The Scam Behind the World’s Richest Dog | Gunther VI Ep 328

06-02-26

Episode Transcript

00:00 Hey man, what's up? Happy to be here. Have you ever heard of Gunther the sixth? No, but I know the other five. I can tell you a lot about Gunther for 00:17 oh and that's making you unhappy. It's hard to be happy when everybody goes happy when you look like hitler. I like when I see Alex's eyes kind of light up where he goes a little lines going in the intro things I learned last night. 00:47 go to the six. Let's start here. Actually in twenty twenty one, this feels too recent to be a sixth. You got to quit doing that. I feel like third is the max third is the max. What if what if you're from a long line of people who just keep renaming names? That's bad, dumb wrong should end. If you're from oh, what if you're from a long line? Stop you right there, stop the lie right in the light because isn't it so finish the blood patch of homes named his kid 01:17 Patrick, right? Yeah, and Patrick Mahomes is the second. Yeah, so his son is the third. The third, feel like is acceptable because you don't want to be junior. Yeah, so you name your kid also and it gets you out of being junior. Yeah, now you're at the second. Yeah, you know, yeah, but after that, Patrick Mahomes, the third should not should probably choose a different name. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, or his kid could be Patrick Mahomes, the fourth. That is how that would go or 01:46 the obvious option. Are you? you? These people are stupid. Do you think people are stupid? um well, the option is to choose a different name or 01:58 or he could be the fourth or he could be George W. Bush. He could be is what I'm saying. This is my kid George W Bush Mahomes. Wait, is his first name George W. All one word George W. Bush and it's not a W. It's the word W W, but not it phonetic G E O R G E D O U B L E you 02:25 E-U-S-H. 02:30 George W. Bush people call him W for short because that's the part of that. That's the easiest part that people remember anyways. So in 2021 02:43 in twenty twenty one Miami. A state was left listed for sale. Okay, for thirty. This is the style of house that my wife wants. By the way, tell her how much it costs thirty one million dollars. We ain't got that. ah And so yeah, it was listed for thirty one million dollars and this made worldwide headlines because the seller, the owner of this home was Gunther the sixth and this is Gunther the sixth. ah He's a uh he's a he's a you want to describe this image to 03:11 sure another picture of them. can describe this image to our list. Anyone who's not watching yeah, if you're not watching, he's got a necklace on and he's like his hair is like brownish reddish black, a bit of black. Yeah, coloration big German vibes for sure. He's got his tongue hanging out crazy for a picture professional photo like this. Yeah, so go on about 03:36 I like the idea of leaving the audio listener in the dark like how long can we do that? Like can we leave it not very long because it's pretty okay. He's a dog. He's a German Shepherd. You know why and that's where I'm fine. I'm fine if he names one of his dogs the seven. Do you know 03:58 if he wants to name one of his pups and that's another thing that weird people do is they call their kids their pups. That's why your these are my pups. You know I kind of like that. Oh you know mama bears love doing that with my cubs protected my cubs. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I bet you are you protect them from from all the scary stuff at target. All right, Rarely are those people protecting their cubs from diabetes. I'll tell you what yeah, man comes love diabetes. 04:29 so gunth I hate the videos online or it's like the mom is feeding the kids the horrible stuff. Yeah, I mean it's like help me make here. Watch me make breakfast for my four kids and it's just like stuff. You're like, my gosh, dogs and tricksy and then all the comments will be like the comments will be like good on you for feeding you. You know, keep those babies fed mama. You know that kind of stuff. Yikes. That's the stuff that you're like. Yeah, no, you know. No, yeah, it is interesting like 04:58 You know, you know something interesting that happened to me today actually? uh So, my whole life, I've been like a hardcore show person, so I like hang out at bars a lot, outside the bar, and everybody's smoking. That's something that people in that scene do, they smoke cigarettes. And so it's become a thing pretty quickly where like, it doesn't bother me. 05:20 usually don't really even notice it. It's very normal. No, we need is a total side tangent on your side. But you know how liquid death made water that looks like alcohol that you could be drinking a liquid death and people were like, oh, he's chill. It's a beer, right? Beer because people were like, look, there's hydrate and water. Give him goth water to feel better. Right? We need liquid death cigarettes. Yeah. So what is it? Like, what are you? Is it just like a little like 05:48 It's like a liquid IV. It's like a tiny amount of water. No, I mean like you're doing, you know, you're doing like it's like the clothes cigarettes. One of the movies or you're not doing anything that's like hurtful, but it's just it's just fun to pretend you're just like, but then you don't get ostracized standing outside of the scene. 06:06 Here's the thing, here's the thing. I never thought, I never had a problem with it. I honestly thought people who had a problem with it were kind of weird. I was like, whatever, if you don't want to do life answer, like whatever. like, I don't know. And I've always kind of been of the mindset that like, even like people with kids, I'm like, yeah, they're going to be around cigarette smoke. Like it's part of life, you know? Like you can't really avoid it. Today, I was driving back from the doctor's appointment with my son and we had the windows down because it's a nice day. Pulled up next to his car, smoking a lot. 06:36 and there was this like animal deep inside me that was like you need to go smash that guy's teeth into a steering wheel for smoking near your kid. I didn't do that, but we know, but but it's so like I all like I never thought I would care. Yeah, I could do it. I could smash that guy's face into a steering wheel. Describe the other guy first. I couldn't see him like and then you were like I got to roll the windows up in my car to save my kid. 07:12 you to get out, go back to his window. You crawling over to get out of your password or the bed. I get to roll it. You know, I understand the it's because your car sucks. I know the bit. I know what maybe it wasn't the guy next to you. Maybe your car was on fire like this guy, but then you assault this guy for smoking. I wasn't even smoking your car was so and that's what sucks man. Anytime you're near somebody who smokes like you just smell 07:37 Mm-hmm. Yeah, it's hard to like you can't help but yeah, it's crazy. You open the door and it just wass into you. Whoa. And that's never bothered me before. But now to my surprise, I can't stand it. To my surprise. I really like that happened today. And then I drove away and I was like, huh, interesting. Because I was like, didn't I my whole life. was like, I want to care. I almost went full Mama Bear and I was like the red light. 08:04 it did. It did genuinely make me angry. So Gunther owns a house and this is what sucks. So come to the six. Here's the thing. I know that I'm older than that guy. I don't like when younger people are are further than I am. He's the thing. Gunther the six is the Guinness world record holder of as the wealthiest dog. He has a net worth of four hundred million dollars. Yeah. And so he this is his life. He's got a personal chef 08:32 he has an entourage. uh He has an entourage as a private jet. He's having a little cocktail as a yacht. He has a human attached to him. That guy probably has something to do with the money right, and so he is living. He has a staff of twenty seven. He's got multiple properties all over the world. Sure, uh 08:55 How is this legally? It's not legally in the dogs name. There's no way. Yeah, it is. It's how it's an irrevocable trust. We learned about that in last week's episode. Okay, so here's a story. Here's a story of gut there. I'll give you his story. Is he a clone? Is that why he's the sixth? No, no. Okay, so some people do that. Yeah, that clone their dogs. No, not this, not gunther. Would you do that? Would I clone my dog? No, I are good enough to be cloned. 09:22 He's a good dog. Gunther. What'd you call your dog? Probably not. He's not genetically a good dog. 09:32 He's not genetically came from his let it leave the gene pool. That's horrible. That's a horrible thing to say about your dog. I can't believe you just said that about your dog. That's a little like you just said. I hope that my dog's genes leave the gene pool. You just said that. I hope the breeder that he came from is more responsible. Hey, there you go. That's a better way to say it. Yeah. But it's also doesn't mean the same thing. Um, so ah 10:00 here's the I like the idea of me saying something and then being like I can't believe you just said that I did it. You said that I kid. I believe you just said that so in 1992 there was a woman by the name of Carolotta Liebenstein, Carolotta Carolotta Carolotta Liebenstein and the interesting thing about her is she was a German countess and let me see. I got a picture of her in here. Here she is 10:30 with her dog Gunther the third. uh and in 1992 she passed away and here's the thing about Carolotta. She was a countess, very wealthy woman. uh Her husband had already passed away. Her son was a huge soccer fanatic, wanted to go pro in soccer, played like for a youth like feeder team that was going into a professional team. His name was actually Gunther. He had a dog named Gunther. How do you feel? How would you feel? What do you mean? It's like 11:01 Okay, I'm just out right there. His name is also Gunther. Okay, his name was Gunther. He had a dog out of confusion when she died. Here's the thing. This is all left to Gunther. He's like, that's me and the lawyers are like, but that dog is also Gunther and he's like, no, no, no. She obviously meant to leave the trust to leave it to me and they were like, this is too hard to tell her 11:27 No, so got their gun there. He had a dog and he named his dog Gunther the second. ah But when he was a young man, like early 20s, I've never said young man before, like a young man. It was also a stupid thing to be like, imagine. 11:46 I know I'm I know I'm going to imagine you. You know you go over to somebody's house like what's up man? You don't know gun through that well. You just met gun there. You're like what's up? You guys you met while you were smoking outside and gun well gun there. You know you're not comfortable enough yet. You don't know that well. Yeah, it's your first time at his house. He's like yeah, he's German. It's actually pronounced good. This is my gunter and this is my is my girlfriend Amber and this is our dog gunter 12:16 You're like... 12:22 got there. It is pretty crazy to name your dog. I'm saying that's that's where he's being like. Well, he had a dog named gun to the second obviously and so the cat like you're just trying to gloss over it like that's not an insane person thing to do. Yeah, you're right. You're I feel like that's a bit that we've done in the show before where it's like a I'm Tim. This is Tim 12:48 you're like what speaking of Tim's, know we're too far from the story. Tell it later. All right, I'll tell you later. I'll tell you now. Let me tell you now. I was talking to my dad this morning, whose name is also Tim. By the way, I feel like that's a relevant thing to this is that he's not Tim Jr, because they did different middle names. All right, we're both Tim and then your dad was like your. know your dad was sitting there being like. I hope he names this kid Tim and just name him like a different J middle 13:17 you know yeah, just like there's Timothy John and Timothy James. He can be Timothy, Jay John's. He could be Timothy John, Timmy John Timothy John, can be Jimmy John's take it. I should have named him to that's okay. Dude, you can name your second. I don't know what which is just awful. Oh yeah, this is my second kid. 13:47 Tim, what's your first kids name? Not to yeah, it's not. We actually legally changed the first kids name to not Tim. All one word in O T T I M don't pronounce it. Not them. It's not not them. It's not. It's not Tim. There's a glottal stop in there. Not Tim, a galore stop. That's what it's called. That's the technical term. His name is not go. I'll stop him in O T 14:17 gee, I don't know, as bug a lot. Also, I stopped with it. No, so my dad, my dad's, I don't even know if that's a real word. You just said it and I repeated it. It's a real word. That's lot. That's the influence you have over me. So your dad, Tim, I told me the story today. He's your mom, three siblings, him. He's the youngest of three siblings. I told all named to 14:46 My dad's the youngest of three. He said when he was four years old, so his brothers would have been six and seven. He said they convinced him that if he ate dog treats, like they would make him faster. And he says he remembers like opening up the thing of dog treats and he's like, this smells really bad. And they're like, that's the thing that makes you fast. Like that's why dogs get so strong. He's like, they eat the treats and it makes them fast. And what they would do is he would eat it and then they would go and they would lose to him like unintentionally to convince him. 15:14 And like they sprung this joke along where they'd be like outside playing football and they'd let him score because they're like, well, we got to keep that. We got to the doctor. We got to keep going. We can't. can't. I want to win, like I keep the doctor. What's more important? The doctorate. And he believed that until he was 24 years old. I gotta make me fast. I love. I love. It's so diabolical for a six and seven year old to be like, give him doctorates. 15:43 and then lose on purpose to keep giving them dog kids are crazy. Kids are wild, insane. Okay, so uh so okay, so she's got so Carolotta Carolotta who cares a lot of and her son Gunther has the dog gone to the second okay wants to be a soccer player like gone to the second is the first dog though. Yes, gone to the second stuff. Got it Gunther is the first right first got to the human is the first on third human. Yeah, I got the human 16:13 Anyways, so he wants to go pro in soccer, a big soccer fanatic. uh But when he's in his early twenties, he's third second is the one who made the team. There's no rule that a dog that says a dog can't play soccer or sorry, there's no rule that a dog can't play football. It was there in Germany. 16:39 I know exactly what you're doing right now. I'm so mad already. I'm like pretty bad and it's gonna work on me and I'm so mad about it. Okay, whatever. Anyways, so Gunther and his in his early twenties, he struggled on and off with depression and he ends up taking his own life and so I was a pretty hard pivot. So the mom was such a hard. So Gunther's mom takes in gun to the second. It's really sad that the second has a little puppies and she names one of them gun to the third and then years later in ninety two 17:09 She passes away and she has no heirs. And so she leaves her entire fortune to Gunther the Third. And in that trust, she outlines some pretty like strict guidelines of like what the caretakers of Gunther were to do with And this is where? This is in Germany. Yeah. And so she leaves $400 million to her dog. And within that uh trust, the law said they had to like maintain the bloodline. And so like, 17:38 Gunther the third had to have a fourth and had to have a fifth and had that in it. So right that lineage had to continue on and the money would just continue being passed down through Gunther's indefinitely right until it runs out because I don't know if you know this about dogs. Not great. The earning potential is just really not really bad with budgets. Yeah, super fast though, because the treats because the cheats they eat a lot of treats to the quick 18:07 They're so good at football. Yeah. Yeah. 18:14 get it because because it's funny because like they play like in Germany it's called football right 18:36 Tim is really mad about how funny this is. I don't know the comments are going to be like Jaren's really mean to Tim, which one 18:57 Hey, thanks for watching our show. you like it, a great way to help out is by being a Patreon supporter. Doing that helps make this show possible, but it also gets a lot of perks for you. You can get every episode a week early ad free. You get access to a Discord where you can meet a lot of other people who love the show and actually hang out with Jaren and I every month on a hangout. And we're also in that Discord chat all the time, hanging, talking with people, talking about episodes and just random stuff in life. It's super fun. 19:20 We do, there's a way to get birthday messages, a free gift, merch discounts in there. So there's a lot of really great reasons to be a Patreon supporter. You get a lot of benefits out of it. And it also makes the show keep happening. So if that sounds great to you, you can go to support.tilling.com or tilling.com slash support, uh or just tilling.com and search around until you find the links and become a Patreon supporter. really appreciate you doing that. But if not, right back to the episode, right? 19:48 So in this trust, she outlines like how to use the money. And so like a good chunk of it is going to caretaking the dog. So she literally is like defines the staff of 27. And so he has a personal chef. I don't get hired by this dog. What do mean? You know, how do you apply for who's, know, so it's funny you say that uh he has this whole staff, like the things you expect, like a trainer, a personal chef. 20:13 like a vet, like all the things you would expect, a groomer. There's a vet on staff. Yeah, a vet on staff that takes care of his health. A breeder who's going to maintain the bloodline. But then there's some other things that don't make a lot of sense. One, he has a spokesperson. And the spokesperson was actually approached. He had, for a long time, the spokesperson. And I think I actually have a picture of him in here. I think he is in this posse. Yeah, so the guy in the top left corner, he's a spokesman. Okay. Or spokesperson. 20:41 And he was like an aspiring actor and he had auditioned for some stuff and the auditioning director was like, I actually know these guys looking for a spokesperson. I think you'd be a good fit for that. And so he got hired by them and he's been the spokesperson for like 30 years now. Okay. Speaking for Gunther, guess, publicly. Yeah. It's crazy. They also have like researchers. They've got a team of scientists that are researching Gunther. 21:10 like I was like Brian Johnson kind of stuff like where it's like. Okay, how do we how do we make sure this this this dog is healthy because what happens what if like he doesn't have any errors and then he dies? Well, that's the point that you have the breeders and so the breeders are always maintaining a next to kin for Gunther and so Gunther the sixth is who sold this house that I talked about in twenty twenty one K and so this is earlier. I think the sixth in this picture is the youngest one actually. Oh okay and so 21:38 They always have a series of puppies behind them that will take the fortune whenever uh the current Gunther passes on to the next life. 21:51 so good and then this is so crazy and then in the in the in the trust one day Gunther got an email from God. They have lawyers, he has lawyers and then he has oh him pushing through means something happening. Okay, okay, okay, okay, okay. He has financial planners that are managing like the finances of the trust yeah and then there is this like key figure ahead in the middle. You saw his picture earlier. Yeah, this guy by the name of Maritio me and 22:25 describe this picture. So this picture is of what's his name? Maritza on me and Maritza. Whatever looking straight out of the camera. He's an older guy. He's got a mustache that is just over the limit. Just I mean like it. He looks like who you think we're talking about, but it's 22:50 but the mustache is just big enough, just big enough to be like, it's not that guy, but it's close. And so, uh, you know, so he's got, but he's looking like, like, uh, like a seriously looking straight ahead, very serious, straight, very serious Italian. And then also being just slobberly licked on the cheek by this dog, which I think is photoshopped. 23:17 in right. I can't. It looks like maybe it's photoshopped. Yeah, I believe that it might not be photoshopped. It might be like retouched like I think like they might have accentuated the tongue a little bit here and added. That's what I mean is like I don't think the lighting on the tongue looks correct to the picture. Yeah, I think it's like this is a solid head shot that they then you know start another tried to put the dog. Yeah, that could that's the idea. This is probably his cover photo on Facebook. 23:47 And so Marithio Mian is the like executor of the estate. He is the CEO of what they call the Gunther Group, which is the company, like the corporation that runs Gunther's life. everything about this company is to give the current existing Gunther the best life possible. And so they got yachts, they got private jets, they have homes in Italy, Miami, California, all over the world and like. 24:13 desirable beachside locations with beautiful views. And then there's like some other things in this dress that are a little strange. One of the things was, I guess Gunther loved music. And so they were supposed to build a Gunther the dog music group. And... 24:40 and so they put it on third the dog music group, so they in the nineties they they can't and the night they try. I went on busy and I trademarked it for seven hundred forty nine dollars so and so it's on the nineties. They tried to put out a house album with Gunther and so it's it's house music, but occasionally Gunther barks on the track. 25:26 I was like I know where I'm going with this bit and it's never to a drop. I'll tell you that, but they 25:35 they in the nineties they put together this this house album and they tried to sell it and nobody would we have any audio of that. I don't have any audio. I might exist out there somewhere. I don't have any audio of it. It was very bad allegedly. And so they tried again in the early 2000s and this time they said what if we make like put together a pop group um where it's like not a boy band because it's men and women but we put together a group of young ah singles and we put together a pop group. So they started what they call the Burgundians uh 26:05 And so it is this group of people ah that we're going to produce music and we're going to tour the world. I'm going to say something controversial. OK. 26:16 All of these people look like they're doing drugs. 26:25 I mean, I'm so serious though. Look at their eyes. Yeah, I'm yeah, you know what I'm saying? Like look at his eyes in the back. Yeah, and then look at her, her eyes on the her eyes over here. Looks like yeah, I'm be honest with you. It looks like they're doing drugs. We'll get there and so and this was this is also the Burgundians because here's the thing about the Burgundians is it wasn't one set group of five 26:53 it. They were constantly auditioning people in and cycling people in and out and sending them on tours, and so you will go see the Burgundians. I don't know how many people ever went and saw the Burgundians, but you would go to a Burgundians show in Atlanta and it'd be a completely different group than was it in New Orleans because they were sending different people at different right there, like twenty people that were in the Burgundians. It's like Santas, very so 27:21 is actually just or the news boys. You know they're always different depending way year you go. That's a that's not the same way you know um and so they uh here's a thing they put together these Burgundians and then they moved to Miami and they bought that house sold and they were thirty one million dollars. They sold it for thirty one million. They bought it from Madonna in two thousand. This is Madonna and the dog yeah 27:52 so that was literally Madonna's house. She bought it. They bought it for seven point five. Yeah, so they made a good pro pay to the order of and that's crazy in that while page, the order of Madonna and then the the signature is a crazy wacky font. This is Gunther and then a little paw print because the dog signed it. Wow, they had this big ceremony and there's the spokesman there with his necklace. Yep, yep. 28:20 and because it's never a list is and so they it looks oh what they're all wearing. I get it. They're very thick necklaces but it's like we're all wearing collars. You know it's like that's the bit. Yeah. So they move into Madonna's house. Yeah. And another thing that was strange about the trust move into Madonna's house is they take these 20 to 30 28:50 20 something singles that are the Burgundians and move them into Madonna's house with Gunther. And there's a line in the trust that, and I think this is because what happened to her son is that they were supposed to use a portion of Gunther's wealth to research happiness and what causes happiness. And there was like a list of ways you do this. So this is what the scientists were doing is they had all these 20 something singles and they basically- saying the singles. That's like the most important thing about them. 29:19 all these twenty something singles. Yeah, okay, it's like a yeah, whatever and so the scientists basically were twenty four seven surveilling these singles. These twenty something just say the twenty somethings. Why is it about how what is about their relationship status that defines? I know. I can't just I can't talk all of twenty something singles. Okay, it's a thirty something married 29:48 so they're watching everything that happens in this house, this guy and like they have cameras everywhere, but they're also like there. So like there's a lot of footage, okay, video footage from the house from this time where like stuffs going on with their bug, I mean so like in the pool or at dinner, they're hanging out for gun beans and in the background you see a guy in a lab coat with a clipboard just taking notes about what's happening. 30:19 Hey, how many? How many mojitos have you had for? Would you call yourself happy or sad? Would you rate your current state of singleness? Okay, and so essentially what they did is they created this imaginary world where they all were getting stipends. So they were all wealthy, kinda like they were living in this. Well, they were all in, but they a wealthy life. They got to live this wealthy lifestyle, getting good stipends. And then they had like every need taking care of them. They had 30:49 healthy food, they had a disciplined exercise routine that they had to do every day. They obviously weren't in the public eye-ish, and so they got to do these performances and shows. And then they would have these big parties that they would throw where it's like they could relish in the party lifestyle. And the idea was we're gonna do all these things, take away all the stresses of life from these people, give them all the fun stuff. Give them everything. And see if that makes them happy and what has the most impact on their happiness. 31:18 Oh, is this episode about to get like real and it's interesting. You said like they all look like they have been doing drugs because like they supplied them with drugs because they're like do drugs make you happy? Yeah, it's the it's the eyes do and like did they pay for her plastic surgery up top or those just like for the picture. She was just sitting there pinching her cheeks. Yeah, the and then this old guy 31:46 and then this old guy, the old guy also lived in the house and so yeah, I gathered that and I imagine that he's taken some liberty with the details of the trust. He definitely he let me see if he's not in this picture, not in this one. Let's see in this one, not in this one. Well, I don't know if I have a picture of her. He married one of the Burgundians. Well, actually he married two the because they got a divorce. They married another one 32:15 That's what I'm saying, and so he was that was pretty obvious. We could tell yeah, you're right. That's fair, and so he divorced the other one because she turned twenty four. You're too. I hate when they do that. Now you're not a twenty something single. Yes, as soon they start dating, he's like, you my girlfriend, she's like, yeah, no, get out of here. You're ruining the experiment. You just got fired. They had these the trust outlined 32:45 these 13 commandments. And so in the commandment was stuff like this. said, you can all have the gods you choose just as long as they don't set upset your enjoyments. Only those who enjoy life will go to heaven. Crazy. And so stuff like that, that's like you do all these things. And so as things like maintaining physical fitness, eating, health, not having any stress. And so like they had to hot. 33:09 Yeah and eat healthy, do a little bit of drugs, do a little bit of drugs and abandon any religious thoughts that you brought into here. This feels like I know where it's going and so life for the Burgundians became what they described an endless festival and so every day was a party like they did have like things that they were supposed to do. They're supposed to work out, they're supposed to eat healthy, they're supposed to go do their press things, but for the most part they just hung around this mansion all the time with all their needs met and just 33:39 did whatever seemed fun as long as they fell in line with the 13 commandments. And let me tell you, the 13 commandments were basically just hedonism. so this went on for years in Miami ah until a handful of the Burgundians started to feel weird about the fact that they were being watched all the time by scientists. And they kind of started- And also what do you do after? 34:03 Yeah, I mean my resume says for seven years I lived at a house in Miami at the behest of a dog. Yeah, I was. I was a research. I was a research research. Yeah, I was participating in a research study run by a dog. His dog was trying to see what makes you was happy and turns out I was never happy. So they fired me. Okay, 34:31 and so yeah, so so yeah, so the backyard agains are like we don't want to do this anymore. 34:41 so yeah, so this kind of a bunch of them leave and take like to the press and the press is like there's some weird stuff going on in this dog's house and so they didn't sell the house, but they moved back to Italy and they live full time in Italy. The dog, yeah, the dog and the staff, the whole staff, the dog and they try it again and they were like, all right, we're going to be an American, 20 something singles, a new group of Italian, 20 something singles. 35:12 Hey, thanks for listening to this episode of things. I learned last night. If you liked the show, you want to support us, we've got merchandise that you can get and it's good stylish stuff that I made. put a lot of work into this stuff, so it's great to find other tilling fans in the wild and be like, wait a minute. I know that shirt. And so yeah, we would love for you to do that. You can pop over to shop.tillin.com or the QR code or there's a link in the description. There's plenty of ways to find it. We promise we made it super easy. So thanks for supporting the show and thanks for listening. 35:42 and it's the same thing. It's the same scheme. The one thing that changed though. Well, I guess there's two things that changed one. uh They put it on TV in Italy. It was like a reality TV show is like watch all these twenty seven singles try to be happy and science. Science tests are watching them. Okay, like it was like real life, weird life uh and also a dog owns the house, uh but then they gave them these neckless guys. What about this is crazy. What if we do like the real world? 36:15 but it's like a dog owns the house like a real world. It's not like the real world at all. Okay, okay. Is there anything else to the idea? No, you're not. No, you're not getting. let me close. Yeah, got that part, but like you like walk me through it a little like flesh. I don't think we're a good fit. 36:39 So they take this show to TV. And then they also, all the Burgundians, they gave them these necklaces that were pretty big medallion type necklaces. And they kind of looked like, remember those Simon Says games? They kind of looked like that where they had different colors and that was like their mood. And the scientists were watching them and moving the colors. Well, the scientists were watching them and they had remotes and they would move their necklaces to change like their, I guess you could call it score. 37:06 And so what they had to do is they had to get the happiness one to the top, like the most lit and so they were everything they did was to try to get this thing lit all the way up and they would just wear it around all the time on this show. Okay, so someone else observing you is to being like not enough and then you go it's like doing you're like oh no. Oh, I felt pretty happy about that. not happy enough. I guess I'm not very happy. How's your day going? I 37:35 I was. It was pretty good until I saw this thing. The but the light go down pretty good. I pretty good. I guess with the light like if you look at the look at the thing really great, a really great day to this day there to this day. They're like at breakfast with their spouse and like how you doing? Oh hey, hey Tim, none of these got married. They're at breakfast with their friend with their long time live in partner because now they are all afraid of getting married. 38:05 so they do this. Meanwhile, Gunther goes around Europe and buys up a bunch of soccer teams ah yeah like and and he's a great negotiator. You wouldn't believe it dude. He buys this as soon as he's in the boardroom. People are like who you can have and then they just like their guard is that then someone goes hey, here's the deal and they go. Well, that's not a good. Oh, you are a good boy. You are. Yeah, I think it's like crazy deals dude. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, 38:34 it's the secret to sales. Yeah, there you go like the book. This have a dog with the book. The secret is the whole book and then the end is like oh yeah and forget everything else. Just buy a dog and bring it to negotiations um and so he one of the one of the companies he bought or I guess one of the teams he caught but was the piece a cult calcio, um which is the women's football club there. It was a very popular club and 39:00 Gunther became the president of the club and they had the whole teams and that year they actually won the championship. It was like a whole big deal like Gunther on the dog team wins the dog team wins. It was a true life air bud. It kind of they had it backwards. He didn't play on the field. He had to in upper management. Yeah, he had the whole thing. It was up in the suites. I should every day the dog owns the 39:25 the dog owns the team. It's not air, but air by the dog plays at a local youth. You didn't know this dog is a ruthless deal maker. This dog owns the Dallas Cowboys. I don't know how I can make this more obvious to you. You're not getting it. It's just seeds of this dog freaking cat brains to fire. Oh God, cutting players, cat brains and 39:52 Then the following year after the championship, there is a little bit of a scandal. One of the players on the women's soccer team, there is this big press interview. There is a very controversial politician who's running for office and she kisses this politician and this press release and Gunther was so offended. He sold the team backed out of his endorsement of the way. What? This was a real thing. This is a way. What? 40:18 what happened? Say it again. So one of the players on the team I was trying to make a joke that Gunther Gunther made like I was gonna be like and then Gunther tweeted. You know I was I was trying to think of a joke to say for that and then you were like someone kissed someone who kissed who so so one of the players on that women's soccer team the the piece of calcium she was at this like press briefing and there was a very controversial politician who was running for office that 40:48 a lot of public despise and she kissed him at this press conference. and Gunther was deeply offended, so Gunther sold his shares in the my mouth, kissed him, yes, mouth kiss. I didn't know if it was like a kiss his cheek or something. Oh, I thought you bet like she used her mouth to get so I was like what are they gonna kiss? He thinks we're dumb. By the way, Tim is always the kind of person who's just like am I the smartest person? He straight up just thinks everyone's around him dumb and he's like yeah, mouth kiss 41:16 Yeah, of course, she you think I was just used her mouth to get some done. What else? What else is she going to use to get them? So now, so yeah, so she kisses this politician gunther's deeply offended. Okay, sells the team. It's this whole thing. It's a huge got it and he puts out this big press briefing of what year is this now? um I don't know what year this happened sometime in the two thousand sure um and so he's going around. He's going around the basic moral of the story. 41:45 is they're doing these weird experiments. He's going around the world buying businesses and properties and starting things. have. Well, because they have to expand that money. You can't just live out, you know? Yeah, yeah, yeah. There's investments going on. so and they also have this. What's the word I want to use? They have a breeder they're using and the breeder is breeding a bloodline for um for Gunther. And it's not just like they're getting one, they're getting 42:14 awful like puppy mill, essentially of Gunther's yeah and then they're choosing the top of the pack to be the sure there. The rest of them become like competition dogs and so like they're competing in these these god like the pre yeah. So yeah, you watch the best show movie no oh you watch best in show. Oh, that's that ass Disney Channel movie. No, no, it's a no. It is a it's an improvised movie and it's uh 42:43 you know Eugene. How do you say it? Levy, Levy, Oh really? Yeah and Catherine O'Hara and in this is early two thousands and they've been working together for a long time and it's best in show. It's like it's like the Thanksgiving dog show and it's a bunch of improv. You'll know you'll improv. Yeah, you'll know a lot of people. I didn't know it was improv. I mean I've heard of this movie like I've seen it. Yeah, it's improv the way curb is is improv. 43:10 yeah. Here's what's happening scene, but there's not a script most yeah. Most of the dialogue is just made up. That's fun, interesting. It's a I mean it's it's every wash it a lot. It's fun, Eugene's teeth yeah, it's in a crazy yeah, but and they do the same bit for modern family where like everywhere they go. You know people I forget her name and I forget Catherine. I hear his character's name, but they're always like I think it's like Trudy or Judy's and like yeah Trudy. You know in the modern family with like player 43:40 Yeah, they do the same bit. It's fun. That's fine. like that. Yeah. So essentially the picture I'm trying to paint is is Gunther's all over the world, flying in private jets, riding on yachts, multi-million dollar properties, buying multi-million dollar companies and doing these like large transactions, not just transactions, like events like they're throwing galas and they're doing like big public appearances with politicians and celebrities and it just like larger than life. Yeah. Lifestyle for this. 44:09 dog and appearing on TV throughout the nineties. There's there are segments where Mauricio appears on TV with the dog and they do these specials all over the world, like not just uh in like local like in Italy or Miami. Like they're going globally to appear on TV show. am that mustache man. I mean he really he is a really looks like he looks like it at all. 44:33 he looks too much like him to be like I'm going to trust some mustache like grow the full beard out. He looks he has the same facial shape. Yeah, yeah. Do we think that that's what certain 44:49 What are you trying to say here? Are you trying to say, don't think that that's like, might be a second. And then in 2008, have you heard of Lichtenstein? No. So Lichtenstein is a very famous tax haven. Okay. In 2008, there is the famous Lichtenstein tax scandal because a disgruntled 45:19 bank employee leaks a bunch of documents from Liechtenstein exposing uh all of the worldwide elites who have hidden their money there. Money hidden in Liechtenstein. And something very interesting that comes out in this is within Liechtenstein, the banks there, Mauricio Mian has an account worth $400 million, but he's not supposed to be rich. The dog is supposed to be rich. He is just the handler. 45:48 and so Marizio this guy bleeding the money well over the course of a couple over the course of almost a decade, very slow journalism was able to track down this story line uh to then in twenty twenty three, a group of journalists put together a documentary that is now on Netflix called Gunther's millions. It's a three part series, pretty good documentary. Is it worth it though? 46:16 I hate when I watch three parts and they go, that should have been a 90 minute. It is worth it. I will say I also hate when I watch a 90 minute and I go, that should have been three parts. No, it is worth it. It was, it was, was really good. One thing I will say we're a family from podcast that wasn't a family friendly. Yeah, of course. Yeah. And the stuff in the, the, yeah. Also when I say family friendly, this means we're not cussing. It doesn't mean I like your family to be clear. Family friendly comedy means like, I'm not going to say inappropriate stuff. It doesn't mean I like. 46:44 I'm not like, I'm friendly with your family. Yeah, you know, I actually I'll say it. I hate your family. 46:52 don't know what this bit is. I hate them. uh And so throughout the course of that documentary, and basically a decade worth of uh investigative reporting, it comes out that this storyline of the German Countess is completely made up. There is no Gunther I who took his life. There is no Countess. All of it is a complete fabrication because Maurizio was the heir 47:21 to a pharmaceutical uh corporation. His mother owned this massive pharmaceutical conglomerate and he was the heir to that empire. And when he inherited it, his mom did not want him to have to pay taxes. So they were going to put this into the tax shelter in Liechtenstein. But they realized that that was tax evasion. And so to try to throw people off of the scent, they created this fictional countess. 47:51 Carefully done. 47:55 And they grew with this storyline of the younger Gunther. And in the storyline, he grew up with Gunther. He's close friends with Gunther. And that's how he has the relationship and his name's the air, because he knew him and he knew the dog. And so he was placed over the job to take care of him. And then they made this trust. And within that trust, they were like, we got to make it really weird. So everyone just thinks, oh, this is a really eccentric multimillionaire who wanted her money to go to weird things. So they created this massive, crazy trust. 48:23 all to hide his wealth that he inherited from his mom, so he does not have to pay taxes on it. Oh my gosh! And he thought... These are the lengths that people will go to, by the way. And he thought, if we just make the storyline weird enough, no one will look into it. And it worked. And it worked for so long. For like 30 years, no one looked into And then he actually, he got caught as a byproduct of another thing, though. Yeah. Like someone wasn't investigating him and found that out. No, no, yeah. It was somebody who just was disgruntled employee, leaked all these documents. 48:53 And that's how this ended up all coming out. And what's really interesting in the documentary, they interview him, they have the whole thing. There's a lot of stuff that goes on. And then they bring up Lichtenstein and you can see he's doesn't want to talk about it. You see he's like angry. Oh, he's in the dock. Okay. Yeah. And you can see, he doesn't want to talk about it. They interview like his ex-wives and they're like, need to talk to him about that. His lawyer, like the staff, no one will talk about it. And then it keeps coming up. And then eventually they bring it back up and he's like, okay, I'll talk to you about it. And he basically just confesses the whole scheme. 49:22 and he's like he's like yeah, like this was a tax evasion scheme and like in outlines how there was no gunther. I was wondering was the dog paying taxes no, no, absolutely not social security number. There's that that's the benefit is a dog can't sign anything on their own. A dog, a dog sign that check to Madonna. I saw a dog side that checked on my bad. 49:48 I was going to be mad for a second. I was like this guy stealing from a dog. No, no, the dog was just the tax. Hey, this guy just likes German shepherds. Yeah, well, and here's the crazy thing is no one in the house knew no, none of the staff. There are staff members who are like I started to be curious about what was going on. The lawyers definitely knew obviously because it's like their job is definitely new. and their staff was like I started to have some some questions about this. 50:13 and what it basically and he just like surrounding himself with young people. This whole thirteen commandments thing in this whole happiness study was really just a way for him to fund a actual lifestyle yeah and he could act like oh I'm just doing what it's research wants to do. I'm just what the dog wants to do and what it is becoming kind of sad. The dog wants us to kiss 50:41 I mean if the dog wants you to kiss me, I mean I guess if the dog wants it, the dog would like us to get married. 50:51 the dog now the dog wants us to get divorced so because he wants me to marry her. The dog says you have to give me five hundred dollars. I don't know the dog said I'm as that is when I'm just doing what the dog said. my job is do what the dog says and it is actually when you as the story goes on actually becomes kind of sad because he struggled with depression throughout his life and Gunther in the story. 51:18 was actually like an alter ego of him. Yeah, and it's like the happiness study probably was him trying. It was him trying to be like, how do I become happy? Yeah, and so he was trying to pay a bunch of people to make him have wow. That's so he was. don't feel bad for him at all and that crazy. I hope I he spent his whole life. That guy spent his whole life hiding his money somewhere and trying to find happiness and I hope he never never finds it. Here's what's crazy. Here's what's crazy. Well, I'll tell you two things that are crazy. We got out of here. Yeah, I know. Hold on. I got to show you two things. One uh 51:48 All this stuff came out and nothing happened. Guinness Book of World Records took back their record. from Rich's Dog. You're going to keep that record. They're like, oh, it was just the guy. A bunch of like. It was just the Hitler lookalike. We all think that, buddy. all thought you did. You know what would help you? You know what would get you happiness? Shave that thing. Shave it off. The mustache. The reason you're unhappy is that people, they first see you, everybody sees you and they go, whoa. Whoa. OK, you're not. You're not. They all go, ah. 52:18 and that's making you unhappy. It's hard to be happy when everybody goes well, I'm be happy when you look like hitler. So 52:32 saw this. like to see Alex's eyes kind of light up where he goes. I was a little lines going in the intro. All this stuff happens. Guess what a roll records revokes their thing a bunch of like newspapers and news companies. They come out and they're like hey, sorry we reported on this stuff. We didn't look into it close enough RB and then nothing else happens. He doesn't get in trouble with the government. He doesn't have to pay back taxes. There's a tax. Everybody's the ways that things were structured. Yeah, everyone's just like whatever man and so now he has a house in La 53:01 And he's doing it again. He's got the House of Gunther. It's a content house in Los Angeles and they're out here making TikToks. And I don't know what his obsession is with trying to like create this like media thing. Wait, I know. I know. You know this house. Have you been there? No, go. I know the guy on the left. I go to play pickleball together. Do you I don't buy this. Yeah. Why would that be real? 53:25 I don't know. You just recently met a guy. You've been playing pickleball with them, so I haven't got nobody was possible. That's the best thing about the and so the documentary is the documentary ends. The credits like start to roll and then it's like and then it stops and it's like I'm trying to is this the right? Can we stop rolling and the filmmakers like yeah and so for sure gamers are off and so he's like he's like I'm trying to figure out the right time to tell you this and he's like but I like the breeder. We're not breeding the dogs. 53:55 clones. And then that's end of the documentary. 54:01 And so like I haven't been able to find anything verifying that they're clones other than he was just like yeah, they're clones Yeah, is the cameras off? Yeah, the cameras off. We're cloning them. Why is that? We're cloning them. I don't know how to tell you this. 54:25 Well fiddle off yeah, are we done? Cool. Hey, I wanted to tell you since we're done with the episode I was gonna tell you about another episode we did about Ida Wood who's a rich lady who hid her finances and she literally had just like zero boxes full of money and stuff. Yeah, we're not recording right? Cool. So if we were recording I would have said like something about Patreon, but you could share this episode that helps us the most. You don't have to financially support us, but you do have to share it. 54:50 Otherwise Gunther will be mad Gunther the dog told you to this episode.


Imagine a dog with a private jet, luxury homes, a personal chef, and hundreds of millions of dollars. It sounds like something from a movie, but for years people believed it was true. The story of Gunther VI captured worldwide attention because he was supposedly the richest dog on Earth. Yet the deeper people looked into the story, the stranger … Read More

