Episode Transcript
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From Dr. Drew's Kitchen in New York City
4:38
this is the Adam Carolla
4:40
show. Adam's guest today Dr. Drew.
4:45
And now Kitchen Table Talk.
4:48
Adam Carolla. Yeah get it
4:50
on, got to get on the church again Amanda get
4:53
it on and back and Susan
4:56
and Dr. Drew's condo kitchen
4:59
for one more special New York
5:01
episode. I was supposed to be back in
5:03
LA but I was flying back with Mark
5:05
Garagos
5:06
and instead of leaving in
5:08
the a.m. he wanted to leave in the p.m.
5:11
which wouldn't give us time to
5:13
do an in-studio episode so I
5:16
was in the Hamptons I hit up Dr.
5:18
Drew and Dr. Drew generously
5:21
volunteered his kitchen once again
5:23
and Kitchen Studio
5:25
and to be a guest to go over some
5:27
old times. Good times yeah.
5:29
New York episode. Yeah it's good and I
5:32
think people can see that I can't in
5:34
your mind's eye I don't think you can quite imagine what it means
5:36
to be a kitchen studio but if you go
5:38
watch the video you'll get a sense
5:40
Susan's done an amazing job putting this thing together. Yeah it
5:43
looks great we're sitting at the Ample
5:45
Island. The
5:46
Ample Island? The Ample Island which is really
5:48
a peninsula. Oh. If
5:50
you really break it down. Ample Island shall
5:53
ever be known as such. All right
5:55
so I had something
5:57
because you and I were talking about
5:59
women being annoyed. My
6:03
daughter told me today
6:05
that the Pilates class wasn't hard
6:08
enough that she took and that was annoying.
6:10
To
6:13
me it's a gift but to her it's
6:15
annoying.
6:19
But we've discussed you
6:21
know women being annoyed at everything.
6:24
Yes. And men never being annoyed. Or just
6:26
never using the word even. Yeah
6:28
and it kind of struck a nerve and I got
6:30
some feedback and people seem to appreciate
6:32
it. But then it also
6:35
struck me that women do
6:37
not like the use of the word moist.
6:40
Ooh. And so I'm wondering if we could
6:42
work out a little trade. Where
6:45
we would not use the word moist
6:49
if you would stop being annoyed by
6:51
everything. Zero probability I would say. It's
6:53
never gonna happen. Drew attempted to speak
6:55
to the ladies on the private jet
6:58
flight over here from LA.
7:00
Yes. About being annoyed. Yeah.
7:02
All the time. Yeah. I I
7:05
don't like annoyed because annoyed
7:08
is the sort
7:10
of
7:11
mental manifestation
7:14
of like saying my back
7:16
hurts or I have a headache. Headache. It's
7:18
kind of a catch-all thing that
7:21
sort of means you get to sit
7:23
down and not participate in whatever
7:25
it is you're being asked to do. Or pull
7:28
away from it. Pulling away is sort of the annoyed
7:30
move. But there is no yardstick
7:33
to measure annoyed just like the
7:35
people with the bad backs or the headaches.
7:38
There's really no yardstick to measure
7:40
it. All you can do is tell
7:41
them you stay here
7:43
and then I'll go do whatever the
7:46
stuff is that you don't want to do with the person
7:48
who annoys you. Right. And it
7:50
also is so nonspecific. That's the other thing.
7:53
It is a word they use to
7:55
capture 30 or 40 different
7:58
other meanings that we could be speaking to. Specifically, like
8:01
in the case of Natalia's Pilates class,
8:04
she was, it sounds like she was frustrated.
8:07
Like it was frustrating that it wasn't hard enough.
8:09
But no, annoyed. Annoying,
8:12
annoying, so hysterical. So. Wonder
8:15
where this started. Think like in the 19th century,
8:17
you think Abraham Lincoln's wife got annoyed
8:21
by some of his responsibilities?
8:23
I don't,
8:25
I don't remember,
8:27
but I do remember my mom not
8:31
labeling everything as
8:33
annoying, but being annoyed. Yes.
8:36
So I think 50 years ago,
8:38
there was a lot of being annoyed, but not
8:41
labeling, carp,
8:44
koi fish, you know, wildlife,
8:46
Pilates instructors, things like
8:49
that, annoying. You know what
8:51
I mean? My mom was just annoyed, and
8:53
by being annoyed, you got
8:55
to, she got to be left alone. You mentioned
8:57
something on Adam and Drew, I think, maybe it was a
9:00
private conversation we had where you would walk in
9:02
the room because you needed a quarter
9:04
for a snow cone, and the response was
9:06
what? Like, well, you're impinging
9:08
on me, I'm annoyed. Well, all you have to
9:10
do is act annoyed a few
9:13
times, and
9:14
then you shall be left alone. So
9:16
it's, all you have to do is sort of reach
9:19
for your back a few times and somebody asks
9:21
you for a hand, and then they sort of learn,
9:23
let that, leave that guy alone, find
9:26
somebody else to pull these boxes
9:28
out of the back. He's not gonna help, yeah, they're gonna
9:30
be no good. The other thing I wanted
9:32
to talk to you about, which
9:35
is driving me nuts, but I don't know, somebody
9:37
tweeted me and I was looking at some tweet, it
9:39
was Dr. Jill
9:41
Biden, which I enjoy, and
9:44
then Joe Biden as well, but
9:47
there's this new thing that goes on. So
9:49
if you're the president
9:51
of the United States, but you're progressive,
9:55
when we read your Twitter bio, it
9:57
has to say husband.
10:00
Father it's not gonna start with president
10:03
of the motherfucking United States
10:05
of the goddamn America Which it
10:07
should start with you would say well
10:10
My mom is a mother and
10:12
my dad's a father husband
10:15
Grandparent like big whoop. It's
10:17
so is every homeless guy walking
10:19
around here. It's like a father or whatever But
10:22
you have to
10:23
virtue signal if you're a dude
10:26
So dude now not Trump Trump
10:29
will write he'll put president
10:32
of the world of the universe
10:34
in there But if you're progressive
10:37
you're Joe Biden you cannot do it now He
10:39
doesn't write the description but whatever
10:41
the 23 year old who's telling him
10:44
what to do does You
10:46
have to write And you
10:48
can look it up in your phone. I don't know see if you can
10:50
find Twitter but so I'm just
10:52
looking up Joe Biden and it
10:55
of course its husband and its
10:58
father and then it's
11:01
Grandfather and I think if there's room
11:04
at the end he may have you missed
11:06
a word. Oh my god. It's even
11:08
better It's better. Yeah, it's husband
11:11
to dr. Jill Bob. There's
11:14
Is there any universe where anyone
11:17
could say to her? You're not a doctor
11:19
We knock this shit off Well,
11:22
I could go on all day about that because I actually consider
11:24
the fact that we're having these conversations about the
11:27
doctor moniker Progress because 30
11:30
years ago it just got adopted by everybody
11:31
and to the point where my entire
11:34
career I had to describe myself as a physician
11:36
not a doctor. Well, okay idea. Can I say
11:38
that means any but can I say this? Yeah,
11:41
we have the names
11:44
of things and and the reason we
11:46
name things is for clarity So
11:50
when this stewardess yells is
11:52
there a doctor on this flight you don't
11:54
have a doctor philosophy stand-up
11:57
right because
11:59
While it's great, we don't need
12:02
him for whatever the emergency that's
12:04
going on in business classes
12:07
because someone's had a stroke. Right. All
12:09
right. So he is what? What's so
12:11
fascinating though is that when it all happened, it was because physicians
12:14
had too high a status. And
12:17
so people had to sort of co-opt
12:19
all of it. Okay. So it's
12:21
husband to Dr. Biden. Oh, it's just Dr.
12:24
Biden, not even Dr. Joe Biden. Oh, really? Her
12:26
hand is Dr. Biden. That's
12:28
fantastic. His number
12:29
one job is being her husband. Right.
12:33
Okay. Comma, proud father. Proud
12:35
father. Because we have to sort
12:37
of... Oh, yeah. After Hunter copping
12:40
up dick pics and enough booger sugar.
12:43
He's still proud. He has to be proud. Okay.
12:46
He's still proud. Proud father. And
12:48
grandfather. And grandfather. Oh,
12:50
except for the one. Except for the one. He doesn't really care
12:52
about that one. And that's all his personal stuff. Otherwise, it's ready to build
12:54
back better for all Americans. Oh, that's right. Someone
12:57
mentioned his status as the president
12:59
of the United States. Official account is
13:01
POTUS. Okay. So,
13:04
then... So, that
13:05
means there's a separate account. He has a... Oh,
13:07
no. There is a president account where he is the
13:09
president. Oh, okay. So, it's a separate account.
