[MUSIC]
>> The Joe Rogan experience.
>> Train my day Joe Rogan podcast by night, all day. [MUSIC] >> Well, so the guy that did your bar flying guillotine is the same guy that did the mothership. >> Oh, wow. >> Rich wise.
>> Yeah, yeah. >> Yeah, Richard, the same designer, architect who did your bar. I have a flying guillotine t-shirt that I wear sometimes. I was trying to find it this morning, I couldn't fucking find it. >> I wore mine yesterday.
I went to the out-of-most draft house and did a screening of the film.
βAnd I said, would it, would it be appropriate to wear my stand-out?β
>> Yeah. >> And he had a draft house hit him. And the guy there, he was like, I thought he wanted to wear his. But as he said, he stole a stack. >> That's that now, but he couldn't find him on the line. >> I've got somewhere, I've got it somewhere in my house.
And I was scrambled in this morning and looking for it, looking for the t-shirt and find it. >> Well, we got to send you some more, definitely, definitely. >> So, it's great to see you again, man. >> That got you, man.
>> That got you just, I got a question for you, man. >> Well, I was thinking, like, well, I remember you had this place in Whitland Hills. >> Yes. >> That was what eight years now. >> We've been out here for six, six years.
β>> Some of six years ago. >> Yeah, you were there like eight years ago, I think.β
>> Yeah. >> And I just remembered you having the hypabolic hyperbaric chamber, do you still, are you still alive? >> Yeah. >> Was that what it was or was it the sensory deprivation tank? >> Oh, the one when you float. >> Yeah. >> Is that because we had that at the studio?
>> We didn't have a hyperbaric at the studio, so I do have a hyperbaric. >> Yeah, not here, I have it at my house.
>> Yeah, I just was always impressed at Jessica consciousness or things that's
unique, right? And as time goes on, sometimes, as we evolved, whether we evolve and physically mentally spiritually or economically, sometimes we leave certain things behind. >> Right. >> And I wanted to, if Joe keep moving his cheek in the same direction, so that's my question to you. >> Well, sometimes he gets caught up in momentum and you got a step back and just realign yourself. That's definitely a factor.
Like sometimes I'm too busy and I get too caught up in momentum of things and you kind of like lose, like why am I doing this? Like, what is the process? Like, what is the reason for doing all this? But vacation always fixes that. Like, take a few days off and you can go. >> Now you can enjoy flying. >> Now I feel the same. >> There be honestly, I've been running around for like, I don't know, for like eight days straight.
And I like to kind of make sure exercise, do my touch, or something, or stretch my body. But I was to tell my wife last night, like, you know, I haven't worked out since we've been moving. But I've been drinking every night. So today this morning, it'll be before I came here.
βI got up a little bit earlier and I went and stretched and got all that out and that's what madeβ
this question kind of my head. It was like, I wonder, like, as we grow and we become more and more involved than we get in whatever it is and like that's given us how we get in these blessings, but how far do we get away from the blessings that kind of made us solid? You know what I mean? >> Yeah, I try not to get as far. I try to stay as close as possible to, like, centering my body. Like, if I don't work out, like, just a couple days in a row, I start feeling weird. Just two days.
>> Right. >> Two days I just start feeling like crack, crack, crack, crack, crack, crack, crack, crack. >> I feel antsy, I feel irritated. I just, I don't think, I think I'm thinking clear. I don't feel relaxed. >> I think on the same. Maybe for me is three and a half days. >> Well, which I mean nuts is like, how many people out there that's their whole life? There's no exercise in their life. Like, my God, you're doing yourself such a disservice.
>> Yeah. >> You're not, you're not, you're mind, you're not just your body, but your mind needs that. You need to blow out some steam and run the machine and stretch it out and relax it afterwards and re-center yourself. And if you don't do that, you're going to be anxious. There's so many people are dealing with, like, constant, crippling anxiety all the time. And how many of those people don't exercise? >> Right. I think that, in Shaolin philosophy,
we, you know, there's Qi Gong, right? In this, the Qi travels through your blood.
So you got to always continue to have the blood movement. Because the blood is the supply you have,
but the oxygen gets in an oxidase and it just keeps it flowing. And when you do stretching or you do exercises or you build up your respiration, it actually energizes the blood, which energizes every body of body. It's trying to, that Qi travels through every vessel,
Every mority and of your body.
>> 100%. >> Yeah. >> Fires up your endorphins, fires up your endocrine system, everything just feels better.
And it calms you down. I feel like human beings are almost like batteries. Like, you're storing energy all the time. But if you, if you've got too much energy, it's leaking out of the battery. And you're, you're not, you're not purging some of it. You got to, you got to, your body has like human requirements for movement. And if you don't, if you don't use those requirements, if you don't meet
βthose requirements, you're just going to feel like shit. And I think that's a big part of what's wrongβ
with society today. There's just way too many people that aren't doing that. And they're just tense. And they're, their, their tense anxious feeling and the, and the mental health problems that come with that, it just spills over into everything else. >> Right. I got, I got to agree with you. And I know that people that like my seafood she and me, who are, he probably works out like six times a day. Because he has to train, he has an individual client. >> Right. Right. Right. But I think seafood
was maybe 10 years old, 10 years older than me. Look 10 years younger than me. Right. Of course. I mean, because he's just constantly moving at she and exercise. And he's, he still could kiss his toes in his 60s. >> Wow. >> Baby's good to do that. Right. Right. He still could kiss his toes like a baby. But he says something to me that I, that I, that I took just he to for myself. I said, see for what he, like why do you work out so much? Right. He gave me two answers. He says, one, it feels good.
It makes me feel so good. But then the other answer he gave me was that because in Shaolin, when you get up in the morning, you have to exercise, run up a mountain, run back down the mountain, do chores and all that before you eat. And it's said, you don't do that, you don't eat. And so I was like, well, that sounds like something from the Bible. What it says is that, uh, man should work to the sweat of his brow. You know what I mean? And I took that philosophy. So I know,
I don't normally eat in the morning. I would normally get up. I mean, I mean, coffee now. So I've been drinking coffee about 10 years, I think. But I will have some coffee, some water and bamboleama. I, I get into my exercise opportunity. When I'm home,
βI think that's the best way to start today. Yeah, I do the same. I don't work out. I don't eatβ
rather before I work out. I always work out first. Right. So because we didn't, didn't know,
didn't know what is fresher, the food tastes better. Yeah. You earned it too. Exactly. Yeah. It's just a good way to start the day to you already did the hard part. The most difficult part of your day is done. Right. And then everything else and also like that difficult thing makes the mental difficulty of the rest of the day work smoother. Yeah. You have a, remember that old commoshoe, the army commoshoe, which one? It was like, we do. Oh, yeah. Yeah. So it's like we do for six
day and we're most people who do all day. Yeah. It's like, back when you post, you know, when I saw an hour as young, I was like, I don't know if they're talking about. But as a man, I'm like, you know, this, this, this wisdom. Get up in the morning and get to C go and have a beautiful day. There's something too that getting up early, where you, you force yourself to work. You force yourself to rise. The comfort of your bed calls, you'd be go fuck you. You get up, get shit done,
and you're like, are you one? I want today. I've got a victory. I've got a victory over my inner bitch. You know, I got out there. I did something. I'm laughing. I'm not going to say it's over
βto the bed. Fuck you. Yeah. That's what you have to say. Yeah. I want to get up almost angry. Fuck you.β
No, you're not going to call me in there when you're octopus tentacles and suddenly you're deaths. This episode is brought to you by Squarespace, the all-in-one platform for building a website that actually looks legit and helps you stand out online. And I should know, my site, Joe Rogan.com is powered by Squarespace. They make it easy to lock down the right domain for your business or project and they've got built-in privacy and security tools to keep everything protected.
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Now, but on the couch and fans are there, then the housemate. When you see it, is there some streamers for football? What's worked really in the perfect facade? A really exciting pool with Sidness Winnie and Amanda Sayfried. The housemate, the thriller, over the all-in-one. Now, see you.
Get up, get going.
It's cold plunge before I work out.
Yeah. I can't do that. Now, that is kind of extreme for me. I'm not fucking with the cold like that. I'm making use to it. I'm telling you. You can use to it.
βIt becomes like a normal thing. How long you stay in the three minutes?β
Wow. It sucks. But every time I do it, I almost don't do it. Every time I do it, I'm almost like, don't do this. I don't want to do this. Fuck this. Right. And then I get in like, oh, we're doing it. We're doing it. And then I take my phone and I set, I got a little kickstand on the back of my phone, you know. So I put the timer on there and I look at it. It's like, it's out of minute.
