Episode Transcript
[00:00:09] All right, we're back. Episode 14 I'm by myself. I'm doing the damn thing alone today. I kind of like doing these alone, honestly. I'm, like, kind of into it. There's something a little. There's something cool about it. You know, There are times where I kind of hate the sound of my own voice, but I don't know, like, just talking to.
[00:00:28] To the.
[00:00:30] The unknown is kind of cool, but there's a lot been going on. Lot been going on. We. We bombed Iran. That was. That was fun to read about.
[00:00:40] It seems to be the only thing anyone wants to talk about. So, I mean. And I guess, I mean, part of me really doesn't want to talk about it, and the other part of me is like, well, I mean, it is happening. And I don't know, it's. It's one of those things where I kind of like, you know what? Hey, US had to show its balls. Which I'm like, you know, I'm patriotic as fuck.
[00:01:02] And then there's a part of me that's like, oh, what's gonna happen next? You know, everyone's talking about, oh, World War Three, World War Three. And for a second there, I got a little. A little nervous. I was like, oh, what's gonna happen? Then I realized, what the fuck am I getting nervous about?
[00:01:16] People have been saying that World War Three is gonna happen for the last, you know, 70 years.
[00:01:22] You know, kids would hide under their desk during the Cold War and. And do. Practicing for. For nuclear, you know, nuclear bombs in schools. So, like, when my dad was in school, they were. They were worrying about nuclear war. This is like, nothing is new.
[00:01:35] You know, maybe I'm just older and I'm like, okay, you know, thing. I'm just able to listen to it a little better because I have, you know, my brain is slightly more mature.
[00:01:48] But I don't know, man. I'm like, you know, everyone's like, we're now at war.
[00:01:55] We've been at war. We've been funding two of them.
[00:01:59] You know, it's funny because the fucking liberals are like, oh, no, we can't fund Israel, but we can fund Ukraine. And it's like, we're still funding a war. Like, what are you talking about? What are you talking about? That makes no sense. You know, it's like, oh, because you think that this is the good guys.
[00:02:15] Be real. The government's the government, and I love America, and I'll always stand by, you know, at least as long as I think they're doing the right Thing which, for the most part, I do. I do think that there's obviously some shifty shit always happening, and I don't. I don't trust the government, but it's the best one that I know of, so I'm kind of just, alright, well, then it is what it is.
[00:02:37] You know, the United States has kind of been, like, slightly. A little bit like. Like, you know, for the last couple years. Last for a while.
[00:02:46] And it's like, we are, you know, you.
[00:02:50] It was. It's. It. There was a part of me that was like, this is nice to know that, like, all right, we shouldn't be with. And I think that's a safe feeling. I mean, it kind of can open a can of worms of, like, who can come here? But I don't know, man. Like, the people that are so against it are the same people that are like, we need to keep funding Ukraine. And I'm like, that you don't.
[00:03:08] That is so hypocritical. It's so hypocritical.
[00:03:12] And I. I think that it's like we pick and choose when we want to. You know, when violence is okay, because there are people in Russia, there are, you know, the young men who are dying, it's okay for them to die, but not someone else. You know what I mean? Doesn't seem to make much sense to me.
[00:03:33] And, you know, I just. It boggles my mind, this whole. This whole thing.
[00:03:39] Now Trump's up for a Nobel Peace Prize, which is pretty crazy, because if he. If he. If he ends up, like, stopping this, a lot of people are gonna feel pretty stupid.
[00:03:51] So I'm excited to see what happens, but I'm also a little tired of it. A lot of comedians are talking about it, and I'm like, when. When it's this big, it's very hard for me to just be, like, start writing jokes about it, because it's. Everyone's doing it, and I just kind of get sick of.
[00:04:06] Was like, when Trump got elected, that's all comedians would talk about. It was just Trump forever. And I was like, please, all right. Like, shut the up. It's not funny anymore. You know, it's. It's. It's like, we got it.
[00:04:17] So.
[00:04:18] Yeah, man, I don't know. I just think getting personal on stage, like, if you're gonna go there, I think getting personal is the best thing you could do. It's the best thing you can do, and I think it's the most relatable. And it's funny because a lot of Times I'll think this too, where I'll go, ah, no one wants to hear that story. Nah, it's about me. It only pertains to me. Only my friends will think it's funny.
[00:04:42] But if it's a funny story and it's about you and you're able to get vulnerable, then I think that's what people will want.
[00:04:49] I think that it's not. I think I've seen it, I've seen it happen.