13:12
Then her account... Oh, but
13:14
of course, proud dad and pop immediately after
13:17
president. Sure. Proud. We
13:19
all have to talk about how proud we are. You have to add the proud in there. All
13:21
right. Another
13:23
task that I thought was funny was
13:25
Dr. Jill Biden, because
13:29
there was no second lady
13:32
on there. It was... Hers
13:34
was great. Hers starts with
13:37
lifelong educator. Correct.
13:40
Yes. And I was like, well, first
13:42
off, you're not a lifelong educator
13:44
because when you're two and a half, you're
13:46
not an educator. You become
13:49
an educator
13:50
as a professional later on. But
13:52
she's a lifelong educator.
13:55
Okay. Which I like.
13:58
Okay.
13:59
So, she's a mother,
14:04
sorry. Military mother. Military
14:06
mother, which is weird because
14:08
that's her step kid. Yeah. Who
14:11
was in the military. Yeah. But that's
14:13
number one after educator.
14:15
Can you do military mother in
14:18
the stepmom? I
14:20
guess. Okay. It
14:23
would be more accurate. Again, we've given up on
14:25
accuracy with balance. And
14:27
then it was grand. I don't know. My
14:30
mother. Grandmother. Sister.
14:33
Sister. Then. If
14:35
my sister's listening, you can hold
14:37
your breath for a long time for a knock
14:39
off New York Times best seller and put brother
14:42
on there. No way. There's a limited amount
14:44
of real estate. You could open every introduction with I'm a proud
14:46
brother.
14:48
It's so funny what everyone
14:50
has to do now, right? Oh my God. And,
14:53
but of course, wife to Joe Biden is the last
14:55
thing on our list. Right. Because
14:58
his first. Right. And here's his last.
15:01
Yeah. That's the new world order. Everybody.
15:03
And I, I think people have gone
15:06
the, done the cycle with this. I
15:08
think they're tired of it. Well they're, I'm
15:10
seeing a lot of pushback. Well let me tell you why
15:12
they're tired of it.
15:14
Nothing comes out the
15:17
other end. So how long
15:19
could you speak to, let's just
15:22
say
15:23
you're parishioners. Let's just say
15:25
you open a church and
15:27
you know the same 500 people just showed
15:30
up every Sunday. How long could you talk
15:32
to them about
15:33
building the new steeple or
15:35
building the new rec center or
15:38
you know, you're the kind of priest
15:40
that believes in progress and will
15:42
not let any one of his flock,
15:45
none will be left behind. We're talking how many decades
15:48
could you do that where nothing comes out
15:50
the other end where at some
15:52
point people stop showing up
15:54
a church and or listening to what
15:56
you're saying. Right. Not long. Well,
16:01
no, long. I belong, I beg your pardon. But
16:04
not indefinitely. Yes. You
16:07
know what I mean? There's a group, I'm
16:09
trying to think of who, now Drew's
16:11
looking at it. I'm looking at something I can't believe. I'm
16:13
gonna bring it up to you. I can't, it caught my eye as I was looking
16:16
at Jill Biden's thing. It looks like
16:18
a parody, but I guess it's real. But I'll tell you
16:20
in a second. Okay, so who has
16:22
the longest
16:24
fuse? And I don't mean fuse
16:26
like temper. I just mean like,
16:29
I don't think you can tell
16:31
the Asian community a bunch of bullshit
16:33
for like 50 years and expect them
16:36
to go along with it on the 51st year. You
16:39
know what I mean? It'll work with blacks. It'll
16:42
work with
16:43
some women, I guess
16:45
gay, maybe. Like I
16:47
don't know. Oh, I don't think gay men would fall for that. All
16:50
right, so who are the groups you can just sort
16:52
of endlessly talk to who
16:54
never stop and go, this
16:57
is nuts, you're not doing shit for
16:59
us. Like we're going a different direction.
17:01
Well, I feel like the people that are just hard
17:03
at work just stop listening right
17:06
away, like immediately. Well, they
17:08
never were listening. Because they
17:10
were just working. Yeah. Right.
17:13
All right, what were you reading? Well, this just
17:15
in, the World Health Organization
17:20
has elected a North Korean official
17:22
to its executive board and
17:25
a UK Communist Party member
17:27
to lead its behavior unit. Oh boy.
17:30
Is this a joke? This looks like a joke. It's got to
17:32
be a joke. It's Michael Sanger, he's pretty reliable.
17:36
The other thing that somebody was tweeting me
17:38
was they finally
17:41
put together a pretty comprehensive study
17:43
on age stratification and COVID.
17:47
And it's pretty much nobody
17:50
under nine. What you expected. He died.
17:53
Under nine, sorry, zero to 19 was 0.2.
17:58
0.0003? I
18:00
thought I saw two zeros.
18:03
It might have been three zeros.
18:08
You gotta look it up. Three would
18:10
have caught my eye, I think. I'm
18:13
pretty good. Was it three
18:15
zeros or maybe it was a zero before the point.
18:17
That was zero to 19 and
18:21
then once you got past 19 it still
18:23
barely moved past 19, right? Yeah.
18:28
Is it becoming abundantly obvious to everyone
18:30
now that this was all about them lying
18:33
about the age? I mean 100%? If we
18:35
had
18:35
understood what the risks were
18:42
for people under 75
18:46
even,
18:46
like, but forget about under 20.
18:49
If we had understood
18:51
that, don't you think this thing
18:53
would have gone a different direction? Oh,
18:56
well, I
18:58
mean at least people wouldn't have complied with that.
19:01
They would have continued their thing. Do you
19:04
think that they weren't,
19:07
that they weren't privy
19:09
to this information early-ish
19:13
on is what I'm saying. Like
19:16
they didn't know the ages of the people that were
19:18
dying and by the
19:20
way I called it eight days
19:22
in. Yeah, you did. Eight days in. I was
19:24
like where that, where the ages, I'm not
19:26
getting ages, I'm dubious now.
19:29
Yeah.
19:29
Now I can look on my phone.
19:31
Well, I've got actually the
19:34
cases versus the death rate. So the death rate
19:37
was one million, one
19:38
million?
19:40
How could that be? Oh, that's the overall thing.
19:42
Right. Yeah. So, all right,
19:44
what do you want to talk about? I'll look for this. I
19:49
want to talk about how people kind of seem to be pushing
19:51
back and it's sort of interesting to
19:53
me and
19:55
I'm almost afraid of the pushback because
19:59
it's been building up for a long time. a long time and
20:03
it is sort of going
20:05
to be led by angry men and that's
20:08
never a great thing, right? And
20:12
I hope that all this, see
20:15
I'm an eternal, I have such an optimistic
20:17
bias it's almost foolish. I
20:20
keep hoping that something good
20:22
will come from all the excess, like
20:25
we'll have more attention
20:27
to some of the issues that are causing tension
20:29
and people will pay attention to this, that and the other thing.
20:32
But my fear is that when they backlash,
20:34
when that pendulum swings, it's
20:37
going to be intense. And already a friend
20:39
of mine sent me some information
20:42
on what happened to, I think it was
20:44
Target.
20:46
Yeah, find that. They just got
20:48
clobbered. Here it is. It
20:52
was $12.4 billion, jesus. And
20:58
the share prices go to lowest levels since 2020.
21:01
And so what is the plan,
21:04
everybody? It feels like that's
21:06
your backlash and now people are going to be criticizing
21:08
the fact that consumers are using
21:10
their power, which I find ironic.
21:13
Well, can I say this about
21:16
that? I've probably been
21:18
clear in the past, but I'll
21:20
keep attempting to be a little more clear
21:22
in my position, which is. It's
21:26
interesting that they've hidden those numbers, isn't
21:28
it? Those numbers seem to be kind of hidden. Yeah, I'm
21:30
trying to find it. But
21:33
the point is this.
21:36
It's not that Target
21:39
or big box stores or any of these
21:41
places
21:43
have a
21:44
section, but okay,
21:46
couple things first. I
21:49
don't get it's the same thing with retard
21:52
Gavin Newsom. It's like I declare
21:54
that by 2027, all big box, 2020.
21:59
All big box stores must
22:02
have three aisles. They must have the girls
22:04
aisle, the boys aisle, and the
22:06
non-gender aisle. Like I said, yeah,
22:08
that's his thing. And I'm like, look,
22:11
it's fucking Play-Doh or
22:13
it's a Spyro graph or it's Tinker
22:15
Toys or it's Monopoly
22:17
or
22:18
it's a Big Wheel or it's a
22:20
Beach Blanket or it's a pool toy. Maybe
22:23
the pool toy. It's a raft. Maybe
22:25
it looks like a cupcake. Maybe it looks like a baseball
22:27
net. Just buy whatever the fuck one you
22:30
want. Yeah. Whatever the kid likes.
