The Average Superior Podcast

#66: Politics, Pyramids and The Matrix

JB, CJ & Jason Episode 66

Welcome back. We discuss the upcoming Canadian election, the new pyramid discovery and the first Matrix movie. Also... a lot of other stuff.


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SPEAKER_01:

Welcome to the Average Superior Podcast. If you enjoy our show, consider heading over to our Instagram account at Average Superior and checking out the link in the bio. From there, you can show your support by donating a small amount per month to help us cover costs. We appreciate listening and hope that you enjoy the episode as much as we enjoyed recording it. Everyone can understand why you can't. What do you do right now?

SPEAKER_02:

Welcome. I don't know.

SPEAKER_00:

Well, it's been a while.

SPEAKER_01:

I would blame everyone but me.

SPEAKER_03:

It's almost like we schedule this when people are working and then they realized, oh, I'm working today.

SPEAKER_02:

As a good, moderately successful adult, as you should, blame everyone but yourself. I'm gonna blame everyone except for myself here.

SPEAKER_03:

But it hasn't been him. It's been you and me.

SPEAKER_02:

It's mostly been you.

SPEAKER_03:

We had one like midweek, and you're like, oh. Yeah, that's what are you talking about? I'm on afternoons today, guys. Listen, I don't know my schedule. Three years ago.

SPEAKER_02:

Whatever. Yeah, that one was 100% you. You are the busiest.

SPEAKER_03:

And then you chose work instead of us.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, because I need to also choose having a roof.

SPEAKER_03:

This could pay for a roof.

SPEAKER_02:

Yes, podcasting has been so successful for us. We've made so much money. It's it's honestly unbelievable.

SPEAKER_01:

Negative dollars every month. It's great. But positive fun.

SPEAKER_02:

Positive emotional rest.

SPEAKER_01:

I agree. It's worth it. That's why we're still here.

SPEAKER_02:

You are the busiest person I've ever met.

SPEAKER_01:

I don't think so.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, you are. By far.

SPEAKER_03:

No, but you'll get like you get a couple more years left, and you'll be the busiest person you've ever met.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, he's already the busiest person. Actually, this is surprising that he's admitting that he's not the busiest person.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, I like I feel like you're really busy too.

SPEAKER_02:

No, he I am really busy, but I'm leaking. Every weekend you're like, I'm not available this day and this day, and also this day.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, because I schedule things in advance, which which we don't do with this thing. But just imagine you in, I would say, ten years. You're gonna be him and how busy he is. So you will be the busiest person.

SPEAKER_02:

I'm pretty flexible. He's fairly flexible.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, you are.

SPEAKER_00:

Why are you so flexible? Because uh stretches.

SPEAKER_03:

I'm a good I stretch you know, like kids your kids do stuff too. Pretty busy.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah. Uh I am flexible, I don't know. Like our Monday, Tuesday, Wednesdays right now are really busy. Uh but other than that, I can usually work around.

SPEAKER_02:

He appears to be flexible because when the difference is is when we schedule something, he's he just says, Yeah, I'm available. You say, No, I'm busy Saturday, Sunday. Well, like Saturday I could come, but Sunday my mother-in-law is here. I gave time. You know what? My mother-in-law's here, but I'll be there at eight. Like you you just kind of like walk it back.

SPEAKER_03:

Because I have to, because I feel so bad because I'm never just available. Like I was I feel so bad because I'm always like, Oh, yeah, well, I can't that day, I can't this day. And I feel like I have to justify it to you guys.

SPEAKER_01:

But there's always some availability at some point in the day. Like today? Yeah, or like at night.

SPEAKER_03:

I'm available until about eleven, and then I'm then I'm screwed.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, let's get on with this then. What are we doing?

SPEAKER_02:

Is your mother-in-law coming?

SPEAKER_03:

No, we gotta we have a little skating activity for the nursing home, and then uh and then I gotta go take my nephew do some stuff.

SPEAKER_01:

Like a good uncle.

SPEAKER_04:

Yeah. Yeah, good uncle.

SPEAKER_01:

You want to talk about that?

SPEAKER_03:

Being a good uncle? Yeah. I'm not a good uncle. I'm I'm I'm a good uncle. Like I I but I I could do more with him. And I don't I don't do enough with my nephew, and I don't do more. But I always say that, and then I just never go to completion.

SPEAKER_02:

Today you're completioning.

SPEAKER_03:

Yep. Don't like the way you said that, but uh, that's something.

SPEAKER_01:

That's not what a good uncle does.

SPEAKER_03:

No, that's not that's not what a good uncle does. Okay.

SPEAKER_02:

All right, off to a good start. Really nice. Do you guys we can go a couple different directions? Yeah, we can.

SPEAKER_03:

Just talk about the fucking pyramids already. Just get it done. Because even I'm amazed.

SPEAKER_02:

Sure, that's option A. Option B is politics. Uh no, they're all terrible.

SPEAKER_03:

I don't even think we're gonna talk about politics.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, we need to like, I don't know, dude. We're we're screwed. Okay. Let's start with this. We'll just start with this. Is that website right now? Mark Carney is going to win. We're fucked. Mark Carney's gonna win. There's no way that one I'm here. We go again. 100%. One hundred million percent.

SPEAKER_03:

Not a majority. I don't know, but he's well.

SPEAKER_01:

I don't know, but he's going to win because they're playing their games. Uh, he's doing a couple things to make it look like he's awesome. Like with the people think the carbon tax is gone, so they're excited about that. It's not gone. Uh right, just it's all semantics. I I don't know, man, but like, and then like I've been hearing ads on the radio. I've been hearing ads oh, on freaking Prime the other night. I was watching Prime, and there was Mark Carney ads.

SPEAKER_03:

They're pushing hard. Polymarket is not looking good. So what is okay? Polymarket is just a prediction website.

SPEAKER_02:

It's a betting website. You basically get to bet on on like anything else, right? You get to bet on the outcome of the.

SPEAKER_03:

There's no way, because it has been the conservatives have been decreased, like what it 30% now.

SPEAKER_02:

But polymarket was, I think, the only prediction thing that was correct for the US election.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah. I I find I find that those numbers extremely I thought it'd be close.

SPEAKER_02:

Let me tell you why I think this is correct. Yeah. Obviously, I don't want to live another four years under a liberal government. However, when I listen to the conservatives talk, they sound like they have no idea what they're saying. They have no grasp on what is actually important to the vast majority of people. They just mask it by eating an apple and yeah, but but I would want my politicians to come out and say, like, hey, I understand that we're cutting um taxes for the quote air quotes middle class, but you, somebody who maybe makes a little bit more than that, fuck you. That's kind of like the message I'm receiving, right? And hey, I understand that you're frustrated by the fact that like, you know, our economy is shit and you get taxed like crazy and like, you know, immigrants and this and that, and it's just kind of like that's why Trump won, because he said all the things people were thinking.

SPEAKER_01:

I don't understand because like I've seen not seen Polyev in anything recently. Like barely anything. I've seen Carniv everywhere. Yeah. And like it's weird that like they're not I feel like they're not as vocal or in the public eye for some reason. But is that the truth or is that just your perception? Well, I completely it's my perception, but like I would I don't know what that's like. I I guess I'm not watching the local news, so but all the ads you guess.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, yeah. Like I'm not I'm not seeing here ads anymore.

SPEAKER_01:

I I'm seeing I saw a couple, but like I all I'm hearing about is Carney. And I guess maybe like you see a headline here and there, and that's all like uh media, like so you're gonna see the pro-Carney uh stuff all the time. But I don't know, man. I I and I don't I guess this is one of those things with politics where you just are like you throw your hands in the air in some in some ways and you're like, well, there's what can we do? Like the I like doing that. Well, it's frustrating because it's like that because there's like the West, really, there's nothing that we can do. It doesn't matter if every we every single everybody over here votes uh conservative, the East votes liberal, we are we're a liberal government.

SPEAKER_03:

I hate watching it on TV and just watching it be decided before our polls even close. Yeah. You know, I like I maybe just release it all at the same time to make us feel like we have a whatever.

SPEAKER_02:

Be comforted by the fact that it's the same side of or the opposite side of the same how do you say that? Opposite side of the same coin. Same coin, yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02:

Right? It's the same thing, it doesn't matter. I was really excited when the liberals came out and said, Oh, we're gonna cut your taxes by one percent. I wasn't excited about that, but then the conservatives followed up and said, We're gonna cut your taxes by 15%. It wasn't actually 15%. I think it was two fifteen percent, which worked out to be like two and a half percent for any income you make under fifty-six thousand dollars a year. Right. So it's like you have both parties saying, Hey Canadians, we really appreciate you. We're gonna cut your taxes by a whole two percent under fifty-six thousand dollars. And he's like, he's like, uh, what was Polyev's talking point on Twitter the other day? He's like, my tax cuts will save the average Canadian family two thousand dollars. Great asshole. The average Canadian family pays forty thousand dollars in income taxes if you're not like this quote unquote middle class that you're focused on.

SPEAKER_01:

Right.

SPEAKER_02:

Thank you so much for your two thousand dollars. Please, sir, may I have some more? Like, fuck.

SPEAKER_01:

I know. And it's interesting because uh when Trump in the States he talked, he was talking basically about like I would like to get rid of taxes or have like a straight across the board 10% tax or something like that. Like he was saying more like crazy like um things to push like the higher tax like like basically we're gonna abolish taxes as much as possible. Yeah if the gov if we can get our if we can get the government in order, get government spending in order, stop sending billions of dollars to other places and actually keep it in our own country, we would not need to pay everyone would not need to pay this much m money in taxes because the government would actually have money, it'd actually be able to support its citizens off of the taxes that it collects at like a 10% rate or something like that. So like you'd like to hear something like that, but nobody's saying that crap. Actually, the only person who is is the PPC guy, Bernier.

SPEAKER_02:

And he's a nut job too.

SPEAKER_01:

And he's impossible. Uh people say like throwaway votes, right? They're like, well, it's like I I like a lot of things he says, and and he's uh more of like a Trump figure in terms of uh saying some kind of not outrageous things, but just more aggressive things in terms of no, we want to do this and uh whatever. So he's more like a Trump side on that where he's just saying what he thinks, and I think it resonates with a lot of people, but they're not gonna vote for him because he's no chance of winning. Or if he does, 100%, that would be one, probably a conservative vote that's not gonna happen because it goes to the PBC.

SPEAKER_02:

He's also a bit of a nut job, yeah, sure. I think like the states, the reason Trump was very successful is because he was an outsider of that party. Right. He came in, he took over the Republican Party over a very long period of time and won the election, yada yada yada. In Canada, there is no outsiders, it's always insiders, it's always the same bullshit political parties until we have a legit outsider come in and say all the things that the majority of people are thinking, namely, stop taking all our money, stop letting people just move here without any like merit or reason to be here, uh, and hey, how about you respect some personal freedoms and some common sense as it as far as it relates to gender? I think if you just said all kind of that stuff and meant it, yeah, I think it I think they would be successful. Uh CJ 2027.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, well, how do you do that? 30, 2030.

SPEAKER_03:

Like, as you, how do you run for prime minister?

SPEAKER_01:

You have to become you have to be running. Uh yeah, you do. You'd have to get like a local.

SPEAKER_03:

So you'll be an insider by that time. Like that's the to get in, you can't just come in from the outside. You gotta work your way from the inside.

SPEAKER_02:

But did you guys look at did did you ever watch any of that Ruby Dollas stuff? No, no. Okay, so she was really interesting. She was running for the liberal candidates candidate. I think I've seen her. Yeah, she's like the East Indian looking girl.

SPEAKER_04:

Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_02:

I was interested. I actually was like, I doesn't because I don't really care so much what party per se you are. Right. I care about what you have to say, and she was very similar to Trump in the sense that she was an outsider that was saying some of the things that everybody was thinking. Right. And her her whole platform was bring the liberals back to center. Right.

SPEAKER_04:

Like that.

SPEAKER_02:

Super interesting. Yeah. Except the liberals literally ran her off the ballot. Yeah, they wouldn't let her even get votes on, right? Yeah. Yeah. So I don't know. The problem is, is like if you want to be that true outsider, I don't think you can tie yourself to one of those political parties. Right, but then you're screwed. Because then you're the then you're the Green Party or the Tea Party. And but if you're like Trump, if you are truly an influential person, I th I don't think it matters.

SPEAKER_01:

I think it does. Because you're you're never gonna get the baby boomers to like you know what I mean? There's gonna be a uh it's the a percentage of the population that is either conservative or liberal. There's no they're not even gonna like consider the external ones, especially if they're not giving up if you're not given a platform on the uh mainstream media where a lot of those people still are sitting on at night and watching at six o'clock. The baby boomers, yeah. Right, when that's a gigantic portion of the bigger.

SPEAKER_02:

But that is changing, you know, the the individual or independent media is changing that. So, yes, while that over time as that goes away, sure, but like that's that's a process.

SPEAKER_01:

Years like how long, like like when's the last time you think your parents watched some independent media sources? Never, o'clock. Exactly. Satish to a lot of people who maybe pay attention a bit more to like X or some other accounts, but uh the vast majority of people I think who are voting in this election, especially for us, are going to be watching CBC. C T V.

SPEAKER_02:

And they also believe that these mainstream media sources are credible. Yeah, which is the same. They just have the inherent credibility. I I don't know. I I think that we will I think the next four years are gonna be really tough.