God Told Me to Build a Theme Park | American Heartland Ep 327

05-26-26

Episode Transcription

00:00 Hey man, what's that dude? Oh wait, I am happy to be here. Good, good. Yeah. Have you ever heard of uh the American Heartland theme park? The American Heartland theme park? Yes. This is that that's a wait. Is this a no, no, no. Yeah. This is a place that doesn't exist. Yeah. This is a rendering. Yeah. This is what they were gonna maybe try to do in Oklahoma. Is that what they were doing? Yes. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Yeah. And is it, is it not happening? Well, it's not 00:30 Done. I'll you that. I'll tell you it's not done. Yeah. But what park is, you know? What dream is done? You know, like it's never it never is the dream never is. That's kind of what life is. Like no matter how hard you work, no matter how far you go, you're not done yet in the worst way. OK. 00:52 There's an old guy who looks happy and it's because he was rich, but like, you know, he his money, they paid him to leave and he turned it into 100 Pizza Hut franchises. And you know what I did with the money the government gave me? I bought Texas Roadhouse. And that's why I want to die young and sad. And he gets to be old and happy. Things I learned last night. 01:23 so it's not done yet. Yeah, so the American Heartland theme park. um I think let's let's take it to the top of the story. I think yeah, yeah, Explain for the listener who doesn't know what it is. Yeah, in July twenty twenty three, there was this like press. I like this was a cove and idea. I feel like this was something that they were sitting around at home. You know, you know, when people had cove and ideas, people were locked in their houses. They're getting six hundred dollars a week. We were. I was blown in on Texas Roadhouse. I forgot that they did those six hundred a week. 01:54 wasn't it? I mean maybe, maybe you were because you weren't making money from like a job. No, no, no, no. How much was the, was the, what was the extra stimulus on it? I think it was, I don't know. It wasn't every week. I think it was like two $1,200 checks. No, no, no. That was like, but yeah, on unemployment because I was unemployed. Yeah. Unemployment was different. Unemployment was getting, we were getting like 600 bucks a week. That's crazy. I was, and so and you know, if I go back in time, I would have saved a lot more of that money. 02:23 ah But um you know, so this feels like an idea that like they were sitting around doing nothing. Yeah. And they're like guys, yeah. Disney in Oklahoma. I think it's 02:39 Kind of maybe is it in Oklahoma? I don't know where I'm. Yeah. Yeah. So July twenty three. Yeah. A group of developers held this press conference at like a like a hotel like a holiday in conference hall and this press conference they basically unveiled these this master plan for the American Heartland theme park. Yeah. And the plan while this conference first of all the investors look like what you think they would look like by the way. Okay. I'll describe them. 03:08 So they're standing in front of is that like a full model? They built out a whole physical model. Okay, yeah. Yeah. So it's pretty big. And that's what I'm saying. It was like they were like Walt Disney did this. So we did it too. Yeah. No other theme park has built this model like this. And so there are seven people standing, all of them just old white people. And and then there's one guy in the middle who got a spray tan for this event. 03:31 and then the guy next to him is, think representative Billy Long from Missouri. What he looks like. You know who Billy Long is? No, let me even see Missouri's representative Billy Long is from me. He represents my district. Oh, that looks my home district. That does look a lot like him. I look like him. Let me. He looks like a guy who would have owned a rate like a horse racetrack. You know, yeah, pull up a picture of Billy Long. 03:59 because the reason Billy Long's famous. I'll wait to you a picture pulled up of him. I saw him. I looked him up, saw him and compared him to that and I was like this guy might actually be involved. No, no, I know that I don't think I long. I know he's not here. I'll grab him. Hold on. Yeah, grab really long for me. That's not yeah. I'll grab them all grab them. Yeah, 04:25 Okay, I hate crying Billy long. Here's Billy long. Oh frick. I don't know what uh stretched out here. Honestly though, it's what I mean. It didn't. It's not like it did an unjust injustice to him. Here we go. Here's a yeah, that's what he looks like. So Billy long is the representative from like my area in Missouri who is famous for he's an auctioneer. 04:50 Yeah, yeah, that's what it's in on the and but he's in Congress multiple times doing auctioneering done his stupid little auctioneer voice. Yeah, we're like hey, whatever they do and you know go to school for that in that crazy and so this is what he looks like. So anyway, he looks like an oil tycoon. You know, he looks like he looks like the bad guy in robots. He looks like he looks like if they remade Sandlot and then 05:19 there was like a rich company was going to come in and build a theme park on top of that ball. I like that Santa and then he's like the developer. He looks like Doug Dimmadome. He doesn't do that. They don't know of Dodge or whatever. I don't know what did him stone Doug Doug Dimmadome over owner of the Dimsdale Dimmadome. Yes, yeah owner owner of the Dimsdale. Yeah, you know, like the local fat rich guy anyway, the local. Everybody's got one. 05:48 Every town's got a local fat rich dude. So yeah, so that's the crowd. This press conference, they open it with, they had someone uh sing America the Beautiful, obviously. And then they came out and they kind of like introduced everybody and then they introduced their grand plan, which was the American Heartland theme park. Which this park is kind of crazy in like scope. This was gonna be a thousand acre project, which to put it in perspective, 06:18 Disneyland uh Anaheim is 150 acres. So this is unbelievably massive. Wait, how big is Silver Dollar City? Silver Dollar City is 61 acres. So this thing is gigantic. Oh my gosh. ginormous park. And it's located just outside there a bigger theme park? uh Well, I mean, if you take like the Disney World footprint, that's bigger. Well, yeah, but that's five theme Yeah. 06:46 the what I should say, and this is maybe a little misleading. So this project was outside the small town of Vanita, Oklahoma. Yeah. And so if we look at that, know where Vanita is. I'll show you is Vanita, Oklahoma. I do know where I'm not joking. I know where it is because it's on the forty four corridor there. Yeah. So this is about an hour north of Tulsa just up I forty four found this out just a second ago when I was like, I didn't know this. Vanita is this that the the travel stop. Yeah. The yeah. But the McDonald's that goes to the highway, it's not a McDonald's anymore, but 07:16 Yeah, it's a common go. Well, it's a maverick. Things are changing. There's a subway up there. I stop with this quite a bit. Yeah, this place is cool. Cool is yeah, this place is cool. Okay, uh but if you look so Vanita is a small town and then I forty four is where that little Wal-Mart or not Wal-Mart McDonald's is yeah this SMG standard materials group right around this is where they bought the plot line and you can actually see the time of this satellite image. 07:46 See that little square like of concrete across from that? Like right across from the SMG materials group? is... You mean like down or... Straight across the street. Oh, okay, okay, okay. That is like a construction parking lot that they built. So this the time of this photograph was when they were starting. They were starting to build it. So this is like the footprint of it. So you can actually see this. Oh, wow. And so the idea was there was going to be directly across the street from that quarry, the three ponies. It's still going to exist, by the way. Yeah, yeah, 100 percent. 08:14 and so they bought these two plots of land here. One is the three ponies RV park and so it was going to be a massive important again, cove, an idea and a lot of people were in RVs. We should make an RV park. Yeah, actually that's you know, you know people. Okay, I'm not going to talk about about RV people. My answer RV people, they have a they have a pickup truck. Oh yeah, I have an RV and they I mean that's what they had. So they spend their summer they 08:42 They can send us magnets. around in the RVs. Yeah. I mean, it sounds fun to just RV around the country. Like, sounds like It sounds fun. It's one of those things where it's like, I feel like it'd be a good little weekend. I don't know that I would make that my personality, you know? But I can see why people, some people do. It's fine. I it would be awesome. Like if you didn't have kids, if you were like, if you're like retirement age, get an RV. And if you worked remote, it would be so clutch to just go drive somewhere, hang out for like a week. 09:09 work there sounds like you want to do fan somewhere else work that yeah. It sounds great anyways, so the RV Park was going to be is going to take up three hundred fifty acres of the like pro yeah, and so that was going to feature seven hundred fifty RV spaces and three hundred cabins to stay at. They were also going to have a three hundred room four star hotel and resort water park thing. Okay, that was going to be if we pull this back up. That's where the three pines is 09:37 the three ponies is just the RV park in the cabins. And so over on this other plot underneath the quarry was going to have the hotel and then the park itself. So the park itself, okay, okay, okay, okay, okay. Ends up only taking up a hundred and twenty five acres, which is still twice the size of, so yeah, which is about the size of, Disneyland and I got you. So the park itself is, is a good size park, but it's not, this is more for RV enthusiasts. Well, if they more for really need a 10:07 way to get people there because the closest international airport is an hour away, so they're like we need somewhere for these people to stay right. So they were building this RV park there and so they were probably trying to cut the distance between Joplin and Tulsa. I mean because Vanita is about forty five minutes, Joplin is a major Metroplex. It is glad we're on the same page and so they this this park was everyone makes fun of Joplin and I'll tell you what they hate that 10:37 They do not like that. Yeah. So I think anybody would hate getting made fun of. Yeah. Nobody's like, I'm glad you're making fun of me right now. I know some people are like, you know, no, no, no, no, no, no, love. Small towns are like small towns are like, you know, we exist. That's okay. Yeah. Joplin is always like the ugly step sister of Springfield. Yeah, it's pretty, you know, ugly steps sifter of literally of everywhere else. Yeah. And so, ah 11:02 no, like Joplin. So like, you know, I was on staff at a church in Joplin. Yeah. And that was a big struggle that we had. Yeah. It was, you know, post like their post tornado 2011. Yep. Tornado happens. Uh, and then all this attention's on Joplin. Suddenly like the news is talking about Joplin all the time. Uh, there's a bunch of money flooding in extreme home makeovers doing several different projects in Joplin, right? Like it's a, it's a, know, and then one day all those people just left and then Joplin was just like back to being 11:32 Joplin yeah, and so when we came in to launch the new campus of our church, there was you know not explicitly said, but you could feel like the you know how long you guys gonna be here. Yeah, we don't really yeah, that was the vibe. It felt it felt a little weird anyway, but you also kept making fun of them. So they were like we also every week we're like hey guys, welcome to yeah. 11:56 Well, just drive forty five well field. I don't know why you're here two hours the Tulsa. What's wrong with you? Why you here? Why are you here? I'm an hour. It's like an hour an hour to Tulsa. Why are you here? So and then they they outline the park. The park itself was going to be six like themed lands um and each land would would have like an anchor ride. That'd be like this big grand. What are the six themes? So there's liberty freedom of speech area. 12:25 freedom and it's area. They just let you do. They let you say say whatever you want here. So Liberty Village is like a classic Americana downtown hometown USA area. This is what I love about theme parks too, is that we're not willing to do this in our actual cities. We're just going to create theme parks and let you have a walkable town that you're at the 12:46 pay a lot of money to a lot of experience. Yeah, yeah, and then you're like and oh you miss what I didn't have forty mile an hour cars. We're going to hit. Did you did you miss when crosswalks were there? Did you miss when all of your needs were kind of like all in the same kind of area and general stores exist? Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, let's let's play pretend park. Let's I love the theme parks are just playing town. You know, yeah, that's exactly what's happening. Yeah, 13:12 uh And then and then they were going to have so here's an aerial shot of it. So there's Liberty Village. I mean a wild looking place. Yeah. And then they would have the Great Plains which I don't know which one in here is actually the Great Plains. I'm kind of looking around to figure it out. I can't tell. But the Great Plains is exactly what it sounds like. They would have like it. They almost had like museums and exhibits of like animals and things like that. I like Great Plains themed right. Be that friary up here then probably maybe. Yeah it could be. They also had Bayou Bay which is this like 13:42 Swampy Louisiana type vibe. Swampy big, big Timber Falls, which Big Timber Falls sounds pretty sick. It had like this big, uh, call this like a timber water coaster. I don't know what the Alpine coaster. Yeah. Anyways, so big, a big artificial mountain with a water ride in it. And this was supposed to be like Pacific Northwest. Um, and then they would have, uh, Stony Point Harbor, which was like, like, um, uh, the Northeast. 14:09 and then they were going to have Electropolis, which is a little bit of a break from the vibe. But this was supposed to be like an amalgamation of all the world's fairs. And so there would be all these like crazy. So let me just run them back again. Let me just run them back again. Name them again. You had Liberty Village, Main Street, Great Plains, Frontierland Bayou Bay. It's also in like the Frontierland area. Yeah. The Tiano's Bayou. 14:38 Big Timber Falls, which would be in. I would call that adventure land, but sure Stony Point Harbor. Well, Big Timber Falls is yeah Stony Point Harbor Matterhorn Electropolis Tomorrow. They were like what if we just slightly changed Disney's I P just a little bit uh and so not even a lot either like not even a lot just like 15:06 yeah. What do we call tomorrow and you know we can't yeah really Billy long. We can't do that. can't do that and so and then there's a train that goes around the whole park on the park. Yeah, that's a revolutionary idea. No one's ever thought of that and then at uh Electropolis that's on the left there. You can see the tower. There's a big like that's a big Tesla tower, but it's one of those drop rides big Tesla tower. No, a Tesla tower is no 15:34 That's what Tesla's famous for. Well, Tesla's famous for a lot of things, but one of the things he did is he built this really big, I always mix up, I think he was AC power. He was either AC or DC, Edison was the opposite, and Edison killed him and got everyone to use his stuff. But what was crazy about his tower- Edison did what? Killed Tesla. And what was crazy about Tesla's towers is, in theory, what he was trying to do was wireless power. So he'd build these big towers that were supposed to broadcast 16:04 energy wirelessly, which sounds awesome insane. Sounds awesome. ah I don't know if it were. If theoretically it worked and I heard about a technology they're trying to do where they're going to put satellites up there and you know up there above the flat earth. They're going to put satellites up there, but they're gonna they're going to collect solar. Oh, I know exactly what you're talking about via satellite and then figure out how to shoot that 16:33 So I know exactly what I know exactly what you're talking about. Oh great company. You you rent sunlight and no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no no I saw that like where it's like you can just you can be like I need some sunlight. It's a mirror that just shoots sunlight to wherever you're at right now. Yeah. So if you're get your neighbors for you know, the idea is if you're running a farm, you can give it sunlight overnight if the daytime sunlight wasn't enough or if you have solar farm. 17:00 then you rent this and then it just has a satellite that goes and tilts the the mirror to you. So then you just have this acre of sunlight in the middle of the night. Yeah. And it's actual sunlight because it's a mirror. It's insane. I mean like but here's what I'm OK. That's a different idea than what I was hearing. I was hearing they were going to have like a satellite that collects the power solar and OK. OK. OK. And then they can convert that to a signal that they could send that to Earth like 17:28 really through satellite send energy so them. We would have satellite energy gathers up there instead of trying to mirror it down to our solar panels here. Interesting. I don't understand. They figure out how to do that or it like a slow figure out how to do that. I mean the conspiracy theorists will tell you yes and that's why Edison killed them right because Edison one. It's like Stanley Myers water car. Yeah, yeah. Edison was making too much money off power lines and sure test. His idea was kind of you know. I don't know what I don't know the full story. This is what I studied 17:58 Okay, but anyway, so they have a Tesla Tower. They have a Tesla Tower. That's also a Tower of Doom. So it's like it doubles. Sure. And so also a ride that they made up. Nobody else has ever done this before. What if we what if we did like a a it drops, you know? Oh, good idea. yeah, that's a good idea. So this concept, they unveiled the whole concept. They tell you all about what they're going to do. They introduced their team. This is actually really interesting. This all go 18:27 kind of backwards through this list. The first guy I'll show you, this guy is not an investor. He's like an executive in the project. His name is Steven Hendrick and he ah is a significant, like I guess legitimacy person on tab on the team because he is a former Disney Imagineering executive. So he actually built Disney World. Of course. Or I should say one of the people who helped build the right. Well, at least they got somebody involved. What do you mean by that? 18:58 I mean they're ripping off all the ideas from dizzy. The least they could do is get somebody who actually actually knows. Yeah, that's fair. You know and I don't care. By the way, I don't care about rip offs by the way. You know, I don't care at all. This whole podcast is a rip off of Sam Manila or whatever. That guy's YouTube channels never Sam and they'll whatever Sam O'neill or whatever that YouTube. Oh, so many of our topics we do take. I hate we don't take top. This is what I hate is it's wild. 19:26 because we just cover stuff that happens. That's what I say. So like people be like, yeah, you got this from salmon. No, I got this from the happening. I got this with the thing that happened. I'm pretty sure they did too. Yeah, this is a thing that happened. He didn't make that up. He didn't do that. You know yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. 19:53 Hey, thanks for listening to this episode of things. I learned last night. If you like this show, we would love to see in our Patreon. It's a great way to financially support the show. We don't make money from this. It just helps us to pay the people who do make money from this. Like Alex and Robert, her editor and maybe one day, one day me and Tim, maybe one day, know, but only if you join, only if you join, we can't wait. We can't get paid until you pay. Can't feed Tim's kid until you join. He's so 20:35 So he was kind of a big legitimacy add to the right right right, because he's an imagineer. He's an imagineer. They sat next to it. I don't know if they want me to tell you this. I sat next to a person who worked for Disney and I don't know if he knows that I know this. They're not allowed to talk about it. Well, he was on his tablet and he was like he was he was on frame I O yeah and giving feedback on you know it was the outline of the the Florida Castle. 21:00 and they're doing the light projector stuff. Oh yeah, the little white does. And so he was like circling like this dinosaur needs to be bigger this, know, that's and like and I was just, you know, I was looking at his screen and I don't care. You were like, you're like, hey, I think the dinosaur should be small straight up. in the middle, I was doing the whole thing where I was like 21:19 like dinosaur and then if he caught me, I pretend to be asleep. You're like dinosaur should be bigger actually, but I don't and then I he would be working on it. I go much dinosaur should be much and then I took everything I saw there and immediately emailed American Heartland and I was like do I have a show for you? What if we did a light projector show on the Tesla Tower? Maybe put some dinosaurs in there, maybe some dinosaurs, but they should be bigger. Whatever you're bigger. Dinosaur. No, it was cool to It was cool. Yeah, that happening 21:48 and so they they introduced him also Disney bottom of Delta comfort plus seat, not first class and they have the money for it and I was a little. I was offended on his behalf. Yeah, I was like you shouldn't be sitting next to me. You should be with the pores. Yeah, you should be with the moderately on poor. You should be with the less a little less pores. The people who are a little less. Don't give them a private jet. Just circling. know this guy does for a living is circle nine as a word. Yeah, yeah, I just 22:24 I don't think we got to keep going. You can give a thought. You're right. Yeah, okay, so I felt like I got a sputtered out and I can see you trying to be like I got. got one more. I can do it. I can figure out another thing. No, I just let it go. It's good. That's good. I was gonna do like a thing. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, so they they introduced this dinosaur. I kept going with it. Okay, keep going. This having Steve on the project 22:52 was a big legitimacy, but sure then they introduced their engineering team that they hired for it was the same team that worked on six flag parks. Oh, so another legit, yeah, like legit people and then they introduced. uh Let me see. Well, we'll go at this. A guy by the name of Larry, will height Larry is a former pastor from Branson, Missouri, yeah, who left his practice as practice, who left his church, left his church and he was at. I know his church. He was that, go ahead 23:21 he left his church to become. I guess like the director of the mansion in Branson, which is a theater in in Branson. This is I'm realizing now that I have this is float flow and that's interesting that you did that 23:39 but pull up the mansion because the mansion does the despicable me thing. Okay, I don't know what you'll know. Exactly what I mean when you see it. I'm pretty sure the mansions where I'm thinking of that does that. I think maybe it's the Andy Williams theater that is at the mansion. I think I know what you I think you know what I'm saying. I've seen it before and now that you're saying that I think I know what you mean. Yeah, I think the mansion and I could be wrong. Maybe you are now, but I think the mansion is the biggest theater in Branson. I I believe so. 24:07 trying to find like a site and sound is probably bigger right. I don't know. I mean I have a picture of the interior. You want to see it. No, I want to see the exterior. I'm trying to get one out of them are strategic. I'll tell you what because the building looks ugly. All right. Well, I couldn't find it. There's a bill. There's one of the theaters in. think it, I think it used to be the mansion at least then I can find the extra that it had like the exterior. The building was painted like the blue sky 24:36 to make it seem like but it never it never looked like it looked the same. It never looked like it was the sky. You could tell. Oh, they're trying to trick you into thinking you're looking at the sky there because they all have these big facades. Here's the mansion. I think that back white that they back like the what might call it Alex the 24:58 What do you like whole life system on the whole fly system? That's they keep all their fly. think that you ever notice you go to the theater. There's no shut eyes in the so I think that it's the fly system. I'm going to do the comedy on the part. There's no fly, but they maybe you can find on a way back, but they that back area of the theater, they used to have it painted blue, so it just looked like the front mansion part. That makes sense, and they tried to put clouds on it to be like it's their sky. Yeah, 25:26 Branson is or or maybe this photo is what I'm thinking of, but it just looks like the sky. Maybe maybe that whole thing is just the back of the building. No, they I remember as a kid always being like that does not. That doesn't look like this guy. Do they know that doesn't look like this guy? I want to go rig. It looks like Andy's room in Toy Story. Yeah, you know, I'm talking about where it's like that's a wall. That's that's fake. So this is this is Will Hyde, Larry Will Hyde. Yeah, this is him inside the theater. 25:54 Yeah, and he left his job at the church as a pastor to run this theater. He doesn't know he runs the theater. He's like the director of the theater. He's done it for like twenty years and then there's a guy by the name of Richard Slanskis. uh He is like an outside. He's an executive producer on the project Slanskis and he has experience and and 26:18 the theme park industry look at him do starting. I'm not even like he's he's the guy who's like his hair is not that color. You can literally see the line of the die. See I'm talking about you can see it zoom in on that. Can you zoom in on that? See me on this, but yeah you can't zoom in you can't out a crop in a Robert can Robert on Robert. You know what I'm talking about. You can see the line of where he died his hair this color 26:45 and it looks like he does it with a sharpie yeah and so and this is this is slans kiss yeah. If he turned out to be a nice guy, I apologize, but uh you know it, you know yeah yeah. So this is lanskis he has experience in the theme park industry yeah and so he came in to help with that. What's his experience operation city? No, he has experience in parks that ah never opened uh 27:13 But they didn't talk about that at this press conference. And then there is a guy by the name of Gene Bicknell. Gene Bicknell is the financial provider for this company. What do think he did based on this image? He's a farmer. about this image? this give you any more ideas? Is he a farmer? 27:35 No, he actually owned over a hundred pizza franchises. Yeah, dude, he's an old guy who looks happy and it's because he was rich, but like, know, yeah, he, he was, he grew up actually in uh what's it called? Pitcher Oklahoma. Is that right? Is that what's called picture? No pitcher pitcher. Let me, let me, I doesn't matter. He grew up in Oklahoma. No, it does matter because I want to talk about it. 28:03 This is a town that we've never I've always wanted to do an episode about it, um but it's there's not really enough content, but picture it's north and imagine that there would be it's north of Miami and this town is really I'm not okay. Whatever is it really yeah. So they pronounce it. No, they do not in Oklahoma, Miami. That's how they pronounce it. Oh my God, that makes me unreasonably mad. Okay, anyways, uh picture is an interesting town because I make you man. 28:32 Because it's dumb. Because it's dumb. 28:37 Do you know why I'm baiting him right now? Oh, is that not real? No, they're just you know, lot of the towns in Oklahoma are named after Indian. Oh my and so is that now, so now you're looking at this stuff being like that's stupid and dumb. I just wanted to bait you a white guy into being like that. So that was fun. You're the worst picture. Pitcher was like a turn of the century town that 29:08 I guess was probably a company town uh and there it's just covered in mines. And so I'm going to I'm throwing some screenshots in so you can see this. And in I don't remember exactly when but the collapse all the mines started leaking uh toxins into the water supply. so it actually the state of Oklahoma started paying people to leave because it was too dangerous to live in and picture Oklahoma anymore. 29:36 and so he grew up in this town and so today he took his money. They paid him to leave and he turned it into one hundred pizza hut franchises and you know what I did with the money the government gave me. bought Texas Roadhouse and that's why I want to die young and sad and he gets to be old and happy. I look how happy he is so picture Oklahoma here it is from far away. So those are all the minds. It was just oh wow in minds yeah and as we zoom in 30:06 this town. There are, think last I heard, which was about a decade ago, there's I think less than ten holdouts who still live here, but the whole town, if we zoom in close, like it is just decrepit, like everything's run down. It's yeah, like all the all those houses are just are just like decrepit falling apart abandoned town. Yeah, and it's a big town. It's kind of crazy. I've always wanted to go anyways. I wanted to do an episode about it, but there's not enough to cover it. It's a till and road trip. 30:35 Yeah, we can add it to the red shirt, but he grew up when your kid finally goes off to college or whatever. Your kid's not going to whenever your kid 30:47 I've I've met him. He's not he's not very smart right now. There's no way there's no way he's getting to college. So he grew up in pitcher Oklahoma, which is not far from okay, Anita and he went to the war and then he came back and and when he came back he bought his first pizza franchise because that was something you could do with a war salary back then and then went from there and built. 31:14 built his empire sure and became a billionaire and so he's a very wealthy man. He owns the mansion and so him okay, I work together for the three horses is a reference to this. I so that's actually probably true. I've never seen someone say that, but you're probably right. Actually, yes, the three ponies ponies. Yeah, I three I gear. Yeah, it's yeah interesting. I've never noticed that, but yeah, nobody said I wonder if there's a significance to those out front of the mansion, but anyway, he just likes ponies. I guess yeah, 31:44 So they unveiled this whole team, they unveiled the plans, they unveiled the uh model of it and they have smoke come out and there's music, really dramatic reveal. And then at the end, the end of it, Will Height leaves and they close the whole presentation and he just does this, it's not a mic drop because it's a podium with a mic, but he tries to do a mic drop so he just opens his hands out like this and backs off stage. 32:13 and then like they play wait, Larry, the older guy like got Larry, but the Larry old past Larry will high. um He's just like he's like and that's the American Heartland. He's just like backs up state and I'm not exaggerating when I say they played the main theme from the nineteen ninety six movie Independence Day. What is the confetti? What's the theme from independent? It's not 32:41 hype. It's like a it's like a score like it's like yeah, it's not. ah I think what I genuinely think what happened is their creative team was like we need another like American song. They're like what's an independent like they found this. It's called Independence Day. 33:05 And like, that's the sun. didn't know that it's that's guess. No one wanted to look even a little bit into the movie. And so ah the thing about this, though, is there immediately was a lot of questions because this is like a two billion dollar project. And they claimed this was in what did I say? July twenty twenty three. And they claimed that they were going to have all of this open by the end of twenty twenty six. 33:33 which is a preposterous timeline. Right. All right. They said by the end of twenty twenty five, three ponies was going to open and then shortly after that, the park would open as well, which is insane. They also the location doesn't make any sense. It's a gigantic theme park. Yeah, they estimated they would have four point nine million visitors a year, which is barely less than the entire population of Oklahoma. Also, and this is really important for you to understand about that. 33:59 a stretch of forty four. It's a toll road with zero exits. Yeah, yeah, yeah, there are no exits. Yeah, like that gas station is your last chance to get off the road before you go an eighty mile strip all the way to Tulsa with no because it's all reservation right. Yeah, that whole that whole plot. Yeah, yeah, which is also anyways they they and so the airport's an hour away before they would have built the. mean to be fair like so Disneyland is pretty. I mean 34:28 it when and when when they were buying all the land in Florida. There was nothing. Well, that was the argument that they made. The argument was that there was some development will happen around this. Yeah, there was a there was some people who raised these concerns and Steve the Disney guy was like, yeah, nothing was in Orlando before Disney and now Orlando is a vacation hub right and so he's like, this is what we're going to do to the need of Oklahoma before they would have built this part. You know, before they would have built this park, the only 34:57 like nearby hotel was in Veneta. It was a holiday and express. That was it. That was all that that could support. So but they would. And this is interesting. I haven't mentioned this in the top left corner. You can see the hotel and the hotel is actually in the park. Right. You can't get to this hotel without going through the park, which is an interesting design. I'm sure they would have an interesting other side. I don't know. That's not what they said. That's what they said. What they said is like the idea is like you're a part of the park, like you're staying in the park, kind of like the Bass Pro shops. 35:26 but if Bass Pro Shops was a hundred twenty five acre kind of like the best, I don't think it's kind of like that. No, but like you know Disney California Venture has the the Grand California. Yeah. And yeah, you can go either. But this is I think this is I think the idea is you're in the park. Well, that won't work. Yeah. I said so ah the other the other big issue with this is they said is going to be this year round park, but it's like in Oklahoma, Oklahoma, which this area is also a floodplain. 35:55 and then yeah, it snows in the winter and then there's a pretty big deal that happens in that area quite a bit. What is it? 36:09 tornado. Yeah, yeah. It's like it's like smack. This is gonna get destroyed by tornado. It's big time tornado land, which part of the experience honestly, like you go to the Great Plains. is a ride that they have that like they'll just slingshot you into a tornado. That's like a really fun. Yeah, he doesn't have that. You could only buy it like there has to be a tornado happening like so like you got to wait for one. It's rare. It's a 36:35 but it's a special. That's what makes it more valuable. Yeah, it's a special. We'll pay the money for it and so they they had this whole this whole event. Months later they had the ground breaking ceremony. So the whole team, I mean it is like prime tornado spot too. That's crazy. It couldn't be more. It could not be more tornado alley. Yeah and so 36:58 a few months later they had this groundbreaking. I love groundbreaking. Oh it's so goofy. It's so dumb. They all put on the hard hats and you're like, is that shovel going to fall out of your head? 37:10 they all wear the hard hats for the stuff except for like two guys who were you know the Disney guy was like I'm just going to hold on to it and then the freaking undertaker on the end down here was like no, I'm not wearing that. I got a trench coat and a cowboy hat. They're like golden shovel and I love the Pizza Hut guy who was like I'm not taking this ball cap off. I'll just float the hard hat above it and there's two. It's too big. You got to get an odd job hard hat job hard hats 37:39 And so they had this ceremony, they had the gold shop. Yeah, they do all their logos on it. And there's like local politicians. Everybody's excited. And this was like a huge deal for the town. Like Veneta. Yeah, there's nothing else there. Veneto was stoked. A bunch of the people who had land around it were selling land. Locals were buying up plots of land, hoping like as an investment property. Right. Local restaurants were taking out loans to like expand the restaurant to be capable of like serving a larger population. This was like a huge boost for the local economy. 38:08 And so then the construction companies came in. They put up this cool sign that said the park is coming soon. And then they... said it's a cool sign? And then they built this. This is a gravel parking lot. Construction, yeah. Which is for construction. Yeah. And they put in a construction office and prepared to begin building construction here. And then nothing happened for over a year. And there was... 38:37 A lot of, I don't want to say uproar. Unrest. Unrest is a good word. A lot of the local officials were like, hey, what's going on? What gives? Like there was this big promise and nothing's happening. And so they had this like local town hall where it was like, you guys got to tell us what you're doing. And they showed by the town hall and Steve comes in and he says, yeah, I know he said we were going to make more broaders by now, but we haven't. And I really, I got to apologize. That's my fault because I went to our engineers and I told them, Hey, we need to. 39:08 Re-consolidate some things and it changed the plans and it's slowing us down. It's got to set back a few months, but like we're going to be able to move forward. No problem. This is a Ponzi scheme. 39:19 And so so he kind of bides their time. He's kind of bides their time a little bit with the local city council. The city council seems a little frustrated, but they're like, OK, whatever. There is some like state and city investment that's going on in this as well. And if I need a city council there, mean, there are no one to scoff at their sharks. Yeah. Yeah. They rode their horses into the meeting. There are three ponies. Yeah. And they sit around a circle and they go. 39:49 What are we gonna do about this boys? You know, I hate that. That is where you do it. I said it like that. now it's like, that's what I hate, but I hate that. It's like, making it look like I that. What you talking about? They all, they drove out in the back of their, their Ford pickup trucks. They put the tailgate down. They cracked up with some keystone lights. 40:14 and they sat on the back of the Ford pickup and they were like, what are we going to do about this? There's no city council hall. It's just like I'm saying they all meet in that in that construction pad and they sit there and they go well skies turning green. 40:32 you better. I better get under our trucks better. Hi, yeah, not go home. Let's not go home. Let's let's you know, it's too late for that. Let's crawl underneath our trucks. That's right. That's what they say you need to do. First of all, that's not what they say you should do. You clearly 40:48 he grew up in Colorado. All right, what you're supposed to do is find a ditch. You got to find a ditch and a ditch and pray honestly. That's why you should not get under a vehicle. That is not what you should be doing. Yeah, that's true. Yeah, you don't do that. Don't do that right. Get under something bigger like a semi yeah. 41:09 so and then a few months later, would I fit on? I would not fit underneath my car. You want to try it? Oh, your car's not here. Yeah, I can you fit under your car. I can fit under mine because you're a weak little small little boy. Was that all? Was that all that all? Look how weak and lame he is dude. He can't even gather his breath. 41:35 a tiny week as long I whatever so like a few months later oh 41:52 Oh boy, am I sick? I sure do need Tim stones. Get well quick trick. And what is it? It's simply chug an entire gallon of orange juice. Wow. I forgot. And then this shirt reminded me, I'm so glad that I have this shirt as a public service announcement, a public health service to other people around me. Do your part. Get this shirt. 42:21 shop.tilland.com 42:29 So once later it is the news that the construction companies have put out liens on the organization because they haven't got paid yet and so that's why they haven't been doing anything is because they were not getting paid. Yeah and so now it starts to become a question of like what's going on and so the lean sits few months go by or I should say over a year goes by. So now we're two years away from the gold shovels. Yes. Yeah and so 42:57 What year is this now? is 2000, this is 2025? Yeah, so I guess it would be, so let me get the dates right. So October 30th, 2023 was the groundbreaking ceremony. then in May 2024, as those liens came out that those liens were up against the company. And in, let me see the date, July 2025, a lawsuit is filed in Oklahoma federal court, alleging 43:27 Rico violations, allegeding alleged, allegeding or he go violations, fraud and intentional infliction of emotional distress from Jean Bicknell against his two partners. Yeah, this first photo he did look a little bit like he was a cutthroat kind of guy. The second photo he looks so much happier where he's just like, ah, yeah, so this is a grandpa. This is a suit first photo. He looks a little bit more. Yeah, he looks like he looks like he's like 43:56 Yeah, he looks like get out of my before I pumped your guts full of lead. Okay, but he's he is suing. Oh, he's suing for emotional distress. He is suing Larry. Oh hi, no, no, he's a good guy. We like him and what did I say this guy was a close Richard Salinas Richard Salanskas and I said he was sketchy on site. So I said as soon as I saw that guy, I was like this guy emotionally distresses the elderly and 44:22 we get these court documents. Didn't he just let me say that these court this guy emotionally distresses the elderly. We get these court documents and what we find out from the court documents are they is it over is over the course of a few years going back to about twenty twenty one. ah No I'm Lancer and will height have been emailing gene Bicknell. Oh no from an account from an email account pretending to be now wait for it. 44:52 God and telling him telling gene that God wants him to build this park. Oh, and telling them him that because everything that he's all the wealth he's amassed is a gift from God. He needs to empty the storehouse and give it to the next generation. Almighty God at gmail.com. 45:15 oh my and so and this there what's that? What's the term for that uh pig butchering there? Oh, fattening the pig. Yeah, they're doing that to this guy. Yeah, so they spent years building them up to convince him that God wants to hold on. on. Oh no. Oh yeah, that's why you weren't laughing at my little bit. 45:41 Yeah, I was joking, but they were doing they were using an old guy. Yeah. So so here's what happened. Okay, wait, wait, wait, wait. Okay. Yeah. Tell us what happened. Here's what happened. Oh my gosh. So a little bit about Rick. I feel so bad. This guy sucks. I you know what? No, no. Zoom in again. Robert show us his sharpie hair. 46:05 This guy abuses old people. This guy stinks. What a crazy plan. So these two start emailing this Oklahoma billionaire pretending to be God. Yes. And they're like, hey, God's telling you to invest all your money into this theme park. Yeah, yeah, exactly. That's exactly what's happening. And so let me take it back a little bit to tell you a little bit about Rick. Rick. Oh, Sorry. Let me take a second to process. I'm hot, dude. It's crazy. So Rick. 46:33 I don't know if you hold by the way. I don't know if you see this bus behind him, but it says the dream vision company, the dream vision company looks and also to be clear, ripped off the paramount logo and dream vision a little over decade before this had proposed a series of parks in Texas and Alabama that the renderings are not as great. 46:57 I actually love this art style like I would I would love to have because they feels like a 90s story. But well they sell like these paintings of Disney and I'm not a Disney adult but like those I mean like we like it but like those are the things that I would allow there's there's lines that I draw. I don't want a bunch of like we have Disney mugs coffee mugs whatever yeah. 47:20 my wife came home with a with a welcome at one time. That's when I was like to that's advertising the neighbors. Yeah, we can't have other people see it. Yeah, as long as you like it quiet. This art style like I like the original layout of Disneyland. Actually, I love I like that the bar Gatsby is opening a theme park in Nashville. He's reopening like the opera land kind of trying to do the night land stuff and it's a fun like vision. Yeah, and so I like this like watercolor painting thing. 47:49 So this concept is there would be a land that was kind of like Louisiana like a bayou. There'd be like a Pacific Northwest land. There'd be like a new land. There'd be like an old school and they were proposing this for where. So this was going to be a series of parks. And it was this idea there's going to be one in Texas and one in Alabama. And in Alabama they actually planned it. So I think this is the Texas one. They've got like some I don't know what that is like a cast or something in the middle. Yeah. 48:14 But in Alabama, you're spending a lot of time on this now, but you've just told me they're abusing this old guy. And I really want to get to that part of centerpiece. The centerpiece of this park was going to be an artificial mountain that was going to be a ski resort in Alabama. And they were going to have artificial snow. You could go skiing. Sure. That'll work. And so long story short, they had proposed this whole thing, did the did the whole presentation, whatever. And then a couple of years into the project, it fell apart. And his business partner went to prison for 10 years, federal prison for securities fraud. He got out of it. 48:42 Cause he was like, I was just creative director. wasn't a part of any of like the financial side of this. didn't run that. And so all of that goes down a couple of years later, he meets Larry Wilhite. Larry has been for 20 years working with gene, a great relationship. Everything gene being gene is, is it the big now? Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. Okay. He's been working with him running this theater. 49:07 Oh, that's right, because Jean owns the mansion. That's right. And going into 2020, they had dreams together of turning the theater into like a TV and film and animation studio. is the monster. uh So they had the dreams of turning this theater into a film. I want to physically fight these people. And 2020 rolled around. They had invested a lot of money to build this and it fell apart in 2020 because they didn't have the cash to float this dream of the TV studio, the film studio. And so that like new branch fell apart. 49:36 and failed and it was kind of like this big hit to both Larry and Jean. Like they were pretty upset that they couldn't pull that off. And so this is terrible. This makes me so mad. So Rick meets Larry and together they come up with this scheme. Yeah. They basically are like hey like Rick's like Larry he trusts you. You've been working together forever. Introduce him to me like let's let's like build this concept. And so at the time Jean I mean we need to remember we saw this picture. Jean is a shrewd businessman. Yeah. And so he meets 50:05 Larry recommends him, but that's not enough. Like he meets Rick and he's like, let see. old is Gene do we know? ah He is at the time of this. I know what he was in 25. So at the time of this, he would have been 88. 50:19 What do you get out like that for? Because I feel like I know where the story goes. um I know what he was. He would have been. He was 88. Yeah. And so Rick meets meets Jean. They have a business meeting and and Rick paints the picture of what he wants to do. Jean's interested. But Jean's like I got to know more about what you're trying to do here. Yeah. I got to know more about you. And so I said do you have any references I can I can speak to? And so he's like sure. And so he sends him 50:47 uh the email of a reference, someone he's worked with. Gene reaches out to the email. God. Gene reaches No, just ask this guy. He knows everything. He knows everything. So he gives him the email and it's supposedly some guy who works at Disney that he's done a bunch of projects with. Gene reaches out, emails him, uh but it's just one of Rick's email accounts. Yeah. And Rick fakes this whole like letter of recommendation. And what's really crazy about this is this came up in this case. 51:16 ah The reason we knew it was Rick's account is because Rick from all of his personal emails, he starts the body of the email by handwriting out from him to whoever he's writing to. And then he does the body because the email doesn't already have that from and to line. He like hand writes a from and to line in the body. He puts that in all of his emails and all of his emails because he's kind of Yeah, because he's weird and dumb. Yeah. Yeah. And so because he did that, 51:42 they could trace the other emails back to him because from who does this God to gene is that in the emails? Yeah, that's exactly what he was doing. No, do we have any of the God emails? I don't have any of the emails. It's all in like this is an active case, so I don't have any of the emails, but in the emails, easy, really holy crap and so so they propose this. When did this all break? What is this? The the the last year, July twenty, twenty five, the lawsuit was filed while I twenty, twenty five. 52:12 I can't wait for this documentary. so so Rick basically establishes the legitimacy with him. They want to work together, but nothing gets kind of set in stone. Yeah. And over the course of a couple of years, God emails Jean and God basically convinces Jean that that he needs to invest 100 percent of his wealth into this project. And furthermore, he God God 52:41 in air quotes, convinces Gene of what he calls the triune concept. And he says, just like the Trinity, like none of these things work without a triune engagement. And so these emails convince Bicknell that even though Solanus and Wilhite weren't putting up any financial risk in this, they should be 33 and a third partners with him. And so they are immediately getting to share in what if went through would be a multi-billion dollar. 53:11 concept ah and so oh my gosh man. So they move forward with this ah and they begin building building the project. This is the stuff that you find out your parents have done by the way, like your parents get to like, you know, it's like it's one of jeans kids who's just like I'm sure we'll get to that, but it's like you just find out that your dad is like emailing God and you're like wait what yeah and then like all of your inheritance is gone. Yeah. So what happened? 53:40 Oh my gosh. I feel like that tight in my chest. They start building this project. Also my body. And he, from the very beginning, he just started wiring the company millions of dollars at a time. Four million, six million, seven million here, like just millions of dollars. For the contracts. For the contracts, yeah. And from what he understands. And over the course of a year of the project, he wires $48 million into this company. Oh no. And he starts running out of money. And so he's emailing them because 54:10 He's like, hey, I actually defaulted on my bank account. I don't have any more cash. And he's like, I don't have any more cash. So I had to take out a personal loan to continue to fund this. So he took out a big personal loan to fund his life and to continue to fund the project. And what they had found out is Gene was a billionaire, but he only had 60 million in like what assets left because he is old and he recently established a trust to pass on to his heirs. 54:37 where all the money was tied up in this irrevocable trust. And the way irrevocable trusts work is they're irrevocable. No one can change them except for the person who made it. And so Gene's the only person who has control over this trust. So Gene starts getting these emails. So this is the middle of this project. This is when they're meeting with the county council. So this is 2023, 2024. Yeah, they're meeting with county council. They've got liens on the business because they're not paying. And the county council is like, gives? And they're like, we're 55:06 We're just that we made some changes to plan. It's not working right because because now he's running slow on now. He doesn't have cash Yeah, so now he needs to change his trust. Yes, is this when did he start getting emails from God? So he got emails from God like in 2021 and so it was like okay big build up to this point and then this point he gets an email from an account called sister Katherine nine on nine and this is a fake none that right of course and this none reaches out and it's like hey we have been an intercessor Katherine none on none 55:34 and so this this none reaches out and it's not a non. It's it's and the nun reaches out and it's crazy. It's not yeah. We all knew that it's not a nun. uh Yeah, we're all on. We're on the same page and he gets the email from his nun is not a nun. Go, keep going and so the nun is like hey, we've been in who's not a nun. By the way, it's right in case you're dumb and you're not following the story. 56:03 She's like, hey, me and all my sisters at, I think they called it Agape Abbey, we've been participating in an intercessory prayer for you. And we feel like that God has a message that he wants us to give you. And over the course of a few months, this nun convinces Gene that God wants him to change the trust and remove all of his children from being heirs to the trust and move the entire trust into the corporation. And this... 56:31 obviously creates strife in the family. This is how his family learns what's going on and so his family is like what are you? What do mean? You got an email from a nun? Yeah, well, I got an email from God first. That's what I'm saying. God has it. And this is just like this ruins Thanksgiving one year because they're just sitting there and he just brings up. He's like, I gotta tell you something. 56:53 I've been emailing God. What do you do? mean, like, do do it? It's It's not funny. That's just like I've been hard for the comedy thing right now, but like because that you just bring that on your kids. yeah, and so he's gonna find out about this and obviously like this creates a lot of tension in the relationship and they're trying to figure out what's going on, but he Catherine sister Catherine now convinces him that I hate when you do this in stories. By the way, we're it's like an hour now. 57:20 And like we did so many tornadoes, stupid bits and Disney bits and all that stuff. And then they go by, by the way, this guy was emailing God. Well, there was a lot of build up to get to the God part. does make the payoff is so worth it. But oh my gosh. And so, okay. So Catherine is like your children are our weapons of the enemy. They are trying to stop you from fulfilling what God wants you to do. And so he cuts his children out of his life to be able to move this trust forward. And what's really sad 57:48 is there's actually emails in this court filing that show that he starts emailing Sister Catherine out of like being like, hey, this is like really hard. Like he's like, he's like, miss my kids. Like I feel like I'm, doing something wrong by them. Like I'm hurting my family. Like I'm in financial distress. And so, and Sister Catherine is like, you're doing the right thing. Like convincing him this is what he's supposed to do. So he's in the middle of changing all this stuff. Oh my gosh. And in, let me see. In July of 2024. 58:17 Gene Bicknell suffers a massive stroke. ah He doesn't pass away, but he is incapacitated in the hospital. And while he's incapacitated, the trust documents aren't done. But his next of kin are now able to access what's going on because he's incapacitated. That's right. And that's where they learn the scope and scale of what's going on. And so then they work with lawyers to begin the lawsuit process. And a year later, they're able to go through and put the together. so they actually, the suit that they put together is crazy because 58:47 They didn't just go like, isn't just elder abuse. This isn't just fraud. This is a RICO about uh a violation, which is the racketeering. Essentially, this is organized crime is what they're calling it. And so this trial is ongoing. We don't have a conclusion to this yet, but it does look like because of some of the things that have happened over the course of this case, this is definitely going to be bad for Larry. It's going to be way worse for Rick because we have emails now. 59:17 that can be tied to Rick in both events because of the from and to line and then also the nine oh nine and the emails he was doing in both schemes and so he's like got almighty nine oh nine yeah like he's doing these things where like he got off scot free from that last Park thing. The other guy got ten years in federal prison and it's almost like he's just like I could do it. He's like yeah, I got away with it once and so 59:43 Oh my gosh. Rick made out with a little over a couple million dollars. He was siphoning money out of company. Larry pulled about 400,000 out. Not enough, honestly, if you're trying to do this. Have they been arrested? Steve pulled a little over a million out of the company. I don't know what the... Wait, the Disney Imagineer guy was in on this? Yeah. Was in on the scheme. Yes. Not just like... I don't know how involved. He got a million dollars out of the company. But that's also... Okay, but that... 01:00:12 that also was one of those things where it's like he he might think he's doing legitimate work. That's a big fear. I have actually is that this whole time you've been scamming me, but like you know he like bad, but like he could legitimately be like yeah. I mean I'm I'm doing work for the park. Yeah, I'm paid to do the work for the park and then now now it looks like like he's a part of it. Yeah, you know yeah. I don't know. I don't know. We don't know until the whole all the dust settles on that. Lawyers dig through that. Is gene still alive? 01:00:41 I don't think, well, let me, I don't know. I do know you had the stroke. I do know you had the stroke. I do know he survived the stroke. Today, I don't know if he's still alive. I've seen like recent reporting on this event. So know I'm hot, dude. That makes me so mad. That's crazy. But needless to say, the park is canceled. It's not going to happen. Right now it's just this little piece of gravel in. 01:01:05 The knock-on effects of this are pretty huge too, because remember I said all these businesses took loans. the whole town invested for this, what they thought was going to be a big boon to the city. And it ended up being a massive scam. uh And so it got me thinking, um not too far from here in Oklahoma City, they just recently announced what is going to be the largest tower in the world. 01:01:31 And that's also a scam. just kind of makes you wonder why would you build this in Oklahoma City and like who's paying for this? Why? It just seems too good to be true. Yeah. Just like this park. I don't know. Construction is a good business to hide money in. It's very easy. But last night I texted you because earlier this year their trademark expired and I want it. And so I texted 01:01:59 it costs a lot. It's above our threshold seven hundred. He texts me and the screenshot and I went to the website because he takes me a screenshot. I don't know what the websites call like there is a brisby or whatever busy and Bize and then sends me a screenshot and in his cart it says seven hundred and forty nine dollars and he goes. Is this worth it? No other context. 01:02:23 I was like I literally I said I can't tell you what this is, but is this worth it? And it's like if you go back and listen to our old old episodes like before video, I remember buying eighty dollars of like astronaut ice cream and been like oh, I spent eighty dollars on this bit and that was and then Tim was like oh well if Jaren spent eighty dollars on a I could probably spend eight hundred. Here's the thing I'll tell you what our business makes a little bit more money now and and 01:02:51 we could afford this and if we do, could make merch with the logo. could make merch with this logo and it could say, God told me to do it. I just got an email that said. 01:03:04 Me and the nuns say you should not buy that trademark. Well, the nuts told me also the nuts told me we should fiddle off. Hey, thanks for watching this episode of things I learned last night. If you like this one, there's another theme park that was kind of similar called Freedom Land USA. It was a park in New York that they tried to make. They were trying to make New York's Disneyland and it failed. So go check that one out. The link is somewhere. It will have it in the description of the episode as well. If you're listening, I'll please share this. Please tell someone about the show. It's our 01:03:34 I keep doing these state of shows and every time I meet new fans who are like, you know, I found the podcast in 2021, my friend sent me an episode and so it really helps us grow. So if you want next week's episode right now and you are joining our discord and we do monthly hangouts, please join us on Patreon. That's a great way to support the show as well. And we'll see you on another episode next week.


Hey there, ever heard of the American Heartland Theme Park? If you haven’t, you’re not alone. This ambitious project, once touted as Oklahoma’s answer to Disney, turned into a wild saga of grand visions, suspicious characters, and a stunning alleged confidence scheme. Let’s buckle up and dive into one of the wildest theme park stories you’ll ever hear. The Grand … Read More

