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Dr. Drew Pinsky on New Covid Studies and Jamie Foxx

Dr. Drew Pinsky on New Covid Studies and Jamie Foxx

Released Thursday, 1st June 2023
Good episode? Give it some love!
Dr. Drew Pinsky on New Covid Studies and Jamie Foxx

Dr. Drew Pinsky on New Covid Studies and Jamie Foxx

Dr. Drew Pinsky on New Covid Studies and Jamie Foxx

Dr. Drew Pinsky on New Covid Studies and Jamie Foxx

Thursday, 1st June 2023
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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

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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

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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

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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

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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

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1:18:26

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1:18:30

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1:18:34

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1:18:36

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