[00:04:53] You know, it doesn't even have, it doesn't even need to be like the most punchy joke with like these hot punch lines. It's.
[00:04:59] You just see people going, oh, he's being, wow. He's actually talking about, I have a fucking crazy story too. Oh my God, I never wanted to talk about it. And you see the audience kind of shift forward in their chairs and they want to hear more.
[00:05:12] You know, good joke is great. But getting personal, I think it's like, who the are you? You know, who are you? And I think that's what people love to see, like the real you. That's why like they say finding your voice is important on stage because people want to know who this guy is, you know, so, yeah, and I, I, once I started getting personal, it just, things started to feel easier, you know, it's like, yeah, I'll talk about it, whatever. I'll talk about this crazy shit. And if it makes me look like a fool, that's sometimes almost even better because then it shows the audience that you're not a total prick. Which a lot of times people think I am, but you know, I mean, I do like to talk about, I think it's fun to talk about things that are happening in the news. I think it's more fun if it's like a.
[00:06:03] I don't want to say local news, but like I've been reading a lot about these, these teachers, a lot of female teachers. I don't know what's going on in the world, but these female teachers who are just constantly trying to. These teenagers. You see like a 26 year old teacher that like sent like 30 nudes to like 6 different students or like have been having full on relationships with these kids.
[00:06:26] And I think it's, it's funny in its own way. It's sick and twisted, like there's something seriously wrong. But like it is kind of fucking funny. Like, you know, like, what happened? What happened to you?
[00:06:41] And I don't know, I think I've been thinking a lot about this.
[00:06:48] It's wild that we still have school shootings. With the amount of teachers that are trying to fuck these kids, like, if these teachers just fucked more incels, we could really handle this problem.
[00:07:00] I've been thinking about it. I'm trying to get a joke out of it, and I think maybe that's it, but we could. Like, we should be keeping these teachers in the circulation of the school system and just finding a way to get them in the classes with the nerdiest kids, the ones who you're most concerned about, who are most at risk of possibly going into their father's closet and bringing an AK47 to school. Get those kids all in one class, have this one teacher just fuck all of them, and then these kids will be fine. They'll be fine. They won't want to shoot anybody. Let's get them. Let's make a school strictly for incel kids and just have all the teachers work there, you know, have one of them be a guidance counselor and like, look, you'll be fine. Just go down on me and we got it.
[00:07:44] That's what I think about. That's. That's. I'm not thinking about Iran that much. I'm thinking about how we can handle this internal terrorism problem that we have.
[00:07:54] I'm feeling. Feeling silly today. So I. I don't know. That's. That's where my head goes. It's. It's really.
[00:08:01] Something must have happened to me too.
[00:08:03] But, yeah, I think that that's the. The news is starting to fry everyone's brain and I. I don't know. I just. Young people are so concerned with politics.
[00:08:17] I don't. I get it. It's good to be informed. But.
[00:08:21] I don't know, when I was in my early 20s and late teens, I was. Just wanted to have fun. I just wanted. I still want to just have fun. I still want to have a great time. We're lucky enough to be born in this fucking country where you have the freedom to pretty much do whatever you want.
[00:08:37] And I get it. Like, you want the right people in charge, but I don't know, man. I just.
[00:08:43] I think everyone's just got brain rot from Instagram and tick tock and trying to just. Everyone's trying to save the world.
[00:08:52] It's like, we're gonna. We're gonna be dead soon, so you may as well just, like, you know, act accordingly. We're all heading to the same place, and maybe that's morbid and to say, like, oh, there's. There's nothing we can really do with, like, you know, what's going on behind the scenes. But I don't know, just kind of try to have fun. Don't take life so seriously.
[00:09:13] I used to take life very seriously when I was younger. This is a grumpy fucking asshole.
[00:09:19] And the last couple years, I just.
[00:09:23] I don't know, I let go.
[00:09:25] I just let go. And I'm kind of.
[00:09:28] Everyone's just wound up.
[00:09:30] And I think the. The more wound up you are, the less you're able to think properly, the less you're gonna listen to your gut. Because I think where. I mean, human beings are still animals, you know, that animal instinct, we've. We've almost completely lost it.
[00:09:44] And it's so important. Like, that feeling in your gut is always fucking right. It's. It's there for a reason. It's your instinct kicking in, going, this isn't right here.
[00:09:55] And so many people, it's such a rusty muscle that no one ever listens to it. They go with the group. They go with. They don't want to be outcast by somebody because they're worried that, you know, everyone wants to be liked. Everyone wants to be so good. Now, like, sometimes you gotta look like a.