Is It Wrong to Be Filthy Rich? | Limitarianism Ep 326

05-19-26

Episode Transcription

00:00 Hey, let's perform. Let's perform. Let's perform. Let's perform. Let's do a podcast. Let's do a podcast. Let's do a podcast. Let's do a podcast. Podcast. Podcast. Let's do a podcast. Let's do a podcast. Let's do a podcast. Podcast. Who's the kid that keeps doing pushups and wants a shout out on YouTube? Do know who that is? 00:29 Yeah, what's his name Ethan or something? Yeah shout out to your push. Yeah quit He's like I'm push-ups until I get told hello or whatever. You should keep doing those Because look what happens if you don't 00:44 Things I learned last night. 00:52 Yeah. All right, let's get into the episode then. Have you ever heard of Ingrid Robins Robins, probably Robins, I think it's road. I would guess it's about R O B E Y N S, not Robins Y N S yeah. Okay, Robains Robains, maybe Robains. This is her. Let's play a game of. uh She is a editor at a newspaper. Interesting. She seems to me 01:20 and if I were to see just this picture and I was going to judge the book by the cover, I would say she's like like a I think she's British right. I would say she's a founder of like a weird kind of creepy biomet company. Sure, so to me company. Okay, so for audio listener, she is wearing like a trench coat. Well, we only see like shoulder up, but she's got like the flap of the coat up over her chin a little bit, yeah, and she's looking back over her shoulder. She's got glasses. She's probably middle age woman, you know, 01:50 Yeah, and uh and she's got graying hair, but not gray. Yeah. And she looks a little bit like the current prime minister. Oh, I can. Yeah, I can see that. Do you see her on time? Well, yeah, I can see that. Here's another photo. I don't know if this gives you any more of an idea. Same vibes. To be honest, it's just her doing her, you know, her her face on her editor hand. I think an editor, I think an author of some some sort opinion at all. 02:19 Okay, she's just is she a speaker? No, I think this could be this. This all could be the same to what about this one? You're just doing the thing. Well, she is British, though. She is European. Yeah, definitely. Yeah, that's I thought. Tim, just don't show me four more. Okay, sorry. oh I was showing you pictures of her. Yeah, so she she you're close. She's an academic. Okay, he's a PhD. She works at the University of Cambridge. 02:45 Another Cambridge, guess I didn't connect the dots. Those did look like professional like, yeah, professional would be on the back of an of a yeah. So she's probably written. Yeah, she's got a PhD. She's definitely written. Yeah. Yeah. And she what's interesting is like she originally got her like her career route and academics was economics for a long time. ah she kind of got disillusioned with economics and then shifted to philosophy and specifically ethics. 03:13 and so she went through like what are you looking at me like that for? I just feel like you're choosing topics that set us up for some crash outs and I'm not excited about that. She was studying economics and then just felt like maybe she should look at ethics. I don't know if that's a good set up for this, but okay and you know I could tell you more about her history, but honestly the whole reason to talk about her is a couple years ago. She wrote a book that has become a pretty significant book. Okay, 03:43 a slightly controversial book and it is called Limitarianism the case against extreme wealth. She was a girl. You go. I just I just feel like you're really setting us up here man. Okay. All right. 04:07 for those listening. It's a piggy bank, but the piggy bank is freaking huge, a small little tiny pig face on it. Yeah, they're just a limit. I ran ism. Oh, you know what? I think I've heard of this concept. Okay, but I'm like, okay, let's get into that. Yeah, yeah, the case against extreme wealth and it should be noted should be very clear when people talk about like wealthy people. Everyone's always like yeah, but my my friend's dad is wealthy. No, if you know that person, they're not well. 04:37 I'll tell you that right now. If you know that you're listening to this and you know them, we're not talking about. They're not. Well, they're not the same brand of wealthy. Yeah. So this book is exactly what it sounds like. It started as a research paper. She wrote this research paper, very heady, very like dense philosophy and economics because she has both of those experiences. um And that got a lot of uh interest in like academic circles. And so she got approached by publishers to be like, hey, 05:05 do you want to make this for a general audience? And so that's when she put out this book. And the book is interesting because you kind of expect reading it that it's going to like propose like a whole new like economic model. But what's interesting about it is it's not really, uh, Hey, this is a better economic model, like communism or capitalism. This is like a moral philosophy of like, it right? 05:32 for there to be people who are extremely wealthy. Like, is that morally okay? And towards the end of the book, she proposes some political measures and some actual economic theory to it. But the majority of the book is just an ethics book, really, which is very interesting. It's an interesting angle to take. I think it makes it, if you read the book, I think it makes it a little bit harder to write it off wholesale. 06:00 I think there's a lot of people who did you read it? Yeah, I think there's a lot of people we've talked about this before. We have. I read it like two years ago, I think. Oh, really? Yeah, I read it a long time ago, like close to when it came out. I didn't read it. But the the the people who discount it or like are vocal about how much they disagree with it, are they often compared to communism, which shows that they 06:28 didn't read the book. They don't understand what it's about or communism also true. They just like big scary word yeah yeah yeah communism has kind of become like the big bad wolf for capitalism and again we're not saying pro communism. We're not saying that but I'm saying that like what you think is communism is most likely not. I don't know what you think communism is but I could almost guarantee your definition of it is wrong. I'm pretty sure what you think it is is not what it is 06:57 Yeah, so, Limitarianism, like a brief, I guess, top of the, top line overview of it, is basically this idea that there is a moral limit to how much wealth someone should acquire. um And that limit is, it's interesting because she says, she defines, and we'll get to this number later, she defines like- Does she give a number? Yeah, she thinks, she defines what she thinks is political moral limit, but she also defines, 07:26 what she thinks is like the, or well, she defines what she think is the moral limit, like the ethical limit where people should choose to not go over this line. Okay. But then she defines a political limit where she thinks like government should move to legislate to this number. And she, gives a few reasons on a few ways you could do this, but the concept is not, it gets compared to communism because commune, but it's not communism because it is not the government taking over the means of production and controlling industry and then distributing the, uh, uh, 07:56 money and resource to the people. It's still capitalism. It's just there is a upper limit. The comparison that is often made is where communism would be you're driving down the highway and the government owns the road and all the vehicles on the road and then it just kind of gives you the right to drive a vehicle. Limitarianism is the government owns the road but everybody owns their own vehicles but there is a speed limit. 08:25 And you can't go over that speed limit because it's dangerous to everybody else on the road. That's the libertarianism is essentially a wealth limit. Okay. And so, uh, she gives like six moral reasons that she thinks that we should have a limit on this. Um, what are you doing? You F. 08:47 I move around. I like I move my body. Let's get you a head set then when I move my body. I got to move the mic to be near my body moving bodies dude. Okay, so my car special that I just filmed this weekend. They I am I was not a little annoyed, but just like they gave me a small stage yeah and like the lighting guy was like hey. If you step too far forward or too far back, you'll mess up the lighting on you, so you can really only move side to side. Oh and I was like 09:15 Oh and then I literally have a lot for foot yeah like it was a very small platform and so I was a little thrown off by that. I think that's really interesting. So I used to move a lot whenever I like spoke on stage. Yeah, I was talking about you give me a second. We could get back to you, but let me talk about me for a second. I used to move a lot when I would talk on stage and I actually got a mark like I got. I didn't get a word of merit and 09:44 The reason I like the amount of like doc I got whatever on the score, the reason I didn't get a word of merit is because they said I moved too much um and like they're like, like try to sit still more and it kind of broke me. Like I feel like for years after that, like I was kind of like trapped behind the podium. Why that's weird. Yeah, it was a weird thing to nitpick on. um And then, and then yeah. And then I like finally broke that at some point in the middle of college, got back into being like able to be like comfortable and mobile. 10:13 And then I got my job at some park and they were like, hey, we do IMAG. You're moving too much. They can't keep up with you. And then I had to like get back to being still. Sure. It was weird. And I don't move a whole lot. mean, I don't do, you know, I'm not like back and forth the whole time, but I do kind of, you know, pace back and forth. And I like, I like the freedom and ability to move around. Yeah. And some of my bits, I'll like lean out and do the whole thing. And it's just, I really did feel like I was just kind of like, okay, I've got 10:41 four steps that I can stay in those little things like you can kind of get in your head like, especially if they're like I joked, I joked during the sound check. I was like, I'm filming my special on the top of a ladder right now. Like you're a little yellow part that you're not supposed to stand on. That's what it felt like where I was just like, okay, I guess I'm here. Yeah. How'd everything go? I mean, that's what I'm saying. There was, there were parts of it that were, you know, the shows themselves went well. Yeah, I'm not saying that they were great crowds. We sold out both shows. That was awesome. Yeah. Right. I think I thought 11:11 that the next day I would be like that was awesome yeah, and I didn't feel that way. Have you felt that before because this is like the fourth, fifth, especially you film? No, this is my third. I mean, I mean, I guess you don't call blind date. I guess if you don't count the blind date or dry bar, yeah, I mean yeah, because the blind date was a different project entirely yeah, that's true and that's kind of what I mean too is that there was a lot of production issues of the blind date, but the blind date 11:40 went so well and was also just like I had never done it before and it was like it wasn't like a it wasn't a traditional special. So like you're kind of taking a big swing, no matter what right. This is like I'm spending more on this than I did on my wedding and this has to go well and also with the crowd is laughing, but I know that these jokes have hit harder somewhere else before like 12:05 and I guess I'm and I know that I'm over analyzing it for sure, but it's just the thing where you step off and you go. Was that the best like was it the best show I've done? Yeah, I don't know how it could be whenever like because all the other shows I'm not up there thinking this is a comedy special that could change your life. Yeah, and I don't know how to I didn't know how to perform the shows that off without thinking that for real and so I what I keep describing it as is the feeling of like 12:34 I just filmed the comedy special. The next day, what I feel like is that I just took this massive risk. My team is down by two. Yeah, I've just kicked the game winning field goal. Yeah, the ball has left my foot. Yeah. And you're just and now I just have to sit in that for two months because I haven't. I don't get to see the footage. I haven't even seen any pictures yet. Yeah, and it's like I've just it's just there and I don't know if I shank it or not. Yes. Yeah. And so that I didn't expect to feel that 13:04 I don't think. Did you feel that after the Galois? I know because you know what though? The Galois, was only four years into comedy at that point. Yeah. And I knew it wasn't going to get picked up by anybody. Yeah. Yeah. You know, I knew it was like the dream that maybe it would, but it's like, I didn't know what I know now about the industry. I didn't have actual connections to make that happen. I didn't have a manager then I didn't have no, I did that all by myself. I mean, yeah, I guess I 13:33 I hadn't signed with the manager yet. I hadn't signed with I guess I didn't realize. I mean, I'm I would have known that then, but I didn't realize, yeah, and we just kind of did that ourselves. It was after always the production team was there. I paid for that out of pocket myself as well. I had to uber drive to pay that off, but but that was also like what six years ago, seven years ago. So that was eight years ago. Yeah, that product was different than paying for a pocket now. Oh, for sure, for sure. 14:02 um and that's where it's like yeah, this thing's paid off like we're good, but also like I don't know if I'll make that money back. I definitely didn't make the money back on the first special. Yeah, you know, and this is like where it's like, but this has more at stake where it's like there's more people involved who want to see the money back, you know, uh and um there's stakeholders kind of yeah, and that's where it's like man. There's I don't I I 14:31 I would love to talk to other comics and figure out how they felt the day after they film the comedy special because uh I didn't feel this way. The dry bark I didn't pay for it. Yeah, you know, I didn't feel this way with the blind date because it was like that was an experimental idea that was it was just fun that it got. pulled it off. Yeah, you know, yeah, I think I was hoping to feel the way I felt after the blind date. Yeah, where it's like after where we had a wrap party and we all hung out and it was all fun and all stuff literally after the special like we went back to the hotel. 14:59 And like my parents were there and a couple of friends and I just I felt like I was just sitting there where I was just I was just going through like Did I tell this joke correct? Did we do this? Like is that the best? Yeah, like I was and I don't know how to turn that off right now So anyway sure like you probably like during the show like you hit a punch line and you're like well I didn't hit as well as last week and then right you have to go on to the next one. Yep. Well, that's still in there. Yeah, yeah in the audience was 15:25 more lit than usual so that we can see them on camera. Yeah, so I'm like seeing people's full reactions, which is a little which is also kind of drawing the whole time. Yeah, and and also the freaking the makeup lady had to come dab sweat off me so many times during the filming. Yeah, because like I was getting it was hot in Nashville and so she would just have to come up and I would have to stand there. Yeah, dabbing sweat off while the audience is sitting right there and then I would just be like 15:53 All right, let's get back into the jokes. it's just, was different. didn't know, I think for the next one now I know what more to expect. But I think I'm sitting here going like, man, I hope my nerves weren't reading on the camera more than, I wish that I had more confidence in it. And I'm sure that when I get the special back, oh, it's great. You know? But I have that little bit of like, I don't know how that went. I don't like that feeling. 16:22 And it's true too, like you've done this set so many times. So you know what it's like when it is like, when it's like hitting. Yeah. Nobody else knows that. So somebody else, I see it be like, was incredible. You're like, it wasn't. Yeah. Oh, and the first show there was two people in the front row who just weren't laughing. And I was like, we switch them out. What's going on here? Why are you get here out? That is for real. Yeah. It is. It is so weird to me. Like people, I mean, I guess sometimes you might not get the 16:52 the joke, but like go into a comedy show and not laughing at all is crazy, but also like you're a special taping. Yeah, pretend pretend you're a you're a participant. You're an actor in this. Yeah, participate, but also part of it is and I don't know like 17:10 We have a bit that we've done recently of like, thank you for your genuine laughter. But like I do think like there is something about like having a sense of humor where it's like you just got to like sometimes just laugh and then like you and like learn to enjoy things more, you know? Like even if like you don't actually, you know what saying? I don't think why you're trying to make this like a weird youth pastor moment. I know sometimes you just got to enjoy things more. You got to smile yourself in the mirror and trick yourself into having a better day. 17:39 It tricks your brain. It's for real. It you know, that's not what I'm trying to say. I think I think I'm saying is sometimes people come into things with bad attitudes. It's like that's why you don't enjoy that because you're for sure. For sure. Yes. But if like you just loosen up a little bit, like you're going to like it more. Yeah. Which is the message of the show, which is like, lower the bar for everything in your life. You'll have a much better time. Yeah. So maybe you should lower the bar for your expectations of the spec. Maybe I should. I don't know. 18:09 Maybe yeah, interesting. Well, it was just different and I'm excited to see how like by the time this comes out, hopefully I'll have an edit back, but I don't know. Hey yeah, maybe I should have an edit back by now. I don't know when their release was. You guys will be the you guys will find out obviously. Yeah. So you can join my email list is the easiest way to find out just so you know, why do they do that? Paul, ride the actor com um wherever just join my email list and then now send an email blast when the special gets a home. 18:38 You know man, could you imagine had there not been that snow storm flying to uh Alaska at four AM the next day after that like the way like yeah, I was originally supposed to do the special and then fly to Alaska the next day and also the Alaska show was just fine, but it's like no, that would have been terrible. That would have been awful. Yeah, that would yeah, but I do think I do now say here go like we did two shows in one day. I do think having two days would have made it better. 19:08 Oh interesting why um because I would have been able to sleep between the shows and had more time to make the second show a little better. This one was like like adjustments all just like all adjustments we had to make were made in the the forty five minutes between shows. That is true. You know that is true, so that's another thing. I think that you know hopefully next time when I film a special I'm able to do like four sold out shows. So can do two shows one night, two shows the next night and we have four shows to choose from. Yeah, you know yeah, but 19:37 Yeah, that was interesting. I'm excited to see it anyway. Who's the kid that keeps doing push ups and once once a shout out on YouTube? Do know who that is? As yeah, what's his name? Ethan or something? Yeah, shout out to your push. Yeah, quit. He's like I'm doing push ups until I get told hello or whatever. You should keep doing those. You should keep doing push ups because look what happens if you don't also 20:05 Also, there is somebody else. Look what happens if you do. There is someone as well. We're shouting people out. There is someone on Spotify who keeps commenting that you made fun of their dad for being bald and there's they said they're just going to keep commenting that until you acknowledge it. And I don't know if you remember making fun of someone's dad for being bald. I think they said it was like a youth conference. So keep doing those push ups to be clear. It did not acknowledge whatever that was. I don't know dude. Here's the thing about me making fun of people at my shows. I don't remember any of you. 20:37 That's not true. I remember that one. I remember that. Yeah, he was bald and out of youth conference. I remember that real clear. I mean, he was at a youth conference and he was bald. I do remember that. But I think I made fun of him. I made fun of him a little bit. I think he had a kid. 20:59 Okay. oh 21:05 I did a blind joke at this comedy club looking through like I'll send Robert the footage. We can throw it in person. The front row was like my wife is blind front row yeah, and I was like and you sat up front. Your date is blind. Is that what you said and you saw a front 21:29 I was the same back there. I love how you guys don't want to laugh about all right. That's really funny and you guys like and no one in the crowd laugh. 21:49 that that I was really mad at that. I was like I was like okay guys, the show's the same for you. You know, I just I don't know we're joking around. We're having fun. Yeah, yeah, this is also the joke I did where someone said they were a homesteader and I was a gas. What rich people do they buy a bunch of land? Yeah, rich people are always trying to figure out how to get away from society. They buy a bunch of land. They build a home out in the middle of nowhere, so she gives six reasons why she thinks 22:18 being super wealthy is back into the next after 24 minutes. It wasn't 24 minutes. 22:28 Thanks for watching our show if you like it. A great way to help out is by being a Patreon supporter. Doing that helps make this show possible, but it also gets a lot of perks for you. You can get every episode a week early ad free. You get access to a Discord where you can meet a lot of other people who love the show and actually hang out with Jaren and I every month on a hangout. And we're also in that Discord chat all the time, hanging, talking with people, talking about episodes and just random stuff in life. It's super fun. 22:51 We do, there's a way to get birthday messages, a free gift, merch discounts in there. So there's a lot of really great reasons to be a Patreon supporter. You get a lot of benefits out of it. And it also makes the show keep happening. So if that sounds great to you, you can go to support.tilling.com or tilling.com slash support, uh or just tilling.com and search around until you find the links uh and become a Patreon supporter. really appreciate you doing that. But if not, right back to the episode, right? 23:19 She gives six reasons why being uh super wealthy is morally not okay. The first is for the protection of democracy and political equality. And under that there's kind of three things. And so basically she says that extreme wealth concentration undermines any democracy. And it does it in three ways. First, the super rich can buy influence. And so they can pay for... 23:48 uh political power by funding candidates, you like campaign donations and things like that making large donations to pot. I feel like this is just crash out bait. I feel like this whole episode is you just being like campaign funds and I'm just supposed to be over here in my head. I'm like citizens United, so wait, I don't like I think and then like I was over here like I'm not going to crash out. I'm not going to do it out. I believe, but we're also only on point one a uh 24:18 of six and I was over here being like, uh it's not just campaign domination donations. It's uh like actual donations to party right or lobbying to create legislation that works in their interests. The other way that they did I hear a thing that this this in twenty five forty percent of lobbyists were on behalf of AI. I have not seen that, but I would believe it. 24:48 Well, we should probably verify that before we just included, but I'm pretty sure I heard that stat, which is a terrifying also uh most Americans almost like by I forget the number. I don't want to quote a number on this, but it is exponentially more Americans are more worried about AI than they are excited about it. Yeah, this is from a citizen dot org, one and four federal lobbyists now work on AI. Yeah. Okay, so twenty five percent 25:16 Yeah, you said I said forty. Yes, maybe that's where I was getting the four front for my bad, but so it is lower, but still that's a significant amount yeah, twenty five percent. Yeah, that's crazy. So yeah, so they can pay for influence in the democracy. That's the first. The second is they can control information. A lot of the a lot of the ultra wealthy they control by ownership. Yeah, the social media platform is where we get our information. The news outlets where we get our information and even like like 25:43 publishing houses where we get our information. Right. They have like actual control over what sort of information is inseminated in our society. But also they ah they can fund um advertising campaigns to influence opinion, influence thoughts, and they can fund research to influence the opinions that they want. And so they these can be kind of what you call like subversive methods to controlling what the public 26:13 believes and you do that by paying a lot of money to do that. And the third is kind of interesting. It's actually the threat of autocracy because there is this documented risk that billionaires historically and nations across the world have aligned themselves with autocrats and they use their wealth to help secure power for the autocrat and then the autocrat takes over control of the government. 26:43 We see this with Putin. We see this with figures like Xi Jinping and then they give handouts to their billionaire allies who helped rise to yeah. No buddy. I know. Yeah, that sounds terrible. This is the first I'm hearing of this. So I hate it. I don't know why you did this dude. No, I think it's, I think it's a good. This is torture because I've said, I think I said in the last couple episodes, 27:11 we're trying not to do this. We're trying not to be like a man like I want our show to be an escape from how terrible stuff is and you're like actually here are the six reasons. This is pretty bad. I did think about that while preparing for this episode, but I have since reading this book. I have for a long time been like in academic circles. It's become pretty big yeah, but I don't think it's big enough like I think more people should know about this idea. Yeah, I feel I feel like when I tell people 27:41 about limitarianism people are like libertarian libertarianism and I'm like no no no no not not that it's not that thing not that thing when you do that do you think that's funny or what what do you do? I'm sorry. I'm sorry. That was real. I know, I I know. was trying to joke with you about it, but I had to it was too mean. It was way too mean. I'm sorry. 28:11 It's kind of funny you say that because that's to you. That's so I'm so sorry. It's really funny you say that because on the way back from lunch you got a phone call. Yeah. And I was sitting in the back seat of the car listening to you on this phone call. He's dropping to your private conversation. Yeah. And I was like, dang, this guy's big. I said this guy, was like, dang, Jaren's being way nicer to this guy than he ever is to me on the phone. And I was like, well, that's a pretty good sign that like 28:38 we actually are friends. Maybe, maybe it's not. Maybe it's a sign that we're not actually good. Why not me to you on the phone? No, I just think like I do think it's interesting hearing people engage with people that like you never had a fight with your wife and then you guys go to the grocery store and she's nice to the person I check out and she's like thank you so much. You have a good night and I'm like where was that attitude? 29:02 when we were that twenty minutes ever happen to you. No, it's like we I'm just saying it's interesting seeing people engage with people who are like because, like I know I know the person you were talking to someone like you're well, it's a newer and friendship with yeah yeah yeah yeah yeah, so it's like we have a deeper friendship, which means you're router so okay. Did you listen to the the? I think that I think that if 29:31 If your and I's text messages got leaked, oh career is over. So done. Like, done. mean, like neither of us would have jobs. But that's the whole thing is that in the proper context of our relationship, like we can say whatever and we know that this is not a serious thought and this is not a harmful thought. We don't have to like clarify it with each other. Exactly. But it also exists in that context. If you and I were to post some of those things on social, that would be like, 30:00 hey, what do you, why you doing that? Yeah, yeah, you for sure. And that's the improper context for those kinds of jokes or those kinds of things to say to or about a person, right? We would never do that because that's inappropriate. Yeah, right. And so the problem is, I think a lot of people don't have the friend group chat or don't have a friend to share that space with. And then it does leak into discord and reddit and 30:27 different corners of Twitter location where it's like you see a horrific thing happen in the news, a horrible accident or a horrible thing and you're processing that with your friends and in this context that might mean a joke about that thing. That's not appropriate. Yeah, yeah, you know, yeah, but if you were to put that on Twitter, that's like hey, that's not the place or time for that. Yeah, yeah, and so yeah, the way that I talk to you, that's it's knowing the audience right, but also I hate 30:56 so much about you that I'm trying to shame you into being more like me. I figure if I treat you your mom called me when you got accepted into a Vangel, your mom called me. She said hey, I was looking up other kids that got accepted into a Vangel. I found you on the portal. She says hey, we're looking we're looking for a mentor for our son. 31:21 because he plays in the park with his friends that they're being followed by the government and we're really hoping he grows out. He is a senior yet. You you guys are the same age here a couple months over the ground, but it's really weird. We want you to mentor him. I was like change him. I was like I guess this amount of podcast with him. 31:41 so she supports. She's our sole patreon supporter, so jaren's been making thirty two thousand dollars a month to make me different and it's not working. Your parents, my parents, so much debt to jerry. 31:59 all right. So anyway, so her second reason that she gives is we've made it through point one no crash outs. I is ecological sustainability and climate justice, so what she says is that extreme walk is oh they care about the trees. She says that extreme wealth is incompatible with a planet that is currently facing 32:29 a climate crisis and she says that because ah the super rich, they have disproportionate uh ecological footprints uh compared to the rest of the society. What is interesting is like uh if you look at the CO2 is the easiest thing to measure. There's more of impact that they have, but CO2. What's interesting is if you look at the worldwide average, the global average in terms of like our impact every year in terms of like our CO2 emissions is 32:58 Most people in a single year are roughly four tons of CO2 that they emit in terms of just like our consumption, electricity, vehicles, our transport. That's a global average. Individuals, individuals. When we look at the wealthiest people, the averages are crazy. The top 10 % is about 21 tons a year where 33:28 the richest one percent is uh seventy tons or is approaching seventy tons. This is the trend line that we're on because these are twenty thirty predictions, though yeah so in nineteen ninety it was fifty six, but what we what we do know is the wealthiest uh the one percent they are traveling on private jets constantly. They're traveling on yachts and multiple large estates uh and they have 33:55 large corporations that they operate to that have a large impact and that is the other corporations were attributing to the individual right that owns it is interesting because that could skew the numbers. She isn't so in these indeed like these type. I'm trying to be fair. I'm trying to 34:12 I think what I what I get frustrated by is the number of people who will discount like if that's the way they're measuring it. I don't think that's fair to attribute to the individual and these type of stats. They are. They are saying just the individual. Okay, that's what I'm Their personal actions and people will try to be like yeah, but that includes all their companies and stuff that like that doesn't they know that's not the same. This is just their personal action and I guess I guess potentially you could probably because private jet flights are in there and a lot of those flights. They are doing business for that flight, but they're also 34:42 doing other stuff. Yeah, you know, like so it's it's kind of hard. There's probably a great when people get mad about Taylor Swift flying her private jet. like what she's supposed to fly delta yeah and let's be honest like you would do like if you had a pilot jet. Oh, I'm not talking about that. I yes obviously, but I'm like could you like is she supposed to a moment in the airport? Yeah, that's true. Yeah, that's not that's not possible for right like that's not a realistic world. Yeah, that's true. 35:12 The other thing, she does separate, so she separates it. So the second level of this is investment impact. And so she says that the global emissions from the investments of the top 1 % is 41, takes up 41 % of total global emissions. And so that comes from all that. But she also talks about resource reallocation, because she says that the surplus money held by the wealthy does not go into the well-being of 35:41 the collective of humanity. And so right now there is a global uh urgent climate crisis that is and there's all this wealth that's being hoarded by the wealthy that could be used to fix these problems. And so because this is just kind of sitting in their bank accounts, this is not that like where we have capital that could be used that is not being used to solve a major problem. And she also talks about just the use of natural resources, the ultra wealthy through their companies. 36:10 are burning through a lot of natural resources, both like trees with deforestation and then like mining and all sorts of resources like that way and natural gases and things like that. So they're burning through a lot of natural resources significantly more than the average population through their investments. But that is kind of through their businesses. So to your point, that's different. Her third reason, and this one's really interesting, is the argument from moral dessert. uh 36:39 And so what she means by that is no one truly deserves to be wealthy because the arguments that you make for someone earning their wealth can all be attributed back to, well, all of these things were not of your own accord. Even if you went and you're an entrepreneur and you started a business and you were really successful and all of that truly could be assessed. 37:05 back to like your own skill and your own capability as an entrepreneur and as a business owner, those skills and abilities that you have were a lottery. There is uh a social lottery that you were born to the parents you were born in, in the uh area you were born in, kind of like you mentioned that comic in a recent episode of like, is easier for you because of who your dad is. So there's that, but there's also, 37:32 like the natural lottery where it's like certain people are born with different talents, different levels of intelligence, different energy levels, uh different health like capabilities um that you can't take credit for. Like you were just born as the person you were born and with the skills and abilities you were born with. Sure. And there's also this, there's this concept. What is this, this concept called? Privilege. There's this concept. don't know if there's a name for this, but there's this concept that the first thousand days of life. 38:02 are the most important days of a person's life. So it's about through your first two years, roughly like a low pressure, dude, you're about halfway through your son's most important time of his life because what's still interesting is 80 % of your brain development happens until you're three up until you're three years old. Okay, and so the a person's and that's why your wife goes, that's okay, that's okay. We went and hung out with with Tim's family. Finally, I had to stay outside in the car. 38:31 but my wife went inside like face time to me and no every time that their son does something like he like rolls over or like bumps his head on something. Yeah, three swoops and he goes that's okay, that's okay, but she so been she from across the room says that's okay because that's a thing like they respond to unless they're like seriously hurt. The way they respond to that kind of stimulus is your reaction like you are right. 38:57 Yeah, and so it's like and she go that's okay, that's okay, so me and my wife pick that up as a vocal stem and it has slowly morphed because it started with us being like that's okay, that's okay, and then it went to that's okay, that's okay. So now if we bump our like I hit my shit on the coffee table last week and Reagan went that okay and we pretend that that's how Brie was saying. You know, I'm saying it's more in so 39:26 broke, broke, saying it. I think it's broke Brenda, but her wife named Brenda, but in those first three years, okay, so just so know, that's what she sounds like does those first three years are vital. I love that Tim always wants to move on. Here's the thing Tim is willing to make fun of his own son on this podcast, but Tim is so scared of his wife who doesn't listen to this by the way. 39:54 who will never know unless I clip this on social media who will never know so you're so afraid. I want you to know I want you to know I can feel your pain right now and I just need you to know say it with me. 40:18 Thanks for listening to this episode of things I learned last night. If you like the show, you want to support us, we've got merchandise that you can get and it's good stylish stuff that I made. put a lot of work into this stuff, so it's great to find other tilling fans in the wild and be like, wait a minute. I know that shirt. And so yeah, we would love for you to do that. You can pop over to shop.tillin.com or the QR code or there's a link in the description. There's plenty of ways to find it. We promise we made it super easy. So thanks for supporting the show and thanks for listening. 40:48 So 80 % of a child's brain development happens in the first three years. And so much of that development hinges on the behaviors of the parent. And so the type of toys that the child has access to, the environments that they're put in, do the parents talk to the child a lot, do the parents read to the child, the type of diet that the child receives, is the mother breastfeeding, on the environment, the care, the emotional environment that they're in, so much of that. 41:16 happens in the first thousand years or first thousand days of a person's life and take it's. It's hard to say someone can take credit for sure they are because of that. We're gonna say that and then there's this uh there's what she calls social debt. Is this part? This is still part of this third point. The moral desert. She calls it social debt and she says no one becomes super rich alone and so she says that they do this, but they rely on public infrastructure. 41:43 Yeah, they get to use to create. That is the most annoying thing. I live in California and people have, you know, even just saying that some people go or have reactions to, but what's frustrating is that all these tech companies and even Elon specifically, yeah, start in Silicon Valley, you know, and they take advantage of the tax incentives and the infrastructure that's been created by all of those companies in Silicon Valley, the networking, the 42:10 connections made through government, all the different subsidies, all those things. They take advantage of those things early in their startup. And then once it's time to start withdrawing money, they move it to a tax haven like Texas so they don't have to pay taxes into the system that helped them create what they are doing. And I think that that's wrong. I think just objectively, if you moved into my small town and you used our resources to help build your business, then you... 42:38 But you also used our resources with the promise of investing some of the return into our city. And I don't think that that's unreasonable for the state to... But they painted us that way. Oh, it's crazy the state's trying to tax me at this level. It's like, it's not though. You... And maybe we should have explicitly signed the contract on that earlier, I guess. Because it was implied that we invested in this for the future tax revenue of your larger company. 43:08 Later in the book, she talks about some of the ways you could create this system and enforce it. And one of the things she actually talks about is what you're talking about right there. And she says it's kind of interesting when you look at most societies, especially capitalist societies in the world today, they have really strong borders in terms of keeping poor people from coming in. But they just let anybody take capital out. she says that the problem is, like you said, 43:33 that capital was built off the resources that this country created. And it's the same thing. the people don't get to benefit off that. It's the same thing I talked about. I was just talking to a guy about like free buses. How Kansas City made the bus system free and the streetcar free. And how whenever Mom Donnie in New York says that he wants to make the bus system free, everyone's like, it's just a socialist handout. But what you're not understanding is that from a city planning perspective, Like if we're working on this as a collective to try to make Kansas City great, one of the things that we want to do is we want to increase the workflow in... 44:02 these city limits. We need more people who can work inside Kansas City limits. um Part of what we need to do is lower some housing costs so that more people can live here and then by living here they can contribute to the businesses and we can get tax revenue from that business action. Another way to help increase our revenue is to pay for the transportation for people to come here from the suburb to then work here and increase our revenue. So for every dollar 44:30 example that we put into the bus system, we get $3 back. So it'd be like if I was like, I got to pay $700 for a flight and hotel to get to the show and at the show I'll make a couple thousand dollars or whatever. Then you would go, that's a waste of $700. And it's not though. It's a business expense. It's an investment to get to a place where I can then recoup that investment. And that's what I'm getting frustrated by is the number of people who treat... And of course I'm not saying like, oh, 44:59 government's great and there's no fraud, there's no abuse, or there's no misuse of funds, or there's no waste, right? But I am saying like to imply that any dollar spent is waste is just ignorant. yeah. It's looking at a lot of these things that... And that's not a That's not a class! It's looking at a lot of these things that they're like face Man, I'm looking at the state of the world and all I can do is be like, that's okay! So anyways, she says... 45:27 that the public infrastructure, the legal systems that were in place, the property protections that exist are all centuries of human innovation and government-funded research. She gives the example of GPS. says a major part of Google's success is Google Maps. And Google Maps exists only because the government invested in GPS, the government invested in the internet, and those were massive expenditures that the government spent on that Google was able to get rich off of. And so the owners 45:56 of Google got to become really rich off of. The government is laying fiber cables because they're starting to treat internet as a utility. Yeah. And that benefits internet companies. Yeah. And so that level of extreme wealth, even if you could say. I just don't understand how anybody looks at it. this, yeah, anyway, conversations are impossible. Keep going. That success is built off the back. 46:23 of a lot of other things that cannot solely be attributed to that one person's capabilities or talents. So to say that they have a moral right to what they earned or because they put the effort forth, you can say maybe, they did some things that do deserve something, but do they deserve as much as they gained? And she would argue no. ah And then her fourth point ah is economic efficiency and declining marginal utility. 46:52 This is really interesting. So these are two sides of this. uh And so basically she says that it's wasteful uh for the ultra rich to become ultra rich because there is this certain point where accumulating more wealth doesn't do anything for changing the quality of the life of the wealthy person. Right. So ah she gives the example of if you have a person say like they're like a single mother living on one income that is a minimum wage income. 47:21 if you gave that person $100, that helps a lot. Like that can go fast food, that can go towards builds, that makes a big difference. But if you give that $100 to an Elon Musk, he'll turn it into a billion. That is not noticeable. That's also what I hate all the way. Crash out incoming. Oh no. Oh my gosh. When people are like, if you give a poor person $100, they'll waste it. But if you give it to a rich person, they'll turn it into $1,000. 47:51 And that's because you're a dumb dumb. If you give a poor person $100, they will spend it on things they need. They will spend it on survival because that's what they have to do. And it's the same thing where it's like, man, I make a good living. I'm not complaining at all. My wife and I, like we're working hard. We're paying off our debt. We're doing our things. I like we're at the point where it's like there's not a whole lot left over at the end of the month. I mean, we're putting money in savings. Of course, I would love to be able to put more into savings. 48:19 And by the same time you get shamed for not doing that. Yeah. Yeah. You know, yep. 48:24 and it's like a go earn more. Oh, I was just I I was just stupid. I thought it was wrong with me, but that's what I'm saying is that oh, that's not a crash out. We're good. We're good. So she said I'm really holding it over here. Dude, she says there's a point you for this. This is is this payback for the April Fool's episode? This is crazy. You chose to do this. He says that there's a point for two weeks in a row. You were like here's some graphs and some science that neither of us understand, but I'm going to pretend to understand it. And this week you're like you're like 48:53 kind of yeah. So do rich people deserve it and I was over here like yeah, uh huh, uh huh, do rich people and you're like and you're like actually one of the arguments is that they're taking more than they're giving back and I'm like so never so the argument is that there comes a certain point right where it doesn't change your life at all sure. What does another vacation mode? 49:20 a home do, what does another jet, a bigger yacht, like none of these things actually improve your life that much, where that same amount of wealth, if you distribute amongst people who are in the bottom half of the population, it makes a massive impact in their life. um so... If you're talking about wealth distribution, people are going to shut you off though. Hold on, so keep talking. So she's saying that those living in extreme poverty, uh these sort of, uh is hoarding wealth that could actually make a big impact in society. And the argument here, 49:50 is that a society where the majority of people have all of their basic needs met is a more productive society and a better society to live in. Not just for the people at the bottom that you've increased their lifestyle. It's better for everyone because everyone gets to live in a society where... I think there's so many things that when we talk about like why is the education system kind of going downhill and it's part of it's like, it's the parents. Yeah. And it's like, yeah, well, if you look at the poorest neighborhoods, like those parents are not able to be present. Yeah. 50:20 Yeah, they're just not able to be yeah because they're working two jobs and even like the older kids in the household have to start getting jobs. Yeah, I would like in that is a way that decreases. There's a book called Dream Hoarders, which kind of talks about this as well, but it talks about like your kid having the free time to play on a sports team, which then opens them up to more scholarships is a whole different level of privilege. Yeah, there are kids who are athletically gifted who would love and could take those scholarship spots to increase their 50:49 uh their earning potential and maybe change their lot in life, but they don't have the after school time to play on a sports team because they do have, they have to go to work. I watched a video recently on YouTube about the winter Olympics, how they're increasingly becoming a rich kids talent show because all of those sports specifically uh are very expensive sports to get into. And so the people who manage to become successful in that, they usually come from money, which is a shame. 51:19 I mean I'm not trying. don't want to. I don't want to be like I hate rich people. Yeah, I'm not trying to be like that. It like you are but uh no, so the next reason she gave me we're not. What if I told you that I'm rich? We're not talking about you. What if what if or not that right? What if I told you I've just been playing humble this whole time and that my dad is the CEO of Delta Airlines? uh 51:48 So the fifth reason she gives is social stability and reduced crime. And she actually makes the argument, which I think is a valid argument through a lot of research, is that inequality has been linked to increases in crime, uh bullying in schools, actually mental health issues, corruption, uh and then just like general discontent in a society because of that gap uh with the rest of society. 52:14 And she actually, what's interesting is she ties us back to the last point. And she says, this is why you see so many wealthy people uh building bunkers in New Zealand. Because they know that the society that they're building is a society. Is so unequal. Yeah. And historically, this gap widens, it ends with the people going for the heads of the wealthy. And so the wealthy are finding places to hide for when that situation unfolds, instead of actually solving the problem. 52:43 And that's so odd. And she says that this is crazy because if they could just change their mindset a little bit where they aren't accumulating on hoarding so much and allow some of that to spread out some more, they wouldn't need to build a bunker because what life is that where the world collapses and you have to hide in a bunker in New Zealand for the right life? Like why do you want that to be the reality you live in? But that's what they're choosing, which is crazy. uh And well, dream orders also talks about how in the current 53:13 system we live in that it is possible, or at least the idealism is that it's possible to move up a rung into a different class. But for lower income, we have really removed the safety net. So what they're trying to do is they're trying to reinforce the safety net so that they never become poor. It's like really like what it is. Is they're trying to make sure that like, because the whole idea is that when, if you fall out of the 5%, someone else is in your 5 % slot now, right? 53:42 but they're just trying to make sure that the top ten percent no one moves out of which also, by the way, the top ten percent is people who earn over a hundred thousand dollars a year, which is crazy because people think the top ten percent is way more than that. It's not but yeah, so anyway, yeah and the last reason she gives is tainted wealth and character harms and so tainted wealth. You can kind of figure out what that is. It is tainted. Well, it is not like a 54:11 rule that everybody who accumulates massive amounts of wealth comes from data means. But it is pretty common that somewhere along the line there is something that happened that was harmful to others that they used to acquire massive wealth. We were talking about lunch. Meta just lost a massive uh lawsuit that said that they were intentionally addicting people. they were, well, I should say they were negligent in the fact that their algorithm. 54:36 algorithms are addictive to people? No, they were intentionally making it like, I mean, sure, you want to use all the legalese you want, but they were intentionally making their product addictive. They knew it was addictive and they were doing that. And also the thing like in 2009 when they fudged the numbers on video views to get all these people to put their videos on Facebook, turns out they were 10xing those views. So a video that showed 2 million views was really only getting 200,000 views and that's criminal. Yeah. But here's what happens. Here's what happens. I actually made a great analogy at lunch. I'm going to make it again here. 55:05 Is that they just pay the fine and they start to build the fine into their operating expenses It'd be like if I have a bus company and I want to make sure that my buses run the fastest in the city So my buses run 20 miles an hour over the speed limit and I just factor in the $200 speeding tickets. Yep. I go. Yep. It's every once in a while I'm gonna get caught with a speeding ticket But for the most part I'm not and I'm gonna keep moving and we're gonna make we're gonna make that up in Revenue because I can move so much faster than the other buses 55:34 And so all this factor in speeding tickets so that I can keep moving faster than the bus. And all the buses that follow the laws go out of business because of you. And then we just end up with a wildly unsafe bus system. And we go, why are the buses so fast and they keep hitting people and there's no way to slow them down? And that, oh, that was a crash out and I'm sorry. I'm sorry. I said I wasn't going to do it. Here, let me cash you back out. I'll cash and release you real quick. 56:03 uh And so she says that this is done by legitimately immoral or sometimes unintentionally immoral means to gain wealth. course. uh And then, or built on the back of other historical injustices, the success that they found was only possible because of the success of another person who was immoral. uh Or aggressive tax avoidance or actual evasion. Yeah. She makes an interesting statement that so much of tax avoidance right now that is legal tax avoidance was illegal 50 years ago. Yeah. And so just because 56:33 the laws have changed, which remember, they paid to change the laws, uh doesn't mean that it's okay for them to evade paying these taxes, it just means that they found a way to make it okay legally, found a way to make it so they can get away with it. So she says that uh typically someone who acquires this much wealth probably tax avoided at some point along the line, if not actively is tax avoiding right now. And that is tainted wealth. The other side of this that's really interesting, she says that this is actually very harmful to the wealthy people themselves. And she says that what happens, 57:01 is that it negatively affects their character and the well-being of themselves because having that much wealth inflates their egos, makes them think that they are more valuable than other people, and leads to irrational anxieties that somehow they're going to lose all of this or someone's going to try to take it from them. Also, it leads to social isolation because they cannot relate to anybody else because so few people are at the level, have the type of problems that they have. You also start to be like, of my relationships are fake. 57:27 because everyone's trying to just our money. Yeah. Even your kids are trying to figure out which one of them is going to get the money. Like, yeah, of course. Yeah. It's there's a reason that they're all addicted to to substances and stuff. Well, she was going to say it becomes an addiction in and of itself acquiring more wealth. Yeah. And they become addicted to seeing that number go up in their net worth. And so this thing has a negative impact on their own well-being to right the well-being of everyone else. And so this is her whole argument of like morally why this shouldn't 57:57 be a thing. She says that this is bad for society and is bad for the people who acquire it. And what's interesting is at the end of the book, she kind of starts to outline how she thinks this should work. And she makes a very interesting statement where she's like, look, I'm not anti-capitalist. I think capitalism is a good thing. And I think capitalism is like one of the And I hope that's clear in our rants and our crash outs too. Like, I'm not advocating that we do like, I mean, like the unregulated state of capitalism we currently exist in. 58:25 is that sucks. That's kind what we're talking about with the whole bus analogy, right? That's where we're at. But that doesn't mean I'm like, let's just get rid of buses. Let's just get rid of society. If that's your takeaway, I'm not trying to be mean, that's dumb. You know? Yeah, yeah. And so she also illustrates, she says, and also like, I recognize that the world I am painting, the alternate world I'm painting, is far away and hard to achieve. 58:52 And we should not say because this is so difficult to achieve, we shouldn't try in some way to get towards there. She said that ah the people who, when the United States overturned slavery, there was still a lot of big problems. There still are a lot of big problems that tie back to that today. But she says that that wasn't a reason to not undo slavery. Like these are things that we need to take the steps towards the moral right, even if it's a long road and even if we're not able to move as far as we to move. And so she says we should take some steps. And so 59:21 What she argues is she argues that there should be a moral top line where we say ethically morally this is the top line of wealth that anyone should acquire. And then there should be a political top line where this is something that government should actually enforce. And so the moral top line, which is kind of crazy, she says the moral top line is a million euros ah is the total net worth, total net worth, which is crazy. And she sets that number for a lot of reasons. But the biggest reason she did a lot of research, uh she 59:51 did this big study by pulling. That's a lot lower than I thought it was going to be, be honest. Yeah. She did this big study by pulling a lot of people that showed these lifestyles, a lot of people. she basically said, who has too much? And she basically took the mean of what everybody said. And that was at a million euro net worth. She also looked at the impact of that hoarding of wealth and what that takes away from the rest of society in terms of how many resources are available. So that's where she set that number. uh 01:00:18 That's pretty crazy. That's interesting to me because I think that that's highly subjective because a million dollar net worth in Kansas City is a pretty decent life. A million dollar net worth in Los Angeles is very different. Right. ah And so I do think like there's a little bit of you got to be able to have some variance there. The political number she says though is 10 million euros. And she says that by basically saying like I I took that up by an exponent. 01:00:45 and by exponential exponentially and said, okay, this is the number where like society should not. actually am a little bummed because I do think that the rest of these points were super valid, but I do think that this ending here is a little elementary is a little bit like, mean, for the exact same thing you just said of like a million here is different than a million there. Oh, I do. And if she came to it just by pulling people, will. Well, it wasn't just that it wasn't just I understand. But I'm saying like 01:01:12 and I will say she did for how well thought out the other points were. I'm disappointed by how not well thought out that is. did mention that these numbers are numbers that probably need to be reevaluated regularly because the economy changes and because of like what is considered a good life changes right and so these numbers need to be consistent like they need to be mobile, ah but the way she says a government could enforce these things and this is crazy. She says that once someone enters a ten million net worth, they should just have a hundred percent tax. 01:01:42 which is crazy. And so she's like, she's like, obviously no one would go for that. Like we'd have it'd be nearly impossible to get somebody to do that. But she said, this is what I think the ethical ideal is, is that scenario. We figure out how we can get closer to that. ah And so there have been some critiques of it. The biggest critique is like the good life. Like how do you define what the good life, right? You find that number and that's how different people are. was like, well, how are they motivated? You also don't understand. You also don't understand that they're 01:02:10 there stops being a moment where the money is what motivates you and it becomes the power and influence. And if we create a system where the power and influence aren't connected to the money, then it's different. Somebody actually made the argument that that is one of the flaws of this system. Because you take the money out and like, yeah, that helps, but like people will still find a way to socially, social hierarchy. That is interesting. And so they're like, this doesn't actually solve the root problem here. This is a symptom of a bigger problem is what this argument was, which is interesting. 01:02:39 but yet to your point uh whenever I hear that my first thought is the Green Bay Packers because you know this. Oh, I know why I go. Yeah, don't even worry about it. Do know this? My first thought is the Green Bay Packers. No, listen, listen, listen, listen. I, I hate the Green Bay Packers a lot, but I will say their structure like their corporate structure is really interesting because they are a nonprofit corporation. Nobody owns the Packers. There's not an individual that owns the Packers. When they were founded, they sold shares 01:03:08 to the city of Green Bay and now it's sold worldwide. But they are a collective of shareholders. And what's really interesting about that is the shares don't pay a dividend. They can't accrue, like they can't go up. They're non-transferable. And so they're kind of show shares. And so what the team does whenever they need to raise money, they sell more shares. And so in 2022 is the last time they did this. They raised $93 million by selling shares of the company for $300 a piece. 01:03:38 and they raised ninety three million dollars doing that and there's when out the end of every season, nobody takes a profit. It goes into the team's fund and they use that to grow the team and to manage the fund. So there's a there's a board, there's a corporate structure, there's so there's right who lead that, but nobody is profiting hugely off of the the people have salaries, but nobody is taking profits out of the Green Bay Packers. Sounds like communism. The Green Bay Packers are communist is what I'm learning. 01:04:08 And so what I'm saying there is nobody there has that financial motivation of like, this needs to be successful so I can make three billion at the end of this year. They just want the team to do well. And that's all that they need. 01:04:24 which is crazy. Well, you can buy a share of our podcast by joining us on patreon as your way of buying a share and then you can also listen to next week's episode right now by joining us there, you know, and then if you like this episode, go listen to Ida would. It was a rich person and she speaking of hoarding. They, you know, she whore, she physically hoarded her wealth and like hid it around her house, which is crazy. So fiddle off and we'll see you next week. 01:04:53 and no crash out. No, we kind of did it. Yeah, we did good. I'm proud of you. He's gonna crash out after this. We're gonna turn the cameras off. He's gonna lose it.


In an era of growing economic disparities, conversations about wealth distribution and its societal impact are more crucial than ever. Dr. Ingrid Robeyns, a distinguished academic from the University of Cambridge, offers a compelling and thought-provoking perspective through her concept of Limitarianism. This isn’t merely an economic model, but a profound moral philosophy that questions the very existence of extreme … Read More

What if Antimatter Was Cheap

05-12-26

Episode Transcription

00:00 Hey man, what's up happy to be here by the way good just I need to be very clear that like I saw a person post online about hey guys. If you're stand up comedian, you don't have to do a podcast. I want you guys to know I know yeah like we don't do this because I'm like oh I have to have one yeah we're doing it for my stand up career. We do I have to have we do this for Tim self esteem yeah, nobody to without my Evan. Tell him what you are without this podcast nothing 00:28 there is nothing about me outside of this spot. has a wife. He's got a son, but to love him, but all of that is nothing compared to this podcast. That's right. Never forget 00:45 the existence of what you could call the anti world. so. OK, what does that mean, Tim? all. Mathematically, the existence of the upside down. This all leads back to stranger things. Things I learned last night. 01:16 Wow, but your thought though. What about? Oh, that was my thought. Oh yeah, like we were to do this and we're not doing this for your career. Yeah, we're gonna do this from a career. We're doing this because I enjoy doing this like genuinely. This is my favorite thing. So like I like doing this. We did this when nobody cared and we will continue to do this when nobody we've been. No one has cared the entire time. We we hope more people will care, but if they don't, we know I don't. I don't care if you don't care. I don't care if you don't care. 01:43 I care. care a lot. didn't like you anyway. lot. I care a lot. Oh, you won't go on a date with me. I didn't like you anyway. Actually, you're ugly and so uh unless you say yes, then you are really pretty 02:02 okay. uh Well, I don't care. You care. I don't care. You care. You care. You're the one who cares. No, for real though, I don't I like doing this podcast. Yeah, the podcast is because of the podcast. Not because you're yes. That's what I'm saying. That's what I'm saying. Cool. uh Anyways, have you ever heard of Paul Dirac Paul Paul Dirac? I think I said that wrong. Dirac Paul Dirac Paul Dirac Paul Dirac. Okay, have you ever heard of him? No, 02:30 Okay, so here's his brother off off the heck. Okay, so bald rack. Let's play the game. Let's play. It's pretty easy to get to him to say stupid stuff. Let's let's play judge a book by its cover. Okay, great. Here's a picture of Paul to rack when he was a young man. Yeah, yeah. What do you think either a poet or a person who wants to kill everyone? We don't talk about like 02:57 a guy who like writes poems about girls that he thinks are pretty or a guy who writes books about how he thinks that he's the only one that should be in charge. You know, that's great. You know where he like writes stuff and he's just like actually I haven't figured out and everyone else is kind of dumb and we should either. We should figure out how to get rid of him and put me in charge or a guy who's just like her eyes are like the beam of sun pierces the cloudy sky. 03:27 you know his palms don't rhyme. You know, I think we were told that palms were supposed to, but they don't have to ride. They don't have to. Some of them do the best ones don't. That's true. That is true. Here's a picture of him when he's a little older holding up his passport. Okay, give you any more context of not at all. What about this one? This is him younger again. We're kind of bouncing through the years for him. What's up with his jacket? 03:53 I don't know. I didn't notice that in the smaller version. Maybe it's wrinkles. I don't know. It's very strange. Okay, here's another one of him. He's old again. Go back to the other one. 04:04 Okay, here he is holding in okay. I love an old guy so okay, so he's standing in front of a chalkboard on this though yeah. There's some math equations there. Did this guy figure out something important? Hey, yeah, you're right. You're right. He okay. This is Ponderac is a famous mathematician from the Einstein era. Okay, 04:26 and it would suck to be a mathematician at the same time as Einstein. You know it's kind of like kind of like being Josh Allen right now, where it's like like an Allen's brother. Yeah, 04:40 No, I know you're talking about yeah, but it's like you worked your whole life. You were the best athlete at your school forever. You went to college. People were like, my gosh, you're going to be you're going to go off and then you're in the league at the same time as Patrick Mahomes, and that's who everyone talks about, but he didn't do it when my homes wasn't there. So that's why is he really that great? That's what I'm saying, but I don't know, but I'm talking about like, know, even yeah, the we call it the Michael Jordan era. Yeah of basketball. Yeah, you know 05:09 where it's like there was so many other really great players, but you only think of that one and that's what I'm saying, but I will stay like from and that's why right now when you think of the podcasting era, you're going to think of it as the Jaren Myers era. Okay, oh yeah, the Jaren Myers era of podcasting. Yeah, when people just had podcasts and no one listened to that's what defines the era. I'm not trying to be one of the greats he uh he, but I will say like that time Schrodinger was the same time Schrodinger 05:39 uh so there's other people that you actually do now. It's not just Einstein, but I do get the point you're saying yeah, but the main one you think of you yeah. You do think of if you were to draw a scientist, who are you drawing probably Einstein? Yeah, Einstein, Einstein or Neil deGrasse Tyson. If you're telling me draw a scientist and if you're drawing him with pencil, yeah, just drawing yeah. 06:05 kind of similar drawings right, Neil deGrasse Tyson and and mustache big hair. Yeah, a face with eyes, Neil deGrasse Tyson Einstein is new the grass. They said just Einstein. No, I'm saying there's the look. Yeah, yeah, yeah, they do have like that science look. Okay, you're saying interesting. So direct is interesting because he was born in Bristol, England. 06:33 You asked me to draw a scientist. I would draw Jimmy Neutron. This is the only scientist that matters to me, uh so he was born in what did I say London? Did I say London, Bristol, Bristol, England? He had a Swiss father and an English mother and he initially went to school to become an electrical engineer. Okay, board him. So he left and went to study mathematics at Cambridge and he actually studied at Cambridge under Einstein. 07:02 And uh he was an interesting guy because uh he was very, what's the word I should use? uh Very, nonchalant isn't right, nonchalant is wrong. He just had a very even temper and he did not talk much. So little that his friends actually coined a term, and I shouldn't say coined a term, they were the only ones who used it. 07:30 but they created a unit of measurement that they called a die rack or a derac and a drac is stands for one word an hour because that's all he spoke and so he's he's all trying to do that today. I want to speak in direct starting now. I hate you. I wonder, I wonder how mean I would have to get be to get you to break from this bit. 07:57 And that's exactly what he would do. He would respond to facial expressions a lot. There's a famous story where later in his life when he was a professor, he was giving a big lecture at a university and there was like a moderator, a whole thing. It like a big lecture that a bunch of people came to and there was like distinguished scientists in the room. And so he's doing the lecture and he's doing equations on the board and someone interjects in the middle of lecture. 08:26 I was like, excuse me, I don't understand the equation in the top left of the chalkboard. And there was this long, uncomfortable silence, because he just stared at the guy. And it was so long and so uncomfortable that eventually the moderator stepped in and was like, are you going to answer his question? And he said, that wasn't a question, that was a comment. 08:52 I like this guy. I like that a lot. He didn't ask a question. I just love that the guy said that and he just understand that they're the top left and you're just looking at him like it's almost like you're looking at him like then ask me to explain it. That's such a power like that's not him be like. Will you explain that further? That's him going. I don't understand that and he just goes 09:23 and okay. All right. Yeah, I don't understand that. Okay, okay. Anyways, I'm gonna continue talking here. I just love that he paused and just waited and just stared at him. That's so funny to me, but yeah, he was a very quiet individual, didn't speak much and he he loved math. I cannot over emphasize enough how much this guy loves math. He loved my loves math and he was this big deal because 09:52 He, in multiple occasions, would describe equations as beautiful. And he said, this is a beautiful equation. Like, this is just, this is a perfect, beautiful equation. And he actually, in his free time, like, his favorite pastime would just be rethinking famous equations and trying to solve them in different ways. And so he would kind of break apart equations down to their basic pieces and then solve them in different ways. That was what he did for fun. He loved math. And so he did the electrical engineering and he's like, 10:22 the build stuff part. If I could just do this with just the math part. And then he's like, oh, I can't. And so that's when he can't do just math. That's when he went to Cambridge to start to study uh mathematics. And he's there studying theoretical mathematics. And at the same time, there are kind of two worlds colliding in the world of physics. And I want to pull this up to make sure that I reference this correctly. There's two theories. 10:50 uh actually from Einstein and Schrodinger. so there's ah Einstein's general relativity or special relativity. That was a big theory that had entered the scientific realm. And then Schrodinger's quantum mechanics. these were both... And his cat. Yeah, his cat was a... Well, his cat was part of that. um And both of these were proven through mathematics and experiments and philosophy and logic. And they were well received within the scientific community. 11:21 parts of them that did not mesh well together and there was there's questions that if both of these are true, then there's some sort of issue here within our mathematics. Okay, so Paul sat down. He's like he's like I love math. I'm gonna see if I can figure out why the issue is within this equation and so he sat down and he basically took he took Einstein's e equals MC squared and he reverse engineered it. I don't know what that means either equals MC squared 11:51 E, since energy. No, I like this. E stands for energy, M stands for mass, and C stands for the constant of the speed of life squared. And so what you're finding is if you take the mass of any material or molecule uh and multiply that by the constant of speed of light squared, you're going to get the amount of energy, like potential energy within that object. So if all of that thing got converted into energy, that's how much energy is resting in that thing. 12:21 it's not true. Okay, but it did not none of that's true, but that did not net made it up. That did not match with quantum mechanics because mechanics kind of taught that there was this like quantum world that we don't that we don't understand. That is also dictating all these things that are happening within the known universe. I was in math league at my school and I was single by the way and uh 12:50 and I could not tell you what any of this said. I mean I can understand like moving MC to this, know, but like I don't know what any of this is. So what he did here is he basically took the E equals MC squared equation and he pulled the quantum mechanic equations into this and basically meshed them together right and there's a simplified version of his equation called the Dirac equation. 13:18 and this is the concise version of this. So essentially what this equation is is in parentheses. You have an imaginary number multiplied by the poly matrices multiplied by the derivatives in four dimensions, obviously acted by Fermi and mass, which of a Fermi and do know what a for me in is yep? Okay, keep going subtracted for the Fermi and mass and then all of that is in press. to Alex over a Fermi in 13:45 is the opposite of a boson, a boson and you know what a boson is. Obviously, I Alex you're not dumb yeah, you're Alex. know what boson you're probably familiar with. I don't have boson is I'm no bozo. I'll tell you that you know what the Higgs boson is right. Yes, you've heard of that yeah, so the Higgs boson is like this like building building 14:09 piece of all matter like underneath all matter. The Higgs boson existed right. The boson is is a mall like an attack to me. Now let's just pretend I went to public school 14:22 uh so a boson is an atomic particle. Yeah, what I like about this though, here's what I like is that if I dig far enough, it'll expose that he doesn't know what it is either, but if you keep it at a high enough level, he can talk about it, but if you go a little further, you can feel them typing. You know I'm saying so a boson has a spin. That is a full integer, so 14:51 where a Fermion has a fractional I'm just I'm only thinking about when you say integer. I am only thinking about like people listen to this podcast with their kids in the car. We have like thirteen year old fans and there's a thirteen year old in the back of a minivan right now and their brain is just melted. They're just like derivative of Fermi hyper, but they're just back there like I guy. 15:17 Hey, thanks for listening to this episode of things. I learned last night. If you like this show, we would love to see in our Patreon. It's a great way to financially support the show. We don't make money from this. It just helps us to pay the people who do make money from this. Like Alex and Robert, her editor, and maybe one day, one day me and Tim, maybe one day, but only if you join, only if you join, we can't wait. We can't get paid until you pay. Can't feed Tim's kid until you join. He's so 15:47 of an angel. 15:59 Here's what I should say. When I look at all this, the only thing in here that I feel like I even somewhat understand is the fermion mass, because the fermion is the opposite of a boson, uh a particle that has a fractional spin ratio. So it's just the mass of this atomic particle, basically. That's the one thing that I feel like I even relatively understand here. And then you multiply all that by the wave function, and it leads to zero. And this was a big deal, because what it did, 16:28 is it merged Einstein's special relativity with Schrodinger's quantum mechanics and show that there was a link in it and like a mathematical provable link. A bunch of other uh mathematicians and scientists tested this and they were able to say yes, this does actually like link the two and like this is the missing piece. Okay, you got the Nobel Prize for this. This was a huge deal yeah, which again, Nobel Prize completely image laundering, but yes, but what this did that was arguably 16:57 just as significant, if not more significant, is it ah is it predicted the existence of what you could call the anti world ah and so. 17:15 Okay, what does that mean, Tim? all mathematically the existence of the upside down. This all leads back to stranger things finale. So here's the thing. All matter is created when photons to high energy photons collide. Sure. And then when that can collision occurs, what we get out of it is we get both matter and anti matter. And so matter, which we have long known about 17:43 Here's a hydrogen molecule molecule and that Hydra hydrogen molecule is made up of proton, a single proton and a single electron and the proton is neutral. It doesn't have any charge. Electron um has a negative charge and then inside it are quarks. Quarks have both inside the proton or quarks and quarks have both charges. Obviously they just fill up that proton. Can we just take a second as we're looking at another graph, another illustration here? 18:12 that Tim is again trying to explain complex scientific details to us that he barely understands himself to be clear. I I barely understand this yeah and I just I was excited when you brought a person at the beginning of this. You were like ah hey, it's gonna be easier and we've gone from iodine to now we're sitting here going like so there's there's hydrogen and there's anti hydrogen right 18:42 and I just need you to know I am unwillingly doing this. This podcast I said at the beginning, because I knew that you probably wouldn't listen this far, but if you did listen this far, you're in a position to help because I don't want to be here. This is actually the worst thing that's ever happened to me and I am being forced to do this against my will keep going. Tim explain science to us. I'm going to trip you so hard later. Alex. What did I say to you between episodes? 19:09 What did I say to you between him? He wasn't listening to you. Come on, you can see his face where he's like. Oh, no, what did you say to me? I gotta go. He should turn the Alex. What did I say to you early? What did I say to your last class? Did you write that down and you put that your notes Alex? What did we talk about last week? Huh Alex? Did you did you do the homework? Yeah, a trip you so hard. left the room. I waited for you to be outside of your shot and I was like. It's funny that he said that I 19:38 or what he said about this episode because next episode I'm talking about anti-matter. Yeah, you were like the last one who got called out for being ambitious. And then we're going for this. Okay. And here's the thing. When, so when matter is created, creates hydrogen. This hydrogen molecule is created. We know what it's made out of. Anti-matter. know. Anti-matter is also created. So you have a... 20:05 an anti matter is basically just the opposite of this so ridiculous trying to do this. So within it there's an anti proton protons. Both protons are neutral, so that doesn't change, but we have what they call positron or you also can use the thing that I'm not even going to try to help you make this interesting. Oh, don't worry, I will. I'm excited about it. The positron is is the opposite of electron, so it has a nade, so it has a no. I'm trying my bad. It has a negative charge and 20:34 the all the quarks, the positive on has a negative charge. Yeah, no, the positive has a positive charge. Sorry that makes lot has a negative charge positive on has a bright charge and then all the quarks. They're just the opposite. They have the opposite charges right. What's really interesting about this is these things are both created during that collision and when they collide, if they collide back with each other, if matter and anti matter were to come into contact with each other, uh they annihilate each other is the word that scientists use because there's zero 21:04 Yeah, there's nothing. Nothing exists because it's a naked. It's a positive and negative like they they they cancel each other out. Okay, exact opposites and what we see and this has since been observed. We've actually done experiments to observe that this is what happens when these so much worse than I thought it was in my picture. It's a low res image Robert. When you put this on the screen, you have to like 21:32 de hands the image just make it so much worse. This is this looks bad on my screen, but it's like you can did the brightness on the TV just adjust as well, because it probably was just like oh yikes. Oh my gosh dude. So what is happening here? I'll explain this. This looks like runescape graphics dude. That's crazy. It looks so much better on my screen. It still doesn't look good, but it's so much better than this. 21:58 What happens is you when you have anti matter and matter collide. What's very clear is that this used to have a white background is the problem and they cut it out and then they cut the white background out. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. When they when it collides, what you get out of it in both directions of the collision and like opposite directions, the collisions you get gamma rays and so okay, photons come out of it and it's pure energy. So a hundred percent of the mass of the anti matter, a hundred percent of the mass of the matter come out in the form of gamma rays as energy and so 22:27 What's interesting about this is that potential energy from E equals MC squared that we almost can never realize because we can't every anytime we create energy, ah it's not fully efficient. So we only get a percentage of that energy out of any sort of reaction that creates whatever energy we're creating. uh But with antimatter collisions, 100 percent of the mass of that matter is converted into energy, both for the antimatter and the actual matter. Right. ah And what is interesting is these 22:57 exist out in the world in a lot of ways. We know that from the beginning of universe when everything was created, 23:10 What do we know about that time? Tim, the that there was a collision of particles. This is interesting that this is where you're trying to go with. I hey, hey, hey man, yeah, I'm listening. There's a collision of particles and what's really interesting is we can see ah we can observe ah that there is somehow more matter than anti matter in the universe. Okay, but that shouldn't be possible because we know when these 23:39 photons collide, it creates matter and anti-matter. And when matter and anti-matter collide, they cancel each other out and they annihilate. Therefore they're equal. And so the universe should be nothing but light. We should have nothing but gamma rays in the universe, but we have matter. And so this is known as the Borean problem, where there is to every, ah there's a billion to one ratio of matter in the universe, where for all the anti-matter in the universe, one matter didn't have a mass. 24:09 each one like particle of matter didn't have an anti matter match and we don't understand why and so what so when there's a billion in one so for every piece of anti matter in the world. So there's a billion. I should say there's a billion pairs okay in that there's nine hundred ninety nine million nine hundred nine thousand nine hundred ninety nine pairs that had matter and anti matter and they cancel each other out. There's one, but there's one where for some reason that anti matter didn't have a pit or that matter didn't have an anti matter parent. 24:37 was able to continue on for some reason and that's how we got everything. All the matter that exists comes from this mystery, basically of how we don't understand why there's no anti matter. What was that face just the mystery ah and so this is one of the things that is Ken Ham say about that Ken Ham doesn't know about that. 25:03 You 25:07 I just love that on threads you've been increasingly antagonistic to the kin ham answers in Genesis account that you've been responding. I you guys are doing really bad theological work. I didn't know you saw I got really bad because I just realized the other day yeah they've been trying to pretend they're the Bible project. looks like yeah because I because it's happened to me a couple times. I've seen this and I've been like I'm like that's weird that the Bible project process saw post of this and then I was like oh it's not the Bible project and then the other day I was like why do I think this is and I looked and I was like the logos are almost the same 25:37 Yeah, and they definitely did that after the project right and that makes me mad. You're trying you're like you're like piggybacking off of a good organization that is doing good sound scholarly work while you're doing whatever conspiracy theory crap you're doing yeah building a giant boat for money laundering for sure it's insane and it makes me mad and I we're not fans of the creation. I didn't realize you could see that but we will say this week sponsor is the creation. 26:06 really grateful that they paid us to tell you to go there. You can go see how dinosaurs and humans probably exist at the same time. According to Ken Ham and also the earth is was he said six thousand of years old yeah yeah. You know and he's got a whole got a whole thing and he said and you disagree with him. He'll argue with you right there. He will argue in the arc yeah, like experience and it's it's bad. So you go 26:36 use code your liar, you're a liar, a liar, that's a twenty percent, it's for you know, because they made it for the Doms. It is the promo code is not spelled. You're a liar as in like y o u apostrophe re. It is why you are a hell high er. They made it. They made it for 27:06 they made it for those of you are like. Oh, I got to take this deal. I I grew up. I'm my it's so crazy. I was talking to my parents this weekend about the shift in their life about how we were those people yeah and like my mom did say that when my when the church, the cult that we were part of started doing the Ken Ham DVD series that that was a thing where she was like. I think we got to get out of this. This is nice. I don't think we believe this. This is weird yeah and so 27:35 but it's like we we grew up being the kind of people who would have gone to the creation museum yeah you know and now we're so far from that yeah that it's like it's become almost like incomprehensible to us yeah yeah it's interesting it's like i mean i guess i think that's where the museum is isn't comprehensible i was about to just like be like i'm sure it doesn't see maybe kentucky yeah yeah comprehensible kentucky 28:05 I hate you so much for that. 28:10 Yeah, I'm a pro. keep going. So antimatter is significant. We are trying to understand it. It's one of these things we know exists. We know for all matter that exists, there is an antimatter pair or theoretically an antimatter pair. Sure. And we're trying to understand it. And that's part of CERN, the Large Hadron Collider. They're trying to discover a lot of things. But one of the things they're trying to understand is what, why did matter continue? Like matter should have been canceled out in the Big Bang, but it was not. And we're still here. How did that happen? 28:39 So trying to understand this. Something pretty incredible happened earlier this week ah that will take a while for us to see the impacts of this because CERN conducted an experiment to see if they could transport antimatter. Because here's the thing about antimatter. If it touches any matter, it annihilates both of them. They both disappear. ah And a lot of energy comes out of that reaction. And so that's something that's never been done before. 29:08 transporting these things because you any container you put it where is anti matter? What do mean? What do mean? What do I mean? It's all around. That's a good question around you. No, I'll tell you, I'll tell you, I'll do we in anti matter. I feel you all around me. Time matter annihilating. There is a counseling appointment happening in a store and I know because they turn the sound machine on and that sound machine does nothing. 29:38 compared to my songs. It keeps us from hearing them, but it doesn't keep them. It keeps us from hearing you, but yeah, hey, sorry, I asked about your husband. You made me consider wearing a t shirt that says I'm going through a divorce, so I don't do that. 29:57 you can buy. I'm going through a divorce. Please don't bring up my spouse t shirts on our website right now. Those are pretty easy to design. Those are on there right now. I'm going through a divorce. Please don't ask about my spouse. The great thing about that shirt is you'd probably get a lot of questions. Don't ask about my spouse. I'm going through a divorce yeah yeah and we have them in different colors. 30:26 we've also got we've got some gossip. We've got something to say. I'm getting divorced or uh I'm divorcing my you know, like we got here. We got different options. We have. I'm going through a divorce and then we've got um my wife is divorcing me and then I've got. I'm divorcing my wife so that you can tell people you tell you could see the the right away. You can be like hey, I'm the one it's me. It's 30:54 that it's not and we're running Facebook ads on those to really target the right audience. 31:02 the way it's like the lady who came to my stand up show and I was like are you enjoying the show so far? She's like the first row and she seemed like she was like sure I was like sure that's not a good answer. She was well you haven't hit my group yet what I said. Who's your group? Are you single? Are you or she goes well? You said single you said married and I said are you divorced and she was widowed yeah probably wasn't gonna 31:25 probably wasn't going to bring up. I wasn't going to middle of my comedy show be like hey, is anybody here lost the love of their lives to the horrible thing of death that haunts all of us? Anybody, anybody here gone through the horrible grief of losing a life partner that they've built a decades of life with just to know anybody, anybody, anybody really good joke about that that you're going to love. You're going to love this joke. I have crazy 31:56 Anyways, unless you killed him, then I lots of jokes about you killing your spouse. 32:03 Oh boy. Am I sick? I sure do need Tim stones. Get well quick trick. And what is it? It's simply chug an entire gallon of orange juice. Wow. I forgot. And then this shirt reminded me, I'm so glad that I have this shirt as a public service announcement, a public health service to other people around me. Do your part. Get this shirt. 32:33 shop.tilland.com 32:41 So, anti-matter, the way we get it is it's created a lot of different ways. Like, naturally, it's created in labs all the time. But because uh matter and anti-matter annihilate each other, it's really hard to capture. And so, a pretty reliable way to create it is within the Large Hadron Collider. And when that collision happens, we create anti-matter and matter because we're shooting photons at each other. Right. uh Shooting them right at each other. And there's a device 33:10 that they have within this whole system called the Penning Trap. And essentially, let me get a picture of this. Essentially what it is, is it's this little tube that through a series of electrodes and magnets creates this small vacuum that that little bit of matter or anti-matter can shoot into and then just kind of float in the center of this vacuum in this tube. It creates... 33:39 It requires a lot of energy ah to contain these things. And so what they did is they took one of these out of the full collider and they put it in this large assembly. And so in the middle of that, you can see the Penning Tramp in there. And this whole thing, this is a graph of what it looks like, but this is the actual device. So essentially it's this big power unit that within it has this. 34:01 magnetized, chirogenically sealed unit for those listening. It looks like a giant computer, but when I say giant like this is still like this is probably six feet tall. Yeah, it looks like maybe yeah, you know, so not like huge, but it looks like an old desktop computer like you know the tower, but that does over actually and then within it is this little component that's holding these uh anti matter particles and there's a okay a vacuum. It's like a artificial vacuum in there that's holding it and so they created these particles 34:31 from the Collider, captured him in pending traps, put the pending trap in this big system that basically was going to sustain the pending trap and keep the pending trap uh from moving or shifting at all and transport. And so it's this big thing that is going to make it not move and they put it in a truck. Okay, and they said let's see if we can drive this around and so they spent a half an hour on the road. First time anyone's ever tried to transport this driving around the certain and what happens if they do like were they expecting this thing to like 35:01 blow up or what? So this is what's really interesting about anti-matter. When we're talking single particles, like an immense amount of energy is released, but it's equivalent to the amount of mass of these particles, which is not a lot. Right. And so like this does shoot out gamma rays and it's detectable. We know what's happening, but it's not something that is going to cause damage to anything. OK, you need um I shouldn't say significant amounts. You need to be approaching a gram. Well, probably not even a gram. 35:30 Approaching micrograms of these molecules for it to damage something. Okay, and this is just single particles and so sure sure sure sure sure we're we would need billions more of these particles for it to be able to damage anything and so The worst thing that could happen here is you lose the antimatter Sure, which cost a lot of money to create because you had to run the collider to create them and so it's a loss of money, but What is really exciting about this is it was successful? 35:59 They drove it around, they drove back to the lab, and all the matter was sustained. They had about 100 antimatter particles within this, and it all survived. And what makes this so significant is because this is the one place where we're actually, in the world right now, where we're actually able to capture antimatter to study it. But because the nature of the Large Hadron Collider runs on magnets, those magnets interfere with most devices we could use to study it. And so this is not a place where you could actually do a lot of really good science with these particles. 36:27 So transporting them off site is what allows, what would allow us to be able to actually research these and study these and understand them more. And this just happened this week. This happened earlier this week. Okay. And so this success, there is this, this unit has about, about a four hour power span. And so we could travel it up to four, we could transport it up to four hours away from the collider. I we can get to some other labs to actually do some real science. And what makes this so significant is because of the potential energy. 36:57 in anti-matter, if we could figure out a way, right now, it is very slow to produce it. We only get a couple of particles at a time. And it's incredibly expensive, costs literally trillions of dollars to produce these. And so it's not economically viable to use these in any way. But the amount of energy would be if we could do some research and figure out how to create these in a more viable, much cheaper scenario, 37:26 unbelievable in terms of the amount of energy we could create out of this for example, we get power the world. Yes, there is. Let me pull up the math on this. 37:52 Are you done? He just searched screams again 38:07 He did this yesterday waiting in line at TSA for six hours. Just watching screams full volume on his phone. 38:20 that's how many screen take dogs. You have to watch in public to get kicked out of a place. Are you okay? Okay, I'm done with his bed. I just like to look up screaming. Sometimes if you feel unsafe in an uber, just go on tick tock and search screaming and then just watch loud screaming videos because then the driver is going to feel more unsafe than you. I promise shift the fear. Hey, let's do a quick thing right now. Let's do a quick thing right. If you're in an uber right now, 38:49 and you feeling safe? Listen to this like play this video a lot. Turn this up and honestly you might want to take your phones out for a second. No, no, no, no, promise. I'm not gonna do. I'm not like oh you're a new right now. Oh, you feel unsafe because the guy looks kind of creepy. You said he smells bad. That's a little rude. Oh, okay, it does sound like he sells bad. You're right. 39:18 You said the music's too loud. He keeps playing bad music. What music is he playing? No, put the knife away. We don't need to use a knife in the Uber. Tell him you're getting divorced. He should know. He should know. So he doesn't ask you a question of feeling comfortable about it. All right, well, we'll see you when you get here. The knife factory will see you dropped off here at the gun store, 39:48 Okay, so a kilogram of anti matter sure, which is a lot. We should say that that would that is a lot to create. Yeah, we don't have a over legal amount you're allowed to carry for sure. We don't have a system. How much a matter you got on you right now? Probably a good kilogram. Yeah, I do much now. It literally the calculation right now, based on how much we can create in a single collision in the Collider 40:18 If we ran the Collider 100 % of the time, it would take us a billion years to create a kilogram. Oh my gosh. Yeah. So that's how slow we're creating. Okay. We to find a way to create faster antimatter if we ever want to use it or to create antimatter more reliably and quicker and cheaper. But if we could get to a point where we could create one kilogram of antimatter and use it, uh that would create 180 petajoules of energy, which could power the entire earth for a day. And so if we could get to the point would go through that in a day though. Yeah. 40:47 But it would, one single plant running a kilogram with literally a kilogram of antimatter could power the Earth for a day. And so if we could get to a system where we could reliably produce this and it would have to be in multiple kilograms consistently pretty cheap, then this could be a massive producer of energy in the planet. And it's super clean. There's no byproduct. There's 100 % burn. 41:16 There's no ash, there's no smoke, there's nothing that comes out of it. 100 % of these are converted in, 100 % of these molecules are converted in. So we would be able, you think we would be able to power like our cars and cities and everything? Yeah, you could power everything and to be 100 % clean, which would be an incredible discovery. Also, it's the same thing with like space travel because right now, again, these, all of our chemical reactions that we use to power or to burn engines for rockets, 41:45 they are not completely efficient. There's byproducts that come out of it and they are relatively slow in terms of the amount of energy that they create. If you could generate a antimatter rocket uh that ran on antimatter fuel, one, would consume significantly less fuel and create significantly more energy and be completely clean. And you could theoretically uh reach speeds that are significant fractions of the speed of light. 42:15 literally be able to transport through space into other star systems in the matter of just a couple years versus right now where it's hundreds of years, if not thousands, to get anywhere interesting. so this is, again, a lot of science has to happen for us to get to the point where we can use this. But this is kind of that first groundbreaking step in getting antimatter somewhere where it could be studied. And then if we can figure out how to mass produce it relatively cheap, 42:45 this could potentially be kind of a watershed moment in the history of the world. Wow, also it could be used for bombs. Yeah, yeah, you you don't need very much of it and what's very significant about it. What is the other end of this graphic say? How many nuclear bombs detonated together? Oh, all all nuclear, but oh that all nuclear bombs, thirty thousand warheads or is it a hundred and thirty thousand warheads, thirty thousand thirty 43:15 He's simultaneously exploded. Yeah, we have, we have like, I think we have like 12, 13,000 if 30,000 warheads in total simultaneously exploded, that would be seven thousand militants of TNT. And then one ton of anti-matter. But yeah, that's one ton of anti-matter. That's a lot of anti-matter. But yeah, it would be 21,500 militants of TNT, which I looked it up. These conversions are a little rough, but theoretically compared to what we see from like nuclear blasts, 43:44 the blast radius of this would be larger than the earth. Yeah, so wider than Australia, for sure. What it? What's significant though is in these bombs realistically, what would happen is they would you be using like micrograms of it. So that way you'd be a little bit more controlled and the blast radius wouldn't be the entire planet. But one it's clean. There's no radiation. So there's not like a nuclear winter that you get out of it. So the scary thing about this is these become like 44:14 actually somewhat viable nuclear scale weapons because it doesn't destroy the whole planet. If you use it, it just decimates that location ah and so it's the mutually assured destruction thing that we get with nuclear bombs kind of goes away with an I matter bombs. ah If you use small enough and I, why do we get to this point at the end? Why did you bring this up? I don't think you had to do this part. We could have left this out. Instead, you're like, well, it does actually make warfare 44:42 you know, significantly more horrific. But anyway, you know, next week we're going to talk about that. You're like, why are you doing that? Well, the explosion, I don't know if you would even call it more horrific because the explosion doesn't actually like like explosions now, like there's just a bunch of energy and it burns things up and destroys things. This like just that dilates things. So if you're in the blast radius, you just disappear completely. All your matter is just gone. And there's just a vacancy in the space that you occupied and the space that the whole area that that blast was in that occupied. 45:10 So maybe more horrific. I don't know. Now that I say that out loud, it's actually less horrific because you're just gone. You just disappear. You not only just die, but you're gone. This is really great. No, no, no, I love our show. I love our better uses. I've better. Sure, we could talk about better things. Please forget about war stuff. Forget about war stuff. um This is actually used today, though. We actually have an anti matter use case that we use today in pet scans. 45:38 Okay. are PET scans stand for positron emission tomography. And the way we do this is really interesting. uh Essentially, we disguise a radioactive molecule as a sugar and we put it in this solution. We inject it in to people. And when that goes inside the body, the radioactive elements within side that decides, disguised molecule disperses throughout the bloodstream and then it breaks down. And when it breaks down, 46:07 it emits a positron and an electron uh antimatter and matter. And then when those collide, it shoots off those gamma rays. So what we do is we inject that into your system. It goes throughout all your bloodstream. We put you in one of those devices that look just like a CT scan. And that CT scan waits for the two gamma rays to shoot out of you. And then it traces those back to the point where it came. And then from that, it creates a 3D model of your insides. 46:37 of your inside crazy and we use these to like detect tumors map the brain before brain surgeries like we use these for really advanced medical imaging. That's crazy, which is unbelievable again. Those are the things it's like if if humanity were to this have to reset it wouldn't. I would never figure that out for you. You know it would be. It would be. It would be gone. It would be 47:06 a billion years before we figured that out, but here's the interesting. Here's the craziest thing about all this. We can't technically tell at great distances the difference between matter and anti matter because light is still light, right? So the photons amended or the photons that emit from uh anti matter matter and the photons that reflect off manner and anti matter are the same, and so there are scientists who theorize that potentially 47:35 some of the solar systems that we see in deep space may be anti-matter solar systems because these things are opposite of matter, but they are the same in terms of their properties. And so in the same way that our entire world is made up of different matter molecules, there could be an anti-matter world or an anti-matter universe complete with star systems and planets and living beings that are completely made up of these anti-matter molecules. 48:04 And we would not know until we were able to look at these things closely under a microscope. so theoretically, there is this opposite universe that is an exact opposite copy of all of us in terms of matter and anti-matter. And if for some reason we were to ever like touch, we would annihilate each other. And so there's a potentially is an anti-matter version of you looking up at the stars every night while you look up at the same stars. 48:33 as the matter version of you and he says fiddle on. Oh, you're in an uber and you don't feel safe. You should listen to the Carter, Jeff scale episode of Tillin ask the regard to put it on have him search things. I learned last night. It's a that's what you should do. You should be sharing this episode with Uber driver. Yeah, yeah, no, just have him do it. Have him do it and then ask him if he considers supporting us on Patreon or her. guess I'm being a little 49:03 well yeah. Okay, so him ask him to support us on patreon for next week's episode. Okay, ask him what he say. He said no. Oh yeah, don't worry. A lot of our listeners support. A lot of our listeners also say no. So if you like this episode, like and subscribe also say that to him. Hey, if you don't like and subscribe, I'm gonna leave a three star review 49:33 so friend your uber drivers with bad reviews. They don't like our podcast. All right. All right, we'll see you soon. So I'll see you soon at the gun store.


