxing is just bam. That's useful too. Breaking somebody's nose I could do, but – You couldn't break their arm? I could not. No, the idea of like bone coming through, crazy. Just choke them. Put them to sleep. Yeah. [1:46:51] You put a lot of people to sleep? Not a lot of people. [1:46:55] Is it a good feeling to be put to sleep? [1:46:56] I don't know. [1:46:58] You've never been put to sleep? No, I've never been put to sleep. No. Really? No. Are you scared of being put to sleep? No. [1:47:03] No, I just tap when I know I'm about to go out. Right, right, right, right. Your body probably taps. No, you tap. I know, but you probably, your instinct, like, even if you're like, put me to sleep, you'd still probably be like, no, actually, no. No, you got to know, like, when you're going. Right.

1:47:17-1:49:03

[1:47:17] Right. So like if you're getting choked, if like someone's got my back and they've got to choke in, there's a point in time where I know I'm not getting out of this. You just tap. [1:47:25] Yeah. Smart. [1:47:26] It's stupid to fight it off because you get injured. And then you wind up being really fucked up. [1:47:31] I love watching MMA. Do you? Yeah, when they jump on their backs like that, when they go full monkey style. Yes, dude. Have you ever been to it live? [1:47:39] No, just that fight. It was a big deal. I went, Netflix took me thinking. Oh, yeah, but that's a boxing match. You should go to a UFC live. It's bananas. Really? Yeah, it's bananas. [1:47:49] Yeah. Yeah. [1:47:50] I loved going to the Serrano. Are you at the club this weekend? [1:47:54] Who's at the... No, I'm in Rochester this weekend. Oh, cool. There's a UFC... I was going to say there's a UFC in San Antonio. Yeah. [1:48:01] On Saturday night. I'll go in New York for sure. [1:48:04] When it's in New York? Okay. I'll get you tickets. It's going to be in Madison Square Garden in November. [1:48:09] I'll go. If you're going to be around. Okay. That'd be so sick. Oh, my God. I'm going to wear a fur coat. Yeah, you'll love it. And seeing it in the garden is kind of special. [1:48:18] Yeah, where was... Oh, they were in the... [1:48:21] Garden, Serrano. No, yes. Was it? Were they? Yeah. The big room or the smaller room? Big. The big room. Sold it out. Wow. Serrano made 14 mil or something. I mean, they made... Jesus Christ. I know. That's great. Isn't that great? That's awesome. Yeah. And the fucking... The... [1:48:36] Card was incredible watching them. Madison Square Garden has got a lot of energy in that room, too. There's something crazy about that room. Yeah. It's just like the amount of concerts and fights and events that have taken place. You feel it in the building when you walk in. You walk in, and you're like, whoa. Yeah, it's intense. This place is alive. It's awesome. Yeah. When you go to a new arena, and they're brand new, and you walk in the door, and it's empty, and you're wandering around, you're like, wow, cool place.

1:49:06-1:50:39

[1:49:06] - This place is alive. It's got memories in here. - The other ones show like racquetball. Like you could, you know what I mean? Like you could hit a racquetball around in one. It's like they're the stage. 'Cause I've done arenas with [1:49:16] Tom Bunch, Segura. And you can definitely feel the ones that have been there versus the ones that they put up recently. Yeah. Yeah, they have history. History is burned into buildings. I'm so bad at rotating. Oh, it's weird. It's so weird. It's the best way, though, because it's the only way you can do an arena where it's intimate. So what we're talking about is a stage that's round. Oh, yeah, in the round. In the round. Yeah, it's the best way. Just say a joke, then pivot. Every time I get up there, and I'd be like, here's my joke. [1:49:46] every single time. That's funny though. Yeah, it was totally great. But I couldn't do the like natural rotation. The good thing about it is though, it makes the show intimate even though [1:49:56] 15,000 people there. Because there's people on this side facing people on the other side. So everybody realizes they're all in it together. And the Jumbotron. I mean, my Netflix special is shot. I was like... [1:50:08] Wherever your camera is, shove it the fuck up my nose. Like, I'm so sick of seeing specials where I'm watching their whole body the whole time. [1:50:14] show my face because my facial movements are like half of my joke. Right. [1:50:20] in the arena, you get that. Like, I remember watching Louis... [1:50:23] at the Hulu, at the Hulu theater. And it was just the fucking jumbotrons. You saw every little movement he was making. And I was like, that's so sick because it's so in a club, you see that. Right. You know, that's what you want to see, especially if you're looking at it on the screen, which is weird.

1:50:40-1:52:14

[1:50:40] Yeah, and then sometimes you watch somebody and you're like, I should just have gone home and watched this. Right. And I would see their face. Right. But the Jumbotron fucking nails you and it's so sick. Yeah, well, that's the good thing about the round, too. You can have your back to them and they totally can still see your face. I know, but I'm always worried about my butt. It's crazy. I want like a trench coat or something. Wear a trench coat. Do like what Kinison used to do. Oh, yeah. Kinison used to wear a trench coat. I can go Trinity. Trinity from Matrix. Yeah, there you go. My icon. There you go. I'm obsessed with Trinity. Oh, yeah. [1:51:10] Thank you. [1:51:10] Did you ever hear that lady that claims that she wrote The Matrix and they stole the idea from her? Dude, anime wrote that fucking shit. Anime? That shit is like ancient as hell. It's Terminator and Matrix. It's both of them. Right. She says she wrote both of them? Yeah. [1:51:22] Is there any... [1:51:24] Credibility to what she says? [1:51:27] We don't know. [1:51:28] I had a joke about the Matrix that people were upset about, where I was upset that the Wachowski sisters were on the top... [1:51:35] Ten female directors. Oh, no. Are they really? Yeah, because I was like, if they had come into... [1:51:41] say they had come into MGM as sisters being like, we want to pitch a movie. Like in the nineties, like we want to pitch a movie. It's about a guy and he's in a simulation. They'd be like, [1:51:49] How about you simulate my dick in your mouth? You know what I mean? And it's not like anti-anything, but people still got mad. But yeah, that joke is... [1:51:58] That was one of my favorites for a while, because I'm obsessed with The Matrix. It's my favorite movie ever. It was a great movie, and I think we're about to... [1:52:05] literally live it. We're real close. I'm in the camp. Everybody thinks I'm fully retarded. They just told me a lot on Twitter that AI is going to help things, not hurt things.

1:52:15-1:54:11

[1:52:15] I would like the record to state that this is my... [1:52:18] theory, because I think it's going to be proved right. You think that AI is going to help people not hurt things? Yes. That's interesting. How do you think that's going to happen? I just think that the whole catastrophic, this is going to be an entity that ends all of us, I don't [1:52:34] I don't think it's going to do that. I think that... [1:52:36] I think that maybe I'm just looking at the positive side, but I think it's such a smart piece of technology that was so – [1:52:43] in the works the whole time to be made that [1:52:46] it's going to help us solve problems. Like I think humanity knows it has been trying to create somebody that can work on a supercomputer level to solve problems faster and more efficiently. Yeah, that's definitely the best case scenario use for it. [1:53:00] Right, but the corporations are evil and all that. Yeah, the problem is they've already shown that these large language models can be programmed with ideology, right? So did you ever see the disaster they had with Google Gemini when they first launched it where they said, show us images of Nazi soldiers, and they had multiracial Nazi soldiers? Yeah. They're like an Asian woman was a Nazi soldier, a black woman, an Indian. They had a Native American lady who was a Nazi. Yeah. [1:53:30] That's... [1:53:31] Not real. Okay, so your ideology, by making everything diverse, you've distorted history. So your ideology interfered with truth. [1:53:41] Okay. But we do that when we take down all the statues. Right, but we're not that. Right, but we're not supposed to be this large language model. This large language model is supposed to be eventually super intelligence in artificial form. So super intelligence wouldn't do that. It would know that Nazis were German and they were – It wasn't Nazi that they asked for. They asked for German soldiers and then gay people in color in 1943, which would have been Nazi soldiers. Yeah, why are you getting all technical? Well, I mean you're asking a large language model to do something.

1:54:11-1:56:00

[1:54:11] I know, but it did show German soldiers that were wearing Nazi swastikas that were multiracial. I'm just saying it didn't – the question would have to be specific when you're talking about these things. That's why – [1:54:22] German soldier, which happened to be Nazi. I was trying to put that music stuff all night. [1:54:26] And you have to be very specific when you want. You don't think there's any possibility that it could be something that we have control over and we use it for? Don't you think we've always been scared about everything, about science, about microscopes, about social media? The printing press? [1:54:44] Yeah. Yeah. I mean, they were terrified when people first developed trains. They thought people's bodies were going to explode if they went over 35 miles an hour. Yeah, for sure. This is the human error removed is sick. Those Waymo cars are sick. The doctors using Chachapiti, they're doing such a better job. Yeah. No, there's definitely a lot of pluses. The problem is control. It's always the problem. And... [1:55:09] every person that has an enormous... [1:55:13] amount of power should be carefully scrutinized. And the kind of power that you're going to have if you are in control of essentially a digital god – [1:55:23] Like it becomes a problem when human beings are involved. Now, if they become completely autonomous, then you have a problem with us being irrelevant. But that's what I'm talking about, that situation where they become autonomous. That's what I'm referring to. So say we have an autonomous… [1:55:38] Entity. [1:55:39] Mm-hmm. [1:55:39] Why would it? Why would it kill us? What we don't go? You know, I'm not saying it would. I don't think it would. I don't think it would kill us, but it would probably give us incentive to not breed, which I think if I was intelligent life force, I would kind of do it exactly the way our society is already going. Yeah, we're already right now. We're doing it to ourselves, but that might be by design. It's my point.