SPEAKER_01:

It is. I was at uh work the other day and I was looking for somebody, ended up chatting with somebody else, and got into this this rabbit hole of uh I can't remember how bad vaccines came up, and then we went down a rabbit hole, and then I just kind of get got the whole point ended up being that like I don't know like how you trust anything anymore. Uh, because like is because we're talking about like I I don't want to be black and white, I don't think you can be black and white with vaccines and say that like you can take them all or take none of them. I don't think that's how it should be. It should be you have to you have to look through it, which is hard to do. But the whole point was that like because that it was so obvious that they were lying to us about specific events in history, like it'd be it's it's clear now they were 100% lying, and then the mainstream media jumped on board and was 100% lying. It's like how do you then trust anything they say? And that's that's a bad place to be in because you'd like to be able to think you can watch some of the stuff and be like, oh, they're trying to give me some news that I need to know about versus this is paid for and they're trying to feed me something. Um, anyway, the whole point is like with with that with the mainstream media stuff, it's like I don't know how you can watch it anymore and think that literally everything isn't some sort of paid advertisement for or they're trying to shove something down your throat.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, whatever propaganda they have been asked to peddle. Yeah, it's like that CBC article that EZ sent us. Yeah, I know. Oh, yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

Yes, they're falling apart.

SPEAKER_02:

And and and maybe they are, maybe they aren't. I read this article and I'm immediately skeptical. I'm immediately thinking to myself, what is the intent of this message? Who's trying to manipulate me to think this way? I the message itself is lost because it is is shrouded in a lack of credibility.

SPEAKER_01:

But here's that, I guess that's the question. It's for that's for us. For us, we are all on the same page with that. We just don't we mistrust because of because of being lied to so many times. But is that the average person? Like, do does the average person just kind of read that headline or read that article and be like, oh yeah, it looks like this is what's happening? Do you know what I mean?

SPEAKER_03:

It's slowly switching, I think. I think it's gonna take time, but I think right now it's like a lot of the baby boomers just don't. They just watch their news that they've watched their whole life, and like, oh, I like Fox News because they do this, or I like CBC and they do this.

SPEAKER_02:

What percentage of our population is baby boomers?

SPEAKER_03:

Baby boomers, do you know? I don't know.

SPEAKER_02:

I don't, but have you seen that poll of voting intent by age category? No. So they break it down whatever every 10, 13, 15 years. So from the bottom up, it's like conservative 20s, conservative thirties, conservative forties, conservative fifties, but like from 55 onward, it's liberal, liberal, liberal, liberal. Which is interesting because essentially we are then being led astray by people who are about to exit or are have exited the workforce. That's surprising to me.

SPEAKER_01:

I I just like thinking about how I grew up, I would say that my I mean, maybe just the echo chamber I was in, but the people like my the adults that when I was a kid, I think would all have been conservative in terms of like they're farmers, they you know what I mean?

SPEAKER_03:

Like they I just we were we were NDP. Manitoba was NDP for a long time with all the farmers, and I don't know the reasoning why, because I was too young.

SPEAKER_02:

But was conservative not what the liberals are now back in the day?

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, did it flip like the states kind of flipped the same kind of thing?

SPEAKER_01:

I would you would think it kind of had to. Okay. But I again, again, 20% big baby boomers, but the other issue is okay, that's 20%, but that's probably of that 20%, probably more of them go to vote for sure than the other population, like the other age groups, which is bad as well. I mean, that's the other thing that I'm hit and miss with the voting.

SPEAKER_03:

I'm not like uh CJ over here. Every election ever in his entire life he's voted in.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, we were talking about that the other day.

SPEAKER_03:

Unlike I would say probably over 50% of the elections I've been around for I voted in.

SPEAKER_01:

When I was younger, I I didn't.

SPEAKER_03:

I just uh Yeah, that's why I'm 50, because like I didn't for the first 10 10 years.

SPEAKER_01:

And if I obviously if I could go back, I'll change that. But I I I I don't know how it's thinking how much the world would be changed if you had voted.

SPEAKER_03:

It wouldn't be. Shut up.

SPEAKER_01:

I know that it wouldn't be, but that's the message that I think they should people should be pushing is hey, you need to go vote. Like everyone, like the pop what what is our percentage of people vote? I'm just looking at 30. It's in the 30s. Yeah, 30 seconds. Oh man, that is that's crazy not many. Like it should be 70.

SPEAKER_02:

Do you think if it was easier to vote, if you could do it on your phone and verify your identity, more people would vote? Yes. Yes. So why don't we do that?

SPEAKER_01:

Uh I just think there'd be a lot of fraud. You have to figure out a way. I mean, I mean, this technology probably the blockchain. Sure. For real. Sure. No, I I see. But again, now but now you're limiting access potentially to people who are tech savvy and using it in quote. Because I mean, it'd probably be pretty easy to do, but you just would have to figure like figure out how do we get this to everybody.

SPEAKER_03:

If you're it's saying 62%, I don't believe that. From 2021 federal election ballots cast versus population.

SPEAKER_01:

62%?

SPEAKER_03:

That does not seem right. I don't believe that. I'm not gonna go to Grok.

SPEAKER_01:

Would you Google it? CBC.

SPEAKER_03:

I'm gonna Google it now and just to see because Grok says 62% from 2021 federal election.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, if Grok said it, that's gotta be right.

SPEAKER_03:

No, it's all tainted.

SPEAKER_01:

Anyway, yeah, I I think that would be kind of more important at this point, is just because then I think we'd have a better representation of what the country actually thinks based on because it will have more people from every age category doing it.

SPEAKER_02:

I totally understand people when they say they don't want to vote because it won't make a difference. I I can get behind that argument, I can put myself in those shoes. It's just a bit of burying your head in the sand or that feudalism, you know.

SPEAKER_01:

It is, but people that but that that's people's instinct right now, with so much access to information and so much noise from every angle of like and again back to like I don't know what to believe anymore. Like this is saying this, this this news article saying that, and it's so for the average person who's busy, we just talked about how busy we were. For the average person that's busy, it is almost impossible to sift through all of the garbage to determine what is actually happening, who is actually believes what, which platform actually is saying what things. Um, and be most people aren't gonna take the effort to learn it all, and it's it's it's something. Because it's super important, but I understand, like you just don't put the time in it, it doesn't become a priority, and so all of a sudden it's election day, and you're like you're like, Well, I usually bur vote this way, so I guess I'm voting that way, or I'm not doing it because I don't know anything about any of these people.

SPEAKER_03:

Stats Canada did a big poll about on 2021. Yeah, 2021 number is like 77 per 76% of total on Stats Canada. That's that's which doesn't seem right. And it says 16, 18 to 24 year old people, 66% of them voted.

SPEAKER_01:

Okay, well, if that's if that's right, because that seems completely shocking.

SPEAKER_03:

That seems does not seem right. But then they say uh they did a the survey after, and it's 46% of people were just too busy in their everyday lives to vote.

SPEAKER_02:

How can you be too busy in your everyday lives? 43, sorry. Well, you're the employer will give you time off of work.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, I guess 11% were disabilities, but then 24% were too busy. 9% were out of town. I'm out of hey, I'm out of town.

SPEAKER_01:

That's I don't know. Here like if that's right, uh then we're completely wrong about the 30%. That's 100%. We're 100% right. There's two verified sources, Grok and Google. Stats Canada. And Stats Canada. They don't lie. Uh anyway, so that's good. I guess we're if we're wrong with that, that's awesome. That's good that if we can get 70%, that's a decent uh that is really good.

SPEAKER_02:

But is it like here's this thought though. Take your population, and we know that the older top part of the population is larger than like it whittles down the younger you get because of the fact that we're not replacing at the same rate. Yeah. So the weighted value then of the younger people is gonna be less every generation, every election, every year.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh until they all die up top.

SPEAKER_02:

But there always will be more old people than young people at the current.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, yeah, because we're not because we're not having enough babies.

SPEAKER_02:

So we're fucked. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, you gotta have more babies. I don't think that's gonna solve our problems. That ship sailed for me. You you did your part. Yeah, I'll try. I'll keep it going.

SPEAKER_03:

I'll get some more voters out there.

SPEAKER_01:

Indoctrinate them for 18 years and then send them out to vote. How do you not feel completely hopeless about all of this?

SPEAKER_03:

Be because we can't do anything about it. We're on the plane. The pilot's flying. If he crashes, he crashes.

SPEAKER_01:

So this so I I see both sides of what you're saying. I I agree with him. There's no way to get around it. I agree with him. And and you I'm reading this book, uh, Ikigai. Ikigai. What? Ikigai. Yeah, I-K I G A I. It's the Is it written in Japanese? No.

SPEAKER_03:

But it's basically secret to a long and happy life?

SPEAKER_01:

There you go. The secret, the Japanese secret to a long and happy life.

SPEAKER_03:

Uh by by uh by an author, not Japanese.

SPEAKER_01:

James Brown. Hector Garcia. Uh anyway, good book so far. Uh, but it's like a lot of them where it becomes down to like focusing on what you can control, what's in your sphere of influence. And I mean, it's not all of it, but that's a that's a part a portion of that book. And so that that's the problem, is because this is beyond our sphere of influence. So the politics and all that stuff is like just legitimately beyond what we can control, but we still need to pay it's but it affects our lives so much that it has to you have to pay attention to it and you have to care somewhat. So this is like a weird I think I think politics are a weird thing where it's like you by worrying about it, it's you're doing what you shouldn't be doing. You're worrying about something you can, then it's also not good because this is important, it's important, it affects your life. So I don't I don't know how I don't know how our politics fits on that and how you deal with that. Because it's like I think all you can do is try to educate yourself on what you think is true and right, talk to the people around you about it, vote who you want to vote for on the election day, and then then just go about your life. I don't know. And then we're all in camps one day and all of our money's going to a pool and we're all getting uh X dollars per month to spend. Pretty much. I don't know. I don't I I I I feel hopeless with it for sure. I completely feel hopeless about about politics and um the way that I see that I think I think it's gonna go, and the fact that I think Mark Carney is going to be like Justin Trudeau on steroids in terms of like he's actually a smart guy and he fully believes in socialism. Uh he thinks and and climate change, like stopping climate change and all this stuff. So I think we're completely screwed if he gets in as a country. I think we're yeah. And so but not if if no, that's a definite. I I think I'm with you.

SPEAKER_03:

Maybe this whole all the media is putting this big spin on it to make sure maybe, yeah. I hope. Can you imagine if that that's a book? They're gonna do a good job.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh Carney's got a book. I uh yeah, and I was looking at Audible last night for uh actually Suzanne Humphrey's book, the one that she was on Joe Rogan the other day talking about vaccine stuff. Uh I debated getting her book, and while I was on Audible, uh Mark Carney's book pull showed up, and I was like, ooh, this is actually interesting to kind of understand what he thinks. Values? Is that what it is? But I didn't get it. I would be interested to do that. Building a better world for Audible. I I what didn't want to like spend the money for. Because I'm sure there's things in there that you'd be like, yes, I agree with that. For sure. But that's the thing. People are complicated and they're gonna have some ideas that you agree with and some ideas you don't agree with. Um, but uh and it comes down, but all it comes down to with politics is you're always concerned about who's behind the the scenes pushing the thing or who's paying you money to you know it it's like in the States. Well it was like actually with um when Elon was on Joe Rogan podcast and they he asked him, uh do we talk about it? He's like, I'm not saying yeah. Do we talk about this?

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, how he said he's not gonna talk about it because you're afraid of his own.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, like so the so it's like he there's obviously something working in the background that's beyond what the average person knows about, um, that people don't talk about. So this idea that you can't keep secrets or that uh there can't be a conspiracy that's so big. Um, like so the moon let's say the moon landing, something like that, where it's like, well, no, it would have come out. Are you sure? Are you sure? Because like apparently there's things happening apparently all the time that uh the elite or whoever's running the government, actually running the government or actually doing these things, they keep their mouths shut because guess what? If you don't, we're gonna kill you and your whole family.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, I think that's quite believable.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, I think it is too. I think people we like to relegate it to science fiction because there's been so many movies made about it or books made about it. Uh so it's like, oh that's just that's just science fiction. But I think uh that's all based in reality in some way. Um there was a I there's a yeah, another podcast I watched the other day where there was some guy talking and uh he was saying that you would you wouldn't know the name of the person who's running the things. Probably it's like you you wouldn't know. Like there's a there's like there's a person or people that run it, you say you wouldn't have a clue who they are. You could I could say the names you wouldn't know.

SPEAKER_02:

I also don't think that's black and white. I think that comes down to influence. Yeah, oh for sure. These people have influence or make decisions that yeah, they're not running their yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, sorry, back to Carney. Why hasn't the whole Epstein thing become like a thing? Why like I know it's people yelling at him when he's on stage and stuff, but why hasn't that been like you'd think again uh an independent media source would say, hold up, there is a connection between Carney and Epstein. What's the connection? I there's pictures with there's pictures with him with that Jelaine, whatever her name is. But what is does Was he on the island?

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, like let's let's go. He's just at an event with him.