So I'm like, all right, we're good. We're past the minute. I want you to get past the minute. The minute mark is the tough part. Once you're past the minute, it's pretty easy to get to three minutes. You just relax. I only did one ice bath and it was, um, they had bought this to bet in Lama to New York and was me. I forgot the brother name. We was doing this TV show thing and it was trying to find out
they're like, they were scanning our brains and see what would happen. If we got into co-bath before meditating, then meditate it and then get back in like, so it was some science, she and I said, yeah, I'll do it. I don't know why. I agree to it, but I did it. Right? But I got in them all, fuck it, bro. And when I got in there, I was like, this is not to shit.
Yeah. Oh, like this. And the host, he got into. Now, I don't know if that was his first time
in that. But he was younger than me, skinny or than me, you know, I mean. And when I couldn't take a no more, around one minute and whatever, it was past a minute, Mark. I got the fuck out, but he was still in there. And I was like, I can't, I didn't want to fuck it. Beat me. There you go. I got back in. Nice. You know what I mean? Um, and I, um, it got some footage of that.
βI think I stayed in, I don't think it was three minutes, but I think I really impressed myselfβ
because I'm super anti-coated. You know what I mean? I, I run hot. I stayed hot. I'm the hot part of, you know, my wife is cold. She's just put her hand on me. I'm the heater. So, so cold is like, something at all. Yeah, I don't like it. Right. I don't enjoy it. But there's a little mind game that goes on. And the mind game is almost immediately like, oh, fuck this. Let's just, let's get out of here. Let's get out of here. You got to ignore that and just concentrate on breathing. So what I do is I,
I breathe through a count of 10. So I, I do this one, two, three, and I just concentrate on the numbers.
And then by a time I get to 10, it's basically like a minute, and I'm relaxed. And then I just
settle in there. It's just you concentrate on breathing and don't think about that part of you that wants to get out. Right. Somebody, I think I'm going to try a cold shower. It's really good. Cold shower in New York is great if you like in the winter because that's real cold. Right. That's real cold. It's like, that's like, I used to take cold showers in the bar. My friend Bob Kafferella, he used to do this at our Taekwondo school. He would take cold showers after
training and I was like, that guy is in fucking animal. And I tried it a couple of times, but I was a bitch. I did it like 15 seconds, I jumped out. But he would just stay there and lay in the cold freezing cold winter cold water and just wash himself. And I was like, this guy's an animal, man.
βI think I brought a conglie. I'm a scene conglie, and yes. Conglie the fighter? Yeah. Yeah.β
I remember we was, could we did a movie years ago in China, but he was, he was the cold plunger. The crew. Yeah. Con, he's, I had the curve on all that shit. Yeah. Yeah. It's just, it's the mental thing is we're really, we're at benefits you, and not just while you're in it, like doing it because you don't want to do it. But when you get out, you feel so good. Your brain just is flooded with all these endorphins. Right. He feels so good. And it lasts for
hours and hours. I'm gonna be, I'm gonna be visited that. I think there's like, there's numbers on the dopamine increase, but I forget what they are off the top of my head. But there's a giant increase in dopamine that lasts like two to three hours after you're getting out of the cold plunge. Wow. I don't know that. I don't know that. But I know you're a long time martial arts student, and I think anybody that does martial arts for a long time realizes that it is as much for your
mind as it is for anything else. It's not just a workout, it's a workout, but it's also like, there's something about going through the motions of martial arts and training and martial arts. So it requires so much concentration, it requires so much of your focus, that the rest of the world
Kind of fades away and the impact of it is relaxed.
It's emotional. There's an esoteric thing, seven planes of energies or five stages of consciousness. I don't know if you ever came across these type of terms, but sometimes we get stuck on just the three dimensions. I mean, just three planes and get to the emotional. You don't get to the will part of it. You don't get to the realization, the control. If you could get to realization, then you can control what's going on because you realize what it is. It's almost like you can
now have the foresight of what it is. And then if you could get to that type of plane of energy, then the possibilities become infinite because you realize that you, you know, they say we have a free will. But then you realize that the will can be controlled. You also realize that with a strong will, you can control others as well. Because some people are walking around with weak
βwills. That's how you start a cult. Oh, bye. By having the snog as well. And you give meβ
you know, you may be, uh, I have a, I do have a film in shit, right? Um, um, quote, once we went to chocolate. And I watched half of it. I had a problem. There was a problem with the early screener. I was mirroring it on my television and it kept breaking up. It kept fucking up where like the sound would cut in and cut out. Okay. And I did it a couple of times and then the screener ran out because I guess. So then I had to contact your people and then they gave me another one. But then they
gave me one on Vimeo. And I watched that in the gym today. So I watched the first half of the
movie and I watched the second half in all of it. Okay. Take your time. Take your time. It's, it's, it's so it's a crazy one. It's the fun watch. It's a lot of ways. And you did it with Tarantino. Yes. Yes. Yes. I mean, and it seems like, yeah. It's got a kind of flavor to it. But I was, I bought it up, just to say that there's a, there's a character who actually takes ice plunges. Yes. And the bad guy. Yeah. The villain. Yeah. So he told him about coats and things. And the way
there's a scene where we, when we introduce him, you could tell that everybody else there are bending to his will. Right. He shows him how to do this. And you do this and you do that.
βAnd then the, there's the fucking, I guess, the week will guy. And then he's like, and that's whyβ
Jim, he's the fucking king, man. So that's the point I'm making is that. So will can control, you know what I mean? Yeah. But if you realize yourself and have that self-realization, self-actualization, you gain control over yourself. You know what I mean? And control your plans and energy. So you're talking about martial arts. And martial arts help you achieve that goal. Yeah. My instructors to say that martial arts are vehicle for developing your human
potential. Mm. Yeah. That it's so difficult that in learning how to get, I don't like the term mastery because I don't think you have a really master martial arts. But in learning martial arts, the difficulty that's involved in it expands your potential and everything that you do. I agree.
And for me, I actually, you know, I always tell people on a physical level, I don't know if
I'm good or not, beyond it. You know what I mean? It took up some hunger and shallons, of course, a little bit of being chown here and there. But I don't claim to be like a martial art fighter.
βBut I will claim to be a martial artist because of the mind, because the way I think,β
because the way it allowed me to think. You know, it's like, it's like, I have probably 20 books on Tai Chi and I wear them. And so I understand that the application of it, like there's a meditation called the eight pieces of brocade. You ever come across that one? No. So what's the word brocade? Yeah. Brocade, meaning blockage. Oh, okay. So it's eight ways, the unblock yourself.
Like the unblocked Chi. One of the first ones, of course, you sit and load this and you just take
your thumbs and you bang on the back of your base of your Medulab glanta. I give you this, because it touched this real quick. If you don't mind. Back in your hood? Yeah, right here. Okay. You see how loud that is? Yeah. Right. So you cover. So you cover your ears and you bang on those drums, first thing in the morning. And it, exactly. And it opens up some of your shakras. So it feels weird. Because it's loud. It's loud as it could be, right?
What point being made by studying all these different books is like the physi...
is exciting. But to me, the mental part has even became more exciting. The more that I can apply.
βSo therefore, I can apply it to my music. I can apply it to business. I can apply it to how to beβ
a better father and all those things. Voices, me just punching and trying to break a break. You know, right? Right. Right. Right. Yeah. There's, I mean, that's Tai Chi, right? It's all mental. The Tai Chi is a martial arts sort of. I mean, I guess like you would learn how to move your body better. That could kind of help you apply it in a self defense situation. But it's much more of a mental martial art. And I still, when I looked in San Francisco, used to watch people in the park.
These old Chinese people would go out there and practice, practice Tai Chi. I was like, what do I
do? I was a kid. I was eight. I was dumb. I was like, what is the purpose of doing this all day?
