Tell it Right Podcast

Episode 65 - Tell it Right Podcast - Full Moon Conspiracy Show - Part 1

February 27, 2024 Hide The Eggs Media
Episode 65 - Tell it Right Podcast - Full Moon Conspiracy Show - Part 1
Tell it Right Podcast
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Tell it Right Podcast
Episode 65 - Tell it Right Podcast - Full Moon Conspiracy Show - Part 1
Feb 27, 2024
Hide The Eggs Media

Its a full Moon Conspiracy Night, and all the weird, bizarre and esoteric is on the table.

Jimi Hendrix is Morgan Freeman

Reptile People

Navajo Skin Walkers.

Show Notes Transcript

Its a full Moon Conspiracy Night, and all the weird, bizarre and esoteric is on the table.

Jimi Hendrix is Morgan Freeman

Reptile People

Navajo Skin Walkers.

00:00:13:11 - 00:00:28:19
Speaker 1
Not anymore. In fucking back it back. Well, that's. That's rough, Jared. That's rough. But it is episode 65. Tell it right. Podcasts.

00:00:29:17 - 00:00:32:10
Speaker 2
Some might look a love 65.

00:00:32:10 - 00:00:51:01
Speaker 1
Look live on my. It's Jared, as always. We got a full moon night tonight. Which means today's episode will be dedicated to the weird, the bizarre and the esoteric and whatever else you can think of. That's just fucked up in nature.

00:00:51:22 - 00:00:52:09
Speaker 2
Mm hmm.

00:00:52:17 - 00:01:15:12
Speaker 1
So I'm very excited about that. Very sad about that. There's, like, 224, 24. Like, that's today's date. Like, does that have anything to do with anything? Like, I wonder if that's, like, a mayan calendar or, like, you know what I mean? Like, 12, 12, 12 or whatever, you know, like, it's one, you know, like ten years ago. Shit.

00:01:15:13 - 00:01:41:02
Speaker 1
It. Yeah. But no, whatever or whatever. But before we get into the weird shit tonight, I did want to point out that on WW Dot Tell It Right podcast dot com. We've been making some updates there, been adding some new content. We're going to get the fan expo 2023 pictures up there soon and get that finished in our pretty much a year late on that.

00:01:41:02 - 00:02:07:16
Speaker 1
But whatever fuck off comments soon will have to eat. You 2024. So we'll be going to that. We'll get those pictures up there and whatever other content we can grab. I want I did post actually on the website when I went into the Tom Wilson Hour talk, the fucker was playing ukulele. It was the greatest. I'm glad I walked in on that.

00:02:07:16 - 00:02:32:15
Speaker 1
I got that on. I got that on camera. So that's up on the website. I just put that up there and then just before we started recording here, Jared and I recorded a table read from the TV show Community, the episode Cooperative Polygraph from season five. So we'll have that up there on Tell It Right podcast as well.

00:02:32:15 - 00:02:47:20
Speaker 1
That that was actually pretty funny what we just fucking did just now and it's I'm going to tell you why that's it's one of our finer, finer times in life here, guys. So you definitely want to check that out. So head up, tell it right podcast dot com.

00:02:48:17 - 00:03:09:19
Speaker 2
You know, I think we really missed out on an opportunity at Fan Expo because yeah, all those people because of the strike, we're doing all these weird things on the side and oh like when we walked in there and Peter Weller was talking about like the history of acting and like going back to like during World War Two.

00:03:09:19 - 00:03:10:18
Speaker 2
And I like that.

00:03:10:23 - 00:03:38:17
Speaker 1
Thought I recorded his shit, but I can't find it anywhere. I'm like, fucking pissed, dude. Peter Weller was that was a gold mine like that fucking right there. Like when we were in there, I'm just like, I looked at you. I'm like, What's going on right now? Like, this guy is talking about Nazis. He's talking about Jews. He's talking about fucking making films and shit.

00:03:38:17 - 00:04:04:23
Speaker 1
Like I was, I lost track pretty fucking easy. And I hear he is not a fine person to work with either. Like he. Yeah, I guess. Bobby Lee. Well, it's Bobby Lee, right? No, I love Bobby Lee. I think he's funny, but I, he he did. I was at Magnum P.I. they they've redone that show with in recent years.

00:04:04:23 - 00:04:15:01
Speaker 1
I guess he went out to Hawaii to shoot some things and I. Yeah. Peter Well they're pretty fucking harsh on him, I guess so.

00:04:15:01 - 00:04:15:08
Speaker 2
Well.

00:04:16:02 - 00:04:18:02
Speaker 1
Was yelling at him. Yeah.

00:04:18:15 - 00:04:28:06
Speaker 2
Bobby Lee's not an actor, is a comedian, you know, and yeah, from listening the way that Peter Weller was talking, like.

00:04:29:05 - 00:04:47:17
Speaker 1
Yeah, he's like, he is a classical fucking. He's like Harvard versus state school, you know what I mean? Like state school. You like? Yeah, you're kind of intelligent, but like Harvard, like, you're fucking. You're ritzy. It's. You know what I mean?

00:04:47:17 - 00:05:16:05
Speaker 2
Yeah. I mean, that's the way it's funny, because you look at actors and like, comedy actors and comedians and and like, even so, as an example, like you, you've always mentioned it with Patrick Stewart and he came into the Star Trek and he was like, Oh, this is just a fucking, you know, well, the stage.

00:05:16:16 - 00:05:36:06
Speaker 1
You know, right. There wasn't at first, though, it took him a year to figure that out. But like, yeah, cause I what's this guy? What's his face? Magneto is like, bro, you don't want to get into this. You got a good thing going with Buck in theater, like, stay the fuck away out of, like, star Trek. Like, why would you want to do that?

00:05:36:06 - 00:06:07:10
Speaker 1
And Stewart's like, listen, bro. Listen, Magneto, I can't. I'm just going to Professor Xavier. I'm just going to fucking do it, you know? And so he did it. And then like he was thinking about quitting, he was thinking like, Magneto is right. Like Magneto is just kind of like fucking getting in his head right then. Like he just sat there, he looked at, he looked at the bridge at the set, and he's like, No, this is the Shakespearean stage.

00:06:07:17 - 00:06:35:20
Speaker 1
This is fucking it right here. And that's yeah. And it, I'm glad he saw that because he could have quit any way. He never got the next generation. You had just had a fucking William Riker without a fucking beard in, like, looking like a weird goof. Yeah, I would say that the best thing that ever happened for Jonathan Frakes was he grew that fucking beard.

00:06:37:03 - 00:06:43:15
Speaker 1
And he was also from the theater, too. Like, everybody was from the theater. Like, they. They made something great. I don't know.

00:06:44:07 - 00:07:15:08
Speaker 2
I'm sorry. I feel like so actors that were classically trained like, let's say pre pre nineties. Yeah. People that were classically trained before the nineties happen. Yeah, we're just better actors. So like and they would get into these roles that, that were so nerdy and sci fi so like, like you got Patrick Stewart. I mean, he's been in tons of sci fi shit, I mean, ever since Star Trek.