SPEAKER_01:

I I don't know, but like that could be very easily that that's my point is like you'd think that that's a potential big big thing. This is a child trafficker that's in jail currently. Uh, you have pictures with her. Like you think, first of all, if that was me had pictures, I'd be like, okay, this is what the this is the circumstance, this is what happened, this is why I have a picture with her. I obviously never said that. And no, as far as I can tell, no independent journalists have uh looked into that being like, oh, this was a one-time thing. They ended up at a uh at a location together because of this event. Uh as far as we can tell, that's it. Or no, this is a relationship that's been going on for a long time. I don't know. I don't know if the onus is on him to have to explain that. Uh, you it's a it's a convicted child traffic.

SPEAKER_02:

I get that. But in the absence of other evidence or other things that are like relevant to that circumstance, I don't know if it matters. Stick with me here. I don't know if it matters if he's in a picture with her. What it could have been in a gala, it could have been anything. It matters.

SPEAKER_01:

I think it matters.

SPEAKER_02:

Because he has to answer to everything every time something comes up like that. Because I'm sure you'll find other stuff.

SPEAKER_01:

This is the thing that's frustrating is I think transparency. This is why, again, in Canadian politics, I don't see anybody. I mean, I I haven't really looked dug into Pierre that much, but like I haven't seen anybody being like, I'm a I am transparent. Here I am, I am transparent. Like I this is who I am. That's what I would want in a leader, being like, hey, uh, there's nothing off the table here. I come at like my life is it, I've made some mistakes, I've done some good things, done some bad things, uh, but I'm a transparent person, I have no problem having a discussion about this. So in in the from a transparency perspective, knowing who that he's in the picture with and the significance of it, you'd think at some point you'd just be like, Okay, this is the circumstances. I understand if you don't believe me, if you want to look into it, go ahead. But let me just tell you why this is a thing.

SPEAKER_02:

But that almost seems like noise to me. Him answering those allegations seems to be almost. I I think generally you get the presumption that I'm not on Epstein's Island.

SPEAKER_03:

Like the thing is if he was on a plane with Epstein, maybe, but like he's at it's a wilderness festival from 2013, and the pictures, there's always like four or five people in the pictures, and she's just in like the line of people talking.

SPEAKER_01:

I don't think it really is relevant. Uh, I think it's relevant in terms of if people are screaming at you at a conference about how many people did you rape, or how many children did you write.

SPEAKER_03:

One guy says, How many kids over and over again?

SPEAKER_02:

But you're the political person at this conference, you're not gonna start engaging these hecklers.

SPEAKER_01:

I know I get that, but this is this is my whole point is getting out in front of it at some point in your process, knowing this is gonna become a thing because it's a picture that got out there, people are talking about it, you make a video at some point, or you uh have a discussion, like maybe control a controlled environment. This is this is what the deal is with this picture, and then from then on, if anyone's screaming at you, like, hey, I explained that. I mean, you maybe address it one time, like, hey, I explained that. If you'd like to go learn more about that, go check this out over there. Yeah, and you move on, right? Because it's been like it's not like you're avoiding, you're avoiding the topic of the question. That's that's the part that people get frustrated with, like, you're not answering the question.

SPEAKER_02:

Have either of these guys been on a podcast that's relevant?

SPEAKER_01:

Uh, Pierre was on um Jordan Peterson's podcast. Oh, really? It was actually really good. Was it? Uh, that was maybe I'm pretty sure I listened to that one.

SPEAKER_03:

That was like Heckler said how many how many kids did you molest with Jeffrey Epstein? Is what the Heckler yelled at him. Yeah, that there's there's no conversation you can have with that guy at that point. Uh and then there's other pictures with him and Tom Zero and Tom Hanks in them, and they're AI generated, but the ones from 2013 look to be real.

SPEAKER_01:

Anyway, I didn't mean to bring it back to Mark Carney and Polyev. Uh yeah, Polyev, I'm pretty sure he was on uh Jordan Peterson's podcast, which I thought was really good. Oh, good. Um yeah, and I think actually he put he opened it for Carney to be on, but I don't obviously he won't.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, because that would be I and I mean maybe that's the generational thing. That's where I get all of my information is long form conversation.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, and you'd think that like the a guy like Mark Carney would learn from watching what happened in the um uh American election where you have Trump going on all these podcasts with just average guys having conversations about for three, four hours.

SPEAKER_03:

They don't need to worry about that because if he doesn't need to, there's no reason to do it because it won't be so bad.

SPEAKER_02:

Which is too bad. I agree with what you say, Jason. There is no need to.

SPEAKER_03:

No, as but if I was his like advisor, I'd be like, no, the worst thing could happen, the best thing could happen, there's no reason to go on here. Totally. You'll lose votes at this point.

SPEAKER_02:

But if you truly wanted to be a leader, yeah, or yeah, you should have long conversations about things because you're gonna find out nuance.

SPEAKER_01:

I also have been frustrated by just how like Trudeau steps down, they elect this guy in the Liberal Party, he's all of a sudden our president, our president, or a prime minister, and prefers the term overlord. Yeah, but not only is he our prime minister, but like how is like there's been no there's been no parliament happening this whole time yet somehow it seems like decisions are still being made, things are still happening, money is still being spent. Whoa, whoa, whoa, you mean that this is all a farce? Like it just I I'm confused because like I can understand if I'm being generous, I can understand that like okay, let's pause this while we get our liberal leader, we got the liberal leader, okay. Now he's just de facto prime minister. But then the second that happens, you think that parliament should have been reconvened. I don't I don't get this.

SPEAKER_02:

You know what? Fuck it. If the liberals get elected, I'm gonna start an NGO that does gender studies on snakes in Uganda and I'm gonna make millions of dollars. Ooh, snakes, why snakes? Why not? They have gender too, do they? I don't know. They get to identify however they want.

SPEAKER_01:

What if they just say I'm a snake? I'm a snake. I don't know what kind of snake that was.

SPEAKER_00:

I don't know.

SPEAKER_03:

That's from something. A Ugandan snake. I'm just excited to for the money I'm gonna get from giving my guns back to the government. I just those checks are gonna be sweet and many rolls and Scrooge McDoc just swimming in coins. It's gonna be amazing.

SPEAKER_02:

Oh, I'm so frustrated. Yeah. Okay?

SPEAKER_03:

Like that's what Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Don't never mind.

unknown:

Don't comply.

SPEAKER_02:

That's what he was gonna say. Yeah, I would never say that. You know what's near Uganda? Oh, pyramids.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, yeah, I'll admit this is more interesting than the fucking Canadian election.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, pyramids. Okay, if your head is in the sand, like a lot of people would.

SPEAKER_03:

It's not that out there though.

SPEAKER_01:

Now spend there's a lot of sand by the pyramids.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, like my my wife had zero idea. Like, it's not something that pops up on normal.

SPEAKER_02:

Is your wife the barometer of what's out there?

SPEAKER_03:

Normal. No, she's an average person with average social media use and no idea.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah. Why would you just call your wife an average person?

SPEAKER_03:

Screw you guys, first off. But like she, yeah, she is the average person, I think.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh my god.

SPEAKER_03:

She's on social media the average amount of people. Whatever. All right, anyway. She didn't know. It's a big deal. It's a big deal.

SPEAKER_01:

Stop saying your wife's average.

SPEAKER_02:

She is so incredibly average. No, she's a screw you guys.

SPEAKER_03:

She doesn't list it anyways. Let's move on. She has average interest. Whatever. I don't know how to say it. But she's the nor she's a normal person. She has no idea about the pyramids. Okay. Most normal people don't.

SPEAKER_01:

Alright, normal people listening. Average, average, normal people. Listen up, you normal normies. Listen up you normal, average people. So the pyramids. There was a paper that came out, I don't know, the beginning of March. Uh essentially, where the scientists used this new ability to scan under the ground. And they did this around well, the scan it's scan. This new ability called radar. Well, but it's like it's different, apparently. It's not just the it's not just like the ground penetrating, it's slightly different. I don't understand the science on why it's a good idea.

SPEAKER_02:

They used slightly different radar. Yes.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh around the uh Great Pyramid of Giza, Geiza, Giza.

SPEAKER_03:

I wish it was called Giza.

SPEAKER_01:

It'd be Giza. The pyramid of Giza. Uh and they found some things. So, but but but have you seen the actual like scan photos versus the 3D rendering photos? Like just the wavelength of colors.

SPEAKER_04:

There's a big difference.

SPEAKER_01:

So the scan photos look like, I don't know. No, 100% there's a structure there. Oh, for sure. But like it's just it's interesting to go from these scan photos that's hard to like interpret to this 3D rendering. Like, oh my god. So what they find, JB. What they think, what they think is, or what they're saying there is. Under the pyramid, uh, there are eight columns that are eight meters wide that go six hundred meters into the ground. Eight of them with this coil that runs along the outside of them from the top to the bottom, like uh like a like a staircase that goes around and around and around all the way to the bottom. Uh under the 600 meter columns is something else. It's like they don't know, that it could be a building, it could be something else, and that this could go all the way up to two kilometers into the ground.

SPEAKER_00:

Two kilometers, two kilometers. That's a long distance. That's a long ways.

SPEAKER_03:

Uh, Egyptians are really good at building stuff. Aliens.

SPEAKER_02:

Why are we not why is everybody on the planet not all stop? Yeah, you gotta answer this question.

SPEAKER_03:

I don't know how we didn't like independence day shut the planet down and just do this because this is such a big deal.

SPEAKER_02:

I know, like just between like Russia, China, and the US being like, hey, hold on. Before we continue fighting, we gotta figure this one out, right? Let's all come together and dig this shit up.

SPEAKER_01:

Completely. Uh I don't it's so insane. Because I I again like the I so the they still don't know who the people okay, this is the hard part. It's it's there's arguments about this, about who built the pyramids, when they were built. Uh, there's historians who think, oh, we we've solved that, we know who it was, we know when it was. And then there's uh others who are like, what are you talking about? There's we have not figured that out, and we don't know how they did it. How did they move 80 town blocks 500 miles away to this place and then hoist them up on top of this thing? According to our friends at the Radically Average podcast, they did it by hand.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, by hand, idiots.

SPEAKER_01:

Idiots. Uh anyway, it's it's so crazy because even if so, let's say that's true, we still don't know how they did it. Like we still don't physically know how it was possible to do that. And now you add this extra layer in where now you're saying literally layer, where you're saying somehow they put these structures two up to two kilometers, or let's just even talk about the columns, these columns eight meters wide, which is gigantic, two six hundred meters into the ground. Like that doesn't make sense. How? How? What are they made of? How do they how are they so round?

SPEAKER_02:

Even if you account for the accumulation of sand when it became a desert over the last, let's say 12,000 years. Okay. I still don't think you would you get 600 meters of sand building up. How do you dig two kilometers down with shovels? With tools. You don't. You don't, because of things like bedrock.

SPEAKER_03:

What's the biggest hole you've ever dug?

SPEAKER_02:

Six feet.

SPEAKER_03:

I mean whoa. Oh shit. Oh, yeah. By hand? I don't mind.

SPEAKER_01:

Like one foot?

SPEAKER_03:

I probably have gone like to my shit, like my knee, like just as a hole. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Like on the beach, like with digging a sand hole, hole in the sand. Like then it starts filling in. You get frustrated.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah. And you know what I have? Manual tools.

SPEAKER_02:

You are not the benchmark for organized labor when you have it by hand.

SPEAKER_03:

Any of us could be in charge of a fleet of able-bodied men with manual tools, and we could not construct anything near what they construct. I would give you all the resources of all of a man, and yeah, there's no way.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, but they were they well, this is the this is the crazy, this is what's crazy. It's like they still can't tell you how they did certain things. Like they have um pottery, like simple things. Like they've got this pottery that is so uniform that they cannot figure out how it's possible they made these things because it's like like it's so it's by the like the sixteenth of an inch with in the same shape, this everything. It looks like it's laser etched, like it looks like something that we would build today with like computers and manufacturing in terms of like how precise they are.

SPEAKER_03:

But what what is this news that come off of the pyramid distracting us from? I don't think I feel like this is such a big deal that it has to be either distracting or something.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, but it's not distracting, because you just said nobody knows about it. Yeah, fuck, I don't know.

SPEAKER_02:

Average people don't know about it.

SPEAKER_03:

Your wife's completely normal people, whatever.

SPEAKER_02:

I I truly think this needs to be investigated because it's quite probable that there was a more advanced society than us that went extinct for probably the same reasons. They probably voted liberal for a fourth term.

SPEAKER_03:

Starcraft. Wasn't Starcraft based on Earth? Was it Starcraft?

SPEAKER_01:

The video game? No. Stargate?

SPEAKER_03:

Stargate. Stargate. Wasn't that based on Earth?

SPEAKER_01:

Stargate, there was a yeah, there was a gate at on Earth.

SPEAKER_03:

That's what the civilization was like. They had the weapons with the spears with the gun.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, it doesn't matter what but the people with the things in their foreheads.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, they're so cool. And then helmets. They were so cool.

SPEAKER_01:

They're the stupidest looking aliens they were. They were good movies. They're the dumbest looking aliens. And there's no way that those things were advanced civilization.

SPEAKER_03:

What are you wobbled? They walked. You're thinking of fifth element. Oh, I can start. When those fucking the the penguin walk into this?