22:32
Yeah. Just go, we don't need a trans
22:35
aisle if you want to buy dungarees
22:37
as we used to say. If you're
22:40
a young gal and you want
22:42
to buy yourself some dungarees,
22:45
then just go buy some dungarees. Yeah.
22:48
It's like
22:49
I can walk into a candle shop
22:52
as a straight dude and just go buy a scented
22:54
candle and leave. It's not really meant for
22:56
me, the candle shop. But I can go do
22:58
it if I want. But isn't the point- Or I
23:01
can go to the liquor store
23:04
and I can buy tampons and
23:07
rose sparkling wine. At
23:09
the same time. But
23:11
I don't have a special aisle for
23:13
me. It's just in amongst the champagne
23:16
and the sundries. But there's something
23:19
even flawed in the premise you're describing,
23:21
which is isn't the goal of,
23:23
let's take a female to male transgender. Oh,
23:26
that's what they say. Isn't it to be-
23:28
That's what they say. They always say
23:31
that's what the goal is, is just equal
23:34
opportunities for being treated
23:36
the same as everyone else. Forget the same. Isn't
23:38
the idea to be
23:39
male and to come on over to the male aisle,
23:42
isn't that what they want? I don't
23:44
know. If you're transgender, you want to be female, you
23:46
want to become male. So you don't want a middle
23:48
aisle, you want the male aisle, right? Right.
23:51
I don't know. Now I'm really confused.
23:53
Here's the point. We
23:57
as human beings do
23:59
not want-
23:59
a new some period in these period
24:02
but we don't want him dictating
24:05
these things God you just want to go
24:07
into the target if your
24:09
son or daughter's gay or lesbian
24:11
whatever and just shop with everyone else
24:14
I don't want a gay spice rack
24:16
literally a straight spice
24:19
again following that following that logic
24:21
we have to have a Sri Lankan
24:24
aisle and Asian I'll
24:26
push it back on so we have to have
24:29
every different
24:29
whatever represented in different aisles reason
24:33
these companies are getting slammed
24:36
it's not because America is
24:38
anti-gay it's America
24:40
has
24:41
had an impacted ass
24:44
full of being preached to
24:46
by people who don't give a fuck
24:49
yes meaning an Heiser
24:51
Bush corporation target
24:54
LLC or whatever didn't care about anything
24:57
Gavin Newsom Gavin Newsom give a fuck
24:59
either I'm saying a bunch of
25:02
sociopathic dickheads who
25:04
are preaching to us something they formerly
25:07
never gave two shits about 10 seconds
25:09
ago yeah that's what the pushback is yeah
25:11
and the people on MSNBC think
25:14
it's a pushback against the
25:16
movement or the community you know if you
25:18
go I don't want
25:20
I don't want
25:23
trans story hour for the
25:25
kids oh you're pushing back against a Rhonda
25:27
Sanchez pushing back no no he's just saying I don't
25:29
want it with the kids that's all and the
25:31
book to take the book with you
25:33
that's it that's what they don't get what they don't
25:35
get is we
25:38
don't give a shit about your movement
25:41
we just don't want your movement shoved down
25:44
our throats well I shoved
25:46
down the throat is one thing but being
25:48
told you are bad right
25:50
is the part that people react
25:52
to that's the part that's sort of a problem right
25:55
so that's where it is but then
25:57
companies will learn but what
25:59
they
25:59
shouldn't learn is, okay,
26:02
we get the lesson. They don't like gays. That's
26:05
not the lesson. The lesson is your
26:07
company run your company.
26:10
Stop lying
26:13
and sort of cow-towing to this
26:15
group or that group. It's like, what?
26:18
These companies, Black Lives Matter,
26:20
didn't they give a fuck about Black Lives Matter?
26:23
They don't give a shit about them
26:25
or they do something. They don't. They're
26:28
literally
26:29
just showing who
26:31
they are, which is a big faceless,
26:34
disingenuous group of shareholders
26:37
that are trying to get paid, and now they're
26:39
learning. Well, it's something you've always said about
26:41
companies and corporations. They don't care
26:44
about anything except they make money.
26:46
That's their everything. It's their fiduciary
26:48
responsibility. Well, they will feign
26:51
caring about the gay community. If it
26:53
impacts on their bottom line. There's
26:56
also the other part where Al Sharpton and the
26:58
race hustlers and the extortionists show
27:00
up and you don't want to get in the hot
27:02
water with them, which also affects your bottom line.
27:05
There's a kind of pay the mob mentality,
27:08
which is what you saw with Black Lives
27:10
Matters. I'm glad that
27:12
they're learning their
27:14
shitty little lesson. I want to swing
27:16
back over to Joe Biden's
27:19
description of himself on the Twitter
27:22
page. Your
27:25
first, right? Proud father or you get second?
27:27
Husband first, father second. Isn't
27:29
this the group that's against the nuclear family?
27:32
Aren't they sort of, isn't that been their thing?
27:34
It takes a village, like families don't, or
27:36
just whatever. There's all kinds of families.
27:39
They don't matter. No? Yeah.
27:42
Isn't that their thing? How do they suddenly go from that
27:45
to father and husband
27:47
number one and two? Well,
27:49
first off, they're all over
27:52
the goddamn road with all
27:54
of their opinions about everything all
27:56
the time. You know what I'm saying? I think
27:59
that's probably true.
27:59
It's like family,
28:02
family, family, except
28:04
for the black community, then we're not going to discuss
28:06
it. Because we're not going to bring it up. So
28:09
they're just, they're all over,
28:11
they're that way with sort of the
28:13
aesthetic of life. Like they love
28:16
the celebrities, they love the beautiful people,
28:18
they love the Met Gala, they love all
28:20
that. Then they're always sort of talking about the little people
28:23
who don't have, you know, who
28:25
attends the Met Gala?
28:27
Super rich people
28:30
who spend more money on
28:33
that one day
28:35
than most Americans spend in one
28:37
year.
28:38
The Met Gala ticket is tens
28:41
of thousands of dollars. I think it goes to charity,
28:44
fine. The gown, these
28:46
people having the makeup artist and the hair, whatever,
28:49
show up at the hotel at noon
28:51
for five o'clock, you know, maybe 10 AM. The
28:54
people carrying their train, you
28:57
know, like little servants and squires,
28:59
right? And then soon
29:02
as it's time to tweet, it's
29:04
time to talk about people
29:06
who are the have-nots,
29:08
you know what I mean? And what
29:10
about Elon Musk? He could be
29:12
giving that money to the schools. You
29:14
know what I mean? Who does the most preaching?
29:18
That group,
29:19
who spends more money in one day than
29:21
most Americans spend in one year, the Met Gala
29:24
group, and then preach, preach, preach as
29:26
they get back in a limo, right? So they're
29:29
all over the fucking road. You
29:32
know, they're talking about secure
29:34
communities and, you know, the young
29:37
black men being shot and stuff like that. And
29:39
then they're defunding the police and getting
29:41
more young black men. They're
29:44
all, you know, they're talking about the environment.
29:46
They're flying private.
29:47
Private. They're talking about raising,
29:50
you know, the sea level raising or
29:52
whatever. They all have multimillion,
29:54
you
29:56
know. Houses on the beach. Yeah,
29:58
I mean, I mean, Jay. Daisy and Beyonce
30:01
just spent $200 million on a house. In
30:05
Malibu. In Malibu. But Bill Gates
30:07
is in Obama's and everybody. They're all
30:10
living as close to the water
30:12
as humanly possible. So again.
30:16
How much do they really believe this stuff? They
30:19
believe it like Gavin Newsom goes
30:21
to the French Linger and has dinner with 30
30:23
of his closest friends. They don't believe
30:25
it.
30:26
Oh my God, it's so offensive
30:28
though, we know what's right for you, but
30:31
don't worry about us.
30:33
It's the most disgusting, I don't understand why people
30:35
are disgusted with that.
30:37
It seems like the worst possible
30:39
sort of quality in a human being. Yeah,
30:43
I don't know that I'm still looking for
30:45
that COVID. I know, I told you they're hiding
30:47
it now, it's interesting. Oh, are they hiding
30:49
it? Yeah, they hide shit all
30:51
the time. When something comes out of a sort of outlying
30:55
data, well this is 29 countries. Was
30:59
it, who published it?