00:07:15:08 - 00:07:17:05
Speaker 2
He's, you know, Professor X and.

00:07:18:01 - 00:07:21:16
Speaker 1
He was the best fucking character for Professor X.

00:07:21:16 - 00:07:38:02
Speaker 2
Though. Yeah, absolutely. And then you have like Sir Alec Guinness, who played Obi-Wan in the original Star Wars. He was a classically trained actor. And you could just tell by the way that they act in.

00:07:38:03 - 00:07:44:13
Speaker 1
The force of the force. Yeah. Oh, yeah. It definitely cures Down syndrome.

00:07:44:15 - 00:07:44:23
Speaker 2
Oh.

00:07:45:10 - 00:07:48:00
Speaker 1
I know.

00:07:48:00 - 00:07:57:15
Speaker 2
Or or probably the best one like Christopher Lee, who played Don't Count Dooku. The fans are credited with more movies than anybody else.

00:07:57:15 - 00:07:59:20
Speaker 1
And like where? His name's Christopher Lee.

00:08:00:11 - 00:08:02:06
Speaker 2
Yeah. Plays Count Dooku.

00:08:02:18 - 00:08:07:08
Speaker 1
Holy shit. I didn't know his name was Christopher Lee.

00:08:07:08 - 00:08:23:14
Speaker 2
Yeah, he's he's a credited with more like acting in, like, movies and plays and all this than any other actor. Like he's, he's upwards of like 200 and something that he's actually like his name is a.

00:08:24:03 - 00:08:25:07
Speaker 1
You know, this is and.

00:08:25:07 - 00:08:27:09
Speaker 2
He's like, you know, Ryan train.

00:08:27:14 - 00:08:41:01
Speaker 1
You know what, Ryan Reynolds, you can learn something from this. You could be fucking doing this kind of shit and be a respected actor instead of some money grubbing horror that's just buying up everything I said my piece move out. Yeah.

00:08:41:12 - 00:09:01:07
Speaker 2
But I mean, I think that, like, not the actor's art going to classes. Like if you've, if you're in a movie, you've gone to some kind of acting classes or acting school, some sort, right? Like, yeah, maybe Franco was, maybe like James Franco was like being in students and he was a teacher at an acting school.

00:09:01:18 - 00:09:06:02
Speaker 1
I wonder if he was ever considered. I wonder if he was ever considered a professor.

00:09:06:20 - 00:09:34:06
Speaker 2
Professor Franco Yeah, no. But either way, I mean, they're being trained, but they're being trained by people that suck, you know, like, not that James Franco sucks, but a lot of, I feel like a lot of actors that play parts are kind of like that in real life. Yeah, the parts that they're playing, they're really not changing who they are.

00:09:34:06 - 00:09:35:16
Speaker 2
Like, maybe, you know.

00:09:36:01 - 00:09:36:06
Speaker 1
Like.

00:09:36:06 - 00:09:39:16
Speaker 2
Charlie, there's a fine line. Charles Yeah. Charlie Sheen.

00:09:39:16 - 00:09:40:23
Speaker 1
But Charlie Sheen, yeah.

00:09:41:02 - 00:10:05:15
Speaker 2
So like, you go to, like, you watching and I know I'm using James Franco again because I feel like he's like kind of that epitome of he really hasn't changed characters ever. But, you know, same thing with like Seth Rogen. He just plays like a stupid high asshole, like in all the movies. But you look at somebody like like Leo leading actor, Leonardo DiCaprio.

00:10:05:15 - 00:10:06:15
Speaker 1
Yeah. Yeah, they are.

00:10:06:15 - 00:10:14:07
Speaker 2
Maybe Leo Leo plays parts, you know, he plays characters. He's probably a fucking asshole.

00:10:14:21 - 00:10:20:06
Speaker 1
No, you know who I think? But you know who I think is a good example is Nicolas Cage.

00:10:20:22 - 00:10:23:05
Speaker 2
He plays the same part. Every movie.

00:10:23:05 - 00:10:24:21
Speaker 1
You know, he doesn't.

00:10:25:02 - 00:10:27:08
Speaker 2
He he doesn't change anything about him.

00:10:27:08 - 00:10:41:17
Speaker 1
Yeah, but you know what? He he doesn't do it. Ah, no. Okay. I'm sorry. Let's take it back. Let's go like G.A.. What about Kiana? What do you think about piano? I guess. Yeah, he does problem. You know, he takes.

00:10:41:17 - 00:10:46:21
Speaker 2
Care that he was cast as like he's he's put in.

00:10:47:07 - 00:10:49:18
Speaker 1
As an autistic Native American.

00:10:50:15 - 00:10:58:05
Speaker 2
Something, you know, I think that that's kind of a bad example. I mean, I like, you know, raves, you know, I think I think.

00:10:59:07 - 00:11:01:05
Speaker 1
He takes care of his own crew.

00:11:01:05 - 00:11:05:23
Speaker 2
He grew eager. And he's actually like, from what I read, that he's a super nice guy.

00:11:06:06 - 00:11:15:23
Speaker 1
He is. Yeah. Oh, my God. If you worked for him and you said, like, I needed 20 grand, he'd put it in your account. Yeah, no questions asked.

00:11:16:04 - 00:11:42:12
Speaker 2
You just I feel like he's you know, you go from point point break. Well, you know, some of his earlier movies and then you move on to where he's come from and what he does now. And he went from that surfer like, you know, Bill and Ted's excellent adventure is like nerdy, like surfer dude. Yeah. To John Wick, and he's a fucking badass.

00:11:42:12 - 00:11:45:20
Speaker 2
Like, you throw away the name John Wick. You're like, Oh, he's a fucking badass.

00:11:45:20 - 00:11:47:19
Speaker 1
Yeah. I mean, that's Keanu Reeves.

00:11:47:19 - 00:12:03:03
Speaker 2
Like, he's not. You don't see if somebody looks at Keanu Reeves now, they don't see that nerdy like fucking stoner surfer dude. They see fucking John Wick. So I think his career has developed him and I mean, he's made the right choices. I mean.

00:12:03:13 - 00:12:17:22
Speaker 1
He's immortal, so he knew what he was doing. When he got into it, he's like, All right, I'm going to play the fucking nerdy surfer. I might do a cop role that diffuses barbs every now and then.

00:12:17:23 - 00:12:19:07
Speaker 2
I love Speed, man.

00:12:19:10 - 00:12:21:04
Speaker 1
Yes, it's a great movie. It is.

00:12:21:05 - 00:12:24:20
Speaker 2
Fucking movie. Plus, Sandra Bullock's pretty hot.

00:12:25:07 - 00:12:33:17
Speaker 1
Who is. Yeah fucking didn't I dude from Dumb and dumber playing that there was Jeff Bridges.

00:12:33:17 - 00:12:34:22
Speaker 2
No, not Jeffrey. Um.

00:12:35:13 - 00:13:03:22
Speaker 1
No. Jeff. Yes, chef. We know who he is. It's Dominic. You know who he is? Is Jeff from Dumb and Dumber? No. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Speed was a great movie. It was. Was it? No, it wasn't Anthony Hopkins. It was. I wanted to see Anthony Hopkins too, but it's not.