1:56:01-1:57:42

[1:56:01] It might be that in order to not alarm us that this artificial intelligence has engineered our diet and our environment to kill our reproductive system. And it's already doing – but it's doing it in a very innocuous way with microplastics and a bunch of – it's doing it in a way where we don't even know what's happening. And it's just happening nice and slowly. But on the same coin, it could be like, hey, what if we actually perpetuated the species and got it back to life like the pandas? I don't think that's going to happen. [1:56:31] hybrids. [1:56:32] We're going to become a cyborg. [1:56:33] Like a real legitimate sideboard. I'm stoked about that. Are you? Yeah. You'd be first in line? Oh my God, give me the freaking parts. [1:56:41] I faint at blood. No more blood. Make me a cyborg. I'm happy. I love metal. I love scrap metal. I love cars. Make me a fucking car, dude. I hate this gooey thing. [1:56:51] I... [1:56:53] I don't know what's going to happen, but I do know it's going to be unprecedented. [1:56:57] It's going to be a new thing. I'm surprised. The one thing that did freak me out is a guy the other day at a bachelorette party had [1:57:02] the goggles on that was recording us. Oh, God. When I realized that, when I was like, oh, shit, I was going to take in... [1:57:09] Everything. All of the information. Yeah. There's a lot of people wearing them metal glasses everywhere, which is like – [1:57:16] At one point, you're like, oh, well, it's cool, new technology. And the other thing, you're like, yeah, but people probably don't even fucking know they're getting recorded, and that's kind of crazy. Yeah. [1:57:25] It's kind of weird. Also, I don't like the idea of all these digital images of things. Like if they if it could be printed out into matter and you could look at it. But the idea of like your entire life, like even us with the fucking iPhones, all these photos stress me the fuck out, dude. Why? Why?

1:57:42-1:59:14

[1:57:42] Because it's so much... Because there's something about it because it... When you have a photo, you're in the present with a past photo, right? Like, I'm sitting here in this reality with a past reality that I can hold. Right. The weird... [1:57:56] giant vortex of memory is almost like my vortex of memory. [1:58:02] You know what I mean? Like neither of them have matter. My memory in my brain and this brain here. I don't like that. [1:58:07] I think that I want the memory to be contained in matter or in my memory. I don't like this being a brain. And I don't like it holding pictures of all of my past. Well, I think when you say, I want to be a cyborg, [1:58:20] That's you're going to hold all of it and you're going to have a hard drive. So instead of having a memory where it's fallible right now, like your memory is like weird. Like, when did we do that? Was that in November? Oh, my God. That was November. November. [1:58:34] You'll have an actual memory, just like you have on your phone, where you can go back to like for you, you know, like, you know, like it suggests you on this day and you go to like 2017. Like, oh, my God. Yeah. Oh, my God. They're so young. Oh, my God. Look, that would feel less disembodied than this fucking weird unit that we're all addicted to. You know what I mean? It's already a part of us. It's so weird that it's just man and unit. But. [1:58:58] the unit you can just put down. [1:59:01] Thank you. [1:59:01] You think it'll be – You can put the unit down. You think we're going to be cyborgs like it's going to be – Uh-huh. [1:59:06] Yeah. [1:59:07] Like, human beings will have a chip in their brain that anytime I'm like... [1:59:10] What year was that? It might not even be a chip. It might be a wearable.

1:59:15-2:00:49

[1:59:15] Where are we going to put down? They might be able to have something that you put on the top of your head with electrodes that touch your temples, and it just sends signals into your brain and works from there. I mean, who knows? It's so cutting edge. And then once AI gets into the picture… [1:59:33] Right, and AI... [1:59:34] If you get sentient AI and you get AI that understands like how human neurotransmitters work and what to stimulate, what not to stimulate, it might devise ideas that we never even anticipated in terms of like how to implement this technology. And it will probably figure out how to make it better. [1:59:51] And then it'll be off to the races. I was so scared today because I texted my friend suicidal. Like, she texted me about something and I wrote, like, tongue in cheek, I'm suicidal, right? Like, I'm not actually, but I wrote it. And I was like, shit, my phone is now going to send me so many fucking don't kill yourself stuff. Does it do that? Yeah, dude. Every time I text some shit like that, I'll go on Instagram and it'll be like, don't do this. Seek help, blah, blah, blah. That's what's creepy is that your fucking Instagram knows what you're texting to your friends. Yeah. [2:00:21] think it like... [2:00:22] Like sometimes I'll think a thought. [2:00:25] And an ad will come up. [2:00:26] That's coming. And two people in one week said that to me. Yeah, but doesn't that just mean it's a coincidence? I don't know. That means you're relying on coincidence. Did you watch this thing I sent you yesterday? I didn't. What is it? All right. So this got announced yesterday. They do not describe the whole works. Oh, yeah, I did. I did. I forgot. Yeah, go ahead. It allows telepathic communication in some way with a headset. They're clearly connected to something, and they don't show that, but...

2:00:49-2:02:40

[2:00:49] These two guys start talking. [2:00:51] uh... [2:00:52] Those guys aren't real. Well, they're real. Oh, sorry. Why does it have... What's this music? [2:01:00] Oh. [2:01:02] He's a dog. He's from Apple Vision. Oh, the Apple Vision? [2:01:07] word into any language. [2:01:09] So this one is actually translated. Let me go back to these two guys talking. [2:01:13] No way. These guys just have the telepathy tapes. It's showing like they're trying to have a communication. [2:01:18] About food. [2:01:22] They're not speaking. It's really hard to hear this. That's crazy. [2:01:26] or a quiet office. [2:01:27] He described that you could be in a party and both have the headset on. [2:01:31] and [2:01:32] The stinger's altered ego detects aren't affected by environmental noise. [2:01:35] All right, these fuckers have to be stopped. This is too crazy. Yeah, now you're different, right? Yeah, that's not okay. I like how you swing one way or the other. No, fuck that, dude. These dorks. These dorks in fucking coffee shops talking shit. I'm going to use my alter ego. [2:01:49] to go to [2:01:51] To give you a travel tip? Yeah, it translates that into Hindi. [2:01:55] So it starts off in English, switches it to Hindi. Whoa. And the weird thing, which was you guys just described, they don't talk about how this works yet. They literally just put up a video on Twitter yesterday. Like, if you want more information, go to our website. [2:02:06] And so you're describing like if the, [2:02:09] They have a way to get brain... [2:02:10] waves in some way all right yeah i'm out on this i'm out on this especially when i see the kids that are doing it i'm like these kids are just fucking dorks who are getting so far they're gonna look like aliens this isn't like the agents from the matrix with big heads yeah that's what's gonna happen but if it was the agents from the matrix like some attractive men and you know sunglasses and suits i'd be like okay what you guys have planned is probably better than reality but those fucking dorks being like this is what we're doing now i think no matter what we do

2:02:40-2:04:20

[2:02:40] is going to keep moving. [2:02:42] No matter what we do. China's going to do it. Russia's going to do it. Everybody with power is going to do it. Anybody that has the resources, they're going to keep pushing this technology. And if you just think, where's it going? Well, it's going in that direction. You're going to become a part of some fucking giant hive mind. We're all going to be sharing thoughts together and some bizarre buzz of information that we all suck from. [2:03:04] It's going to be real weird. [2:03:06] It is going to be weird, but then you could have the unpluggers, which would be nice. Well, that's what it's going to be when you go to the club and you put your phone in the yonder bag. You talk some shit, do stand-up. Yeah, totally. I think it's one of the reasons why people love going to a comedy club now, and especially when you make them put their phone in the yonder bags. It's a game changer. Oh, it's everything. You could actually pay attention, actually focus. You're there. You're living in the present moment instead of constantly checking your tweets. People, you know. [2:03:33] It's an addiction, man, and it's a new one. It's one that didn't exist for our parents. They never had to deal with it. And we're growing up with this very bizarre connection to the whole world. And a lot of it's negative. A lot of it's negative. And it's also manipulated. A lot of it's bots. I guess I'm hoping it also gets so bad it gets better. Like I'm hoping – [2:03:55] that not to use the matrix again that there will be a point where you can be like i'm disconnecting for everything whereas right now it feels like we have to engage with it yeah like it would be nice to get to a point where it's like a oh are you on or off i'm off and you're like oh okay i won't try and do you ever just disconnect your yeah when i go to my house yeah yeah totally it disappear yeah that's good yeah and i just put this healthy i have like a safe where i lock my oh good for you that's my phone and lock candy

2:04:21-2:06:06

[2:04:21] Candy and your phone, the same. Yeah. What's harder, candy or the phone? Candy. Yeah, of course. Fuck the phone. Candy rules, dude. Candy's so good. The phone sucks. It stresses me out. Those little candy fishes. Yeah. [2:04:34] Those are my favorite, Swedish fish. Yeah. I just had a real one from Swedish. What do you mean? From Swedish. Most of them forgeries? [2:04:40] the fake the red ones it's fake swedish fish those are american bullshit the swedish fish are black from sweden really interesting yeah it probably doesn't have our nasty chemicals for the dyes yeah the red 40. yeah is rfk against red 40. [2:04:55] I think so. It's so funny watching RFK go through the lesbian moms that I have. Like – [2:05:00] you know, because they're so liberal, so they're like, fuck RFK. And then at one point he's like, [2:05:04] I want to bring back raw milk. And I said to watch my entire town of Ithaca be like, well, we do love raw milk. We actually like that quite a bit because they're like right now siphoning raw milk illegally off of farms. It's so silly that raw milk is illegal and you go buy whiskey at Costco. It's so weird. So dumb. Raw milk is so good. It's really good. Francis Ellis is all about the raw cheese and milk. Yeah, it's good for you. Yeah. And for a lot of people that have lactose intolerance. Oh, not Francis Ellis. Jason Ellis. Francis Ellis is a different comedian. Oh, Jason Ellis, the comedian. Yeah, yeah. [2:05:34] Giselles is a comedian, but he's way more into... [2:05:37] Or a two-story chicken. Yeah, it's really good for you. [2:05:40] yeah it's just don't get it bad don't get it where it's and then what happens you just have a bug or we get fucking rancid diarrhea yeah but whatever better than a fucking cancer yeah well i think your body when it's homogenized and pasteurized it's like what is this yeah no enzymes what is this water protein you're making me drink that i'm gonna fart out yeah i bet we could drink endless raw milk i bet we could really go ham on raw milk and cheese