Ever wondered about scientists beyond Einstein or what happens when matter and antimatter meet? Buckle up, because we’re diving into the fascinating world of Paul Dirac, a brilliant mind who cracked some of the universe’s most profound secrets, including the existence of the “anti-world”! Who Was Paul Dirac, Anyway? Imagine an era dominated by physics giants like Einstein. It could … Read More

Can Salt Make You Smart? | Iodine Ep 324

05-05-26

Episode Transcription

00:00 Hey man, happy to be here, dude, happy or happy. Have you ever heard of iodine iodine like the stuff they put in your blood? What did they do that during your Marais? Is that diamond? Well, and I don't know about during M. R. I don't they put something in your blood to like make it a color on the thing, which feels like I don't know if they should do that. I don't know. No, it's it is. It's CT scans. Oh okay, but that I'm not wrong. Yeah, so you're yeah, you're close. Yeah, yeah. 00:29 Yeah, I don't know the difference between a CT scan and an MRI yeah. Neither you could. That's how you could tell the status of my health insurance. 00:40 And so especially when you're young and when you're in utero, iodine is very important because iodine is what creates this T3 and 00:52 I hate that joke. You hate that you laughed at it or you hate the joke? part of it? Skin milk is too strong. Too strong? 01:10 I mean you don't need one. I don't know the difference between a physical and a regular check up. You don't need one as far as I you how they check. If you've got strep throat versus hemorrhoids, I don't know. Speaking of like deferred healthcare, I have this thing. I haven't told you this yet, but I'm this thing that's been going on for about a year now where then this is going to sound crazy. I just don't like that. I said hemorrhoids and you're like speaking of deferred health. 01:39 this is a go on for a while. It's not ever. It's it's I don't have ever. Okay, no, there's this thing in this spot right here, right above my knee where about probably three to six times a day. It just goes completely numb and it's like a probably a six inch in dynameters section and like, how do you like feel of that's numb? Well, I just what do you mean? Like here's what happens. I'm trying to feel my thigh right now. Let me feel it. 02:08 No, like here, because what happens is I can't oh, because you I can feel it happening so like it gets kind of tight. Does it like tingle like what and then it starts to tingle and then it just like shuts off and then I touch it and I can't feel it and I I like it of that thing where it's like you're talking about the edge of your quad here right yeah and it's this thing where like I touch it and I'm like I think I can't feel that I'm not really sure, but it's like you know you're I can't feel that you know you like when you touch yourself you're like am I don't know this can I feeling this here am I feeling it here? I feeling it here you know 02:37 And so then one day it was happening and I was like, was like, Hey, grandma, close my eyes. Would you just touch me right here? And she did. And I was like, are you doing it? And she was like, yeah. And I was like, I can't tell. So yeah, totally numb. And then after a while it comes back and it comes back with the tingles again. And then it goes back into the tightness and then it just kind of relaxes. So I don't know what that is been happening for a while. I should probably see a doctor probably too high as sodium. I so. I think so. Why? Cause I think that would affect the circulation to that or your 03:06 just really dehydrated, probably both, but I probably a combination of too much sodium and not enough water. I mean that's in that's just my estimation a ton of water. Okay, I'm just making sure I can feel my leg. You got to be kind of paranoid about it now. I feel your thigh. I feeling this right now or is it just the tips of my finger that are I don't know if I five hey, I'm going to close my eyes. Will you touch me? I don't feel that 03:31 No yeah, it's stressful, so I should see a doctor, but you haven't. I have it okay, and I don't have an excuse. I have health insurance. I have health insurance. I also have health insurance. To be clear, I we were joking. I haven't sure I have health insurance. Don't you think you'd feel a lot better if you had life insurance and so so like I started, I feel like I need to go get this check out okay, and the more I think about it, the more it starts to stress me out. 04:01 So if you go to the hospital, they're going to put iodine in your blood and then they're going to put your leg into a machine. I don't know how cascades work. I don't know either and that's not what this episode's about. Great question. Let's talk about iodine. I can tell you this is iodine. Yes, it is well. It looks like pencil shavings. This looks like yeah. This looks like if you took the edge of the the lead pencil and just 04:28 I had itself is a chemical element. Yes, this is like a mineral version of the iodine element. I love when you choose ambitious topic like stuff that you're clearly not going to cover. Well, you don't talk about like where it's like this, this is iodine and it's on the the table of elements. Is that what we call it? The it's a chemistry thing and it's a this is in a physical form. 04:58 I here's the thing. Here's the thing. That's the this whole start. Yeah, keep trying to talk while you're starting the timer, buddy. That was awesome. So okay, here it is. It's a liquid of ish form. It's liquidizing. Okay, uh the word for that is sublimation. I know that word, so it's this like purplish element and this is an interesting thing because it is a heavy. It's called a heavy metal and that's not like it's because it's so dense. 05:26 and it actually does a couple. It has a few interesting properties. One of the things that it does is when you put it into a starch, it turns like dark blue or black and this is a picture of iodine drops being put on a potato like a a fourth grade science project by the way yeah and so I had itself as purple, but then you put it in the starch and it turns blacker or whatever and this is actually used in these iodine pens, which is how we know if 05:54 US dollar is counterfeit right right right right because if US dollars are made out of potatoes, that's exactly right. No, they're made out of they're made out of cloth, not paper and paper is a starch and so paper would turn the black or blue when you used it, but it doesn't change a cloth. Yeah, they're like a clothy material and it's not like like actual cloth like you think of when you think of like. Do you have any money to see or do you need? No, I yeah, if you can spot me somebody to look at some money. We're like there's a couple hundred 06:24 there you go. Yeah, yeah. This is like a cloth. It's like a cloth. Yeah, I don't know if you guys can hear that, but that's cold hard. That's the sound of someone who just filmed his comedy special baby. Do you carry cash? Sometimes yeah, I try. I genuinely don't use well. I'm in a lot of scenarios where I have to tip people yeah, you know, because that's where you get rich and I don't carry like I don't carry cash the way that like 06:50 I carry cash when I travel. guess I was with a friend. have a friend who has money yeah, you know it was one those things where we were getting ready to the bill was like a hundred and fifty bucks and so we're pulling out our card and he goes I got you and he just pulls out his wallet and he just opens his wallet several bills in there and just pulls out a hundred and pulls out a fifty and gives it and so was like I didn't want to be like how much cash do you have on you right now? Yeah, yeah, but I also 07:16 I kind of wanted to know how much cash do you have on it? You know he was one of the thousand that you're just carrying in cash and he's like yeah, here you go. That is that is crazy like because I was like I got to rob you. If I if I have more than fifty dollars on me, I'm stressed about it. Yeah, I'm like I got to get like I'm gonna. feel like I'm gonna lose it. Yeah, I this has to go somewhere else. I am the opposite of the Dave Ramsey rule where if I have cash, it's like not real money to me. 07:44 because like real my way in my account is like assigned to bills and stuff and this is just cash and my wife's not going to know if I lost this or if I spent it that's oh oh so it's like it's like hidden hidden spending. Oh and that's probably healthy. I'm you do that with your wife. No 08:03 you go hide little tiny purchases from each other and maybe you're just like oh she doesn't have to know about this yeah. Yeah, I just need to take out like twenty thousand dollars. just take out twenty thousand dollars cash. What are you Tim? What are you? What are you sporting on this because like twenty thousand now is not an amount that you can get like a crazy good thing for you know saying like you're just hiding a two thousand twelve Honda Civic from your wife. It's pretty sick. That's right. too a grand 08:30 twenty grand could still get you like like a twenty nineteen on to yeah point twenty no, because mine to twenty seventeen and it's worth eight. I think yeah, so it does depend on the mileage. That's true. That's true. Yeah, yeah anyway, or like a jet ski. 08:47 you know, I have a secret jet ski. I have a see. I have a secret. My wife doesn't know about my jet ski. We don't live anywhere near a lake and I have no way of owing the jet ski to the light. Keep it hidden on behind our house and dollars was those jet ski electronic games from Chuck E cheese where you can just like yeah, but I can't keep it at my house, so it's hidden behind. I have rented another apartment. 09:15 it's a studio department that done at all. it is in the studio apartment downtown is more expensive than the rent that I pay at my apartment. I it's an elaborate lie that I've been living and I also had a hundred dollars at the apartment. have another wife and a kid and 09:32 and and they and I like idea that you have a whole secret family, but you lead with. have a secret. That's key. The jet skis the secret yeah she know she knows about everything else yeah. Yeah, it was about all that. She what all is up. didn't know about the jet skis. That's crazy. Okay, so I yeah, that's what is used for those pins. I did these for those PED and the reason I died is significant is because it is poise. I feel offended 10:02 by the way, when I pay with cash and someone pulls that pen out. Oh yeah, because it's like oh you don't trust me. I literally I do feel that way. I go okay, well, especially if I'm a regular at that place, it like I'm like you think that I actually maybe I'm flattered. Maybe I'm flack. Maybe you yo you think I'm a criminal. You think you think I could do 10:30 Yeah, it happens to me almost every time gosh, but there is it happens to be is because whenever I pay with cash, I say it's real yeah. I mean that don't go yeah yeah. Okay, this is real and they go. It was don't say that next time. Why else would I say it's real? So the I had one. How are you okay? So I died is interesting because it's a poison. It will kill us, but that's what I'm saying simultaneously. It is the heaviest element 10:59 that is essential for most living organisms, and so we and most living or did you search this up just because like we put iodine on the salt like I dies salt and you were like, but that could kill us and then and now you're trying to do an episode about this. Is that how this started? The shame that you had and then you pull up a picture that you had ready and here's exactly how this went. You went wait, but that could kill us. 11:27 and it's like Tim, any chemical could kill you at too high of an amount. I could end this episode right now. This is really embarrassing for you that I hard for the audio listener. He just shamefully he had this cute up as a picture of the Morton salt. You know what the girl, the umbrella on it, it's crazy because it's a poison, but like we put it on everything. So you're the thing 11:56 so here's what's interesting. All right, sorry, I let you talk. Okay, no, no, go back to the beginning of your script before I said to you that here's what's interesting. It's it's a thing. What are we doing? What are we doing? That's so good, so yeah, it's poisonous, but it's also essential for life. Most life what's interesting is yes, most chemicals. If you do too much, it'll kill you yeah, and that's true of iodine 12:25 But iodine is significant because the amount we need is very, very small. The recommended daily intake is 150 micrograms. So it's smaller than a tablespoon of salt, or a teaspoon of salt. Very, very minute amount of this that we should be taking in. Any more than that, and then it does become something where you're putting yourself at risk with the amount of iodine that you're intaking. But this has a very serious health effect. 12:54 the the part of our body that regulates iodine is the thyroid yeah. Here's the thyroid gland. There's your Adam's Apple. I got a because I thought that it was funny that I had that it's not just I need. I just wanted to be really clear. Sorry, I didn't that sounded mean, but like you pull up a different graph. You're like here's the Adam's Apple and it's like that wasn't. I just thought it was really dumb like that. 13:18 Adam's apple is not like a medical term. I'm like who made this graphic anyways, someone who is trying to get its Web M D dude, they Web M D is trying to get normal people to understand things, whatever fine. This is this is the thyroid. What here? Here's the animal. Here's a way. Where is the items apple on this just so I a normal person so the me a dumb can understand. If you look at the thyroid, see the thyroid sure right above this task. little thing that looks like an apple above it yeah. 13:48 So the way this works is your body needs these three, I guess, chemicals, T three, T four and calcitonin. Sure. And those things, they, they provide a lot of functions for the body, but probably the biggest thing is growth. And so especially when you're young and when you're in utero, iodine is very important because iodine is what creates this T three and four. I've never been to utero. 14:15 I I've always wanted to visit hate that joke. You hate that you laughed at it or you hate the Joe I both part of it, which part of that joke so I think I'm going there on a cruise next year. Here's beautiful this time. So T three and four the three and the four is like the amount of iodine molecules that are in that chemical or in that or about V. Tro what here been in V. Tro 14:44 I think that this joke's still going on. And so a little bit of iodine has to be a part of that compound that goes throughout our body that helps our body growth and a lot of other things. Sure. Your metabolism uses these compounds as well. But the this is regulated by the pituitary gland. So the pituitary gland in your brain basically gets a signal and that signal is we need some more T3, T4 for all these essential functions within the body. OK, a little low. 15:13 and it sends this chemical TSH, which is a compound that triggers the production of T three and T four in your thyroid. So that way more is produced. The problem with this sister, what's insane about everything's happening on our podcast is that it's just stuff like I'm trying to I'm on the listener side right now. Okay, because so much of our show 15:39 is you being like this guy founded the Backstreet Boys and look he's got a fake plane, you know or or this woman won the lottery in a ruin her life and then sometimes you just venture so far out of your own depth. They are like yeah, so the Perttuartary clan and we're all sitting here being like I didn't sign up for med school to him. I'm here to do a funny podcast. These people are on their way to work right now. They're 16:04 barely awake. They're here for some ha ha's and you're over here being like yes, the between take land the TSH combo. We actually need for growth and it's really important for our foundational growing years and it's higher in children, but the T three T four in the council tone and and then you know the hypothalamus, you know the whole thing is and that's your Adam's apple and I sorry I thought that was super funny. I it's so crazy how you're so willing to venture this far. 16:33 away from the boat. You know first of all funny point. Second of all, I feel like I need to correct you. Tsh is what the to the go. You're right. T for yeah. So sorry, sorry, sorry, sorry. See that's how little I was paying attention to your rambling earlier, but what's significant about my God. I feel like I'm in eighth grade science right now. Can I tell you what I did to my eighth grade science teacher? I tripped her. uh That's true. 17:03 she was walking and I had my foot out and she fell over it and then I very stealthily moved my backpack to where my foot was. So she thought she tripped over my backpack and and I know that's me and listen. I'm not saying that I'm proud of that. It was funny, but I'm not like it was funny, but I'm proud. It was now. I understand that I'm not. There's so many things you understand as an adult where you're just like aw crap, dude, that sucked. She was just at work. 17:29 Yeah, that's why she hated us. Yeah, she hated us because she was barely making enough money to survive, and we were awful. Yeah, we were the worst. Yeah, I think about that all the time. I was pretty. She didn't fall completely. She caught her, but she tripped a little bit and she was really embarrassed, broke her wrist, no, she did not go down to the ground. She literally did that thing where she was like whoa. She looked back and I was like I'm so sorry my backpack, but it was me. I did it digitally. You want to apologize for that? No, she was awful. She was 18:00 Yeah, but was she awful because you were awful? No, actually she she was awful in the way that was like if you're an athlete, you're allowed to say and do whatever you want in her class, and if you're not an athlete, you are not allowed to speak in her class. She also was wearing this shirt that said please be nice. I'm going through a divorce. Oh no, oh no man. I'll tell that that story then, and this is a friend. They I you know that sucks. 18:26 I hate that whenever you talk to a friend you haven't seen in a while and you're like hey, I you know, so was I was messaging John the other night and just seeing if he was going to come to the show and then and then his wife who I'm talking to ah is like oh yeah and I was again he said he was he was traveling this weekend and she went yeah he might have been traveling this weekend. I don't know and when she says that 18:49 you kind of put together what's happening and I think that if you're going through a divorce, you should have to wear a shirt that says please don't bring up my spouse. We haven't seen each other in a couple months. It's a really sensitive topic for me and it'll be very uncomfortable for you because then I got a message later. It was like hey, just so you know, here's what's happening. I'm like I wouldn't have said anything if I knew I truly feel so terrible about that. 19:15 Facebook should add a new so like when your friends are going through that it's like hey, if she's gonna be there, do you want me to like tell you? Do you want me to not invite you? Yeah, I also let the dynamic. don't want you to see that we all hung out as friends. Yeah, even if she's not in a picture, I don't want you to see that like we all went out to a restaurant and you weren't invited and I don't want you to feel like yeah, you know yeah there that is it's a tough time off man. Yeah, so 19:44 I'll never do that to you. Let's make a pact right now that you and I are never going to get divorced yeah, so that so that we never put each in that position. Yeah, I'm just staying together so don't make Jared. love my wife a lot. That's that I'm going to make that very clear same. I feel like I feel like this is the time where I it was a joke. It was a joke. Oh my gosh, but 20:12 I also it adds there's pressure yeah, you know, yeah gotta keep it together. I got to give it together so I don't embarrass him. 20:26 Hey, thanks for watching our show. you like it, a great way to help out is by being a Patreon supporter. Doing that helps make this show possible, but it also gets a lot of perks for you. You can get every episode a week early ad free. You get access to a Discord where you can meet a lot of other people who love the show and actually hang out with Jaren and I every month on a hangout. And we're also in that Discord chat all the time, hanging, talking with people, talking about episodes and just random stuff in life. It's super fun. 20:49 We do, there's a way to get birthday messages, a free gift, merch discounts in there. So there's a lot of really great reasons to be a Patreon supporter. You get a lot of benefits out of it. And it also makes the show keep happening. So if that sounds great to you, you can go to support.tillin.com or tillin.com slash support, uh or just tillin.com and search around until you find the links and become a Patreon supporter. really appreciate you doing that. But if not, right back to the episode, right? 21:17 I don't know why she comes out of there. I didn't to talk about that so and she's like turn. think I wanted to work like no, no, no, no, no, hey, hey, we will. I'll do anything. We'll work through this. We can't do this to Tim. She's like what are you talking? I probably I'm heartbroken. I'm like oh, I'm processing the feeling like oh my gosh, you want to leave me. This is terrible, awful, but also like 21:39 this is so bad for him. So bad for my divorce is really bad for him. He's going to be so uncomfortable. That's never going to happen. That's never no for real. Do my wife often says to me she looks at me in the eyes and she goes you know we're never getting divorced. She'll just do that so that's so great. Yeah, I wasn't planning on thanks. She goes you're with me for you can't get out of the show. Just remind me that sometimes I go yeah. I mean like but she'll say it in a way that's like threatening 22:08 yeah, I'm like I wasn't. I was never hoping was never thinking that yeah, we're locked in dude. I love you. I want to be with you. Yeah, like good. 22:18 she backs out of rooms. Lately, that's a thing she's been doing. She doesn't move her legs either. She just kind of freaking move your legs when you want. No okay, so what's significant about this is the pituitary gland doesn't have a mechanism to say oh we are making too much. It only has a mechanism to see we don't write right right and so if there's something wrong with that interpretation where it's like oh we don't have enough. 22:43 yeah, we'll just it'll just keep going, keep going and then and then you and then a lot of people gain weight because their thyroid is out of whack yeah, and so there's all sorts of different issues that could come out of that out of that. I got my thyroid tested when I was large because I didn't want it to be my fault. What did they say? They were like it's your that's true. Like I was big. I remember I got the call. It was and I think you were there for that show. I was in the alleyway of the show where we played at lemon drop 23:12 and it was like the garage was open. The lemon drop was such a weird venue. I loved it. I loved it to modern craftsman is what it became, ah but it was like the back area with the Rogers open and what was what was their band called ah the sisters, the Malone sisters and Jared Stantler. Oh Willow something. Was it just the Willos? It might have been that sounds right. I thought it was something with an L in the beginning. 23:39 maybe I'm wrong, La Willows, but anyway, I got the call in the alleyway and my doctor was like yeah. Everything's normal and I literally hung up and I was like oh, I'm just big. Oh, it's just me. I just because I it's probably because I ordered a dozen Fasoli breadsticks to the drive through last night for two ninety nine that might be contributed to my weight gain, but honestly such a good. mean in this economy, so so yeah, so it doesn't have a way of being like as is too much yeah and and what ends up happening is it's a 24:08 It's a growth thing. Yeah. And so what was a long time issue across the world was this condition called Goytters. And what Goytters was was when your thyroid just continued to grow. The thyroid would grow. That's the thyroid itself just swelling. And for most of human history, people did not understand that this was the thyroid. Like all of a sudden you would just have this growth that would appear and it would 24:32 range in size and so yeah, it could be a for those listening. It's a giant growth in your neck. I could just like it looks like a gigantic double chin that just forms. This is going to be a kind of disrespectful way to describe this, but picture a and then make that human ribbit like a toad where the like next is a very disrespectful, but accurate way of describing this. I like that you were like this is going to be sound mean 25:01 uh And here's the thing, people did not understand that this was because of iodine issues. What they found pretty early on was that sea sponges were a pretty good treatment. so people would give them, or doctors would give them sea sponges to treat this. And the reason that worked is because there's a pretty decent amount of iodine in seawater. uh so... That's it's so salty. Yeah. so, no. That's not why. Yeah. 25:29 What else can I get you to agree? These were a treatment and what was interesting is the way we have always historically ingested iodine sure to feed our system is through the foods that we eat like through plants we eat because it's in the soil and it gets in the soil through rain water. Okay, and so the closer you live to the ocean, 25:56 the more iodine you're getting naturally through your diet. the plants that grow in that area have more access to iodine. The further you live inland, the less you have access to. And even furthermore, the further you live north, in an area that used to be a glacier, uh even less, because the glacier tore away that soil that would actually have iodine. And so the places where we saw the largest amount of iodine deficiencies were up north, more inland, typically. 26:25 uh Europe, where you see this a lot, is like Northern Europe and like the Netherlands, Norway, uh all over like that side of the world. uh The other issue that you can get from uh iodine deficiency is eh a condition called cretinism. And cretinism is a condition that's almost completely eradicated, at least in like the Western world today. And what it is, is it's a... 26:54 stunted physical and mental growth that results from like fetal deficiency, and so if okay mother uh is not getting enough, I that what we call it like we're like oh, that's a cretin. Is that the same? I'm pretty sure that's just like that feels from Crete disrespectfully and mean like the only if it's like a cret the only way I've ever heard that uses for people from Crete. I don't know if you've heard that as like a disrespectful way to say that yeah. 27:24 have you? Am I wrong cretins? I don't actually know okay, but it's it's like a significant, so it people who have cretinism they have a my thing is something else. I'm thinking. I don't know trying to think of a scenario where he's now you got me guessing, but here's the thing about when you when you second guess me. I'm usually right. What are you talking about when you're like? I've only heard people from creed called that and I'm like no 27:51 People from Phoenix are called Phoenicians. Probably right. 27:58 um No, cretinism leads to a series of ah disabilities, mental and physical disabilities, because that fetus wasn't able to grow properly. And so it was, and it still is considered the leading cause of preventable intellectual disability is an iodine deficiency during pregnancy. Okay. Because that child isn't getting enough iodine in their diet. And so when this was discovered, 28:27 that iodine was the thing that we need to prevent goators and all sorts of other uh conditions. There was this move in the early and the nineteen twenties to iodized salt yes and uh so this was kind of a slow rolling thing, um but eventually because even in the nineteen twenties they were like listen. You know what people love sodium. We got to figure out a way to sneak this into their diet uh kind of 28:56 And so doctors basically proposed if we put a little bit of iodine into the salt and we just like in liquid form, just spray it on some salt, uh then people will get enough iodine in their diet. Yeah. And this popped up because there was an actual problem in World War I. uh The army couldn't enlist anybody. Well, I should say couldn't enlist anybody had uh more difficulty enlisting people from Michigan than they had anywhere else in the States because the people in Michigan 29:25 the men in Michigan couldn't button their top button of their uniform because they all had coiters because they were inland and they used to be all had coiters. I not all but a significant portion of them had coiters and so there was they were like why are there so many people from Michigan that we can't that are medically unfit to serve because they can't button their top button and so they start. That's how was decided if you're medically unfit. Well, it was a it was there's 29:52 other. It's not just you have this. There's other conditions you have when you have goators, but that's that's what made them realize they're like you can't button that button. What's wrong with you? And they're like, well, don't you see this thing on my neck? I have glitters. Gotcha. Okay. And so then doctor started to research this and that's what made them say, well, if we can add it to the salt, then we can distribute it more into the population. So in the twenties, this became a really big thing. More and actually resisted it pretty heavily because what most national salt companies did is they said, well, just put it in our Michigan. 30:22 salt, our salt that goes to Michigan. And Morton was such a big company, they're like, it'd be too hard for us to manufacture specifically for Michigan, so we're not going to do it. But then when they saw the sales of iodized salt in Michigan, when the public started to understand the point of it, they're like, oh yeah, we're going to do that. And so we're going to do it nationwide. And so then salt became, iodized salt specifically, became seen as like this healthy thing like you need to have in your diet. And it became a very big deal. And what was really interesting is this is something we haven't discovered until 2013. But in 2013, we went back and we studied the data. 30:52 from the window between World War One and World War Two, where I saw it became the norm and we looked at the ah military. What is the exam called? Basically the the mental exam that they give the presidential fitness exam. No, it's the mental exam and so it's the it's the examination that they give the military when they enlist to just kind of see where they where they sit mentally ah and the I was trying to pull out the ink splotch test, but I can't think of it right now. 31:22 the inks inkblot test. Yeah, what's it called the right? Yeah, I don't. Yeah, you're on the right, right? I can hear your your close. You're so close. Reckoner close ret. What is it? Roar shock. Roar shock. Ah, yeah, I was so there. Yeah, I was a good joke. Let's pretend I got it. Okay, yeah, here we go. Yeah. So they had like the mental military. Oh yeah, yeah, like the 31:52 Oh shoot, what's the the ink plot test? What's it called? I'm right here with it. Oh no rock shock rock chock rock the rock chock test. that doesn't sound right rock. What is it? Google it real quick or shock dayhawk roar shock or shock a hawk. That's right roar shock. Golly man, I tried again. had the military metal 32:20 assessment does. yeah. 32:31 that I've done that in the previous episode and you fully fell for the first time. That was great, so now this military mental assessment test. What they saw is the average um the average scores ah compared from people who enlisted in World War One versus people who enlisted in World War Two was uh an order of magnitude higher in World War Two and what that attributes to 32:59 is about fifteen IQ points on average, and so there's a significant leap and I can IQ points. Can you do an episode of the gifted program low? Do you like at school? Yeah, there's every school have like the same gifted program. Is it the same thing? There was a national. Do you guys have a gift of program at your school? Yeah, were you in it? Yeah, yeah, we knew as soon as he sat up where he went. Yep gifted man over here. No, I know we had the vibes. Yeah, yeah. Do you think I was in it? 33:29 probably okay. Do Tim was in it? I we have a gift. don't remember what the what the qualification was other than being hot and they were like they took all the hot for like all right. You guys are gifted for sure. I don't know what the there. No, there's like there's like standards at least like you know and maybe it'd be interesting to see what Missouri standards were versus yeah. I genuinely don't know anything about it we didn't have that in private school like we had like you could take like 33:59 like once you got to high school like they had like college credit courses. Yeah, I know this wasn't that, but it was this was it was different. Well, we'll do an episode about it. Okay, I'll also learn about it. I guess I'll have to get the gift. Yeah, well, why don't you use this medical interest that you suddenly have to search out? Yeah. Hey, hey, if you like this episode next week, we're talking about shingles for some reason and we love for you to you know, but this is interesting because this using I 34:29 iodine and salt, they estimate over the course of the 20th century. What are you doing? I'm looking up this week sponsor. Hold on. I know that we have like a thing over the course of the 20th century. They estimate that iodine, iodizing salt attributed to across the entire population, a 180 million point increase in IQ worldwide because of all these people who were all of a sudden um ingesting more iodine in utero, which meant their brains were able to grow more. 34:59 wow, they were a fetus. That's crazy yeah, and so uh what is interesting is we found uh evidence that before this that most locations in the US and you're going to hate this most locations in the US that did not have access to iodine naturally in the soil. A lot of people still had plenty of iodine in their diet and the way that they had that we discovered was because of dairy and there was two reasons for this. um What 35:28 Again, I cannot overemphasize enough. You're going to hate this. okay, the the iodine link that we had was within cow feed. There was iodine trace amounts of iodine that was found. So cows had iodine in their system. But what was more prevalent was most dairy farmers used a very similar disinfectant called Eido force to clean their milking equipment. 35:58 and that would leave trace amounts of iodine left on all of that equipment and when they would milk cows, that cleaning solution would get into the milk and people would through milk and cheese and other dairy and just all the iodine that they needed from that, which is I love that. I actually think that's really great that the core rock star way out of that and in why would I hate that? I don't know. I just think it's gross. I I would hate you. You think that you think that I, a person who never crashes out, 36:28 would hate that cleaning solution got into our food supply system and then that was enough of the cleaning solution guy to our food supply that was able to you know. I why would I a person who never crashes out? Why would I hate it? I you know I'm I'm surprised. I don't know. I realize that we crashed out too much and then I remember the prisoners listening to this and it's like they don't give a crap about it. That's not the state of the dairy industry is not on their list of concerns. Yeah, you know yeah 36:57 so I've been trying to do this episode for them. Well, okay, great. Do you like that? Do you like that? Is that was that? Was that you're making me mad? You're sorry. I didn't think I would be received the way you received that. Okay, so keep going. So okay in two thousand five there was a big push to remove these kind of chemicals from our cleaning material, got you and what's very interesting is there is a noticeable 37:26 uh decline or noticeable increase drop, you notice will increase in iodine deficiencies across the states when we did that because a lot of people were still getting it primarily from their dairy. So at any point in life, this isn't just a like an iodine deficiency. Like if I stopped consuming iodine completely today, I would develop that. Yeah, so there's there's this isn't just a there's two impacts like when in utero, if your mother is iodine deficient, 37:56 then it reminds me of my I need to update my passport for you to row. I'm going to a music festival there, so if your mother is I deficient, you're going to have issues developing and so what about dignity? What indignant? He ate this bit so much and I hate that I just fell for it again. I that I felt okay, so you're going to have 38:21 you're going to have conditions, indivisible with liberty and justice for yeah. I've been indivisible before I was there with liberty and justice. My bow, you know them, you know liberty and justice for all for all. That's their last name for all for all their twins liberty and justice for all that's indivisible with liberty and justice for all this. 38:50 you hate that you're laughing at this. I also am not proud. Here's the thing about most of my content that I post online and stuff is like people are like oh, just stand up comedians used to like write brilliant stories and and call backs and these intricate things and now they just post these clips online and it's like yeah dude it. I'm not proud of the stuff works. That's what works though. Yeah, yeah, it's like yeah dude. I also wish that my intricate well thought out and well crafted stories were the things that went viral, but they're not 39:18 Go to a show, you'll see the roadcrafted stuff. That's what I'm saying. For real. Yeah. Online, you're going to see, I don't want to call it hacky, but it's just like, yeah, it's the first level joke. It's stuff that's like, oh, this would hit hard on Twitter. This would hit hard on... Because it doesn't take any context. just... I've got eight seconds and you're going to share this with your friend. Yeah. And it's like, yeah, I mean, I hate that. I hate that about the art as well. But you know, that's not why I'm doing Indivisible jokes. This is just funny to me. But it's like, yeah. Anyway. 39:48 So anything in utero, those deficiencies cannot be reversed. Like that is a developmental thing. Oh, gotcha. But once we can't just pump you full high down. Yeah. And I should say too, like as an adolescent, like if you have deficiencies, there's certain things in your adolescent development you're not going to able to reverse. Got it. But as an adult, a lot of these things can be reversed because they are conditions brought on by essentially an issue within your diet. OK. And so if you can supplement that. 40:16 and reverse some of those effects, technically. Some of those effects, like if they run on too long, they can create knock-on effects that you can't reverse. But some of them you can. uh Does that make sense? Yeah. Okay. So uh what is really interesting is over the last 20 years, not just because of the dairy, we have seen like a massive spike in iodine deficiency. Okay. 40:45 chase back to uh changes in diet. And so over the last 20 years, there has been a pretty large amount of chefs and consumers who have shifted their usage from I dies like table salt to kosher salts and sea salts. And honestly, like I was thinking about this when I was reading these, like, oh yeah, a little, yeah, I can't think of the last recipe I have found online. 41:14 that didn't call for kosher salt or sea salt. Like I don't remember last time it just said salt or iodized salt. ah It's just always been kosher and see so and honestly like we have both at home and I've only used kosher for a long time. There's also the last twenty years been a really big rise in plant based milks and so that not only the okay, not only you know what for a second I my brain was like milk based salt. I don't know why when you're like plant based milk 41:42 you said milk and my brain was like milk salt, but I trademark that yeah milk salt milk salt. That's gross. You like crystallize milk and his salt and then poured it on your steak that faces a fits getting all my new trees. 42:07 Hey, thanks for listening to this episode of things I learned last night. If you like the show, you want to support us, we've got merchandise that you can get and it's good stylish stuff that I made. put a lot of work into this stuff, so it's great to find other tilling fans in the wild and be like, wait a minute. I know that shirt. And so yeah, we would love for you to do that. You can pop over to shop.tillin.com or the QR code or there's a link in the description. There's plenty of ways to find it. We promise we made it super easy. So thanks for supporting the show and thanks for listening. 42:38 here's what I hate. I cannot stand whenever someone's like here's my new high protein dessert and I'm like is it cottage cheese and they're like all you got to do is you need to combine chocolate chips. I'm like it's cottage cheese and they're like and then you got to get your blender. I'm like here comes the cottage cheese and then put one top of cottage cheese. Gosh, I'm not making cottage cheesecake. 43:04 cottage cheese. I'm not doing it. It's so gross. 43:10 I need to make that. I need to do some videos where I just react to those rise. Go is it cottage cheese is it cottage cheese your car? That's part is cheese and that is a kind of hacky that will work on social media. Don't ever call it. Don't point me and go kind of hacky. Hey, kind of hacky, kind of acky. Wow, I can say that that's our word. Sorry. Oh sorry as a is that a thing? Okay, sorry as a 43:40 Comedian diagnosed diagnosed. 43:46 my doctor says I have comedy. uh My doctor says I have the gift of gap. I don't know it's a plant based milks. Obviously, like we shifted from having iodine, but okay, but cows still get iodine through their diet, and so you still do get some through. the I don't get the I mean I get it for lactose intolerant people, but I don't drink it as like 44:12 if I'm just going to try to whole milk. I honestly haven't drank just a glass of milk in forever. You shouldn't that's that's murderers do that a lot of our podcast list. If I cook with milk, I'm using skim milk, ah but for coffee, I use milk alternatives because I do think milk like even skim milk is too strong. That's all I can taste. I don't taste the coffee and so I usually use oat milk too strong. 44:37 oh yeah. I hate whenever I over skin milk is too strong for me. That's the dumbest thing you ever said. I just don't like the I can't taste the coffee. This yeah dude, whole milk is too spicy for me and so so we've pulled back on plant based milks, process foods also I and I salt 45:03 um so do you think that we're trying to solve all these other problems and we're creating one that's to sneak up on us? Well, kind of because the because process foods though is a little different because process foods are doing it because like it affects color and they think it affects flavor, but a lot of blind taste tests have said no yeah and then there's also been a lot of salt reduction initiatives because like there's public health. I hear like the getting too much so and not enough rider colored foods like when I work at subway. 45:29 Yeah, it's like yeah, do those tomatoes are pretty bright red. The banana peppers are very bright yellow. The jalapenos are bright green, yeah, but it'll be honest. They look more appetizing to eat. Yeah, they do. Yeah, because when you take that stuff out doesn't really affect the it doesn't affect it at all. They just tell you it does. They're like oh, and the guy who says it sounds like this and so it's like don't. Why are we trusted and so yeah, but it looks gross. Yeah, 45:58 anyway, and so what's really interesting is over last few decades. We actually have the data from pregnancies because we collect this data. All these people, by the way, who do this stuff will fully eat like sour gummy worms or like oh yeah, oh, I don't want any any trace of that stuff in these in the vegetables and you're just like 46:19 people. They're just like easy. Yeah, but when you go out, you have you have cocktails that have more poison in them than this does. It just it's inconsistent. It's stupid. It's just it's all anyway, whatever, whatever we have the data because we collect iodine. I used to eat family size bags of Doritos. Do think I care about a little bit of coloring in my banana peppers? No, I used to sit down in one sitting and have a family size bag of Doritos which 46:49 is awesome and honestly I was I was happier that maybe that's what the problem that the problem is. I was happier. Oh shoot dude, I should be eating a dire fan. I should fat again dude. I was so much happier back then. I didn't think about anything. I never worried about working out. I didn't worry about what I was eating. I didn't care about how like the world was doing. I didn't follow the news. All it was was just food. I was fat and happy 47:18 Oh no, right. That could be a fast forward to a year from now clip this. So I next year when I'm just sitting over here like 47:30 honestly, and then I'm over here like I didn't work. I still sucks. Everything's still bad. I hate this honestly would be great for another special to like just come into that bit and call it fat happy fat and happy where I just gained a hundred pounds and then I was like yeah. No dude, it's so hard like losing weight is so difficult yeah that it's like I'm so terrified if I if I ran it back. Have you seen you? 47:56 you watched always sunny right yeah yeah yeah where he does it he gets fat man yeah, but like they and this is the thing do they can pay for it and that's you know, because he talked about that in interview where he's like people like oh, how did you get shredded? He's like well, you got to be able to pay someone to make the meals for you and pay a trainer to come to us like it's and here you know what okay not to crash out on comedy stuff again, but I I found out a comedian that I follow who is funny. I'm not trying to take away from their art right yeah. They are funny, but I found out their dad's the CEO of the company that owns Grand Theft Auto 48:25 and I was just like, Oh, so it's like if this doesn't work out for me, yeah, then I have to go get a normal job and like live with the pain of like, yeah, my dream didn't work out and now I actually have a bunch of debt because of it. Yeah, yeah. And if it doesn't work out for that guy, he's fine. Yeah, nothing happens and it's like art and honestly, even if it works out for that guy, also nothing really happens. 48:53 what I'm saying is is that and people, oh, you're just jealous because they have financial security. Yep, yeah, 100 % like I'm I'm not. I'm not. I'm I'm trying not to be bitter about it. I'm not like saying it's their fault. I don't fault them for that. I'm not saying we should strip them of their financial security. I'm saying yeah, if of course, if I had a financial security, I think my jokes would be a lot better because I could think about stuff that wasn't, my gosh, you know, making sure that all the stuff's time on survival. Yeah, yeah, yeah. 49:22 Yeah, which is a real, which is a genuine thing and a genuine thing about human history is like when the the society at large had the most amount of population. He was financially and like physically secure in terms of like the majority of their base needs were taken care of. Yeah, the society advanced way further. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, 49:48 Oh, what was it talking about? I saw this recently talking about the the Rorschach test. Oh, it was the podcast you sent me. He talked about the arts and he said that's the biggest signal that a society is failing is when the arts begin to fail right because that is when there was a really good interview. Chris Gethard's been out here doing some interviews circuits kind of thing about the DIY stuff because I just filmed my comedy special and I paid more for my comedy special than I did for my wedding. Yeah, and that's a thing that like and that's what I mean is that if I had the financial security, I could take bigger risks. 50:17 I had to do this on kind of like a pretty tight budget and it's good. It's going to be great. I'm excited for it. But if it doesn't make that money back, I'm just out that money. that's like, and that's something that you feel like financially. That's something that's like, I will feel the pain of that. And so that did put a lot more. And this is what I mean is that during the filming of it, 50:44 the pressure of filming this special to a level of performing and then editing and doing this special in a way that will make money made the product worse. think yeah yeah because you're like trying to it's that uh the you're trying too hard to look like you're not trying that hard. It's a whole thing of like you play. It's like whenever if you're an athlete and the college scout shows up and then you're playing good, you're playing well like you're not playing. You're not flopping yeah 51:12 But you know that you have played better. Yeah, yeah. And you know, like, it's in your head. You're in your head. That's what I mean. So anyway, that's... I'm really not trying to cry. I'm just trying to... That is like the state of what this is, is there used to be other paths for me to have an income alongside what I'm doing. But now all the paths are 40 hour a week jobs. Like, there's no good part time job that I could get that's flexible enough to be doing what I'm doing as well. And a lot of the reliable income paths. 51:42 can just be overnight. Oh, I mean, oh, I know dude. I got demonetized on tick tock. Yeah, I was making. I was making some decent money from tick tock and I don't know where they were just like it's unoriginal content because they flagged the podcast podcast clips. Yeah as me taking from YouTube. Yeah, and I appealed it and I was like, hey, this is my podcast. I'm the person in the clips. Yeah, this is see, see me. That's me and they rejected the appeal, so I'm not. I'm not able to monetize again and for another month and I go like how insane okay yeah. 52:09 like and that's what I'm saying is anyway. I'm not trying to cry. I really am grateful. This is my job. I'm not trying to complain, but that's also what I hate to when people are just like when I go. Well, we should figure out some better systems for artists to live like this and they go okay. Well, then just quit complaining and get a real job. Okay, delete your music playlist on Spotify. Never watch a movie again, never watch a TV show, don't watch a comedy special. Turn this podcast off, close your eyes, don't open them ever again. What are you talking about? Yeah, you know, like 52:38 Yeah, what are you talking about? Never go to a concert? Yeah, never. If you don't, if you don't think that this should be a real job, then don't go. Yeah, 52:47 I agree with you. I agree with you wholeheartedly anyway. Anyways, you want to talk about iodine? Yeah, how does iodine fix all that? Well, actually kind of hot in here, dude. Did they turn the AC off? It's possible if we have new neighbors and they like it hot. Yeah, and I and I'm going to tell them today, be like, put a hoodie on. uh So we have the data because during pregnancy, that's something we track is iodine levels because it's important. 53:14 And in 1971, the average iodine level for a pregnant woman was 327 micrograms a liter. Now, it's 144 micrograms a liter. So it's about cut in half. And we can see that in IQs across the country. It is a noticeable dip in IQs and theoretically, as we watch kids who were born after the year 2000 grow up, 53:42 I think there's a higher chance that we're going to start to see these effects with thyroid ah disease and deficiencies and potentially even goiters come back um really because our diets have almost completely removed these. um People are not eating I die soft. So all this to say and I do need to be very clear. There are some snake oil salesman online that are selling like supplements like you don't need supplements. Yeah. You can just get I die. So I just use I die. So when you cook there's been lots of taste tests that say that it's not noticeable. 54:12 some chefs will tell you you can tell they're wrong. It's not noticeable. Yeah, maybe a chef can tell maybe someone who's like an expert and they do it. They're around this all the time. They can't. There's pretending, but you're not going to be able to tell just cook with I saw you don't need to like go check it like just get enough like just eat whenever you use salt, use I saw and you're going to have enough and you're going to be fine and you're going to be smarter. Your kids are going to be smarter for it and you're not going to fall apart. I can't believe that's what the topic you chose. That's pretty wild. 54:40 when you're cooking, I guess here's who cooks anymore. By the way, here's what's I here's what's interesting. Here's what he does not in the US. Yes, I do you say I actually picture of your tonight putting a lean cuisine in the microwave is not cooking to be clear. Tonight, you eat lean cuisines tonight. I'm making sell people you eat link cuisines. I actually haven't a link when things in a while and I should eat link and scenes again. No, because I am eating pretty bad. Here's the thing. Here's the thing. I are not 55:08 good. Okay, no, no, no, I hate. I hold on. We didn't do our sponsor calorie. Oh, okay, yeah, we can do a response. I think and then I want to come back and close it with one more thought, but we can do our sponsor. What's our sponsor? Well, our sponsor this week was link was in until I hold it after that bit. So that's what they heard us record. All right, this week sponsor is this nineteen eighty six Ford f one fifty listed on Facebook Marketplace. It's currently thirty five hundred dollars. It is a 55:34 a four point nine liter six cylinder engine, four speed manual transmission. So that's kind of like a good thing to know. They replaced the brakes, the rotors, the master cylinder two years ago and this truck has not been driven much in the last several years. It's definitely like a vintage looking, you know, on you know, I could, oh that red leather interior. I will send all this to to Robert thirty five hundred dollars. How many miles? That's I was trying to find out a hundred and thirty seven 56:03 hey, that's pretty high, but workable. There was a guy who was on Conan O'Brien ah years ago because he got his uh engine over a million miles and I mean he meticulously maintained that thing, but he did so crazy right. Just work on it. It'll keep going and that's why every day I put I salt in my gas tank. 56:24 just to make sure that everything is going. Don't put sea salt in there. Yeah, that's not right. Don't put culture salt in there. It doesn't like that. Yeah. Yeah. Where's the thing? The this problem is confined pretty heavily to the US, a couple other Western nations, but pretty heavily to the US because most Western nations, when this whole all this stuff was discovered and we started iodizing salt, the process was like moved into law that all these nations have to iodize their salt when the United States 56:52 They just have to have this label underneath that that says this salt supplies iodide, a necessary nutrient where an kosher salt or sea salt says it does not. It just has to have a note that says this doesn't provide it. It doesn't have to. OK, I just have to tell you it has it or it doesn't have it. um And so the United States, people get the choice. um And because of that choice, we're all dumber. 57:20 I don't okay, so the next time you're cooking you open the freezer, you pull out the link was in box, put them at you peel back the you peel or do you puncture it depends on the okay, so you give it a little puncture with a fork. You put it in there beep beep beep put on some music, wait for your link with light a candle. 57:44 No, oh, relaxing music like a fiddle off. Okay. 57:51 Oh, like, okay. Let me try it again. 57:56 Roar shock! 58:01 maybe the next episode will be better. Hey, speaking of the next episode, you can watch it right now on patreon. We have next week. That was unavailable for the people who support us. It helps grow the show and also I could not even think of an episode to suggest for this old guy. I might not even suggest for a long time about this. How about Kellogg go look up Joseph Harvey Kellogg? That's because he thought that the gut was the central part of the whole life, and so he thought that your diet was very important. 58:30 Yeah, and then I was whatever shared the episode. You're not here. You've already exited out of it. Whatever dude. Thanks for listening to the show. We'll see you next week.