31:01
I don't know if it was out of Israel,
31:03
but it was 29. I thought it was an Israeli study.
31:05
It was 29 countries
31:08
and the study was out of Israel.
31:10
And your morbidity for
31:13
zero to 19 was 0.0003, if memory
31:16
serves, which is then non, I
31:21
mean Drew, how would you
31:22
typify that as a clinician?
31:25
I would not worry
31:27
about it. But is it even a thing? I
31:29
mean, would you talk to your patients about something that
31:32
was 0.003?
31:33
As
31:37
I've said. Or three zeros? As
31:39
I've said. I mean, I'm not sure. I mean, I'm not sure. I mean,
31:42
I'm not sure. Three. As I've said. Or
31:44
three zeros? As I've said repeatedly, if at 1%
31:47
or 2%, which
31:50
is what my risk was when I got COVID,
31:52
I didn't even give it a thought. Right?
31:55
And people were you scared? Were you scared? I thought, why
31:58
would I be scared? It's a 2% risk.
31:59
fatality rate. All right I got
32:02
more to complain to Drew about. We'll take
32:04
a quick break. Be right back after
32:06
this.
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All right, back in Drew's kitchen, serving
36:23
up. The ample island. The
36:25
ample island, which is really peninsula.
36:28
Why is it a peninsula? Oh, because it's attached
36:30
to the wall? Durr. Okay, just
36:33
checking. Look, I don't know these things. Well,
36:36
I'm no mariner, but I can see when something
36:38
emanates and ejects
36:40
from the wall. At least I asked the right
36:42
question. All right, other
36:44
thing, you know, Drew says all the time
36:47
that he doesn't mind paying his taxes
36:49
in New York City. And
36:52
there are things that drive me
36:54
insane. Like I just drove here, was
36:57
driven here, I should say, from the Hamptons. It's
36:59
beautiful. But
37:02
as you go through the city, as you
37:05
cut through the city in traffic
37:07
hour,
37:08
you'll see that there are traffic
37:10
cops that are posted because
37:12
things get traffic-y and
37:15
they put people in certain places.
37:17
And LA has
37:20
the most traffic in the world. And
37:22
I, for instance, have,
37:24
anyone who lives in LA knows there's these
37:26
really bad hot spots like
37:28
where sunset heads
37:31
down to PCH at five in the afternoon
37:33
and no cars can turn right and they back
37:35
it up. And, you know, if you would plant
37:38
a traffic cop at that intersection,
37:42
they'd only start work about three
37:44
in the afternoon and they could probably knock
37:47
off at six or 6.30, but
37:49
just somebody out there sort of. Now
37:52
in LA, you don't need a traffic
37:54
cop to even
37:56
do traffic copying. You need them to
37:58
be like, hey, fucking.
37:59
turn right turn right
38:02
now you fucking read your just
38:04
go watch these guys they do a lot of that they
38:06
let you go right
38:09
right they move your ass just alert
38:11
people to what already is yeah but
38:14
I
38:15
don't know as I was reading something
38:18
on Twitter and it was saying LA is
38:21
gonna implement this surcharge now
38:24
or people who use the highways during
38:26
the high traffic whatever which
38:28
is one more reason to leave but the point is
38:31
is
38:32
there are things they could do and they
38:34
just won't they won't govern
38:37
it's so they want to the basics
38:40
of government water sanitation
38:43
safety transportation
38:45
yes roads none
38:48
of it gets attention yeah none
38:50
of it it's bizarre
38:53
yeah I know all right did you
38:55
find that article I didn't find it but but
38:57
by the way as it pertains to traffic cops
39:00
even when there's a massive outage and
39:02
a failure on multiple say intersections
39:05
busy intersections where the lights go out do
39:07
you get a traffic cop for that no they
39:10
set up a sort of a
39:12
sandwich board to put a stop sign on it right
39:15
and that's it everybody's
39:17
yeah you're on your own good luck it's
39:19
ridiculous
39:19
we're both gonna do this
39:21
no I don't know did
39:24
they scrub it it looks like it
39:26
it's interesting all
39:27
right so I wrote down traffic cops
39:30
I'm gonna look on it on Twitter a little bit
39:32
too I was also hanging
39:34
at
39:35
Mark's place at the Hamptons yeah pretty
39:38
damn nice yeah the Hamptons
39:40
is pretty damn nice but all
39:43
I could think of when I was driving riding
39:45
one of his bikes rental bikes
39:48
through
39:48
the Hamptons was old money
39:51
man is that there's LA there's
39:54
no place in LA that feels like old
39:56
money no no no not like
39:58
go you go back
39:59
the aforementioned Beyonce
40:03
and Jay Z's $200 million
40:07
Malibu estate.
40:08
That feels like the definition of new
40:11
money. The Hamptons
40:13
are these hedgerows that
40:15
are beautifully manicured
40:18
and 10 feet tall and just run
40:20
the length and the driveways. You
40:23
can't see the house from the street. The driveway
40:25
is so far back. And then
40:28
I really started thinking about it over
40:30
there. It
40:31
is a parade of
40:34
maintenance vehicles, but not LA
40:37
gardener's trucks. LA's gardener
40:40
trucks are like the
40:43
VW Rabbit pickup
40:46
truck from 1979. It's
40:48
like the bumper dragon and the duct
40:50
tape, shopping cart
40:53
and a thing, like weird shark
40:55
cage. These are new trucks
40:57
with trailers and riding mowers.
41:00
It must be eight
41:03
grand a month to
41:05
maintain these properties. That's
41:07
not
41:08
including water and other
41:11
things. Just the lawn,
41:13
just the hedge. There's
41:16
literally just armies of dudes.
41:18
And again, they're not the downtrodden,
41:22
beat up, sort of illegal wearing
41:25
the t-shirt that says making bacon
41:27
on it. Like in LA, these are like professional
41:29
gardeners. They got the belt with the clipper
41:33
and the holster with the clipper on
41:35
the belt. Oh, yeah. Just the, not
41:37
the hedge clipper,
41:38
the snipper clipper. The snipper
41:40
clipper. The roses. Clipping roses
41:43
and flowers. They got the dually
41:45
pickup truck with the riding
41:47
mower that's coming out of the trailer in
41:50
the back of it. I mean, it
41:52
is crazy. And
41:54
went down. I never really spent
41:57
any time on the Atlantic. I was
41:59
always like the Pacific that's the
42:01
nice one yeah the Atlantic that's
42:04
the scary one
42:06
but the beach beautiful sand
42:09
dunes it just for
42:11
they have they have the they have the classic
42:13
thing of sort of this weird wooden fence
42:16
with the sand coming up against it a little bit of grass
42:18
yes yeah down to the sand dune yes
42:20
yes the little wooden fence yeah
42:23
the sand dune coming over the top of it
42:26
and little sprigs of grass
42:29
growing out I love that periodically there's
42:31
always breezy I don't know what the breeze is
42:33
always a little wind there always going
42:35
yeah and it's
42:36
just amazing yeah and
42:38
the properties are like
42:41
acreage in acreage in acreage
42:44
and it's all
42:46
manicured every
42:48
blade of grass it's all the driveways
42:50
that go on forever it was just I
42:53
I don't know I find that kind of stuff inspiring
42:55
oh yeah except most people
42:58
get angry yeah yeah I'm
43:00
just supposed to get inspired that could be you most
43:03
of that is finance guys New
43:05
York
43:05
it's gotta be I mean this is just
43:08
finance men and women it's so goddamn
43:10
expensive notes very successful finance
43:12
women did the same thing so I've stumbled
43:14
on something else here in terms of numbers
43:17
mm-hmm there's a brand-new study a few
43:19
hours ago that came out an attorney actually
43:21
filed a formal in a lawsuit or some
43:23
some action a formal
43:27
action a formal inquiry into
43:29
the Israeli Ministry of
43:31
Health to document
43:33
for this case exactly how many
43:35
cases of COVID deaths
43:38
in the 18 to 49 year age
43:40
group did not have comorbidities
43:43
yeah that's none that
43:46
number is zero it's zero it's zero
43:49
in Israel this the
43:51
Israel Ministry of Health yeah 18 kovudez
43:54
and age 1849 and they at one point
43:57
they said 27 of 350
43:59
had no co-morbidities,
44:02
no, no, it's zero. No co-morbidities, zero.
44:04
It just never, it never was.
44:07
And it
44:08
was, it was clear
44:10
that they were hiding it. And that's what
44:13
I'm sort of on to. It
44:15
was clear that they were not being
44:17
straight with us. And
44:20
I couldn't figure out why other people
44:22
didn't know about it, but it was, it
44:24
was clear that that's what they were doing.