SPEAKER_01:

I'll retract that. Fifth element aliens are stupid.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, Stargate though. Oh, there's a TV show too.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh anyway, backing up. So here's here's the thing is like I I agree. I think the how are we not looking into this more? How are they not okay? We found this thing. But here's the problem is I I think there's obviously a ton of red tape when it comes to the pyramids. They're trying to preserve preserve them, they're trying to make sure. Uh, but there's also like a gatekeeper for like you know, there's there can be no alternative theories to how this was done. So that the I can't think of the name of the guy, but he's like the head of the antiquities or whatever, and he's like, nope, this isn't true, like immediately. But I watched a YouTube video, because YouTube's always right, um, uh about these guys who found a tomb. So uh there's the pyramid, and then there's like off to the side, they found this tomb, it's called Tomb of Birds, I think is what they called it. And they figured out they they believe that it connected somehow with two tunnels to the pyramid. Um, and immediately this this antiquities guy was like, no, no, no, not true. And they finally got allowed to study it and they found this this tunnel. And then like a year later, the the guy, the main guy, was has a video of him being so excited going into this thing. Look what we found. Um, and so it's like it it's weird. It's weird that there's a gatekeeper on this. Like, I don't why would like why?

SPEAKER_02:

Do you know what I mean? Yeah, and maybe all the superpowers of the world need to come together and instead of fighting war over things like oil, yeah, maybe they need to be like, hey, we digging this up whether you like it or not. Yeah, we're taking this.

SPEAKER_03:

Potentially, maybe we find maybe we find a big circle we can walk into and it takes you to another planet.

SPEAKER_01:

Maybe that'd be amazing. Yeah, it's like a gate to the stars.

SPEAKER_03:

No, I agree. This like scientifically, this is a huge this is huge.

SPEAKER_01:

It's just cool. And it's just cool, and it's like it's insane that we in our because we think we're so smart as a human as human humanity right now with all the stuff. It's weird that we think that we don't know our history. Like we don't have a clue how this was happened or who did it or how or when or why or all these things.

SPEAKER_02:

Or the fact that they're even still there. Like you know how recyclists will say what recyclists say things like people who rebuy, yeah, people who recycled, like like us.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, people who recycle.

SPEAKER_02:

No, but like people who are like religious about recycling. Yeah, recyclists. Yeah, recyclists. Okay, yeah. You know how they're like, yeah, if you throw out that that plastic fork, it'll take a thousand years to decompose. Right. Okay. What about 12,000? Yeah. You my my fucking truck is decomposing right now and it's only been around for 25 years.

SPEAKER_01:

What what do you think if uh you look 12,000 years, say right now society's done, everyone dies? Quite possible. 12,000 years from now, what what's left of our society?

SPEAKER_02:

Those pots.

SPEAKER_01:

Those glass pots. Like do you what do you like? It's like what like the metal, like what sticks there'll be zero metal. You think so? You think like sky rises, like gone, everything's gone? Gone. Without a doubt.

SPEAKER_03:

12,000.

SPEAKER_02:

I don't know, I don't know how long aluminium takes to decompose, but the rest of it. Is that not how you say it? Aluminum. Aluminium? I hate how you say that. Plastic? I don't know. How long does it hey Google?

SPEAKER_03:

I'm trying to spine trying to spell al aluminium. Aluminum.

SPEAKER_02:

Spell it like it sounds. Aluminum.

SPEAKER_03:

Not the way you said it.

SPEAKER_01:

Not aluminum.

SPEAKER_03:

It doesn't break down. It just it just lives. Well, it's alive. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

No.

SPEAKER_03:

Uh 200 to 500 years.

SPEAKER_01:

Okay, it's gone. Yeah, it's gone. Everything. You just went from it doesn't break down to Well Grok, Grok gave me a weird answer.

SPEAKER_03:

Anyway, yeah. So 200 to 500. Never, but five.

SPEAKER_02:

Are you using deep search?

SPEAKER_03:

What the f what is deep search? I'm using Grok 3. No, you need to use buttons.

SPEAKER_02:

Why are we switching? No, that is Grok. You're not using Deep Search.

SPEAKER_03:

There's a deep search button on the bottom. What does that do?

SPEAKER_02:

It does thinking. Deep. It goes deep.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh my gosh. Everything degrades. Do we have anything that doesn't degrade? I don't think so.

SPEAKER_02:

Well, aluminum, gone. Yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

Aluminium. Oh, now it just takes longer because it's deep searching.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, because it's actually thinking with its AI brain.

SPEAKER_03:

Anyway.

SPEAKER_01:

So my point is anything we've created. Gone. Uh, if it's six, even six thousand years. Half the time. Yeah. If if something happened today, meteor strikes, world is uh humanity's gone, but somehow there's like a group that lives uh in a 500 years. I don't know, where would they live? Where would they survive, you think? The Rocky Mountains, yeah. The hills have eyes, people, they survive, uh, and then they spawn people, and then six thousand years later there's a civil civilization that's kind of respun up, they wouldn't have a clue what we did. Yeah, it'd all be gone.

SPEAKER_03:

That I was actually I like the the things that are like in that first hundred years, like society in that first hundred years interests me.

SPEAKER_01:

But they're well interesting, it'd be just like it'd be awesome. Torture, suffering. Oh, you know what?

SPEAKER_03:

Was it 28 years later coming out? It's gonna be like that.

SPEAKER_02:

I want to make a VR experience. Like, you know, have you you remember like like The Last of Us when you like the buildings are all kind of like souped up and trees are going through them and it's like everybody's been gone for 25 years? That'd be cool. I want to see that.

SPEAKER_03:

They have to have they have to have that. Like a VR I think they probably do experience. Probably you think so.

SPEAKER_01:

There's a video game called New Horizon, something horizon, and it's essentially where uh it's I don't know how you don't know how long it is after, but something happens to civilization and it basically gets goes extinct, except for a couple of groups of people. Um, and then through the thousands of years, what happens is um machines evolve with animals, so now you have like these weird like half animal, half machine things running around. Uh it's suit it's a really cool, cool story. And then as you play the game, you like end up finding um like sky rises that are completely buried, but you can dig into them and you're finding stuff.

SPEAKER_03:

It's a super you play an animal or you're a person.

SPEAKER_02:

Here's a question for if they had put satellites into orbit 12,000 years ago, would they still be here?

SPEAKER_01:

I think they would. Oh I think that they would lose their trajectory at some point.

SPEAKER_02:

Good use of the word trajectory.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, yeah. Uh also it sounds like you know what you're talking about. Yeah, trajectory. Uh obviously I do. Um when I was looking into the YouTube pyramid stuff, it also there's some crazy math involved with that stuff that's so impressive that like the idea that um essentially the pyramids was put specifically on like northwest, east south. Uh they would not be around.

SPEAKER_03:

They would not be around. They still degrade.

SPEAKER_01:

Okay. Uh, but like the the alignment of it with like north, true north, and no, it is, but like just like again digging into like just the pyramids in general.

SPEAKER_02:

Is that is that true? Is it truly like aligned perfectly with true north? It's like because true north moves also, doesn't it?

SPEAKER_01:

So this is the other crazy thing. So they there's what when our earth spins, every it it has a bit of a tilt, so like it's not spinning perfectly around, it's kind of got a bit of a tilt, so it's got a tiny bit of a wobble. And because of that wobble and because of the way things move, I I learned so much about uh so in astrology, you know how they people say it's the age of Aquarius. And well, I didn't know what that meant. Did you? No. It's a song, but what it means is there's a specific point in the world that uh that it's like the I don't know if it's what you would call it, but there's like a point that point it points directly at the constellation Aquarius, and throughout uh as our as we every so many years it just slightly moves and because the sky moves and the earth moves, and so it slightly moves, and so we could be moving into the age of Orion or something like that, but it's based on what the uh earth is which constellation it's pointed at. So and that that apparently changes and it's a cycle, something like 26 every 26,000 years is is like when it completes that cycle and returns back to the same constellation.

SPEAKER_03:

Are we in a certain age right now?

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, I can't I can't remember what it is. I don't know what it is.

SPEAKER_03:

The next age of Aquarius. Oh, yeah, every 21, 20, 2,160 years. Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh it's pointing at the Aquarius. It's when I can't remember what point of the earth it is, but there's some specific point of the earth that's pointing at that constellation. What are we at now?

SPEAKER_03:

We will not see it. We're 200 to 600 years. No, but what are we in? Oh, what age? You don't know that.

SPEAKER_02:

Have you seen what's happening with the AI?

SPEAKER_03:

Pisces.

SPEAKER_02:

We are in the age of Pisces.

SPEAKER_03:

And we're 200 to 600 years away from Aquarius again.

SPEAKER_02:

Right. Dude, you're like 10 years from being uploaded to the cloud. I think you'll see it.

SPEAKER_03:

Ah, fuck, I hope so. I've been looking forward to this one.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh so last night. Anyway, pyramids, crazy. I don't know. I we should dig it up and just look, like, look it up. Actually, not only dig it up, I want to like figure out how do we get into the columns and like go down.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, I was wondering if they'd send a person or a drone.

SPEAKER_02:

Well, you send a drone first for sure. A drone or like a ferret with a string tied to it.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, just like a just like an iPhone on FaceTime on a rope. Yeah. You just like kind of kind of let it down.

SPEAKER_02:

Oh no, it fell. It's disappointing to me. No, it's not. I understand why like the the cryptkeeper, whatever he's called. Yeah, the crypt keeper. What? The crypt keeper. Like the crypt keeper, the Egyptian guy that's like, no, you shall not pass. Okay. That he's like Gandalf. Yeah. Um I understand, I think, why he would be very protect protectionist about it, especially if there's some religious.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh my god, what's going on with you? Protective. Yeah. But also curiosity. Completely. And that but that's where like I I that's where I can't stand just that dogmatic no, there's no possible way it's anything else. No, it's this, it's only this. And when in in light of new evidence, it's not like, ooh, that's that doesn't really make sense anymore. Like how I don't understand anymore the idea that if the in light of new evidence that challenges your belief or doesn't fit into that paradigm of your belief, where you can't be like, wait a second, maybe everything I think I know isn't quite right. Which I think is like Well, I know that's an important outlook. You have to have that. You you need that. Because if you don't have that, is what that's what you how you end up with like religious cults, right? Because then it's like it doesn't matter what they say, it's just like nope, this is what I think. And and there's no no evidence could ever convince you otherwise, right? And that's where that's just that's that's just an issue in general. So that and that hasn't just religion, that's like ideas. So if you're no this is the history of the world, there's no other thing that could change my mind, then all of a sudden something pops up that's like 100% challenges that you're like just gonna ignore it. Did you ever listen to Randall Carlson when he was on Rogan?

SPEAKER_02:

I did, yeah. Something happened between him and Rogan. Oh, really? Yeah, apparently they recorded an episode that Rogan didn't release.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, I didn't know that. Yeah. Uh I don't know when. He's the guy who's talking about the uh impacts with the meteors, meteors, right?

SPEAKER_02:

No, that's Graham Hancock, was it?

SPEAKER_01:

No, Graham Hancock and Randall Carlson.

SPEAKER_02:

Randall Carlson talked a lot about the massive flooding that occurred in North America.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02:

Remember him, his whole theory is that there's I think as a result of the meteor impact from the younger dryists, but just massive, massive flooding that is what resulted in kind of the topography that we have of today. And he talked something, he was starting to talk crazy talk a little bit, or at least it sounded crazy talk. He was talking about we have uh currently like our technology is we use I think it's explosion, like you know, like um combustion, right? So like to like move things, to generate things, to power things, however that works. And he was talking how he had maybe figured out how these cultures had used implosion to create power, which I don't really understand, and I can't say more than that.

SPEAKER_03:

A thunderstorm generator is what he called it. Is it? Yeah, interesting. That's I've never even heard of this.

SPEAKER_02:

Did you just look that up while we were talking?

unknown:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_00:

Oh my god.

SPEAKER_03:

He did his job. It only it only took about 60 episodes. Oh my god, I should maybe do two things at once. Holy crap. And multitask. That's hilarious. It's a fringe science belief.

SPEAKER_02:

Uh, it was neat though, he because he had this theory about how some of these things came to be and how maybe that's how they used that technology, I think, to create the pyramids or move big objects or something crazy talk like that.

SPEAKER_01:

Sure, but I mean, there could be. I mean, that's the thing, is like we don't know. It's we should be curious.

SPEAKER_03:

Really, though, he put Terrence Howard on there, who came up with a new math while he was on Joe Rolls Podcast.

SPEAKER_01:

Listen, Terrence Howard is sure, he's crazy, but here's the problem. I guarantee guarantee I'm I'm getting crazy. 100% he's some of I it's very probable that some of the things he's saying he's not wrong about. And and and it would be a big impact on things. That's that's the problem, is like what portion of him is insanity, and which portion of this is ooh, this is completely groundbreaking, and in uh 100 years from now, we're gonna be like, see, that's what it was.

SPEAKER_02:

Well, and Eric Weinstein also, when they had that did you listen to the second episode with Rogan and no, oh, you should. Because Eric does a really good job of Oh, when the three of them were there, yeah, and he he very much breaks down and basically says why Terrence is wrong on a lot of this stuff, but Eric Weinstein, the brilliant savant mathematician, also says, Oh, you got this one right and nobody else ever figured that one out. Yeah, so he wasn't completely wrong.

SPEAKER_03:

Okay, he's just throwing throwing darts at a dartboard.

SPEAKER_02:

Well, I mean if you and I throw darts at a math dartboard, we're not gonna get something right.

SPEAKER_03:

Something might hit. Nope, something might hit not to that level.