Have you ever heard of iodine? Most of us probably associate it with something doctors use during medical scans, or maybe that stuff in iodized salt. But what if I told you this seemingly small mineral plays a huge, often unseen role in our health and even our intelligence? Well, buckle up, because we’re diving deep into the fascinating world … Read More

These Old Men Robbed a Bank | Bad Grandpas

04-28-26

Episode Transcription

00:00 man. What's up? Happy to be here. Good. I good. All right, well now I'm a little less. I'm going to start this episode a little different today. I'm not going to ask you if you've ever heard of what this is about. Sure, I think it was going to give it away. I'd rather you be surprised. ah I love that as well, so there's this. There's nothing. There's nothing I love more. 00:24 See you on for your birthday. 00:28 I don't think my wife hurt me, but I saw her think about it. It was hard for me to say with all the fourth of July in my mouth speaking of trauma. Let me tell you about my gas. 00:42 I hope your mom Rob a things I learned last night 00:55 my wife found this out. She tried to surprise me a lot for my thirtieth couple years ago. You know a long time ago. 01:03 we're well into our thirties. Now I did think you were one of my friends the other day, but you're like so old. I like dang he got so that sucks. You see that somebody messaged me on it. I posted a selfie of like hey, I'm filling my kind of special this week and someone messaged me and it's like oh, I thought this was my friend Michael and thought dang he got old, but then I realized it was you and I was like you guys don't have to face everything that comes to your head. You know, I read messages yeah 01:32 That's so funny. No, I think he got old. Wow, look how old this guy is old. No, so I yeah, so on my thirtieth, I'm the planner in our relationship. Yeah, and so my wife obviously for my thirtieth birthday didn't want me to make the plan. She wanted to surprise me with a lot of stuff, but then she she surprised me with us riding bikes around Santa Barbara all day, which was great. 01:55 but I did not know to pack shorts or a shirt to wear for bike riding like biking and jeans. That's and that's where it's like that kind of stuff is like you know we learned some lessons in our relationship yeah during that trip. It was great. It was fun. I'm not saying that at all. It was a great time. I know I know I just like she learned that there's like yeah there's a there's a line of like I can plan all the stuff, but there's some things that don't have to be a complete and total surprise. Yeah, you can yeah yeah yeah for sure. 02:24 so cool. Well, this is going to be a complete and total surprise great. Well, not really because I'm going to you if I wearing the wrong pants for this, I'm going to so mad for this. I'm telling you right now. I'm looking at your pants. They are the wrong. Yeah, honestly, that should be an out of context intro for I'm looking at your pants anyways. 02:47 uh we let Alex decide which out of context was yeah. Why don't you do your job? Okay, so all right. How about you tell the story? I'll do the funny little bit and Alex will sit over there making judgmental faces the whole time. Yes, sir, and all those people on the other side of the wall will be grieving the loss of their friend. 03:05 is re definitely a we really don't know how to handle this. We've never had. We've never been here ever shot an episode. I feel really bad about it. I feel really bad about it. We're recording this podcast next to a funeral and I don't know how to you know, so we're going to be trying to be very respectful today and quiet. It's not going to happen. We're going to try well. Yeah, anyway, yeah, there's a funeral over there. There's a divorce over here. Yeah, it just doesn't get any better than this. We're just in that's and you know what 03:34 That's what we hope our podcast is for you. Put some inspiration shining light in the dark. We're just the world is terrible. There's divorce on this side. There's death on this side and in the middle of all this stuff, you got a comedy podcast where we never crash out. That's our guarantee. We never crash out. That's our guarantee. 03:58 I did I dive by a bit. Listen, there was a phase there where our episodes included a lot of crash outs But I want I want you to know we're trying for me personally. I'm not trying not to I'm telling you right now. I have given up I've done this new thing where I don't care anymore and it's really helping me not crash it because I would be crowd every day I'd be like, oh my gosh, and I'd be like, well, we should do this different now that was solved this wrong We should do this there and you know what I just started doing. I don't care anymore 04:27 it's really it's you know it's privilege. Yeah, you did send that to me. I sent you a screenshot. We got an email for I think an advertising opportunity. Yeah, they want us to promote their five g conference or whatever. No, it was. It was a Christian cell phone network. The network is a Christian network. Oh okay, what what does it even mean? Yeah anyways, and so I got annoyed and he was like I don't care anymore for real though for real though. 04:55 I really, as far as like some of this weird stuff that Christians do lately, I don't care anymore. I just go like, no, that's weird. Yeah, you're being weird. And I'm not, I view it. I've said this before. I view some of the extremes of American Christianity is a completely different religion than anything I follow or believe in. So I, you know, it'd be like if you sent me a thing where you're just like, look what these Mormons are doing. All right, they're Mormons. I don't care. Like, cool. Good for you. I believe something completely different than that. 05:25 yeah, and so it's like what you do isn't affecting. It doesn't affect me. It's not like I'm like I have. I'm to the point now where I'm not even afraid of being associated with you because it's like yeah, we're different yeah. You know interesting, so hey yeah, make a phone network. I'm not as like I'm emotionally mature as him. I'm still very yeah about your when you get through it when you turn thirty two. You got a couple weeks left till your birthday when you reach the wise age. 05:55 that I'm at. Yeah, you know, what do you want for your birthday? I don't know time back. 06:04 I would love my skin from my twenties. I would love all those moments that I regret another chance, you know, so I was talking about this thing we're talking about today sound like the people on this out wall speaking of that we got to keep on but do you do bring the therapist up again later because I got to talk about something about her sure sure so so you saw my therapist sure yeah love that. 06:35 you know your therapist talks about you that way to I bring Tim up later. I tell you something about him, so there's this place in London called Hatten garden and garden is this little district. You can kind of think of it. It's it's it's an interesting district. It's not like upscale shops. I was going to compare it to like the plaza. It's kind of like the Branson land. 07:02 No, I can't really think of what to compare it to because it's not like upscale shops. It's not upscale shops. But there is like there is just like a conglomerate. It's almost like Silicon Valley for jewelers. And so there's a bunch of people who make jewelry and they are like jewel dealers, but they're not jewelry stores. Does that make sense? OK, it's like the upper end of the supply chain. And it's this district that's been around for a long time. 07:28 in in the seventies, there used to be a ton of like armed robberies of these locations, but throughout the eighties, security got a lot better. A lot of those robbers. Are these like cut jewels or is this the people you would buy like an uncut diamond from so you could cut it both? Okay, so they have gold, they have silver, they have jewels and they're clear both. Yes, that that's that means each of the things you just said got it. Call it B O T H K 07:54 and the O is spelled like O L the L is always pronounced O L your washer clothes both these first of all, no worse is wrong. It's wash, but both is how you say okay both yep. Gosh, I want to throw up when I say like that uh anyways, both of those um so this district. There's a lot of people who have take my diamond guy. I got a diamond guy yeah and that's something you'll get when you're rich and uh 08:23 like me. I like I'm going to sit with my what is the manosphere? The man's here. So I got a diamond guy now. No, but when I went to buy the engagement ring, yeah, my wife has an uncut diamond. It's very unique ring. No one else has anything like it. No, but I was, you know, he was like, I'm going to this conference where I can buy. He goes, he looks kind of hard to get an uncut diamond. Yeah, he was, but I'm going to be this conference where they have them. 08:52 yeah. I was like my sounds sketchy, but all right yeah. It's like by to McDonald's. It's not even not a conference. Oh yeah, it was a uncut diamond and reptile conference. Just freaking it's not in a building. It's the parking lot. I've told that on here before about the the BMX team that my manager also represents. I mentioned yeah, we were at the very cool 09:17 It is very cool, but we were at the thing and one of the guys just went next door to a reptile conference and bought a little alligator and then I went to the management table at this conference and there was a little alligator in a tub there and I was like who did this and she's like Cody and I said don't even know who but that makes sense. don't know. Cody, but that sounds like a Cody thing to do Cody thing and also that BMX team is like five guys yeah who rode down in a van to that conference together. Yeah, 09:46 and so they had to drive back in the van with an hour. Yeah annoyed. I would be I like imagine that we were on tour back in the day. We have our little Ford Econoline and then you just bought an alligator. Is this like a full size Gator or a baby Gator, baby Gator and still yeah you got a Gator in the Gator in the van and you like you go to the gas station get some snag show. Hey, will you watch my Gator? I guess I do like that. I should have done it had it yeah. 10:16 I think very weird. It's a good thing we didn't have money on tour, because I would have bought a lot of useless stuff. My gosh being poor saved us from so many bad decisions. It's crazy dude. There's so much stuff that I would have done if I could have afforded to do it. Oh and there was a lot of stuff we did do that we couldn't afford right right. I get married and couldn't afford that paid for it on credit card. 10:37 so and a comedy special maxed out a Costco credit card for that. So please watch that when it comes out. I'm not looking at the cameras. I'm looking into the void. 10:50 no no, I promised I wasn't gonna crack that! He promised! He promised he would- 11:01 Just leave in the comments below, just say you promised in all caps. You promised. You promised. So in the middle of this district is the Hatton Garden Bank. And the Hatton Garden Bank is significant because at this bank they have safe deposit boxes. Yeah. And a lot of these jewelers. What's the 88, 90 thing? That's the address. Okay. 11:30 A lot of the jewelers in the area, take their jewels and gems and gold and they store in these safe deposit boxes. They use that. My jewels and my gems and my gold. And money. And they leave it in the safe deposit box. Right, of course. What are you supposed to use a safe deposit box for? Yeah. And so. Is this a heist? So. Nice. So on. 11:53 uh yeah. Oh yeah, I love a heist. Okay, great, great, great, great, great, great, great, So on April 2nd, 2015, oh, pretty recent. Okay, I like that. April 2nd, 2015, the staff locks up the depository and they lock it up uh knowing they're going into Easter weekend. So it's Thursday night. They lock it up at nine p.m. and you do have to something different for that bunny doesn't come take these jewels. Watch over the book and so they lock it up. 12:21 and they leave. They go home. Was this a viral video when I was an eighth grader? Was this just a video that my friends and I found? Do you know I'm talking about the difference described or like you? Yeah, I know what you're saying. Yeah, yeah, we all had a video that we watched a billion times when we were like middle school, but I don't know if it was viral or if we just did that up and you told someone about it and you're like, oh, let me pull it up and you pull it up. It's fifteen thousand views. You're like oh, that's what I'm saying yeah, okay, but there was a video of a of a rabbit, a person in a rabbit costume, just beating people up 12:51 Do you remember this video? This sounds vague. Where I was like, what is the Easter bunny do the rest of the year? It just beats people and literally like just I mean, are people yes like drop like a person on a bike and it would be like music where it's like this for music. 13:09 a person on a bike and then he's like yeah, the bunny drop kicks the person on the bike. I've or like they're like the elevator door. Is this a commercial elevator is open? No, this is just a YouTube video. This was YouTube before we got on it. You know we ruined this stuff to podcasters and content creators ruined the in it used to be good. 13:28 the best. It was a shot of an elevator opening empty elevator guy gets in right as the door is closing. The bunny is in the elevator and it blitter rates. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you see him for this video familiar. Yes, this sounds familiar. I think you're waking up a memory in me yeah. Wake me up, wake it up. It's I remember, okay, so they're going into the Easter weekend. You know that song was written by a colt. What I don't know that, but I thought I threw it out there. 13:58 I'd say that and see if it sticks. 14:03 I thought I try to start a river and so shortly after the building is locked up uh this group of masked individuals. Well, what I should say they a group of individuals approach the building wearing high visibility vest dress like workers and they the best way to rob places. One of them opens up the door, goes the alarm and disables the alarm and they go into the building. They go, they pry their way into the elevator 14:30 and they rappel down the elevator. It's a whole group of them. I think there's seven of them. I think six go inside, one's in a lookout car outside. um They rappel down the elevator and they bring heavy equipment. Which is cool. Very cool. Very sick. They rappel down the elevator, go out the elevator. This is not why the elevator was turned off. No, they turned it off. They disabled it. Okay. They disabled it so they could rappel down it. 14:57 but that's what I'm That's what I'm saying is like that was a part of the plan. This was like okay, we're going to repel down the elevator shaft and they're like we why because it's because it's like so sick like oh you are going to take the elevator. They don't know which floor we went to. I think the reason for it is because they went down the elevator and like the elevator at the bottom of the shaft. There was like a service hallway and so they need to get to the service hallway, not to the main 15:26 area that the doors were going to open up to okay. I think I don't know for sure, but I think that's what happened. They get down there. They go. They find the wall that's on the other side of the safe and they set up this diamond drill and they propelled down the elevator shaft with this thing. Yeah and this thing looks like it weighs a lot for those listening. It's a very big piece of machinery. Yeah, so this this drill is is a heavy heavy drill and the way it's it's 15:56 built is your picture in a handheld thing. That's not what you should be picturing. Yeah, no, this is like a have to bolt it into the wall right for it so it can be stable and then it's got a giant what looks like a silencer. I don't know. It looks like it. You know what it looks like is like a thing picture like a civil war cannon. Yeah, is the size of this thing. Yeah, it's here right and then that's what is you turn that and I drill some of the wall. Yeah, and there's a hose attached to it because it needs water. A continuous flow water to cool it right and it's got a diamond tip drill 16:26 And what they did is they drilled this series of three holes through the wall ah into the safe. And this is a 20 inch thick concrete wall. this took hours. is crazy. Here's the thing though. ah They got through this wall and when they got through the wall, something unexpected happened. There was a giant bunny rabbit inside. He was waiting for them and he dove through the hole, drop kicked them. 16:54 beat the tar out of all of them vigilante justice. I like the idea that it's it's Phoenix Jones and the Easter Bunny. You know and he's wearing a bunny costume, but the sleeves are ripped off. She's sick sick and he's jacked. Obviously obvious bring Easter Bunny hot and so meanwhile they're inside here drilling the hole through this wall. 17:23 and takes hours. You said hours unbeknownst and they started at what time they break in. They're broken shortly after they locked up okay, so yeah nine thirty ten p.m. uh and why is the depository open that late? I'm thinking it'd be five six o'clock. No, they close at nine nineteen. I don't know why it was open that way. They close it. Well, they locked up at nine nineteen, so maybe they closed earlier and security was still there and then at nine nineteen they locked up for the long weekend. Okay and at 17:50 1221 AM an alarm. This is unsecured at night. Well, at 1221 a they broke in and someone disabled the alarm. One of the people I know it's like not patrolled by somebody is what I mean. No, no, it's not that's weird. So at 1221 AM an alarm is triggered. Okay, Scotland yard is notified when the alarm goes off yeah and they call the security company that manages the store and security says we're we'll go check it out. So security sends one of their officers to go there and 18:20 Here's a little bit of backstory about the security system. They have a very sensitive security system and false alarms happen all the time. Right. Literally a week before this, a false alarm happened because a bug, a literal bug flew and landed on one of the sensors and set off the alarm. And so these are very common. He shows up. It's the night before Good Friday, the middle of the night. ah I guess technically now it is Good Friday. And he rolls up, he checks the doors, the doors are locked, peers through the windows, doesn't see anything. And he just says, it's a false alarm. 18:49 And he goes home. Yeah. But here's the thing. Here's the thing, too. I should say, too. They do have a policy as well that security guards aren't permitted when there is an alarm to go in alone. And so he shows up alone and he's like, I don't see anything. I don't think it's a big deal. I think it's a false alarm. I'm just going to head home. I'm not supposed to go inside and look in there. Right. I'm just going to it looks fine. Nothing's broken. Everything's OK. Locked up still. So they lock the doors behind them. So he goes home and. 19:18 Meanwhile, they're drilling through they get all the way through. They get through this wall and they have a problem. can't hear the drill. I guess no, I guess not. Yeah, it's underground. I don't know man, so the other night it's like the the night before my wife's birthday party and the birthday party is a big big task. So we're up kind of like yeah preparing last details for this party. Our neighbor is 19:45 doing a project where they are sanding down the drywall in their bathroom, which is a shared wall with our apartment. And then our other neighbor has rented an industrial carpet cleaning vacuum. And so my wife is on the floor. We're not arguing, but we're definitely like, it's time for bed. know? Where I'm like, we're sitting here going like, hey, let's finish this tomorrow. And she's like, no, no, no, no, we're going to do this tonight. And she's getting a little antsy about the party. And so we're arguing a little bit. And then you just hear, 20:14 And then on this wall. 20:17 And it was just we both just sat there like, oh yeah, we almost almost fought each other physically like that bunny. I saw her. I you know, I don't think my wife's going to hurt me when I saw her grab the knife. I saw a little tighter. I saw her. I saw her. I saw her think about it. I don't think my wife's gonna hurt me, but I saw her think about it. That's a good put that in the intro. I like, know, 20:45 I think you should put that in the intro. I'll decide which quotes go in there. I hate that I hate that. hate that. Oh man, so they draw all the way through this wall. uh 21:05 Hey, thanks for listening to this episode of things. I learned last night. If you like this show, we would love to see in our Patreon. It's a great way to financially support the show. We don't make money from this. It just helps us to pay the people who do make money from this. Like Alex and Robert, her editor, and maybe one day, one day me and Tim, maybe one day, but only if you join, only if you join, we can't wait. We can't get paid until you pay. Can't feed Tim's kid until you join. He's so 21:34 of an angel. 21:46 genuinely bothered by that. It's crazy. They draw the way through this wall. Yeah, there is so what's I was expected well on the other side of the wall. What they didn't bargain for was the safe deposit box being up against the one is bolted to the floor and it's bolted to the ceiling and so now you go drill through the safety deposit box. Well, the drill can't it's metal. The drill is not drilling breaking through the safety deposit box. Luckily, they thought that there was probably going to be some problems, so they brought a hydraulic battering 22:15 And so they take this hydraulic battering ram to try to batter ram this thing over. And it is so secure that it breaks the battering ram. so tension starts to rise similar to the situation you're talking about. There's dust all over the place from the drill. It's late into the, we're talking early hours in the morning at this point. Um, and so they decide we need to pack up. We're not going to get this done tonight. We're going to have to come back another night to try to finish this job. And so they leave. 22:44 They go through all of Good Friday, kind of reconvening, figuring out what they're going to do. Two people who are part of the party were like, I don't think this is going to work anymore. We're out. And then the rest of them come back Saturday evening. We're still in the middle of this long weekend. No one's been around. Oh yeah. So they come back Saturday evening. Same plan. Go right through the front door. Their alarm specialist shuts off the alarm. They go through the elevator, rappel down the elevator, and they bring a different set of tools that is capable of knocking this thing over. They knock this thing over. 23:13 They crawl through the holes. This is a obviously a recreation after the fact. They crawl through the hole that they dug and they ran sack the safe deposit box and this is the next morning where they broke into. Let me get the number right. That's crazy. Yeah, they broke into a couple hundred of these safe deposit boxes. I don't know exactly how many, but they broke into a couple hundred of these safe deposit boxes and they made off with about 14 23:43 million pounds worth of cash gold, diamond, silver, so about two million dollars. I don't know what fourteen million. I mean, it's probably close to fourteen million. No, it's not. The ratio is really bad. The United States is the best. I've been told I as about eighteen million dollars. Oh, okay. Yeah, so better actually 24:08 Well, think that I guess, yeah, my bad. I would have gone the other way. And so the on Monday or on Tuesday after the long weekend, they come back in and this is the scene that they find all the stuff's gone. Yeah, they have no idea what they check the CCTV. All the cameras have been wiped out. Everything's gone. The police come in. They try to start getting DNA. They discover that these these criminals had bleached the entire crime scene. Oh, my gosh. So it's completely clean. 24:38 There's nothing here to like show any any residue of them, and so that day the chief of police comes out on the news and he says we think these are very sophisticated uh career criminals um who perhaps were hired by like some large conglomerate sure pull off this job a composite, uh and so they begin this this man hunt to try to track down. It's crazy uh who was responsible for this event uh and 25:07 Over the course of 24 hours, they start to kind of piece together the story a little bit better. And what ends, what they end up being able to trace through a lot of other data that they were able to capture outside of this initial crime scene is that this was done by a group of criminals that, well, have you ever heard of the bad grandpas? No. 25:36 What? No way. This is a group of sixty and seventy year old plus criminals who broke into this this uh bank and pulled off this heist and it was nearly the perfect crime. They almost got away with it. Oh my gosh. Okay, I love all these guys. Wow. uh 26:05 these guys, these guys rappelled down. I mean this is decades of experience though. You know I'm saying this is oh yeah, these guys rappelled down that look at the okay. That is this the main guy? Is that why he's on the left? Okay, he's like the leader. Yeah, look at the guy. They call the governor, not top middle, but top left. Yeah, that guy is going to do it again. You know, saying like he's he's got his mug shot where he's just like he's like. I don't feel bad. I don't sorry at all. The only one that sorry is the one right below him. 26:36 that guy's sorry that guy's like mm. We give him a car shoved on this and then there the young gun on top the young gun yeah yeah yeah the goatee and he has any oh yeah you got to you got to go to you think you're better than or you know so and your eyes are too close together though. That's why you got to have the goatee make it seem even out your eyes both your eyes. So here's the thing this guy in the left is a guy by the name of Brian Reeder 27:05 and Brian is the mastermind of this whole event. Yeah, dude. And he looks cool. And here's the thing. This isn't the first ice. Brian's of course not. Obviously not. These are all career criminals. Yeah, obviously. He was actually known uh as uh he did a very similar crime to another Hatton uh Garden Bank in 1971. 27:32 and in nineteen seventy one he spearhead so like forty years earlier. Yes, he spearheaded this plan that he came up with by reading a short story called the Red Headed League, which okay, pull this up the Red Headed League, and this was a short story written by Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. It's a Sherlock Holmes like extended universe story short sure 28:00 and in the short story, I know who Sir Doyle is okay, so in the short story, you don't got a man, Spleen Sherlock Holmes to me in the short story. Sherlock Holmes is trying to solve a crime just so we're clear. I'm Watson. I love the authority of uh a kid who's like let's play 28:25 I'm Robin, I'm Robin, no, I'm Rob, okay, okay, but you could be Robin, I guess, uh so in the story, I'm Ron Weasley, you be Harry Potter Harry fine. Okay, I wanted to be I'm Hermione. 28:49 Oh, I don't be weird about it. Don't be weird about it, Bro. I'm a miney. Okay. Bro, we're 21 hours. Stop playing every time. playing. Okay. 29:06 twenty one's not too old to play Harry Potter. Okay, thirty two is no people judge you if you play. So in the red, Sherlock Holmes is solving a crime. That's why I love the red fair because no one judges you like holes is trying to stop a crime in the red. Oh he like actually that yeah okay, so in this in this story, what criminal dies 29:35 is the criminal has a basement and from that basement he drills through the war basement and tunnels like your same neighborhood. Yes, yes, exactly the same searching for treasure and so he says. What if we could do this and so in nine? Seventy one get rich by the way we are going to build like a cul de sac where all of our homes are connected yeah yeah through like a dirty ton. You know like one of those that like that like looks like a mine. You know oh yeah 30:05 gritty. So in 1971 he plans the burglary of the Lloyds Bank and specifically picks a branch at 185 Baker Street because this this branch was a block from the fictional homeless Sherlock course and so he's such a big fan. I like that. I like he this bank and 30:28 They threw some other connection, obviously, I'm the name connected to this, but through another connection, they rent two doors down a leather goods shop. And in the basement of that leather goods shop, they dig a tunnel underneath the neighboring restaurant, all the way underneath the neighboring restaurant and up into the safe of this bank. And they planned this whole elaborate thing. They had one of them that went to check in on a safe deposit and he brought his umbrella. 30:58 And using the umbrella in his arm, he measured the whole like just like he was like kind of like dancing around the safe deposit box while the guy was locking, unlocking everything for us. He measured the whole safe deposit box so he knew when we dig here, here's where we got to dig to. So you're just a worker. You're a banker guy comes in and goes, I like to get my box. I see my safety deposit box and you're like, sure. And he's like, okay, it comes with 31:26 How you doing with your umbrella? It's not even raining today. like my umbrella though. 31:34 Hey, I've got an idea. Do you want to Harry Potter? Like no, okay. And so. 31:47 and then you got to go back. Yeah, you get into the tunnel. Yeah, he's like, have we made it yet? He goes, let me see. 31:57 I gotta do the no we need four more feet on this side like what the heck I gotta do the whole dance to know it's the whole I don't know dude. It's like got hold on to know 32:11 Ahem. 32:14 No. And uh so then on Saturday, September 11th, 1971, they finished the popped through the floor of the safe, and they made out with $300,000 or 300,000 pounds. Right. ah Which was a pretty good haul. Pulled that through, went through. uh The way they ended up getting caught, and what's ironic is at 11 p.m. 32:44 there is a amateur ham radio operator nearby. We're talking about the Baker Street. Well, we're talking about big Baker Street. Okay, this is 1971. There's an amateur ham radio operator. Yeah, who's hearing some strange stuff on radio and what he pieces together is that there is a lookout on a rooftop with a walkie talkie talking to some people who are robbing a bank and they're talking about the hall fun gag to do by the walkie. Just get on random walkie talkie channels and be like now you're clear. 33:13 Oh, hold on, there's a cop rolling by. Just stand still. As a bid. Now you're good. Just keep moving into the safety deposit box of the bank that we are robbing. Somebody kill that guy. Shoot him. 33:31 Shoot him. So this guy, shoot him. Do it. You coward. This is your mom never loved you. Hey, speaking of moms. 33:45 Should we do the bit that I I told you about here today? I don't remember what I like this bit where we just make up some phrases and then we have to call people and try to work that phrase into the phone call. I think that's pretty funny. It is a funny bit. We can do it later. We're doing the after the fiddle. Okay, subscribe to our patreon for more content during the after the fiddle. We're going to call our moms. That's the stuff you should pay us for 34:14 Um, or we should call each other's moms. 34:19 Hey, hey Terry, literally never once called my mom out of the blue. I've called your mom. No, stop this. You you yes, I am okay. Whatever. I don't like this bit. We talk all the time. I'm a fan of this, so so this guy calls the ham. Oh, you're so mad at me and your mom or friends. Oh my gosh dude. 34:44 You don't get to dictate who my friends are all right, whatever man, the ham radio operator cause me and Terry play pickleball together. 34:52 they have radio guys really good cause the police is like a your mom owes me a thousand dollars because she was in a she was in a bind and she was like I need to call somebody who should I call my trusted best pal Jaron? That's how close me and your mom are and you're over here like no you're not so I know so about your mom. 35:21 you don't know. I hope your mom rob a bank. I'm giving you so many options to put in the intro Alex. calls Alex. I'm just I'm just intro farming over here, intro ranching intro maxing. calls the police and the police are like okay, whatever they like. They're just it's what what are you talking about? You let them let of cares yeah, so he gets off the phone with the police realizing they don't care. 35:49 And so he puts on his bunny costume, calls Scotland yard directly and is like, Hey, somebody's robbing this. Is there a number to call the FBI? I think so. Yeah. Like the tip line. Sure. So he calls Scotland yard directly and he's like, somebody's robbing a bank. And they're like, which bank? He's like, I don't know. I'm picking them up on radio. And he's up on a, here I'm talking about it. And so Scotland yard goes searching that night. They checked 750 banks and they don't happen to check the one that they're actually robbing. Wow. So they get out of there with their hall. Um, 36:18 they end up managing to track these people down. And so they do serve prison sentences for this. Years after this, world changes. This type of heist doesn't work anymore because of modern security systems. A lot of these criminals get into some more white collar crime. They start doing uh like taxation crime where they will buy gold and then they will sell gold to people. And then instead of paying, they will charge the full rate, including tax. And then they'll just keep the tax and never pay the taxes. 36:47 That was what these guys started doing. Like sure simple white collar crime easier, harder to get caught easier, harder to get caught. Yeah, but our ringleader of this, what did I say? His name was Breeder. ah Yeah. Reader is a Brian. Yeah. Brian Reader. He's sitting in his garden one day, 70 years old, retired, drinking tea. He's like, man, I miss the good old days. Sure. And he's like, he's like, we used to, we used to do heists. We used to do big things. Yeah. 37:17 and so he starts just kind of dreaming. What would it look like to do one last job? Sure, starts meeting up with all his old crime buddies at the castle pub, which is a sick place. Those look very cool. Every okay. I don't know if these are all one location or the same place. They're clearly not well. No, what I'm saying, not one location, but the same like chain. It's like a chain or if it's like the castle is just a common name for pubs out there, ah but every place is sick. 37:45 they get together. They go to the castle pub and they plan this job for three years. They're hanging around the pub planning this heist and obviously they know what they're doing. Like they have people who had roles. They have someone who cleans the site. They have a lot of the heavy. You can just be sitting eggs like because here's the thing will happen right is that you and I would go to the pub 38:06 and we just be sitting there. We see this group of old guys and we're like man. I hope we're friends like that when we're old yeah, dude, that's great and they're over there. We don't even know what they're doing. Yeah, we don't know that I can out we're thinking they're playing. They're just we think that they're just hanging out and they're over there just like yes, we'll use the diamond drill probably going to propel that you think we can propel. Well, I don't know if you can look anyway. Yeah, I think we're gonna 38:35 you know, there's teasing each other. They they while planning to rob millions of pounds yeah. Well, here's the thing they plan this whole thing out. They gave each other hard for me to say with all the fourth of July in my mouth. It's hard for me to say I stumbled over the freedom, so 38:59 They're glad those whole thing they have. Everybody's got specific roles. Different things are going to do. They acquired all the different stuff and very clean operation. They knew how they were going to do everything. They had an alarm guy. They had someone who's going to wipe the cameras. They had someone who's going to clean everything. They obviously were wearing gloves and they knew what how they were going to launder all this afterwards. Everything down to meticulous details, even down to and this is not a joke. They had a schedule where they timed the breaks to take their prostate medication. 39:28 Yeah, okay, so while you're drilling, I'm going to step aside and take my my uh prostate medication and I've got like a heart issue going on my, but also we should and everyone make sure you eat enough fiber. We gotta be good because you know we'll need bathroom breaks probably yeah yeah. Oh, we're doing it good Friday. It's my granddaughter's birthday that night, so 39:57 Well, during your shift, I'll take a phone call. 40:02 I love them. Ironically, I'm get away with it. They're old. Ironically, it's funny you say that because the guy by the name of Terry Perkins, one of these burglars celebrated his sixty seventh birthday during the heist. We got well obviously we'll eat a cake. We'll do a little thing. 40:23 Oh boy. Am I sick? I sure do need Tim stones. Get well quick trick. And what is it? It's simply chug an entire gallon of orange juice. Wow. I forgot. And then this shirt reminded me, I'm so glad that I have this shirt as a public service announcement, a public health service to other people around me. Do your part. Get this shirt. 40:53 shop.tillam.com 41:00 that's why he was so mad that safe didn't come down. He's like, so this is getting really this cutting into my cake time to my birthday. It's my birthday right now and I can't get into this safe. The safe is ruining my birthday. I only turn sixty seven once speaking of trauma. Let me tell you about my counselor. How did you try to really try to shove that one in there? That was, I think everyone listening, I think everybody listening was like that was a tough one. That was a tough sell. uh 41:30 Yeah, but no, go ahead. Tell us tough transition. I'll just go over here. I bring out a disagreement recently. Got the camera to his just put his camera. I gotta tell you, because I want you to, I really want you to make fun of me for this. um So pretty, I had a disagreement recently and we don't have to talk about the whole content of this agreement, but it did end in apparently I come off as somebody who is pretty 41:58 what's the word I strung? No, no, no mean cruel, no, arrogant, no insecure. Yes, but no fat. Yes, but no, I'm just guessing all the things you come across as a good dad. Yeah and an okay son. 42:23 No, no, Terry called me there today. Me and your mom we're talking. She hadn't like that. You called your son a parasite in one episode a couple weeks ago. She said she was going to call you. Did she call you after that? He did. Yeah, we did talk about that. Yeah, and then my dad sent me a stand up comedy clip of also yeah, was gaffing and being like I hate these kids. These kids. No, okay, so your wife told you that you come across as kind of intolerant. 42:51 she's like she's like if other people have ideas you disagree with, you're kind of intolerant of those ideas. I'm like I disagree. I'm only intolerant if what they think yeah is wrong. Alex made eye contact the second you said it because you do that. You do the thing you do that or someone will tell you something and you and they'll go like I think this and your first instinct is to go no that's wrong. Here's the thing. Here's the thing. I'm only intolerant of ideas. If your idea is wrong, 43:18 if you if it's a if it's a subjective thing, whatever you believe, whatever you want, but if it is an objective reality, what example of what wrong idea were you guys talking about? No, no, no, no, I don't hold back now. Tim don't back off now when the cameras are on so no, no, no, no, tell us what were you talking about? She says you need to go to count you or yeah. What were you talking? He says in council you can bring this up to your counselor and see what she thinks you were talking about. If poor people were allowed to vote, weren't you? So I told your target you were talking about of poor people were allowed to vote. 43:47 I did the whole thing. You're talking about it. should let people live past sixty five, weren't you tell the whole story to my therapist? We go through the thing. We talk about it for a while and then we go through the thing. The session we got to work, got to get the end and then there's like that long pot that long silence. Yeah, I hate when counselors do that too. They've wait for you to talk and then I'm like I'm paying you say something dude. My counselor says 44:13 I'm just curious. Do you have a Facebook account named Todd? I'm just I just can't. I really love. know we've done this whole problem. I know we're in the middle of the work out. What if it's really kind of mess of like you might be died and then I have to be like yes, I do let it now back to me. All right now that's out of the way. 44:43 No, she says, I'm just curious what you think in light of this whole conversation about a goal you set at the beginning of this year. And she's like, would you like me to read it you? And I'm like, yes. And she says, your goal that you stated to me was I would like to be a little less angry and more accepting of other people's beliefs that are different than. 45:09 and she's like that is one of your goals and you're like I didn't write that I didn't say that I didn't say that and she's like no, we wrote the you're making it up. No, no, no, that was that was Todd wasn't it because because here's the thing like that argument. Bray and I still made it. was like I'm not intolerant and all you're wrong and and so I came in and I came into that session with that energy. My counselor was like so what about your goal? 45:39 I love your counselor brought receipts. That's insane yeah. She said that the very did you say back to that? I was like I was like oh shoot. I that was the moment I realized I was like oh shoot. Maybe I do. I think the most frustrating thing in this I and Alex I'm going to ask this and you're going to tell me that it's not universal, so that's going to suck, but is this universal? It is clearly isn't our relationships that 46:08 I will tell my wife something. We'll have a conversation. You know, she'll, she'll open up about something and I'll say, well, maybe, maybe, maybe thought about it this way and she'll go, well, no, you know, whatever. And then someone else, anybody else will say that same exact insight to her. She'll come home. She'll be like, ah I just realized that it was actually this that I was dealing with. And I said that to her a week ago. Does that happen to you? Yeah, sometimes I, I, 46:39 sometimes sometimes we get worried that does happen, so he's putting that in the intro. I hate you for that, but no, that is a that's a that's a because your wife was just like sometimes you're intolerant and so now you'll go home to bring like okay in my counseling session. I think and this is a completely original idea. 47:05 that me and my counselor came to together and you've never mentioned it before, but I think I might be intolerant of other people's ideas and beliefs and then we would go. That's an interesting insight that you've come to. We literally we had though I was on. I talked about it a little bit more and then there was a long another long pause. She's like I said, what would you call my wife and tell her she says, so what do you think it right now? I was like, I think he's going to think it's really rich when she hears about this goal. 47:35 did she yeah? Oh yeah, she did because breeze the type to breeze the type and you know what me and brie are pretty similar. I feel because breeze the type to when you tell her that she goes. I knew it. I she does that long. I I told you that's a that's a really good and pre impersonation. You guys don't know her, but I do. I think what she did was that she went or at least I used to yep. I've said that before too. 48:04 Yep. I've said that a couple of was another though, really interesting, another part of that same session, same conversation. That's the part where Alex goes, I've never said, yep, to my wife. Another part of that same conversation, same topic. She says, have you ever thought about that? It's interesting. This is your counselor. Yeah. Have you ever thought about that? It's pretty interesting that you feel this need to influence other people's beliefs, change other people's beliefs when you think they're wrong. And that used to be your job. 48:35 and I was like oh no, I haven't thought about that. Yeah, speaking of what used to be your job. 48:48 You 48:50 to eat. Does Alex know this? I don't know what you're saying. I don't know. There was a news article that came out this week about the church that Tim used to work at the church. I used to work at not that the other church with a very similar name in town. Okay, you've performed there. 49:06 What? Which church the summit church? Oh, I thought you said it was not some apart. Okay, another church, very so a church in Kansas City found out that one of their staff members is in the Epstein files and not like mentioned in an email. She was the facility manager in twenty eighteen and twenty nineteen, which is island. 49:31 like the of the worked on the island was the facility manager so crazy of in twenty eighteen twenty nineteen, which and this is true is too late. This is true is we knew yeah we all knew and she and just didn't put that on resume. I guess yeah she she covered that up in a resume. She oh yeah, you have in the article in the article and said that she put like she was also doing contract work for another church and that's what she put in that time. That is insane. Yeah, um 50:00 she claims that she didn't know about any of it going on. She knew what was happening before and she said he believes she believed him when he said that he changed that is her time raise, but yeah she's all over the files because like the files are like oh yeah she'll she'll book your accommodations while you're here. Here's her account. Yeah, that's not not involved. You know I'm saying that's like because there's a lot of names that people have been thrown around being like oh they're in here and it's like you look at the actual document and it's like 50:25 literally like like bark at sea. Isn't it because yeah because they had sent they had sent a comedy seller list. Okay, hey, there's a show having and his name is one of the names listed on the commerce list. Yeah, yeah, so there's stuff like that and it's like yeah, so he's like, but it's not it's not in the file part of it. Yeah, homegirl is all up in those files to I think the article said eighteen thousand mentions which 50:51 I'm not laughing. I'm not that's so crazy. I laughing at the situation. I'm laughing at the fact that you work at the church and someone who on staff finds that out. That's so crazy insane. So anyway, so she's been removed from staff. Yeah, the church is doing all the right stuff. We're not handling it. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, that wasn't the church. But I mean like and here's the thing that I get upset by. Okay, is that you can have that on your resume and still get a job. Well, that wasn't on a resume. 51:20 she left it off for. mean like you can have like yeah, you know yeah, yeah, that's crazy. That's crazy. That is actually crazy. So anyway, so these dudes threes and they can't get jobs because they've been roberts. The Roberts are all live. Yeah, we spent ten minutes on your counselor. That's a funny bit. What was the thing that you're intolerant about though? We could talk about it later. It's it's nothing we need to talk about here. Um 51:49 straight marriage is just freaking out straight. Just freak me out. I hate it. So these guys, these guys literally came out of retirement. Yeah, this one last job, but here's the thing. This is a movie right one last job where they go. All right guys, this is ocean seventy two, seven two. So the problem though 52:18 is these guys were experts yeah in the seventies and the world has changed okay, so there's a lot of things that they did. Oh, they got this is the reason they got caught was because they didn't account for yeah. There's a lot of things that they did that in the seventies would have been enough sure. For example, they wiped all the cameras, but they didn't realize that all of these were also backing up immediately to the cloud. So they wiped all the local storage 52:47 but we have all the security camera for oh day and then side. Yeah, that's kind of uh they also didn't account for the fact that everywhere you go is camera everywhere is cameras. Yeah, and so their lookout so they just go to the pub in their full yellow stuff afterward. Their lookout was sitting outside in his very recognizable white Mercedes and then driving all around town and his very recognizable 53:14 white Mercedes and they have an entire map of everywhere he's ever been because they can pull these files same for their fan very recognizable and I'm not trying to side with the robbers here. I hate this actually. I hate that we live in a world where you can't do anything without this. You can't do any crime yeah no no no no that's not what I'm saying. 53:35 I am not saying that I'm not saying, but it does suck that you can't get away with it. So you can't get away with crime. They also all of them didn't have any burner phones. They use their personal cell phones and we're just why would you other about the job all the time? One of them actually ah didn't get arrested with the first group of initially his son did because he didn't have a phone and he used his son's phone to text everybody and so said got arrested. 54:03 And then they found out they're like, Oh, I let my dad borrow my phone sometimes because he's too old. He doesn't have a phone. And so he texts his friends. So old. He doesn't have a phone. And so now here's what these guys could do. What? 54:19 I what could they do? Are you going to give her? Am I? Oh, just be old. You can just be like, don't know what you're gonna be like. I have. I am not aware of my surroundings. Listen, I gotta get. I need my pills. And they're like, no, sit down. They also did all of their planning on their personal computers. 54:43 And they didn't even turn on private browsing. They just like, got their computers and all the browsing security of them shopping, these drills and these hydraulic battle grants. They didn't even use DuckDuckGo either. They just completely just searched all this stuff up. And so this group of seven men got caught pretty quickly. Yeah. was able to track them down because they weren't aware of all the technological things that could get them got in this era. Yeah. Except for one guy. They all talked about this one guy that they called Basil. 55:13 and which the name said like that sounds cool at first glance right basil, but then it's like why is he called? 55:32 And Basil managed to elude the police because his only role was to shut down the alarm. And he was the alarm expert. He showed up and he supplied them with what they needed to shut down the alarm. He got out of there. And so he didn't actually get like his face was never caught on the cameras. OK, he was smart enough to put himself in a situation. He shows up full like ski mask and everything. And they're like, why are you dressed like that? Oh, what do you think? You know, what an idiot. What an idiot. 56:01 was then propelling down. Oh my one of them. It's funny you do this because one of them actually we actually caught these guys because all next door someone called in and said I hear a lot of loud grunting next door. So you're grunting guy at my gym. other day I walked in this guy, me and him alone of the gym. This guy has three benches. He's on two different machines, towels everywhere. 56:31 and not doing anything that's actually going to help him. He's old and and but he is really putting in the like everything he picks up for his big robbery loudly. oh Sounds like you telling a story. 56:59 Dude, and I could not get my music loud enough. he just, it was almost like I had to it up and he was like, ah! He was like leaning over your shoulder. uh Yeah, so that's how they got caught. Yeah, so, uh but Basil, he managed to get in and out of there without getting caught, without getting captured on any of the cameras or anything like that. And he actually evaded arrest for three years. 57:27 All these guys got arrested in 2015 shortly after the event. He didn't get arrested until 2018. And the reason why it took him so long to track him down is because this man lives off the grid in London. He doesn't have a bank account. Sick. Doesn't have a bank account, doesn't pay taxes, pays for cash for everything, including his flat. Nothing he does is traceable because he knows like this. He doesn't have a phone, he doesn't have any technology. They ended up tracking him down. He was the alarm specialist. This is Basil. is the guy. I like him. 57:54 He looks like a normal white guy in his fifties. Yeah, he's wearing literally a button up shirt with a green jacket over it. Like this guy volunteers at a church somewhere, you know? Yeah, yeah. Or it looks like he does anyway. He's got his eyes aren't completely in sync. I like that about him. Eyes aren't completely in sync. Look at that one. I know what you had a little out there. You can see it. 58:19 Yeah, it's a funny way to say that. I like I know that's why I said it that way. I'm trying to do comedy over here buddy. So they funny way to say it. Yeah, everything I say is the funny way to say it. They all go to court. Everything I do is funny. One of them tries to get a legs for pushing through a buddy. I appreciate that about you. You're looking at the clock being like, wow, this episode was getting really long. I shouldn't have done that whole thing about my counselor in the middle. 58:40 So now I'm to tell the rest of the story, but I'm over here saying funny stuff. I'm actually not saying funny stuff. I'm saying you're almost stuff. Okay. the, uh, one of them tries to get a lighter sentence. So he does do that in the middle of stories. He's trying to get a lighter sentence. So he rats out basil. No, no, no, no. What he does instead is he's like, I'll show you where I hit everything. 59:06 Cause they all took their cut and they hit him in places. I hit a bunch of stuff in the cemetery. so he takes them to where he hid some stuff, dug it up in the cemetery. And so there's like a couple hundred thousand dollars worth of things that he hid in the cemetery. And the police are like, after he leaves, the police are like, let's dig up the rest of the cemetery and see if he's lying. And they found a lot of bodies, but. 59:28 no, they didn't find. Oh my God, look at all these dead people. You got like we put into these guys for murder. We found all these bodies buried and you're like yeah, that's that's where they would be so some of them burned monsters cremated. Oh okay, okay, okay, and so they ended up. They ended up finding another cash 59:55 that he had hidden in the cemetery that he didn't tell him about. he didn't actually get his sentence shortened at all. But what's interesting is the judge oh that presided over this case found that the value of the amount of stuff that they stole would typically pull a 20-ish year sentence. eh But he said, these guys are old. Yeah, he's like, no, you're going to make it that long. And so he's like, I'm going to commune your sentence a little bit. 01:00:22 so that way if you had done this when you were younger, it's a similar amount of life that you'd be spending and so they all got roughly eight year sentences. So that way they would spend their time and then get out before they died. Was the judges that's crazy and so one of them ended up actually passing away in prison, but the rest of them were able to serve their sentence and then get out recently from this and so now they're back in retirement sure, but this was their one last job that how did basil get caught? Oh, so it's interesting 01:00:51 uh A couple other details I guess I forgot to tell you. The police, after they figured out it was these guys pretty early. But they waited a couple weeks to put together the web of everybody who was involved to arrest anybody. And in that time, they had bugged a bunch of their cars and they also found that they hung out at this pub all the time. And so they got the security camera footage at this pub. And there's too much noise in the pub so they couldn't hear what they were saying but they got... 01:01:17 uh lip reading specialist to read their lips and figure out what they were saying in there. And so what they found is that they were hanging out this. I can also do by the way he's saying purple green green lighter green. That guy's on the phone with Tim's mom. 01:01:41 So they see that they are both in their cars and at this pub constantly bragging about this heist. Not just to each other, like to other people. And there's a situation where they You know what we did, huh? We got away with it too. They mime one of the guys and they can see him clearly going boom and then like miming down the thing falling over in the case when they knocked it over. 01:02:06 And so they're like bragging in this pub that they got away with it because it crazy. They did like they got in. They got the money out. They hit all the stuff and they are they are hanging out in the pub celebrating their spoilers. They got their one last job done as the police are just watching and they're trying to gather enough data so they know about this basil and they have information about him but they're not able to track him down. It takes them years to actually track him down so they know enough about him to know how to find them. It takes years for them to actually find him if that makes sense. They waited for these guys. 01:02:34 They had planned this kind of handoff where they were going to get together and they were all going to split everything up and move it to where they were going to go launder all the stuff. And the police just waited for that handoff and they sat out there, waited for them to do it. And then they swarmed them and arrested all of them. And so these guys thought until, I mean, it was weeks. They thought they got away with it. They waited for it to cool off and then the police got them and they had no idea. And the only reason it happened is because they weren't aware of the- Because they didn't know how stuff worked now. Yeah, how technology has advanced. But literally only a couple of years after this, 01:03:04 in twenty eighteen they released a movie, the King of Thieves, which is this story okay, and this is actually a shot. Yeah, Michael Kane. makes sense like they did. Wait, who else is in it? back 01:03:15 Oh okay, yeah, this Michael Cain's the center yeah guy yeah, and so it's literally this exact story and uh I remember this coming out. I think I actually saw it, but yeah, it is a true story. That's the exact that's crazy what happened, um but yeah, that is that's these guys that came out retirement to do this. It worked really well until it didn't until it didn't. Yeah, that's crazy the Hatten garden heist or as I like to call them the bad the bad grandpa's 01:03:43 the bad grandpas. Yeah, I love that. That's awesome. Yeah. What are my favorite high summer? Yeah. And what I love most is that, uh, you know, all these guys seem like the kind of guys who play games on their phones, full volume. 01:04:01 and because they don't know how to turn it off, especially bottom right. That guy terrorizes people in public, just full volume oh slot machines. His favorite one is one where it's fiddling off. Oh, there we go. You know, hey, thanks for listening to this episode of things are one last night. If you liked it, you want another episode. We did one called DB tuber, which is a bank robbery where he also dresses like 01:04:24 construction worker, but then he hired like thirty other people to show up dresses construction workers and blended in robbed the bank and then left so many construction workers at this bank. It was really so is a great episode really funny and if you want next week's episode something that's not already out, you can join us on Patreon. That's a great way to help fund the show help grow the show, but the easiest and freest way to help grow the show is to tell your friends about it. Please share us on social go follow us go interact with the posts online that really really helps us and if you want the show to keep happening. 01:04:54 please do that. If you don't want the show to keep happening, then just keep doing what you're doing. Do what you do because it'll will quit eventually. And if you want to watch us talk to our moms on the phone, then you join us on page. Yeah, that's one of the page around benefits that you get all the communications between me and my mom. You get transcripts of every phone call between us and her mom. You can learn about my grandma punch someone at the nursing home the other day. thing that happened 01:05:22 is the real thing. All right. See you next week.