44:27
And I, I,
44:29
I guess it'll be more clear next time
44:31
or, or maybe not. That's. Well,
44:33
they did an awfully good job,
44:36
right? And with the collusion of the
44:38
press that was so unanimous,
44:40
the unanimity was striking.
44:44
Think about what they might be able to do. Particularly
44:48
if you don't have somebody and they're asking questions.
44:50
I, well, you, the really question, the thing
44:52
I'm wondering about is where would the
44:55
questions come from next time? You know,
44:57
who would it be standing up and going, you know,
44:59
is it going to be Marjorie Taylor green? And then people
45:01
are gonna go, ah, shut up. You know, how's
45:04
that going to work?
45:06
Yeah, I don't. I
45:09
don't. Is it Jay Bhattacharya? Are we going
45:11
to listen to Jay next time? Well,
45:15
if everyone didn't immediately de-platform
45:17
him and then try to get him run out of
45:19
his job at Stanford and then call
45:22
him a coup. They're still going after him to this day.
45:26
But it's still sort of everyone's
45:28
fault, but it's, it's really, here's
45:32
the people that deserve the
45:35
ire is all
45:37
the doctors that immediately
45:39
folded ran to CNN
45:42
and started spouting out gibberish
45:45
and alarming. It's Leanna.
45:47
Yes. It's Dr. Hoteb.
45:51
Not job bow tie. It's Sanjay
45:54
Gupta. Like I want to say the guys
45:56
like Sanjay Gupta. I hope it's worth it.
45:59
fucking soul. Did something to get that
46:02
into it. He sort of went over his skis when
46:04
he talked to Joe Rogan. That's where things went. He did
46:06
that. He also
46:08
got into it with natural immunity.
46:11
He wasn't asking the right questions.
46:13
He sort of pushed. We don't know how
46:15
effective that community is. I
46:18
was yelling at the TV. He
46:20
does. I mean,
46:22
he just sold himself out. That's
46:24
all. And who were
46:27
all these physicians,
46:29
experts, clinicians, who just ran
46:32
to the TV camera and somewhere
46:35
between lied and just,
46:37
I don't know what else to call it. They
46:39
did not do what they're trained
46:42
to do, which is look into
46:44
things. And then Sanjay Gupta
46:46
just lied. He's just a liar. I mean, he
46:49
gets paid by CNN. I don't know, but
46:51
he just lied. All the
46:53
horse-paced shit was all just, that's just
46:55
lying. He knows what it is. So
46:58
if in fact he's a real doctor, like now
47:00
with some of these people, I'm like, is this what you do?
47:03
Because now I'm scared.
47:05
Because now you talk
47:07
to people, and the people like my
47:11
whatever pediatrician wouldn't do this
47:13
and wouldn't do that, wouldn't give me whatever.
47:15
Like,
47:16
what the fuck happened to all these people? Well,
47:19
man, it was wild. I'm telling
47:21
you. The fact that you
47:23
look no further than sending people home
47:26
until they couldn't breathe with
47:28
no care and no nothing. That was routine.
47:31
And they were mandated to do that by their
47:33
hospital administrators, who shouldn't have
47:35
had any vote in the game, but
47:38
they were afraid they were gonna lose their job if they didn't do that.
47:40
Finally now, I
47:42
don't know that your listeners know this, the
47:44
annals of internal medicine. So I've been very concerned about
47:46
the medical literature because it also has been
47:48
toeing the line. And medical
47:51
literature is exquisitely
47:53
important. I rely on it so heavily. I read three
47:55
different journals every week to two weeks. And
47:58
they've always been just the center. centerpiece
48:00
of how I sort of refined
48:02
my knowledge base, all of a sudden during
48:04
COVID, I noticed there was sort of
48:07
no
48:08
back and forth. Normally the literature is kind of back
48:10
and forth. Like you sort of see things go this way, and
48:12
then as another data goes, nah, it wasn't as conclusive
48:14
as we thought. It takes a while to
48:16
develop a consensus. I hope people
48:19
now understand that. But for three
48:21
years, it all went one direction. And I
48:23
was like, well, something's weird about this. Well,
48:25
Annals of Internal Medicine, who was the first
48:27
journal to publish the Danish mask
48:30
study, which was this huge study
48:32
that came out, I think it
48:34
was 2020, it might've been 2021, and
48:36
a lot of excitement about it. And
48:38
then all of a sudden, New England Journal won't publish it. Then
48:40
all of a sudden, JAMBA won't publish it.
48:42
Annals publish it, negative study, masks
48:44
don't work. As a mass policy
48:47
on a mandated level, they don't work.
48:50
Yes, you can wear an N95, perfectly worn, you
48:53
can do that and you can protect yourself. But
48:56
on a mass basis, it doesn't work because people
48:58
eat and people don't wear them perfectly. It
49:02
just doesn't work. Did you hear, talking
49:04
about health, did you hear anything
49:07
about this Jamie Foxx situation?
49:09
Oh, so hold on, I'll take about that in a second. Oh boy, funny, you'll
49:11
bring that up.
49:12
Oh, we have thoughts? Well, the
49:15
reason you're seeing it come up is me.
49:17
I got, I just, Chris Maxapatta
49:20
just sent me a thing. That's me. But
49:23
no, he was talking about- Let me just finish
49:25
thought real quick. Annals finally two weeks ago
49:27
published articles on, A, how we should
49:29
be doing vaccine studies, even though we don't have
49:31
randomized control opportunity, early
49:33
treatments, Budecinide and fluvoxamine,
49:36
low and behold, works in mild
49:38
to moderate COVID. Low and behold, we
49:40
could have been, it was recommended, that was known from
49:42
the beginning of this pandemic. And those people
49:44
were called quacks and were vilified.
49:47
Remember that doctor in Texas, he
49:50
said he prayed to God and God told him that these
49:52
inhaled steroids might be helpful. Turns out they
49:54
are. And
49:57
then Steve Kirsch and the fluvoxamine
49:59
study.
50:00
Completely sidelined. I used that
50:03
for long COVID in it. I'm telling you it worked for me. But
50:06
anyway Jamie Foxx. So I had AJ Benza on my streaming
50:08
show yesterday. Oh is that where
50:10
AJ was? It was
50:13
on your show. Oh I heard about
50:15
it somewhere. But I didn't know
50:17
it was on your show. Right
50:20
here at the ample. Peninsula.
50:23
The ample Peninsula, yeah. All
50:25
right. Wait a second. I'll tell you what. Let's take
50:27
another quick break. We'll come back and
50:29
we'll unravel the
50:30
AJ Benza Jamie Foxx
50:33
controversy right after
50:35
this.
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okay now we is back
52:24
and I heard AJ Benza AJ
52:26
Benza is a funny
52:28
guy AJ Benza is a smart
52:32
guy AJ Benza is a fire
52:34
starter been around a long time been around
52:36
a long time and AJ
52:38
Benza
52:40
doesn't talk out of his ass that
52:43
much at least to my knowledge he
52:45
what he does is he says really
52:48
incendiary things that
52:50
get people very upset but
52:54
then turns out maybe
52:56
was on to something or there was some truth
52:59
in it or something so my
53:01
history so it's sort of it's
53:03
it's sort of like oh
53:07
god the National Enquirer
53:09
so when they weren't talking about aliens but the
53:11
National Enquirer would would be like you
53:14
know so and so is gay
53:16
you know Woodrow Wilson was gay or
53:18
something and you'd be like what no way
53:21
get out of here you know then some point
53:23
they
53:23
find out he had a lover
53:25
who was a male or something and made him
53:27
check give him a cabinet position I'm
53:30
just saying like he's they do
53:32
things that sounded insane all
53:35
the time but
53:35
later on there'd be no lawsuits
53:38
well right the reason was they had
53:40
sources right and their
53:42
sources were good and checked
53:46
and they were turns out more reliable than the
53:48
sources the fucking Washington Post uses
53:51
a bunch of Pulitzer Prizes reporting on Russian
53:56
collusion that never happened so
53:58
yes they are better
53:59
Yeah, and that's what started happening.
54:02
I remember like 15, 12 years ago. They're
54:04
better reporters, not because they're better
54:06
reporters. It's just they're not in
54:08
the bag for the Democratic Party, which
54:11
then corrupts their reporting. So
54:13
how could you be a good reporter if you
54:15
were rooting for somebody
54:17
to be elected and reporting?
54:19
Right, you couldn't. So here's my conversation
54:22
with AJ. So AJ
54:24
says he spoke to somebody who was
54:26
standing
54:28
in the room with Jamie Foxx.