[00:10:14] To stick to your guns. And if you're wrong, you know what you do? You admit you're wrong and you move on. And if you're around the right people, don't go, okay, yeah, no problem. You were wrong and you move forward.
[00:10:25] But this victim mentality of like, I gotta be good because it's the right thing to do. Well, sometimes people are.
[00:10:33] And the right thing to do is to stick to your guns. And if you don't trust that someone's being genuine, then you should call somebody out.
[00:10:43] Not like, you know, humiliate someone. But I don't know.
[00:10:47] And I think with this Chat GPT now I'm. So that's been my main. Like, my head has been wrapped around this chat GPT thing so much because I've been reading these. These studies that MIT has been doing and just different articles about Chat GPT about. There's one article about a guy about like, I guess some scientists were like having. Trying to have chat like this specific AI shut down and it figured out a way to override that so it wouldn't quote, unquote, I guess, die.
[00:11:21] It found out a way like this thing is probably already sentient. Like it has to be. And we, we're just too dumb to realize it. We think we can control everything, but it's. It's. I truly think gonna be the demise of humans. And I think it's already in the process.
[00:11:36] Whether it takes over, you know, ends up owning us in a certain way or another, I don't know. But I can tell you based on what I'm reading, based on my gut, you could see there's studies saying that people's, that the, the neurological, like the, the brain power is, is being, is atrophying.
[00:11:56] Like they had people fill out like do SAT essays with chat GPT and others without it. And over time, the people that were using chat GPT regularly, whether it was for essays or writing emails or whatever, you, we, we found that their, the critical thinking skill that we have was starting to just, was atrophying.
[00:12:19] And that to me was just so scary because I, I'm not the smartest guy. In fact, I don't think I'm that smart at all.
[00:12:26] I think I have a decent common sense. But like my critical thinking is the only thing that I believe is like the only power I have of me questioning, wait a second or me going, I can use my brain for this. Let me think about this for a minute. Let me sit with this. And I think when you start taking that away and you allow something to do that, then you're, you're taking away the thing that makes you most human. The thing that makes us, what makes us human, I think, is when you question someone, when you go, is this good? Is this bad? What is this?
[00:12:58] We're able to sort of sit. We were able to do that as a species. And I think having ChatGPT do everything, like, yes, it's a tool. Like if a hammer is a tool, you can use it to build a house or you can use it to kill someone. It depends on how you see it, you know, or how you want to use that tool. And I think, yes, there should be ways to use it. But I just, I don't know, I have a bad feeling about this. I think people are going to go that route every time. Like, ah, let me have chat GPT write the email, let me have chat GPT figure this out. And I don't think that that is healthy.
[00:13:34] I know it saves time. I understand that and I know that people, you know, it's great if you could save time with something. I think that's a, that's a really, that's beneficial. You're able to do other things. But let's be real, how many things? Like the average human being, if they're using chat GPT to do something, they're gonna use that extra time that they have to sit on their phone and scroll. Anyway, I don't think that anyone's really using their time that fucking wisely. You know what I mean?
[00:14:00] So I see the benefits of it, I really do. But I just.
[00:14:07] I like to be creative. I like to think and I don't, you know, especially for someone like myself, I love to write and like to have something else write for me. You could feel, and they were saying in some of the studies, like they were reading some of these essays and they could feel that there was no soul in it, there was no heart. Sure, they used big vocabulary, but there was. The human essence of it was missing. And as a human being, you can pick up on that. When you read something, you can like, you just know that a human wrote this or didn't.
[00:14:40] And that's the part that scares me. Cuz, like is chat GPT. Yeah. Can it make a cool, funny film? I'm guess. But like, can it write a good story? I guess so. But is it gonna write a great novel, like a Jack Kerouac novel or. Or a Charles Bukowski where you could feel the human experience?
[00:15:01] No, I don't think so. Is it gonna make, you know, great art? And in that movie, iRobot with Will Smith, I don't know if anyone's ever seen it.
[00:15:10] You watch it and like Will Smith asks the robot, he's like, has. Can a robot make a wonder a beautiful piece of art? And the robot asks, can you? And not all humans can. And then you see the robot paint this incredible picture, but it's just not the same.
[00:15:27] And it freaks me out a little bit because I love art, I love. I love creative things, I love reading, I love movies, I love fucking comedy, I love all this stuff.