2:06:06-2:07:41

[2:06:06] Swedish fish is a taste that's supposed to be called a lingonberry. A lingonberry. But the black stuff is a different kind. It's called salmiak, which is black salted licorice. That shit is good. You like that? Is that your shit? Ammonium chloride. Ammonium chloride. Nice. Probably not better than Red 40. I don't know. Well, let's Google ammonium chloride. We assume everything Nordic countries do is better. I know, right? It's crazy. We assume. They'll be in the audience and I'll be like, oh, you think you're better than me? [2:06:36] White crystalline water-soluble salt formed from ammonia and hydrogen chloride. [2:06:43] Used primarily as a fertilizer. An expectorant in cold medications and a component in soldering and galvanizing fluxes to clean metal surfaces. Also found in dry cell batteries such as a flavoring agent in its natural form. It's called Salamoniac. [2:06:59] I'm sure it's delicious. It's good. Well, it's like monosodium glutamate. Everybody was scared of that for the longest time. And Bourdain and I were talking about it, and he was like, no. He was like, it's good. He's like, it makes the food taste better. I go, right. It does, right? He's like, yeah. I go, what do you think about all the stuff about it being bad for you? Because I think it's bullshit. Yeah. [2:07:23] And what does it do? It's just a – Monosodium glutamate is like what they would always put – the thing was it was always – you would hear that it was used in Chinese food. But it was used in a lot of food. Oh, MSG. [2:07:33] I remember when I worked at Newport Cranberry, they used to have some laying around. I think – God, what was the name of the stuff? Oh, yeah, you go into places where you can –

2:07:41-2:09:21

[2:07:41] MSG is every time? Yeah, but there was a name that – there was a product – [2:07:45] . [2:07:46] MSG enhances umami flavors with less sodium, about one-third the sodium of salt, while NACI primarily... [2:07:57] That's just table salt. Wasn't it called Accent? Wasn't there something like that where there was a monosodium glutamate product that they would have for restaurants? [2:08:07] God, I can't remember what it was called. [2:08:11] Is it accent? There it is. [2:08:14] That's a good rebrand. Global Food Company known for Amino Science. Umami Seasoning. Yeah, that's it. So they'd have like a tub of that stuff. You'd throw it in whatever the fuck you're cooking. It made it taste better. [2:08:25] What was the... But monosodium glutamate was like the thing that everybody was always blaming. Oh, I got to stay away from Chinese food. That fucking MSG kills me. It's so good. And he was like, that's bullshit. [2:08:34] But why did we say that? I don't know. It's probably one of those things that we got stuck with, like saturated fat's bad for you, because some cunt got a lot of money from the sugar lobby. And so they wrote some fake science and everybody bought into it. Like the non-fat diet, yeah. Those guys fucked everybody so hard, and they did it for 50 grand. They did it for 50 grand like the 1960s, and forever we've been fucked. [2:08:57] I fell for it for a long time. 60 years, everybody's been like, oh, stay away from it. Stay away from fat. [2:09:04] The perceptions of MSG's danger stem from the anecdotal reports and flawed early studies, not from consistent scientific evidence. For most people, MSG does not cause health problems. However, a small subset of the population may be sensitive to it and experience temporary mild symptoms.

2:09:21-2:11:17

[2:09:21] So what's the mild symptoms? Headaches, nausea. Delicious. Drowsiness. Yeah. Flushing or sweating. Maybe you just ate too much, you fat fuck. It was... [2:09:30] Once called Chinese restaurant syndrome, now known as MSG symptom complex. These symptoms often appear within two hours and are typically mild. Yeah, but also you probably ate like a pig. [2:09:43] Also whiskey again. Difficulty breathing in rare, severe cases. [2:09:48] He probably drank beer and ate 50 bowls of noodles, you fat fuck. Is RFK pro fucking, is he like pro checking all of this stuff or is he, isn't he the anti just like let it all run or is he? No, he thinks you should know what's bad for you. [2:10:07] And if you want to take it, there should be a label on the food letting you know that the stuff in there has been shown to cause X, Y, and Z. [2:10:16] Okay. That's it. Like, he doesn't say we need to get rid of cigarettes or we need to get rid of whiskey. Like, if you don't say that, those two things, if you don't say no more cigarettes, no more whiskey, if you don't say that, then shut up. So the left is worried about deregulation. [2:10:30] They're worried about deregulation. Is that true? Yeah, with many things. Yeah, with environmental concerns. I'm sure they're worried about deregulation. With banking and industry, they're worried about deregulation. Is there any party that's just pro-regulation? Me? [2:10:44] Is there any party that's just pro-regulation? Regulate AI, regulate Instagram? I think the Democrats are much more... [2:10:49] Um... [2:10:50] interested in regulating things. Like if you look at the most regulated states, they're Democrat-run states. Like California has a lot of red tape and regulations if you want to get anything done. Socialist is the most regulated. Yeah, because they want control. They want more control from the government. They have a bigger bloated government, and the way to keep that functioning is you've got to go through hoops and ladders to get through anything. Anything that you want to get done. I feel like it's all or nothing. I feel like you have to regulate everything or regulate nothing.

2:11:17-2:12:57

[2:11:17] no some regulation is good like reg like your your parents are contractors right there's a good example you need too much regulation there too much regulation but you need inspectors fuck the inspect they suck okay you can't say that because if your family does a good job and i'm sure they do that's fine but there's a bunch of fly-by-night fuckheads yeah that you know make a house and don't follow code and then shit goes sideways but that shit is so corrupt that stuff is like [2:11:47] bullshit that contractors have to go through. It's psycho. That's true, too. I used to be a contractor, dude. The amount of... I should have been... [2:11:54] I think there's a comfortable medium. [2:11:55] I think, yeah, I don't... My stepdad was an architect, so I grew up around construction sites as well. So you know how frustrating that guy is. I do, but I also know that there's a lot of shady motherfuckers that are involved in construction, and you've got to make sure these assholes... [2:12:09] Follow code. Otherwise, this house is going to collapse and kill everybody inside. People suck. Some people suck. And they cut corners. They save money. They do things all half-assed. And you need someone to go inspect it. [2:12:22] But then it's weird to not have regulation on other – there's no regulation with social media. I mean, unless it's the censorship shit. Right. That's – it's weird. And it's really bad for you. [2:12:31] psychologically it might be one of the worst things that's ever happened to like collectively society psychologically like if you look at Jonathan hates book do you ever read his book the coddling of the American mind no it's all about he's great it's all about social media and then self-harm with girls this is a big self-harm suicidal ideation suicidal thoughts

2:12:57-2:14:52

[2:12:57] That all comes... [2:12:59] like this because ramps way up when social media gets introduced and there should just be elected committees elected psychological committee elected philosophical who's going to tell you you can and can't do it who's going to say you should and shouldn't say things if you don't like it you should get off of it and that's what i do i just stay off of it for the most part i know but so is booze right the you get they have no don't do that it'll ruin your life don't do this this could ruin [2:13:29] And it also sucks your time away. It needs to be regulated like a drug. [2:13:34] Who's going to be the one? Who's going to tell you what? I don't want anybody telling me I can't go on Twitter. If I'm at home and I have nothing to do and I pay taxes, I fucking my bills are paid. I want to just any tactic for attention. Monopolization has to be removed, says the committee that doesn't exist. Like, you know how you feed them. It's not monopolization. You can shut it off any time you want. [2:13:59] But it pulls you in. It sends you alerts. It gives you the dopamine thing. I don't have alerts on. [2:14:04] No. I've never had alerts on. The kids do. Well, they should shut that shit off. Someone should teach them how to use it correctly. And also tell them, like, hey, this is a lot of negativity, and a lot of these people are wasting their life on this shit. [2:14:16] You're wasting your time. I know that. And I just fell into a dark hell hole last night. Like, it's hard to avoid. It's it's it is. But you can do it. I do it. [2:14:24] Yeah, but I can do it, but 13-year-old Jordan would be fucking hanging from that closet at the Airbnb. I mean, it would be rough. 15-year-old Joe would be tweeting horrible shit at every celebrity. Oh, just horrible shit. That's the other thing. Horrible shit. Yeah, under fake accounts, you can make 30 different accounts. Yeah. Make a new Gmail address, make a new account. All they have is their IP address. Maybe that should be no more fake accounts. Yeah, but then the thing is whistleblowers are important, right?

2:14:54-2:16:35

[2:14:54] going on and you can expose it and you don't want to die. Yeah, yeah, yeah. You don't want to get sethritched. Yeah, yeah. [2:15:01] But isn't there another way to whistleblow, like graffiti or something? No. It doesn't work. By a billboard? It can't go viral. Yeah. Billboards don't go viral. You've got to be able to express yourself without fear of consequences because there's a lot of people that don't have any power. And there's a government or maybe you find out that the corporation you work for is doing some horrible shit. And they're bypassing some environmental regulation and dumping toxic stuff into the ocean. [2:15:30] Well, maybe it just comes down to regulating the corporations and being like, bro, you can't make money off of people's data. You can't make money off of – That's a problem. It's because they didn't – we didn't know when we all signed up for it that data was going to be this massive commodity. [2:15:44] Not only is it very valuable, but then it gives them insane power. The people that have all that money and have all that power, now they're in control of – [2:15:52] You know, essentially all social discourse. So maybe that's the thing that needs to be regulated. [2:16:00] I don't know. Because when they do regulate it, then it's like – did you ever read the Twitter files? Did you ever read any of the stuff that Matt Taibbi and Schellenberger and all these guys – [2:16:12] Elon purchased Twitter. One of the things they found out was the intelligence communities had been deeply embedded into Twitter, and then they were involved in suppressing certain narratives and pushing other ones. And it was like really sketchy stuff, like dangerous, dangerous stuff, because if they have the power to suppress accurate, real information, then you're propagandizing to the entire country.