54:30
And let me just say, I
54:32
didn't really cosign any of this. I
54:34
don't know what's true and what's false. I'll tell
54:36
you my concerns in a minute about some of the things
54:38
he said, which I raised yesterday, but obviously
54:41
Twitter didn't catch on to that.
54:44
So he said he was talking to somebody in the room and he's
54:46
had a large stroke and it's bad and
54:49
it's affecting his ability to move and
54:51
see. And
54:52
I asked it having
54:54
to do with speech. He couldn't answer that question.
54:57
But if it's affecting the
54:59
occipital cortex
55:02
and the parietal cortex, that's a massive
55:05
stroke. It's a real doctor. So
55:13
I mean, if it's affecting
55:16
your vision.
55:17
Yeah, that's an unusual piece of this.
55:19
Mostly speech. Well, it's
55:21
your brain is constructed
55:24
in such a way that on the left side of your
55:26
brain, speech movement feeling is
55:28
all in the same general area where
55:30
it's supplied by the same artery.
55:33
And it's a common artery to get clipped off
55:35
by a stroke. If you're
55:37
going all the way down to the occiput,
55:40
you wonder if that was an embolic event, like multiple
55:42
clots, or was it a bleed
55:45
into his head? Because they kept saying it's a blood
55:47
clot in his head. Well, blood
55:49
clot strokes are caused by blood clots
55:51
in an artery, cutting
55:53
off blood supply to the brain and the brain dies.
55:55
But you can also get bleeds in the brain
55:57
where the arteries rupture. And the
56:00
brain gets crushed and those
56:02
are a little more sort of protean
56:04
in terms of the anatomy and how it
56:07
manifests. So maybe it was a bleed,
56:09
don't know, but he kept saying
56:11
it was stroke, stroke, stroke, the guy was saying stroke. And
56:14
then he emphasized that he is
56:16
still in a rehab unit,
56:18
a stroke rehab unit, weeks and weeks
56:21
and weeks after the injury, which is now
56:23
what you call a good sign. He also
56:25
said that everybody became... It's been two months, right?
56:27
Yes, it's not good. That's a long
56:29
time for a youngish,
56:32
healthy-ish person. It's unheard of actually.
56:35
Sort of unheard of? I usually go to outpatient
56:37
management and stuff like that. So somehow he's getting
56:39
some
56:39
specialized care here. And the
56:42
other thing AJ pointed out was that everybody that
56:44
has walked out of his room,
56:46
even until his present time, it says pray
56:48
for him, pray for him. You don't say pray for him
56:50
when they're sort of engaged in some... And
56:53
my question was, what are you praying for? I mean, you don't
56:55
get to pray for him to be able to
56:57
walk against him someday. He's not going to be playing
56:59
the piano. I don't know.
57:02
So, okay, pray for Jamie. And
57:04
let me say again, I feel... I think
57:06
Jamie's a brilliant
57:07
performer. I love that guy. I feel
57:09
terrible that this happened to him. So
57:12
I just... The whole that we're even talking about is just awful.
57:15
But then AJ went on to say
57:17
he was on a production. The
57:20
SAG requirements required him to get
57:22
the vaccine. He fought against it.
57:24
He was upset about it, broke the vaccine,
57:27
and AJ is making the association between
57:29
the vaccine and the cerebral event
57:32
stroke. He
57:34
could not tell me whether or not he'd had COVID.
57:36
It could have been COVID related. It could have been COVID
57:38
and vaccine, or could have had none of the above. But
57:41
the fact that he said vaccine in
57:43
his mind clearly is what got
57:45
everybody all riled up.
57:47
And we have seen an awful lot
57:49
of strokes these days, and I don't know if it's COVID
57:51
or vaccine, but there's a lot of stuff going on.
57:54
Well, are we
57:55
cooling our jets on
57:57
the vaccine? And
58:00
I mean, if you think, you know, so let's,
58:03
you know, I like to follow the
58:05
trajectory of things as I'm
58:08
apt to say, you know, so vaccines
58:12
were
58:14
going to cure a view of COVID and
58:16
we're going to stop COVID and
58:19
then vaccines were, well, you could
58:21
get it, but you couldn't spread it. And then
58:23
vaccines were, you could get it, you could spread
58:25
it. And then they wore off pretty fast.
58:28
And then it was vaccines were
58:30
better than natural immunity, but
58:33
you had to get boosted all the time.
58:35
Right. And, you know, Sanjay
58:37
lying Gupta was up there going, whoa.
58:42
And Fauci were like, we don't
58:44
know how durable, we
58:46
don't know how durable natural immunity
58:49
is. Like, well, there are, there
58:51
is precedent, number one. Number
58:53
two, you
58:53
don't know how durable something is, but
58:55
you're telling everyone they have to get boosted
58:58
in seven weeks. Right. That
59:00
doesn't sound super durable. Right. Right.
59:03
To me. So you're questioning how durable natural
59:05
immunity is. And then now the other side of your mouth, you're talking
59:07
to people about getting injected with the vaccine
59:10
three or four times a year, which sounds like
59:12
the opposite of durable, which is where
59:14
I had a problem with. But then
59:17
it goes to, you know, how durable is it? Now we need
59:19
to get it more. Then it's some
59:21
weird push to get your kids vaccinated.
59:23
Yeah. Again,
59:26
zero, zero healthy people
59:28
under 19
59:29
died. It's just zero.
59:32
So why you'd be pushing so hard to
59:34
get this population late in the
59:36
game, by the way, when you did have the numbers
59:38
and now you're lying again. Don't
59:41
you think that was the teachers union required? Yeah, it's all
59:43
whoever, it's whoever, whoever the same
59:46
people are. I showed you that clip of the crazy
59:48
black woman on CNN, the doctor
59:51
straight hair who was talking about the
59:53
ills of hot combs or something,
59:55
and then start talking about getting kids vaccinated
59:58
and how important it was to get kids.
59:59
That shit's like four months
1:00:01
old. That's not from two years
1:00:04
ago. It's it's People
1:00:06
pushing out there are people really pushing so
1:00:08
and defending lockdowns and defending masks
1:00:11
and still masking but then
1:00:13
When you would push back against that you'd
1:00:15
be pilloried fine Yeah,
1:00:17
then at a certain point somebody
1:00:19
started asking about
1:00:22
the safety of the vaccines And
1:00:24
then they went super hard at
1:00:26
those people But these are the same people
1:00:29
who are going super hard at the people
1:00:31
who are asking about the safety of the vaccine
1:00:34
We're going super hard at the people who
1:00:36
asked how effective it was six
1:00:38
months earlier or six months before
1:00:41
that Asking if you could spread
1:00:43
it. So there's a group of weaponized
1:00:46
people
1:00:47
who I Don't know if
1:00:49
it's all just big pharma and big
1:00:52
pharma pays in so much to CNN
1:00:54
and buys so much Advertising on the New York Times
1:00:56
or LA Times. I don't I don't even know if
1:00:58
there's a direct correlation but there is
1:01:01
a mobile army of
1:01:03
writers and correspondents and experts
1:01:06
and CNN experts and TV doctors
1:01:09
who anyone who raised their hand about anything
1:01:11
vaccine Went all in now
1:01:14
Ten minutes earlier they
1:01:17
all grabbed a microphone and said
1:01:20
if this vaccine comes from Donald
1:01:22
Trump I'm not taking Saying
1:01:28
that then they were screaming at everyone
1:01:31
to get vaccinated even though it came
1:01:33
from the Trump administration people forget about that
1:01:35
part That's
1:01:36
okay. So you absolutely
1:01:39
don't take it if Trump is behind it Yeah,
1:01:41
then ten minutes later you're screaming at everyone
1:01:43
to take it Then you're screaming at everybody
1:01:46
if you take it this thing ends and
1:01:48
this is an epidemic of the unvaccinated These
1:01:50
people shouldn't be allowed in hospitals if they
1:01:52
get no motorcycle accident They're not vaccinated
1:01:55
because they're putting us all in danger They shouldn't be
1:01:57
allowed back on the police force or the fire
1:01:59
force
1:01:59
They shouldn't be allowed to play tennis
1:02:02
in this country or play
1:02:04
quarterback for the Green Bay Packers. But
1:02:08
they never stopped.
1:02:10
It was wrong. They're wrong
1:02:12
about everything. And
1:02:14
now we've
1:02:15
entered the chapter where
1:02:17
we're talking about safety. And
1:02:20
the same people
1:02:22
who made a lot of noise about six
1:02:24
months ago if you brought up safety are
1:02:27
kind of cooling their jets. Oh,
1:02:29
no kidding. About safety. Well,
1:02:32
especially, here's how it
1:02:34
works. Somebody says, I
1:02:36
don't think this thing's that effective. I think if you
1:02:38
get it, you can still
1:02:40
get COVID. And then they go, those
1:02:42
are breakthrough cases. They invent
1:02:45
a term for, oh,
1:02:47
those are breakthrough cases. Like, okay.