00:13:04:00 - 00:13:10:08
Speaker 2
His fucking silent sensible. It.

00:13:10:08 - 00:13:15:12
Speaker 1
And I want I keep saying Dustin Hoffman but it's not fucking Dustin Hoffman at all. No.

00:13:15:19 - 00:13:21:17
Speaker 2
Definitely. Definitely came out like it's a speed cast.

00:13:22:19 - 00:13:34:08
Speaker 1
It's Dennis Hopper. Oh, my God. Dennis Hopper. Yeah. Fuck it, Dennis Hopper. Dude, that was so sad when he died is just it was the worst.

00:13:35:02 - 00:13:36:04
Speaker 2
Jeff Daniels.

00:13:37:00 - 00:13:54:04
Speaker 1
Jeff Daniels. Nobody cares about him. No. Ethan Allen Rourke played in that movie. No shit and that. Oh, yeah. No, that's Grant. Yeah, that's. We talked about that when we watched Willy's Wonderland.

00:13:55:13 - 00:14:05:09
Speaker 2
Joe Morton. Joe Morton is the guy from Terminator two that plays Miles Davis, Miles Branson or whatever.

00:14:05:22 - 00:14:23:07
Speaker 1
George or Joe. Joe Morton also plays in a show that I really love that was on sci fi called Eureka. He was this really smart science, that urethra. Eureka. Oh, yeah. I think Archimedes said, Eureka. I don't know.

00:14:23:07 - 00:14:24:07
Speaker 2
I don't know about that.

00:14:24:16 - 00:14:33:14
Speaker 1
Yeah, I. I don't either, but yeah, that's for sure. So well.

00:14:33:14 - 00:14:35:18
Speaker 2
Now that we've gone completely off topic.

00:14:36:10 - 00:14:37:05
Speaker 1
Let's get back to the.

00:14:37:05 - 00:14:39:08
Speaker 2
Conspiracy theory conspiracy.

00:14:39:08 - 00:14:40:11
Speaker 1
Conspiracy night.

00:14:40:11 - 00:14:55:16
Speaker 2
So we we can. We can tie this, we can tie this. Let me kick it off. Okay, pick it up. So there's this there's a like this conspiracy going around that Jimi Hendrix and Morgan Freeman are the same person.

00:14:56:07 - 00:14:57:17
Speaker 1
This sounds fucking retarded.

00:14:58:03 - 00:15:39:10
Speaker 2
It does sound retarded, right? Yeah, but there's a lot of similarities between the two. Right? Okay, so it's kind of like the conspiracy theory. The claim is that Jimi Hendrix reinvented himself as an actor after faking his own death, right? Yeah. And here's the thing. When you look at the two in pictures next to each other, like you could always sound really racist and say that all you know, all black people look the same, just like people say all Chinese.

00:15:39:14 - 00:15:41:11
Speaker 1
That's what this is sign like right now.

00:15:41:11 - 00:16:11:00
Speaker 2
Yeah, but there's a lot of things that happened and are kind of congruent with the time frame. So Jimi Hendrix died in 1970, right? Yeah. Morgan Freeman made his first film debut in 1971. So a year later, after he died, that's first first thing right? They both have military backgrounds. They both served.

00:16:11:09 - 00:16:19:14
Speaker 1
And no way, really, Jimi Hendrix served. I believe Morgan Freeman did. But yeah, the Jimi Hendrix served in the military.

00:16:20:00 - 00:16:20:21
Speaker 2
Yeah, yeah.

00:16:22:01 - 00:16:22:20
Speaker 1
Oh, shit.

00:16:23:04 - 00:16:33:00
Speaker 2
Like, if you look at them too, like their military photos, I think they look like the same person. Yeah, yeah. Like I'll, I'll send you this info you can. You know, I was.

00:16:33:02 - 00:16:58:00
Speaker 1
I was yeah. I was looking, I pulled up some pictures here. I mean, like to me, like I see some differences for sure. I mean, their noses with what's interesting is their noses look very similar. Okay. But there's something about the eyes that, like, I can tell, like in my personal opinion, like, you know, that separates them. Yeah.

00:16:58:03 - 00:17:09:09
Speaker 1
But it is very interesting, though, that he died in 1970 and then all of a sudden Morgan Freeman just comes out of nowhere in 71.

00:17:10:00 - 00:17:10:08
Speaker 2
Yeah.

00:17:10:14 - 00:17:18:17
Speaker 1
And, you know, but I didn't know that Jimi Hendrix served in the military. That's that's interesting.

00:17:18:23 - 00:17:21:10
Speaker 2
Well, just like Elvis, the military, too.

00:17:21:19 - 00:17:49:21
Speaker 1
What makes you wonder? I mean, it makes you wonder if Jimi Hendrix had anything to do with some of that. I what do you call it? Like the the research into the like, oh, what the fuck's it called where. Oh God. I got a mind blank here. No, no, it's just telekinetic, right. Or telekinesis or not kinesis but telepathy know.

00:17:50:07 - 00:18:05:03
Speaker 1
And it was like that. That super soldier program that was going on where they were trying to find like Russian basically, you know, the Russians were doing it. So the United States tried doing it. I forget what they call it.

00:18:05:03 - 00:18:26:05
Speaker 2
It's what if it's like that Manchurian Candidate thing? Like where Jimi Hendrix was in the military and this and that, and then they rewired it. Brain pretended he died, and then he became a famous actor.

00:18:26:05 - 00:18:27:01
Speaker 1
It could be.

00:18:29:15 - 00:18:30:10
Speaker 2
No, just say.

00:18:31:03 - 00:18:32:23
Speaker 1
No, no, no, no. I mean, like crazy.

00:18:32:23 - 00:18:42:14
Speaker 2
But I mean, there's a lot of there's a lot of coincidences that, you know, and most people would say that's a pretty crazy coincidence. You know what I mean?

00:18:43:21 - 00:19:13:11
Speaker 1
Yeah, I know for sure. Remote viewing, that's what it's called, remote viewing. So basically the United States government had a program where they were training, they were putting funding into training people to be able to use psychological powers or whatever or psychic powers. So basically it was more like recon intelligence. Shit.

00:19:14:05 - 00:19:22:20
Speaker 2
Look at this. Yeah. Morgan Freeman's wife, Jimi Hendrix. One.

00:19:22:20 - 00:19:25:09
Speaker 1
Are you sharing a screen right now? Yeah, yeah, yeah.

00:19:25:11 - 00:19:28:21
Speaker 2
Okay.

00:19:28:21 - 00:19:30:08
Speaker 1
Okay. So they were both white.

00:19:31:13 - 00:19:35:20
Speaker 2
Yeah. I mean, that's part of it. But I mean, when you really look at it, I mean.

00:19:37:03 - 00:19:38:16
Speaker 1
I just hate how they're showing.

00:19:39:05 - 00:19:45:17
Speaker 2
The same their I the way their eye shape is is kind of the same. I mean, you can take pictures and.