SPEAKER_02:

Because he was Eric Eric said, he's he said, Terrence, you have figured out this thing that nobody else could figure out. That's impressive. Yeah, you're just wrong about a lot of this other stuff because you're not properly educated in math. But he's like, you are a he essentially says, You are a genius. You just don't know how to like how we can make stuff.

SPEAKER_01:

That's that's what I'm saying. And so like you have like you have this I this person who's got like whole like eventually it's gonna be like, oh my god, like that was the thing we needed to know. And we just ignored him because in all the noise of some of the craziness, we didn't we said, Oh, we just discounted him completely, versus said like what Eric can like look at look at it and say, Ooh, not wrong, ooh, that's got something here, right? Did you ever read the book The Three Body Problem? I didn't, but there's a I've watched part of that show and I never finished it for some time.

SPEAKER_02:

Okay, so the show's pretty good. The book's better, but the book is translated from Chinese to English, so it's a bit of a hard read. The whole premise of the three-body problem is that if you have uh an Earth and then orbital bodies like moons or stuff around it, you can I think it was the sun. Do you throw a third object into the mix? It messes with the gravitational yada yada of things so much so that you can't calculate the trajectory of those three orbital bodies. Of course, Terrence Howard came on X this week and said he solved the three-body problem. Nice. What if he did? Maybe, right? What if he did? Uh finish the show, it's good, and then read the book.

SPEAKER_01:

Okay, well, uh, this all reminded me last night uh we were trying to find something to watch and with my uh 11-year-old, and he the matrix popped up, and I'm like, This is too old. I'm like full sand. Yeah, I'm like, uh, let's try it. And if it's if it gets too old, we'll stop watching it.

SPEAKER_03:

You're probably good. I would say yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

So so we started watching it, and uh a lot of blood. No, it's good, it's fine. It there's yeah, there's a couple swears, nothing crazy. It's good. Uh so anyway, so he's gonna have nightmares about the thing coming out of Neil's stuff. That's the thing. So we're watching it's a quick exit, though.

SPEAKER_02:

It's not like it's quick. Just out of the belly when his mouth is like, oh, yeah, that was a creepy thing.

SPEAKER_01:

That freaked him out a little. Uh so we were watching this, and I guess to the point where they're explaining, so Morpheus is explaining what happened, like to the world, and how AI basically we made AI, and then in the war with the humans, the humans because AI needed solar, so they decided let's destroy the sun, let's destroy the sky so that they can't survive. It's the only way to kill them. Is we they can't get solar power anymore, so let's just pollute the sky. So they pollute the sky, and then AI figures out how to use humans as energy sources. Um, and well, uh my kids look at me, he's like, Why are we making AI? I don't know, man. Valid question. I don't know.

SPEAKER_02:

Valid question.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, but some of that that's a it's still a great movie.

SPEAKER_02:

Like it is, it's still amazing. I love the I love the scene when he's walking in the in the city and and and uh Morpheus is like, Did you see the girl in the red dress? Look again.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah. No, that's so it's so good. And I just I like the uh the idea still is so is so amazing. And then you start like thinking, again, we wouldn't know. That's the whole point of it. It's like us sitting here right now doing this thing. There's some clues. We would be in it and we wouldn't. Is there? There's some clues. There would be none.

SPEAKER_03:

No.

SPEAKER_01:

That we're in the matrix.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, I'm not sure. No, for the people that for the people that looked for them, like hackers or whatever like Neo was.

SPEAKER_01:

He's saying right now, dude. I'm saying he's saying for reels. For reels, we're in the matrix, is what he's saying.

SPEAKER_03:

Are you Okay, why? What are the clues that we're in a matrix? Sorry, I haven't written them down. Yeah. Okay, we're just gonna Terrence Howard this and just start spouting out things. One of them will stick.

SPEAKER_01:

Anyway, still a good movie. Great movie.

SPEAKER_03:

You're gonna watch the second and third one.

SPEAKER_01:

We're we're not done the first. We are yeah, we got like 15 minutes left in the first one.

SPEAKER_03:

You got 15 minutes left in the first one? 50, 5-0. Oh, okay. I'm like, why would you stop it?

SPEAKER_01:

It was 10 o'clock, I'm like kidding me to go to bed.

SPEAKER_03:

And that's right before like the lobby, like you're like 30 minutes.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, I stopped it before the lobby scene. Good call. Good scene. When you dropped the suitcases, good scene.

SPEAKER_03:

Man, I saw that movie a couple times in theaters back then.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, no, that's is that three or two? Two or three. I think it's two because they end up uh in Zion. Right. Just fast forward through the origin. Yeah, it's a good movie.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, it is. It is in the second one. Morpheus is a speech, and then you're right. But they don't do Oh, there's boobs. No, they show boobs.

SPEAKER_02:

You think your boy hasn't seen boobs? I don't know. Okay. Seriously. How old did you how old is he? 12? 11. 12 this year. Yeah, he's boobs.

SPEAKER_03:

Has he been around a piece of technology without you? Yeah. He's seen boobs.

SPEAKER_02:

I don't think he I don't think he asked him. Just point blank ask him.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah. My we got the letter today from my out my oldest who's 10. He gets uh the the the sex ed next year. Okay. And so now we have to like because my wife and I make a lot of jokes that like inside jokes between us that they the kids don't get, you know. That's kind of how that's kind of how we flirt.

SPEAKER_01:

You haven't you haven't been caught yet?

SPEAKER_03:

That's kind of how we flirt at the dinner table, is we'll make some kind of you know, just a little bit of joke. We can't do that anymore. What are you doing later? Yeah, something like that. Well, something something like that, but a little milder, you know? And uh and our boys started to queue up on those, so we're gonna have to adjust our behavior.

SPEAKER_02:

Your boy said they're like gross.

SPEAKER_03:

It's just like I'm like, oh okay.

SPEAKER_02:

They haven't walked in on you ever?

SPEAKER_03:

No, no, because we put a lock on our door. It's a good idea. Unlike some of our friends. Tony. Tony, lock your door. But yeah, yeah, we put a lock on our door.

SPEAKER_01:

But uh you'll have that problem in a couple years. I don't know.

SPEAKER_03:

But I see, I see that the take it. Is this a taken apart crib we have right here? It is. So we're moving to some form of a a day a day bed or an exitable bed for the kid? No. Oh, just replace it.

SPEAKER_02:

Just a cage. Oh, just a cage, just a cage. It's just bars on the door.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, you're gonna get there. It'll be good. You have to lock your door.

SPEAKER_02:

That's a minor inconvenience.

SPEAKER_03:

Okay.

SPEAKER_02:

Sorry, so your kid's going to sex ed. 10.

SPEAKER_03:

Well, yeah, now we just can't make all these uh these jokes anymore about.

SPEAKER_02:

So, anyways, to go back, your kid has seen boobies, so that's the way that's a good thing.

SPEAKER_03:

How do we get there? That's right. I don't know. He has. Ask him. I'm gonna ask him, I'm gonna ask my boy today. I'm not gonna ask him.

SPEAKER_02:

You've seen breasts. You've do are you gonna call him breasts? Are you gonna call him boobies?

SPEAKER_03:

Uh uh stick of breasts. What are you gonna do? You say you're gonna say boobies to your kid? Titties. Ah no.

SPEAKER_00:

No. Don't say titties to your 11-year-old.

SPEAKER_02:

I don't know. I'm not gonna say. And if he hasn't, he'll never forget the second matrix. It will go down in his history as a hallmark moment.

SPEAKER_03:

He's uh honestly, I I would remember that the Demiro Vinji's wife as opposed to the Orgy scene. What's her name? Uh the Mirovin's wife. She's gorge gorgeous woman, whoever that is.

SPEAKER_04:

What is her name?

SPEAKER_01:

I don't know.

SPEAKER_02:

Shit. Anyway. She is super hot.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh my god. That I but I like I hadn't seen that movie in a long time.

SPEAKER_02:

And bro, that is seen on the highway when they're doing the car chase. Oh, yeah, that's cool. Yeah. And the music and they're like jumping from semis and stuff.

SPEAKER_03:

In the car chase's second one.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, on the highway.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, that's right. The second one was really good.

SPEAKER_01:

So good. Like I remember going to the theater for the first one. Do you remember? Oh yeah. It was the first movie I saw twice. Yeah, it was such a uh informative third once. Third one's okay. New one I've never watched.

SPEAKER_03:

It's it's fucking terrible. It's totally so bad. Oh okay. Like it is so it destroys all the first movies. But yeah, the f yeah, third one's good.

SPEAKER_02:

I think we're only a couple years away from AI generating us full-length movies that we want to see. So you could I I honestly believe in before 2030, you're gonna be able to type into your computer, be like, create me the fourth Matrix movie, don't make it suck. And it's gonna be an hour and a half, two hours long, and you'd be like, this was fucking incredible. Well, there's there's there's constantly if that's true, that is the end of uh dude. It is true.

SPEAKER_03:

Have you not seen what chat GPT there's like a running South Park episode that's been going for a year, and it's just constantly new. It's like a doom scroll of South Park episode. There's just new content the whole time it's been running for like by AI?

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah. Oh yeah, I believe that. Like, okay. Oh my that that's hold on. Have you not seen what GPT 4.0 can do now? No. Are you kidding?

SPEAKER_03:

GPT 4.0?

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, that's the version. Whatever. It's the one you pay 200 US dollars on it for? Four, the number four, and then zero. So 40. Oh. No, oh. Like oh so why do you say four? Because it's an O. It's a number four and a little O. No, there's no point. 4-0. So it's 40. No, it's not a 0, it's an O. Anyway. Remember when you said I wasn't gonna yell?

SPEAKER_01:

Anyway. You're yelling, it's okay.

SPEAKER_03:

So no, I we have not seen what that's what 4-O. Is it better than 4M? Alright, sorry. Go ahead, go ahead, go ahead. I'm sorry. L M N O. I'm sorry.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, yeah, yeah. So you can take a picture. I could take a picture of, let's say, JB's Tim Hortons cup here, and then I could type into it, create me an ad for Tim Hortons, or make this cup uh you can it will literally do anything. I don't even know if I can do it justice. You could for marketing or advertising or home decorations, I could take a picture of this room and be like, show me what this room looks like with wood slatted walls, or show me what this room looks like with the color red that's the same as this Tim Hortons cup painted around the windows. It will it will create like anything now. It's wild. We're not far away from getting movies.

SPEAKER_03:

Well, yeah, I think I I wow for some reason I don't I like that.

SPEAKER_01:

Well, it's interesting, but like that it's crazy to think uh the movie making industry, the TV industry essentially is gonna be gone.

SPEAKER_02:

Do you guys want to split a GPT subscription for 200 US dollars a month? What would you use it for? Fun most of it.

SPEAKER_03:

I didn't know that you my uh sister has when she's a teacher. I and she was showing me what she uses it for. It's like it's actually amazing. Yeah, yeah. Like there's a few of them that split it.

SPEAKER_01:

Is it better than so it's still the best?

SPEAKER_02:

It always changes. That's the thing. Part of the reason I'm reluctant, because I really want to pay the 200 US dollars a month. That's how much I 200 a month.

SPEAKER_01:

Okay. For a second I was thinking year.

SPEAKER_02:

But this week it's it's uh uh open AI. Next week it'll be Google's Gemini, the week after X, maybe if X finally catches up. So they're always changing, they're always leap-rogging, so you just gotta wait another month. They said Moore, you know, you know what Moore's Law is?

SPEAKER_01:

Uh I've heard of it and I should know, but I can't.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, so Moore's Law is basically since the 50s, it's been proven that computing power doubles every 18 months. That's Moore's Law.

SPEAKER_01:

Okay.

SPEAKER_02:

They have shown that. What are you doing?

SPEAKER_01:

Throwing things around. Sorry, continue.

SPEAKER_02:

Why are you throwing cups at people? And then you're Moore's Law. Oh, you're playing with it. No, no, no. You need the you need you need 4-0. You can't do it with a regular one.

SPEAKER_03:

I'm doing it with 4-0. Go just tell your story.

SPEAKER_02:

How do you have 4-0?

SPEAKER_03:

Don't worry about it.

SPEAKER_02:

Okay. Uh so Moore's Law, 18 months, computing power doubles every 18 months. Right now they've said AI is every seven months. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

So like literally, we're like We are not far away. What does 2030 look like? Nothing like today. What like that's not that long? Like in the scheme of things, five years, not that long.

SPEAKER_02:

Not even I think it was what does the world look like? Well, the liberals will still be a government somehow. I think when it comes to tech and different, uh your kids are gonna you're if they haven't already, your kids are gonna now immediately uh uh not believe that any image is created by a person.