1:02:50
And then they'll go nuts. But they
1:02:52
only go nuts for about four months. And
1:02:54
then they turn out to be 100% wrong. And
1:02:56
then they move on to the next thing to go nuts about.
1:02:58
Moving on to things that they're wrong on is the
1:03:00
thing I have trouble with. I just keep going for one more thing to do. I
1:03:03
do enjoy it. But I'm telling you.
1:03:05
I don't enjoy it. Well, I
1:03:07
enjoy it as a comedian. As
1:03:09
a father, as a
1:03:12
husband, as a wife, as a
1:03:14
gay, as a straight, as a lesbian, as
1:03:16
a grandfather,
1:03:17
and as a Jesuit.
1:03:21
Check the Twitter bio. I'm
1:03:23
saying
1:03:25
they were going batshit
1:03:27
crazy on anyone that dared
1:03:30
to bring up the safety implications
1:03:33
of the vaccine six months
1:03:35
ago. They're not as
1:03:38
fired up about it anymore. And
1:03:41
I don't know if they're just tired of being wrong,
1:03:44
but the
1:03:46
backlash is not nearly as powerful
1:03:49
as it was. I've noticed
1:03:51
this AJ thing created a huge old backlash
1:03:53
on my Twitter. Let's see how bad it is. I
1:03:55
tend not to even look at these things anymore. But
1:03:58
it feels a little bit like a bad thing.
1:03:59
like a different group.
1:04:02
It feels a little different. So he's
1:04:04
saying he thinks that
1:04:07
the vaccine
1:04:09
caused the clot,
1:04:12
the what, the event, and are
1:04:16
there more events? What
1:04:19
do you mean? Are there more events going
1:04:21
on now in regards to clotting
1:04:23
and things like that than there were four
1:04:26
years ago? Yeah, well there's certainly
1:04:28
excess mortality in pretty much everywhere
1:04:30
except Africa, interestingly, and
1:04:33
no one seems in a hurry to explain
1:04:35
it. It's just the oddest thing in the world.
1:04:38
If everyone wants a tell, here's where my two tells
1:04:40
in this entire episode. One is no
1:04:43
age is being reported on
1:04:45
a man died in Culver City
1:04:47
from COVID. No age
1:04:50
attached to it. Hearing it on the radio, pattern
1:04:52
broke, nose up in the
1:04:54
air sniffing. I'm
1:04:56
like a dog walking a room with meatloaf
1:04:59
in the oven. What's that? What's that?
1:05:02
What's cooking in here? Something's cooking. Nose
1:05:05
in the air, no ages. That was the
1:05:07
first one. Next one is
1:05:09
every
1:05:11
single pandemic, AIDS
1:05:13
and beyond. It's always Africa,
1:05:16
Africa, Africa. What about Africa? What
1:05:19
about Africa? All of a sudden, we're getting
1:05:21
reports out of Italy. I heard
1:05:23
more reports with
1:05:26
mortality and death out
1:05:28
of Italy. You never
1:05:31
hear them. There is no other
1:05:33
disease or airborne
1:05:35
respiratory virus or whatever that ... They
1:05:38
never talk about Italy, right?
1:05:40
They would only
1:05:41
talk about who wasn't doing well and
1:05:43
Africa evidently was
1:05:46
not being decimated even
1:05:48
though the hospitals are few and far between
1:05:50
and the healthcare and all the stuff they love
1:05:54
was few and far between, but everyone was
1:05:56
young and everyone was skinny
1:05:58
and everyone was all alone.
1:05:59
also on hydroxychloroquine as
1:06:02
well. And those are the three things they didn't wanna
1:06:04
get into. So
1:06:06
half the populace is on hydroxychloroquine,
1:06:09
which they didn't wanna get into. They're
1:06:11
all, you know, average age, it's
1:06:14
like 22 or something like that. And they're
1:06:16
all
1:06:17
underweight or not fat. All
1:06:19
the things we couldn't talk about,
1:06:21
thus they weren't being destroyed
1:06:23
by COVID, even though they should
1:06:25
have been. Well, first off, it
1:06:30
discriminates against black people. So
1:06:33
you would think if this is the birthplace
1:06:35
of black people, then they would be
1:06:37
decimated
1:06:38
by this. Well,
1:06:41
if in fact, if I hear the politician
1:06:43
correctly, which is COVID praise
1:06:46
disproportionately on black people,
1:06:49
here's a nation of black people, why
1:06:51
are they not decimated by COVID?
1:06:55
A continent and CNN, what
1:06:58
happened to the reporting out of Africa, which
1:07:00
I always hear for AIDS in every
1:07:02
other pandemic. So
1:07:04
nothing out of Africa made me
1:07:07
suspicious early on. And
1:07:09
then back to the excess mortality, tell
1:07:11
me what your snout tells you about
1:07:13
this. So excess mortality has
1:07:15
stayed up, you know, into levels, it
1:07:18
usually goes down after a pandemic because
1:07:20
the unhealthy people die off. And so
1:07:22
the death rates become improved. Death
1:07:25
rates have stayed up in Western countries into
1:07:28
sort of pandemic levels.
1:07:30
So here's what I find
1:07:32
interesting. There's a reasonable
1:07:34
probability that this is still
1:07:37
COVID for some reason, like
1:07:39
something about COVID causes downstream
1:07:42
effects that's leading to mortality. But
1:07:44
just because it's possibly
1:07:47
related to the vaccine, we can't even ask the question.
1:07:50
Right, that to me is just astonishing.
1:07:53
Like we can't ask it because we might
1:07:55
find out as some of the vaccines
1:07:57
are just, well also.
1:07:59
The vaccines are just big pharma
1:08:02
and big government. And if
1:08:04
they're not really effective anymore,
1:08:06
then why are we all so bent
1:08:08
out of shape about discussing the
1:08:11
effects of the vaccines that could possibly
1:08:13
be negative? Look, to
1:08:15
me, you
1:08:16
can talk to Pfizer. They'll
1:08:19
tell you one thing. You can watch Joy
1:08:22
Reed on MSNBC. She'll tell you
1:08:24
the same thing. Pfizer's telling you, Sanjay Gupta'll
1:08:26
say whatever. Talk to insurance guys. You
1:08:29
want to talk to the money handler.
1:08:32
Talk to the guys who have to cut checks.
1:08:35
Those are the people that
1:08:37
are going to be on top of it. And they'll be
1:08:39
on top of almost any subject
1:08:42
because the people that have
1:08:44
to write the checks are
1:08:46
the people that are on top of it, their businesses.
1:08:48
They have to know. They have to know. They
1:08:52
can't listen to Sanjay
1:08:55
Gupta
1:08:57
bloviate about the dangers
1:09:00
of this or the safety of that. They
1:09:02
have to really crunch numbers,
1:09:04
boots on the ground, and do it because
1:09:07
their business could be destroyed. So
1:09:11
they can listen to the Obama's talk
1:09:13
all they want about global warming.
1:09:16
But if the sea is going to rise 20 feet, they
1:09:19
can't insure those houses that
1:09:21
Jay-Z and Beyonce just bought. So
1:09:24
find out from them. And if they
1:09:27
will insure their house. It'll be a fortune.
1:09:29
Well, no, what I'm saying
1:09:32
is they will or they won't or it'll
1:09:34
be a fortune or it won't be a fortune.
1:09:36
But I'm saying if you want to get the number. Yeah, find
1:09:38
out what the probability is. They'll know us. They'll
1:09:40
find out because that's their business. They
1:09:42
cannot afford to insure $200 million homes that
1:09:47
are overtaken by the Pacific Ocean
1:09:49
in four years.
1:09:51
Right? So and- And by the way,
1:09:53
those of you who think to yourself, I know the natural
1:09:55
thought would be, guys
1:09:57
like Beyonce and Jay-Z, they can build
1:09:59
a wall.
1:09:59
or something to protect themselves. No, against
1:10:02
the law in California. The Coastal
1:10:05
Commission has a new policy as
1:10:07
it pertains the Pacific Ocean. You know what it's
1:10:09
called? Reclamation.
1:10:12
So if the water comes in, it's just
1:10:14
reclaiming it. You're not allowed to protect yourself.
1:10:16
So when the
1:10:17
insurance
1:10:20
guys start worrying...