2:16:42-2:18:27

[2:16:42] It's going to affect everything. And they were doing that. And they were doing it because they had regulation over social media. They had power. Now, Elon comes along and he's like, fuck that. It's Wild West time. And opens it wide up and everyone's like, oh, it's all racist now. There's Nazis. Like, yes, there's more of that now because it's not getting banned. But also there's more people that, you know, can talk about virtually anything that they want to. And you can debate it out. [2:17:12] You can talk about the moon. You can talk about asteroids. You can talk about foreign governments. You can talk about anything. And that's better. It's better to have people say horrible shit, but also be able to say true shit than not be able to say anything. [2:17:28] Yeah, but I worry about the – it just comes down to kids for me because they get radicalized. I mean when you see the racist shit and you join the tribe, it just like becomes – They can. They can also get radicalized. They can also become Christians. They can also become like hikers. They can also like really get into jujitsu. They can also like join video games. They can join ISIS. ISIS. They can also do whatever the fuck they want to do. I mean this is just – we've got to duke it out in the battlefield of ideas, [2:17:58] It has to be able to take place. You can't have people decide what you can and can't discuss because the problem with that is like then they have power over you and they have power over the most important thing that we do as a culture, which is figure out what's right and what's wrong. Figure out who's correct and who's incorrect. What's a fact and what is a lie? What is propaganda? Why have they made so much money pushing this thing where there's no science behind it? Then they say trust the science. Well, show me what the science is.

2:18:28-2:19:41

[2:18:28] And then you have people that are looking at the science that are actual scientists that get boycotted and banned from Twitter. That's one of the things that happened during this whole FBI infiltration of Twitter or whatever the organization was that the government had that was deeply – it was multiple organizations deeply embedded. They were kicking people off. They were like Stanford scientists that were – they had a different view of how the pandemic should be handled. They were kicking them off Twitter. And then you get to the point where you need regulators on the regulators and who's going to – [2:18:58] Who's going to regulate the regulators? So you think Wild West is a good one. [2:19:01] Teach your kids correctly. Yes. I think that's better. I think this is the world we're living in, and it's a weird world. But this is the reality of the world, and you need to prepare them for the reality of the world. Don't shield them from it. [2:19:13] Right. I guess it's just technology being such a drug is an issue to me. It is a drug, but. It feels like the government making money off of selling fentanyl. That's what it feels like. Yeah, but it's also fun for kids, too. They're doing Snapchats and they're having a good time, too. It's not all negative. It's just it can be negative. And the pylons, like when people, like that lady, what she did to her daughter, which is the most evil fucking thing ever.

2:19:43-2:21:22

[2:19:43] a kid and pile on them and attack them anonymously. And, you know, kids kill themselves over things like that. It freaks them out. Teens? Yes. How do they deal with it? They're pretty remarkably healthy. It's very strange. [2:19:56] They have social media, but they're crazy about it. Yeah. One of them just got off of everything. She wants to concentrate on her schoolwork. She hasn't been on any social media in over 90 days. It's very impressive. But that's an addiction to be like 90 days of clean. Yeah, but it's also she can do it. [2:20:11] You know, it's like it's not an addiction like, oh, my God, if you ever get on social media again, now you're going to be homeless and snorting social media. No, it's like. [2:20:19] It's a thing that's not necessarily good for you. Just like cake. Don't eat cake all day. But if you want to have a birthday cake or you want to occasionally have a piece of cake, you have dinner, nice dinner. Let's get some dessert. Fuck it. Yeah, but what about the cake? What if every time I went to go eat cake, there was 90 other dudes in the cake shop that were being like, we should kill this group of people. And you'd be like, fuck, I really want to eat cake. But these people keep saying that. Maybe I believe them because I've read so much. [2:20:44] At some point, somebody should walk into the cake shop and be like, dude, you guys can't be here. There are laws, right? So like there's free speech, but if you threaten someone, there's laws against that. [2:20:56] And that's a group. [2:20:58] Yes. Yeah. If you say, I want to kill all the Greeks in America, like someone will come get you. Nobody wants them. We love them. [2:21:10] But if you just said something like that, yeah, someone would visit you from the FBI if you make threats against people. But we have existing laws that already protect people from that. OK.

2:21:28-2:23:15

[2:21:28] of [2:21:29] It's crazy how I just last night was sucked into this vortex, and then I just put my phone away, and my dog was sitting right there. Yeah. And I was like, oh, hey, real life thing that loves me. Also, I had no idea that this was going on with you. I had no idea. Yeah, I know. It's ridiculous. It sucks so bad because I was trying to be so... [2:21:48] I was like actively trying to say a woke thing that I went through. [2:21:51] patting myself on my fucking back and it just fucking spun out of control you can never be woke enough [2:21:57] Because it's all horseshit. [2:21:59] It's all horseshit. It's just a cult. [2:22:01] And it's a cult that is mostly perpetrated by people that don't have a religion. So it behaves like a religion. Yeah. Yeah. [2:22:10] You can get excommunicated. You can get cast out of the kingdom for life. There's rules. If you follow those rules, you'll be good. If you're not, you're a heretic. Yeah. It's a religion. Yeah. [2:22:21] And it's a religion for people that don't have a religion because there's a fucking weird part of our brain that whether you are a Democrat or Republican, it fits that spot. [2:22:33] Right. So there's a if you don't have something in your life that you think of as a higher power or at least have like some sort of ethical and moral foundation and some goals, some higher goal that you ascribe to. [2:22:47] Something will fill that [2:22:49] spot. There's a spot in your brain. And that spot will be, I'm a Republican. Or that spot will be, I'm a liberal. And we got these goddamn racists and all these white people. We got to get rid of white people. White people say that. The real problem is white people. They'll say that. And they'll pat themselves on the back while they're saying it because they think they're being a good wokester. It's just nuts. It's just religion. It's crazy how many people DM'd me and I DM'd them back being like, hey, I just want you to know I'm so...

2:23:15-2:25:04

[2:23:15] I like totally didn't mean to hurt anybody. And I'm really sorry if you're offended by this. And they would just immediately be like, oh, it's totally okay. I take back everything I said when what they said was like, you fucking bitch. And I just was like, hey, I'm a person. And they're like, oh, shit, I completely forgot. And I was like, oh, okay. Yeah. Everybody's very complete. It's a terrible way to communicate. [2:23:33] It's bizarre. Yeah. I mean, I fucking do it. I talk so much shit about everything. And then I get there and I'm like, oh, yeah, this is I think it just feels good to believe something. It feels so good to stand your ground on something and to be like, right, I did something today. Something even though it doesn't mean anything. It doesn't. We need meaning so fucking bad. We do. [2:23:55] And that's why it takes the place of religion for people who don't have religion. [2:23:59] It doesn't have to be religion. You can have it be in the you can have it be the. No, it doesn't have to be. No, but I mean, there's a spot in our brains. Yeah, the religion is always been there. And we filled that spot with whatever the fuck it is. Leftist politics, right wing ideology, whatever the fuck it is. Yeah, you find a thing that becomes your religion. [2:24:21] Totally. People are fucking broken. They're so weird. [2:24:24] But we're also wonderful. We're fun. When we work right. [2:24:32] Yeah, when we're face to face. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, online, it's crazy. But then you run into the person who talks shit about you and you're like, oh, hey, what's up? Yeah. You were just playing the video game. [2:24:43] Yep. Of hatred. Yep. Yeah. Yeah. And that's what most people are doing on Instagram and on Twitter because it's just such an easy thing to do. And especially if your life sucks, it's a great distraction. You can pay attention to other people and tell, fuck Jordan, fucking cunt, and just say horrible shit. And it distracts you from whatever is wrong with your life.

2:25:13-2:26:45

[2:25:13] too and it is it does take that role a lot like a lot of times when people are just hatred i'm like just target lower belly fat if you want to be fucking activated about something get fucking pissed at that you know what i mean because it's always i look at the picture of these people and they're just like miserable fuckers in a basement i'm like dude just yeah what if you just spent all day taking a really long bath and just cleaning that shit off you you know what i mean instead of hating me um well think about what we're talking about with ocd those tight grooves of [2:25:43] They just get just – it's so easy to slide into those grooves. They're so honed. They've been used so many times. Just an instantaneous decision to go down those pathways. It's hard for people. It's hard for people to snap out of them, especially people that are fragile and that are worried about getting attacked themselves. Those are the most vicious. Yeah. The most fragile people are the most vicious. They're the most mean, the ones that are worried about being criticized themselves. Yeah, totally. Yeah. [2:26:11] Hurt people hurt people. [2:26:13] True that. What's that? I've done it. I've done it. I've heard people. We all have. Yeah. Yeah. It's normal. It's a normal part of being a person. It's just the social media thing. [2:26:23] There's very little value. [2:26:26] And a lot of negativity. Or you could use it correctly if you're a journalist or if you're someone who's like curated a good feed and you just want to find out what's actually happening. Yeah, because the world's filled with like crazy shit that happens all the time that you don't know about unless you get on Twitter. [2:26:41] If you just paid attention to the mainstream news, you'd miss 80% of what's going on in the world.