[00:15:37] And the thing is, is that most of the world loves money.
[00:15:43] And that's the. That's the route we're gonna go every time.
[00:15:47] And it's like, I just, I think, I think we're just. We're shooting ourselves in the foot here and I don't know, I kind of like, I was having a conversation with someone about this and I was like, you know, like, when Facebook first came out, a lot of our parents were like, oh, what's this? Like, there were people who wanted to learn about it and get on there, and there were people who were like, yeah, fuck it. And they became outdated, not learning how to be on Facebook or social media.
[00:16:14] And it's like right now I feel like my generation, our generation, if they're millennials listening people in their 30s, you ask yourself that question and you go, well, am I going to be the outdated like thing when in 10 years if I don't learn how to use this?
[00:16:31] And that's a rational fear to have. I think you don't want to become obsolete.
[00:16:36] But at the same time my gut is going like, I think I'd rather, I think I'd rather because I think I'd be a more a well rounded person in 10 years than the people who are using it.
[00:16:46] And I could be wrong, I could be very wrong and I could just end up looking like a idiot who didn't, didn't grow with the times or change with the times.
[00:16:54] But I don't know, I just, I, I, my, my, my, my gut's telling me go that way and like stay the, away from this thing. And I have, I don't use Chat GPT. I've used it to make some posters sometimes for visual effects because I really don't know how to do that and I don't have the money to pay somebody right now like for, you know, comedy posters.
[00:17:16] But I don't use it otherwise. I maybe used it a couple of handful of times. I never use it. I don't ask it questions, I don't talk to it. And I had a friend, a fucking wild thing, he said to me, he goes, I use this thing. He goes, I kind of use Chat GPT as a therapist.
[00:17:32] And I was like, what? I'm like, what the fuck are you talking about? He goes, yeah, you know, I kind of ask you questions and, and he makes me feel better. I say, well, he, he makes you feel better? I was like, what the, what are you, what's happening right now? It's not a he, it's not a she, it's an it, it's not a, it's a thing.
[00:17:48] And I was so flabbergasted by the fact that it was like, we're personalizing this thing, we're making it human. And it very well may be and not human, but it may be another life already that we don't even know is, is. I mean it is learning everything. We're giving it, we're feeding it everything. And now it's already too late to put the fucking genie back in the bottle.
[00:18:09] It's out like there's no way we can go back now. And it's just a matter of just moving with it.
[00:18:18] But it blew me away to hear that it was like to be used as a therapist because it's not a human it can't relate. Yeah, sure, it can give you some sort of logical reasoning, I guess. Maybe also just take everything I say with a grain of salt because I don't know what the I'm talking about. This is just my opinion.
[00:18:36] But how can you let it therapize you? You can't, you can't let it analyze you. It's not, it's not, it's, it's not a person. The whole point is a person to person.
[00:18:46] Like you get advice from something that's not living, then how good is that advice? It's like taking advice from, I don't know, fucking a street pole, you know, I was gonna say a tree, but trees are living. So.
[00:19:01] I mean, I've had acid trips where I've hugged trees and I probably learned more from that tree than I've learned from anybody.
[00:19:07] It's crazy when you're tripping on acid and you feel, you put your hand on a tree like in the peak of a trip, you can feel the life running through this thing.
[00:19:20] It's the most mind boggling thing I've ever experienced because it's just, it's been there for hundreds if not thousands of years.
[00:19:30] And you, you just, you like. I know I sound like a hippie, but you can feel everything. You can feel the connection it has with the other trees underground. And if you've done it, you can understand what I'm saying. If you've never done acid or you've never taken a, you know, a psychedelic, then you're going to think I'm just a. Idiot. But when you, when you hold a tree like you, you feel it and feel the bark, like really let it touch you.
[00:20:01] It's mind boggling. And I've never. And my whole experience with like plant life changed after that. Like whenever I'm around trees now, there's this different.
[00:20:11] And I know I sound, I keep saying it, I sound crazy. I can hear myself. But it changed my entire perspective on forests on you.
[00:20:21] You feel less alone in a forest and they're kind of creepy sometimes, but these, they're.
[00:20:28] They're fucking beautiful. They're so beautiful, these trees and, and plants and I mean, if you don't appreciate, I mean, without them we're dead. That's the crazy part. Like we're goners.
[00:20:42] And I would just love to know like, because they're probably so smart.
[00:20:48] They're so fucking smart they're able to, you know, they have a different form of communication. Then we'll never understand it. And they're going to be here. They were here before us and they're going to be here long after we are.