1:10:23
California fuck. Those
1:10:25
of you who can't believe it's true. When
1:10:28
insurance guys start worrying
1:10:31
about excess deaths,
1:10:33
that's when you should listen. Look
1:10:35
up a guy named Ed Dowd. He's all
1:10:37
over this. Insurance guys, to
1:10:40
the best of my knowledge, Ed Dowd. I've heard him speak
1:10:42
for. They weren't that worried about COVID
1:10:45
per se, but they are
1:10:48
worried now about excess death
1:10:50
or mortality. And I think
1:10:53
when the guys who cut the checks
1:10:57
start worrying about shit
1:10:59
on any level, the check
1:11:01
writers, not the bureaucrats who
1:11:04
shuffle the checks from that taxpayer
1:11:07
over there, from Jay-Z over there and give it
1:11:09
to that guy over there. Not them.
1:11:11
You don't have to worry about them. They just waste money.
1:11:13
When the guys who have to get out their own checkbook
1:11:15
and start cutting checks
1:11:18
for the 53-year-old who was in great health and is now
1:11:20
dead, who they have a $2 million policy
1:11:23
on for $26 a month, those are people they
1:11:26
have to listen to.
1:11:29
Skin of the game. It's not too long before they
1:11:32
pay close attention to that. So
1:11:34
let me swing back around to Italy. Are
1:11:37
you aware of what happened there? Why we were talking about
1:11:39
Italy? Michael Sanger has chronicled
1:11:42
it very carefully. So
1:11:45
what happened was, first
1:11:47
of all, there was something called Pandemic
1:11:50
Inc., which is there was this
1:11:52
growing group of people who
1:11:54
were, their profession was pandemic
1:11:56
preparedness. There were a
1:11:58
giant hammer waiting for it to come.
1:11:59
waiting for a nail. They had done war
1:12:02
games just months before this
1:12:04
pandemic, though even in the war games they
1:12:06
did, they did not contemplate widespread
1:12:08
lockdown. There was never a realistic
1:12:11
policy that they considered.
1:12:13
But China does its
1:12:15
thing.
1:12:16
It's super clear that what China
1:12:18
did was a political
1:12:20
maneuver. It was
1:12:23
clearly the local Communist Party
1:12:25
leaders trying to impress the leaders up
1:12:27
on high. I'm going
1:12:30
to show you the graph of what they said
1:12:32
happened during COVID. This is the
1:12:34
graph that they got. So
1:12:36
it went up fast, it slowed, it went up
1:12:38
and here was lockdown right here. So
1:12:43
when lockdown hit, they claimed
1:12:45
there was a total
1:12:46
flat line in new cases of COVID,
1:12:48
which was a complete and categorical
1:12:51
lie. But our government
1:12:53
officials, our public health officials, bought
1:12:55
it. And
1:12:56
were enthusiastic that
1:12:59
the Wuhan officials really had done it.
1:13:01
And they actually talked to them and believed their
1:13:03
bullshit. I can't believe it. But that wasn't
1:13:05
enough to get us to do the lockdown. It
1:13:07
turns out lockdown really wasn't
1:13:10
contemplated until Italy. And
1:13:12
so when Italy, I'm trying to remember the name of
1:13:14
the district there, Lombardy. Well, the
1:13:17
Lombardy officials decided to lockdown.
1:13:20
There were something like two or three officials that really made
1:13:22
the choice. But the main guy that
1:13:25
was pushing
1:13:26
it wrote a book about it
1:13:28
right after the lockdown. Turns
1:13:31
out this guy did not have any intention
1:13:33
to have an effect on COVID. He
1:13:36
was a sinophile. He was a champion
1:13:39
of the Chinese Communist Party and
1:13:41
saw this as an opportunity to deploy
1:13:44
some of their techniques and to show how
1:13:47
wonderful Chinese policy would be
1:13:49
in Italy. And this was just
1:13:51
an opportunity for a totalitarian
1:13:53
sort of intervention. He did not think
1:13:56
it would do anything for the COVID. Maybe it would on
1:13:58
the, you know, he
1:13:58
wrote a book about it.
1:13:59
And the book was so embarrassing they took
1:14:02
the book off the market very quickly when
1:14:04
we saw Lombardy lockdown That's what
1:14:06
we decided. We must do the same
1:14:08
Or you can come to California
1:14:10
and be free And
1:14:13
when when Trump said hey, no, no, no not so much
1:14:15
then the governor stepped in and
1:14:18
that's when California did its thing I
1:14:22
Parting note I
1:14:24
Walking
1:14:26
around the Hamptons.
1:14:28
I saw a lot of benches Dedicated
1:14:31
to people Couples and
1:14:33
guys, you know a lot of many
1:14:36
dedicated benches, which is it's
1:14:38
depressing but also means you're in a pretty
1:14:40
expensive zip code, you know, yeah,
1:14:43
and
1:14:45
And I thought I don't know what the rules
1:14:48
are for dedicating benches But I
1:14:50
would like my bench dedicated
1:14:53
before I die. I'm sure you
1:14:55
can do that. I bet I never see
1:14:57
it It's always a memory of yeah.
1:14:59
Yeah, but if I could get one before
1:15:02
I died then I could
1:15:03
Stand over people and go hey
1:15:06
Off my fucking bench. Yeah, I
1:15:08
like that and they'd be like you're dead.
1:15:11
I'd be like, no turn them
1:15:13
alive and Still
1:15:15
kicking your ass get
1:15:17
your ass off mine Now I'll be gone in 11 years
1:15:20
and then you can sit into it as
1:15:22
long as you like But I would like
1:15:24
this bench with my name on it while I still
1:15:26
got air my lungs and as long as I'm around
1:15:28
No one's sitting on this damn bench get off
1:15:30
my lawn. You can look or your
1:15:33
choice now without your permission Yeah, you when
1:15:35
I'm at home on my sofa, but when
1:15:37
I leave my sofa, I need my bench. Yeah
1:15:39
Yeah, this is an outdoor sofa
1:15:42
for me with my name on would you like to
1:15:44
walk in my home?
1:15:45
I just sit on my love season all these days.
1:15:47
I like same difference. Yeah.
1:15:49
All right Drew how do
1:15:51
we you go to Adam crawl calm for all that
1:15:54
live stuff? I'll be back in the studio. The shows
1:15:56
have been a bridge because you know,
1:15:58
have we've been on the road and Drew's been
1:15:59
and generous enough to let me use
1:16:02
his condo. But adamkroll.com's
1:16:05
where all the, wow, God, coming,
1:16:07
doing tons of live events. So check
1:16:09
that out. What do you got, Drew? If you wanna
1:16:11
see more of that streaming show, this
1:16:13
is today, right? This is day and date, yes? And
1:16:15
you can see me talking to Pierre Corey.
1:16:18
And then coming up, I've got Elsine Malhatra,
1:16:21
and I've got, got so many
1:16:23
great guests coming. So it's three o'clock Pacific time,
1:16:26
Tuesday, Wednesday, and Thursday. Do
1:16:28
check it out. And yeah, dr.com
1:16:31
for Adam and Drew and After Dark. And
1:16:33
until next time, Adam Kroll for Dr. Drew saying,
1:16:37
mahala. Make
1:16:38
sure you get a copy of Adam's latest
1:16:41
book, Everything
1:16:46
Reminds Me of Something. It's available where
1:16:48
Finder books are sold. Leave us a voicemail at
1:16:50
888-634-1744, and
1:16:53
get your tickets to see The Ace Man at adamkrolla.com.
1:16:59
See what streaming free, all month long
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1:17:39
Hey, it's Adam
1:17:41
Carolla and I'm very excited to finally announce an evening of stand-up
1:17:44
comedy with me and
1:17:46
some of my funniest friends. Brad Williams,
1:17:49
great stand-up comedian. Kimbles
1:17:51
Hume, very funny stand-up as well. They're
1:17:55
gonna join me on stage. Where? In
1:17:58
San Diego,
1:17:59
we'll do an.
1:17:59
improvised performance. We'll also
1:18:02
be taking audience suggestions and
1:18:04
spinning them into comedy gold. And
1:18:06
you can tune in virtually for pay-per-view
1:18:08
access. And you'll have the opportunity to
1:18:11
virtually participate in the show. Tickets
1:18:13
go on
1:18:14
sale Wednesday, May 10, at
1:18:16
live1.com
1:18:19
slash
1:18:20
Corolla Live. That is live1.com
1:18:24
slash Corolla Live. Plus, the
1:18:26
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1:18:28
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1:18:30
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1:18:34
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1:18:36
and you don't want to miss this. It's gonna be funny.
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