Right. Like, and then once you do it a few times, you're like, oh, this is not easy to do. Right. And then in doing that, it cleans your mind of everything else that's going on. Because all your concentrating on is these movements. He's very difficult. They're not stupid. Like, they've been doing this for thousands of years for a reason. Because it helps them. What a crazy thing about Tai Chi give you a little information about it that you made, and I know, but the idea of Tai Chi is that
βif you masturbate or you have that control over it, you should be able to move a thousand poundsβ
with just four ounces of energy. So the idea of them pushing constantly means it's something that ever came to them. That's they pushed out of sight when I'm thinking about it. Right. Because just four ounces of energy can divert. It's almost like tripping the giant. I think it's great on paper. Actually giant. I don't care how much Tai Chi you know, a dude is like a 300-pound all-american wrestler. It comes charging out. You're not going to use four ounces of energy and divert
him. Well, I'm an architect, right? Okay. The voices you use is just step to the side. Yeah, everybody says that's step to side. It doesn't work. It doesn't work. They grab you. You're not getting up. We didn't, we didn't know that. Well, I'll fight as a fight. That's a difference between a wash you all and a fight. But it's also just the reality of physics. It's one thing if you're doing that to an unskilled person, but to a skilled person, you really need to know the
skill that they're applying. Like, you know what I mean? That's the difference between like someone who's practicing something that is great in theory. But I mean, it's not, it's not just in theory. Physically and mentally, it's great for you. But it's just, it's not the right application in terms of actual hand-to-hand combat. Yeah, I mean, a fight is a fight. I don't care. I mean, in my opinion, a fight is a fight. I don't care, which I don't care, you know, if you
the best box in the world that knocked on the fuckers out, like like one of our greatest fighters, my Tyson, who wasn't just that he was a fighter. He was a fighter. Like, most he had a skill set, and he was a well-trained, but in the peak of his fights, I don't care how much somebody else trained. When he got in the ring the fight, they weren't better fighters. They could have been better boxes, better athletes, better whatever. So I think of fight, and this is my opinion.
It's an instinct. It's a, you know, like what you, you know, like when Mike Bitt is here, right? That's a fight. That's nothing to do with boxing. I think that was frustration, you know, unfortunately, you know, that was a vander was beaten him up. Yeah. And I don't think you liked it. A vander was beaten him up. Yeah. Ah, professionally, skillfully and boxing, but then Mike went to fighting. Yeah. In fighting, like in an immigrant, you can't fight in a
βman. You can't fight in no sport, right? Yeah. Uh, you need to push the hit the nuts. Right?β
You need to push too. I know, which is crazy, because in a fight, the nuts are one of the best spots to hit exactly in the eyes. Do you need to push the poke the eyes? Left friend Eddie had an idea for a comedy sketch called Ultimate Sac fighting, whereas just dudes had just just the nuts of
the only target. It's amazing how vulnerable we really are all balls just sitting on the outside like
that. Yeah, fights, you poking the eye. I mean, you poking the eye in an MMA fight, the referee stops the time and you get a point deducted. But it's a very good technique in an actual fight. Yeah. Well, that's it. That's it. That's it. That's it. I meant by saying like, so if you've got trained and trained and trained, but when you are when his life against life or life of death, it's a whole
Another chamber of fighting for survival.
or they have these no rules fights in Russia and a bunch of other places. But they do outside
βin a field. And these guys fight in this wrestler gets his guy down and he just shoves his thumbsβ
in his eyeballs and he gets on top of them and he just grabs his face and shoves and the guys just screaming and it's trying to move his head away and he taps his blood all over his eyeballs. The party over. He really is like how devastating that is, like the pain and the just the and they know it's so crazy. The person who did it, like the maybe the guy who got the chance to do it, it's not easy. And it's tell me if you agree with this, you could disagree, but
it's not easy to do that either. I don't mean not easy that you can't do it. It's not easy
for your spirit to do it. Right. It's not me. It's evil. Yeah. And so, so that's a whole
another chamber. It's like, yo, will you do it? Will you blind the man? Yeah, will you do it? Right. And it's like, maybe you won't. And but if he will and you won't. Right.
βYeah. Yeah. That's it. That's it. That's what my seafood says that aboutβ
here, because you don't train nobody out of fight. I can't teach nobody out of fight. You know, I'm not going to teach you how to build your body. How to build your tea. How to build some strength. But a fight, bro. It's this is different. There's no rules. It's life and death. It's like and and and your will go back to the will we talked about. Your
willpower has better be strong to survive. I love with Bruce Lee said he practiced the art of
not fighting. I mean, so I told that to my son. I was like, yo, well, listen, if you go run, bro, run. Yeah. I mean, be up out of there. And motherfuckers chase you. You know, you got to, you got to go to, you got to think on something. But if you get just yo, that's right. Now, yo, yo, yo, you want to fight. Yo, yo, you know what, Joe? I see you later, bro. You know, I mean, I'm just too many people that get into fights for no reason. And then you
want to change in the rest of your life. You got a scar that's going to be with you forever or you accidentally kill somebody. It's stupid. It's a stupid thing to do. And there's so many men that feel like they just have to prove themselves, which is what a gym is for. Go to the gym, go to the gym, work out with exactly with other fighters, train, get beat up, realize where you're at, get a realistic sense of your actual ability and then improve upon them. Yeah. Don't go
getting in Street Fighter. Please, God. Don't do it. Don't do it. And for me, I put all my aggression and all my energy into my art. You know, you think about some of my early songs. You know, wait, the motherfuckin' rock is ball. That was, that was like, I used to have a, I had a, I had like a problem of, I don't know if it was anger management, maybe. But I, but I was just like, like, I don't know. Like, I needed to hear the sound of breaking glass. I used to scream, like, jizzles,
like, y'all just to do. Like, 'cause I was, and I realized that I had so much anger in me that, you know, I couldn't really get it out. I was kind of hawkish in a way, like, like, beat Bruce Banner some of that shit, right? But then through music, it started to come out and it started to come out. And by the time I got to, um, Wu Tank forever, a lot of my anger was in the song. If you want beef, then bring the rockers and like all that stage in all that
energy. So it really helped me. And then I realized going to bring it up to date tomorrow to my new film. I'm watching it and I'm just like, okay, once again, I took all the anger and I put it into the art. I mean, there's actually a character in the film, a name, it's name is unique. Did you catch that when you saw the piece? unique is the name of old dirty bastard. It's the original name was A song, unique. So that was my way of giving homage to him by naming the lead character,
my new film, unique. And it says in the film, he says, you got a problem with anger and anger management, right? He says he's on work and on that. And what I love about the art of it is that the problem that he had with anger management was his reaction. Like a lot of us, we just react too much. We react before we think, right? Because they say a man could think seven times before
βhe reacts. That's how fast your mind can move, but we go on that first impulse. But this character,β
he keeps, he holds the anger until one morning, he's at a veteran home, right? And he's sitting there and he's having breakfast and he has this can, right? He's seen this thing, right? And he's like,
He digs the spoon in there and it's like fucking there's nothing in it.
it's like once more in the chocolate and then he gets what angry and he thinks boom, who the fuck
βleft one's going to chocolate in the can. But then it took a old man that was settled. The tell himβ
once more in the chocolate, it changed a whole glass of milk, it changed the whole glass of milk. And then you notice that character, when that then he calmed down, he started reading to the kids. Yeah. So, and that was kind of me taking some of my personality, some of you, some of old-dodies personality, some of personal eyes that I see in my community and putting into this character, this, this, this, like, you know, sometimes you'll calm down, listen to the
wisdom of your elders, right? Have you ever, have you ever, um, in your life, I'm an actual,
have you ever, like, come across some old person, whether there's a homeless guy, David,
the guy, your own cool somebody, that you kind of didn't look up to in no way, just kind of they was, but then they say something to you that's profound and changed your life. Oh, man, I'm trying to find an example. I mean, I've definitely gotten a lot of advice from old timers, but definitely people, especially people that have done a lot of things, you know, people that have accomplished things, made mistakes, and recovered from their mistakes. Yeah. I mean, I actually, because I was,
maybe 11, and it was a, like, a dope fiend that was dating my aunt, and he was at the table in shit, and he was like nodding, but he was just, he was kind of in this, in a chamber, but, you know,
you know, kids, and you're looking at this guy, and he says something about like, you know,
I don't care, I mean, you gotta get knowledge, man, you gotta get knowledge, man,
βthe gods is right, man, you gotta get knowledge. I started reading it since that day, bro. Really?β
I'm seriously. I did dope fiend. Yeah. Then inspired you to read. Yeah. He said, because he said, you gotta get what happened was he had knowledge of self, I guess, back before the drugs hit him, and now he's like dead, and he was like, he was just said, you gotta get knowledge, the gods are right, the gods are right, and, and so what was he on? What was the drug of choice? He was on, the fuck of you, he shot that shit up. Heroin? Yeah, he's on average. That's the old days back when they
shoot it. Yeah, everybody's on pills. Right. I know, I don't know about that. I don't know about it either, but I mean, I don't know about it personally, but that's, it's essentially what oxycodone is. All those pain pills that you see, all these people dying of. Like opioids. Yeah, opioids. Yeah, the number one problem, I mean, I think the deaths in America, it's upwards of 70,000 a year. I know, it's crazy. That's crazy. Yeah, just from overdozing on pills. Yeah, and most of it happened
because of the sacchar family. The sacchar family, this one family that convinced people
βthat taking these incredibly potent opioids, did you ever see that Netflix docu-series pain killer?β
I didn't see that. It's really good. It's all about the sacchar family. It's Peter Berg made it. Same guy. You know, Peter? No, Peter. He's great. Loan survivor made it a bunch of excellent movies. He's great. He made this documentary on documenting how, well, it's not documentary, a documentary drama series or recreation showing how this one family, they wanted to figure out a way where they could sell opioids to everyone. And the way they did it was like giving people
pain management tools, giving people medication that you could be on forever. And they, they made it, and they pushed it through these different doctors. And they had all these hot ladies who were representatives of the pharmaceutical drug companies that come to the doctor. And they were the wraps of the common cell things. Yeah, I mean, really. And they all financially incentivized to sell it. And they tried to pretend that it wasn't addictive. And they lied about
that. And they got who knows how many thousands and thousands and thousands of people ruined their lives because of it. And like I said, 70,000 die every year just in America, just from opioids. That's crazy, bro. From overdoses. I mean, and how many more would there be of that if it wasn't for Narcan? That's that. Well, that's the, that's the counter. Yeah, that's the stuff that the EMT is giving you. If they find you overdosing, they give you Narcan and it kills it and brings you back
to life. And that one family, you know, no one's kind of jail. No one's got a jail. They, I mean, I don't even know how much they've been fined. But if it wasn't for what they did. And again, well documented in that Netflix series, it's horrific, man. It's really, it's really terrifying. Because it's not just the people that died, the people that are addicted. It's all the family members that were affected by them, all the children of those people and what happened with their
Lives, all the spouses and the brothers and sisters of those people.