00:19:46:03 - 00:19:59:02
Speaker 1
But you're looking at this is what I don't like about everything that I've seen in that way that you're pulling up right now is they're showing an older picture of Morgan Freeman and not.

00:19:59:02 - 00:20:10:22
Speaker 2
Just here. Here's more. Here's Jimi Hendrix in the military is Morgan Freeman in the military. But they're like the same goddamn person. They're no their mouths.

00:20:11:07 - 00:20:19:23
Speaker 1
I'm telling you, I know what you're you're. Yeah, they kind of do, but like, I'm still seeing a slight look.

00:20:19:23 - 00:20:23:20
Speaker 2
At this picture and look at this picture. Yes, there's slight differences. All right.

00:20:23:20 - 00:20:31:16
Speaker 1
I here's the thing about Morgan Freeman. He looks like he's fucking Chinese somehow. I don't know how to fucking put it.

00:20:32:00 - 00:20:32:08
Speaker 2
I guess.

00:20:32:11 - 00:20:38:19
Speaker 1
Jimi. Jimi Hendrix. I don't see that Chinese look, you know, I don't know. That's. That's just me, though.

00:20:39:03 - 00:20:59:07
Speaker 2
I mean, maybe there's the room. Maybe the only thing is Jimi Hendrix looked like this. He was in. They captured him. Yeah, through hell. And then a year later, they just rewired his brain, and he looks a little older, and he didn't have a British accent.

00:20:59:07 - 00:21:00:19
Speaker 1
Jimi Hendrix from Britain.

00:21:01:01 - 00:21:03:06
Speaker 2
You know he died in Britain.

00:21:03:06 - 00:21:05:05
Speaker 1
I know, I know. Yeah, he died in London.

00:21:05:05 - 00:21:07:19
Speaker 2
Yeah, yeah. He wasn't British. I don't.

00:21:08:01 - 00:21:27:02
Speaker 1
You know. So you said you wanted to talk about this today, and I was, like, kind of like looking up other conspiracies around Jimi Hendrix. Yeah, it's just. Why did you bring this up? You remember do you ever remember, like, growing up and, like, you know, smoking weed with kids and, like, they'd be like, you can't have a fucking whitelighter.

00:21:27:02 - 00:21:31:00
Speaker 1
It's bad lock or something. Yeah. Did you ever hear that? Was that.

00:21:31:00 - 00:21:34:14
Speaker 2
Everything? That was never a thing that where I was from.

00:21:34:18 - 00:22:01:05
Speaker 1
All right. So it was a thing where I was from and like, I never gave two shits about it, right? It's like read into it and play the Snopes on. It was just like, well, Bic lighters weren't even invented till like 1973. So that like throws out like cause you're trying to say like Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix, and then like Kurt Cobain all had white Bix fucking pockets.

00:22:01:13 - 00:22:06:22
Speaker 1
Oh, Jim Morrison to all had white bits in their pockets when they died. Yeah.

00:22:06:22 - 00:22:17:18
Speaker 2
And why that is because they put the labels on those books and you peel the labels away and it would be a white Bic underneath it, remember? Well, they used to have the wrap around it.

00:22:17:18 - 00:22:44:19
Speaker 1
Well they still do that. They still do that. Yeah. Yeah. Well somebody made it more realistic. Thing is. Well, you're smoking weed, you're always packing the fucking ball with your lighter when it's lit high, you don't use your fingers. Yeah. So, like all that resin gets stuck to the bar and lighter, and then the cops would just. When they were trying to bust you, that's how they busted you.

00:22:44:19 - 00:22:53:20
Speaker 1
They would look at, you know, they would see the lighter and then they would see that you had all this fucking residue on it. So it just pretty much meant you're fucking smoking weed.

00:22:54:18 - 00:22:57:12
Speaker 2
Yeah, yeah, yeah.

00:22:57:12 - 00:23:04:02
Speaker 1
But I. Yeah, I don't know about that. I don't know about fucking.

00:23:04:14 - 00:23:18:17
Speaker 2
It's probably far fetched but yeah I think it's a, it's an interesting concept. It, it, I mean it's when you really look, I mean they're looking at them, they do look for they looked very similar when they were younger.

00:23:18:17 - 00:23:19:15
Speaker 1
They do. Yeah.

00:23:19:15 - 00:23:38:22
Speaker 2
And there is a lot of coincidences that happened. Do I believe it? I think it's a stretch, but yeah. Yeah. Who the fuck knows? You know, maybe they've pulled it off just like. Have you ever heard of, like, how they. They've replaced fuckin what's his face from the Beatles like? They say he died in a car accident and he was replaced.

00:23:38:22 - 00:23:39:11
Speaker 1
Oh, Paul.

00:23:39:11 - 00:23:41:08
Speaker 2
McCartney. Paul McCartney. Yeah.

00:23:42:01 - 00:23:43:04
Speaker 1
Interesting. Yeah, that.

00:23:43:05 - 00:23:52:00
Speaker 2
That's a fucking weird one, too. Like, when you look at it on paper, it's a pretty fucked up thing.

00:23:52:06 - 00:24:00:07
Speaker 1
But but then like, you think about it, it's just like, I guess it's they're famous, but like, why is it worth all that trouble? You know, I get.

00:24:00:08 - 00:24:01:15
Speaker 2
Any man money.

00:24:01:20 - 00:24:09:01
Speaker 1
But like, when that all went down, was it still like, was the money?

00:24:09:01 - 00:24:11:04
Speaker 2
Yeah, Beatles were selling. They're like.

00:24:12:14 - 00:24:22:16
Speaker 1
I know there, there there is money being made. But like, somebody actually, like, think to themselves, like, oh, if we just replace. Yeah, I mean.

00:24:22:16 - 00:24:34:10
Speaker 2
I think I like this like this because they said the same shit about what's that one singer girl more, more reason.

00:24:35:16 - 00:24:37:05
Speaker 1
Um, Taylor Swift. Like.

00:24:37:12 - 00:24:38:11
Speaker 2
Not Taylor Swift.

00:24:39:22 - 00:24:40:15
Speaker 1
Billie Eilish.

00:24:41:05 - 00:25:01:13
Speaker 2
No. She used to be popular with us, and now she made a comeback. She doesn't have come on her back. I'm just saying she made a comeback. I, I all. I'm going to just buy Avril Lavigne. Avril Lavigne all.

00:25:01:16 - 00:25:03:00
Speaker 1
She's got come out of her back.

00:25:03:06 - 00:25:09:13
Speaker 2
Well, I mean, that's for sure. But I'm just saying. Yeah, there's a theory that she died and they replaced her.

00:25:10:05 - 00:25:11:23
Speaker 1
But this is getting out of hand.

00:25:11:23 - 00:25:23:05
Speaker 2
But no, but think of this. Okay, so let's just take this. Yeah, last, last, last thing on it. Let's say Taylor Swift died in a car accident or a plane crash. She's on her private jet.

00:25:23:07 - 00:25:26:10
Speaker 1
Oh, yeah. Kelsey would have flown already ready to go.