Ever heard the saying, “You’re never too old to learn something new”? Well, for a group of seasoned criminals in London, that lesson came with a multi-million-dollar price tag and a few years behind bars. We’re diving deep into the incredible, almost unbelievable, story of the Hatton Garden Heist, affectionately dubbed the “Bad Grandpas” caper. Imagine this: you’re enjoying a … Read More

The Declassified Truth Behind the Crashed UFO | Roswell Ep 322

04-21-26

Episode Transcription

00:00 Hey man, happy to be here. What's going on? Oh my gosh. uh Have you ever heard of Roswell Roswell? Yeah, like the he was the president during World War Two and his brother Teddy was the president before. well they were related right? 00:26 Teddy Roswell Roswell Franklin D Roswell yeah yeah they they did that they did that but then at but they also did some aliens. They also did some aliens. Is it New Mexico or Arizona? Yeah Roswell, New Mexico. Okay, as one new Mac Roswell. Oh no okay. Well, it's going to be bad. Let's do it. Okay, okay, so you can see if you go back and watch what just happened. He said Roswell. I knew 00:56 And you can see my face go, oh no. And I was like, kind of trying to be a keep it light and trying to maybe, maybe he's going to, maybe he's going to change up on me. Maybe he's going to, you know, this is a distraction, you know, he's going to actually do something. No, it's an alien one. Okay. It's Roswell, the actual Roswell. You have, it's the most why I will know now, but I always think why it's the most famous alien thing. Yeah. I think it's kind of like the foundation of like the UFO phenomena. 01:25 Like I think this is the foundational event. There was a couple things before this okay. There was like is this also maybe just beefed up because it's on route sixty six right. There's probably a good part. Is it on route sixty six? I don't know. Let's see and so like they just made it like roadside attraction kind of stuff like see this giant alien. You know I'm sure I mean that is definitely a thing like yeah. Yeah, it became like it became like a tourist attraction type thing. So maybe that's what 01:53 I don't know. We'll find out. It doesn't look like it's right on route sixty six, but it does seem like it's close to its gates, so you could like D or yeah, yeah, it'd be too convenient if it was on sixty six. Yeah, yeah, that's true. Yeah, people wouldn't believe it. 02:11 Why do give off? Does it seem like I don't want to be places? Cause I'm having a good time. I'm generally having a good time. I enjoy doing stuff. I love being around my friends. I like being here at the podcast. This is a really good time that I'm having right now. Yeah. I believe you. Open the casket. Things I learned last night. 02:41 Here's the story on a June, late June, nineteen forty seven. Okay, I raised about the name of WW Mac Brazel. Cool. Mac Brazel, Mac Brazel. Yeah, he's got a ranch in uh just outside Roswell, New Mexico, and he finds this two hundred yard uh just field of strange debris. He's he describes it like big. Yeah, he describes it as like 03:07 tin foil and rubber strips and paper and wooden sticks like weird stuff. Okay, that's like he's like, he's like it wasn't quite tin foil, but that's the closest thing I can describe it to you know and so and paper and sticks. Yeah, that's what okay, were the aliens just flying the right brothers plane? What are you talking about? This is freaking okay. um 03:30 And so yeah, just papers and sticks and this has got to be aliens man. He sees all this junk on his land. Okay, he's like this is weird and he's like well I have been needing to build this damn and so he's like so I'll grab some of the sticks and see if I could damn up the little Creek didn't work and then he kind of just forgets about it. He's like got a big ranch. He's got things to do. He's like this is weird, but whatever who's got a big enough ranch that there's like 200 yards of it. That's just debris from something they are like 03:58 bad. I think you're like working and you go, oh yeah, I could use that to make this day. What? No, I'm just thinking like a month later you go, what was all that stuff? Where'd that come from? Well, no, July 2nd. So a few days later, okay, about a week. I don't know. I don't know exactly when he finds it. I know it's late June. He finds this debris field. Um, and then July 2nd, there's this big thunderstorm that has the area like super severe thunderstorm. Okay. Um, and 04:25 What happens during this thunderstorm is there becomes this kind of like local legend that forms out of this thunderstorm. And so everybody in town is talking about how they saw these like lights pulsating in the sky during the thunderstorm. Not lightning. Oh, it's crazy. Different than lightning. OK. Like there was lighting, but there was like lights in there too. Uh huh. There was like lights lighting. OK. In the sky with the lightning. And so Brazel is hearing all these stories in town. And he's just a farmer. 04:54 he's a rancher okay yeah. What's the difference? Yeah? Well, you know you just corrected me. Tell me the difference farmers raise crops, ranchers raise livestock. I don't like how quick he knew that I kind of thought it was going to stop him and instead he nailed it. Bummer for me yeah. Do farmers do crops and I guess you yeah. So is there a ranching simulator? All right, well never mind then so 05:23 there was a there's a there's an expansion pack for ranching. That's crazy for sixty nine dollars. You can have some house rancher. Okay, anyways people. Most of people do both though, don't they? um I don't know. I think it I don't know. I actually I don't know. Okay, I don't know why anyways. So July sixth he's like, you know what I keep hearing about these lights in the sky. I have all this junk in my yard. 05:52 Uh-huh. And he's like, maybe I should report this. So he calls the sheriff and he's like, hey, I don't know. It could be nothing. But I mean, there's something in my land. And he's like, keep hearing about all this stuff happening in this guy. something crashed. You want to come look at it? And sheriff comes and looks at it. And the sheriff's like, oh, this is definitely something. So the sheriff calls. There's a local. But also a storm has now come through. He's kind of blowing the debris around. 06:18 Yeah, so it's yeah, it's it's spread out now and okay still there, but it's like spread out sure um hold on. Let get the name of this. Is this just a brayer? Is that like you know the dirt's kind of like something landed here? Yeah, well, it's it's like a it's a it's a debris path, so there's there's it definitely is like it like crashed and spread out okay the trajectory. Okay, just outside Roswell, there is the Roswell Army Airfield and so the sheriff says 06:48 I'm going to call the army airfield and have them come check this out. Okay, this seems like something that they should deal with and so he calls them and they send out um this guy here. I'll show you this is a guy by the name of Major Jesse Marcel. Okay and Jesse Marcel is black and white photo for the for the listeners and his his eyes are pretty sunken in. He looks a little alieny. Yeah, is this what the military caps like they don't look like that anymore? 07:17 um I don't that emblem up there. Yeah, I don't think so. That looks very World War Two II. Yeah, yeah, I don't think they, don't think they do that anymore because this was this was pre like the army splitting out into Navy Air Force and things like this. Oh, the army was one thing yeah and so he was actually a part of the five hundred and you think about it. They haven't won a world war since all right. We need a unified military. Oh, we split into five branches. We haven't won, you know, Marcel 07:46 is significant and really this whole airfield is significant because it's the home of the five hundred and ninth division. Okay, the five hundred and ninth. I think they're called the five hundred and ninth composite group and this is the group where at this time composite group. Yeah, they are yeah. I was playing pickleball the other day with my composite group. They are the only. there a lot to get to in this episode? 08:14 it just doesn't seem like you want to chat. What are you talking about? I go a composite, you so they are the okay. All I do you want to talk about? No, I'm just over here. I'm just over here. You know, I talk about how these old. I'm like what I have seen farmers, ranchers, you I don't really know the difference. So there's a field. I there's like a lot of stuff. No, you didn't. You didn't know the difference and that's important to remember 08:40 So okay, so this five hundred and nine, so there's five hundred and I don't know if you notice this about on the way in. I don't they're clearly setting up for a funeral outside. I saw that see that I didn't see that this back edge of our wall, but the auditorium to where yeah, so there's a funeral potentially happening right on this. Oh, I actually thought we had more space. No, we got more space. No, no, no, no, can show you exactly where our wall is. 09:06 you know how we should let's a to the wall. Let's two holes, punch two holes and then just stick her hands through. like it's like at the sorry for your loss at the Renaissance Fair. We stick our heads through yeah like the stocks yeah. Oh sorry, didn't know you do it right here. Okay, see now you want to chat okay speed of the red fair. All of my friends think I'm a jerk. I think have I saw have I told this before 09:33 because I don't know if you have on the podcast. I know last year they were like hey, you want to go to the Ren fair and I was like yeah, that'd be fine. I'd never been you know and my wife just goes yeah, it's probably not Jaren's thing, but he'll go and I was like all right and then all of my which is strange because you were like your runes gate and a theater kid. Yeah, like this is like your vibe probably you know, that's the thing I'm accepting. I don't want to be part of. I'm not like you know, but you're there. There's like 10:02 there are there are a lot of levels to how people experience the ring. Yeah, it's like you know it's not. It's not like I'm not a person who's going to put on the elf ears and like fully immerse myself in this, uh but some people do and that's fine. You know yeah we were leaving the red fair. I we had a good time and then we're in the car and all my friends are like all right, Jaren, what do you think? 10:27 and I was like yeah. It was fun. There was no no tell us all you really thought. I was like I had a good time. They're like it's safe. Now you're in the car. You can tell us what you thought and I was like actually you know what now I hate the red fair just for that because it's not inclusive. Apparently it's inclusive of all the weird stuff yep all right, but I'm not allowed to stand in the corner and go a little weird. This is a like that's where they draw the line. You don't let me say all this is a little weird 10:55 Yeah, I don't say it out loud. I'm not like looking at people being like this a little weird that you're doing that. No, I'm there and this is their thing. Have fun. I don't care. Yeah, you know, I'll go. We'll have a giant turkey leg and walk around and say it's a big craft fair. It's fun, you know, but they think they think I hate it. Well, you did. I did based on the words you're saying. It sounds like you hated it. No, I just didn't immerse myself in it. It's like like that, you know, 11:24 paint balls, not my thing yeah. I actually don't want to do paint ball at all. I actually do actually you know what I judge people who do paint bomb yeah. I have actually and I was scared the whole time. I was walking around like this. I was like please, no one hit me with the paint ball. Please, please. I don't want to get bruised by the people and so like I'm just sitting. I felt like I was at war. You know I was like where's my composite group and so I 11:48 Yeah, we were called the composite paintings. It's really great. I was kind of a tool with paintball in high school. That makes sense to me. I wore like a vest and that was it and so I just had like open chest and I I remember one time where you were a tool or a fool. I feel like you were the one in the friend group that they were like yeah, dude, Tim loves this stuff and they all show up with the gear and everything and you're out here like you got some eye black on and a vest. You're like let's go guys and I a vest. They let you run to the woods and they're like let's all just get them 12:16 I had a vest. Hold on. Let me tell you were just the target. I had a vest, obviously sleeveless and then the back had this big full back size like patch on it. I can't believe I've never told you this at a full literally this path. feel like at the end of story, we're going to find out why you never told me this. This is my entire back was this patch and in the patch it was from this hardcore band, but I thought it was so sick because the whole thing was like the view of like a sniper scope and in the cross hairs was the devil. 12:46 yeah, dude and I would um and then yeah one time we were playing. It was a camera was like capsule flag or yeah it was caps the flag. Well, so the five hundred ninth composite group there's a lot of debris in the field and so like they send out Marcel and he goes up. You see that's what that's what we were like earlier. It was was caps the flag yeah and I was the last person left and they call it 13:15 there's this really cool place in Sedalia, Colorado and I'm sure it's I know but They had like two huge forts and everything like that Yeah, and I was the last person left and then they call it they're like they're like 30 seconds remaining and so like I'm in wins and so I see it in the middle I don't I haven't seen anyone for like minutes. I don't know where any of the hostiles are and so I 13:43 climb down. were they were waiting. They're camping. I climbed up for the fort. I run and I'm like I got a freaking zoom and so like full sprint across no man's land. Keep in mind this is a JV football player by the way, so like the speed was pretty incredible vest flowing in the wind. This is a senior JV player here. He's conditioning was in it was crazy and I jump into that. They had these like 14:12 trenches and they were deep by four or five foot deep trenches in the now and the flag was in the middle of that trench. It's I run and I jump in that trench and there was a guy just laying in there and he just lit me up to all the way from like just like straight in that gap in that guy kind of socks man like that's what I'm saying. Like the reason I don't like people, the reason I don't like the Ren fair. I do like the river, but the reason I don't like some of this stuff is that there's always there's always a couple people who are just 14:42 bad about it. You know well, I was the person who was bad about it and he lit me up. There's just people who are bad about it. I'm bad about the rain. No, I liked it. Well, anyway, so the group chat has started for this year's ren fair where they added me and like I got added to the group chat like my wife added me to it. She's a hand is adding jaren so that we can coordinate the dates and and joy responded and said oh, I didn't know if he was going to go on to go or not. 15:10 the group chats named Jaren doesn't want to be here. Jaren doesn't want to be here. I got to wear. I got to. I got to make a Ren fair style shirt that says happy to be here. Is that the vibe I give off? Does it seem like I don't want to be places because I'm having a good I'm Jen. I'm generally a good time. I enjoy doing stuff. I love being around my friends. I like being here at the podcast. This is a really good time that I'm having right now. Yeah, I believe you. 15:43 somebody on the other side of this wall is just happy to be here. I love being here right now and then you know there's some guy over there like is the the dead guy talking and open it up. Oh, I dare you to yell. I dare you to yell. Please let me out like like up against the law. 16:14 don't write that down and staying in uh hey we signed a lease. They knew they knew who we were. Let me out. Oh my gosh, that's good. Okay, so oh yeah, so he was the he was part of the five hundred and ninth composite division. I'm going to make a red stairs, red fair style shirt that says I keep saying I'm going to make some merge designs 16:43 and then Tim keeps texting me like hey, you mentioned this episode. You're to design that we're going to release a drop for the spring. You know, keep an eye out on the socials for it and when I have time to do that, so the what did I say they were called the five hundred and ninth yeah right yeah five hundred and ninth yeah the five hundred ninth composite division was the only nuclear capable air division in the world at the time. uh So is this this was must have been the one that 17:15 Well, I guess nuclear atomic are different. I Well, it was. Yeah, it was the Nagasaki division. Oh, and and it well, I don't know if Marcel was there, but we do know he was in the division at the time, so he probably was on one of the planes. Sure, sure, sure, sure. 17:34 Hey, thanks for watching our show. you like it, a great way to help out is by being a Patreon supporter. Doing that helps make this show possible, but it also gets a lot of perks for you. You can get every episode a week early ad free. You get access to a Discord where you can meet a lot of other people who love the show and actually hang out with Jaren and I every month on a hangout. And we're also in that Discord chat all the time, hanging, talking with people, talking about episodes and just random stuff in life. It's super fun. 17:57 We do, there's a way to get birthday messages, a free gift, merch discounts in there. So there's a lot of really great reasons to be a Patreon supporter. You get a lot of benefits out of it. And it also makes the show keep happening. So if that sounds great to you, you can go to support.tilling.com or tilling.com slash support, uh or just tilling.com and search around until you find the links uh and become a Patreon supporter. really appreciate you doing that. But if not, right back to the episode, right? 18:25 So they get dispatched and so he comes to check out what they have there and he sees it and he says, oh, this is kind of crazy. And so they show up, what is this? July 7th. now we're okay. We're like two weeks after. Yeah. And so this is two week old debris. Him major Jesse Marcel and then another counterintelligence agent show up, look at the stuff, package a bunch of it up in boxes and then they leave to go back to base. Okay. On the way back from base, 18:56 Major Jesse Marcel does something he's never done before and he swings by the house and he gets home and he's his house yeah. Okay, he gets home and he tells his wife and you got a breath just from telling your paintball story. I'm out of breath from just like distress of the day. He gets his home and go go go go go go. 19:27 I need to get fit again. Yeah, dude, I did. We've all been trying to tell you I'm mad. I listen. I know we're interjecting the story again. Chill out podcast listener, but I'm mad that my comedy special I'm filming it this weekend. By the time this episode comes out, it's been done and and you know for the January filming Christmas has happened. I had tried to get a little. had like a month. I tried to get a little bit more fit for the for the taping and then since they got pushed 19:57 to March. Now it's been my birthday and my wife's birthday in between this taping. Yeah, you know how hard it is when people, you know, for your birthday, people just give you give you stuff and they get, know, and especially my wife got like seven different cookie cakes and stuff. And I'm just over here like, you know, people are like, oh, if you're fat, just eat less. I wish I would have thought of that, you know, because like I can't. Yeah, there's a reason that Dave Ramsey makes people cut their credit cards because like you can't, you need to cut your birthday cake. 20:27 I do I cut it and I keep eating it. I cut a piece off and I eat it and I cut a piece off and I eat it so, but at least I'm out of I'm not out of breath. Yeah, I need to start. I need to start being healthy again. I have been. I have been trying to eat a little bit better and it's a slow progression. I have Tim's location and I'll watch him go to this place called Sliders quite a bit so good and then 20:53 I actually did tell breathe the other day. It's ironic. You bring this up with the other day. I was like, I was like, man, I love slider, but I got to stop eating it. It freaking wrecks me every time I eat it. But I will say that guy who came up with here's the thing about sliders slay. They make sliders like the burger sliders, but they give you queso to dip the sliders in. And I told her, I told her the other day, was like, Alex's face, Alex's face is just like, I've, he can't even comprehend because Alex, just so y'all know, 21:23 every time Alex goes with us anywhere. He always orders like because we took him. I took him to fifty four street one time he ordered us. He orders a salad and they say we don't do that here and then he says I'll tell you how and he goes. He goes. That's okay. I brought my own and he brings out a little bag of romaine lettuce that he carries around with him. Now he orders like the power bowl from fifty four. I'm like just eat the chips in case so and he's like no he has will power yeah he's going to he's done it over here. He is telling a story about dipping sliders in case 21:52 and I need you to. You can't see Alex's face, but it was genuine fear. Alex was like that. You shouldn't do that and me and it to really I told Brie the other day as was like yeah. Honestly, I feel like death every time I eat it. It's not the same but who made sliders in Springfield. Is it no, no, no, no, no. You remember that place and that place was also really good, right, but yeah, the whoever came up with let's let's dip burgers in case. So I think that guy should be president because that is 22:36 okay, so the five hundred and nine composite, so he swings by his house, yeah, he swings by his house, sees his wife who I'm gonna be honest with you. I have no idea how to pronounce her name. Her name is V, I, A, U, D, V, I, you dude, the odd, don't think it's V, odd, I add like I 22:59 I think the odd is the only way that that makes the odd, the odd, the odd, the odd. So anyways, Jesse Marcel walks in and he says, Viad, go get Jesse. His son's also named Jesse and he's like, got to show him something. Jesse Jr. So he shows Jesse. He's like, look at all this alien spacecraft stuff and his kid goes 23:21 and he goes yes, yes, Jesse get it. You get it. I don't know dude. His wife's name is Fia. That's not a human name. You that's friggin that's an alien name. That's a good point. Actually, that's a really good point, so he shows it to his s. He goes takes home to his kid and his kid is sitting in his room just like yeah. 23:39 it is that of our planet. What do you like? Okay, yeah, yeah, so he shows him and he's like he's like he wakes him up from the ufo. I suppose, hey, wake up, you gotta see this. like this cigarette. I gotta show you some stuff from a different planet. I gotta show you some stuff from the war. I'm gonna show you some stuff from the world. We're about to have another war. I think this one's gonna be bigger. It's gonna be so big. We have to split the 24:09 military into five different branches and one day six, but it doesn't really matter. The does it. Let's no one really a person is like yeah, dude, the six 24:25 and so he shows the body. Ryan tricky has a really funny bit about that. If you know you should, here's some comics to watch. Oh, we I can tell you, I'll tell you two people's jokes on their behalf. Ryan tricky is a really funny bit. It's really great friend of mine from Kansas City comic. He was on they don't bite. If everyone, if anyone listened to they don't buy podcasts, I actually watched that the other day. Did you really? I mean not the whole thing, but like I was looking for something. I don't know how it happened, but I saw that I was like, oh, this isn't what I expected. I clicked on, but 24:54 Here it is yeah, and so he's a really funny bit about being at the gas station. He let a soldier in front of him and he was which branch you serve in and the guy was like I'm in the space force. He's okay. I'm going to cut back. It's a really good bit. I love it so much and then also Matt Kershen who is a UK comic. He lives in L. He's who I play pickleball with. He lives in. He lives in LA, but he's a Yeah, he's got an LA. So he sounds like this is what I mean. You know, he's a very good jolly. He says weird stuff like that. 25:24 But he has a he has a really funny bit about the red fair about how he can't go to the red fair because people think he's in character the whole time. Where's the restroom and they're like oh over here good jolly sir and he's like no I'm just torn uh up. He's like no it's a really fun. That's pretty funny. So good to comics to follow Ryan tricky and Matt Kershian. So he shows Jesse his son. Okay this stuff and so allegedly what he shows him is there's there's this metal. 25:53 that is described like tinfoil, but it's like memory. And so he's like, I can crumple it up into a ball and then it just crumple back out, like flatten back out into that perfect shape it was in. Like nothing happened. It was like really flexible, it wouldn't stay in that position. And then there was like, what he described as little eye beams uh and the eye beams had purple hieroglyphs on them, which I actually have. I think I have a picture of it. Yeah, here's a picture of one of these little eye beams with like purple. 26:23 hieroglyphs on our small little tiny high beam. That's real I beams yeah. That's a real picture. Yes, it is and is this in front of a leaf. What is this and is this excite? It's a very blurry photo. It's somebody holding it, so this is zoomed in on a picture of somebody holding it like this. I mean I yeah I can, but I can see the picture I'm saying with the you see what's laying up. It's present a table cloth. Maybe or so I think it's his I didn't know holding it like this for the camera. Oh okay, so for audio listener, it does look like a six inch ruler. You know, is it metal and it has little 26:53 ah you would describe those as hieroglyphics. It's got letters characters, potentially on it, potentially a word yeah and they're purple. Obviously this is black and white, so we don't see the purple, but this right, but those are purple. I actually one of my skills is being able to look at a black and white photo and tell you what the color is. Yeah, that's why they hired me to do the colorization of stuff because I just because I just know I just know by looking at black. 27:18 Yeah, that's green. Green. 27:23 he gets paid a lot to do that yeah, so I don't actually do the recolorization of it. I just just say the color and then somebody else does. It's like I have this crazy ability to look at celebrities and makeup, but I can tell who they are. I'm a super recognizer super. I stand over the guy's shoulder like green. No, not that green, my little lighter, too light, too light. No, you know, now that I think about it, I think it should be blue. Yeah, change my name to Hugh so 27:54 so it is like an actual object. Yeah, yeah, it's like in the debris yeah and he shows. So he shows his son, it says it and he's like he's like I got to go back to the army. So I just wanted to see this because I think this is a big deal. Okay, so he goes back to the base and he shows everyone at the base and his son tells everyone at school. Yeah, it sounds like I got to tell everybody about this yeah and so it's do by way. Yeah, I don't know. Yeah, true and so he gets those stuff that my wife's students will say to her. First of all, 28:22 if you got secrets, don't send your kid to a school. That's what I think. Home schoolers are just trying to they're just trying to keep their family secret safe because your kid will go to school and tell your dirty laundry to everybody. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. So they go back to the he goes back to the base. Yeah, he brings all this stuff and he shows everyone at the base and the and they're like we're the first people to see this right. He was yes. I haven't shown anyone else the the how old is son 28:52 like eleven. I think the time he's old enough to know what he's looking at. Okay, okay. He's old enough to know that this is a big deal. Yeah. And so at the Roswell Army Airfield, their public information officer sees this and he's like, we need to put out a statement and he goes to the Colonel and he talks to the current and the Colonel clears him to put out a statement. And so they put a statement out to the press and within the hour the press is like putting out papers that say this capture flying saucer. Okay, so yeah, the press was just like, let's run with it. Yeah, 29:21 And so this by that evening, this is the Roswell Daily Record. Yeah. Okay. So by that evening, not just in Roswell, but across the world, this has hit the wire and this is everywhere. Aliens crashed in Roswell. I'm looking at the other headlines real quick. House passes tax slash by large margin defeat amendment by demos to remove many from roles is demos Democrats. I'm assuming. Yeah, we should go back to calling them that. That's fun. 29:51 demos. ah Okay, and so they this no details of we go back to this. No details of flying disc are revealed, so they're already running yeah with this is a flying saucer yeah, and there's a flying disc. Well, this is what they say that the the uh the Roswell Army Airfield. They put out a statement that literally says alien flying disc is recovered outside of that. Was that a real paper or was that like a tab? That is a real paper. 30:21 And it went to real papers across the world. entire globe was reporting on this by that evening. And so then that night, that airfield gets a call from higher-ups in Fort Worth, Texas and was like, need to fly down to Texas right now. So they do. They fly down to Texas, they bring the stuff and they show this kernel and they look at it and they come out and they put out a correction and they say, oh no, it wasn't a flying saucer. It's actually a leather balloon. 30:50 and they send out these photographs that they take and so this is Marcel and then this is my home yeah holding a torn up weather balloon yeah and this is Marcel with I think this guy's I don't know if he's a general or a colonel but his last name is hold on let me make sure I'm getting that Rami R A M E Y Rami General Rami okay and so they're holding up the wreckage and so these are the pieces of the craft that they've got okay and smiling and laughing yeah just kind of chit chatting 31:20 suspicious and they put this out and publicize this and they say, Hey, this was not and this is this is a black and white photo, but his jumpsuit is orange. I can tell you 31:33 Yeah, yeah, that does look orange. He's a prisoner. Also somebody shot up the room they're in on that. well, that just messed up the photo. It's got to be go back to the other picture. Yeah, the holes aren't there. 31:49 Hey, thanks for listening to this episode of things I learned last night. If you like the show, you want to support us, we've got merchandise that you can get and it's good stylish stuff that I made. put a lot of work into this stuff, so it's great to find other tilling fans in the wild and be like, wait a minute. I know that shirt. And so yeah, we would love for you to do that. You can pop over to shop.tillin.com or the QR code or there's a link in the description. There's plenty of ways to find it. We promise we made it super easy. So thanks for supporting the show and thanks for listening. 32:19 They publicize this. say, oh, hey, sorry, our mistake, not a flying saucer, not aliens. This is actually, it's actually just a weather balloon. Yeah. Which of course screams cover up. And this wire goes out four hours after they sent the first wire out. So it's like, they sent that wire out, Fort Worth heard about this and the general's like, get over here right now. They flew to Fort Worth and then they took these photos and sent out a new wire. And they were like, we got to correct this immediately. Yeah. And so yeah, of course this does scream cover up. Right. 32:48 And what's interesting about this, this whole thing happens, the press hears about this, the press issues a correction, and this story dies for 30 years. This is just gone from the zeitgeist. And what's really interesting is I think there's something to say. This is like, this is the late 40s when people still trusted the government. And so they were like, oh, they said it was aliens, it's aliens. And then they're like, oh, they said, sorry, we were wrong, it's not aliens. It's not aliens. And then it's just kind of the end of it. Like they just believe them. 33:16 I mean to be fair, they had just won World War Two. There was no real like reason not to I guess yeah yeah and I mean this is before basically every political scandal that's ever also the correction sounds a lot more believable. Yeah, the first news press is kind of like really yeah and they come on. They're not here's what it was and go here's what it was. Oh well to be fair two weeks before I don't know if it's two weeks. It might have been two months recently before this wire went out 33:46 was the event that actually coined the term flying saucer. There was a siding over Mount Rainier in Washington, yeah, and a pilot said he saw this while he was coming in for a landing in Seattle sure, and he saw what he described like a flying disc and the reporter was like we're going to call it flying saucer that runs better and so that's where the name flying saucer came from was like we did a whole episode about the weather balloon kid yeah and that looks like an alien. 34:12 crap. Yeah, if you see that floating through, you see that weather balloon. Yeah, yeah, it looks like a saucer for sure. What year was project blue beam project blue beams like now like blue book, no project blue beam, blue beam. Yeah, well, when were they, when were they flying stuff in Antarctica? Wasn't that during World War Two? Oh, that was uh what was that because we thought because Germany was down there doing stuff. Yeah, Germany was doing that. That wasn't blue beam. That was what was that called? 34:40 I thought those project blue beam blue beams where they're going to make Jesus return in the sky with, okay. Stuff. I can't remember what that Antarctica was called, but yeah, that was fairly certain that it was part of that story that we did. I mean, I'd have to look it up to know for sure, but this whole like there was a lot of the conspiracy theories about UFO world started in this era, but they weren't in the public yet. Okay. Makes sense. So like there, they go back. 35:10 And this was silent for 30 years until 30 years later Marcel retires. He's an old man. Yeah, he's an old man. He retires and he starts talking to an author about it. And he's like, you know, that whole thing was a cover up. He's like, they flew me out after this thing came out and they said, you're going to take these pictures and they brought out new rubble. And he's like, this was not the stuff that we brought them. They took the stuff we brought them. They put it, uh they took it away. They took the stuff that we brought away. They brought this stuff out and they said, we're going to pose with this stuff. 35:39 And he's like, but that's not the stuff. And they're like, yeah, we can't let the... But that's not the stuff. That's not the rubble. And so they made us pose with this. Okay. And so the author publishes that and then it becomes this big storyline. The author does some work to go out to all the other people in Roswell and he talks to all the other people who live there, the rancher. And what's interesting is the storyline is a lot more... 36:06 fantastic now. Right. And 30 years time had passed. And so what the storyline becomes is now this debris field, according to the rancher, was not 200 yards, but was two miles of debris. Right. Right. Right. And ran all the way along this. And the people in the town say like, oh, yeah, we saw in the sky, like we saw this thing coming down to crash during the storm. And so it became a crash during the storm and everybody in town saw it crash and he went out after the storm to find it. Right. 36:36 there was bodies. There's little bodies of little charred men, um tiny like charred. look like children. He's they said sure um and but this is also after other conspiracies have have. So now they're merging their memories with yes yeah, so there's there's yeah and there's there's thirty years of like memories right. You know um and there's someone he interviews who says that there's a 37:05 uh a local moratition who says that, he was contracted by the Air Force to, I guess the Army, m to make small coffins for them. And he's like, so I had to make these tiny coffins for the aliens. And then he said that he spoke with a nurse. He said, yeah, they had to do autopsies on these alien bodies. um And so it turns into this whole story. um And the weather balloon thing is now viewed as a cover up. 37:33 Sure. So in the seventies, this gets traction. And I do think in the seventies, there was other conspiracies that had come out. Right. And then Roswell was like, oh, this is the big proof. This was the cover up. They acknowledged it and then immediately retracted it. What is interesting is over the course of the like this runs through the seventies to the eighties. And you have a lot of amateur researchers trying to figure out, if they can figure stuff out. One of the things that's interesting about this is in 38:03 this photo you can see general rammy standing there and he's holding a letter, um but in the original one he wasn't well the other one you showed yeah he is and this one okay. Okay, it's just darker yeah and so with like modern technology people have modern technology exam zoom in and hands yeah they've enhanced this. Oh yeah, I bet they've I bet they did. Oh yeah, I bet 38:32 this looks exactly like what it is, huh, and so they flipped this over. So I don't know if you can read this. I can't, but allegedly base are here at the what what has happened is they've examined the negatives and tried to interpret what this is. And according to the expert researchers who understand these these type of yeah, there are some who say they see uh the phrase victims of the wreck in this letter. 39:02 I have no idea where you can see this. Other experts have said, we don't see this at all. There's no phrase, victims of the wreck, in here at all. ah 39:14 I would guess it's this you know, top line or second line, I guess, because like you started the top over here uh base are here. I think here is pretty clear at the and the this part victims of the wreck, because I can see and maybe you could, but that's like this is dumb and you can't really decipher this. Yeah, yeah, I mean you can't 39:45 but I but I can't because what color is it uh black and white is in 39:58 wrote it in pen. looks like just a black ballpoint pen. Look at this image. This black and white image. It's black and white black and white. 40:10 pretty easy and so this becomes like the story and you're right. The town turns into alien to right. They they ham it up. They I don't know if I would say make a lot of money, but it becomes a I feel like it's one of those things where it's like this is an opportunity to make this a tourist attraction. Yeah, yeah, is now alien town sure still is, but in the nineties the Air Force comes out and the Air Force says hey guys, we know how this all 40:39 Like, okay, it wasn't the UFOs and it technically wasn't really a weather balloon either. It was something else. ah This was a part of a secret now declassified project known as Project Mogul ah that was going on at the same time. what Project Mogul was is it was this array of high altitude balloons that the army had. uh 41:07 essentially just suspended in the airspace above the United States. Okay, and dangling from these balloons was microphones, low, incredibly low frequency microphones, and the idea was for those listening. This looks like it's like a balloon with a big string. It looks like a tail, but all the things on that look like the like when you'd be like, know, what do you call that thing? Yeah, where it's like you get the four points. You put your thumbs in it 41:33 And it's like the game you play when you're a kid, you fold the paper up and you do the whole burp, burp, burp, burp. I don't think me doing that helps the audio listener burp, burp, burp, burp. You know, if you ever seen community, it's the thing that you intro on community and sure a little paper game. Yeah, fold it up and put your thumb side. Yeah, but it looks like several of those along the string. But this is this is a huge array because this is a series of balloons. These almost like kite tails hanging from it with the with the microphones. But these are six hundred foot long arrays. 42:04 that are floating up in high altitude. Oh my gosh. These are massive balloons, huge balloon floating in high altitude with these array of microphones. And the purpose of them was they were flying high enough altitude, capturing low enough frequency and with an array over the United States that if the Soviets successfully tested an atom bomb, it would pick up the explosion, the sound, the like sound wave. And so this was their way of making sure we know and they have a successful test. Okay. And 42:33 They obviously didn't want the Soviets to know about this. Sure. And this crash was one of these crashing in Roswell, New Mexico. And they have record of it. Right. Because they have launched one two days before the crash. Oh, they did. They launched one two days before the crash. And that's why the Air Force showed up so quickly. But what's the thing? Well, here's what's interesting. ah This was shortly after the war. And so resources nationwide were a little slim. 43:01 And so they subcontracted the manufacture of certain elements of this balloon array. for part of the subcontracting, they hired a toy company out of New York. And this toy company, again, they didn't have as many supplies as they normally work with. so they used uh pieces of old Bossa wood to connect this array together. And so this is actually a Bossa wood I-beam. uh 43:31 uh reflective so they like would not be picked up by radar. And so they had this reflective tape that they used for toys that they put on there and the reflective tape had purple floral designs on it. Okay. And so when this crashed it the crash happened days before it was found by the farmer. Sure. And then of course there was that store animals crawled up and etched those little letters into it. They're like this is going to confuse the humans. 44:00 They love that, by way. The Ailes love confusing you. It's their favorite thing. ah And so the storm comes and what happens is in the New Mexico heat after getting wet, the tape actually loses its sticky residue or whatever was sticking it to the balsa wood, falls off, whatever, melts away. And that purple uh flower print that was on it had leaked through and stained the wood. But it's like... 44:29 floral print and it's weird designs, but not all of its leak. Oh, okay, okay, okay, okay. So it's like is that floral print, but just like partial pieces of floral print leaking through onto the boss. That's a very elaborate story to make up to you. No, it's like look, it's like you can see how it's flower print, right? 44:51 Huh? Maybe I'm starting to be the conspiracy theorist over here. And they said, and here's the deal. All the, all the alien body stuff. This is actually what they use this term. What did they call it? Suggestive memory or something like that? they're like, they're like, what's happening here is they're kind of merging together a few other things that happened because later in the fifties, there was another test in Roswell where they were testing parachutes. And so they put a bunch of crash test dummies attaching to parachutes and 45:20 lifted him up with balloons to high altitude and drop them in the desert and Roswell and so these bodies just fell because obviously not all the imagine how how traumatizing that would be. 45:35 You're out picking some corn. Cause you're a farmer and you're a, then just, Oh, and then like immediately this black SUV rolls up, picks his body up and throws it in the trunk and speeds up and goes. 45:53 If you tell anybody, I'll kill you. I guess I can't tell anybody about. I guess I'll keep my mouth shut. Hmm. I didn't see anything. I'm just a lowly farm. do anything and picking and picking corn. Yeah, dude. And shortly after that, there was another event where there was another military plane coming in for landing at the airfield that crashed. 46:21 and it was this horrific event, massive flames. Everybody on board died. Okay, the news, the way they described it is the reporter said it was like looking at little charred bodies all over the field. Oh, so the air force says, which is a pretty gruesome detail to include in your report, but okay, yeah, crazy. And so the air, but the air force, the statement is in terms of the bodies that people are talking about. It is the memory of these events being kind of conglomerate and attached to Roswell. 46:49 got attached to the original UFO incident, but it's not. They weren't the same thing. Yeah, they have an explanation for everything, but here's 47:01 Here's what I think though. I think this event is what made the army be like, hey, actually this is really useful to us. Because I think it was the Project Mogul. I believe that it was that array that was listening for Soviet bombs. And I think they realized, they're like, oh, that cover-up was way better than our cover-up. they really- cover-up? Oh, that it's aliens. They're like, oh, they believe the aliens way faster than anyone was going to believe. Oh, okay. weather balloon thing. 47:31 and they were like. I think that the army was like let's just a freaking use that and so I I don't I have no way of so now you're fully on the other side of all the conspiracy theories you brought into this podcast. You fully gone the other way. I've been like yeah. I just got cy opt actually. I do think I do think that I think they watched how well the Roswell storyline of UFOs worked and after that when they were working on spy planes and that's our everyone and the stealth bombers. They were like 48:01 Tell them it's aliens. That worked way better with Washington than our weather balloon thing. Okay. I do think that that's what happened. Yeah, there's UFOs, man. Aliens. Yeah. 48:11 I don't know what to tell you. It's aliens, but it wasn't a you. It wasn't the army saying that it was then like leaking out sure, and I think that's what's still happening today with Tom Belong. Okay, and anyways, I guess I want the last little tidbit that there was a group allegedly by the story. There's a group that was put together by the army to cover this up and but the name of it is majestic twelve and which is pretty cool, pretty cool. Also what Jesus called the disciples 48:40 Hey, majestic twelve. It's time for us to do some ministry. It is time for one of you to portray me. saw it. Wouldn't that be crazy if it was like held like a survivor tribal council. The last supper was actually just him really everyone write down our name. Everybody bringing bring out your torches. I saw a tweet the other day. It said uh Easter is coming along and I'm going to coming along 49:08 this is your I'm going to celebrate Easter by betraying one of you. That's crazy. No, but Majestic twelve this this three times to yeah, I'm just going to keep doing it now the the majestic twelve became this this big uh big bad villain for the UFO conspiracy. Okay, the latter twentieth century and uh 49:38 at the end of what I would call, and I don't know if this is right, but we did the episode on Tom DeLonge recently, and I would say in their second, well really their first big studio release that got massive, massive, have a song called Alien Exists, Aliens Exist, and the last line of that is 12 majestic lies, and I think he says 12 majestic because it probably flows better than 12. And I... 50:07 I do think that this whole thing is the thing that tricked him and ruined my favorite band. 50:13 Wow anyways, that's that the Roswell incident. I think it's it's. I believe the idea that it's the balloon array sure and I do think that this is the thing that made the army think I I think that the idea that they were lie about aliens. It makes it seem like they're intentional enough or organized enough to do that kind of thing. You know, I I look if we're talking to the huge, I'm saying like all 50:42 Yeah, I think that obviously like the newspaper runs a thing. People in town believe this stuff. Of course, that's a lie that gets out of hand right, but I the idea that the government, some shadowy figure can just be like, let's tell them it's aliens and create this alien story. Here's what I think here's that that that assigns that's a phrase I love lately is the don't assign genius to you know, incompetence. I do think I do think I do think yes, that is true, but I think like 51:11 I think in the same side, you see a lot of people when arguing about the fact that this original story is the true story, they talk about Jesse Marcel and how he was a part of this elite division in the Air Force that had access to the most powerful weapons we've ever created. And so he had like top security clearance. And so the argument that's made a lot is kind of like this argument from authority that because he had this top security clearance, he would know about everything. But it's like, just because you have top security clearance, you understand about the stuff that they let you understand about. I do think like the people... 51:39 in the military. When I say that there are people who are like, let's use this, just if you work at a hotel, you have a key to every room, but that doesn't mean you've gone in every room or know every room's deepest. You know, you don't know every detail of every room secrets. You know, yeah, I know what you're saying. I know what you're saying. Yeah, but you might know a couple of these rooms pretty well, but I think I think it's also a three twenty five guy myself to be more like I know that room. 52:09 to use that analogy. I think it'd be more like if you worked at a hotel and everybody who worked at the hotel got all the keys to one floor and it's like where you have a master key to this floor, but you don't have any. You don't have any access to the other floors because I think that's the way that these work is they're very segmented. That's true. That's your sphere of influence that you get to understand. You don't get to know everything. That's true and I think that there are influential in that Obama interview when he was like, what was the first thing you had like with you know, because I was like that that is who did that interview? Do you remember who? 52:38 who interviewed him. I don't remember where it like. That's what I would do. If I became president, I would swear in. would walk off that stage and immediately go tell me about the moon landing. Tell me about aliens, but I think I think that's the thing is I think there's even stuff that and then Obama was like yeah, aliens are real and everyone's like. Oh my gosh, you know, I think I think it's like these elite generals and maybe even it's an one individual. That's just like we need to create this press. I think it's a small group of people who are in the that need to know 53:07 clearance right for that specific project that I like. This is a better storyline to tell or maybe there is a maybe there's a sphere in there that this is the propaganda division the five hundred and eight sure propaganda group. Yeah I don't know and they're like listen we've got all these microphones all across the country and it's just a pick up in case anybody anywhere is fiddling off the devil right now. 53:37 Hey, thanks for listening to this episode of Things I Learned Last Night. If you liked it and you want more of it, there's another episode we did called Project Blue Beam, which I believe is the one that we mentioned that in. So you need to go listen to it and tell me if I was right or wrong. Come back here and say yes or no. Yeah, no, context. Just yes or no. That would help. That was actually a really funny episode. I remember that one. So if you want next week's episode right now, you can follow us on Patreon. So go join us over there, and that's a good way to help grow the show. It helps fund it. And so... 54:05 We really enjoyed it. So we'll see you next week. And oh also share this stuff on social media. Find us on social. And it really helps us to grow the show. jaronmeyers.com slash shows. Or paulrudtheactor.com. alright, we'll see you next week.


Roswell. The name alone conjures images of flying saucers, alien bodies, and government cover-ups. For decades, the 1947 incident in Roswell, New Mexico, has been the cornerstone of UFO lore, a foundational event that sparked countless theories and fueled the public’s fascination with extraterrestrial life. But what really happened on that remote ranch more than 75 years ago? Let’s delve … Read More