That's crazy. You know, when you were saying that my, my, my, the, the imagery in my head was
βthat scene in American gangster when it was like Thanksgiving. And, and they showed Frank Lucas atβ
the table with his whole family that had a nice spread of food. And then they, the camera went and showed all the families that was hooked on the blue magic drug. We had like lady dying over here to kid, they kid looking at her mother dead. Or so the difference, I guess, that's the image that came in my head when you said that by that, that's the difference is in that particular case, somebody goes to jail and pays the price for the crime. But in this particular case, you're saying
that nobody, nobody went to jail. They did it legally. Somehow or another,
they pimped it out and then sold it to everybody legally. I mean, it's, it's sick.
They're the biggest drug dealers that have ever existed. Fuck all these street drug dealers. I mean, these guys killed 70,000 people a year for who knows how many years. And it was probably more than that before they figured out in our can. And part of it is also because people get addicted to it.
βAnd then they get stuff from the cartel that has fence and all in it. And that's why they're dying.β
But there's a bunch of people that just died from straight up overdose of opioids too. It's terrifying. And it's over to counter. Yeah. And yeah, no, it's on over to counter. You have to get prescribed. But doctors are happy to prescribe before you. I got my nose fixed. I had a deviated septum and they cleaned it out. And I was leaving the doctor's office and he gave me two prescriptions for opioids. And I said, uh, but I don't, I'm not in pain. He goes, but you, you probably will be.
And I go, but it's going to be worse than this right now. Like we're just out of the operation. My nose was, I have like, this, these things stuffed up your nose to keep your nostrils open. And I was like, are you sure? It's going to be worse than this. And he gave me two prescriptions. And I, I went home and I was like, I don't need these. Like, I didn't film. But I'm like, this is not, but this guy was given me two different opioids to take. You had to win back.
I probably would have been hooked. Yeah. I mean, back. I know a lot of people that got hooked, man. I'm not, I'm under no illusion that I'm stronger than those people that I would have figured out a way to not get hooked. Right. So many people that I know got hooked. So you're saying like, let me just go back on this, because I actually don't take nothing. Well, like, you know, I don't have any, um, I mean, I do pump it as my inhaler. Yeah. When I get, when I get it, because I had asthma,
you had asthma, my whole life other than that. I don't really take no Tylenol, nothing. Well, fuck all that stuff. But you're saying though, at the end of the day, just taking, doing this back at you,
the doctor basically sling gave you some free shit. Yeah. The kind of have you as a
βcustomer, because when crack came out, I think he's financially incentivized. I mean, they'reβ
financially incentivized to prescribe you this method. Because he didn't say, if you're in pain, contact me and I'll fill you a prescription because it's just my nose. Right. It's just the nose. It's not that big a deal. Like I slept fine. It was nothing. That's crazy. And I tried to tell him, I'm like, I don't understand why you're giving me. We had a conversation, I go, is it going to be worse than it is right now? Like right now, I'm not in any pain. He goes, it could probably get worse.
I'm like, how much worse? Because right now, I don't feel anything. It's like nothing. It's like mildly uncomfortable because I have these tubes stuffed up my nose. Right. But this is not, this is a require heroin. This is crazy. I'm not laughing at you. Well, I'm laughing. I'm just, but it is kind of, it's kind of financially incentivized. Let me go back to them film. No, because in the film, there's a, there's an article that I hear will open up in the paper.
It's not the same subject, but it's a medical thing. And then it says, like, this, this particular county is leading, right, is leading in this particular process, because there's money in it. If it's money sadly, you know, I mean, and that's a movie, but sadly, if there's money involved, people can become insidious, right? Yeah. People can become like, yeah, you, you could get this long out. You could get this long out on a sold, you know, I got, I wrote 20 prescriptions this week. And
they're not cheap, right? How much is the prescription when you fill it? Is that like 40 bucks on honey bucks? I don't know. It's not cheap, but more importantly, the doctor gets incentivized. It's not very dark shit. I was reading about this doctor that was an oncologist, so he's dealing with cancer patients. And he was giving chemotherapy to people that didn't have cancer, because it would get a little more money. I don't make you kind of fucking get with that. Yeah, you kind of
Hit my voice, because I just lost my brother to cancer, my brother power.
think of a moment. I'm sorry to hear you. Yeah, it's one of the most profitable medications,
βunfortunately, for physicians, well, not unfortunately. Look, if it saves your life, that's wonderful.β
But the reality is this one doctor that I'm discussing, this one doctor decided that he was going to get paid more by just giving chemotherapy to people that didn't have cancer. So he diagnosed a bunch of people with cancer. They didn't have it. So, unfortunately, you have cancer. The good news is we get on chemotherapy right away. We think we can kick it. And they were regular people with nothing wrong with them, and this fucking guy gave him poison. You know how much the chemo
course? It's very expensive. Yeah, it's about 30 to 60 grand a hit. Yeah, I'm not surprised. And the doctor's profit off of that. It's one of the most profitable medications that doctors
prescribe unfortunately. And most doctors were never fucking imagined doing that in a million years.
But this one doctor, like his success was, hey, this is how I get paid. You know, I'm dealing with all this overhead. I'm dealing with all this liability insurance. I'm dealing with medical school bills. I'm dealing with all this. Fuck this. I'm just going to start prescribing a little bit of chemotherapy here and there to people that don't actually have cancer. And I don't know how he got caught. I don't know what happened. But I think it was just, they got him. There was some bread
flat. Yeah, they got him. He's in jail. There was some bread flag where they noticed like, why are so many people getting cancer with this one doctor? Like, why is his number so high? It doesn't, it's not representative of the normal one. Yes, that's crazy. But that's with,
βthat's what's hard to imagine is that money would incentivize someone to tell a person. Like,β
how many people just commit suicide? Because they think they're dying to cancer and they go, fuck, I'm not going on. I don't want to do this. I don't want to suffer. I'm just going to fucking go out of my own terms. You know? Yeah. Well, how many people, how many people's lives did that ruin? Well, I don't, well, that's, first of all, that was trouble. I had to kind of emotionally rebound from that because it's just, you kind of maybe think like, I don't know, like, like, you know,
we don't have the answer to shit, you know, I mean, things happen in life and sometimes you just like,
you know, but I do have anything. And I always, I, you know, I just felt that something wasn't,
I don't know, I don't even go there. But you said that money, why would, why would you do it for the money? It's like, yo, everything is for the money, but my focus is doing, you know, cash rules, everything around me. Well, you know, I mean, the money, yeah, and people were stuck on that. You know, I mean, the, the goal, hopefully, because we live in the capital of society, but the goal should be the cash doesn't rule you,
money shouldn't rule you. We need it. You know, I mean, you know, full clothing and shelter, you're going to need that, and nothing given here. But, but it doesn't surprise me, you know, that that's the motivation for, in city, it's behavior, you know. I was, I'm going to go back a little to history here. We're working on another project where we tap into, it's kind of fantasy. I, I just write off my imagination. But, but I had the, this family,
they are, they are answered, that their ancestors are from Congo. And in the Congo, they trace their ancestors back to the Leo Poe days. And you think about the Leo Poe days, millions of Africans were mined, chopped off their arms and shit. All because the gag was, they wanted them to work and to get the rubber from the rubber tree. So the rubber at one point became the main gold of the world, right? And King Leopold went over to Congo. And you could
tossing it out of this shit. That's the, that's the, the fictional story. But he goes over and
βI think they said, at minimal, 2 million people. But I think it's 5 million that were justβ
mined or killed, just for the economic profit of what those rubber trees was offering to Western citizens have it right now with cobalt. I had this guy said, Darth Kara on the podcast, he wrote a book. Jamie, do you remember what the name of that book was? His book on cobalt mining
in the Congo. So cobalt is a critical mineral that's used in cell phone batteries and many electronics.