00:25:26:20 - 00:25:49:23
Speaker 2
100%. Like, either there's going to be a clone, which I there's probably people have been cloned. I think there's like some underground shit because they cloned a fucking goat. Like, they've, they've cloned people. I'm sorry. There they have like maybe it wasn't the US that did it because we've got morals, you know. Yeah. We've got whatever I want to go.

00:25:50:00 - 00:26:14:12
Speaker 2
I shouldn't say that. It's probably the you guess the US. Yeah. It's the US operating in a different country right there, cloning people. You know, they're in the Wuhan lab, fucking making people cloning them. Yeah, they're big. But if Taylor Swift were to die, she would have a clone the next day or somebody replacing her that looked 100% like some doppelganger.

00:26:14:19 - 00:26:16:03
Speaker 2
Maybe that was Taylor Swift.

00:26:16:05 - 00:26:22:08
Speaker 1
Maybe that fucking island exists. Think about it. I mean, I think.

00:26:22:08 - 00:26:23:23
Speaker 2
If you're rich enough, you could have a clone.

00:26:25:11 - 00:26:49:10
Speaker 1
That's sort of saying, like the island exists. Like the like Bono is fucking, like, running an island right now. And, like, you've got clone. Well, no, no, you're. You're in the movie The Island, right? With Ewan McGregor. Yeah. Bono is the guy that ran everything. That's why I'm saying, like, Bono's got an island. He's got, like, fucking clones that he's just like, fucking feeding them bullshit.

00:26:49:10 - 00:27:01:07
Speaker 1
Like, Oh, yeah, you all survive to Duke, you're fucking Holocaust. And I, you literally just are arriving retarded. And we're giving you the skills to get back to life.

00:27:01:11 - 00:27:03:15
Speaker 2
Yeah. The rich ha.

00:27:04:11 - 00:27:30:14
Speaker 1
Remember who was in Rick and Morty? The latest episode? So is with the spaghetti in, like, they're trying to, like, suicide spaghetti. Yeah. People committed suicide. Like, their bodies turned into spaghetti or whatever, and it was like the most delicious spaghetti ever. So they like they tried cloning people and like, they ended up shooting each other like they thought it was like it was ripping off the island.

00:27:30:14 - 00:27:35:14
Speaker 1
And they're like, I can't do it anymore. And they just blow each other's brains out.

00:27:36:02 - 00:27:36:09
Speaker 2
Yeah.

00:27:37:06 - 00:27:38:05
Speaker 1
Fucking all areas.

00:27:40:15 - 00:27:42:03
Speaker 2
Last season got a little extreme.

00:27:43:11 - 00:27:44:23
Speaker 1
Yeah. No, I mean.

00:27:46:01 - 00:27:51:14
Speaker 2
I watched it. Morty doesn't bother me as much if his voice was bothering me, though.

00:27:52:16 - 00:28:04:11
Speaker 1
Yeah, it's weird. It's like it's f first. It was, like, easy to notice, but if you keep watching the series, like, over and over, like, it just.

00:28:04:16 - 00:28:05:17
Speaker 2
It's not as bad.

00:28:06:05 - 00:28:34:21
Speaker 1
Yeah, kind of just, like, blends in and then, you know, like how sometimes like certain seasons, like, I mean, honestly, if you watch the first season, like the first episode for sure, like the voice of Rick sounds a lot different than like what it matured into before Ryan Roiland got fired. I mean, like, and that's just like, that's just life on a fucking TV show, you know?

00:28:34:21 - 00:28:53:21
Speaker 1
Like, you refine things as you keep going. Like, if it makes it past the pilot, you change all the things that were critiqued on it. It's like, all right, we like it. But this is what we, you know, what people would like to see come out of it or whatever or, you know, and all this other shit. And I bet you.

00:28:53:21 - 00:29:19:20
Speaker 1
Yeah, Rick's voice was like, You know what? We're on to something, but it's like, do this or that to it. And then, like, Rick sounded more like Andy. You know what I'm talking about? Like, you watched that first episode Rick's I don't want to call him more like a robot, but it's like the way he talks is like it's not as smooth as it is as in later episodes, you know what I mean?

00:29:21:00 - 00:29:26:15
Speaker 2
So it's going back to like OG Rick, where he was drunker and very.

00:29:28:12 - 00:29:37:00
Speaker 1
Well, like, you know what I'm saying? Like that first episode of Rick and Morty first season. Like, he's drunk in, like.

00:29:37:10 - 00:29:38:14
Speaker 2
They're flying around.

00:29:39:09 - 00:30:07:00
Speaker 1
Yeah, yeah. And like, the way he's talking it, like, it's Rick, obviously, but like, there's something weird about it because then you watch the later episodes and like, it's just it's a, it's a smoother voice as it keeps going on, you know what I mean? So yeah, but fuck, man, I don't know. I'm fucking now, but I yeah.

00:30:08:11 - 00:30:42:09
Speaker 1
This Jimi Hendrix Morgan Freeman thing is, is this is a wild topic. Yeah. I don't know how I feel about it, but I definitely see the similarities. Definitely do like this. But this that's the other thing too. It's like Jimi Hendrix. Like it kind of makes sense. Like to, like, maybe this was a government thing, like, cause, like, that was during it time too, where the government was actually giving these drugs out to people like LSD and all that shit.

00:30:42:20 - 00:30:43:03
Speaker 2
Yeah.

00:30:43:13 - 00:31:08:03
Speaker 1
And because they were testing the psychological warfare, like all that, like actually it's kind of funny. Like it's, it's connected, like the remote viewing and all that because they use drugs to try to unlock different parts of the brain. And, you know, the CIA has actually disclosed that they did testing on the public in their own people without consent.

00:31:08:10 - 00:31:20:01
Speaker 1
And basically because of that, like there are stricter laws on experiment. Like you can't just do it without asking for permission and shit like that, you know what I mean?

00:31:21:21 - 00:32:13:23
Speaker 2
But I just a real quick side note, kind of a weird thing, too. On this day, 1943, George George Harrison was born in Liverpool, England. So he passed away when he was 58, while he would have been 81. Today I can Beatles man I love like I love old school music. I think a lot of that has to do with like my dad, you know, like if you had a parent that was born in the fifties, yeah, you're pretty much guaranteed that, like, every Sunday morning, my dad would blast breakfast with the Beatles, like to wake us up like he loved the Beatles.

00:32:13:23 - 00:32:18:00
Speaker 2
I mean, and pretty much anything in that in that era.

00:32:18:00 - 00:32:41:10
Speaker 1
You know what's interesting, like with my dad is like so he grew up in that era too, but like he wasn't into the Beatles. He was more into like Zeppelin and like, more like Clapton and like bluesy shit in rock and roll. But like, while growing up, he was like, in this country phase. So that's like all he listened to.

00:32:41:12 - 00:33:09:04
Speaker 1
Like, yeah. So that's like who I thought of. My dad was like, he just like country music. But then when, like, when I went to college, all of a sudden he was going back to what his roots were. And I was starting to learn that I'm like, Oh, that's pretty, pretty awesome shit. Yeah. No, I mean, he was like, listen, this like getting really big back into Zeppelin and shit, but then like, he's the one that really turned me on to blues.