2:26:45-2:28:38

[2:26:45] Yeah, that's true. Yeah. I mean, there's so much. I talk so much shit about social media, but the amount of animal videos that have brought me back from the I mean, I found out that otters have a little skin pocket and it's like saved my life multiple times just knowing that. [2:26:59] Like that shit is so good. Yeah. Any fast intake of National Geographic online is like. Oh, yeah. Yeah, totally. Most of my time I spend, if I'm fucking off on my phone, is on YouTube. And I don't have a problem with that because most of that is like videos. I'm getting educated. Yeah, I would not have been able to be a contractor without YouTube. Yeah. I should have called my business YouTube. There's so much you can learn if you just do it right. Like YouTube is the most amazing resource if you just do it right. [2:27:29] I'm going to teach you exactly how to utilize this impact driver. And you're like, yeah, I don't know why you're doing this, but thank you. Yeah. Why are you doing that? It's really weird. Some of those people, they're like, I'm going to tell you how to change a Toyota tire on a Nissan truck. And I'm like... [2:27:43] that's exactly what I need. 52 views. It's crazy. Right, right, right. Yeah, those guys rule. [2:27:48] Oh, there's so much good how-to stuff. [2:27:51] That's available online. Or you can get on Twitter and just start yelling about the Jews. Figure out a thing, whatever it is. The fucking climate. Do you understand what's happening? We won't have an earth for our children. [2:28:05] People go crazy. Are you worried about your kid's future? [2:28:10] Of course. Of course. I'm worried about everybody's future. I'm worried about their future. I don't want anything bad to happen to them. I don't want anything bad to happen to anybody. That's why I don't think I can have kids. But when people say that, I'm like, I wouldn't want to have kids today. I'm like, yeah, why would you with all the books and medicine and shit? People had kids before they figured out doors. When they say I don't want to bring a kid into this world, like I sometimes don't want a kid just because the idea of letting my dog outside without me scares me.

2:28:39-2:30:24

[2:28:39] and I'm neurotic. But when they say that, I'm like, you're talking about the absence of consciousness. [2:28:44] being superior to consciousness. Yeah. That's a paradox. You can't say one is better than the other. There is no better until you're born. Not only that, [2:28:52] There's a lot of people in my life that I love. I have a lot of good friends. I have a lot of people that I love. [2:28:59] The only way you make people... [2:29:00] is they have to be babies. [2:29:02] They grow up to be people that you love. Yeah. That's the game. Yeah. That's life. You have to, if you love people, you probably love kids. Yeah. You just don't know it. And you probably are, you know, terrified of responsibility, which is real. Yeah. But. [2:29:18] You can have kids. [2:29:19] It's not bad. Do you think everybody should do it? No. No. [2:29:22] I think you could have a rich and full life and never have children. I don't think there's anything wrong with that. And I always resented that when I didn't have children. People say, oh, you don't even know. You don't have kids. Yeah, yeah. Like, okay. Like, don't say that. That's silly. Did it change anything? Because then you alienate people. Yeah, it changes everything. Did it unlock, like, a Molly level of love? Yes. Chappelle had the best quote about this. He said, not only did it change the amount of love that I have, it changed my capacity for love. [2:29:48] Okay. [2:29:49] Yeah, you don't know how much you love your dog, and I know you love your dog. I've seen you with your dog. Yeah. Yeah. [2:29:54] You love your kids times a million. But that's frightening. That level of love. How do you let them go to school? Life is crazy. Life is frightening. You just have to learn and grow and just deal. This is just part of the thing. You can't just be safe forever. You're not going to live. You're going to die. We're all going to. You just have to exist. And, you know, you have to, like, when you don't see your friend, like, bye. And, you know, they get on a plane. Like, oh, my God, what if the plane crashes? What if I never see them again?

2:30:24-2:31:38

[2:30:24] You can't live like that. Yeah, but a child, I would be so... I know, I know, I know, I know. You had to teach yourself to chill? Yeah. Really? And you only chill so much. You love them so much, it's hard. [2:30:37] I think there's a reason why societies like people to have children because it makes you much more concerned with law and order. It makes you much more concerned with cleanliness and pollution and all of the harm that could happen to your child. Yeah. [2:30:53] You worry more because if it's just you're selfish and you're by yourself, fuck everybody. I'm going to go get a whore. You know, like, OK. Yeah. You're not really a part of this thing. You're just kind of like you're a leech. You know, like this, this thing is all of us together. It would frustrate me if I had kids that people without kids have equal right to vote. That would annoy me. Why? I don't know. Because they could vote for negative things about your kids. It just would, it would piss me off. I'd be like, you know, you're not keeping a life around. You know what I mean? [2:31:23] Well, there's a lot of those selfish shitters and eaters too that think that somehow – because this is one of the things that people are being taught today, that somehow or another because there's so much money in the world, like you're owed something and they should just – we should have universal basic income and your needs should be met.

2:31:53-2:33:33

[2:31:53] their needs are met because there's a fake scarcity crisis in this country. And it's really because the wealthy people have gotten so much. But that's the Bernie bro. Yeah. Well, there's some truth to that, though. [2:32:06] Right. There is some truth. Like if someone acquires all the money and everybody else is poor, obviously you have a broken system. Yeah. Bernie's idea was to take a small amount of stock market exchanges, just like a fraction of a penny for each one of these. And that money would all be an incredible resource that would go to education and health care and all these different quality of life things that would have a legitimate impact on society. [2:32:36] most compelling thought that he had. Yeah. The most compelling thought to me. I was like, that seems like that would work. That seemed like that would have a big impact and it would change a lot of things. [2:32:47] I've always been down for the tax the corporations. I've always been down for it and not view them as having human rights. Well, the weird thing is that they have the ability to donate insane amounts of money towards congressional campaigns and Senate races. That's fucked. That's fucked. So they're going to take that – stop that. No – what is that called? [2:33:09] What is that called? Electoral funding? [2:33:12] Um, sure. [2:33:13] Election funding? There's a name for it. But stop that. Campaign funding? Campaign funding. Stop that. And it's not even just that. It's like it's funding super PACs. It's funding NGOs. It's there's a lot of shit that goes on that's just really about influence. But if you get a corporation, it's making that much money. Tax the shit out of it for schools.

2:33:34-2:35:03

[2:33:34] Well, not a bad idea, but you've got to be able to make money. The real problem with corporations is they have to always make more money. [2:33:40] Like if you have a responsibility for your shareholder, if you're a CEO, every quarter you have to make more money. The idea is like you're doing really well. You're making more money. And the only way to really keep making – they never go, we're good. Hey, everybody, we're good. Why not? Because they're cunts. Oh, okay. Because like you get to this – that's the game they're playing. They're playing the I want more money game. They're not playing the let's make the world a better place game because it's a corporation. So it's a sociopath. It acts like a sociopath. [2:34:10] these studies where they're like, well, look at the behavior of a corporation. It's basically a psychopath. That's why I think they should fund this shit. It's crazy how much the middle class is taxed. What they really fucked up was with the stock market in general in the first place. The stock market is so weird to me. I will not put any money in it. I buy gold and I buy a house. I buy a car. I buy a watch, but I won't do the stock market. But it's crazy that everybody gets to be involved in IBM. That is so weird to me. It's weird. But I'm not allowed to say this because [2:34:40] put it into a fund that is an index that but and i'm like i don't have to gamble i grew up white trash gambling is a bad thing yeah but in my family you're not allowed to do that the thing is it is a real thing and it does work look at nancy pelosi she's got half a billion dollars right she did it a shady way is that good that she has that no it's not good no my friends who are like it's not gonna make her live longer she's she's 82 fucking years old she looks terrible

2:35:03-2:36:34

[2:35:03] right like it's the end is nigh stop working and my friends are like i made 50 grand off bitcoin and i'm like you just put it back in the bitcoin you're going to keep it in bitcoin because now you're stuck in an addiction until it's gone until it hangs you know i mean nobody that i know is like i'm pulling out maybe a couple some people have and they've made a lot of money that's great yeah i have one friend who did that very proud of him but typically it keeps you in it it's like the same people that stay off social media they're rare they're rare but they utilize the system yeah [2:35:33] could post and be like, I'm going to stop microdosing. [2:35:36] Because I was in and out of a relationship that when I would microdose, my brain would be like, bro. [2:35:43] What are you doing? You got to get out of this thing. And I'd be like, okay, just want microdose. But now I'm back to it. Oh, okay. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. Well, I get that. When it shows you a truth that you cannot handle. And you're like, yikes, but I don't want to be alone. I would take the mushrooms and they'd be like, come on, dude. This guy is mean to you. You're a cool chick. And I'd be like, shut up. I'm not cool. The mean to you is gross. It's the best, though. It's my favorite. You like that? Yeah. I hate that. [2:36:09] back and forth. I like fighting. Yeah. Fighting in the makeup sex. I just like somebody who's very honest and is like, that's a stupid thing that you did. That's a good thing that you did. It's very daddy. There's a way to do it with tact. [2:36:19] Yeah, totally. Yeah, you got to be able to do it with someone when you calm them down. [2:36:23] And say it rationally. Yeah. And you've got to say you love them first. And you've got to say nice things first. Yeah, that was the problem. There's none of that. Yeah, totally. But the mushrooms would be like...