And that is cobalt red, the blood of the Congo powers on our lives. It's very disturbing conversation.
He had, he snuck in cameras and got some footage of these people doing what, ...
you think that this stuff is mined in some sort of industrial process. Look at this, this is how these people are mining. And you've got women who are have babies on their backs. And all this cobalt that they're knocking out of the ground is completely toxic. Some of them just have like a bandana over their mouth that they're using to protect themselves from. But look how deep that is with human beings that are just pulling cobalt. They live on dirt floors.
They live at the lowest level poverty imaginable. They don't have clean water. They don't have
βgood food. And they are pulling out a mineral that's essential to the most technologically sophisticatedβ
aspect of our society, which is our connectivity through the internet through cell phones. And this is that they, which is kind of crazy if you think of like the most technologically sophisticated aspect of our society, if you follow it all the way down to the very bottom of the food chain, you've got slave labor. And that's a giant percentage of the cobalt that's in our
cell phones and our electronics is coming out of this place. You know, so I've never seen that before.
A lot of them are run by China. Yeah. And it's very scary, man. I've never seen it. But I wrote a lyric that touches upon it. I never seen those images before. He's got videos. See if you can find the video. The video is dark. I think I love it said, uh, let's see if I could be remember my lyric. It was a song I wrote called The Faded of the World. It's in your hand. It was me and DJ Scratch. And uh, what I knew that I knew that cobalt or I knew that there was getting the mineral from Congo. But I didn't know it like that. It was something like, you know, as an artist, you're a
fucking antenna, right? You get shit. But I said some, uh, I said, I'll try to remember the lyric I said. It was like, uh,
βhey, could you put up the lyrics to, to remember the lyrics later the world as well? How do you do this?β
Yeah, put up video real quick, but please, look at this. How crazy is this? By the way, all this
seen almost biblical toil, the prize is cobalt. And here's the thing, all this shit is super toxic.
So all these people are breathing in this and seemingly toxic dust. And they're knocking out of the ground with hammers and carrying it off and bags. This is, yeah, this is, this looks biblical. Well, and imagine how fucking heavy these bags are. And they're doing this all day long. Look at these guys struggling to pick those bags up. And they're carrying this shit all day long. And they're just knocking into the ground, trying to pull out this cobalt. And the thing is, like,
this is what we need to power our phones, which is so crazy. If you think about all these people a little virtue signaling about how wonderful and ethical and moral they are, they're doing it on a phone that is literally powered by slave labor. That's crazy. It's crazy. It's crazy. This is going on in 2026. And most people aren't even aware of it. Well, you're back, like I just said, the project I'm working on now, we just talk about it. We, we take, we're tracing it back to the rubber tree.
But yeah, it's still going on. Still going on. And that's just cobalt. There's other stuff that they're mining there too. It's, it's very similar. There's other, what they call conflict minerals. Pull up my lyric for the fate of the world. I just want to just point out what I said if you, if you got that on genius or something. Yeah, it says a thousand years of darkness,
the world got struck with sorrow, how will be the name we need about it tomorrow? Go to the second
hour, the second verse. Let me see. Let me see. Wait. Oh, no, wrong song. That's with the rhythm. I got some of these songs. You forgot the name of your own song. That's the lyrics. Yeah, you got two many songs. We're still other one on that one. Go, open that. No, not that. We'll go to the other, you call it the other. Go to the album title. Yeah, hit the, the album, saturday afternoon. You're going to edit something this way. No, you know, edit, okay, well, we're going,
we're going with y'all going to bear with us. Saturday afternoon. No, no, no, no. Go to the, oh, it's called the great fisherman. Let me see the titles of the songs. Fisher fisherman. Yeah, pull that one up. What was that? So what is genius genius? Is it shows all the lyrics?
βYeah, that's what it is. And then it actually has a song underneath it. Oh, that's cool.β
I don't even know that existed. People can annotate and tell you what people were meant by what they said. Oh, really? Yeah. On genius. Yeah. Oh, come right there. There you go. The great fisherman,
A fisherman, trying to make a remedy for the elixir of sand, a permission.
intervention. This whole world is the whole world is the stage. So it's time for intermission.
In the middle of the Congo jungle, there's a combo of concentrated elements that make the world's phones glow. But they got a small zone for their phones, though, because they don't even got these steps in out there. But we used to communicate just banging on the bongo. That's when the village was more motherly and more brotherly, but then the dust came through and killed them more for the robbery. King Leopold city was built from a sea of gold and the resurrecter still
trading on a silky road. Yeah, those are some bars respect, but I'm not doing that to show off another place real. Yeah. But you just gave me, but you gave me like the full, you gave me the
connotation and the annotation of the lyric. Well, I could not even see another thing that
before. Oh, that's great. I just heard that they got to get it from there. And I knew the history of King Leopold, but I did not know that. This is still still. This is crazy. Yeah, it's still going on. And it'll continue going on as long as no light is shown on it. And this is what Sadarth Carr was trying to do with his book. And the tour that he was doing and doing podcast and trying to let me mean he rest his life, man. I mean they questioned him and he got very lucky
that he got out of there with that footage because they want to make sure that nobody knows about this shit. Because they don't want any outrage. They want the mining to keep going as planned. I mean, it's, it's dark. It's dark. Because it's a multi multi billion dollar industry that's powered by my abject poverty. Probably true. Yeah. It was like, yeah. It was like using
βsand like this. It was in all our phones. That means not just our phones, but I think it's in a lotβ
of electronics. I think it might have been is copalt in electric cars. I think they're trying to make new formulations of batteries without copalt. So there's Jamie, what is that? I know a lot of the Chinese cell phones are using a different battery technology. Instead of lithium ion, they have
something else that's more dense. That's a critical component in lithium ion batteries.
Right. That's crazy. Yeah. Lithium ion batteries. What is, like, Obo? There's a bunch of these new Chinese companies that have cell phones that have much more battery, like instead of like a Samsung Galaxy S26 Ultra has a 5,000 milliamp battery in it. I think these Obo phones have 7,000 plus, but it's, I think it's carbon silicon based batteries. I wonder if they have cobalt in them. They've, you know, as technology for batteries changes in advances. They need different
kinds of components in them. Right. But I mean, then you're going to find a word where they're getting that shit from. Is that another, like, conflict mineral that they have people digging out the ground with sticks? Well, the other thing to think about, you know, just, okay, let's say it is
βworth $1 trillion. Like, when do the people who, you know, like a vessel, my property, bro?β
You don't say it's my, you're coming to my crib for it. I should get paid off of that. Right. I should be the, well, you know how it works. China comes in. It's a lot of these are Chinese run. China comes in. They pay off the people that are in power in this area, and those people will get wealthy. And then all the people that are with the workers, they all get, like, pennies. Smaller wages, you could possibly pay them to keep them alive. These people live on dirt floors.