SPEAKER_01:

It's gonna be de facto, this was AI, this is not real, this is not, you know, which uh maybe isn't a bad thing versus thinking that it's like real and it's not real.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, because you're gonna have to. You you will not assume that it's not real. So any images, any media will be AI generated. Uh any content, text, uh, any interaction you have with anybody who provides service to you outside of being face-to-face will be in AI. Uh any any serv like just think about services like lawyers, accountants, um anything, any of those professionals where they they draft documents or they do data uh input or output. Yeah. It's gonna be so different.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah. Uh so I feel like I mean that this is crazy. So it's interesting, but it's also you have to think about like the opportunity it also pr presents, right? Like the there's gonna be a lot of industries that get decimated by this, but at the same time, the people who are ahead of it and they're thinking about it potentially have an ability to make some insane amount of money and changes.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, they say many trillions of dollars will be created in the next five years. Trillions. How do we how do we get a piece of that trillion? Uh well, you're gonna have to get creative. I know that's that's that's where I suck. But here's the thing creative is not that hard. So think about GPT 4.0, not 40, 4.0, and its ability to take an image and then create the thing that you want it to create. And I I to describe it would be like so say you buy this new iPhone case made by uh whatever company, company A. Company A says, Hey JB, if you'd like our iPhone case, can you take like a selfie of yourself in the mirror using this iPhone case? You take a selfie in the mirror. The person who's gonna make money on this is gonna take GPT-4.0, wrap it in a user interface, and then charge this company a monthly subscription fee where if you take this picture of itself of yourself using this iPhone case, it will immediately take that photo of you, generate like a marketing material post or prompt or brochure or whatever, and then provide that to the company. It's that's the that's where you're gonna start seeing like that.

SPEAKER_01:

And then if I'm that company, why would that company not just do that themselves?

SPEAKER_02:

Well, because it's I think it's the wrapper, you know what I mean? Like the interface around the technology is what makes things easy for companies because the company would has the option of either having somebody do that and input that, or they just have it automated for them and they're willing to pay for the automation. I think that's where the money might be in some of these things.

SPEAKER_03:

I I don't know. I enjoy when they take two animals and like a lion and a tar tiger and like combine them and then the combines them and it makes like a liger.

SPEAKER_02:

You are the product.

SPEAKER_03:

It looks cool.

SPEAKER_01:

You are the product of all of these things. I like watching the babies fight the chickens. Oh my god, a kung fu fight like an animal. Think of it.

SPEAKER_03:

My powers of scrolling through social media waiting to find an AI generated video of a baby fighting a well. Have you seen those ones uh with the dudes um there's hang out they can make OnlyFans a guy can make an OnlyFan page with a chick because like they're it changes their face to like a girl and they can do people who make tons of money on OnlyFans by just running an AI profile with no real image at all? Like there's there was that kid, yeah, I I gotta look the article up. There was a kid in the States who made like a million dollars last year because he just had an AI girlfriend, OnlyFans. So he would it would just prompt the conversations with people and you'd send them like Why are we not doing this? AI generated pictures. Yeah, good for him. He was like 14 or 15 or something like that. Yeah, if someone wants to pay like three bucks a month for us to type a couple words into a key.

SPEAKER_01:

Picture this you come home from work at night, you put your kid tired. Shush, you put your kid to bed, you put your kid to bed, you go for 30 minutes, you sit down at your computer with your little AI thing, and you sit there, you take make a video for 30 minutes, and you put it on your OnlyFans page. That's uh for Christinith. Christina. It's Christinith uh Szyzinski. I don't know what that means.

SPEAKER_03:

I can see him being a Christinith.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, completely. And uh you get these lonely dudes who are sending you money every month, and you make a million dollars in the first year. Okay, but let's stop so much. So you let's say it takes you, let's say you make three videos a week. It takes you an hour and a half, two hours a week to make three videos. No. Listen, listen. And at the end of the year, you've made a million dollars. No. You're an idiot.

SPEAKER_03:

But is there Then why don't you do that? Because I don't know how to use two-way communication. Does he have to communicate with the guys? I don't I don't know. I don't know how this works.

SPEAKER_01:

I don't know how OnlyFans works. I don't know how people make money. So if it's just like, are they just posting videos? They're just making things up. I don't know.

SPEAKER_03:

I think you pay for like the communication or something. Okay, so then you can get it where it's just like so then you use AI to like have communicate. You're subscribed, they're subscribing to you and you don't have to communicate at all. It's just you throwing content out there.

SPEAKER_01:

You throw a video three videos a week.

SPEAKER_02:

You guys do know what OnlyFans is, right? No? Yeah, it would yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

It's not at all.

SPEAKER_03:

It's not all like gross. There's like all the personal trainers on there. There's uh MMA fighters on there who run it and they train people like online train. There is I don't think they're making a million dollars either. They're definitely not.

SPEAKER_02:

I hate everything about the idea you just came across. Even if it made you a million bucks.

SPEAKER_03:

Would they see his face? Is it like that? Well, they can't see his face. That's the point. It's a it's a girl's face. Yeah, like he sits. What is your issue with this?

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, then why don't you guys do this? I'll help you. I'll show you how to do it. I just don't want to.

SPEAKER_01:

Do you know how to do it? This is gonna go the same way as our feet finder idea, which we never did. Yeah, you guys never did. You're all talking about feet. I tried. I didn't try.

SPEAKER_02:

You gotta think pornography also probably, if it isn't already, will very soon be pornography drives all tech.

SPEAKER_03:

Sure. It's weird, but it yeah, a hundred percent does. It's crazy.

SPEAKER_01:

Which which everyone needs to stop doing watching. I guess totally. Like turn it off. Like at the end of the day, guys, if you're listening to this and you're still watching it, you gotta stop. You gotta stop. I guess it's ruining your brain. Yes, it's ruining your brain, ruining your relationship, likely, ruining your idea of people. It's just not good. It's taking your energy. Yeah. Yeah. It's not good. Don't do it.

SPEAKER_03:

To all the guys and girls out there.

SPEAKER_01:

Sure, yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

Maybe it's yeah, for sure. Yeah, not just the guys.

SPEAKER_01:

Like, I honestly, I'll be completely honest, like, I've never really been into it, like, I've never been a person who's like super into it. Like, obviously, I've watched, I've seen it, but like I'm not we've all seen everyone's seen.

SPEAKER_03:

Sure, everybody has seen it. But my point is, like, I'm not never been somebody have you have you seen boobies?

SPEAKER_01:

I've seen them, I've seen them. But I've never been a person who's like been like obsessed with it in any sort of way. You know what I mean? Like some people just get obsessed with it and they just watch it at a time. Like, uh never, never been my problem. But like I can see why it could become a problem.

SPEAKER_03:

The problem is with AI now, it's gonna be wor like not worse, but like I guess better for them, but worse for the addictiveness of it. Oh, for sure. And it's gonna get better.

SPEAKER_01:

And the addictiveness, and like again, I think it at a whatever age if you're studying, because I got that's I don't couldn't tell you with the first time I probably watched saw it was I was probably older, like 20 red shoe diaries. Oh, yeah, maybe sure. Like some softcore, yeah, some softcore on TV at Showcase. Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

We watched that with other people in the room.

SPEAKER_01:

Showcase at one in the morning.

SPEAKER_03:

We played volleyball, we were traveling and stuff. It'd be like the hotel room like Friday night before the tournament. Hey guys, this is we get was it like showtime or showcase? Showcase. Showcase? We get showcase. There's like eight boys in a room.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, or remember the ones uh you're at the hotel and like you screwed up, yeah, it's like it was still there for some reason, but it was all like like grayed out, and you can kind of see the forms. Yeah, yeah. Anyway, yeah, I was probably far. We've come. Yeah, completely anyway. But like if you see it, I think if you see it younger, which obviously the access to it's ridiculous. So if you see it younger, I think obviously it could get a hold of you in your brain probably a bit more than if you're you know you're older when you first kind of saw that. So it's definitely important to keep kids away from it. But yeah, you're right.

SPEAKER_02:

I think the research is pretty clear now how like it is uber harmful, yeah. Uh, especially to young brains, as far as I mean, not only does it create uh unrealistic perceptions of what a healthy sexual relationship is, I mean, dopamine, you because you get the same dopamine from that and scrolling or whatever, and I think it also it's creating a lot of extremism uh in young people as far as because like any other drug, you your next hit, right? You need more, you need more, you need more. And the problem with that is is that pushes you into some pretty dark corners.

SPEAKER_01:

Do you think that that's what this like hookup culture thing comes from as well? Partially. Oh I I think so, yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

100% think so.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, I don't understand like if that was b after my I was off the market, so I never like it.

SPEAKER_03:

But the apps too, I think. Yeah, like I just apps came first, I think, and then well, I don't know what came.

SPEAKER_01:

I think yeah, I think the apps obviously drove it, like it definitely drove the increase of it.

SPEAKER_02:

But look at the same, so even just that that motion on the apps, right? Like whether it's Twitter, Instagram, frickin' TikTok, it's always just like quick hit of next.

SPEAKER_01:

I think that started with the hot or not website. Okay, yeah. I see. You remember that? You might have been too young. I don't know. You're probably too young. There was like when I was in university for the first couple first couple of years, there was this website called hot or not.com or something like that. And it's literally all it was literally just pictures of people, and you just said you just said yes or no and just moved to the next one. Hot or not. Did they upload the like like people would send put upload pictures, yeah?

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, I don't know. It's uh if you like I think for men, because obviously men are much more afflicted by this than women. Yeah, I man, I don't I would be pretty supportive of age limits, like verified age limits. How do you verify it?

SPEAKER_03:

Hot or not is now chat and date and is now owned by Bumble.

SPEAKER_01:

Interesting.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh who which also owns Badu. What is Badoo?

SPEAKER_02:

I've heard of that, but I don't know what it is. But think of this. So if we go back to AI, think about how right now a lot of your content is created by people who still have to eat and sleep and like just can't.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, it's gonna destroy that like everything.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, but the thing is your AI avatar making porn doesn't need to take days off, right? Doesn't need to stop. Can just create, create, create, create, create.

SPEAKER_03:

And I I think that like honestly, it just porn will drive a lot of tech. And if it drives it to a point where you can create like that tech will get better, and now it can create shows and movies and whatever, right? And now you've got everybody on a movie set does not have a job. And that like that's a significant if you look at down the line of how many people are involved. It is huge. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Do you know how like some of these things, uh people's like resistance to these things kind of push, just like everything, uh, an idea that maybe like uh you're abhorred by it pushes you one way or the other. So for example, it could be like the trans uh female in in women's sports, and so like you like that's absolutely wrong, and you get angry at it, and it pushes you one direction. I feel like AI is going to have the same effect in terms of the people who are like, I 100% do not want to participate in this, and you're gonna have those like oh yeah, those compound commune, we're gonna go live off grid. The light. Yeah, yeah. And like, and I can understand the I can understand the appeal to that in some ways. You're like, I don't want to live in a world where I don't know what I'm looking at is real or not. I have no idea if what I'm seeing is anything in reality. Uh, I'm just gonna not look at it. So that means I'm I'm my phone's gone. My gone out. Completely. And and I can see how that could end up pushing portions of society that direction. Uh, because it just because it becomes again, we're already so uh just overwhelmed by un garbage.

SPEAKER_02:

The people that get pushed out like that, I mean, you see things for being either un either universally bad or universally good. And for example, if I go back to the porn thing, there is benefits to this. And I mean, I think, and I'd be I would actually like to look into this a little bit more and learn more about this, is the number of whatever they are, I don't actors, content creators that are actually either victimized or exploited or have a history of like terrible trauma in their past that led them to this place. So those people probably need to get the fuck out of this industry, but can't. I think if you have the ability for AI to generate this type of content, now there's gonna be less of these people being pushed into this industry or extorted into this industry because like there's just no market for them. Is that good? I don't know, but there is benefits to these things by people because these people creating this content and then having this content viewed by people just causes them to be exploited or victimized more, right?

SPEAKER_01:

And it's like it's hard because like obviously that's a portion of the them, and there's a portion of the people that they this is then like no, I choose to do this and I want to do this, and it's my way to make money, and if you take that from me now because it's all AI, I have no I mean you know what I mean.

SPEAKER_02:

So yeah, and and I think you'll have markets where authenticity is really desirable still.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02:

You know, like people will want to see real people. How are you gonna know that?

SPEAKER_01:

I don't know. Uh what I was thinking about that, like pushing those people out to kind of like the the fringe of society to be like, nah, we're gonna go live in the hills and hunt and have a commune. Sounds bad. Uh it sounds good, but it sounds great. Um let's go. Can we just do that? I've been watching, let's go. Love the trucks. Well, we we gotta buy some land and build our thing with the central gym. Oh yeah. Uh um, there's a couple shows I've been watching lately that have been like kind of do like so. Uh I started from.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, so yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Okay, uh, it's it's a horror show, which I'm not into horror, but I started this show, and other than the fact that they're stuck there and there's like these things trying to kill them at night, uh, the way they're living, you're like, oh, that's kind of neat. Yeah. Like they're said the the uh premise of that show is basically people end up in this town, they like they're driving down a road, they end up in this town, and they can't get out. Doesn't matter what they do. They drive they drive out, they end up back in the same town. They drive, it's and they're stuck. And then the problem is at nighttime, as soon as it goes turns night, there's these ghosts or things that hunt and kill everybody. And so you have to have the sneat. Yeah, exactly. It's so good. So I don't know any, I'm only like four episodes in. I'm not saying a word. Okay. Uh, but anyway, that I that like little town community feel, you're like, oh, that's kind of nice though.

SPEAKER_03:

It is, and everyone relies on each other. Yeah, yeah, you're right. Yeah. The food thing in that show, I don't know how they're getting food. That's so they kind of address it later, but it's it's not it's not well done.

SPEAKER_02:

Okay. Anyway, anyway, but Okay, well, let's suspend some disbelief here. They're in a town they can't get out of. I'm sure food also just kind of shows up. Maybe it could.