2:36:34-2:38:12

[2:36:34] It would become I'd immediately be lucid and be like, you can love a person and not be miserable that those two things can happen at once. You can love somebody and not be in a relationship with them because it doesn't. So I was like, OK, we're not going to microdose. Yeah, I'm on the fence about microdosing. But I think for some people, it seems to be a giant quality of life enhancer. It just tells you when to stop. You can't do it that long. You can do it for like two weeks. [2:36:55] Microdosing? Yeah, and then it doesn't do shit. [2:36:58] and then you have to stop [2:36:59] Well, that's probably good, too. It's probably like most things. You know, you shouldn't drink every day. If you want to go on a vacation for two weeks, you're going to get hammered. Yeah. [2:37:08] It's good. [2:37:09] But the mushrooms will be like – I mean they'll just be like, dude, what are you? It never gets addicting. [2:37:16] But I did it a lot during the pandemic. And I know some people that got addicted to the idea of like spiritual awakening. Oh, the ayahuasca people. Oh, yeah. Some of those people get cooked. They get overcooked and they start reading poetry on Instagram. You're like, yo. Oh, my God. When I get the text messages, like, hey, I love you so much. I'm like, damn, we did another ayahuasca journey. No, that's cool, though. Someone just saying they love you is nice. That's nice. Ari sent me an I love you message the other day. [2:37:46] on. Follow Molly. [2:37:47] That's... [2:37:49] Dude, he's gone for a while, right? He's in South America or something. He's off the fucking reservation. He is so inspiring to me with comedy, where he'll be like, I'm not doing it right now. [2:37:59] Well, he's very smart. [2:38:01] he's so smart yeah he's very smart he did the whole I mean Eric Abrams and my whole team did it but Ari like every step of the way would be calling me every day and be like what are you doing do this and I'd be like I don't know what I'm doing and be like

2:38:12-2:39:47

[2:38:12] Tell everybody to pause. I mean, it was crazy. Ari's very strong in his beliefs. [2:38:18] Some of his opinions are terrible, though. Ari famously told me to never put out a three-hour podcast. You've got to edit it. In the beginning, he goes, why is your podcast three hours? [2:38:27] I said, because that's how I felt like talking for three hours. You should edit it. No one's going to listen for three hours. Three hours when you were just starting it out? Oh, yeah. I always did it three hours. I'm like, they don't have to. [2:38:39] How long have we done? Don't listen. Almost three hours. Jesus. No. Oh, yeah. How do you do that? It's a time warp in here. It is a time warp. Yeah. Because we're locked in. [2:38:49] So if you're really locked in, if you're really locked in with someone, you really haven't, it seems like three hours. What if you don't get locked in? It happens sometimes. Really? Yeah. Some podcasters. Women. [2:38:59] No. Men, too? Sure. Non-comics? Oh, yeah. Non-comics. Even some comics. You're like, God, I have nothing in common with this guy. Brutal. That's like when I'm in therapy and I'm talking about yet another breakup and my therapist is it's the worst feeling ever. And I'm like, well, you need to lock in right now. Yeah, lock it in. But you've had not lock-in days? Have you ever had it be your fault? Oh, I guess. Probably. Yeah. [2:39:21] What do you do? I mean, I try. I mean, at this point, I'm pretty good at it, so I know how to finagle a conversation. [2:39:29] Generally, I look for a blunt. I'm like, okay, I've got to get this. Oh, I have to change my brain. I've got to fucking fire this up and make fun of this. Oh, you're pro-weed. You're a weed guy. I love weed. You love weed. Oh, I love it. Okay, I just started using weed for sleep and... [2:39:42] Well, it's weird for sleep. Okay, but it's the only thing that's ever worked, ever. Oh, really? Do you use edibles? No.

2:39:48-2:41:33

[2:39:48] the other day, edibles the other day. Yeah. But the thing is, I think it prevents you from going into REM sleep or it hinders your REM sleep. Yeah, but it lets you watch... [2:39:57] It lets you watch yourself enter sleep, which rules. Like being like, and goodbye is sick. Because every morning you wake up and you go, I don't remember falling asleep, but on weed, you're like, this is it. Here it is. Here we go. Yeah. No, I know a lot of people that use it for sleep. I know a lot of people that always hated weed and used to like when I would smoke, they were like, weed makes you lazy. I'm like, it doesn't. I'm telling you, it doesn't. You're lazy. Weed does not make you lazy. That's me. [2:40:27] I always thought weed makes you lazy, but now I'm using it for sleep. Yeah, I thought it too, until I was 30. I met my friend Eddie. My friend Eddie Bravo was the one who got me high for the first time when I was like 30 years old. I hadn't gotten high since I think I got high like maybe a small handful of times when I was a comedian. When I first started doing comedy, rather. And then before I was a comedian. Like... [2:40:49] Maybe my whole life, maybe seven, eight times ever being high, ever, ever. [2:40:54] Would you panic? No, I just didn't like not being in control. Yeah. You know, I always associated people who did drugs with people who never got anything done, and they were a bunch of fucking losers. And I never wanted to be that. If you smoked a blunt right now. [2:41:10] you would have no fear that it could turn. [2:41:13] a bad way. [2:41:14] No. [2:41:16] You don't have any of the like, my heart's going to stop. I can hear my blood in my ears. Oh, no. You don't have any of that? No, no, no, no, no. Have you ever? Sure. I've gotten paranoid before. Yeah. But you just ride it out? I had to figure out why. And generally, it's like there's something bothering me in life.

2:41:33-2:43:06

[2:41:33] So the real thing about it is it exposes something that's bothering you. Well, you should go probably fix that. [2:41:39] Yeah, but what if the thing that's bothering you is that you can't deal with the fact that you have skin? You know what I mean? That's what happens to me when I smoke weed is I'm like, this shit has got to go. It's crazy. You have a different mind than me, I guess. I mean, that's the thing. I wouldn't recommend it for everybody. I know people who can't smoke. They don't like being paranoid. I like it. I like being a little scared. Yeah, some of you fuckers love that shit. I like being a little scared. Because then after the panic, you're like... [2:42:04] I'm good now. Good, but also it's good to know maybe you have blinders on and there's some real vulnerabilities in the world. And you should probably consider them sometimes. So you've never had a crazy one that you were like, that's not right. That's crazy. No, not that bad. I've just been real paranoid before. Just super high, like, yikes. And then you calm down. You're like, whew. Once it's over, you're fine. It's crazy for you to be paranoid because you're like one of the people that should be paranoid. [2:42:34] What's his name? Lizard Guy? Liver King. Liver King. [2:42:41] What happened? Yeah, if anybody should be paranoid, I should probably be a little paranoid. But anybody in the public eye should be a little paranoid. Anybody, you included. [2:42:50] Yeah, I've gotten high and deleted some stuff. Yeah. For sure. For sure. But like, whoa. Right. This has got to come down. Well, I think marijuana is a tool. [2:43:00] like everything else i think you can learn things from it and i think it's uh it's like steroids for comedy

2:43:06-2:44:41

[2:43:06] You can come up with some stuff when you're high that I don't think is available. Really? Yeah, I don't think those thoughts are available if you're sober. There's things that I wrote when I was high that I was like, there's no way I was writing that without – [2:43:18] Any help? [2:43:19] Yeah, I guess I've had it a little bit, but I have to hit the sweet spot or I go right into panic mode. Oh, yeah, the sweet spot. Yeah. That's the key. Don't go too hard. You know what helps me if I always have a Xanax somewhere? Oh, no. Like it just exists in my house. Oh, so you know in case. So I just know that there's a bullet that I can pull. That's a crazy one. That's a scary addictive one. Xanax is so addictive. Yeah. Jordan Peterson, speaking of which, he was on that shit. I thought it was Klondike Bar. Klondike Pin. [2:43:49] on them clown decks. Well, he was definitely on benzodiazepine for a long time. That shit. That's Xanax. And so that's one of the ones where you get off of Xanax where you could die. There's only a couple of drugs where if you get off of it, [2:44:06] you could die. Alcohol is another one. Alcohol is one, yeah. Yeah, but Xanax is another one, and it's really hard for people. Dude, I bought Klonopin in Mexico, and I was like, I'm just going to use this when I have a panic attack. [2:44:16] done done in two weeks every night i was being like well might as well i take a little bit of your little and i was like oh you need to never allow this around you i got a xanax the other day and my friend was like you can have as many as you want i was like i need one and never give me another again because this is the thing that i'll keep it just in case just like break glass in case break glass is a break glass pill yeah totally yeah or else i fuck our benzos are fucking dude i've heard

2:44:41-2:46:12

[2:44:41] No, no, no. No. I was on a flight once with a lady, and she said, there is nothing in this world that's better than a Xanax and a glass of wine. Yeah. And I was like, I don't think you're supposed to drink with Xanax. She's like, nope. It's so sick, dude. That lady didn't give a fuck. What was what I did the other day? Poppers? Oh, no. Amyl nitrate? Poppers. Dude, I had no idea, because I don't do anything. And I was dancing at a wedding, and my gay friend was like, sniff these. Oh, gay guys love that. [2:45:11] The best. They love the poppers. Just a mini rave for a second? How much... [2:45:17] Did you do it? A lot. [2:45:20] How many times did you do it? [2:45:22] Um, enough where I felt fucked up, like five. [2:45:25] Wow, so it gives you instant brain damage. Yeah, that's what it felt like. I think it does. I think it cooks your brain. It's got to be bad. Because I went from being such a downer to being like, marriage is stupid, to being like, yeah, it was crazy. I was dragging people in. But that's like the brain damage from the boxing where you're like, dude, sometimes I need to be a little stupid for a second. Or else I'm just constantly being like, society is evil. I wonder what's worse for you, amyl nitrate or boxing? [2:45:54] I don't know. What's the side effects of amyl nitrate? [2:45:57] Because I know a lot of the gay fellas like it when they bought them. What it's actually made for is to relieve pain of angina attacks. [2:46:06] Oh. Which I don't even know how to get that. Angina. What is angina? What the fuck? I thought that was like digestive. That's when you're anal, the part between your anus and your vagina.