It's crazy. No food. It's horrible. It's, it's really dark, man, because it's with power electronics, which is nuts, because that's the most sophisticated aspect of our society in terms of technology. Well, the government in those places and not to get here, like, I'm an, like, you know, I'm an artist, and I'm a spiritual man. But they should be like, you know, hold on, bro. Like, like, in Alaska, right? There's a pipeline that goes to Alaska. You know,
I'm not sure. But at the citizens of Alaska, they get a royalty. Yes. Like, the, like, I'm in Congo, and I got this cold boat as well. Children's, and I got all these people,
βgiven them a royalty. 100%. If that was America, that would probably the only way to do it.β
But obviously, you couldn't pay people the way you pay people in the Congo in America. Anyway, we have laws, but this is also why they want illegal immigration. That's part of the reason why they're like illegal immigration is because you don't have paperwork. You don't have to pay people with their supposed to pay. Do you pull that back up again, Jamie? Please, about the silicon carbide batteries. So it seems like one of the reasons for utilizing this new technology is because it's not
Using as much cobalt.
graphite anodes offering roughly 20, 40% higher energy density and faster charging, especially in smart phones. Is it the same thing? I thought a lot. Yeah. So it has cobalt and then as well. But that's, it enables more sustainable cobalt reduced designs. So you have less cobalt. Yes. And it's more energy density. So these Chinese phones are, yeah, here it is. Honor Magic 5 Pro. A lot of these one plus 13. A lot of these Chinese made android phones
are using much more advanced battery technology. So they're trying to ease up on it a little bit
basically. I don't know. The question is like, well, where are you getting everything else?
There's all the shit that's in your phone and how you mining that. If you're hiding how you mind cobalt, how you mining all the other stuff because they're all conflict minerals. And a lot of these minerals, unfortunately, are mined out of the third world. They find them in these places where people are really poor. And the people that live there, they don't benefit from it. Their lives don't get any better. In fact, they get worse because they get poisoned. Well, the thing thing that,
but hey, go ahead, go ahead. Let me ask some wisdom to that. The people got to realize that they are not poor, right? Because if that is valuable and you're standing on it, then you're standing
βon a value. And that's why they keep them poor because they can't order them. But think aboutβ
the Holy Corn for a moment. Let me go ahead. So in the Holy Corn, it mentions that if the Muslims were to do what they was going to do, that they would have many wells. Because they
live in the desert basically. And it says they're going to have abundant of wells. It's not an
abundant of water wells in the Middle East, right? And these are people that are living, nomadic, economically, not really at the level of the rest of the world. But it's a prophecy telling them that they're going to have wells. But what kind of wells are they in the Pavan? Oil, oil, wells, right? And so now all of a sudden they become the most richest, small region in the world. So the promise is fulfilled, right? But the guy is that the people got to realize sometimes
when you stand, when you stand on your land. You know what I mean? The value of it, as the Bible would say, "Yo, work to the sweat of your brow, to dig and plow, and make your land valuable."
But now if I'm to stand that the people will dig going to get whatever they're going to get,
go. Okay, y'all can't have you going to get some berries in the Amazon. If the berries were money, then the dude who got to hold the berries got to realize that your brow, let's make a deal. But it's like that ain't happening. No. No, it's not happening. And the reason why it's not happening is because you have enormous corporations to come in from other countries. They get contracts and they pay off the people that are the leaders of these countries or the people that are the
βleaders of the military. And then those people keep these people oppressed. And that's what,β
I mean it's the people that are running these countries that are making sure that these people don't get paid what they deserve so that they can keep them working there for slave wages. So they keep their profits as high as possible. They also keep the options as low as possible. People don't have any options. If you're living in the Congo and you're near with these cobalt mines, what are your other options? I remember I'm gonna shut out Burnham Boy,
Burnham Boy is a good dude. He had told me some, gave me some insight about Nigeria and and and like he would say to me like how Wu Tang, when he was young, you know, we had a slaying street for pharmaceuticals. But out there, oil is like a street for pharmaceutical. Like do this was slinging petrol and slinging oil. In Nigeria? Wow. That's crazy, right? That's crazy. But the gag on sand is that still, you know, across the government could
chose all that. But sometimes people got to just snap, you know, just, you know, I don't know, stand on your land, you know, and and and and realize the value of where you stand. You know, every
βman has a value. You know, we all walk with a living value, every life is precious, every life that'sβ
born changes the world. Soon as somebody is born today, this ain't the same world it was just today. Right. Soon as somebody, we turn to the essence, it's ain't the same world. But so we got to kind of, but the people, I'm going back to the people, not to the military or to the government, the people got to realize that you're all on, bro, it's you, you're the value. Because without
Them, right, until they do get 10 million robots to do that shit, which I don...
right, since 10 million robots are big enough, bro. And, and still though, if it's on my land,
break me off. Right. I mean, but people got to snap into that. Well, these, these places are all guarded by the military. So, yeah, what's all people with guns, yeah, you can't leave, you're doing their bidding, you get shot. Yeah. They kill people. They bury you, no one notices, no one cares.
βThe value of human life is extremely low. Yeah, it's, it's, it's satanic. It's dark. Well, let's jumpβ
back on my film because in my film, the value of life is once again. We're talking about the world, but yet, I got it related back because in our film, the value of life seems low as well. Yeah, low for the post and live in more for the value for the post and that kills them. Right. Yeah,
without giving too much of the film away, what happens in the film actually happens in real life.
I mean, that, that is, it's based, I mean, you say it's based on real life, but there's been real life cases or people, they've harvested people's organs for profit. Yeah. And that's a thing. I mean, that's a big problem with people in China. You know, people go to China for, for, for organs like there's a tourism to get organs replaced. Like they can use new kidney or
βneed to deliver whatever you got it. Yeah, they have it. And what they'll do is they'll take theirβ
fucking prisoners and they, oh, look, a baby blood type perfect whack. And then now you got some dudes heart business. Yeah. There's a crazy. There's another element that, um, this is where the right hem live on Joe Rogan podcast. I got a new film coming out of May folks. It's called one spoon of chocolate written and directed by the riser starring Shambi Moore, Paris Jackson, play on the word Rockman Dumbar, the name of few. It's produced by Quentin Tarantino
and my wife, Talani Diggs, hey, baby. I did that, did that, did that, did that, did that, did that. Ladies and gentlemen, this is the riser coming in at five after the hour. But I love how art can touch upon things, even if it's unintentional, right? But I mean, my unintentional is that, you know, as an artist, I just let the shit flow. Like I did, like when you showed all that
cargo cobalt, I never seen it. But yeah, it's in your lyrics. Yeah, but that's in my lyrics.
And even if you tell me that's trying to stuff here, I don't know about that. I do know some things that happen with some articles, but I wasn't, I'm not in debt in debt, with all it, in DEPA, STH. Yeah, I don't have in debt knowledge of it. But I, but I strive as an artist, Joe, is to actually to at least show the surface so that, you know, I don't know how deep the pool is,
βbut I will show show the surface, do my art. And I think in this film, which is an action film,β
though, right? So Joe only seen the first half of it, so he doesn't know about the Vivinciomatic ass kicking, and I'm not going to spoil it. I believe it. There's already plenty of ass kicking already. Right, exactly. Seems like I'm okay, but it gets fucking, you're going to have a good time. I'm sure you want to have a good time. But still, once again, the art of it has a, I'm realizing, as I'm watching with different audiences, like when I watched it in New York,
I had more focus yelling at the screen. Fuck that. It was good. They were doing some shit. When I watched it in LA, the audience was like, it was like a sense of nervousness. It was in the room. When I watched it in Chicago, it was standing ovation, you know what I mean? I watched it in San Francisco, and the Q&A was revering intellectual. So I'm realizing that, okay, this is touching. Then when I watched it, there's other place to go with Dave. Actually, I watched it with Dave Superl. He said that,
you got bars in this motherfucker. What's the mean by bars? He said, well, the guy says, the girl says, I'm supposed to go, this is just come, you haven't seen this thing yet, but Patrick Jackson is telling him that everybody in this town goes to church on Sunday. Except for Jimmy and his gang of degenerates. They party all night Saturday and they sleep all day Sunday. She said, and I guess they're not afraid to go to hell. And then the hero says, well, what I come from,
they say heaven is what you make it in hell. It's what you gotta go through to get it. That sounds like Dave was like, that's a fucking bar. And yo, oh Lord, so last time I was here, it was down there, or Rollers was here, right? So check it out,
Bro, I was showing the film the day, right?