00:33:09:18 - 00:33:47:04
Speaker 1
Yeah. And I've also learned that blues is like, it's literally the foundation of all music. Now people realize that, but the blues rhythms and notes and scales and all that shit, those are used interchangeably in all of music. So like a lot, a lot of people say our modern music roots from blues, from the blues and in the blues comes from the slave fields, the cotton fields of the south.

00:33:49:00 - 00:34:07:18
Speaker 1
And like they used to just do this, like instinctively, like the way they would sing and they would sing in these scales. And then this evolved into jazz and blues and whatnot. And eventually now rock and roll rap, R&B, techno.

00:34:08:12 - 00:34:09:11
Speaker 2
Disco about.

00:34:10:00 - 00:34:11:05
Speaker 1
Disco, baby.

00:34:11:05 - 00:34:12:06
Speaker 2
Rap, but.

00:34:13:19 - 00:34:24:19
Speaker 1
No, no, I would say. Right, yeah. No, rap definitely is going to have those those roots. But it's, you know, it's how it's used and.

00:34:25:21 - 00:34:28:12
Speaker 2
Far derived but was based.

00:34:30:06 - 00:34:30:17
Speaker 1
Yeah.

00:34:31:13 - 00:35:02:20
Speaker 2
Um, yeah. Because I went to a, I went to a bad company, I went with my dad to see Bad Company, Grand Funk Railroad and one other band was playing. I can't think of the name of them, but yeah, like my dancing days like that. Many of these guys are the original. It's like it's like going to a dead concert now, and it's like John Mayer's fucking saying, and you know what I mean?

00:35:02:20 - 00:35:15:09
Speaker 2
Like for bad company, though, like the lead singer was the same guy that was in was that British brand. He was then before it. I can't think of it.

00:35:15:11 - 00:35:20:10
Speaker 1
Like I should know this.

00:35:20:10 - 00:35:31:05
Speaker 2
If you look at the singer from Bad Company, he was looking right now I can't think of Paul Rodgers, I think was his name.

00:35:31:08 - 00:35:31:21
Speaker 1
Yeah.

00:35:32:12 - 00:35:39:22
Speaker 2
And he was in another band, which is a very popular band beforehand.

00:35:39:22 - 00:35:41:20
Speaker 1
The Yardbirds. No, I don't know.

00:35:43:10 - 00:35:43:18
Speaker 2
No.

00:35:44:02 - 00:35:54:01
Speaker 1
You know, because I feel like everybody played in the fucking Yardbirds. I, there's very bad company, the firm, the law.

00:35:54:04 - 00:36:09:10
Speaker 2
Three, three, three, three, three. That's who he was. Yeah. They saying, like, feel like making love, feel like making pioneer Mayer Turner there. Yeah.

00:36:10:18 - 00:36:11:09
Speaker 1
Yeah.

00:36:11:15 - 00:36:18:14
Speaker 2
That was. Yeah, baby ever. Yeah, it's free, baby. Free fallin.

00:36:20:02 - 00:36:20:15
Speaker 1
No, but.

00:36:20:15 - 00:36:22:10
Speaker 2
Like, so hot. Betty.

00:36:22:16 - 00:36:49:02
Speaker 1
I wanted to piggyback here on what do you call it, the whole thing with Jimi Hendrix, like just rebranding himself, whatever. So I was looking up some other shit and like, there's, like, other people in history that, you know, people believe they faked their deaths or like, they didn't die. Like they should have and have become different people.

00:36:50:03 - 00:36:58:07
Speaker 1
So here's this story I found. Have you ever heard of D.B. Cooper? Like, it sounds familiar.

00:36:58:08 - 00:36:59:04
Speaker 2
Ring a bell?

00:36:59:18 - 00:37:28:11
Speaker 1
So D.B. Cooper was this guy apparently like he he didn't, like, necessarily hijack the plane, but he told the stewardess that I got a bomb in this suitcase, and I want you to send a message to the to whoever. And this is what I want, you know, and nobody's going to get hurt. So he basically requested 200 K in cash and then four parachutes.

00:37:29:00 - 00:38:00:04
Speaker 1
And so the flight was somewhere in Oregon going to Seattle. And so they land in Seattle, they get everybody off the plane, except that the crew that was working it, like the stewardesses and the captain and copilot. So there was a transfer. They gave the money in a suitcase and then they also gave four parachutes. So then the guy tells the pilot to take off and then they head towards Mexico.

00:38:00:09 - 00:38:40:23
Speaker 1
Okay. They're in New Mexico. Yeah, Mexico. The dude gets gets a parachute on and he fucking jumps out of the plane and nobody ever sees him ever again. Nobody knows what happened to him. They did a huge fucking search for him. They, they never found him. And like, what's crazier is in 1980, some fucking kid found some kind of bag or something stuck in a tree, and it matched up to where this trajectory of this airplane would have been flying as well.

00:38:42:00 - 00:38:54:03
Speaker 1
And I guess it had a bunch of rotting cash, but it only had about five grand in there. And the serial numbers matched up to the serial numbers that the handed over to the guy.

00:38:55:19 - 00:39:04:10
Speaker 2
So this in low key was it? Yeah. I think Loki pretended to be this person and that's.

00:39:04:10 - 00:39:10:14
Speaker 1
Holy shit, you're right. I totally forgot about that. Oh, my God.

00:39:10:20 - 00:39:15:22
Speaker 2
It's like I thought you were going to refer back to Loki at first. No, you didn't.

00:39:16:12 - 00:39:32:17
Speaker 1
You weren't. That's probably why I thought it was familiar. No, this is an actual story. Like I was reading this, I was reading this off the FBI website, actually. Yeah. There's just like they don't.

00:39:32:20 - 00:39:33:19
Speaker 2
Yeah, this is a true.

00:39:33:19 - 00:39:35:05
Speaker 1
Story, but they.

00:39:35:08 - 00:39:36:06
Speaker 2
They linked it in.

00:39:36:06 - 00:39:38:07
Speaker 1
The OC was this.

00:39:38:07 - 00:39:38:17
Speaker 2
Guy.

00:39:38:23 - 00:40:08:23
Speaker 1
That's right. Yeah. And he, he jumps off like C later, everybody, you know. Hmm. But yeah, I guess in 1980, they found a package of rotting $20 bills, because that's how he asked for it, too. He asked for it 200,000, all $20 bills, something like that. And they only found about like 4 to 6000, but it was like 5800 is what this website saying.

00:40:08:23 - 00:40:38:05
Speaker 1
Right. Or the FBI website saying right now. But like yeah, like the FBI has investigated many people. There's this guy, Richard Floyd McCoy, that they they still to this day say is the favorable suspect, but they got nothing on it. Yeah, they just don't know what happened to the guy. Like, there's no fucking remnants of him.

00:40:39:05 - 00:40:41:03
Speaker 2
It's fucking looking.

00:40:41:03 - 00:41:05:03
Speaker 1
Yeah, right. But no, like, I mean, like, think about that though. They just, like, think about, like, how fucking like it's just like, you know, you always hear these stories, like, you see it in the movies. Like, guy holds up something, he gets what he wants, gets all this money, and they actually think they're going to get away.