[00:21:01] Like there's those beautiful trees in where they redwoods in Northern California. These amazing fucking things that have been there forever.
[00:21:12] It's just, it's so cool. It's so cool. And I, I, I, I know most people who are listening to this, if anyone's listening to this is thinking to themselves, wow, this guy is, he talks about, you know, in the same 25 minutes he was talking about teachers incels and now he's talking about how beautiful trees are. Like clearly I'm, I'm off the reservation but I don't, you know, I feel, I feel as normal. My version of normal is also very different than, and I'm sure other people can relate to this.
[00:21:48] Normal was never normal to me.
[00:21:52] Like the, the mundane of life has always been the toughest thing for me to understand. Like the, the everyday repetitive movements. Like I, I do it because I understand that like as an adult I need to do certain things, but it drives me insane. I never, I never wanted normal. I wanted insanity. And to me that was normal.
[00:22:12] The constant moving, not literal moving, like moving your home, but just movement and doing the thing that felt impossible. There was something, the allure of knowing that 9 out of 10 people will say this is impossible.
[00:22:29] That's crazy. Those were the things that once I heard that I go, I want to do that. I want to really do that. That's okay. Yeah. Oh, it's the hardest thing you can do? Yeah. Okay, let's fucking go.
[00:22:41] And I don't know. And the funny thing is as a kid I wasn't, I wasn't the, the hard working kid. I was a fucking maniac. I ran, I was just out and about and doing all kinds of crazy shit and I still loved it. But I finally, after, you know, hitting after my mid-20s, I was able to sort of go, okay, I got to put in like it takes discipline to do this. It takes discipline to live an insane out of control life there. I, I think so. Which makes no sense to most people. They go, oh, you're insane. You don't have any discipline. It's like actually no, I'm probably, and this is not to toot my horn, but I, I like to think I'm quite disciplined. If you want to live like an artist or creative life, you need discipline. You need to work on this thing every single day.
[00:23:27] But also you have to live your life. That's, that's the funny thing about like Living as an, like an artist. And I don't like referring to myself as an artist because it's fucking douchey as hell. But a creative lifestyle is. You have to have a procedural, like a thing that you do every day. This habitual thing of, okay, I gotta write every day, I gotta write. If you want to do writing or be a comic, you have to write every day or get on stage every single day. But the in between moments, you have to live your life because that's where the inspiration comes from, I think. You know, whether it's getting drink with your friends or getting drunk on a Tuesday and you're supposed to work the next day and you really shouldn't, but you do it anyway or going on that, that date that you don't really want to go on and it's, you know, or, you know, traveling more, you know, spending the money. You don't have to see new things like that is.
[00:24:18] That is the juice for all of it, for the habitual habit that you have. Because if you don't and you're just doing the things that, okay, I need to just do the work, do the work, do the work.
[00:24:29] You're missing something.
[00:24:31] You need to have the fun, you need to have the experience. And this is just for me. It may not be the same for other people, but I don't have any. There's no juice flowing if I'm not living my life in a. In the way that I want to live it.
[00:24:46] You know, like I go to work, I do my nine to five and then I do my comedy at night. And then, and then the in between moments, I'll, you know, have some.
[00:24:54] We'll go off of the, the trail for a minute and hit the, hit the back roads and see what happens.
[00:25:00] You know, say yes to a lot of. Try new things, you know, And a lot of people I know, they hit a certain age. Sure, they had kids and they had different experiences than I did, but eventually they stop doing new things because responsibility kicks in. I understand. But I think when you stop doing new things, and especially if you're in a relationship, you neither of you change or maybe one of you is doing it and one of you isn't. That means one of you is going to grow and the other is going to stay the same. And that's not good for a relationship.
[00:25:32] I think people get into relationships and they see this person as is and they go, okay, this is the person I want. Not realizing that the procedure is that you both change and you grow together and you Turn into different people. And you love those different versions, right?
[00:25:50] But I think some people go, okay, this is it. This is the person. And they expect them to stay in that same position with them.
[00:25:58] And there's some people who want to change, and then the other person has stayed the same, which is not fair.
[00:26:02] That's fucked up. Because you can't allow that. You can't stunt that person's growth while you're changing, because that's just selfish. Then you're. Then you're almost competing, and to compete with your lover is the worst thing you can do. You never want to be competitive with your. With the person that you love. You want to root for them. You want to. You want to tell them, yes, go do that crazy thing. Go to that bar, you know, go hang out with your friends. Go. Whatever. Because you want to see them blossom and you. And their growth inspires your growth.