Spring, Ohio. It was down there, bro. He was there, yo. And then he got up and he asked the question and he started, he interrupted, he talked about, then they, we was here and he, and you, you were spied on the door podcast. I mean, when you said yo, you saw the podcast, but you might even help them, right? And then he said, uh, and I said, oh, yeah, if you need something hit me, so he hit me up, so yo, let me get an opening theme track. So I got like a bunch of beats that's
on my little thumb drive. I sent them like five of them, right? And he chose one. Yeah, he told me about this. Yeah. So there he chose one and that because this theme, this is, it was a nice
βfucking, but that's saying five tracks. Uh, my manager is sending it to other people too, is it?β
So I can, I did give it the dining, I'll give it to him, Gratis. But he comes up in the middle of my Q&A with Dave about my film and he starts talking about the beat and he says, "Visa is an Indian giver." He said, he said, I was playing, he said, I had it on my podcast for almost two years. And then one day it said, like, license, uh, whatever they do instead of, uh, when you can't even know if I could shoot. And I was like, um, I said, oh yeah, but oh yeah,
the, the people from the minions, they had got, um, those five tracks as well and, and they chose it and they put it, and they put it, and they pay us a lot of money. And I'm not, I'm not going back to the money of it all, but, uh, so I told, I said, that she was another beat. He said, nah, son, that was the one. Oh, no, that was the one. That was the one. I said, bro, they chose
βit. My manager made the deal. Oh, no. It's off the table. Oh, no, so you had to change his opening?β
Yeah. So I, oh, no. That gives a board of complain about. Yeah. Oh, no. It's almost worth giving them the beat. So he doesn't have to complain. Yeah. I owe you down now. And I'm going to hook you up with something. I don't cook you up something nice. I can't wait for this phone call. Son, you know what you did to me. Son, he took it back. He said, that's in front of the audience. Oh, I couldn't deny it and said, I was like, yeah, they, they, they, you know, that's hilarious. That's
hilarious. Um, but anyway, um, but they love the film, too. Like, like, the audience and, uh,
I'm going to say that because I love, I love in my peers react to something. Is this your first
feature-length films, the fourth, fourth? Yeah. I know you've done other stuff, but this, did you have you written and done other things like this? The way you're doing it this way? This is my second one writing. So I wrote my first film, Melda, I have this, right? Right. Uh, which was a quick attack, you know, present as well. And then it was a, you know, kung-fu movie. So then I didn't want to get stuck and like, oh, that's all he does. So my second film I didn't write, uh, was
written by the Nicole, and she, um, she, it was called Love Beats Worms, uh, and uh, that was like a movie about poetry and a female lead and it was actually, um, John, J. D. What, John David
Washington was his first feature film as well. Um, and then my third film was called Cut Throat City,
which I didn't write, um, just wants to get a high gun as a director, and, and that film I had shot me more as the lead actor, and I kind of like fell in love with this talent. So that's why he was in Cut Throat City. He's in the Wu-Tang series, he plays Rayquan, and now he's the star of my new film. So he's kind of, we kind of got this, uh, I had to say, but we kind of got this, uh, this Denzel Spike Lee energy, this cooler Michael B energy. I really like this guy, but on this
particular film, yes, I decided to write it and direct it, um, and I'm back to the basic, like quintessential President, my first film, and now he's my fourth film, and he's back in the
building. And one of my favorite songs from that first soundtrack is Badest Man of Life,
that he's with Black Keys, and that song, that song, killed it, set out to, um, set out to Dan and Patrick. Yeah, I love those two guys. They're cool. That's on, kills it. That's on, kills it. That's such a good song. A bunch of dudes use that song. Let's walk out, walk out for the UFC.
βI think they don't look fucking carcamotion one day. Did you guys listen to lyrics?β
All right. I guess all you need is that hook. Right. Yeah. On this, on this, uh, how we don't know, are we good? Yeah, we're playing on this, on this particular film, uh, I got a guy named, you know, Jason Israel? Yeah, sure. Yes. So Jason Israel did a song, uh, in the film,
Is called the comic book life.
well. Um, and that was a pleasure. Uh, Larry's goal. Jesus Christ walked, it's, Jesus, Jesus Christ,
βmay have walked on water and Superman flies through the sky. The immigrant crossed the border.β
He's looking for a better life. Trying to find it. He's reminded that dreams are born to die. His reality kills his fantasy. It's not a comic book life, you know, I mean. Mm. And so it goes on, um, um, um, and so I try to, when I do films, it try to make like a unique musical collaboration. Of course, that was me and the Black Keys back then. And on this, on this, uh, on this film, he got like music from Jason Israel. We got influences from the Isle brothers who check this out,
but I'm on the plane three days ago, heading to Atlanta, the shoulder film. Guess who's sitting
in the first class in the sea right there. Huh, nicely. Now I never met him before. I'm like the
big fan of love as music. I got two of his songs in my movie. You know, like, I'm going to show
βand I look over. I'm like, my wife's like, yeah, that's why. And I was like, I got a chance to getβ
up and thank him, uh, for, you know, for his work and for even allowing his music to be in my film, because I, um, that was that special. Oh, that's cool. Are you a one, Isle fan? Not really. You're not a Isle brothers, Paul. Listen, Paul. You got that. Let me, I'm, I got to put you on some minds. Please, Paul, because if, you know, I'm quite sure your love life is good. All right. Quite sure you got a good love life, Paul. But if you have a get into any love life,
trouble. Okay, put on a Isle brothers. It was moving. Tell me what to get. I'm going to say,
sensual, sensual. Yeah, put that one on. And, um, and uh, yeah, I'm going to just give you that one, because, you know, the way that comes on, bro, your shoulders are going to start moving. Okay, all right, coming with two glasses of wine. Yeah, I'm telling you, bro, it's, you're going to be good. Yeah, I'll check it out. Who's up? Who's up? Who's up? Who's a, um, who's up? Favorite musician? Oh, boy. I don't think I have a favorite musician. I don't even have
a favorite genre. You know, I, I like all kind. I mean, if you look at my Spotify green room playlist, it's all over the place. It goes from Nina Simone to Bill Widdler's to Wu Tang to Leonard Skinner to Led Zeppelin. It's all over the place to Gary Clark Jr. to, it's everywhere. I move around. Your name is some dope shit. I like to move around. I like all kinds of shit. I'll listen to Dwight Yokem and I'll follow it up with, um, you know, cool G rap. I like, uh, one of my favorite
albums ever is when, um, the brand new heavies. Do you ever listen to brand new heavies when they got heavy rhyme experience? Do you listen to that? I don't know if I know that particular. Oh, brand new heavies got together with like cool G rap. They got together with a bunch of different rappers um, who else is in there? God. It's like, there's, there's a ton of different people that they did these tracks with. So they have like, the brand new heavies playing the music and like, like,
heavy rhyme experience is a name of the track. Gangsters and it's Wayne Source. Yeah. Where is this?
βWell, 92, I think. Wow. 92. Yeah. Right. Right. Because I remember that first album. Oh, my God.β
You got to listen to some of this shit. Yeah, because by now 92 was, no, I have this in the 1992. I'm on my own deck now. I don't listen to nobody. I'm just Wu Tanged out. Oh, okay. No, I was trying to make it. So I'm like, yeah. Yeah. Oh, I got it. So I missed it. Oh, yeah. I actually missed a lot of things doing my career. But I realized, like, I'm going backwards. Like, there was a point in my life where I couldn't stand R&B. Really made me nauseous. I'm serious,
like, like, like, like, like, if I'm driving an R&B zone, I felt, no, I was so fucking hip-hop, bro. 'Cause you're so concentrated. Yeah. It was weird. Like, I think, since though. Yeah, it makes sense. Yeah, because you were on the grind. You were really trying to make it happen. Now, you're giving me, now I play R&B. You made my wife. We'd be dancing on the mother for a good house. I mean, there was a point in time where I was only into 90s hip-hop. Like, 90s
hip-hop was my shit. Right. Because like, that was when I was young and I was on the road a lot. And that was, like, my getting fired up music was like 90s hip-hop. But then, I started expanding. And then I got into, like, a lot of, like, old classic rock and roll. And I just think,
It's all dependent upon your mood.
Right. But this, you got to listen to some of this heavy rhyme experience.
Yeah, I'm gonna put that on my own. Yeah, that's right there. Playing in that, uh, cool G-rap death threat. This is, like, one of my, all, uh, was so in the green room. We'll have to cut this out of the podcast, unfortunately, because we don't want to get dinged. But at, uh, in the green room playlist, this is, like, one of my first beginning of the night when the comedy show starts. And when the green room getting fired up,
pouring a couple of drinks, everybody's getting fired up. Someone's rolling a blunt. This is one of my favorite songs to start the green room playlist. Have me with it. This is cool G-rap and the brand new heavies. Okay. It's great. And, uh, the gang start hectic. That's another one of my favorites.