2:46:16-2:47:50

[2:46:16] Angina? What is the side effects of amyl nitrate abuse? What? [2:46:20] Angina attacks his chest pain, discomfort caused by reduced blood flow to the heart. [2:46:25] Okay, and so amylo nitrate reduces that? It reduces the pain of it. [2:46:30] Oh. Oh. [2:46:30] Because it relaxes the blood vessels and increases the blood and oxygen to the heart. Also relaxes that booty hole. Yeah, it makes the butthole open. Woo! I was worried I was going to shit my pants when I did it. Were you? Yeah, but I didn't do it. I think other things have to happen for you to shit your pants. Yeah, a gay man has to try and have sex with me. Someone has to pound you in the asshole. [2:46:47] Um, side effects, headaches, dizziness, flushing, rapid heart rate. [2:46:52] I got more severe risk, life threatening blood condition called methamoglobin, say that. Help me out. [2:47:08] Methamoglobinemia and dangerous drops in blood pressure, especially when combined with other drugs. [2:47:14] Does it cause brain damage? Google does amyl nitrate brain damage. Dude, you better say that it does or else I'm doing that right now. [2:47:23] Damage didn't come right up. Oh, fuck. [2:47:28] Let's see. [2:47:29] It can cause both acute and long-term brain damage. Why wouldn't it come up immediately? Primarily through two long-term, acute and long-term brain damage. Primarily through two mechanisms, oxygen deprivation and direct neurotoxicity. Severe or prolonged exposure can lead to permanent cognitive and neurological issues.

2:47:50-2:49:23

[2:47:50] Yeah, I mean, you feel that immediately when you sniff it. You're like, yeah. This can't be good. It feels like somebody's hitting it back in the back and forth, and you're like, dude. It's so crazy. It's like Whippets. [2:48:00] Oh, but way more, right? Way stronger, right? Yeah, it lasts way longer. I did Whippets at the Newport Creamery place that I worked at because we had real Whippets. Like Whippets? With a giant whipped cream canister, like a huge one. That's sick. Like the real things where you make the whipped cream, we'd have to pour the sugar and pour the cream and then mix it. Yeah. If I do that with a whipped cream bottle, aren't you not allowed to... [2:48:21] use any of the whipped cream. That's always been my problem. Oh, we have the gas. [2:48:25] We had the actual gas back there. One of the kids that we worked with was a total dirtbag, and he knew how to get high off the gas. We would all go back there and get high with this guy. That's so fun. I only did it like once or twice because you hit it, and you're like – [2:48:39] You have almost like an out of body. Like, whoa, whoa. You're like, whoa. It's awesome. Yeah. And it only lasts like 15, 20 seconds. And I was like, oh, my God. You're dumbing up as it is. Don't get dumber. Right. It's always the idiots in the back of the place. Yeah, yeah, yeah. I just used to get so high. I used to smoke a blunt every morning before school. And I just would get. [2:48:59] I was so crazy stupid. And then when I got older, my brain was just like, you can't have any more of this. If you do, you're going to bite your tongue off. It's definitely probably not good for kids. [2:49:11] Oh, yeah. We were so high. You're getting high all the time when your kids. It's like, God. [2:49:15] Like, you're developing. Your brain's developing while it's constantly being bombarded by THC. That's not good. My dad was just such a weed guy. He was like a...

2:49:23-2:50:58

[2:49:23] You can smoke weed with me whenever you want. That's funny. Have you smoked weed with your kids ever? No. Oh, yeah. I see that's appropriate. But I told them. We've had conversations about drugs, and I said the most important thing is stay away from any and all pills for a bunch of reasons. Not just because what the pill supposedly is is bad for you, but because I bet what's in that pill is not what's supposed to be in there because of fentanyl, and they know that. And powder. Coke is fucked. Oh, yeah. Coke is fucked. I think Coke is the worst. Well, it's all fentanyl now. [2:49:53] oh, there's so much fentanyl and there's fake Xanaxes and they're all fentanyl. There's molly, fake molly. It's all fentanyl. And the fentanyl, if it's small enough, it's fine. [2:50:05] Wow, it's so much. It's so small, the amount that can kill you. Have you ever seen the amount of fentanyl that is lethal? Did that cop show it? [2:50:13] No. Have you ever seen in comparison to a penny? There's a photograph on the internet of the amount of fentanyl in comparison to a penny that's lethal. [2:50:21] That will 100% put you in the fucking ground. And it's so small. It's the best feeling ever, though, when you go under for surgery and they give it to you. [2:50:29] Is it? Yeah. What did you get surgery on? Did they give you fat? I used to be so fat that I had all this skin, and I got it cut off. Yo. [2:50:38] How painful was that? Afterwards, brutal. Oh. They kind of shuttled me out pretty fast. They were like, all right, go ahead, up and out. See? I can't move. It was crazy. Draining. Yeah. Go home and drain. Draining. Oh. Yeah. Yeah. It had to go, though. It was in the way. Must be happy now, right, that you did it? Yeah, totally. It was stuck in my – it was getting my zipper. Oh, yo.

2:50:59-2:52:31

[2:50:59] Yeah, like a dick. Yikes. It was awful. Ouchie. I've only caught my dick in my zipper like two or three times in my life. [2:51:05] It's brutal. It's not fun. [2:51:07] How do you catch it in there? [2:51:11] Wait, why is your dick up that high? Oh, I see. Baggy pants. But you're just not paying attention, like going raw dog. It's weird that you guys have a whole external package down there. You just have balls on the outside. The balls on the outside is the dumbest fucking invention of all time. I'm sorry about that. The itchiness and the wetness. That's not the problem. The problem is getting kicked there. Oh, yeah. That's the problem. Yeah. But evolution had to give you that. You had to add something. I guess. Yeah. [2:51:37] We have so many problems. It's just to keep them from overheating because you need sperm. Or they hang. Yeah. Well, they have to be able to cool in the breeze. [2:51:46] Because if they're getting overheated, it's not good for you. It's not good for the swimmers. It's crazy that you just have a unit dangling off your body that's keeping it. It's crazy. And it's the most vulnerable part of your body other than your eyeballs. [2:51:58] Yeah. It's just hanging out there. It helps, though. Men are very intimidating. It helps that you guys have that, honestly. That you have a spot to hit? Totally. It helps. I don't think we would mate with you easily without the balls. Interesting. Sometimes when the penis goes in and the balls touch you, you go, oh, yeah, he's just a person. This is safe. You know what I mean? Because you have two squishy guys that are like, don't worry about this fucker. He's just hard. You know? But it helps us remember that you're... [2:52:22] fallible [2:52:23] The balls do. Totally. Okay. If you guys were just rods running around, we'd be like, go away from me. Well, imagine if you didn't have to get hard to have sex.

2:52:31-2:53:55

[2:52:31] Like you didn't have to be aroused. That would be crazy. Like animals. Animals just have a bone. [2:52:37] Oh. Yeah. Yeah. [2:52:39] How do they... [2:52:40] They don't have to get hard. Uh-oh. Dogs get the red rocket. [2:52:43] But they have a bone, though. [2:52:45] Ew. There's a bone in there. In there? Yeah, yeah, yeah. You could break your dog's dick? What is that bone called again? We have one out there, a giant fossilized walrus bone. Baculum. Baculum, that's right. It's a bone, yeah. I think all animals have it except human beings. Monkeys can't have it. Do monkeys have a baculum? Do monkeys have a baculum? [2:53:03] I don't know. Probably not. They're always jacking off. [2:53:06] They're always jacking off, dude. Always. Every zoo you go to, you have to cover the children's eyes. Chimps, gorillas, monkeys. It's like it's designed to be jacked off. It's right there where your hand drops. That's... [2:53:19] Some species? Yeah, only some species. But the little fuzzy ones, not the ones that look like us. Deer have it, right? [2:53:26] I'm pretty sure deer do. [2:53:28] Matter of fact, I know they do. [2:53:31] So do like moose and elk and what mammals don't. [2:53:36] primates, oh, [2:53:37] It's present in some species within the orders of primates, rodents and carnivora. [2:53:43] I don't know what that is. Bears, dogs, and walruses all have a bone. Because, like, you don't have time to get hard, okay? You're out there in the wild. Shit's crazy. What, they just slide it in? Just ram it in there. Yeah.

2:53:58-2:55:56

[2:53:58] I was just thinking that would be a really fun, if that's where the term, if you lack a backbone. [2:54:02] The back. Oh. I don't think that's where it comes from. I don't think so. [2:54:08] Our primate ancestors did have one, suggesting it was lost through evolution. That's kind of weird. [2:54:13] Probably lost when the aliens came down and manipulated us. When was that lost? Cats don't? Really? Really? [2:54:20] Wow. But cats have like a hook dick where they get stuck. A barb. Yeah. Have you ever heard cats where they're stuck together? And they're fucking ass to ass and they can't get loose. They're fucking kicking each other. Not present in humans. Present in the penis of some primates. Gorillas and chimpanzees have baculums. Wow. What? Chimpanzees have them? Yep. [2:54:42] Wow. [2:54:43] rodents, bats. When did we lose them? What evolutionary step did we take to lose them? When the aliens came. I think it's probably when women started being like, that guy, I want that guy's genes and not that guy's. [2:54:54] Hmm. Right? Probably. Because if I kept getting loads blown in me by betas. Right. It doesn't serve our population. Right. I have to be like, that alpha male's sick. Right. So I'm going to rub my monkey butt. Like his dick. Yeah. Whereas other species, it's like, it's a free-for-all. Yeah. Well, other species also, I bet we probably got rid of it as soon as we figured out habitation. As soon as we figured out homes and doors and we could structure, you know, like, keep people out. Yeah. Yeah. And you'd be like, that monkey can't build the door. Yeah. Totally. [2:55:24] line with I think Richard Dawkins theory sort of [2:55:27] Look at this. Proposed honest advertising is an evolutionary explanation for the loss of the baculum. The hypothesis states that if erection failure is a sensitive early warning of ill health, physical or mental, females could have gauged the health of a potential mate based on his ability to achieve erection without the support of a baculum. Everybody I date has penis problems. Every comic needs a blue chew, so I shouldn't be letting any of their baculums in my baculum. Oh, no. Are you only dating comics? I'm not anymore.