The Explosive Truth of the Nobel Peace Prize | Alfred Nobel

04-14-26

Episode Transcription

00:02 I ever notice how much your toe your fingers look like toes. That's so weird. You got short stubby fingers. Look how bad your fingers are. Dude, those are weird. Put your hands next to each other. Is your left hand shorter? Look at how whoa your left fingers are shorter than your right. They're the same. You know the Alex. No, no, no, no, put the palms equal buddy. They are equal. That is 00:28 totally shifted. You shifted the right way further. These are equal. You, when you shift them, when you shift them, look at how high the right ones are like that. They're different, if you, as long as you keep up normal, they're not a weird hand. Oh my gosh. You have a weird, you got a weird dance here. Nobody's got weird. Hey, he's got five fingers. I've got seven shows. The end of April in Las Vegas. Come hang out. If you're in Vegas, that'd be great. 00:56 and now we're you know. I don't know if I'm supposed to promote those. It's at Brad Garrett's Comedy Club, which is kind of cool because I'll get to hang out with Brad Garrett. I know who that is. You do know who he is. He's he's the brother and in the everyone loves everybody loves rain. Oh yeah, the deep voice one yeah that's Brad Garrett cool and so cool. Nice 01:19 and he's not bitter at all that you know who Ray Romano is, but you don't know who he is. Well, it's because the show is everybody loves Raymond named it after him. Yeah, that was the thing to do too, like even like the the Cosby show was called the Cosby show, but he played Doctor Oxtable. Well, what's interesting? What's interesting is like I was thinking about that the other day because I saw a picture of Al Borland and I was like it's weird that he just his character's name and Tim the tool man Taylor was just out yeah and Tim's name was Tim. 01:47 Yeah, like they gave him different last names, but they had the same first name and they did that with all their characters as weird that that was the thing that they did in ninety sitcoms. Well, it was because it was built around that character like celebrities were a different. So it's a different thing than man. Yeah, yeah, we have a different culture. So anyway, what's the episode about? Have you ever heard of Alfred Noble? 02:12 Yeah 02:20 Okay, I'll stop, stop. No, thank you for stopping, that would be great. I won't do it again. I've spent my whole life bombing and now it's time to love bomb. Things I learned last night. 02:40 Yeah, from the show he plays Alfred, but they change his last name. mean, I need please Al Alfred Nobel Noble. Is it in OBL? Yeah. Oh, so Nobel Nobel Alfred Nobel. Okay, so for for people who are not watching and are just listening, this is a painting. This is a pain. Yeah, this is a painting of him. So this is an older and older. He's this guy's probably in his like later fifties early sixties. 03:06 and he's wearing like a suit. He looks like an inventor in the eighteen hundreds yeah, okay, eighteen hundreds inventor. Yeah, this is the nobel if he's price guy. If if I think this would be, I think you you said it wrong on purpose just to try to throw off. What do you okay? Look, he's got beakers and he's got no. If you're an audio and audio listener, 03:30 picture if the neighbor who shoveled snow and home alone was a scientist. That is true. He does look just like that guy and here's the here's. Let me can I guess the story based on just this picture yeah okay, so he's a science teacher who gets cancer and so now he's got to figure out how to pay for it and so now he's listed one of his old students and they bought an rv and now he's in the woods out here just making meth. Did this guy invent meth? 03:54 So here's another picture of them. This is this. It looks like might be a photograph. Yeah, this might be a picture. This might be a ears are huge. Yeah. Well, yeah, that was that was a thing about being a man back then. You got big ears, you got tiny ears, tiny ears. I'm looking at you man. I'm talking to you. I didn't see you have tiny ears. The way that the the headphones because look how tiny those headphones looking at my ears. Can you guys say hey Robert, can you zoom in on this 04:24 All right, show em 04:52 Oh my gosh, I think something happened in the middle of between episodes today where you're just like, want to make Tim insecure. This episode, I think this is what you said. I think you sat down. Are you an AMC member? An AMC stuff. Remember, are you a member of the AMC stop hub? No, are you should be with those stubs. Oh my gosh. 05:14 I don't, we could not allow this to become a bit. What do you just clap at your own jokes? That is so insane. And I do not want that to become a thing. I do not want that. 05:31 I don't know dude. I feel like the last episode was like it was a kind of like a hey, the world's full of bad people and so I'm trying to make this a little more light hearted yeah. Well, there was good people in that story. All the people who exposed the true and then they died in car bombs. Okay, welcome to the pot. So Alfred Nobel, he was born in eighteen thirty three in Stockholm, Sweden. Okay, so I nailed it. That's eighteen sixties. Yeah, his dad, a Manuel was a lifelong inventor uh which 06:01 I listened to uh Notebook LM uh podcast about this uh and the way they put it was uh they said he was a lifelong inventor, which means he was bad with money. They said that? That's what they said. And we keep saying they, you know, for a listener, we've covered it before, but if you don't know what Notebook LM is, it's where you can put documents into Google and then it'll generate a podcast. Based on the documents you And it sounds like the co-hosts have 06:31 chemistry. Yeah, they have chemistry. They make little jokes. You can hear them breathe. Yeah, they they have like dull mispronounced things and then like re pronounce it like they try to make a sound real human. Yeah, they literally go though. They'll do this where they're kind of starting a sentence and then they'll change their mind and yeah and no and they'll stumble and change the way they say exactly like that. It's very strange. So weird. They're trying to make it feel human and it feels and it's close. It's not. There's only moments where there's sometimes where something happened. You go. Oh yeah, this isn't real. 07:00 Yeah, but like it is, it's like, it's like right on the edge of the uncanny, candy Valley Valley where you're like, so I know it's close. It's Oh, it's weird. Anyway. Yeah. But yeah, the fact that he said he was an inventor, which is, which just means he was bad with money uh because it said, said, I'm not going to start referring to the notebook LM podcasts hosts as they 07:28 Thank you. yelled, I had to call Hertz rental car the other day and I yelled at the thing because I said, hi, I'm Haley. I'm here to help you. I can help you with this, this. And I said, your name is not Haley. You're not a person. And I was just in a Panda Express parking lot yelling on speakerphone, you're not real. 07:59 Okay, so so I know for real though. You know what it hurts to seize this out there in the world. I hate that yeah. Use an AI assistant. I don't care. Do not try to give them names and then try to be like it sounded like real person and then it started going to the options and I went oh no you're not real you're not real you're not real you're not real you're not real. 08:24 You can't hurt me. You can't hurt me. You can't hurt me. man. Hey, we got a new company that moved in next door and so they're just finding out how loud we are. So yeah, do they do? Again, drove the therapist out of town. Their appliance repair, appliance repair. That's right. Yeah. So, uh, Emmanuel, his dad, consulating, vetting stuff, starting little businesses, but constantly going bankrupt. Uh, cause he can't like, 08:50 run the business. He really was about he has some decent. It wasn't as a joke. They were like they were they were giving you the back story yeah like he has decent ideas, but he can't run a business. What's he trying to invent a lots of different random things? It really is kind of like we talked about it in another episode like the like nineties infomercial people where it's like yeah random products that whatever so we were talking about that in it was the balloon. Oh I'm really proud of you. 09:18 Vitamin D baby. Yeah, I don't like a bit where you do that at the end of the things. 09:26 I don't like where you go full honeycomb cereal character. Okay. 09:42 Okay, I'll stop. I'll stop. think you were stopping. That'd be great. Do it again. Sorry, that was a mistake. I had to do that on the show. I made a joke. I made a joke on one of my shows. I wrote a cancer joke and it doesn't work. It does kind of work. It's funny to some. It's not funny to other people. Yeah, yeah, yeah, and I did it at the show in Dallas. They did not like it. Also, there was a person at the Dallas show 10:09 who said when I walked in the lobby was like Jaren's light is my might and I need you to know I was not rushing like because I just went ha ha good to see you. I was late to get to this gig because of the rain and stuff, so I was just I wasn't trying to be like don't talk to me. I'm sorry if that's because I wait. I was trying to find you after the show yeah to be like hey and I know you listen to the podcast. I was trying to find you after the show to be like hey, I just see you. Thanks for listening to the podcast. 10:34 and then you left. So I didn't want you to think that I didn't want to talk to you. I want you to know if I ran into you in public and you said jaren's light is my mind. I would have stopped and I would have talked to you no matter how late I was. I to know I'd be late that if we're in front of you you say that to me, I will if you're a public and you say that to me, I will in your face go 10:58 and all your friends that you're with will be like what the heck is that guy? Yeah, it's just a weird trigger phrase. God, he's like Jason Bourne, dude. You you say his trigger phase and then he turns into the turns in order. That is serial in early two thousand. So yeah, so he wasn't going money. He was inventing. No, were in the middle of your story about your bad joke. You never finished. Yeah, I don't. I told a joke. It didn't work and then I you know and what happens in stand up is if a joke doesn't work, 11:27 You just got to keep you got to keep going and so I go to a different joke and then I die joke wasn't working. I literally had to be like I feel like I lost a lot of you on that last joke. I'm really sorry. I said I'll never do it again. I'm sorry and then at the end of the show I opened it up for questions. I was like hey, we got any questions late in the front row goes yeah, I don't do the cancer joke and I went okay, got it understood totally won't do it again. 11:54 and then a couple other people started raising their hands and be like we actually we actually really like that joke and I was like wow, we got conflicting opinions and then another kid. Another person was like as a person whose mom had cancer. I'm like hey, hey, hey, see we have any questions that aren't about the joke. I did I was like you guys are really focused on twenty seconds of my show that didn't go well. It's been an hour. Can we go questions about any other fifty eight minutes that I did? Oh, I was so bad 12:24 people are like what's the joke? I can't do it. It's a good joke. It's a good joke, but it's a bad, but it's a bad and that's a bad joke. That's the whole thing is I'm trying to set it up. The joke is that it's a bad joke because the real joke is that I do the I do the joke and then and then people get mixed reaction. Some people laugh, some people go oh and then I go yeah. See, I told my wife that joke this week. I thought of it and she went Jaron. Yeah, you cannot say that, which is why I had to say it. 12:53 and then that's like the joke and then I do a little bit more about how it's funny that like I know I'm doing something really funny or I said on the podcast to when me and my wife listen to episodes were driving. I know that I've got a really good bit when she goes jail in yeah. You know if I make her laugh, that's fun, that's fine, but if I make her go chair and that's too far, then I know I'm right on the mark. 13:16 The setup of the joke is the joke to set up the fact that the joke is. Yeah, and that's what I'm saying. So it's a bad joke. need to write a... Different bad joke. I think it's too far. I think it's just past the acceptable line of edginess for me. You got to tip toe. I got to find a way to bring it back. that's like, and not to do too big of a tangent, that's what I love about standup. Finding that But usually audiences give you a little bit more grace than I got in Dallas. All right? 13:46 Hey, don't do the cancer joke anymore. And then I said, I said, you want me to biopsy the joke? got you. And I was I'm doubling down, It's, yeah, not a good joke. So his dad, Emmanuel, was like this disgraced inventor, constantly making new things, constantly going bankrupt. And so the family was very poor. The children, they begged in the streets for money because they just had nothing. And so that was what they did all day. He was born chronically ill, constantly sick. 14:14 throughout the course of his life. Alfred was? Yeah, Alfred was. And then his dad, Emmanuel, um in the early or late 1830s uh moves to St. Petersburg, which in Russia. uh To like rebuild himself. This is during the Enlightenment in Russia, right? I think so. I'd have to double check dates, but I think you're right. um And so he he moves to St. 14:44 St. Petersburg, he starts inventing things. And then while he's there, he has a pretty big idea. And he says, we've got mines. What if we found a way to put mines in water and make them float? uh And so that way boats can't. Mines? Oh, like, oh. Like bombs. Yeah. Yeah. He's like, we got those. What if we can come up with a way to make them float? And so he invents naval mines um and he goes to the Russian government and he's like, check this out. And they were like, 15:14 give us so many of those we need just enough. wanted so many of those who was the head of Russia at this time. It was Nicholas the first okay, the Tsar of Russia at the time he was right between the Alexander's, I was going to the first and second was on both sides of him ah really of his reign yeah and so who was before Alexander the first 15:37 Alexander the zero. No, who was before Alexander the first? Give me the whole run down here. I'm gonna okay, so Alexander the first was before him was Paul the first and then before Paul was Catherine in the second yeah Catherine the second death in the second yeah. I just think Catherine the great that was Peter the third Peter. Okay, so we need to do an episode because Catherine overthrew Peter her husband. Yeah, yeah and then they had pole 16:06 Yeah, I'm trying to see when the first Catherine was, but when was Catherine the great the Catherine the second? What was her reign? Oh, I am way hold on your way too far. You're too deep looking for Catherine one. Yeah, hold on. Let me just yeah. I can't. I remember I've I've been scrolling looking for Catharines before back when I was single and I'm just on tender and I was like give me a Catherine Catherine Catherine. She was seventeen sixty two to seventeen ninety six. Oh, okay, yeah, I knew she'd rain for like thirty years. Yeah, good for her 16:37 So he goes to St. Petersburg, a manual Nobel. And he invents the mine. Russia is like, need as many of those as you could possibly make. And then once you make as many as you possibly make, make a lot more. And so he opens up a factory building Making mines. Making mines. 16:54 a very rich, very, very rich, like overnight. And that's the key. If listen, if you ever want to get rich, make something for the government that could kill a lot of people. That's like though that's been the secret for centuries. Yeah, yeah. I mean, look at the people who are rich now. They're making technology that could wipe out a lot of people. Yep, yep. uh So in 1842, family wouldn't believe the ideas like God, uh 17:25 In 1842, he moves the family to St. Petersburg with them. And they're all now very wealthy. And so Alfred gets a really good private education. And so during this time, he learned Swedish, French, Russian, English, German, Italian. He gets proficient in poetry. Just learns all these different things. Learns sciences, all like really like a Renaissance man. Still sick, but... 17:53 Like not like a good sick, you know, like still physically sick, but sick intellectually also. Sick. Bro, you're intellectually so sick. So he gets very intelligent. And in 1850, he moves to Paris where he goes to study science more professionally and become a chemist. And there he meets a guy by the name of Asiano Sobrero. This is him. 18:22 And so Brero is famous because I think we need to bring back these little bow ties. You know what saying? Yeah, those are like they're like the KFC bow ties. They're barely bow ties. Honestly, what they look like. Stick with me for a second is the ties on trash bags. Yeah, yeah, I can see that barely bow ties. Yeah, and they look good and they look good. I like look good. 18:52 yeah, just go rip off a little black tie on your your glad trash bags. Yeah, the username brand trash bags. No, didn't think so. Of course, I don't. Why would I? Why would I splurge for name brand? I'm I'm able to do that. Oh okay, because I invented it. mass war. It's crazy. So I invented. What you invent? What's your contribution to the world? 19:21 Explosive devices. Cool. So Sobrero is famous because he discovered nitroglycerin and it wasn't intentional. It was an accidental discovery. He discovered it was explosive. He then brought that as a scientific discovery. Right. Somebody else found out about it, started making bombs with it. And in 1847, he actually like expressed deep regret about discovering 19:50 all these people do same thing with Oppenheimer. They all are like he says when I think of all the victims killed during nitroglycerin explosions and the terrible havoc that has been rate, which in all probability will continue to occur in the future. I'm almost ashamed to admit to be its discoverer, and that's the thing is he didn't he didn't like proliferate it. He just discovered it, wrote a paper, but is the argument that someone else would have you know. I mean maybe, maybe so he works under Sabrero 20:19 and Sabaro and him, he learns everything about nitroglycerin and Sabaro is, 20:27 French? Yeah, yeah, in Paris. Okay. And at what point in his lineage did they open the mall? 20:36 food court. I think that was like the eighties. It was like his great great grand got it. His great great great granddaughter opened a pizza play in the mall and it's underwater. She's selling slices at the mall. I'm really good singer. 21:03 Thank you Blair. Thank you Blair. I'll be here all week. 21:12 Hey, thanks for listening to this episode of things. I learned last night. If you like this show, we would love to see in our Patreon. It's a great way to financially support the show. We don't make money from this. It just helps us to pay the people who do make money from this. Like Alex and Robert, her editor and maybe one day, one day me and Tim, maybe one day, know, but only if you join, only if you join, can't wait. We can't get paid until you pay. Can't feed Tim's kid until you join. He's so 21:54 so he I ordered something on Amazon to go to Tim's house and then Tim's wife was like. Why did he do that? 22:03 What do mean? Why do do that? She was like just ordered to your house. Your wife will get it and I'm like yeah, but I need I'm on the road. I need it now yeah and that's we have the ability. Yes, I think about that so often you just used to order stuff and then be like no get that in a couple weeks yeah or in the eighteen hundreds whenever in like a few months, two months yeah and now it's like literally like last night on the plane. I ordered that yeah last on the plane 22:31 and you were like you're like it'd be convenient if I could have that tomorrow. It'd be great if I could have that tomorrow and it got to your house and then your wife was like I don't like that he did that well, Breen, if that is your name. 22:46 So he so I'm nervous to listen to this Alfred. I can say whatever I want about your wife. not my wife listens to this show nervous. My wife loves our show because she loves me. Your wife doesn't listen to the show. What does that say about you and your little nub fingers? uh So your no bell Alfred Nobel fell in love with nitric glycerin. He was like this stuff is sick. uh It blows up 23:15 and it blows up really easily. Yeah, it's like very like su too easily too easily. Yeah, you like move it just a little bit. It'll explode and he loved that about it and this guy's who we named the Nobel Peace Prize after 23:32 so he goes back to. know that it is. I'm just trying to hear how we got here from the bomb, so he he learns in Paris about nitroglycerin and all and his and this is Alfred right. Yeah, this is how he's a my dad invented bombs, one minds, naval mines. He didn't invent bombs, but he invented naval mines. Yeah, my dad, my dad was the bomb guy. My dad is bomb boy. That's what he calls himself bomb, bomb, but we yeah he has bomb, but he has these ads that run during the football games on the weekend. 24:02 and it's like it's like in that little local ad slot where it's like usually like a friend and they're like right dude. We got we should make a commercial that is so local ad looking that's how I'm to promote my special. That's really local ad just yeah, that's a better idea. There's like a bunch of like weird like there's like a slide that comes in tiger and it's clearly like just they and there's some of these people are still using clip art logo. Yeah, it's crazy. Yep and so 24:31 He moves back to uh St. Petersburg in 1853 at the ah beginning of the Crimean War. And he says, Dad, you're never going to believe what I learned about. And he's like, stuff called nitroglycerin. We can make really better bombs with this stuff. So they start using nitroglycerin to make better bombs. And Crimean War kicks off, becomes a huge deal. They're working on these bombs. They're manufacturing a lot of them. And ah they keep using this over and over and over again. 25:01 1864 comes around ah and there is a factory that they have that is preparing nitrochlorin and it accidentally explodes ah and it kills uh five people. Okay. Including Alfred's younger brother, Emil, who was 21 years old at the time. Alfred is this kind of Rex Alfred. This honestly, Rex, like the whole family, a manual only a couple of years later, like a manual went into like a deep depression. 25:28 And a couple of years later, he dies from a stroke. And a lot of people say that it was like the stress of that whole event, like his actual death. ah And uh Alfred then kind of vows, like, have to come up with a way to make nitroglycerin safe because it was so dangerous to handle because it was so ah sensitive. Literally, like if you just bumped it just right, it'll blow up. And so he was like, we got to come up with a way to make this safer. It's a liquid, right? 25:58 uh Well, I think in at this time, I believe it was a gas the way the okay at this time and my liquid. makes it not as crazy? I mean, I saw I said, it well what he does is he he gets this island in the middle of this lake and he says I'm going to use I'm going to build a lab and I'm going to go there by myself. I'll be in the center of this lake and I'm going to find a way to make this safe and so he spends years 26:28 boating out to center of this lake where he then works. 26:34 And then he works all day trying to mix different compounds together to make nitroglycerin safe. his original idea is like, if I can make it a solid, it will be more stable. I've got to figure out how to make this a solid and make it still like have the function of being an explosive and have the same yield, but be stable. Sure. And he tries all sorts of different materials to mix with it, to turn it into a salad or a solid. Yeah. 27:04 ah And nothing is working until he ah finds, what is the material that he finds here? Let me see if I can find this. 27:16 hold on to me. Okay, while you're doing that, hey, this week sponsor is this guy's nineteen eighty five Chevy C ten. He's got a listed for ten thousand five hundred dollars. It's got seventy five thousand original miles. That's not that bad. That's pretty low three or five with automatic transmission. Pretty much brand new tires, fully loaded Silverado, very reliable truck, newly redone interior. Let's take pictures. Let's look at the interior real quick. 27:39 Wow, that looks pretty sharp. So if you're interested in that, this guy's out in Overland Park, uh, message Jace and I'm just going to message right now. Let them know, Hey, just promoted this on the pod. 27:54 ask him if they heard of us when they buy it with who buys it as you sell it. Good luck. All right, use code Dylan when you buy. Yeah, here's here's the money also telling so I love this is such an insane. So you just tell him you heard about it from this podcast. You know, that's really funny. So you should laugh. 28:28 So at this point in time, they were using nitroglycerin as a liquid. It was a liquid state. And he said, OK, if I mix it with some other material, I could make it into a solid. And he tried a lot of things, sand, powder charcoal, wood shavings, brick dust, cement, all sorts of different things. Couldn't find a material to use for it. But in a twist of fate, because he was working in the middle of this lake, there was this microscopic 28:56 microscopic dust that would float around the lake in the mornings. And he's like, what is this? And so he ended up collecting some of it and finding out that this was actually this substance called Kieselger, which is a fine powder that is the fossilized remains of very tiny organisms called diatoms. And it's very poor. The fossils are very porous. We found if he mixes these this powder, which is fossils with liquid nitroglycerin, 29:25 the pores would absorb the liquid nitroglycerin into tiny, tiny, tiny little pores. And that separation of the liquid nitroglycerin in the pores of that was enough to make it stable because they never made contact with each other. So you could then have essentially this powder version of nitroglycerin because it was each of those little molecules or little kernels of that powder was full of nitroglycerin was now stable. But 29:52 there was nothing that caused it to detonate. So he actually invented the first detonator, which interestingly enough was a essentially small unit of just a little bit of liquid nitroglycerin that you would detonate. And then that detonation would trigger a train reaction through all the powder because it would then catch all the rest of the nitroglycerin. Gotcha. And so it was this weird twist of fate that because his brother died in that explosion and he went to this specific lake, he discovered that powder. 30:20 sure and mix that powder with it to make an actual functional powdered version of nitroglycerin. Okay, and he used so when they when we in the old timey cartoons and stuff when they're pushing that handle down, that's the that's that that's that detonation. Yeah, okay, and he then took this powder and he invented dynamite. Yep and this was grime. This was dynamite 30:51 Yeah, actually it was dynamite. Well, because this is how they start blowing, you know, holes into sides of mountains. Yeah. Coincidentally, this the timing of this invention was very significant because at the same time, like almost like months before this, the pneumatic drill was invented. And so it allowed them to drill into mountains, a hole just big enough for you to drop a stick of dynamite in there and then blow up the mountain. 31:17 And what was really interesting about this is gunpowder existed before this. was other explosives. How powerful is dynamite? Well, here's what's interesting. Gunpowder and all that existed before this. was explosives before this. But gunpowder, the way it moves is it's a chain reaction explosion. Right. And so it actually moves slower than the speed of sound. And what it does is the way that they describe it is it separates rock, but it doesn't pulverize rock. Where? Dynamite. Dynamite, nitroglycerin, it moves faster than the speed of sound. So it pulverizes rock. 31:47 and it turns it into like a dust where where the if raise your explosions would break it apart, you got a big boulder to move and things like that. Yeah, turn it to dust right and so and this is sixty four and sixty four eighteen sixty four was when that explosion happened. Oh, so it's a couple years later when when dynamite actually entered eighteen sixty seven. Oh wow he patented dynamite and then they start manufacturing it. He 32:16 starts his business, Dynamite Nobel, which is what brings dynamite to the world. He actually what's really interesting about this. Okay. His why'd you say noble at the beginning? His whole just to throw it off a little bit. His whole thing, his whole thing, a little bit, his whole thing was I want to make safer nitroglycerin. Whole thing was my dad was the bomb daddy. But that was the bomb daddy. I need to be the 32:45 I'm baby, I'm the bomb baby, I'm the no, no comma. I'm the bomb baby, baby, Mr Bombastic. So he he was like, he's like, I have to make a safe version of nitroglycerin. His his brother died from it and it wasn't just his brother. There was multiple explosions happening at the right across the country. And so he's like, I need to make a safe version of this. His original brand that he put together for the dynamite was Nobel safety powder. 33:15 whoosh. Good thing he did it go with that because I don't think that that would have float as well right and so he used dynamite. He took that from. I don't remember if it was a Greek or Roman uh God. I think it was Greek uh for like explosive wow and so dynamite ended up being the name of that name stuck ah and this ended up being just a dynamite. It is the biggest and that was the biggest invention of that. It was a massive invention. It in so many things 33:45 His family's probably still making money from it too. It made him extraordinarily wealthy. Right. And so he continued inventing things. He actually, for years after that, would invent different versions of explosives. He actually invented this thing called Jellonite, which is very similar. It's exactly what it sounds like. It's basically like a hair gel that blows up. So that was in 1876. He also invented 34:14 Ballastite, which is very interesting because there was you might have heard of the term like fog of war and this era gunpowder was smoky. Yeah, smoke everywhere and then you couldn't see anything and also everybody saw exactly where that shot came from because there was so much smoke. Right. And so there was a big market for it. We need to find a way to make this do this be a gun without smoke. He invented the material ballastite. 34:41 which is the powder that is in bullets again to this day. If want to get rich, just invent things that other people can kill people with. That's the secret. And so that's still used in a lot of explosives and rocket propellant to this day. um Okay. And so the he's creating weapons of war is what he's creating. Right. That's what I'm saying. And it's a big deal. This is also at the same time there are there's a big the really the first 35:10 anarchist movement kicks off. uh And this was before uh the term anarchy, like we see it today. And they call themselves the anarchists. They existed in the United States uh and the anarchists, they would use dynamite to blow things up and do terrorism. And so before this moment, before this invention really, terrorism wasn't really a thing because there was no 35:38 efficient way to kill a lot of people at the same time. Right. If you wanted to do something like that, you would have to go do it by hand and you'd usually get stopped before you could cause a lot of damage. Right. But this was the first time that it was really easy. Accessible. Yeah. For people to just go do terrorism. And so Nobel effectively invented terrorism. I don't know about that. I don't know about that. I mean, listen, listen, if someone buys a car, 36:06 and uses that car to rob a bag yeah, so uh he throughout the course of his life. uh He was very focused on his work didn't uh didn't put much effort into his social life or into relationships or anything of that nature yeah, and as he got older uh he started to feel lonely and so in his late forties 36:36 in okay in his late he always early for the forties in and when he was forty three years, I've spent my whole life bombing and now it's time to love bomb and in it was forty three years old in eighteen seventy six. Okay, let get this actual age difference. Did he marry a fourteen year old? No, no. I want to get like the word for word. What this advertisement said? Oh, he put on an advertisement for himself 37:06 he put out a pay is in the paper. He said, do you like Pina coladas and getting caught in the rain? Alex left his mic on my heard Alex go and that it was rewarding, so he was forty three years old, eighteen seventy six. He took took out an ad in the paper and he said he said I'm a wealthy, highly educated, ultra elderly gentleman seeking a lady of mature age versed in languages and that to be a secretary and a manager of my household. 37:36 he took out that ad and put it in the paper and a secretary and manager of the household. Yeah, he was looking for someone to fall in love with, but he was a little bashful, but he was also kind of like you gotta be useful. That's crazy. So I show the other night in Houston. There was a couple who sat like up front. They wanted to talk a lot yeah and they had been married for nine months yeah and then they got divorced and they've lived together for the past nine years. Oh wow, 38:04 and uh and I was talking I so they took up the whole show because I was like what does that mean yeah and so she had moved out then kovat happened and she moved back in and they live in different rooms and I said so do you pay who owns the house well he owns the house he pays the mortgage I said okay do you pay rent and she goes no I do all the cooking and cleaning. 38:28 and I said so you guys are married and she and she goes no. I said are you dating other people? She goes no. What are we doing here? That's great. It sounds like you're the secretary and manager of the home. You're the secretary of the sustain that he's a wealthy guy and is always a wealthy elderly gentleman. Well, it's crazy as he called himself elderly is forty three. That's what I was thinking to 38:54 we should just start referring to ourselves as elderly. It'll make it. It'll make a sting, Loi less when we finally do get there and so coincidentally, a woman by the name of Bertha, knee, kinsky response to the ad. Okay, and she said I'll come 39:25 Oh boy, am I sick? I sure do need Tim stones. Get well quick trick. And what is it? It's simply chug an entire gallon of orange juice. Wow. I forgot. And then this shirt reminded me, I'm so glad that I have this shirt as a public service announcement, a public health service to other people around me. Do your part. Get this shirt. 39:54 shop.tillam.com 40:03 Yeah, so I like a black and white photo hot. Her name is Bertha Bertha Bertha, Neek, I love a girl named Bertha, so so she comes to work for him and they immediately hit it off. They they get very close very quickly. They spend a lot of finds out that it wasn't just a secretary job. They go on carriage rides all the time and they have like deep conversations on these carriage rides and she works there for a few weeks. 40:33 And then she just disappears and he doesn't know where she went. Like she just disappears without a trace. Ends up finding out that she ran off with this guy by the name of Arthur Gundasser Von Suttner and eloped with him, um which is very odd. And so she moves to Georgia, the country, not the state, um and and starts a life with him. And this crushes Alfred. Yeah. And um 41:02 for years, she blew up his whole world kinda and he kind of wallows in grief for a long, long time um until one day, how long is a long, time? A couple of years. Let me see if I can see the exact date on this. 41:23 in eighteen eighty eight. So this would have been like a decade later about ah wow and eighteen eighty eight. You're still hung up on that girl. You did some carriage rides with for three months ten years later in eighteen eighty eight. He sees he's reading the paper and it gets the obituary section and this is this is the obituary. This is the actual obituary. Obviously this is not in English, so there's here's a fake version of it that has been put in English and then for some reason they okay on here badly. 41:53 This is what it says. You want to read it? Yeah, the merchant of death is dead. Dr. Alfred Nobel, who made a fortune by finding ways to kill more people faster than ever before, died yesterday and he sees his obituary in the newspaper, but he's obviously not dead. Okay, what happened was the newspaper mixed him up with his brother Ludwig who died the day before, and so they the newspaper saw that they're like. Oh, that's the bomb guy. 42:22 and they wrote this obituary about him, so he sees this obituary yeah and is like I need to change everything about me. Well, he sees his obituary and it changes his life because he's like he's like. Oh, this is what people think of me and he always had this which is we were big fans of a guy who wrote a book, a couple books, but this is what a lot of the self help stuff tells you to do. I don't necessarily think this is bad when I make my annual life plan. 42:50 reading your eulogy like writing your eulogy as part of it. Yeah of like imagining if you died, what would your obituary say? Yeah. And I yeah, I mean if that's if your obituary says the merchant of death. Yeah. Yeah. What do you think? What do you think? What do you think? was honestly the merchant of death goes pretty hard. The merchant of death, the merchant of death bullied me in the Panda Express parking. So this is like this 43:20 This, cause he had long had this argument about the stuff he was building because he had this, and this is going to sound familiar to you. He said, there is no peace council or committee that will bring peace to the world. What will bring peace to the world. He said, what will bring peace to the world is the knowledge that your adversaries have weapons more powerful than anything you could imagine. And so it will stop you from fighting each other. 43:49 because of the threat of the weapons that they possess. And so he said, I need to build the biggest weapons possible to end war. 44:04 But like 44:06 and it sucks because it's true. I mean it's one of those things where it's like yeah, I don't know man. is interesting is like the guys were going to build it. The concept of mutually assured destruction, which is we have today in reference to nuclear bombs, which has been relatively effective because it is true. If really the United States and Russia, every other country, they don't really have an arsenal large enough, but the United States and Russia 44:36 got into nuclear war with each other, the world ends. Yeah. And so it does work in that scenario. Right. But for Alfred Nobel, he was building what we today would call small explosives. And so nothing he was building was big enough to have that effect on people or on me. Right. And we see that throughout history because it was used to kill a lot of people for a long time. Big wars. Yeah. And so 45:05 The idea eventually came into fruition to be somewhat true. and something years later. Yeah. And it's still loosely true. still like, we still don't know if this is true. Like it still might not be true. It's worked for a little bit. It's held for a little bit, but that doesn't mean it's accurate, you know? Yeah. But anyways, so he really believed in that. The irony is he had this pen pal that he talked to who strongly disagreed with that. And this pen pal, 45:33 someone who he's been talking to for years and so he popped off a letter to a right away when he saw this. Okay, this this paper and this pen pal was a woman by the name of Bertha von Suttner, which was his secretary ten years ago that ran. so there men they that they still talked for ten years writing letters to each other and she hey, no, you ran away, but just miss you. People think I'm the merchant of death. 46:03 What do you think about that? Which hey, she's older in this picture. Still hot, still hot. Oh my gosh, how hairy her arms are, but uh, 46:18 but we so she ran off with somebody else and then just kept him on the hook. I kinda I guess that's a bummer. Yes, you could say that just let him on for all those years. She's like no, I'm going to leave him. Well, here's what's interesting. So she goes to Georgia. ah becomes a Baroness and she uh becomes like this advocate for peace and she and him, they write each other, but the the writings that they have for like ten years are debates on 46:48 how to achieve peace. And she thinks that the way to achieve peace is by actually being peaceful. And he thinks the way is building bigger bombs. And so they're debating on that for years. He sees this and he says, I think you might've been right. And so she actually wrote this book called Lay Down Your Arms, which was a novel, but it was kind of like those novels where they have a point. Yeah, there's a point, a message. And so there's a message to it. She also starts uh this international peace committee. 47:15 which ended up being a big thing. So she became world famous as like this peace advocate. And so he sees this and it has this like profound effect on him. And so he sits in his mansion. This is his mansion at the time with his vast wealth. And he calls his executor of his will and he says, he says, I want to update my will. And so the executor says, okay, what do you want to do? He says, I want to take 95 % of my wealth, forget my kids. I don't want them to have it. 47:45 and he says I'm actually going to have. I want this to go on to uh an organization that I want to call the Nobel Prize organization. Okay, and so he puts together this Nobel Prize. So really the Nobel Peace Prize is just him trying to make up for all the death he caused. Is that what we're doing? The Nobel Peace Prize is named after the least peaceful person of the eighteen hundreds. 48:13 and it's just to make up in and it's just so that in his post life he can it can be like oh he actually was peaceful. Are you kidding me yeah? He basically is trying to buy. What about the FIFA Peace Prize? What's the history on that? What did FIFA do? I mean what is crazy? So he he allocates ninety four percent. Hey, we're giving the till in Peace Prize to whichever authoritarian person wants it. You know 48:44 he alligates ninety four percent of the peace prize or else he allocates ninety four percent of his wealth to go towards this. This yeah peace commission and one percent to go to Bertha. He ends up dying in eighteen ninety five that the executive of the will ends up transferring that money to this peace committee at the total of thirty one point two million Swedish Kroner, which adjusted for inflation converted to US dollars. 49:12 is $340 million today. um And so that money goes over. His family was furious and they were trying really hard to get that money back. And what's really interesting is the executor of his will actually smuggled the money out of the country in carriages to get the money out. Cause he was like, this money can't be in this country. His family is going to get it. And so this was before money was digital. And so he had to physically drag all this money out of the country. 49:41 to save it. So he took a revolver. I don't know if it was a revolver. He took a handgun ah and all that money and carriages and smuggled it out of the country away from the family. Started the Nobel Prize committee. And the prizes were in physical science, chemistry, medical science, and then literary work, and then the famous fifth prize is the Peace Prize. And so these were kind of his way to buy his 50:10 the way he would be perceived in the history books. He's that's crazy for you. can just buy the way you're perceived in history books. Yeah, he's been three hundred forty million dollars to change the way he's viewed. So now when you hear Nobel Peace Prize as you think of or when you hear the name Alfred Nobel, the first thing you thought was the Nobel Peace Prize instead of out, die murder, murder, murder, merchant, the merchant of death, the merchant of death who who invented devices that killed more people than anything in history, ah which is crazy. 50:39 So it would be like if we had the Oppenheimer Peace Prize yeah yeah exactly actually and that's crazy. I didn't. Did you know all this in 1901 they gave out the first set of prizes? Sometimes I look at Alex and I just fully expect him to be like. Did you know all this and he goes yeah, you know, like okay, so in 1901 they gave out the first set of peace prizes yeah here. They give these coins with his with him on it yeah. 51:04 uh and so you get this coin you get you even tried to get away from it too, because like I that's he looked really familiar yeah and he looks familiar from the coin and then in 1905 uh birth of on Sutner becomes the first woman to win the Nobel Peace Prize. Okay, um and what's ironic is the description of the Nobel Peace Prize is word for word what she said we need to achieve peace. Yeah is from a letter from her and so he modeled the peace prize after so she gets it and she goes 51:34 thanks. This should be the birth of prize as a work on it. We're calling it the birth of the price birth of peace prize. Yeah, yeah and so what's crazy is there is a ah up until recently his company still in and like operation. This is their current load. The dynamite company is still in business. Dynamite Nobel. They still make explosives and we even doing outside their factory. 52:01 their factory has since moved, but outside their factory, there was this statue that was erected. And in this, this is supposed to be the gate to peace and it's boarded over and there's a plate with holes through it to give you the vision of shrapnel or bullet holes or something like that. The top of the gate says Nobel. And then the bottom there, there's two coffins and on the coffin, the first coffin, this is the total death count from 1901 to 1984 in wars. And so 52:31 between 1901 and 1913 as uh a hundred thousand 1914 to 1918 ten million nineteen nineteen and nineteen thirty nine ten million nineteen thirty nine to nineteen forty five fifty five million yeah forty five to eighty four fifty million and so they're attributing all these deaths to him because he built the explosives and then on the other coffin is every Nobel Peace Prize winner which is crazy up until twenty two thousand two I guess yeah where Jimmy Carter won that one 53:01 Wow, and so it really does make you think differently about the whole Nobel Peace Prize when you realize that it is a guy who recognized his legacy was going to be a bad legacy. Yeah, so he spent three hundred forty million dollars to change his legacy by creating this little coin that he can give to people who were good people, but he still made insane amounts of money off of devices that would be used to kill. Wow, people, that's crazy. That's 53:29 Well, speaking of bombs, we have an episode about Castle Bravo that you should check out and that's an older episode we did. It's about the biggest bomb explosion that they had put off since remember is the biggest bomb. The biggest bomb that the United States ever done. Yeah crazy. So also if you want next week's episode right now, you can join us on Patreon. We don't give any coins or anything. We should. We should make a little patron. Call it a little patron. 53:53 My tour dates, my tour dates as always are on paulrudtheactor.com. Thank you for listening or watching our show. We appreciate a lot. Share this with somebody. Tell somebody about the thing. Tell somebody about it. Tell somebody because it would help us a lot to So we need you to help us blow up, right? Fiddle off.


When you hear the name Alfred Nobel, you probably think of the Nobel Peace Prize. It’s one of the most respected awards in the world. But the story behind it is not what most people expect. In fact, Alfred Nobel’s life is full of surprises, contradictions, and one powerful lesson about legacy. Who Was Alfred Nobel? Alfred Nobel was a … Read More

How 11.5 Million Documents Ended a President | The Panama Papers

04-07-26

Episode Transcription

00:00 hey, thanks for listening to the show or watching the show or or you know, reading the show. We prefer to read the transcript. It is an option. If not, a lot of people choose, but you know, mean some people do. I've been reading this podcast. I've been reading this podcast lately. Hey, you know, I've got some shows. Hey, this week I'm in Kansas City. I'm in Saint Louis and Springfield doing the show me tour and and then later this month I'm in Vegas all week, so you'll know where to find me. 00:31 yeah, I'll be at the Chris Angel show every night every night. I'm using my entire paycheck to buy Chris Angel tickets, so no please come hang out of the shows. I would love to see you there and then I've got Birmingham, Alabama and Georgia and you know I've got to I got tour dates and they're on my website, Paul read the actor dot com and would we're gonna jump into the episode. 00:52 all right, man, have you heard of the Panama Papers? Hey, April Fools, don't you imagine them? brought another one. I brought another one for weeks. I'm like people like I want to know what the Panama Papers are 01:07 I got hate crying by the IRS. I'm not joking. I say like I'm doing it like I don't got nothing to do. You underestimate how much time I have you underestimate. I would say I a Panda Express papers. 01:28 Things I learned last night. 01:37 All right, what are the Panama Papers, the Panama Papers? I think the best place to start with a story is in early twenty fifteen a okay list by the name of Bastion Obermeyer. He worked for a German open myer Obermeyer Obermeyer. That's not the brand of cookie that we had to sell right. Did you have to sell cookie dough when you were a kid? 02:01 do you remember when someone would come to your public school and they would enlist you in their M L M yeah, I do remember that and we had to sell cookie dough and they'd be like if you sell enough you get a TV, but nobody ever got the TV yeah, because he was like a billion points, but so instead you get those like we're plastic thing. You're just like get a racers. get a race, neighbors and going door to door without your parents, by the way, just going to be like you want some cookie dough. My school wasn't cookie dough. My school was butter braids 02:29 What is a butter braid? Oh my gosh, honestly, though red or what is it butter braid? It's it's kind of like if a cinnamon roll was a loaf of bread. Okay, but they would, okay, they would put filling and stuff in it. Honestly, very delicious. Actually, I was going to get a different picture, but I'm getting this because I remember this was the piece of paper we we took around with us to show people because we would be like that's what people would say. You'd ring the doorbell. They'd be like, well, what is a butter braid? And then you'd show them this and people would be like that does look pretty good. Actually, 02:59 we had a full and people would buy that if someone came to my door and was like, would you like to buy this weird croissant? ah No, these were genuinely delicious though. They had like a filling, so this is a strawberry one like they could never tell you how it helps your school. Yeah, it helps our school, but how oh 03:22 your principal is going to get to go to vacation this year for this hey, the also the domain on this is everything mommy hood dot com and I just got to say I don't like it. It's crazy that the date is twenty twenty. I crazy like this date is just p covid three twenty three 03:43 to four. That is like ten days in which I'm not going to lie like in the middle of lockdown, a butter braid would have friggin hit. We found we found this cranberry cheese at high V yeah too early in the pandemic, and so we were eating cranberry cheese and wine every night. Where do you yeah? That sounds great. It was all and I lived right next to a Texas Road House 04:12 wolf, because you could just walk over and go to the pick up window. Yep, yeah. Lockdown was a weird thing because for some people it was obviously not good yeah, but for me it was the best for a lot of our listeners. It was like the beginning of their life. They were so young and don't remember anything and for us it was the worst year of my life. Yeah, for you it was pretty though pretty rough. Yeah, all everything that you did everything since been pretty bad. Yeah, yeah, you know most things since 04:40 I worked at the church. didn't have to go service with little glimmers of joy. We had online church only. And I remember I had to reply to comments. I sat there replying to comments and I'm not exaggerating. I had, I don't think I've ever told anybody this. My wife obviously saw it, but I had to have the online service playing right here. And then I'd be replying. I'd be replying to comments. And I had, cause it just came out animal crossing on the Nintendo switch. And I sat there playing animal crossing and then I had to reply to a comment. And then I play. 05:10 I like, and then I replied to a comment. I can't believe you quit that job. 05:15 everyone's like pastor Tim really give us some insight in these comments as your lead pastors up there being like lead self leadership is really about leading yourself and you're like I said that that was my line quoted. That was my line. So anyway, that was so that's a butter braid. We would sell cookie dough, but we didn't you didn't have the butter braids right. They would order them. Yeah, they ordered them. They came to do another trip where you go deliver them. You you were the hire. We didn't have to deliver them. They came in the mail. Oh 05:45 not at our school. We were the entire supply chain. Otis Spunk Meyer was like, let the kids do the work. Otis Spunk Meyer was like, yeah, we'll give the school $200 in exchange for child labor. Send the kids door to door. Teach him how to be salesman. Sell chocolate chips, sell oatmeal raisin, sell the whole thing. Right. And then in a couple of weeks, 06:06 it's all going to come in now. I call the sales. You had the spreadsheet, you know, paper written stuff down, then you track all and then you get all the product, you a check and then you would give it to the school and the have to keep in it to Otis Spunk Meyer and then Big Otis would be like all right, that's good and then you would have to they would just send home a gigantic box of frozen cookie dough with you. That is crazy. I wonder how many people bought cookie dough and didn't get it because like kids were running that 06:33 like yeah, the kids would be like oh, I think he ordered four, but I don't. I can't read. You have the ever and it had stickers with their names on him and then you had put it in your wagon. I had a wagon and I would take it door to door, but like also it was hot. Not that cookie dough was frozen. The cookie dough was frozen when I got it. I'm sorry this was frozen earlier. You know I'm saying like I for sure gave somebody food poisoning. 07:02 and that's on Otis Spunker for trusting third graders. I for sure gave some food place that areas and I gave it to one neighbor on purpose and they know why I'm going to come to your house last. I hate crime them. I hate crime them, crime them. I hate crime to them. Oh the reference to our show is a joke. We made a couple weeks ago 07:32 you don't remember me saying I hate crime doing the Panda Express Park. I do remember that that's a good line. New March. You can buy that shit right now. I hate crimes, Tim and the that's public. You can't wear a band express. They'll have some questions. Okay, so this is Bastion Obermeyer. Okay, okay, that's how we got here. Otis Spunk, Myer, open, Myer. Oh, that's right. That's how we got here. Sorry for the tangent. 08:02 and I know you're here for the hoes, the chair and let him talk. No yeah, so bass and Obermeyer. He was a journalist while this episode so long. We got a rapid word for a paper in Germany. I believe okay called. There's going to be so much of this. Sorry, is it relevant? Yes, okay, so douche zy tongue, so douche, so you're confident with that. You're going to go with seduce. No, I'm not confident with that, but it's all I got. 08:29 seduce zytung. All right, you know blairs half German and then he he worked alongside another journalist by the name of Frederick Obermeier, who is not related to him and in fact they're their names both over Meyer spelled completely different, but they just happen to be both the over Myers and so this is his other and they're not related for just go back and forth between them for a second and they're not related. They're uh 08:57 today. Just this is just what people look like there and they both look like their advertisements for Warby Parker glasses uh crazy uh so Bastion uh late July uh or early early in twenty fifteen. I don't know if it's July or something, but early twenty fifteen he just gets a message uh from a guy calling himself John Doe. 09:25 This is late at night. He's like trying to take care of his kids, do all the nightly chores and stuff. of honestly at first a little annoyed by this message because he just gets this message that just slides in um and this guy says, Hey, my name's John Doe. Are you interested in data? And he's like, I mean, what kind of data are we talking about? And he's like, I've got lots if you want to see it. 09:50 and so he's a journalist and so he's like I get weird messages like this all the time of people like yeah, I get weird messages all the time. You're like you want my data. Are you interested in data? What kind of data data boy? You're like what got him and so long story short, they're messaging back and forth and John Doe is telling him he's like he's like I can't reveal my identity identity to you. 10:18 I can't meet you in person, this is the only way we can ever communicate. And he says, And he says, because I'm in danger. And he says, but I have a lot of data for you. And he's like, how much data are we talking? And he says, more data than you've ever seen in your life. So he sends him this set of documents. And this first set of documents was enough to kind of pique Obermeier's interest. 10:41 But it wasn't anything groundbreaking. was just like, honestly, like a lot of articles of organization for like businesses. And he's like, okay, I'm not sure what I should really do with that. And he's like, wait till you see the second set. Wait till you see the second set. That's more data. I've got more data for you. And so he sends them a second set of data and the second set of data is 2.6 terabytes of essentially spreadsheets. 11:12 And so this is 11.5 million documents of essentially, and I mean there's PDFs and other document like Word docs and stuff like this too. But essentially these are inventories and articles of organizations and legal documents uh of businesses being put together in Panama, uh shell companies being put together in Panama. 11:41 all of the information about them. what you're actually seeing in these documents is when a shell company is created and you're seeing who is creating them. And so it's linking a bunch of people all over the world to um sometimes legal, but sometimes illegal activities to operate with tax havens and tax avoidance and also 12:11 conduct crime and this all came specifically from this company. um Let me get the name of it right. uh Mo sack flan seca, which is a law firm out of Panama. Okay, here's Ramon phone sack phone sack. Hold on to me yeah fun set fun seca sorry fun sec. Yeah, was gonna say I don't like phone sack. I them together and you're again mosac 12:37 okay. These are the founders of the company. I don't like this guy, so yeah you you shouldn't because you're gonna know sack. He lives in Panama because his dad moved to Panama uh after World War Two. I wonder why, because he was one of them yeah and he uh got enlisted by the CIA. When did you move here? uh Forty four forty five somewhere around there. 13:04 what brought you to Panama? I like the weather, the sports, the the international law. We just really like it. Well, no, his dad got courted by the CIA to be a spy for the communist sure or I guess a spy on the communists and so that's mosak. You're in mosak. Okay, Ramon Fonseca is a little bit of a different story. Ramon, he uh 13:34 He wanted to be a priest and so he went and went to seminary, started learning that world. And I don't know exactly what happened, but he failed at being a priest. And so then he started uh going to school to be a lawyer. He shifted to law and learned all that law. And then at some point he met Mossack and they said, hey, let's start a firm together. And they created uh Mossack Fonseca. 14:03 uh And this company, what they did is they would organize businesses in Panama. And so honestly, we used a company like this to file our businesses. um And what these companies do is you go to them, they take care of all of the paperwork for you, and they organize your business. help you file with the government, make you a legal entity. And then um you have a person there who essentially operates as your government. 14:32 go before where it's like they will sign documents for you. They will do all of the like legal side of things. They're like a lawyer. They're a lawyer that do that type of things. It's called a registered agent. They did that. the catch was they did it in Panama and Panama is a tax haven country. Because they allow a lot of that stuff is not public information. don't broadcast that out. don't. 15:00 And so if you were someone somewhere else in the world who wanted to hide your wealth, Panama was always a great place to do that. Right. And so they would operate in Panama doing this. And what's interesting about it is technically what they are doing is illegal or is legal. um But because the nature of the fact that it was so private in Panama, it attracted a lot of people who were doing it for illegal means, who were tax evading or who were laundering money. 15:27 or who were like drug cartels sure on monitoring money trying to obfuscate things. And it's interesting when all of this came out they talked about how they're like we don't know what who our customers are in a lot of cases a lot of times where there is a there's barrier. Yeah. There's a ball. don't yeah we don't understand these things we don't know what's going on sure and so they describe themselves as a car manufacturer like we're a car manufacturer we make cars people buy them. 15:56 if they use the car to rob a bank, that's not on us. Okay, so that was an interesting defense that they used for a long time. I mean, unless they come to you and they go, hey, I'm going to buy this car to rob a bank. Well, what's it? I need a car that I can rob a bank with, which which and that's and that's honestly, hey, hey, come on down to Toyota, you know, 16:19 look at the spacious back third row. These seats fold down plenty of room for cash bags if you'd like and you can actually fold down the captain seats as well. If you need to lay down and hide behind here for the cup and the pulling open door of this on this mini van, Toyota Sienna ah is perfect because if you just open that sliding door to do and then close it, you know and 16:43 you know. I think this is in the you acceleration on this is pretty great, so I think that for the needs that you've stated that you have and I know about this might be the best vehicle for you to rub a bank with, but don't worry, we're not going to write down in your need, but I'm not going to I'm not going to tell anybody your I know your needs, but I won't tell anybody I got you. I got you. 17:09 Yeah, kind of except so they used that as like their defense when this started hitting the news, good defense, but they quickly backpedaled and changed that analogy okay, and they change it to no. We're like a life manufacturer. If someone uses a knife to kill people, the knife manufacturer is not in trouble. a little bit more. Well, the reason they backpedaled is because there was a specific document that was a part of this 17:38 that they were like, we probably shouldn't use the card analogy here because it's probably a little too on the nose. Oh, because there was in 1983 and this was there's documents. there's documents in the leak, the Panama Papers leak that talked about how Mosak Fonseca worked for uh set up a shell company for an organization uh that was out of London. 18:05 And in 1983, there was this famous gold heist called the Brinks Mat Gold Heist. And there was this facility right next to Heathrow Airport where there was this big robbery that occurred. And the people who broke in, they expected there to be money there. They didn't know there was gold. There ended up actually being $26 million worth of gold. Oh my gosh. used these gold bars, melted them down, and it was never recovered. 18:34 the gold bars. They never found the gold bars or the people who the robbers and they just made out with them. When this happened, obviously it was huge. what? They made out with them? 18:51 yeah, so look at all his gold. I know what I'm going to do when get home and you get home. I'm not even gonna wait. I don't wait on in the age of e land. It's a good thing we bought this as you ve from most sack from Sika with fall down captain sees a perfect thing that I just bought this twenty nineteen Toyota Sienna 19:19 with plenty of room for making out with gold. 19:24 purchase it now. Hey, this week sponsor is this nineteen ninety one Ford F one fifty available in Independence, Missouri. It's just someone's face, but market place. I runs drives great, but to be a project truck, but no longer have the time to do so. So forty five hundred or best OBL, which is our best offer. So it looks like a pretty decent truck. And so if you're in the Kansas City area and you're looking for a Ford F one fifty 19:51 get your needs met with this one that's on Facebook marketplace. The seller's name is Nathan Sipes, so Nathan Sipes dot com slash tillin pot yeah. I'm gonna message him right now. I'm gonna tell him hey man, just plug your truck. 20:08 a man just uh just promoted this on my podcast. Hope you get a say on my podcast. If you're going to sell you owe me twenty percent. uh 20:25 Use code till and podcast at checkout. You go to pick that up and you just say, you just say, Hey, till and podcast. And then he has to give us 20%. uh 20:40 Thanks for watching our show if you like it. A great way to help out is by being a Patreon supporter. Doing that helps make this show possible, but it also gets a lot of perks for you. You can get every episode a week early ad free. You get access to a Discord where you can meet a lot of other people who love the show and actually hang out with Jaren and I every month on a hangout. And we're also in that Discord chat all the time, hanging, talking with people, talking about episodes and just random stuff in life. It's super fun. 21:03 We do, there's a way to get birthday messages, a free gift, merch discounts in there. So there's a lot of really great reasons to be a Patreon supporter. You get a lot of benefits out of it. And it also makes the show keep happening. So if that sounds great to you, you can go to support.tillin.com or tillin.com slash support, uh or just tillin.com and search around until you find the links uh and become a Patreon supporter. really appreciate you doing that. But if not, right back to the episode, right? 21:31 I'm going to send you a screenshot of this, so that you can put that in the ad. That's crazy. A ran just promoted this on my 21:53 If a Ford is a Ford F one fifties, your speed. We have plenty of merch on tiller.com and you can buy that's so funny. All right, back to the episode. 22:08 this week sponsored this guy's for that one. Okay, I don't remember what I was talking about. Oh the bank or the robbery yeah they just made. They got away with it well the uh the reason why mosak fun seca changed the story line and stopped using the car analogy is because it came out that in these document links there was documents from when the shell company opened up right after that robbery. 22:37 and the the dollar amount that they were trying to put into the shell company, most like Fonseca, we're saying there's a pretty good chance that this is that robbery and it's in writing that they recognize that there's probably that robbery. Oh wow, they don't email back. Is this this robbery that is a place and the guy's like here like guys like L O. Yeah, L O. And the guy's like ha sick. Why does gold have saliva? 23:05 so slobbery. So it was the amount that was like sloppy. What they're clearly trying to launder. Yeah. And what's interesting is in this case, there's documentation. If you follow the thread line of this whole like that show company a couple uh months later, the police started to figure it out and we're like narrowing in on the show company and they set up another shell company and moved all the money to a different shell company and office gated it before the police could get to the end line of it. And they did that on their own. 23:35 got it so the the journalists get these documents. They're reading through these documents. They're realizing. Oh, this is pretty big. There's a lot, a lot of people. This is a full service crime center. Yeah, what it is yeah and and it's and there's a lot going on here right. It's eleven million documents. There's a ton of people named in it. World leaders, celebrities, cartels, terror organizations, 24:02 It is massive. And so the two of them, they say, we can't take this on by ourselves. Right. And so they call the ICIJ, which is the International Consortium of Journalists. they do that. And they say, hey, we need help going through this. And so they put together a group of 200 journalists from or I think it was actually 400 journalists from 200 uh papers around the world. And they said, we're going to work on this together. Sure. They all were going to follow the trails for their locality. 24:32 and figure out all this stuff of the people near them that weren't involved in this. Do I just want to be a journalist? Is there money in it? Because like not really yeah, unless you become like an author and sell books and do that kind of stuff. Yeah, I mean money, but like I just love putting puzzles together, you know, and that's what these people did. But here's the thing they recognize very quickly that there was a lot of very powerful people in these papers and so 24:59 all of these people, basic all these journalists basically went into hiding for a year and you could just become a youtuber who does this stuff and that stuff doesn't have to be true. 25:11 You're right. Yeah, you're right like that dumb kid like that dumb kid. Are you talking about the yeah yeah, and you know who was talking about? I don't know who I'm talking about when I say that dumb kid because that feels like enough. Yeah, I know exactly who you're talking about. Actually, sadly, and that's what I'm saying is that like he's just on YouTube just saying stuff yeah yeah and he's built a career. That's what I'm saying. It's crazy. don't know what I'm talking I'm a remember 25:39 ah No, but that's what I'm saying is like you could just I don't know. Maybe when my takes the cake comes out, maybe it'll blow up like that. People like there's fraud happening. So what's interesting is each of these people recognize that how dangerous this was yeah and so they all went into hiding for like a year. They all worked on air gapped computers, which if you remember right in our last episode, these are computers that have never been connected or much, much previous. was couple weeks ago. Yeah, we did an episode a while ago where we talked about air gaps. 26:08 If you don't remember, air-gapped computers are machines that have never been connected to the internet. physically can't. They don't have Wi-Fi cards. They don't have ethernet ports. It's impossible to connect them to the internet. The only way to get data on them is through flash drives. ah so they're isolated machines that are disconnected from any network. What's interesting about it is they also noticed, or they also knew, that, okay, at the end of the day, even if it's air-gapped, it's a physical machine that exists and that data's there. 26:35 and so what they did is they took them apart and on the hard drives, the screws that attach the hard drives they put. How do they get these these air gap computers yeah and get them anywhere? No, but I mean like how do we get the data from it? Is that what the whole thing is? John Doe leaked the data. The guy who's interested in some had access to one of these air gap things. No, not an air gap computer. He he got out. We'll talk about how okay, okay, okay, okay. 27:01 but he distributed the data to these. But I'm saying like the data is on the air gap computer. That's where I was confused. But keep on with the air gap stuff. Yes, the air gap computer, the way they got the data is through flash drives. Right. The flash drives on and they were able to download. Ah, you got you. And they recognize that they had hard drives in there and people could still if someone got into that facility, wherever they had the computer or their home or whatever, they could take that hard drive, copy the contents of the hard drive, know what was on it. And so what they did to be able to tell if somebody did that on the screws that screw the hard drive in the machine, they 27:30 painted over that with uh glitter nail polish. And the reason they did that is because... It's clear unless you shine a light on it? Well, no, they took a picture of it. It's a high-res picture of it. And because it's glitter, it is always random. And so they could, if someone ever took that off and then tried to put it back and put glitter on it, it would be a different pattern of glitter. So they can compare it with the picture and know somebody got into this hard drive. Isn't that crazy? Geez. Yeah. 27:58 The level of security I don't have anything I'm trying to hide that back. Also, I don't know if I have the brain to be like here's how I would hide that yeah that crazy yeah. So these journalists spent two years ah or they spent one full year going pouring through these documents, putting all the plants together and then finally on April third twenty sixteen at six PM European time four hundred journalists in eighty countries 28:28 published at the exact same time, articles outlining what they found in these papers. And so obviously this was massive news. What we found from it is there was uh offshore companies operated out of this single company basically worldwide. they incorporated, what's interesting is initially when this company was founded, the earliest companies that they started were all in Panama. 28:55 But when the US took over control of Panama, the laws changed and Panama wasn't as good of a shell company country. then they went global and they started using all these other countries that have good shell company locations and they opened up these franchises essentially in all these different countries to operate their shell companies. so obviously, ah 29:19 Tons and tons and tons of companies were opened operating out of these different companies and yeah, they were linked to crazy. think the number was 12 world leaders, uh dozens of celebrities and then hundreds of very wealthy individual. 29:38 third one from the bottom and Nevada Reno, Nevada is a tax haven. Oh, it is Nevada. That's what we're talking about Nevada. Yeah, yeah. Okay, so why is the I don't know it's not red. I don't know why it's not red. I was looking at that too when I okay this, but yeah Reno, Nevada is a big tax haven. What's really interesting is in this propaganda or was trying to make it seem like oh it's everyone else, not us, and then they put the there's twelve hundred documents from Nevada on their hand. What's really interesting is this leak? There are 30:08 tons of people from all over the world listed in this. World leaders, celebrities, there are very few Americans listed in this document. And listed in this leak. one of the reasons for it is because the United States has its own tax havens in Delaware, Nevada, uh Wyoming, South Dakota, are all tax havens. And so you don't have to leave the country to set up quote unquote offshore accounts where you could hide your money. 30:36 so there were very few Americans listed in this. I got some offshore account. If the IRS hears that I don't know, I'm joking. I if we do, if that turns out to be true, that's crazy. That's it. That was an accident, but like I don't know that I have business managers yeah and so kill them. I mean, I don't know. Does the IRS kill people potentially 31:04 That's a good. That's a good river to start. Yeah, the IRS kill the IRS kills people. I got hate crying by the IRS. You hate me because I don't pay taxes. Yeah, I don't like me that yes. Yes, that is why we should not joke about me not paying taxes. the way, I'm pretty big that I don't pay taxes. I haven't paid taxes like seven years. I'm paying taxes anyway, so let me let me pull up this this picture. The extent of people listed 31:33 in these documents is pretty wild. So ah this is an image from, I believe, a French uh newspaper listing the people whose names were found in this. And so at the top we have a bunch of leaders of countries. I think there's 12 of them. And so these are actual presidents, kings, prime ministers who have money in offshore accounts operated by Mossack, Fronseca. 32:02 What's interesting is the list below. think it's actually far more interesting because these are global leaders. Associates of our associates and one of them that's really interesting is this guy by the name of let me make sure I get his name right. Sir gay, Sergey, Walt rolled again. Okay, Sergey rolled again. He is a celloist and a successful celloist, but he is listed as the owner of multiple companies in these papers. 32:31 that total over two billion dollars worth of assets, which would make his net worth two billion dollars. The interesting thing about world again ah is he's not only a cellist, but he is a close friend of Vladimir Putin. Yeah, he's actually been lifelong friends with him. Here he is at Putin's wedding or another dedication. This is Putin's. This is a Putin's child dedication and he's actually the godfather of Putin's daughter. 33:01 and he says he's not a wealthy. He all the time looks so happy in this too, like you would not even imagine the joy and so rolled again. He looks like go back to Putin. He looks like Stephen Miller. I know isn't that kind of weird in that weird. It's got a weird wow, but rolled again. What was kind of surmised from this document is rolled again. 33:29 there are these moments where you can see money moving through rolled against accounts from different shell company to shell company to shell company. And then it goes out to a Russian bank and people are like, yeah, he is the, started calling him Putin's wallet. This guy's Interesting. Okay. And there's, he's not the only one Putin you'll see his childhood friends, close friends. There are multiple people and we see this. There is the president of Syria is down there. 33:59 there are multiple. The president of China is down there. ah Yeah, there are multiple world leaders who have these associates who have billions of dollars worth of asset under management from these shell companies that are running through these UAE, president of Argentina, and so this is the prime minister. This hit the news. Russia immediately started calling this right western propaganda. Of course, China, China, 34:24 blocked it from all of their internet like it was completely black listed it within four hours. It was gone from Chinese media right. em What is really interesting though is the day this came out. There was also an interview with the Prime Minister of Iceland yeah who was on the graphic yeah the Prime Minister of Iceland. Let me get his name right. uh Sigmund are oh Dave you 34:49 let me get his name right. Sigmund, er, uh I goon, goon, me get his name right. As I say it completely wrong for sure, goon, log us in and he ran on a campaign ah that was about integrity. Yeah, well, it was specifically about the rich avoiding taxes was like how he campaigned into power and so he has this interview and in this interview, these people sock man. There's this interview where he is taken in and they 35:17 Filment at the prime minister's mansion and the ICIJ journalists were like, okay, the local Icelandic journalist was like, I want to interview him, but he's going to know something's up if I'm the one interviewing him. Right. And so he says, I'll come with you. I'm going to hide in a different room. You want another ICIJ journalist, you approach him, you say you want to interview him about Icelandic, the Icelandic economy. And so they show up, he does this interview, they agree to it. He sits down and for like 20 minutes. 35:46 He just soft lobs questions, kind of buttering them up being like, talk about the economy. Your presidency, you were seeing the numbers go up, you're doing such a great job, things are so great. And then it turns, and I actually have the video footage of this. want you to watch. uh It's going to start, the first couple seconds of this are going to be in Icelandic, it's going to quickly shift to the interview where it's in English. m And so this is that video. This is the prime minister. Have you or did you have any connections yourself to an offshore company? 36:15 myself. Well, the Icelandic companies, and I have worked for Icelandic companies, had connections with also companies, the, what's it called? workers unions. So it would have been through such arrangements, but I have always 36:44 given all of my assets and that of my family up for taxes. there has never been any of my assets hidden anywhere. Mr Prime Minister, what can you tell me about a company called Vintris? Well, it's a company, if I recall correctly, which is associated with one of the companies that I was on a port of. 37:14 was had an account. Oh my gosh. As I mentioned, has been with the tax on the tax account since it was established. The other journalist came out and then he stormed out of the room. He went to his kitchen because he saw this other journalist and he's like, oh, you're trapping me. And they start arguing in Icelandic. And then he leaves the room. They 37:44 They filmed this two weeks in advance of everything leaking out, but they released this video the same time everything else came out. 37:55 Hey, thanks for listening to this episode of things. I learned last night. If you liked the show, you want to support us, we've got merchandise that you can get and it's good stylish stuff that I made. put a lot of work into this stuff, so it's great to find other tilling fans in the wild and be like, wait a minute. I know that shirt. And so yeah, we would love for you to do that. You can pop over to shop.tillin.com or the QR code or there's a link in the description. There's plenty of ways to find it. We promise we made it super easy. So thanks for supporting the show and thanks for listening. 38:26 so what happened to this guy that that company was his offshore company and a little bit of background about that is when he got into politics, he sold that company to his wife for one dollar through the offshore system, so his wife was on the paperwork as the owner of the company right nine million in assets under there that he was very clearly. He did not disclose. I this is what I'm trying to explain to people to is like you don't understand the level of wealth that exists yeah because I 38:55 is just yesterday. Logan Paul sold a Pokemon card for sixteen point five million dollars. You know he sold that to Anthony scare moochy son. That's crazy scare moochy was the press secretary for eleven days in the first Trump administration and it's just like that that guy scar moochy who I've listened to several podcasts of and I was like oh, I think this guy's guy now I'm sitting here on like his son was able to spend sixteen point five 39:22 million dollars on a Pokemon card. That means that if that's the amount of money you can spend on a Pokemon card, that means you have a lot more much more. Yeah. And that's where I go like, why are we scrapping? But I will also say, no, I will don't interrupt me in the middle of my, my trying to start a revolution. I'm not, I'm not. A lot of those are in and of themselves tax havens because you don't pay property taxes on a Pokemon card. Right. And so if you have $16 million in assets and that's a Pokemon card, 39:52 that is a tax haven and then in and of itself and that's the same thing with fine art like fine arts the same thing. I understand money into these things that are just fake tax holdings, so this kid might have. I mean I don't think the kid might have bought that maybe how old is he? I don't know how old he is. He's an adult. he's an adult. Okay, so he might have just wanted that he might just have the money. I just wanted that to pay sixteen point five million dollars for yeah yeah, but that's what I'm saying is that like it's like whenever and this is where I'm annoyed by 40:21 is that whenever people talk about the rich, it's things like this where they're doing these offshore accounts and stuff. We're not talking about the dude in your town who makes two hundred grand a year. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you know, it's a different. It's a different thing entirely like, and I don't think people understand how much money there is. Yeah, it's insane that some of these people just have yeah, yeah, and they're going to and what we see in these papers, they're going to extreme lengths to keep it hidden for tax avoidance. Yeah, 40:51 But not just that is one of the interesting things in this. And through all this, there is a storyline about a prince. And I want to say the United Arab Emirates. can't remember what nation, but a nation in that general region of the world. And uh he had a shell company that owned a plot of three houses in a row on the beach in Malibu, totally 80 million dollars. Right. And an interesting thing from that is 41:20 there is a actual logical explanation to that of if the prince is coming to Malibu for a vacation yeah, you don't want to. You don't want anyone to know that this is his house right and that he's going to be there and so there is like and then and that's true of like celebrities to like there is a real like actual reason why you want to keep some of this stuff hidden. They're going to live in a gated community. You want to lose like because yeah you don't 41:45 it's a security risk. Yeah, there is like a safety thing there and there is also a privacy thing like there is a level of like does a privacy thing. I've decided that I'm going to because I saw a guy doing like I'm paparazzi in the paparazzi. Have you seen that or like the paparazzi that there was a camera and there's another guy who just takes his picture and films them and then they get real mad. Yeah, but I think he's not going far enough because I'm I don't have anything to do during the week. 42:10 yeah, and so now what I'm gonna do, I'm gonna pick one guy out of the paparazzi yeah, and then I'm gonna sleep outside of his house yeah, and when he wakes up in the morning goes out to his car. I'm taking his picture and I'm yelling stuff at him and I'm gonna follow him everywhere he goes yeah yeah until he is a mental breakdown and I'm to stand over him and I'm going to take a picture was mental breakdown and then I'm going to print out like a magazine cover that it says his name is probably Michael. I assume Michael loses it. I'm gonna put I'm going to send it to him in the mail 42:39 Yeah, just over and over again. Just I mean I'll just thousands of copies of this magazine. Michael lost it. Yeah, you're to figure out every grocery store you frequent and change out all the I'm not joking. I say like I'm done it like I don't got nothing to do. You underestimate how much time I have you underestimate me. Yeah, you underestimate how insane I am. 43:04 So so but did that the Iceland guy get in trouble? Here's was crazy. Gunn Lageson. That video comes out the logins the next morning sounds like good night the next morning. The next morning he looks out the door of his prime minister's mansion to this and this is what we got to do guys. What's really interesting about this is Iceland, uh specifically uh Reykjavik Reykjavik. Is that how pronounce it? Yeah where the mansion is 43:31 there's a hundred and thirty thousand people who live there. This is a crowd of twenty thousand people, so this is almost twenty percent of the population of that city show up to protest him and I'm not exaggerating when I say they are egging his house. They all brought a good and they are a private is to judge and someone said we ran out of eggs and so they start going trying to buy eggs. They like sold the city out of eggs because they were I love it and forty eight hours later he steps down forty eight hours after this thing hit. 43:59 good so like it actually was like real. It's crazy double like impact in Iceland because every it came out that this guy was just a liar and he was he was literally doing the thing that he campaigned against to get his position of power and this also this is two thousand sixteen yeah. Gosh, I feel like I feel like politicians have figured out now that if they just push through long enough, it'll go away. Yeah, that is true. That is true and uh so this was obviously worldwide news right. 44:27 those 12 world leaders, a bunch of world leaders with who obfuscated through other people. ah What's interesting is there's a bunch of celebrities. Jackie Chan was in there. ah He had like 12 companies in there. ah And then who else was Lionel Messi was in there, which ironically he was under investigation for tax fraud already. And then when that came out, it was like, oh, here it is. ah And so there's a lot of these celebrities. And here's the thing. Here's the thing about the papers. I think I kind of said this. 44:55 but a lot of the people in these papers were doing this legally because if you have a shell company and you disclose that you own that shell company in your taxes, that is just a legal operation of that is a that is an asset that you own yeah, but a lot of people were using these illegally and they were using them to high taxes or to launder money, and so this was actually linked to multiple terror groups that and cartels that were laundering money through this panamanian company right to hide their activities uh and so 45:25 This hits the news. The biggest impact was in Iceland. There was impact worldwide. There was a lot of people who, uh, who I don't want to face, say face like the music for this, but it did open the eyes of a lot of people worldwide of what their governments were doing and what important people within their country were doing. Um, a year later there was a Maltese investigative journalist and Mike blogger. She was like a independent journalist and this 45:53 The important thing about this is this exposed the dealings of one specific company that operated shell businesses. This is not all the shell businesses. There's a lot more out there. And this kind of opened up the doors for journalists in 2017. I shouldn't say the years because I don't know the exact years, but throughout the rest of 2010s, we saw two more leaks come out. The Pandora papers uh and the Paradise papers. Love the... 46:16 Loved the P. Littering on Paradise Pandora. Yeah. And in that we just we saw more and more of shell Panda Express. We saw more and more of these shell. Panda Express papers. We saw more and more of these shell companies get exposed and more and more of these journalists were independently trying to chase down right people who were doing operating shell companies. And there was a specific journalist by the name of Daphne Galiza Galizia. 46:44 uh who was trying to uncover a specific politician uh in Malta who was corrupt using these shell companies. And she was getting really close down the trail. They had for years been trying to silence her actually. She had faced a ton of cases like defamation cases that she kept winning. uh And one day she wrote a blog outlining her most recent findings. And the last line of that blog was, need to come to terms with the fact that most of these people empower our crooks. 47:15 And it was the last line that she wrote in that blog. She got out, got in her car, backed out of her house, drove a few yards down the street and died in a car bomb. ah And this was an interesting moment in this whole storyline where all these journalists kind of got put on notice of like, hey, this is not just like powerful people in the world and celebrities and world leaders. These are criminals as well that are doing things and they are not. uh 47:44 opposed to killing people who are going to bring a light on their shade. Right. ah And so they don't need to PR this. Yeah, they'll just kill you. Yeah. And so this became or that event kind of took this down uh a different light. A month after all this happened, uh John Doe, uh which sidebar, we found out the way in one of the early releases, we found out the way he got access to all these documents. He was actually a hacker. 48:14 who found that uh the company, MoSack Fonseca, their website was running an out of date WordPress plugin called Slider Revolution. And they used that vulnerability to get into the website. And they had on the same server hosted all of their company's documents. so he just pulled everything. And so uh crazy, ridiculously easy vulnerability to patch 48:42 weren't aware of weren't paying attention to or something like that and ended up costing them um quite a bit because you're running a weird shell company and you need to make sure that you don't have any weird back ends or or back doors open. You know, hire Tim. Yeah, I could have. I could have stopped that. You what Tim loves crime, put it on record. Tim loves crime. I mean to be completely fair, if they hired me, that would have never happened. 49:10 I would have, I would have caught that vulnerability. loves crime. You heard it here, folks, but here's the thing. Here's the crazy thing. Um, uh, most act Fonseca. They obviously got put in this, this negative life. They went under this huge investigation. Long story short, they ended up managing to get out free on all this because they, don't know how, but in Panamanian courts, they were able to say, Hey, we weren't aware of a lot of these things that people were doing. 49:36 but it was still enough of an impact on their reputation as a business. They were not a safe place for you to move that money. And so their company ended up going out of business. Yeah. And then throughout the stress of all of it, most sack died. I don't know what happened to front sake. I don't know what he's out doing in the world anymore, um but ended up having that impact. John, this is interesting. They had this thing called shelf companies ah where they would start a company and they called it like, 50:04 aging wine on a shelf and so they would start a company in two thousand three and they'd set it on the shelf and when you came and you say hey, I got to move ten million dollars. They say oh, we have the perfect company for that. Let me pull it off the shelf that way. It's not a new yeah and then it's like you've been operating this company since two thousand three and then now all this money is moving through it. That's crazy yeah and they had they had subscription services for eight seventy five a month. They had subscription services where it's kind of like some of the bits that I have going right now. Like I've got some bits that I started when we were live together as roommates that 50:33 I mean I'm not going to that's not going to pay off. I hate that thirty years got a shelf bits. have shelf shelf. It's well they had it. They had this. They had this subscription service eight seventy five a month and basically the subscription service was we're just going to sign documents for you to make sure things continue moving the direction you want them to move and there was a story line. Okay, this man I can't remember the name of this guy, but he was an overseas. I'm sure it matters. He was an overseas criminal in human trafficking. 51:00 he gets put in prison. He got caught. I was to guess his name. It wasn't him. He kills himself. He goes to prison. He gets he goes to prison. He is in prison and his business is still he's still signing documents for his business while he's in prison because I bet that's still true of the of the other guy to he's paying for this eight seventy five a month eight dollars and seventy five cents subscription service. Oh, that's yeah. I thought you were saying eight hundred and seventy five eight dollars and seventy five cents a month. 51:25 for them to just keep signing documents like forging your signal. I don't know. I feel like tending to that big of an operation. It's probably worth eight hundred and seventy five dollars a month. That's what's crazy is like they were an economy of scale like this was a thousand, thousands of thousand small, but shell businesses that they were operating. That's crazy and so John Doe a month after all this comes out. He puts out a manifesto okay called the next revolution will be digitized. 51:55 And basically it's this whole manifesto about how um the elites of the world are tricking you. And this whole economy is set up to benefit the people at the top and extract from the people at the bottom. Which is interesting that we just talked about this in the last episode. But I want to read the last like paragraph and a half because it's really interesting. And he says, so he's setting up this whole story about how capitalism is essentially economic slavery. 52:24 where the elites are getting all the benefit and everybody else is suffering. And then he says this, in this system, our system, the slaves are unaware both of their status and of their masters who exist in a world apart where the intangible shackles are carefully hidden amongst the reams of unreachable legalese. The horrific magnitude of detriment to the world would shock us all awake. But when it takes a whistleblower to sound the alarm, it is cause for even greater concern. 52:51 It signals that democracies, checks and balances have all failed, that the breakdown is systemic and that severe instability could be just around the corner. So now is the time for real action. And that starts with asking questions. Historians can easily recount the issues involving taxation and imbalances of power that have led to revolutions in ages past. Then military might was necessary to subjugate peoples, whereas now curtailing information access 53:21 is just as effective or more so, since the act is often invisible. Yet we live in a time of inexpensive, limitless digital storage and fast internet connections that transcend national boundaries. It doesn't take much to connect the dots from start to finish, inception to global media distribution. The next revolution will be digitized, or perhaps it has already begun. What is really interesting is I think his diagnosis of what's going on here is perfect. 53:50 But what's unfortunate is I think he put this message out. Because in 2016, that last line was true. The last line is uh the limitless digital storage, faster internet connections, transcend national boundaries. What has happened over the last decade is this internet that was uh open and built by 54:18 tons and ran by us. The people has been consolidated to a handful of corporations, so you think that he put that out and the corporations were like that's our vulnerability. I so we need to make it. We need to tighten that up. I think it is. I think it's probably I love when Tim gets back into conspiracies a little bit. I think it's fun right. I think it's probably two things at once because because what we we've seen since then and it started a little bit before, but I think what we've seen since then is we've seen the majority of online data. 54:47 is now concentrated to Amazon, Google, Microsoft, Oracle. um Meta has some of it, but it's really just their ecosystem that they have. Apple's the same thing, but it's really just their ecosystem. Majority is four companies are operating all of the data on the internet, which means they have control of all of the data on the internet. uh And this thing that he's talking about where there's limitless access to data, 55:16 and all this can be accessed digitally. I think it's kind of like what we've seen with uh the media landscape where everything's consolidating to a handful of companies that write all of these, different things that you can't get real actionable uh or right. What I should say is true information anymore because the people who can show there's only a couple of people who actually control it puppet master to the top and it relies on you have a couple of weeks ago cloud. There's this big uh cloud flare had an issue that 55:43 took down half the internet and this thing went viral. um But it's really accurate because it really is this handful of companies and cloud flirt probably shouldn't be that big. They were in this case because of the DNS. But what is the what is the single pillar at the bottom? I don't know what they're it's cut off. I think it was like a meme. It's a meme. It's not like actual company um but it really is Amazon's AWS Microsoft's Azure Google's cloud services Oracle's cloud services. 56:11 are the majority of the internet. Cloudflare runs DNS. They also have cloud services too now. The majority of the internet is a handful of companies now. Even if you're hosting with Squarespace or Webflow or a WordPress host, they're using, they're renting AWS servers and Google servers. And so all of this data is concentrated in one place. And so I think the point he's making, the revolution will be digitized. We have access to all this information. I don't think it's true anymore. And so I don't know what to do with that information. 56:40 his diagnosis is accurate and I think they've patched the vulnerability. That's interesting. Yeah, wow. So I wish there was a nice happy ending to this. I guess the happy ending is that that interview was really cool to watch and watch that guy kicked out of his job and be exposed as a liar. But yeah, everything else is just there's an underworld of really rich people moving money around and getting away with it. That's nuts. Yep. That I mean, that's true. 57:11 well another encouraging episode from things I learned last night. You know if you like this and you want to know what else is the government hide from me. Why don't you listen to the Montauk project episode? The great episode about all how trustworthy everyone is so you can go listen to that and or watch that. Thanks for being here for our show. All my targets are at Paul, right the actor, I can you can get next week's episode. Oh speaking of shell companies, 57:38 we have a show company you pay into it every month. We have a service and it's called Patreon and we would love to see you over there and we take all that money and we hide it and so please join us over there. I don't know how to end it. Fiddle off man. That's crazy.