SPEAKER_03:

Uh yeah, I'm not gonna say anything. Yeah, it's it's uh you should watch it too. It's a I don't, but it it's like the show Lost, though, because it's the same guy made it. So every episode there's just questions. Yeah, and there's never any answers. And I'm three uh seasons in, and I'm still gonna watch to the end, but there's a lot of questions and not a lot of answers. Yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

I also started watching Yellow Jackets. Have you seen that? Oh no, I saw it. It's on HBO. It's basically this um 1996. This this uh female soccer team, national soccer team, ends up in a plane crash in the mountain in the mountains. Uh, and then they kind of cut between that and like 2021. And so they end up getting out, but then they're kind of talking about how they survive for those, I think it was like 19 or 18 months in the in the eat other people. I think they cannibalize each other.

SPEAKER_02:

That's what's that movie? There's a movie where that actually happened. Yeah, I know. Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

Was it Yellow Jackets? Isn't it real? Obviously. No, no, but the the it was a soccer team, wasn't it?

SPEAKER_02:

It was I thought it was rugby. Rugby? Yeah, in in some Mount Uruguay or something like that. Yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

I'm watching Twisted Metal on Amazon. Oh, it's insane. It's pretty.

SPEAKER_02:

How many frickin' TV subscriptions do you guys have?

SPEAKER_03:

Okay, so here's the here's the stupid thing that I did is I wanted to watch Fargo because uh somebody said Fargo is really good. It's on Crave. So I I paid 20 bucks for a month of Crave, and then I go to his office at the nursing home, and he told me all of these different shows that are on Crave. Oh, that's right.

SPEAKER_01:

And they're all amazing. Well, HBO's on Crave.

SPEAKER_03:

That's the I'm gonna pay$20 a month.

SPEAKER_01:

Dude, you should buy it by the year because it's way cheaper if you pay for the full year.

SPEAKER_03:

You know what I should, because it's so good. I just paid for the year of that. But Twisted Metal is is hilarious. Good, good, good callbacks to the video game for kids.

SPEAKER_01:

And I got uh Disney again just because I needed to watch in the show that was on there. Yeah, what show? Uh The New Daredevil. Is it good? I like it. Is it the same actor as before? And it's very no, not the Yes. Oh, not Ben Affleck, like the TV show the show. Did you watch that show? Yeah. Oh my god.

SPEAKER_03:

I didn't think he was. Oh my god, we watched it.

SPEAKER_01:

He watched that show. He watched the show.

SPEAKER_03:

You were just on X the whole time working.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh the new one is very good. I like it. I'm not getting Disney. You should. Nope. Just for that show and then sell it. Nope. Uh Snow White got released. Oh, yeah. And it's made so it cost 250 million to make, and I think it's only made like 90 million worldwide. Good.

SPEAKER_03:

What? I was really hoping it'd be good because they know because the lead actress is a BOX. No, they switched her.

SPEAKER_01:

No, they didn't.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, I thought they switched her.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, and I've seen a hilarious meme because uh Rachel what Rachel Zellwig, is that her name? Zegler. Ziegler. Rachel Ziegler is the Snow White, and then supposed to be 0.5 out of 10 on IMDb. The jealous uh stepmother is Galgadot. And she's supposed to be like jealous because of how hot she is, and you're like, she's way hotter than the parent.

SPEAKER_03:

No, no, no. She's also jealous of the youthfulness of Snow White.

SPEAKER_02:

How did Galgadot feel about Rachel Zelwig or whatever her name is posting on her ex account about freeing Palestine? Yeah, I don't know. That would have been. Isn't that messed up?

SPEAKER_01:

It's because she's Israeli, right? Yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

At least they replaced small people again. They didn't try to do the divine small people? You can't say diverse. Diverse.

SPEAKER_02:

Can you say midget?

SPEAKER_03:

No, they tried to do a diverse cast of non-midgets for the the seven dwarfs. Yeah, they 100% did. This was the big controversy, is that they replaced all them now with actual animated midgets.

SPEAKER_02:

Are they called little people?

SPEAKER_03:

I don't see for the purpose. I'm gonna say midget. I don't care. It's not offensive. Um but they they didn't have seven. Well, if you say it isn't, then it isn't. Is it seven midgets or whatever? Seven dwarfs? Dwarfs, dwarfs, dwarfs, dwarfs, dwarfs. They're dwarfs. Yes, it's but they they replaced it with like an ethnic uh melting pot of these seven different people with Snow White's uh entourage. Okay, and then so people cancel culture, like reverse cancel culture got after it and was like, no, these need to be dwarfs, they're actually dwarfs in the book. You're not casting right, and then they replaced everybody with dwarfs.

SPEAKER_02:

Okay, but I appreciate that. Okay, yeah, I don't understand.

SPEAKER_03:

The right the right way, I guess, like the true to the story way.

SPEAKER_02:

I don't appreciate that they had to go through all that work just to cast the right people. Like just to cast the right people.

SPEAKER_03:

I thought that the Snow White girl was also cancelled and they replaced her, but I guess not.

SPEAKER_02:

Hey, speaking of calling people midgets, well, I don't think it's offensive. Uh maybe I don't think I don't think it's offensive when people call me a ginger. However, I was at Costco the other week and one of the employees of Costco came up and made a comment about uh my daughter's beautiful ginger hair. And then I said to this employer, I was like, Yeah, she's a ginger just like you. And she did not like that.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, people people are people are terrible.

SPEAKER_02:

And I was like, I'm a fucking ginger too, lady.

SPEAKER_01:

So the employee said something about a ginger, and then you called her ginger?

SPEAKER_02:

No, she's like, Oh, your daughter has beautiful hair. And I was like, Yeah, she's she's uh she's a ginger, just like you. The way you said it, though, you thought you were. No, no, no. Okay, okay, yeah. And she did not like that. That's hilarious. Really? Yeah, whatever. And I was like, whatever. Also, I'm a ginger, so I can call you a ginger.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, it's like, yeah, okay. It's like only a ginger. Only a ginger, yeah. You know, it's a little bit more than a gun. So but then can can you can your wife say it? Because she's married to you? She's a ginger too.

SPEAKER_02:

She's just a half breed. She's more of a half-breed than I am.

SPEAKER_03:

Well, I I need to be canceled because according to the Little People Society of America, the M-word or midget is a slur. So I I am terrible. I'm sorry, I didn't know.

SPEAKER_02:

Do you know who Tim Minchin is? Who? Tim Minchin? I think he said Tim Minchin. He's that British uh comedian slash singer. He sings the song Only a Ginger. Can you call it another ginger ginger?

SPEAKER_03:

No, I gotta look it up.

SPEAKER_02:

You've never heard that song.

SPEAKER_03:

No, I just like calling you a ginger.

SPEAKER_02:

Only a ginger. You can call it another ginger ginger. Uh, definitely have not heard that song.

SPEAKER_03:

Is he? Should make an AI song. Sound like a leprechaun. Oh, he is like a super ginger though. He is like a carrot top.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, he's like a legit ginger. Yeah, he's scary looking. If you haven't listened to it, you should listen to it.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah. Alright, I will.

SPEAKER_02:

Good. Find your way home. Good. Good.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh, what else is going on? How's your running going? Good? You're still into it? Yeah, I'm at 160 for the uh month.

SPEAKER_03:

I think I'm at like 11.

SPEAKER_01:

I'm at zero. You're at 1.6. That was last month. Uh I think it's it this month?

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, yeah. I've I was actually told by my athletic therapist that I'm not allowed to run right now.

SPEAKER_01:

Okay. Okay. Doctor's note. I have a doctor's note. I can't I can't do it. I'm sorry.

SPEAKER_03:

So did they start you at the 25 then for your 50k run? Or how does that work?

SPEAKER_01:

Jason.

SPEAKER_03:

I'm just curious.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, but this is a guy. You're gonna blow me out of the water. You're gonna pull in glass houses shouldn't throw stuff.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh god, I hate running and I I don't do it, and I'm gonna have to start. This is gonna force me to do it.

SPEAKER_02:

I just have some underlying issues that can only be treated by my friend BPC.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, hopefully it works. Yeah. Yeah, you're at 1.62 for the month. Uh Jason is a solid uh 10.03.

SPEAKER_03:

10 double digits. What's up?

SPEAKER_02:

So you went for 10 one kilometer runs?

SPEAKER_03:

I went for two runs that I split up into 10 kilometers. And I hurt my knee.

SPEAKER_02:

I'm just not into running right now, anyways. I I I am impressed by your commitment and dedication. Okay, let's see about the kilometers for the year.

SPEAKER_01:

You're at 15.

SPEAKER_03:

Not bad.

SPEAKER_01:

You're ahead of Jason's 10.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, wait, you're beating me for the year? Yeah, it's on. And I've run like twice. It's on.

SPEAKER_01:

I'm at 485.20 at 629. I don't know how. How do you guys have time for this? I don't know how he's so off more. He's 143 kilometers ahead of me for the year. What's George at? Uh not very much. No, he hasn't really been running. Uh he's at 243 for the year. Peasant. Yeah. He's gonna increase that volume.

SPEAKER_02:

I just uh yeah, haven't been even if I could, which I'm I'm glad a professional has told me I shouldn't be running right now.

SPEAKER_01:

You needed that validation. I needed to be like, yeah, I knew that. I knew it. I knew I can't run right now. I knew it. Uh I don't know, it's fine. It's going fine. Uh I uh but honestly we've been talking. I need to we need to go back to lifting more. Uh so I think we're gonna Why Um Because it's good for you? Okay. Uh I honestly I'm just we're just kind of thinking we're gonna get burnt out here. You think so? We're gonna like try to keep that 100 miles uh probably about a hundred miles uh a month for a couple next couple of months.

SPEAKER_02:

Do we tell them about the pool that we have?

SPEAKER_01:

We don't. Okay. No, we do.

SPEAKER_02:

Okay. You have a pool?

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, the JB gives up pool.

SPEAKER_02:

The JB's sick of this pool.

SPEAKER_03:

I don't have I'm not in that pool.

SPEAKER_01:

I've just fucked.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, okay.

SPEAKER_01:

Like, I think there's a pool without me. I love betting. Uh we're gonna try to keep going about a hundred miles a month for the next couple months.

SPEAKER_02:

At some point, JB, knowing you, you'll hit a wall. You'll come out of it on the other end, and you'll be okay. But at some point you're gonna hit a wall and be like, I fucking hate running.

SPEAKER_03:

You're you're gonna finish the 100 miles. You will, yeah, but there'll there'll be a there'll be a wall pyramid. I have doubt. I have doubt. Um you're starting like a day before us, right?

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, yeah, before the 50, yeah. We start we start the whole the next morning before you, and you probably passed me on that last ladder. Oh, I can't. If you do and I'm lying in the dirt, can you at least kick me and make sure I'm alive? Yeah, you still got a pulse. Yeah, leave him, boys. He's okay. He'll get up at some point. He'll be fine.

SPEAKER_02:

You've trained so much, and you will have trained so much, it will be like a walk in the park. It won't be a walk in the park, but yes, thank you.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh, but yeah, we're gonna start lifting a bit more and stretching because my hips have been a bit tight.

SPEAKER_02:

Sell me your cold plunge. No. How many times have you used it in the last 30 days?

SPEAKER_01:

Is there water? Is there water? I I cleaned it out actually. Uh like it's empty? No, no, I it's empty of him. And then I didn't get in it. It's been a while, okay? Yeah. Can I can I lease it from you? Sure, sure. You can lease it.

SPEAKER_02:

How about 50 bucks a month?

SPEAKER_01:

No. 100.

SPEAKER_02:

No, no deal. 40. It's going down now. I'm offended by your offer. I'm gonna negotiate like the states.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh, we what else happened? Uh, my child's high school team won provincials basketball. Nice. I saw that. So that's exciting for her.

SPEAKER_03:

Where did you see where did you see that on? What obscure sports do you follow on?

SPEAKER_01:

Insta. Oh, I follow junior high girls.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, which is like what?

SPEAKER_01:

Oh, so the funny part, so funny about that.

SPEAKER_03:

So do you know Carney and Epstein? Sorry.

SPEAKER_01:

So the funny thing about that, so she they I didn't go up because it was like they left on Wednesday, and then the finals were Saturday, and I just couldn't leave work. So I my plan wasn't to go up, and then they ended up winning the semifinals, going to the finals. I'm like, oh damn it. So they played at six o'clock on Saturday, so I decided last minute I'm gonna go. Six o'clock in the morning? Uh no, at night. So I drove up Saturday to watch. So we're sitting there, and uh, one of the coaches of her team, it was supposed to be his bachelor party that night. Uh, and he's a coach, so he's like, I can't miss it, guys. Like, I got I gotta coach. So good decision. Yeah, so he shows up to coach. His boys show up hammered. Oh no. And and and they're sitting and they're sitting behind us at and they're so loud. And I'm like, I like and like loud in a good way? Yeah, it was they're fine. Like they weren't like being dicks or anything, they're just being super, super loud. Um, and I'm like, I ended up talking to him at one point. I was like, Yeah, this is very different. Uh I mean, on my bachelor party, we didn't go to a high school girls basketball game, but they're just like, Yeah, I know it sounds weird, but whatever. And that's after the game, uh, I go to go use the bathroom before I drive home for another three hours, and uh the one dude's puking in the bathroom. Ah, it's hilarious. But anyway, that's good. That'll be a good memory for his bachelor party. Yeah, so that's awesome. And I'm glad you went. Yeah, it was one of those things where I debated it a lot. I was like, I'm not, I'm not gonna go. And then uh I'm like, What? My I talked to my wife, she's like, it was up to you, it doesn't matter. And then actually, we have friends that live, it was in Olds, and we have friends that live in Olds, and uh, she was hanging out with them, and like five minutes after I hung up with my wife, I got a call from our friend uh Tanya, and she's like, You have to come. You're an idiot if you don't come. I'm like, Oh, yeah, she's like, You'll never regret coming, but you'll if you don't come, you'll contest your credit. And you're like, Yeah, that's good point. It's only six hours driving. So I why don't you just stay the night? Because we yeah, nobody's no nobody was staying the night because they were coming home because they'd been there since Wednesday, so they were coming, they had a bus that everyone's coming home on. Uh so anyway, uh yeah, it was good. I'm glad I went, it was fun. And uh yeah, now we're moving into uh club basketball. So we're still busy. It never ends. It never ends.