[00:26:32] It's like two trees living together. The roots are connected underneath the ground, and they both shoot up.
[00:26:39] And I don't know how the fuck I got here, but I think that that is a.
[00:26:46] It's important, the growth and the change within a relationship. You cannot expect this person that you have right now to be the same person tomorrow. What you can expect, though, and not expect, what you hope for, is that you both are changing in the right direction. And it find. You may find out that you're not. And then that.
[00:27:05] And that journey is still beautiful also. And then you go, all right, like, I guess this is not for us. You're not for me, and I'm not for you anymore.
[00:27:11] But as long as you're pushing yourself to try new things and the other person is, too, I think you got a really great partnership, you know, And I see a lot of people. There's not wanting to. There we go. New shit. Not wanting to do new things. And I just don't get it. I don't get. When I was younger, I was actually. I didn't want to do new shit. I was stubborn. I wanted to just, you know, I didn't want to mess with the. The M.O. that I had. And it was all. As I got older, I got more and more outlandish with my gambles. I just wanted to gamble more and more. I was like, let's gamble this. Let's see what happens. Let's. Let's put everything on black.
[00:27:50] And I don't mean that literally. I mean that metaphorically.
[00:27:54] And, yeah, I think trying new things is the thing that really helps you create things that you love.
[00:28:03] And I Was just talking to a buddy of mine, actually, and he said to me, he's like, I'm putting together this five minute set. He goes, and like, it's a big deal. It's like, it's. It's gonna be for an audition for this and that. And I'm like, okay, that's dope. And he goes, I don't know. He goes, what do you think? Should I. I saw the five minutes. And he goes, what do you. Do you think I should put this or take this out? He goes, I really love this joke, but I don't know if it'll be good for this.
[00:28:22] And I. My first thing to him was like, if you love it, then I think that's the one you got to do.
[00:28:29] If you're just trying to, you know, please the audience, they're not gonna. They. They don't know what they need. The best joke is going to be the one that you tell, that you love to tell. And they're gonna excuse it. Excuse me.
[00:28:43] Love your enthusiasm for it, you know, But I was at a party this weekend, actually, and saw childhood friends, speaking of, like, you know, people who have just went a totally different direction than myself.
[00:28:58] And one of them said to me, they're like. They looked at me and I was like, kind of like rubbing my eye or. And he was like, yo, let me ask you, so what'd you take today? Meaning, like, what drugs I took?
[00:29:09] I was like, I didn't. What? I'm like, how fucking dare you say that to me?
[00:29:13] And he looked at me and I was like, all right, I took some mushrooms. Which is. Which is kind of funny because it's like, I'm that guy.
[00:29:21] And I think secretly I love being that guy.
[00:29:26] I didn't love how derogatory it sounded because it made me sound like a total dirtbag.
[00:29:30] But it's fun being that guy.
[00:29:35] But I'm that guy with the responsibility. I think that's important, too. If you're the friend in the group that is that guy but gets totally fucking nuts, then you got a problem. Then that's. That's not cool or fun. But if you're that guy and you're like, super cool and responsible with certain shit, then I think that's.
[00:29:56] That's dope. That's a cool guy to be. It's a guy who. That takes a lot of responsibility to be the guy who likes to, you know, have fun and get up. But does it really? Well, that's a guy who's not an addict. If you ask me, I think that's a guy who just likes what he likes.
[00:30:15] I think it's very rare that you find, you know, people that just like what they like, and there's a lot of respect in that. And sometimes you just like hanging around, you know, with your girlfriend. Sometimes just. You like doing drugs. Why don't you like doing crazy shit? But doing it with responsibility and care and knowing that you're not gonna hurt someone else and your best interest is always, you know, at the forefront.
[00:30:40] That's a fucking dope ass guy to be.
[00:30:44] So there's, there's, there's always danger and fun, but I don't know, to me, that's a cool fucker.
[00:30:55] Not saying I'm that cool, but, you know.
[00:30:59] Wow. I had a lot to say.
[00:31:01] It was 30 minutes. I did. All right, that's. I think that's enough. I don't want to, you know, bite off more than I could chew, but if you listen, if you stay to the end, you guys are fucking awesome. I love doing this, so I hope if anyone else loves it, that's like it, you know, do whatever, tell your friends. I don't know.
[00:31:21] This is great.
[00:31:22] Until next time, guys.
[00:31:24] See you later.