2:55:57-2:57:36

[2:55:57] I've done forever. And musicians, which is the same thing. Basically. Yeah. Same problem. But constant Bluetooth. [2:56:03] Well, it's crazy to be at a group of comics. Well, it's a crazy new thing, right? Like, what did they do in the 60s? I think they said, hey, I have a problem where sometimes I don't get hard, and here's the things I could use for you to help. And now they just go, nope, I'm hard, which is psycho. Here's the things that I could use for me to help that won't work on everybody. But this is like the selection thing. It would keep those guys from breeding. Right. [2:56:27] Oh, that's right. That's probably what it is. People of ill health. Like, there's probably a reason why your dick can't get hard. Blue Chew Dick is so weird. [2:56:34] It feels like a strap-on. [2:56:36] And it's attached to somebody who's anxious and, [2:56:39] And then it's just this rock hard dick. It doesn't make sense. All right. Because you're like, this guy's afraid to be here. And that dick is. [2:56:45] is not his thing. That's somebody else's fucking... He's afraid to be here. You get guys that are afraid. Oh, yeah, totally. Where they're like, oh, it's not even... Yeah, there's something about the stand-up and the... I think people just think that I'm going to... [2:57:00] be mean to them oh yeah that's it because you're funny yeah yeah and if you're funnier than the guys you're fucking that's a real problem [2:57:07] Yeah. [2:57:08] Yeah. Which I don't think I've ever had sex with somebody above me in comedy. That's a problem. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. [2:57:14] Yeah, totally. They're scared of you. I think they're scared of me and they also are scared of, yeah, I think it's mainly they're scared of looking foolish and having me be like. Right, and then you're in her act. Yeah, totally. Dude, the amount of dating app people that are like, I don't want to be in your act. I'm like, fuck, we've never even met, you piece of shit. It's so crazy how many people say that.

2:57:36-2:59:19

[2:57:36] Yeah, the dating app thing is wild. Yeah. When I see people just like constantly scrolling and picking people and choosing people, my single friends that are on dating apps, that's an addiction unto itself because there's always someone waiting. Yeah, it's crazy. There's always some new – this is – I don't like the way she smiles. Fuck this. I'm out of here. It's crazy. And then next thing you know, you've got three or four more dates lined up and – Well, it's ruined dating because everybody has a queue of people they can date. Right. So they go on a date. [2:58:06] Oh, God. You don't know that person. And also, it would probably benefit you to have an hour-long conversation with somebody. Right. As opposed to being like... [2:58:13] Sorry, we're not compatible. Right, but I think women are worried about guys getting fixated on them and then not leaving them alone. It is brutal. And then texting them and fucking with them and then being mean when they get rejected. That's the best. The DMs I have that are like, just please be loved. I love you so much. And then, whore. And I'm like, wow. I never have responded once. It's crazy. They do get fixated for sure. Yeah. But then you... [2:58:37] Yeah, but then you have to, then it teaches you to set boundaries, which is good to be like, hey, man, I'm not going to text with you anymore. You got to chill. All that's going to go away when you put on the headset. I know. [2:58:47] When it goes... We all lock in. [2:58:50] And we'll just be able to tell them fuck off. Well, you're going to read their minds, too. You're going to know, oh, my God, this guy's a total sociopath. He doesn't give a fuck about anybody but himself. Everything he's saying is a lie. But that's so fucked up. For people with OCD who are like, what if I kill that cat? And they just get... No, no, no. You'll probably be able to see why they think that way. Like, oh, no, no, no. You're okay. Like, you're just freaking out. And maybe you won't think that way when you're embraced by this hive mind. Maybe you'll abandon all of it. Maybe that'll be, like, one of the great side effects of it.

2:59:20-3:00:52

[2:59:20] My best friend was paralyzed from the C2 down, and it would be good to read her mind and be like, what is actually the pain coming from? Because she was like, I don't know if there's pain. Right. You know? Well, we had the guy on who had the very first Neuralink. [2:59:35] And he's paralyzed. [2:59:37] He paralyzed in like a diving accident. [2:59:40] And he uses his head now to control his computer. Like he can play video games. [2:59:47] with just the chip, so he can't move his arms. And he's playing video games. And he says, it's like I have an aimbot. [2:59:53] Because I point to what I want to shoot and immediately shoot at it. Eye movement? Is brain. [2:59:58] his brain moves the cursor around. [3:00:01] That's awesome. How? [3:00:04] I don't know. Like he just moves it around. I can feel like. Somehow or another, the way the computer interfaces with the neurochip, so the brain interfaces with the chip, which interfaces with the computer. And somehow or another, you can control movement. And they're getting better and better at it. [3:00:20] That's crazy. Which is a problem for the people that got the first one. Okay, are you going to be able to pull that out and give me a new one? Yeah. Or is this the one? And I asked him about that. I was like, is this like it? And he's like, I think this is the only one that I can get. I mean, maybe as technology advances, they'll be able to take this one out and put a new one in. But at one point in time, like the wires were coming out and it wasn't working anymore. And so they had to like re-inject them back in. Shove them back in there. That's crazy. I mean, we started doing that with back pain, right? [3:00:50] Or people stick it in to fix the...

3:00:52-3:02:23

[3:00:52] Nerves in your back? Do they? Yeah. My uncle had that. Well, that's the ultimate goal of Neuralink is to restore movement. It's going to be able to replace your entire spinal system. You'll be able to – this thing will tell your muscles and your brain to fire. So if you're breaking your spinal cord, it'll be able to bridge that and you'll be able to use your body like you normally would. [3:01:13] This is like the ultimate goal. That's going to piss me off if this comes out after, because my paralyzed friend's passed away. I hate that when this stuff comes out. I'm like, God, you motherfucker. It's always going to happen that way. She was getting into stuff, though. She was getting into ear. Ear. [3:01:27] Ear touch. [3:01:28] If you touch your ears, you get pumped. Yeah. [3:01:31] That was a thing. She was getting into all that shit. She had like a servant that would make art for her. That was awesome. So she kind of had it. She kind of had her own little neural link of girls that she paid. We're probably about five years away from an unrecognizable world. [3:01:45] You think five years? Mm-hmm. [3:01:47] Yeah. [3:01:49] What about structures? [3:01:50] I mean, it'll be recognizable in terms of buildings, but I think the way the world interfaces, the way we interface with the world is going to be very different. [3:01:59] You think it's like walk into a space and it'll be like, welcome, Jordan Jensen. We have. Yeah. [3:02:04] Yeah, probably weirder than that. [3:02:05] Because there probably won't be people working there. [3:02:08] Bro, the Waymo is sick. [3:02:10] You like it? I thought I was so against it. I got in it, not having to talk to some fucker, being able to fart at will. Right. Just, but here's what I'm wondering. Why don't people go take me to... [3:02:20] an hour of [3:02:21] place away. [3:02:22] and just fucking it.

3:02:23-3:03:54

[3:02:23] It's got to be cheaper than a hotel. I bet people do. [3:02:26] Gross. [3:02:27] this won't go on the freeway yet but people are definitely doing all that stuff really they're probably fucking there's got to be cameras filming people fucking care i think yeah they're like let's go put on a fucking nixon mask and fuck yeah let's go yeah yeah but i really like them well it's certainly probably safer you know they don't really get in that many accidents if they do it's usually somebody else's fault not the waymost fault i'm sick of looking at playing [3:02:51] pilots and being like, he's going to be bad. This is going to be bad. L.A., I had one that was so... [3:02:57] caked up. His ass was so... [3:02:59] amazing it was the worst flight of my life i was like yeah we can't have these la beautiful barbies he was like a perfect kendo and i was like this is crazy they're gonna be reprised [3:03:09] Great. They're going to be replaced with AI. AI is going to fly all the planes. I would love that. I hate the idea of these guys getting sleepies. [3:03:16] I hate that. No, that's a big part of plane crashes. How about the half-strokes? [3:03:21] They got that fifth booster and they fucking stroke out while they're on the... [3:03:24] Does that happen? Oh, yeah. No. Oh, yeah. Yeah. People are stroked out while they're flying. [3:03:28] I'm not religious, but the private plane thing freaks me out because I'm worried that if God were to smite one of the planes, he'd be like, yeah, the comic who thinks they're hot shit with a private jet. Dead. You're dead. No one has kids in it. That's what God's going to do. Not terrorists. No. Oh, yeah, not terrorists. No. Smite the comic with a big ego. Yeah. That's funny. The people that take the photos in front of the private jet, they're the ones that are going to get smitten. Yeah. You post it right before you get on the plane. I worry about that. Looking cool.

3:03:54-3:05:36

[3:03:54] 100% you're going down dude I'll look at a plane that I'm on see if there's kids I'm like oh we're safe we're safe God's not gonna kill these kids that's funny yeah totally um [3:04:06] Thank you. Thanks for being here. It was a lot of fun. [3:04:08] Watch my special. It's available right now on Netflix. What's it called? Today. It came out today. Today. Take me with you. Take me with you. All right. Hell yeah. Thanks for having me. My pleasure. I'll see you tonight. Well, that was fun. Hell yeah. All right. Bye, everybody. [3:04:37] Your season, your shot. The NFL season is rolling and every touchdown can bring you closer to a payout with DraftKings Sportsbook, an official sports betting partner of the NFL. Every game is another chance to cash in. Don't just watch the action, win with it. DraftKings Sportsbook delivers the unmatched intensity of the NFL right to your fingertips. From the first touchdown score [3:05:07] in-game betting. Every snap is loaded with opportunity. New customers, this one is for you. Bet just $5 and get $200 in bonus bets instantly. Plus, score over $200 off NFL Sunday ticket from YouTube and YouTube TV. Your season is heating up. Download the DraftKings Sportsbook app and use the code ROGAN. That's code ROGAN to get $[redacted address] your first

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