00:41:06:04 - 00:41:26:09
Speaker 1
And they like to think that somebody actually gets away. He, you know, like, yeah, how do you actually live your life after that? You know what I mean? Like, it just seems like even you might get away, but you're eventually going to fuck it up and someone's going to catch on. Like thinking.

00:41:26:09 - 00:41:29:20
Speaker 2
It was a lot easier back in the day to get away with this.

00:41:30:04 - 00:41:31:04
Speaker 1
Absolute.

00:41:31:04 - 00:41:31:20
Speaker 2
I mean, like.

00:41:31:21 - 00:41:32:07
Speaker 1
Yeah.

00:41:32:07 - 00:41:49:11
Speaker 2
Now with like, all this shit, like, there's a camera everywhere you like, rob, a bank can get away with it. Like, look at that guy that I mean, that should happen, like, right down the street from me where that guy, like, killed, like, seven people and and drove to Texas.

00:41:49:23 - 00:41:52:03
Speaker 1
And, like, they knew who he was. Yeah, he was.

00:41:52:03 - 00:41:54:09
Speaker 2
Found within the day.

00:41:54:23 - 00:41:55:11
Speaker 1
Yeah.

00:41:55:20 - 00:42:18:17
Speaker 2
You know what I mean? Or there's even that one, like, and that's even a fucking kind of spooky story that, that one Navy guy that, like, went off the grid and they, like, the FBI was after him and shit. And it's like, what did this guy know? Like, what is this? What secrets of this guy have? And they like because the story was so vague about it.

00:42:18:17 - 00:42:43:00
Speaker 2
I wish I could remember what the full story was, but it was like a Navy guy. He went like, Nate, he went fucking a wall and like, all of a sudden the FBI is looking for him and they're like, he's a super dangerous person. Like, there was, like, no backstory to why he was a super dangerous person, you know what I mean?

00:42:43:19 - 00:42:47:14
Speaker 2
Yeah. And I. I can't.

00:42:47:14 - 00:42:50:18
Speaker 1
Think. Was it like in 1992 or something?

00:42:52:11 - 00:42:53:00
Speaker 2
No.

00:42:53:10 - 00:43:05:16
Speaker 1
Okay. I just typed in Navy guy goes off grid FBI and then like there's like a History Channel thing. Ruby Ridge, Idaho Incident and standoff.

00:43:05:16 - 00:43:21:11
Speaker 2
No, I don't think that was it. I'd have to. It probably fucking made the case go away anyways. It's like, say you don't remember it, but. All right.

00:43:21:11 - 00:43:36:01
Speaker 1
Anyway, it, it just keeps pulling up everything. But yeah, actually let me try to do it here on the Tor browser because it doesn't have the fucking blocks and shit.

00:43:36:14 - 00:43:40:08
Speaker 2
There is use DuckDuckGo.

00:43:40:08 - 00:43:49:05
Speaker 1
Yeah. I mean it's the, that's the server, that's the engine that pops up on the Tor browser.

00:43:49:05 - 00:43:53:12
Speaker 2
Yeah. That's the. No they don't.

00:43:55:04 - 00:43:57:19
Speaker 1
Right, they don't. Yeah. It's supposed to be.

00:43:57:19 - 00:44:01:20
Speaker 2
They're not bought out right now by the, by big.

00:44:01:21 - 00:44:17:00
Speaker 1
Government. But I sometimes I use the Tor browser and basically what that does is it I, it doesn't, you can't track a person's VPN when you use it. So it's like a free thing and like this is like.

00:44:18:01 - 00:44:19:21
Speaker 2
That's how you get under the dark web, right?

00:44:20:07 - 00:44:25:18
Speaker 1
Exactly. Yeah. But you got to know how to get on the dark web. And I have no fucking idea how to get on the dark web.

00:44:26:12 - 00:44:28:18
Speaker 2
What if I want to buy a kidney? So can eat it.

00:44:29:05 - 00:44:49:11
Speaker 1
Well, right? You got to like know like somebody like you got to know somebody and they got to, like, tell you, like, all right, you want a kidney? This is what you type it on the browser. And then you put your bid in or you send your money through it or whatever. Like, it's weird because like.

00:44:49:11 - 00:44:56:16
Speaker 2
There's still a human interaction that has to be done. I feel like there has to use.

00:44:56:23 - 00:45:02:15
Speaker 1
Yeah. Still have to know somebody to know somebody to even figure this out because like.

00:45:03:05 - 00:45:11:20
Speaker 2
So it's like you used to buy drugs before the internet. Yeah. From your dealer. And you had to know somebody that knew somebody that was a drug dealer.

00:45:11:20 - 00:45:34:05
Speaker 1
Well, right. Because you can't, like, search for this. Like, you can't and like all these websites, too, they're going to look like normal websites. Like they're not going to have like they're they're going to be like fake websites and you're going to click there's going to be something that you click on it that brings you to a portal or that brings you to another part.

00:45:34:06 - 00:45:35:00
Speaker 1
You know what I mean?

00:45:35:10 - 00:45:39:13
Speaker 2
Like honest wardrobe on on Wayfair and getting a Chinese child.

00:45:40:02 - 00:45:54:10
Speaker 1
Well, it's like going to Wayfair.com, but like, you know that if you click on this one hyperlink that's like so hidden on the website, that then brings you to the market where you can buy the fucking children or something like that.

00:45:54:23 - 00:45:55:09
Speaker 2
Oh, gosh.

00:45:55:18 - 00:45:57:05
Speaker 1
Does that make sense? Yeah.

00:45:57:05 - 00:45:57:19
Speaker 2
Yeah, I hear you.

00:45:58:01 - 00:45:58:11
Speaker 1
It's so.

00:45:58:23 - 00:45:59:08
Speaker 2
Deep.

00:45:59:18 - 00:46:20:03
Speaker 1
Right? They'll be legitimate websites. You probably could access them through Google. But like, again, you don't know how to get to them, but like if you're going to access it, you're not going to do it on a normal computer. You're going to use a VPN or something or more or less a tor browser. So you're not tracked in that.

00:46:20:13 - 00:46:48:17
Speaker 1
Yeah, Bitcoin, whatever. That's your payment. I don't know how they did it back in the day before bitcoin and all that shit, but like the Tor browser I mean apparently was created by the CIA. This was the tool they created. So they, they basically what people say is the CIA created the Tor browser and they created the like the online black market.

00:46:48:17 - 00:47:13:14
Speaker 1
But this was how they could oversee it. In other words, in a navigate it, I don't know. But yeah, you use a tor browser when you want to get to the the dark web because like your Google and all that, that's the surface web. All right. And like there's still a lot of information there, but that does it even.

00:47:13:14 - 00:47:36:14
Speaker 1
That's just the surface of what's actually on the Internet. And then you get deeper. So then like some of your other things are like your your courthouses and like your your government's like, you know, like how like if you want to get like certain records on things, you have to go to a courthouse and use their computer terminal and you can print this stuff.