SPEAKER_02:

Judo's still good. How's your judo going?

SPEAKER_01:

No. I I'm worried about getting hurt. I I'm I like the ground stuff obviously, but like the throwing I'm just not great at. I'm not good at it. This is not great. I'm not good at it. And uh I'm that's where I'm worried I'm gonna like get a knee ripped apart or something, just just because of the nature of it, right? But it was it's always your fault if you get hurt. Uh no. Well, I would I would say it's no one's fault. It's your fault. It's kind of the no. Like sometimes guys like you know, try to sweep your leg out and your knee goes the wrong direction and it's yeah, because you put all your weight on that leg. It's not like my it's not like my fault, it's not his fault, but like your fault. Like like 90 ten. Yeah. Anyway, that's what's going on with me.

SPEAKER_03:

My uh youngest lost his first tooth last night.

SPEAKER_01:

Oh wow.

SPEAKER_03:

First one. Yeah, so it's the last first tooth my wife and I will ever have. So that's kind of a little bit tooth fairy com? Yeah, yeah, a little 325 in the old bin.

SPEAKER_01:

Sorry, what?

SPEAKER_03:

It was the amount of change the uh tooth fairy dollars and twenty-five cents. Yeah. The amount of change the tooth fairy had in their in their little jar at home, pulled it out. Okay, and then also my oldest lost one of his last teeth that he's gonna lose, and then I went to I went to uh I was gonna say, I went to Tooth Ferry him in the morning at like 5 a.m. before work, and I rolled into his room because I thought I was super quiet and sneaky in my boxers, and he fucking woke up and he looks at me, and I am like, I'm like almost mid-tooth grab in my boxers, and I'm just like, and he's like, What are you doing? It's like it's like that righteous gemstone scene when he kisses his son on the forehead. It was like that. I'm like, oh, I'm just I'm just checking on you before I go to work, buddy. And then I just left, and uh yeah, he he didn't put two and two together, so that's good.

SPEAKER_02:

Did you so I was actually I've always kind of wondered how you would pull that off. Like, did you did you just kind of do like a distract, like, hey, pay attention over here while I give you a kiss on the forehead and like grab the tooth?

SPEAKER_03:

No, no, we we have a little jar that we put it on their nightstand, it's a little fancy jar, and so that way we don't like do the pillow thing. Um but then some some some some like idiot at school told it is gone in the morning, but the water's always a different color. So now we're playing that weird game at home. Yeah, it makes no sense. It makes no sense. So the oldest did it, and now the other kids are like, Oh, this is so cool, the tooth fairy's gonna color the water. Meanwhile, I'm putting food coloring in water at two in the morning in the house. It makes it dumb.

SPEAKER_01:

You're just thinking, put a little pea in it, just I was thinking of like a little sprinkle of fairy. Oh, you're there, you got nothing else, you're in your boxes.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, some glitter. Yeah, some glitter would be nice. My daughter would love that. If she loses, I'm gonna pull the tooth and just yeah, but just glitter all over. Like all over her, just like everywhere in the room.

SPEAKER_02:

Just bum, bum, and be like, oh my god.

SPEAKER_03:

And they heard me swear in a podcast once, they said uh last week. Are they listening to this podcast? No, they I guess uh my wife got in the vehicle and just turned it on and auto-spotified, played the last thing, and I I dropped uh your wife does listen. Yeah, she does. She's well, she's she said your average listener. She's an average listener. All right. But yeah, that's it. I'm sorry. A lot of teeth, a lot of throwing up happening in the last couple days of my house, so I'm waiting for me to get the bug, but hasn't happened yet?

SPEAKER_01:

No, no, don't have you just think that you won't get it.

SPEAKER_03:

No, it's I I've no, I've tried your voodoo magic where I don't think I'm gonna get sick and I don't get sick.

SPEAKER_02:

I've got sick before you're sick because soft.

SPEAKER_03:

Me?

SPEAKER_02:

You have the sick you are the sick. I've been sick like once.

SPEAKER_03:

I've been sick like once.

SPEAKER_01:

Kay, you've been sick a lot this year.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, are you talking about like work call in sick or sick? CJ's been sick a lot this year. Okay, you you're you're just a walk, yeah.

SPEAKER_01:

Well I've been sick like once.

SPEAKER_02:

You were like twice.

SPEAKER_01:

Deathly sick.

SPEAKER_02:

That was last year.

SPEAKER_03:

Well you have the same like bacteria resistance as you do to the sun. Like there's there's none there. It's just you exposing yourself. Here's all my all my what do you mean exposing myself? All my here's all my immunity. Just come get me sick.

SPEAKER_01:

Like to the sun? Flashing the sun, getting that sun. Right in the right in the beehole.

SPEAKER_02:

You need to get the sun. Keep your circadian rhythm set. Yeah, obviously in the beehole is important. Yeah. Yeah. Sun your beehole. Everybody.

SPEAKER_03:

Fastest way to get drunk. Right? It is. It is.

SPEAKER_02:

Have you confirmed this independently?

SPEAKER_03:

I'll do it with grok. No, like you you can get an injection of alcohol as a suppository. I don't know if it's called an injection.

SPEAKER_02:

I don't like that. Fastest way to get drunk.

SPEAKER_03:

For grok.

SPEAKER_01:

On this note, yeah, if you're still listening, I have to go pick up my kid. So I need to leave soon. What's that over there? Oh, it's a power battery pack?

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, I my my kids are using the iPad yesterday, so there's not much battery in it. Little battery pack?

SPEAKER_01:

Okay. Uh so end of those okay, at least one at the rate we're getting podcasts done. Let's try to do our best. Let's try to do our best to like educate ourselves here on the platform.

SPEAKER_02:

How do you educate yourself?

SPEAKER_01:

I don't know. So do you want to assign people? Okay, I'll do I'll do C B C. Oh, I'll do liberal. No, not CBC. Uh like I think I don't know.

SPEAKER_02:

Like, I guess you go to their websites and you see what they're saying. Can we dress up as our favorite politician? Because if so, I want to be Elizabeth May. I want to be Jag Meat. He's not my favorite, but I think he'd be the best address. Okay, that'd be funny. Remember when we were gonna video this part?

SPEAKER_03:

I'll be that guy outside who calls out Jagmeat, and then you can come up to me like, would you say bro or whatever happened? Yeah.

SPEAKER_02:

What's up? I wish that would have been a fight. Uh if I'm gonna be Elizabeth May, I might I might break my celibacy from drinking it shit faced like she does every time she's on TV.

SPEAKER_03:

Can I be John Kretchen?

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah, can you can you show me your John Kerchen? I can't. I can I can't. You paralyze half your face. I can't do it. We'll go to the dentist and just get you jabbed up first. Just keep we need a fourth though. Does Tony want to be Jag Meat? He could be a Jag Meat.

SPEAKER_01:

He could be a good Jag Meat.

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, you look like a Pierre. Yeah, you look like a Pierre.

SPEAKER_02:

You are Pierre.

SPEAKER_03:

We'll bring you an apple and you can sit here and confidently eat it the whole time.

SPEAKER_02:

Oh, this would be fucking funny. Let's have a debate. Oh no. Let's have a fucking debate. Okay, so we have to learn about our platforms. Oh yeah. Oh, this is so good. Tony, you're the NDP. And who are you? He's gonna have to be Mark. No, yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, I don't know who their leader is even.

SPEAKER_02:

Do I look like a Mark Carney to you? You are now. No, you don't. But this is so good. We need a we need uh who wants to Do you think Allie's free? Allie Price? Probably. Does she want to be our Elizabeth May?

SPEAKER_03:

How is this not JB? The Bloc Quebec leader? I could bring you these glasses and you do your hair. This is you.

SPEAKER_02:

I don't speak French.

SPEAKER_03:

Good-looking man.

SPEAKER_02:

This would be so funny. We'll just put a Canadian flag on the back wall here.

SPEAKER_01:

Just for us. That'd be your side.

SPEAKER_02:

No, I support that. You kind of support that too, though, you fucking.

SPEAKER_01:

I know, it's annoying.

SPEAKER_02:

Um what are you?

SPEAKER_03:

So he who's Francois Blanchette.

SPEAKER_02:

Okay, but then sorry, uh is Catherine or is what's her name? Elizabeth May. She's no more than the Green Party. It's that young black guy. I don't know.

SPEAKER_01:

I don't know anyone about the Green Party. Oh, you could be Bernier, you could be Maxime or Bernier.

SPEAKER_03:

Sure. That'd be funny. I don't know. Oh, oh no. You're the PPC. Elizabeth May, yeah, as a Green Party leader.

SPEAKER_02:

No. No, she's gone. I think she's BC. Maybe she's just the BC Green Party.

SPEAKER_03:

No, Green Party of Canada.

SPEAKER_02:

Oh, okay. So we need an Elizabeth May.

SPEAKER_03:

Oh, they've they have co-leaders. We're gonna need another Mike.

SPEAKER_02:

But when you have a when they have a debate, is it all of the players?

SPEAKER_03:

Jonathan Pedn Pednant.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh no, they usually freeze out some of them. They don't usually just like the two. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02:

So we'll Jagmeet. Yeah, Jagmeet. We'll just have the four. Yeah. Maybe five.

SPEAKER_01:

But we don't have a fifth mic. We'll just have the four.

SPEAKER_03:

I'm just gonna be I'm just gonna be Trump.

SPEAKER_01:

Uh so your homework, your homework, hey, we're we're like the radical apathy podcast now. Your homework for the next podcast is to learn about your platform. You have to learn the PPC platform. You have to learn liberals, I gotta learn the conservatives, and he's gotta learn NDP.

SPEAKER_02:

Oh, it's so good. Because then we have right and left. We have a nice balance of right and left. We have extreme right, we have extreme left. What's more extreme left? The NDP or the D.

SPEAKER_01:

Yeah, I don't think they're extreme.

SPEAKER_02:

Sorry. More left. More right. None of them are extreme. Sure. Like we're not, yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

We're gonna have to dress up for this. Maxi and Burger. Mostly just Tony, though. Yeah, mostly Tony. We often just wear suits.

unknown:

Okay.

SPEAKER_01:

Let's do that. We'll inform him of his role. We'll we'll have the He's gonna hate this.

SPEAKER_02:

Do you think the radicals average podcasters will come moderate this debate for us? We don't have enough mics. We can't do it. Where's videoing it? There's mics on the video cameras. Okay. I'm sorry. I don't mean to keep calling you radically average. You're radically awesome. Yeah.

SPEAKER_03:

Bunch of average people.

SPEAKER_02:

Yeah. You and just like my wife.

SPEAKER_01:

So average.

SPEAKER_02:

Oh my god.

SPEAKER_01:

We're really sorry for your husband.

SPEAKER_02:

We're not on this podcast. We're not sorry at all. He is the way he was created. Yeah. And you love him.

SPEAKER_03:

Average phone use is what I meant. Anyway, just finish it up.

SPEAKER_01:

See, you had to qualify. You couldn't just leave it because you know there's gonna be some.

SPEAKER_03:

Well, I'm already getting canceled because I use the M word a bunch. I didn't know it was a bad word.

SPEAKER_01:

It's okay. We sometimes we don't know. And you're you didn't have bad intent, so I still think that's a good one. So when are we doing it? Do you want to do this debate on election night? That would be pretty funny. Uh when is election? April twenty third, is that right?

SPEAKER_03:

Yeah, we could do like a the like a fight companion, but like with the with the election going and can you look up to see when the election is?

SPEAKER_02:

Can we live stream on YouTube so everything we say and we can never take it back? April twenty ninth, you said? Yeah, I think so. Twenty eighth.

SPEAKER_01:

Twenty eighth, the Monday? I have no idea. Yeah, Monday. It's always on Mondays. April twenty eighth.

SPEAKER_03:

Okay.

SPEAKER_01:

We're going to Mexico on May 1st. We're going to Red Deer on May 1st. Alright, thanks for listening. Sorry it's been so long. I know you've been missing us. We've been missing you too.

SPEAKER_02:

We think about you a lot.

SPEAKER_01:

We thunked so much about you.

SPEAKER_02:

If you like this podcast.

SPEAKER_03:

Thank you. That's it. If you like this podcast, buy us a coffee.

SPEAKER_01:

I'm still using that one sometimes because you like this podcast. Please follow us. Average.superior on things. We're really sorry that we've done this. Bye. Once again, thanks for listening. If you enjoyed the podcast, share it with a friend and consider heading over to our Instagram at average superior, checking the link in the bio and supporting the show. Have a great night.