The world of international finance often operates in shadows, a complex web of legal loopholes and clandestine transactions. Few events have pulled back this veil with such dramatic force as the Panama Papers. This monumental data leak, which occurred in 2016, sent shockwaves around the globe, exposing the hidden wealth and offshore dealings of some of the world’s most powerful … Read More

My Mind Was Blown: Understanding Planned Obsolescence

03-31-26

Episode Transcription

00:00 Hey, thanks for listening to things I learned last night or watching wherever you're at. I just want to update you about some shows that I got coming on. Next week, I am in Kansas City, Missouri, April 8th at the Funny Bone. And then I'm in uh St. Louis. I'm doing the whole Missouri Triangle this week. I'm doing Kansas City, St. Louis, and Springfield all in the same little thing. So all those shows are coming up. And then I'm in Las Vegas, Sin City, all week, April 20th through the 26th. And then I am in 00:31 Birmingham, Alabama on June 6th and Atlanta on June 7th. those are all the shows. You can find all those dates at Paul Rudd, the actor dot com and I did that. I did a show. I did a show this past weekend that we're recording and I literally got on stage and they had like the monitor in the back and I can see that they have a slide up there with my face and it says Jaren Myers, but Jaren is spelled a new way. J E R O N 00:59 m e y e r s both names and I literally that's why I'm like on stage being like yeah, don't try to spell jaron Myers dot com. Just go to Paul Rudd, the actor dot com. Yeah, comment below how you think jaren Myers is do that. I do this. Tell us how you jaren Myers is spelled. So anyway, I would love to see it. Those shows that would be awesome. So let's jump into the episode. 01:25 Hey man, have you ever heard of the Panama Papers, the Panama Papers? Oh my gosh, did we get here from Watergate? Is that how we got to this topic? Maybe I don't know honestly, I think hey actually April Fools. Oh my gosh, what are you doing? Aver falls? What do you, what do you, what do you, I want to run this episode. Oh my gosh, 01:49 Oh, no. Mark down a time. I got to get set up on my laptop. Oh, no. Are you just going to do the same shrink next door? 02:09 They go back to their little melting factory at night and they wear their little masks in their costumes and they all stand around the fire and they're like, melt, melt, melt, melt, 02:30 Things I learned last night. 02:41 Before we get going, I want to read you this comment that we got 11 hours ago. ah It says, let Tim do the topic. I always come to the topic and stay for the bits. So well, not this week. This week you're here for the topic and you're here for the bits. Sorry, sorry, Dylan May. So because here's the thing, I saw this story and I'm tired of telling you to do topics and then you just let him sit in the thing for like six months and then you and then you delete that thing. So it actually like the last topic I taught, 03:11 I have been asking you to do that for literal years. Yeah, you have. So I saw this story. It's a fun. It's a hopeful story, right, and I was like, I don't want to wait for Tim to find something about this and mess it up for me, you know, because we're talking about the story of this guy named Danny Hartwell. Have you heard of Danny Hartwell? No, okay, so what's that? You have a picture. I do have a picture of Danny Hartwell. Here's a picture of Danny Hartwell. Okay, obviously in two thousand to this 03:39 feels he like a I. What do mean? It feels like this feels like a like you went into AI and you said put a picture of me, but make me younger of me of me or no, no, not no, just like you're you're this guy and you tell AI you're like make a picture of me in two thousand and two out of gas station diner. Okay, that's what this looks like to me. Well, this is in rural Indiana. Yeah, Indiana does just scream AI. Okay, 04:09 He looks like Jim from the office. He kind of yeah yeah, but this is Danny Harwell for the audio listener. He's got the Jim Hill Halpert haircut. He's got a blue shirt. You to you goes to his barber probably not a barber. He probably in Indian small town Indiana is probably just whoever does his mom's hair. Yeah, that's usually how that works. Yeah, and you just go to her. Her name is like Teresa and you go and she does your hair and it's not great. We're making fun of this and Alex has the same haircut. uh 04:39 So but he was so he's born in 1981 in Woodgrove, Indiana. It's a it's a town kind of like Malvern. The population is actually a little bit bigger. It's population is six thousand. His dad Mark is an appliance repair guy. Okay, and so we've got new appliance repair guys that just moved in next door. Oh yeah, yeah, in this building. Yeah, yeah. Do you think that we're to mess up there? We should ask them well made. mean honestly they they might know about this. Yeah, interesting. We'll find out 05:08 um So his dad, Mark, is an appliance repair guy. My dad does subway repair stuff anyway. And then his mom, Elaine, she works part time at a community thrift store. So, you know, small town just doing stuff. And so Danny grows up surrounded by, I don't want to say junk, but just like... 05:31 But I mean like no, no, he's surrounded by like spare parts. Yeah, it's discarded machines. appliances. His mom works with the thrift store. So like just, just. Yeah. Yeah. All this is set up is that Danny's like a tinkerer. He likes to, he likes to put things together. He likes to try to invent new things. And he was growing up in the 80s. 80s. Okay. Yeah. Okay. And so, um, so he had like this, this tinkering obsession, you know, he would take apart anything it could cause hands like 05:57 He would take up microwaves, VCRs, radios, all this stuff. He built his first crude, like, mechanical helper arm at 12 using a bicycle chain and some scrap. So he was really smart. What do you mean mechanical helper arm? I was trying to find what that meant. Is it like those things where you reach and That's what it sounds like. It sounds like one of those little pincher arm things. But he made his own out of scrap parts and a bicycle chain. Is that something that everybody's grandma has? 06:26 Like does everybody's grandma have those pinchers things or is that just my grandma? Everybody's, every old person, I think you get it for your 65th. It's like, yeah, you reaching is out of reach. They're like, hey, that's dangerous, dude. Don't, don't, don't do that anymore. You cut off the punch line on that. really bad because I thought it was really funny and you're going to think it's dumb. But I said reaching is out of reach for you now. Oh, that is funny. And think that's hilarious. I like it. 06:56 Here for the bits. Did we start the timer? Great. No, we did. OK. That's funny. But anyway, he was always talking about something like he wanted to, he had a dream in the 80s too. feel like it was the world was like full of possibilities. Now, I mean, you also got to think like tech, like we talk about a lot. The difference between the iPhone from 2007 and 2015 is wild. Yeah. 07:24 The difference between the iPhone, and that's a, eight year span? Yeah. Difference between 2007, 2015, and almost all of technology. Yeah. Wild. Yeah. Difference between 2015 and now? 10 years? 11 years? Not much. Not crazy. So like, he's in the 80s though, where there's so many, I mean, we just went to the moon 10 years before he's born, right? Yeah. My nose is itching, and I'm trying to subtly do it, but anyway. You know, he's got like this 07:54 I don't know, maybe too optimistic, like this ah naive view of the world, but he wants to build something that he thinks could change the world. I mean, I think that's what, to be fair, like I think a lot of people through that time period had, I mean, even us, like up until recently, there was this idea, especially in this country, that like you can go do and build anything. We talked about this recently. I don't know if we talked about this in the podcast, but Maslow's Hierarchy of Needs, how... 08:21 really in the United States since the 50s until pretty recently, a large chunk of the population, not everyone, but a large chunk of the population was at the top of Maslow's hierarchy needs. And we were all living in the self-actuation triangle. so it's like, everybody's like, yeah, live your dreams. you do what you love, you never work a day in your life. And like the world was your oyster because all of our underlying needs had been met by being a part of the wealthiest country that's ever existed in the wealthiest. 08:51 time for that country. Yeah, which will, will, will, and know, and I'm, I'm, I'm going to save the not crash up, but the, uh, I'm going to bring up that article, not what would you call that? That paper that the college paper I sent you. Oh yeah, that was really interesting. I was going to bring that up when we talk about a different character in the story. Okay. So we'll get there. All right. All right. Um, but so anyway, so Danny discovers a book called building a better machine, the Whitlock philosophy by Dr. Harold Whitlock. This is 09:18 do I want to show you old wit lock or young wit lock? Let's see. This is one of those things I was going to. It's weird that you told me that this photo looks like AI because I was like dude, here's the thing. Here's Doctor Harold Whitlock. Yeah, those papers look like AI like his desk, the back, the this is a magazine on the walls. This is a magazine shoe. This is this is the pans on the wall, the desk, everything about this screams AI. He does him 09:46 Whitlock. I'm assuming this is this is Harold Whitlock Whitlock. uh No, I was gonna say, because like the two photos I did this on purpose because like the two photos that I found or not to I found more of them, but the one I was the other one was going to use was just like this is literally just like it's an office and it's the same jacket. It looks like no way. It looks like the same jacket, but to be fair like that is that is a I was going to do that joke. 10:16 But yeah, that is a core like male experience is finding something like a just article of clothing. I that is just perfect good in and you never get rid of it. I say this all the time. If you find an outfit or like pair of pants, yeah, buy three, yeah, yeah, buy three pairs of those pants because when you go to the store the next time they're not going to have it. I did. I did just recently rip a pair of pants that I have and I 10:42 I put an order in for the exact same pair. I to, so for my special, I went to Banana Republican, some pants and uh I washed them for the first time and that's like, I spent $80 on these jeans. Yeah, this is like that's straight, like my old Navy jeans. Yeah, they get ruined in the wash. They get ruined in the wash. Go get some new ones. But like I spent money on this and I literally was like anxious. I was like, I hope anyway. So that's Dr. Harold Whitlock. Whitlock 11:11 is a... So he's the founder of Whitlock Industries, which is headquartered in Chicago. And he's known for designing modular upgrade systems for equipment. basically what his idea was, the idea, kind of like what we're doing with our headphones, like you said, you heard. His idea was everything we make, and they do... Hold on. 11:41 It sounds like, did you see this phone? I can't remember what it was called. Alex, you might remember, but in the mid 2010s, this phone came out, they were crowdsourcing it. And the concept of the phone was every component was a little block and you just plugged it into the phone. And so you had the screen and then you could just plug in the different blocks. And so if you wanted a lot of memory, you got a bigger memory block. If you wanted better speakers, you got a bigger speaker block. And for whatever you cared about. 12:09 you got the hardware for what you cared about. um And I think they ended up getting bought out and killed. Like I think like a big corporate, like a big phone corporation, just sidelined with the project. that's the whole thing is so like he was doing, he did like farm equipment and he did, they did. So my dad actually worked at a machinery shop and they made, they didn't make guns, but they made the little metal parts that go inside the guns. So with like, are you talking about bullets? Yeah. 12:39 No, like they made, they basically made a 75 % of like what an AK 47 would be, but like all the little metal parts because if you put it together as illegal, you can make it in parts and you can sell them parts. So no, but like they, you know, so there are things were universal gear assemblies, like ball joint connector packs, like different things. So the idea being from all of their products on, you know, uh farming equipment, small manufacturing equipment, machine shop equipment kind of stuff was the idea was if this breaks. 13:08 What we're talking about with that phone, you can replace just one part of it. You don't have to replace the entire thing, which as you're saying, is not, you are going to lose your mind. We need to acknowledge oh is not profitable. mean, it's profitable. It's profitable for the people making the replacement parts. No, no, no. Here's the thing. It's not, it's profitable. It's a good business, but it's not like it's not actually scalable the way that shareholders want things to be. 13:36 Right? um, and that was a big thing. keep, uh, and I've never, I'm, I'm glad you found this story because I, and I'm drawing a blank on his name right now, but we had a listener for a long time and I'm not sure if you still listen, but you'll know who you are. Uh, uh, kept recommending that we do the right to repair as an episode. And he worked in agriculture specifically about farming equipment. 14:05 and I looked into it a few times. that what this is? And I just could not find a storyline to make it an episode. But what is the right to repair? It's that if you own something, you should have the right to fix it instead of having to replace it. Yes, which is a big, it's a big issue in the farm world right now because all these products are getting put out that you literally can't fix. You have to replace. So that is the Whitlock philosophy. The Whitlock philosophy is that you should be able to repair and instead of have to replace the entire product is that 14:34 everything on this machine is designed that it's supposed to be unbelievably cheap to be able to repair these things so that you can buy one product and you can use that product for decades and just make minor repairs right so so Danny Hartwell obviously idolizes dr. Whitlock right like almost to an unhealthy degree like has posters of him has like like of that guy. mean yeah of that guy no, but I mean like like you know I yeah yeah he's on his wall. He's like I love this no, but you know what mean like he 15:03 talk about him. He's just saying he's laying in his bed at night. He's just like one day night night like luck, okay, up his cigarette, I would like joking, but not joking. That's how obsessed he is with this guy. Okay, right. So let's go into who dr. Wicclocke is. So dr. Roloc was born in nineteen forty six. He's a basically a child prodigy, kind of the same thing as dan. It's a really tinkering at a young age like my brother has that gene, whatever that is. My brother could 15:32 build computers and take things apart. m I have the creative, I don't have the mechanical brain. So he starts Whitlock Industries in 1978 in a rented warehouse. And his mission was to make machines last longer and work longer for the people who depend on them. Was his stated mission, right? And so, because a lot of what we're talking about, we've already covered this, but it's in my notes, but if you broke one part of your farm equipment, you had to replace the entire system. 15:59 there, right? And so Whitlock creates universal connector standards. So even like 20 year old machines could be upgraded for cheap. Okay. Right. And so he becomes a folk here. Rural communities love him. Farmers love him. Small manufacturing towns are like, this is perfect. This is literally like, yes. And so there is the upfront cost of converting to some of these machines, but he was also making back end products to upgrade your current, like you don't have to buy a Whitlock machine. You could, he could profit it for whatever your other thing was. Right. 16:29 And so around 2003, you know, Danny's 22 at that point, around 2003, Whitlock kind of isn't doing as many interviews anymore and isn't. He did like these not video series, but kind of like they put out these like promotional things. He was a very big, big character, big personality kind of guy and I like would have been what 57 then. Yeah. So, so not like it's not like he retired. 16:57 Right. And he just kind of started slowly disappear. He's not doing interviews anymore. He doesn't show up at product launches anymore. Like he used to be like, and he, and this was like one of those things where he was like the lovable guy. And he was kind of like the face of brand. Like he was always right. And so rumors were kind of going around that he was burnt out, that maybe he's like battling depression, that he's, you know, he's being pushed aside by the board and, the company insists that he is, he is deeply focused on research and that's why he's not being in the public anymore. 17:26 interesting, okay, but even employees who work there aren't seeing him as much anymore, which is weird, right? So um inter two thousand four, a younger executive named Victor Redden, which this is I don't even have to see him. This guy's a villain. I know he's a Victor. Oh, no, this guy is and this is like a life like gosh. This is the early form of so my mom and dad got wedding photos around this time whenever 17:55 Okay, first of all, look at how wet his hair looks. His hair is so wet. This is style, My dad did this. like and I did this like I see if I can find a picture of me when I was that. Let's see if I can. That's I he looks like he genuinely looks like and I always I always want to call this the show's not severance. It's the other show where it's like they're all like they're the rich family and they dress like that. They look like that and it's what it's not severance. I always want to call it severance. It starts with an S. 18:22 But ever since Severance came out, I just always think it's Severance. You watched it. I watched a little bit of it. I didn't make it very far. It was like an HBO show and something with a business. Do you remember what I'm talking about? Oh, succession succession. Yeah, that's what that's like a succession. to you. does. And like he just looks like that little smirk is gross. Oh, yeah. No, he looks slimy. And so this is Victor Redden and his hair looks funny. He's a he looks like a slimy person. 18:52 with slimy hair. This is the kind of guy, this is what we're talking about. Optimization is everything to this guy. And this is even like 2004, dude. This is like before the... He was early to the movement. Yes. And so I actually listened to a podcast this weekend about performative excellence. Do we talk about that on the phone? We talked about it on the phone, yeah. Performative excellence being that instead of like actually moving toward goals or doing work, a lot of these guys in the... 19:21 tech bro world. This guy's for sure looks like a finance bro like just freaking came out of what's McKinsey or so. I you know and just talks you know and his wife's name is Chelsea. He doesn't like her and uh but her dad was cool and rich and that's why he married her and I like to play golf with them. You know 19:50 Hey, thanks for listening to this episode of things. I learned last night. If you like this show, we would love to see in our Patreon. It's a great way to financially support the show. We don't make money from this. It just helps us to pay the people who do make money from this like Alex and Robert, her editor and maybe one day, one day me and Tim, maybe one day, know, but only if you join only if you join, can't wait. We can't get paid until you pay. Can't feed Tim's kid until you join. He's so 20:32 I was trying to find a picture of myself from that time anyway. It was in two thousand four. You know your hair would looked wet. That was like that was put hair gel in and it looked and it wasn't like like now like people use palmate and powders. So it like looks more natural, but then it was gel and it was his gel and it was supposed to look. It was hard, so thick and like hard yeah yeah. It was bad and that was the style. It looks so bad. So anyway, 20:59 so Victor Redden, he's a Harvard MBA. He's got a consultant background, so I wasn't kidding. And he's obsessed with efficiency. Yeah. Yeah. So he immediately starts shifting Whitlock Industries toward a more what he calls modern profitable model. Oh, no. Right. And so he cancels all affordable modular upgrade lines. Isn't that like the business though? Like what are they doing if because wasn't the business like everything is upgrades? Yes. But what his idea was, his thought was 21:28 was that now we have such a brand loyalty from these manufacturers and these farmers that we can now get them to upgrade to our new machines that they can't upgrade that that they can't fix what they didn't. I don't think they knew that at the time I think that's right. They expected so he calls it the red replacement initiative, which is full replacement products instead of parts. 21:55 I hate this guy so much already right, which forces people to buy expensive new models, which starts crushing low income customers and rural people right and so warranty policies start lock. How many how many Whitlock is primarily the farm equipment? It's manufacturing equipment and farm equipment, so I mean it was a pretty broad set of products and so I could give you an example like trackers or like I've never heard of like I've 22:22 I heard of John Deere. I played farming simulator. I don't know if I recognize a Whitlock tractor right so there's a W series modular gear kit. So let's see it was designed for midsize agricultural harvesters from 1988 to 2002 models replaced the entire transmission units for 40 % of the cost. Do we have Whitlock like unit link three point one interface hub like this is all you know I'm talking about this is all actually retrofit. 22:50 so like this is for hydraulic presses look up here. I'm going to look up wit lock. No, don't look up stuff. I want to see like the tractors though. Okay, do I? I'm really, I don't think they have wit lock tractors. Let me do the story later. 23:10 I just I don't think they were putting out like they're putting out conversion kits, but now they're putting out instead. So it basically is like instead of refurbishing this or replacing this one small part of the element like so like say for example, there's a coupling system. See, you're asking me questions that don't. Now I understand I'm too deep into the stuff. Well, I want to know. I just want to know if I know these charges for far. You don't know that they don't make tractors. They make harvesters. They make parts for harvesters. Okay, 23:40 but now or the more we say wet like the more I'm like maybe there was a wet lock and maybe there is looking up after this anyway, kids, not thinking about I'm that like so they changed like warranty language. The parts that were twelve dollars are now unavailable entirely kind of situation that happened to me the other day and by the other day, I mean a few years ago, the are the pump in our fridge water 24:11 dispenser uh broke ah because I was replacing it and I I took a new wrong a little too hard. Yeah, so the thing broke just out of nowhere. It broke and it was well because I was working on it. The hose broke. I wasn't working on it because it was broke the hose. It was broke because I was working on the hose sprung a leak. There was like a little tear and I replaced the hose and when I was taking it off 24:38 I didn't realize the type of connector on it. And so I was just like, let me just take a wrench to it and just get it off. And I got it off and I broke the pump. And so I went to try to replace that though, and you can't get that pump. And so our fridge, water dispenser just didn't work until we replaced the fridge. I had to replace the whole fridge to get the water dispenser to work. And I didn't do that until the fridge So more of what they're doing is less like full like product replacement and more, like for that example, 25:08 is that they used to make things and design things so you could replace that one sealant spot, but now you would have to replace maybe not the whole fridge, but at least the entire hose, that entire, yeah, that entire part of the whole, the whole assembly. Yes, yeah, and so that's what I mean is like there's not like a wit lock refrigerator. don't maybe there is, but I mean like those kind of repairs, right? Yeah, so this brings us back to Danny who around this time, 2004 as Redden has taken over 25:35 and is starting to do all these changes. Danny doesn't really know about that because it's not like his major news, but he's obsessed with Dr. Whitlock. And Danny has been for his entire life. And going to these conferences expecting to see Dr. Whitlock and he's not there and he's like, where is Whitlock? Where is Whitlock? Where is Whitlock? Dry your hair. uh He's in the crowd echoing him. 25:58 Dry your hair. Dry your hair, you wet loser. hair looks so wet. Dude, that's the thing about these efficiency guys. It's the same thing as Brian Johnson. Why are you so wet? So Danny creates a compact multi press joint, basically a universal connection hub for small tools. 26:21 and and he's been trying to sell this around a small town and a couple people have said like man, this is a really good product like you should take this to Whitlock yeah because there was still like a little bit of an idea of like I can just show up at Whitlock yeah and try to apply for and that's how and a small Indiana brain was like I can just go to Chicago yeah, so that's what he does. 26:42 So Danny takes a greyhound to Chicago, a backpack full of parts, hundred and fourteen dollars in cash and he expects to a hundred and fourteen dollars in cash. Just you know he's got that's like us going on tour when we were nineteen. We said that bag of cash we took. We we were gone for thirty days. We spent thirty days on the road and I think between the two of us, we left with two hundred bucks. Yeah, we like this will be enough and you know what it was. was enough. We made it through 27:12 that is the craziest part of that story. I how we did that. We ended up getting through the God we did us. We did. Was it Houston? That guy was like Dallas. I remember him for all of my life. He's like he's like he's like hey. I think God just told me to fill up your gas tank and then he filled it up yeah and fill up our gas and then he also told us that he goes yeah. I just got a large inheritance. I'm set for life and we were like did it okay, okay, good happy for you man cool man. 27:39 Thank you for the gas. Yeah, can you actually buy us something else? Yeah, did you buy some? I was drinking a lot of monster energy drinks that I think about the food we ate on that run. That's what sucks. That's the stuff that I'm like how did insane and here's the thing and I'm not trying to be gross. Where did we poop? I don't remember any. I what I I think we did thirty days and I don't think I move 28:04 what I remember clearly though. I do remember this so clearly. We packed up that bus. We had all the gear for the show. We had our suitcases and not exaggerating, not twelve packs, but like cases, cases of like twenty four packs of I think four cases of bah, ha, blast, ha, blast baby and it just come out finished that before like 28:26 hundreds of Bob, so it was. mean I and I was like and I was a person who was like why am I four hundred? I could not figure it out, could not figure it out. So yeah, so days guy we were. They were the same age as Danny at this point. Danny's like three, so we were a little younger, bright eyed. We were twenty bushy years like I'm gonna go meet Doctor Whitlock. Yeah, you know, so he shows up to headquarters, which this is their headquarters. Pretty cool building honestly. 28:53 villainous. It is a little well when that is one of the red in perspective, maybe but like it is a if you look at it with hope, you know what I'm about. So that's in Chicago and ah and so he shows up. He's just like yeah, I've got a thing I invented yeah and security is like no get out. goes. Can I meet with Dr Whitlock and they were like no and I don't know. We lock's dead 29:21 And it almost... Here's the thing about Danny. Danny's pretty perspective, because he's in the lobby and he's one of those guys that he was planning on sitting in the lobby and he was just like, okay, I'll just wait. And he's like, I'll just wait for him to leave. But he does notice that the security team, when he was like, hey, can I just have a meeting with Dr. Wirtlick? And they literally were like, do you have an appointment? People don't meet with Not like people don't meet with him. They were like... He's not here. 29:49 that's the vibe that Danny was like what he and they were like yeah, he works off site now and Danny was like where he got he got repaired so Danny's he he just has this like sixth sense where he's just kind of like something's off right. There's a strange vibe. The employees look like they don't they're not supposed to talk to people in the lobby. You I'm not where he's just like he's like people are avoiding me. I'm trying to be like hey and they're like yeah and like 30:20 or he looked like a farmer who took a bus to Chicago or he looked like or they were like they were doing this whole day. like don't he had a bunch of like metal sticking out his backpack and people like I think that's a bomb, but he does go to like the coffee shop inside the thing and he he meets a girl, a woman, I guess who's around his age, yeah, Carolyn price, okay and 30:45 He's because he's trying to ask random people how because he's yeah, he's if there's one thing he's taking a Greyhound bus He's gonna be dark. Yeah. Yeah, you know, kind of waste that piece and he's trying so he's talking to Carolyn and you know She's having her coffee on her break. He finally get she says this she says you didn't hear this from me, but things are Not what they're looking like right now this company this company is doing a really weird shift and she says because one of the guys like I can get you meeting with Redden and he was like, that would be awesome. and then she says 31:16 you shouldn't take that meeting interest. don't. shouldn't trust this guy, which first of all again, can't trust that guy, can't trust that guy and trust that guy, can't trust that guy, not trust. Well, so so you know, and he leaves there with a little bit of crush on Carolyn because she was cute and she was the only person to talk to him. I think that's like the rules. If you're from a small town in Indiana, it doesn't take a lot for you to fall in love with somebody yeah and it didn't take a lot for me. I mean I that was I was like that 31:42 Yeah, well, I any girl who talked to me. I was like that's my wife. I think I mean you she acknowledged me. You leave you leave that small town where you knew literally every woman and then we go that's true out and then a woman talks to you and you're like that's true. She's into me so so Danny leaves feeling we just got a lot to get to. I'm trying to get to it, so he leaves feeling frustrated and he actually starts going to different shops around town. Okay, 32:09 um and just trying to different like maintenance shops and trying to you know show them his new okay, so he's going to like ace hardware being like look what I made yeah, but he's hardware is like a company he's going to like man, pa yeah he's going to mom, pa shops trying to to gauge interest in all this stuff and he meets a guy named Frankie Delgado now Frankie. It was a cool name right. He's got a blot have a he's going to blow up Victor, but we can imagine what Frankie Delgado might look like 32:38 and uh in Frankie, he starts telling him how do you he got this weird sense at the thing and Frankie goes. I know where Dr. Woodlock is, which is crazy, and this is a small town guy who's just like where is he take me to him? You know, so Frankie takes him to the South Bridge area where scrappers sort out old industrial parts. Okay, right, 33:04 and ah he shows Danny these piles of Whitlock upgrade kits that are brand new upgrade kits that have been seized. so he Frankie describes to Danny what's happening is that not only have they discontinued those products, but they are actively going on to the resell market and scry in the products back and melting them down, getting rid of them so that they can't exist. I hate Victor. 33:32 Right. I hate Victor Redden is awful. And so frankly, Frankie explains that the Reddens run that facility and that the person who runs that facility is actually Victor's mom, Agnes. Oh, so Victor's mom. Okay. So Victor's mom was like, we got to melt some more stuff. We're running out of stuff to melt. And Victor's like, I got an idea, mom. I'll go work for the place that makes a bunch of stuff and we'll bring it over here. So we'll just pollute together on this. Right. And then they, they go back to their little melting factory. 34:02 at night and they wear their little masks in their costumes and they all stand around the fire and they're like no actually more like melt, melt, melt, melt, and then they drop a little little tractor component in there and so and then we're like yeah. 34:31 Oh boy, am I sick? I sure do need Tim stones. Get well quick trick. And what is it? It's simply chug an entire gallon of orange juice. Wow. I forgot. And then this shirt reminded me, I'm so glad that I have this shirt as a public service announcement, a public health service to other people around me. Do your part. Get this shirt. 35:00 shop.tilland.com. 35:07 weird family. They love it though. They love it though. So ah so Frankie kind of breaks down the game to him and says this is what they're doing. Okay. And it sounds a little bit conspiracy stuff, but it is a little bit like that's what they're doing. Yeah. Right. And so ah so Frankie says, listen, Whitlock's not in the office. He's not missing. He's hiding because he claims a Whitlock is living out of his old research annex. Why is he hiding? 35:38 So Danny says, can you get me a meeting with him? Yeah, and so Frankie takes into like this, you know, graffiti building. Is it really? It's almost like what we were at in the West bottoms, like an old place, right? When I say graffiti, like it's, it's not like a toy, it's the West bottoms, you know? And ah and he takes him, it looks like people shouldn't live there ah and uh they sneak inside this half open loading doc door. 36:08 And the place is cluttered with half-finished prototypes and old sketches and all this stuff. And there they find Harold Whitlock living in this rundown building. so what with? Does Whitlock have a family? Whitlock committed his whole life to this company. Wow. So he's not married. Wow. And this is his passion. And this is like, they find him, he's not homeless. This is not like a, you know. Well, this is a home. 36:37 that's what I'm saying. Like he's but it's not like he's like living in a shack. I'm saying it's like it's like if he lived in our west bottom studio, it's like there's like got a little apartment. He put together a little apartment. He's there. He's probably getting taken care of by the company at least a little bit like he's not, but he is not involved in the company at all. We're that he's just and it's almost like he's having this like I don't want to call it like a depression thing, but he is fully uh reverting back to the beginning of his company where he's just like yeah, I'm just back tinkering. I'm doing 37:06 just trying to invent a new thing, just trying to, you And he's just like, this is what we're doing. And so he says that he was forced out after arguing with Victor about the company's mission and that the board forced him and that they pressured him to retire for the optics and that this was a great time. And then once he retires, the stock is going to go up because we got fresh young people in. public company? Yes. Okay. And so Victor and Agnes have been planning that shift for years, apparently. 37:32 And Whitlock has this mental breakdown and retreats to his little place. And he says, and one of the things that Danny said is that he was so heartbroken that Dr. Whitlock said, I didn't think anybody needed me anymore. And so Danny then shows Whitlock what, and Whitlock was convinced that Victor Redden was like a young guy. 37:57 who was going to continue the mission. It was just going to update, like bring the new technology into things. And so Danny says, Hey, hey, look what they're doing. Look how wet he is. This is look how wet that guy is. And Whitlock was like, Oh my gosh, you're right. What? I never saw it before. He tells him how people back home in Indiana are suffering because these price, these price increases and that this is going to cause this entire industry. 38:25 Yes, of course, Whitlock Industries will make money, but this is going to cause a lot of disruption. Is this a true story? Yeah. This feels like a setup for like a, mean, honestly, like an early 2000s buddy comedy where these two became buddies and now they're going to take down Victor Redden. Like now the whole movie is they're going to take him down. Like that's what this feels like we're setting up. I don't think you're going like the way this ends. Great. 38:50 Well, maybe, I don't know. Let's go for it then, huh? Because Whitlock still owns 37 % of the shares. Yeah. Which is a pretty... That's a majority stake. Probably a majority. Right. Yeah. And uh I think Victor assumed after the mental break that he wouldn't show up again. Yeah. Right? And so Danny does kind of help him snap out of the stuff and like... 39:12 it and this is all we're condensed. This is like two days right take some debt back down to the any ends up living in Chicago for like a full year. It's you know like I wonder what he's going to know. He just moved essentially right. He moved to Chicago and and this is like after months of spending time. It is a little bit like a buddy coming I guess because like they really did like become close. Yeah, there's like the super cut of them and in the warehouse or like take around with stuff things together afraid and they're like 39:40 put things to bomb bomb bomb, I'm like walking the streets of Chicago yeah, nice cream ice with their components of course, and then they've invented a new thing that holds their ice cream, so that it's not like melted and it catches the ice cream when it falls off that's crazy. So here's the thing he does convince them over this full year that there is a board meeting coming up yeah and Danny does convince Whitlock that he can go into that board meeting and he can he says 40:09 you're like it was almost like you know Whitlock's this old guy who just got pushed around by the board and didn't realize like oh wait, I do have power here, you know, because he doesn't have a wife at home or kids to be like dad, don't let him treat you like that. Yeah, yeah and so Danny kind of becomes like the voice is like you can't like just let them steamroll you like this and so so Whitlock shows up to the board unannounced to this board meeting and Victor tries to spin it. He goes, he goes Victor straight up in front of the board is like this guy is unwell. 40:39 that there's a reason that he's been he's been we voted him out he's uh he's clearly had a mental breakdown right. Whitlock gives this I don't want to say like incredible speech, but like he talks and says I built this company to help people who could not afford these new machines and what you're doing is putting them in a position where we're going to make a lot of money here and you're going to make a lot of money here, but we're going to destroy these small businesses and so the board breaks out in the panamonia. 41:07 You know, shareholders are furious about the deception. Several board members turn on Victor instantly, but some of them are like loyalists, right? And so Whitlock calls for an emergency vote to remove Victor as CEO. Nice. Which it passes. Nice. Yes. Yeah. And, and Whitlock was reinstated permanently. And so Whitlock restores the upgrade program within six months. 41:28 turns the company around, he issues a public apology for disappearing, and he launches a new community program giving discounted parts to those small shops that were affected by those upgrades. And so he also puts in a new warranty that's like, hey, listen, we'll fix whatever. Like if you bought these new machines, like you're not going to have any more expenses past that. yeah, good God. And he hired him as a, he hired Danny as a junior engineer at the company. So a junior straight up. I don't know. 41:56 Thank you for being a junior engineer. Right. This whole thing was just an elaborate recruitment ploy to get Danny on the payroll. They were like, there's a really young inventor. It looks really smart. And I mean, like, you know, Danny gets hired. It's great. I'm so nervous right now. What do you mean you're so I just I just feel like I just feel like it's going to drop. Like I feel like you're going to pull the rug out from underneath me. Woodlock is going to get shot in the street and Victor take the company over. 42:23 Well, I was saying like it's a happy ending because Danny did start working at the company and like gets to actually in fact change and also like he and Carolyn got married or whatever. We can say whatever we can say or whatever, because here's the thing about this story. It's here's the thing about this story is that it's not true. In fact, Tim, I need you look at the screen. This is just the plot to the two thousand five animated movie robots. 43:09 So Danny Hartwell is Rodney Copperbottom Dr. Hill Whitlock is big weld. 43:19 Oh my gosh! 43:24 So these are AI images! All those weird AI images! I clocked it! These are all AI images! 43:33 you said give me a wet CEO. Well, I mean look at like what here's every full of a picture of what this is what the bad guy uh and you said make this a human. said give me a two thousand four corporate head shot of this guy. Oh my God turned into a steer. That is insane. So oh yeah, these are all AI. I literally 44:02 because I because I thought that even with victor's I was like it's like this. This also looks a little AI, but not as much as the rest of these. This is a I do that bill doesn't exist. Yeah, that is very ominous. It does. It didn't seem like a weird fish islands, so I clocked this new day when you were like when you were first of all you were like these are AI images. I was like oh no and then you're like this sounds like a early two thousands buddy comedy and I was like oh no, no, 44:29 dang so crazy. That's I didn't realize April Fools man, how much the plot of the movie it's called robots robots. Yeah, I didn't. I watched it when it came out. I remember that movie coming out, but as a child, I guess I didn't connect that this is like actually like accurate. have the worst movie yeah it's. I mean it's phenomenal. I actually re watched it this year. This is why I wanted to do this. So I re watched the movie one night and uh it first of all, do you do you know who voices the 44:57 you remember who voices the red guy now Robin Williams is in this. Oh really, I know the red guy is Finder. It's Frankie Dogado. That's in our story. um Did you have a make up those days? Did you come up with this? Oh, I is that a I make up all the names. I give me a retelling of this ah yeah, so yeah, that's I would have looked up Whitlock Industries. That's was like the of the company. It wouldn't pull up anything. I was not the name of the company 45:27 it's not here. I don't know because big weld is the is the yeah. I was sitting there. I was sitting there. I was like with log industries. I was like maybe I have seen that in farming simulator and I was like kind of convincing myself. I was like you know what? There are harvesters and harming simulator called woodlock harvesters. I'm so glad that worked. That's crazy. Oh no, it's interesting. It's interesting because it does. It does make you like 45:52 we we had these recommendations to talk about the right to repair concept right right and how like everything you're saying is a real problem for farmers right now. Yes, but there is no there is no positive stories of people defeating it is the problem yeah and that and that's the problem and not to crash out, but like when we talk about like public companies like what happened in this fake story where the board is like hey. If we keep making products, then we allow people to repair them are 46:22 our revenue numbers can't go up every quarter. Exactly like we can still be a profitable company. We can still be a successful company, but our revenues doesn't go up every quarter. And that's the point. So you're a public company. The other thing too, like the subscription model that most things have changed to is that the the incentive for a company is no longer to make a better product to make more money. The idea isn't let's put an upgrade that no other competition has so that we are better than other people. Yeah, it's almost with Adobe specifically and I'll call him out. I don't care. Yeah. 46:51 like the premier in Photoshop is a seventy dollar a month subscription yeah that used to be forty thirty nine ninety nine by the way yeah and well used to be seventy dollars one time. It was never seven. It was like five hundred dollars for Photoshop. You had to you know, but now I'm paying seven eight hundred dollars a year yeah yeah for what I would have paid one time as well. Yeah and it used to be like yeah they'd come out with a new version every couple years and it would be better than the last version or whatever it and now getting 47:21 it's a subscription model that now they're more incentivized not to make a better product, which they're making. It's fine, but it's not like it's better than Da Vinci or and but they are incentivized more to make it so that you can't unsubscribe. Yes, yeah, they're making it so that's like okay. Well, these files you can't open in Da Vinci. Yeah, yeah, can't open all of your previous stuff. They make it and that's what saying is like. They make the cost of switching higher 47:50 rather than making the the good of the product better or like I think the Sims for I don't know if you played the sims games. It's the same. Yeah, sims for the whole. They removed no for real. Oh yeah, it's like Sims for uh Sims for removed a bunch of features that came with Sims three and then you had to pay expansion packs to get those feature and so you buy a sixty dollar game. 48:15 but then to get even just the same amount of features you had three, you'd have to spend another sixty dollars on expansion. That's what we talked about. We did a whole episode on micro transactions yeah yeah and maybe that's an episode that we referenced for this is that hey at the end of this go watch micro transactions because it's exactly that where it's like let's make the game free but in order to actually win this game you do have to spend a bunch of money over and over and over you would have if they just had a normal and that so there's a there's a book that I was getting ready to buy um 48:45 the extraction economy, yeah, where that that's what he's talking about. Yep is that it's where it's just built to extract as much. You're a crash out about that nurse thing yeah crash out about that. Oh my gosh, I didn't know about this. I find out about this this past week is that they're company called. Do know what that come? have no idea. Um, it's a week. We can just call it a data come. It's just a data company. We don't nurse payment algorithm. Let's see. Um, so the way that they're doing 49:15 paying for travel nurses is that there's an every you should say not everyone, not everyone. There's people who use this who use this service. The company is that this data company has uh access to credit scores and it can see what someone's debt to income ratio is and then it can figure out you know what's the lowest amount we could pay this person that they have to say yes to this because because they can't make less than this a month. They have to pay their debts back. 49:43 Yeah, and so it's an algorithm that figures out what's the lowest amount we can pay them that they're there now because they're desperate enough for that, which is and and you should know hell that's crazy that that is there because because they're just trying to figure out what's the lowest we could pay you that you could pay your debts, but you can't put any away for savings. Yeah, yeah, you have to say yes to this because there's no other option. Yeah, yeah, you can actually like that life that sucks risks than losing you as an asset. 50:12 and also oh my gosh, spend more for and we and that's the whole thing is that so many of these things have moved to an extraction model where it's like yeah it's like that movie was two thousand and five yeah that's twenty years ago and the point of that movie was like hey they're making it so that we can't repair and replace the things or like the HP printer subscription stuff insane that we live in this world so so anyway. 50:36 Yes, it was robots the whole time. That's hilarious. Do you want to talk about that paper? You said you were going talk about that. Oh, I was going to talk about that with that with the optimization guy. Yeah, there was a there was a 50:44 college paper. Maybe we'll just read that in the after the fiddle. Okay, yeah, how about with that? Let's do that. So the after the fiddle is what our patreon supporters get. You could support us on patreon. You get next week's episode and you get bonus content every single week. We after the fiddle music plays, we keep talking for a couple minutes and you get that content and so sometimes it's three minutes. Sometimes it's twenty. Who knows depends how much more we crash out of us. No, but please go check out the micro transactions episode and it also one again. My shows Paul read the actor dot com 51:11 I've been doing a lot of shows and till and fans show up. It's really cool because you get to meet each other and also get to meet me, which is fun for all of us. No for real. That's great. Thank you for being here. We'll see you next week.


In today’s world, many of the products we rely on are becoming harder—and sometimes impossible—to fix. From farm equipment to electronics, companies are quietly shifting how things are made and maintained. At the center of this issue is a growing debate between the right to repair and what many call corporate greed. This isn’t just a technical issue. It affects … Read More