00:47:36:14 - 00:47:58:18
Speaker 1
It's all don't get me wrong, it's all public access. Like you're able to just go to a courthouse and start looking at weird shit like real estate and whatnot, but you can't access it from anywhere else. You can't just sit from home and access you know, the county courthouse. You have to actually go there because it's like a library.

00:47:59:07 - 00:48:08:08
Speaker 1
Essentially, a courthouse is essentially a archives. If that makes sense.

00:48:08:08 - 00:48:11:02
Speaker 2
So I like that.

00:48:11:10 - 00:48:46:13
Speaker 1
Yeah. Yeah. And but yeah, as you get deeper like then yeah. Then there is like that dark web, which is the bottom of everything. Like there's a, there's like a nice example online. It shows a fucking glacier and it's like a cutaway view and it shows you the top of the glaciers, Google and all that. And then it shows you right below the surface is like all your court systems and your, your, your government access, you know, which you have to go there to get.

00:48:47:00 - 00:49:10:19
Speaker 1
And then below that is the dark web. They're like, Yeah, you can buy kidneys, fucking people, whatever you want, it's fucking there. But again, you have to know, Yeah, like you're asking like you have to know somebody like, yeah, yeah. Like you just can't search for this. Like, you can't just be like, you know what? I'm gonna to buy a fucking kidney.

00:49:11:08 - 00:49:38:18
Speaker 1
I'm just going to go buy a fucking kidney. I'm going to go pull the Tor browser. I'm going to search how to buy it, how to buy a kidney. You know, doesn't really work that way. It's more or less like you end up finding someone, you pay them some money to get this information and then they tell you where you need to spend the bulk of your money to to get this done, you know, or how to access that and shit like that.

00:49:38:18 - 00:49:42:22
Speaker 1
So but yeah, I.

00:49:42:22 - 00:49:48:21
Speaker 2
Mean.

00:49:48:21 - 00:49:50:06
Speaker 1
What you got going on there?

00:49:50:17 - 00:50:00:06
Speaker 2
I mean, the kidneys, you know, $442,000 when you're just to get an organ transplant in the US.

00:50:01:11 - 00:50:14:12
Speaker 1
You know, back in the day you used to be able to buy that shit on eBay. People were put in like fucking organs on eBay. That's fucked up. They put a stop.

00:50:14:12 - 00:50:18:04
Speaker 2
To heart transplant and be $1,000,000.

00:50:19:21 - 00:50:31:06
Speaker 1
That's why insurance companies love when you're like, not dead, but not alive, you know, just that medium where you just need help all the time.

00:50:31:21 - 00:50:39:17
Speaker 2
You can donate a kidney for $500,000. I might donate.

00:50:40:00 - 00:51:04:04
Speaker 1
I don't think that's legal, dude. It's not you know, it's not legal. Like, well, hey, I feel like the DMV would be like, hey, you can either give us your kidney now, we'll give you 500 K or we'll wait till you're dead and we'll just scrape it out of you, you know, like. I don't know, do you?

00:51:04:04 - 00:51:15:17
Speaker 2
That's I mean, think of it like you're able to like somebody on that short list of people that are just, like, about to die.

00:51:16:00 - 00:51:16:23
Speaker 1
Like who's paying.

00:51:16:23 - 00:51:17:12
Speaker 2
Kidney.

00:51:17:12 - 00:51:34:00
Speaker 1
It sounds like dead. This like, honestly, it sounds like that poor like you're just going to be thrown into a lab and just tortured and like, you're never getting 500 K and, like, your kidney never goes to anybody, you know, like, I don't know, like.

00:51:34:16 - 00:51:36:22
Speaker 2
Putting a finger up your butt all the time.

00:51:36:22 - 00:52:02:10
Speaker 1
Like, like maybe it's like the government's like, yeah, we're paying 500 K so we can help people get up on top of the list or whatever, you know, I don't know. It's, it's like you inquiry on something like that and like you never do anything and then you go to Vegas and then you wake up in a fucking tub with a bunch of ice around you.

00:52:02:10 - 00:52:09:03
Speaker 1
You know? Am I. Am I cutting out.

00:52:10:05 - 00:52:11:15
Speaker 2
Uh, just a little.

00:52:11:23 - 00:52:18:06
Speaker 1
Oh, sorry. All right, so what else we got going on here, man?

00:52:19:09 - 00:52:25:20
Speaker 2
Are you, uh, you've got the. The main point of the night, I believe.

00:52:25:20 - 00:52:26:21
Speaker 1
The skin walkers.

00:52:27:01 - 00:52:29:19
Speaker 2
Yeah. Your skin. You want to get into walkers.

00:52:29:21 - 00:52:34:01
Speaker 1
You want to get to the for skin walkers?

00:52:34:01 - 00:52:34:09
Speaker 2
Well.

00:52:34:23 - 00:53:01:00
Speaker 1
All right, let's do it. So I've always loved Native American culture, and I always found it interesting how they look at the world and they have a little bit of a mystic side to them. And it's it's hard to see if like, if they actually are real magic or if it's just, you know, the same thing as being a fucking Christian girl, you know, five or 2000 years ago or whatever.

00:53:01:22 - 00:53:23:15
Speaker 1
But like, so what I what's interesting is I've been finding out about this thing called the skinwalker, okay? And I've heard it from many things. It's in a lot of sci fi. I guess it's something that it's also a little convoluted, too. So like it's, you know, the sci fi really like makes it into something that it's not.

00:53:23:15 - 00:53:54:04
Speaker 1
But at the same time, it is what it is. It's weird. So like a skinwalker is supposed to be this kind of like it's hard to explain because like, I guess, like, in order to explain it. So like the Navajo have this these people called Madison man or the medicine man. Okay. And these are people that go through it, not the Michelin man, but the medicine man.

00:53:54:18 - 00:54:28:02
Speaker 1
Okay. Well, these people go through these extensive ceremonies and trainings and their purposes is to be spiritual leaders and to be healers to their tribes. Okay. So it's like this thing where it's like the same person you go for spiritual healing or spiritual guidance. You go to that same person if you like, fucking cut your arm or your your hand or something, they're going to take care of you, you know, or if you get sick and all that shit.

00:54:29:05 - 00:54:56:01
Speaker 1
So there's that, there's the medicine man and that's the good side of things. But then there's this other side where like, and I guess it's like the process of becoming a medicine man where it's like you either become the medicine man or you go down the other path and you become the skinwalker. And so the skinwalker also has these same abilities.

00:54:56:01 - 00:55:09:03
Speaker 1
They're very spiritual person. They also have healing abilities, but they're evil in like they're it's personally, dude, it's Star Wars. It's fine.

00:55:09:04 - 00:55:10:14
Speaker 2
Just going to say, no.

00:55:10:14 - 00:55:11:15
Speaker 1
No, no, no. Like, that's where.

00:55:11:22 - 00:55:13:19
Speaker 2
I started, like 100%. Yeah.

00:55:13:19 - 00:55:26:15
Speaker 1
And that's where I'm getting at with it because, like, there's been like, I've seen that like recently. Like they've translated Star Wars to Navajo and all these Navajos in.