You also cool about it for me. So I never heard it. But it immediately, like, put me right back
and I stayed with some projects. Like, right back. And that time, like, my, like, my, cause, cool G-rap is love that dude. So put me right there. Thank you. Your cock blockin. One of my all-time favorite songs. Right. Right. Talk like sex. Um, I mean, so many ill-street blues. Ill-street blues. Amazing. And cool G-rap, I just think in mainstream just doesn't get
βthe respect he deserves from, like, the influence that he had in the '90s. Yeah. I think that I thinkβ
the the artists we get to on. But yeah, you write the, the, the pain stream. Yeah. People, there's so many people. I bring up cool G-rap and they're like, who? Right. And they're like, oh, sit down. Sit down in a place. Yeah. Yeah. And I didn't never, he told me this year's later that the G stood for genius. Ah. And these are, these are fucking genius. Even though we, we got the Joseph, the genius. And I, cool G-rap is a, is a, is a genius, man. I was blessed. I was blessed to
do a couple of tracks with him. And my, my catalog, we actually got a couple that we did together and it's a couple that I just produced with like him and expected deck and things that they just solved. That's one of the greatest blessings of all of the art is that I'm also you do the same as, you know, whether you're doing comedy, whether you're doing your physicality, that you have people that you had in my yard and then all of a sudden you're, you're, you're, you're a, you're a peer.
You're a collaboration. Yeah. You're doing shit with them. Yeah. I don't know. It's very exciting. Just being able to hang out with them. You know, we did, uh, uh, we went to dinner with the Quentin Tarantino Roger Avery and then they came to the comedy show and then we're all hanging out in the green room. Right. And everybody's like, this is the fucking coolest night of all time. Just chilling
βhanging out with Quentin Tarantino and Roger Avery at the mothership green room. I think it's hardβ
to beat man. Everybody the next day were like, didn't last night really happen? That was so fun. When, um, uh, when I, this, I, I, I, speaking of Quentin, when I, um, had a cut, that was, um, you know, what would you just show him? Uh, uh, a buddy jab at it and my buddy Abba's all, they, uh, so Jarrett kind of owns the old Desi on as studio. Oh, wow. Um, he's the guy that started
with cameras. So, and he has this amazing screening room. And so he said, yo, um, you can
screen it here for Quentin. I said, I cool. So we finally got the date to do it. And I go there and his plus one is, his adventure. Oh, wow. Exactly. So I'm just like, oh, crazy. Yeah. So now, like, okay, whoa, okay. Um, and it was, and I played the film to them. And it's, once it was another great night, uh, some great, uh, what have we sipping on? We were sipping on, uh, some great scotch. Yeah, we have some great scotch. I don't smoke weed like that no more. So, you know,
that's, do you still smoke weed? What happened? Were you stopped? I just, I, I don't function good in public or weed. So it does. Well, does. I get it. Well, okay, people think they don't exactly, but I don't want to see that photo. I don't want to, I don't want to, yeah, I don't want to be that guy no more. It's like, if I'm home, also to be honest with you, if I smoke weed, bro, I start doing kung fu, bro. Really? Yeah, I'm out there going to sit
quiet and like be a total of your story. But yeah, it motherfuckers like, yo, this is, yeah, exactly. I'm starting to, it's like that. I mean, with a fucking pseudo honest so soon. So it sounds fun. Yeah. You know, so I, yeah, I kind of, twenty-fifteen was when I, when I stopped. Really, completely. Maybe, I mean, not, yes, for completely, but then I said, I will only smoke with two or three people in the world. One of them is quintanting, you know,
because we watch our kung fu movies, we're not going over it. I smoke a, I have some weed
βwith them. I know that, I'm in a, you know, no photos is happening. Not going to see this, right?β
The, the, the Zonky, Rosa, my other brother, I smoke weed. I won't say his name, because I don't know people know he smoke. I think I might not see smoke, but I won't say his name is, and the
Bonnie see him want to see, yeah, twice, you know what I mean.
like, I was smoked up blunt with method man, and over twelve years ago. Wow. And that's my,
that's my, that was my, he's the king of smoke. Anyway, but I was like, but I just, like I said, I just don't like how, uh, you know, it just doesn't fit my, my, my, my today's personality. So I'm a sippin' out. Mm-hmm. I was a sippin' some, some, not no syrup. I mean, I know what you mean. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. Little Scotch. Little Scotch, little Scotch. Little Scotch, little with the key. I love to, uh, mescal. Mm-hmm. You know. Look, there's nothing wrong with those things. I think they're all tools,
and I think one of the things about tools is you can miss use them. And I think there's a lot of people that just live in the cloud, and they just get high all the time, and then they just feel
βlike their life is out of control, and then pure abstinence becomes the only solution. But it's really,β
you just started abusing the tool. I think marijuana is an excellent tool for creativity. Mm-hmm. In the way, I like it the most is writing. I think it's the greatest thing ever for writing. There's something that happens with just not a lot, just a little bit of weed. Just all sudden, big ideas start sparking off in your head. Then I go, I don't think that these ideas would exist without this stuff. That's one of the things that Carl Sagan said. Mm-hmm.
Jimmy, was that famous Carl Sagan quote on, uh, cannabis? But Carl Sagan, who's obviously, like, one of the most famous astronomers of all time, he had, uh, and wrote that great movie contact,
the great book contact. He had this quote about cannabis that I always like to say to people
that want to say it's for dummies. Because it's like, no, man, there's something to it.
βYou could look like a dummy if you abuse it. Just like you look like an idiot if you get soβ
drunk that you can't walk. Exactly. It's the same thing. But a little bit, just a, just a little bit sometimes, just fires up. The illegality of the council outrageous and a petta bit to full utilization of a drug which helps produce the serenity and insights, sensitivity and fellowship. So desperately needed in this increasingly mad and dangerous world. That was one quote, but there was another quote that he had about ideas that are available
through cannabis that aren't available without it, that his perception will, and obviously,
here's a guy that, I mean, what better way to utilize weed than to smoke a little and stare at the fucking vastness of the cosmos and just try to, with it well, open up your mind to this. That's exactly what I mean for me, right? So, so if I, so it's only two things going to happen for me. I'm a smoke. No, it's just me like, even if I'll be in here finding fucking constantly. He said I'm a, yeah, or kung fu, kung fu. That's, they'll sound like two good things.
Yeah, I'm not knocking on them, but it's definitely a, my schedule. It does, yeah, it does.
βThat's the thing is like, what is life is life about schedules, life about enjoying moments.β
And I think there's, there's something to be said for enjoying moments and there's certain things that will help enhance moments. And I think that's where cannabis comes in, in the play. I think the problem with it is the problem with anything that human beings abuse, whether it's soda, chocolate, whatever, alcohol, food, people abuse things. They go too far with it. You don't use it correctly. And I think it's also part of the problem with it being illegal.
One of the things about alcohol being legal is we understand what it does is. If I give you a shot of decila and we both clink glasses and we do a shot, we understand the dose that is one shot of decila. It's not confusing. Whereas we all know, we, you know, you get a whole lot of snoops, we either. Some people are just there. They're dealing with botanists that are on another planet. Let me say one thing about snoops. We one day. Well,
when I was smoking, I did it. And if you were him. And that's when he had that GSC, he had the G. Yes, something that worked that he had. And we was talking about my movie. And then I was going, everything was fine. Like, you know, he's he rolling it, you know, he's talking. And he lit that motherfucker up and passed that shit. Well, I hit that shit, hit it back, hit it again. I'm getting the fuck out of here. And I was gone. Yeah, that's Joey Diaz we too.
Joey Diaz got that same kind of weed. I've given it to some people. I'm like, careful. Let's Joey Diaz weed. And they get scared. Like, oh, Jesus, you had to go and take them in. Yeah, put a pillow, get a pillow ready, because that's it. It's going to fucking, and he could do it all day. Like him, and that's crazy. Him and method man out of for my, and I give Bona Boy in that category, as well. Those are the three most people that I've seen, very, we tolerant, like, like, like,
They could be on the third one.
we all going like that? They go it all day long. When Snoop was in here, he just kept rolling
blunts. And I was like, how are you still awake? How are you, how do you function? But they're so accustomed to it. They're tolerance is so high in that feeling. I just being in the cloud all the time. They're fine with it. Do you find that other quote? There's multiple quotes. It can put here at an essay. So it was something about ideas being available. That aren't, that was the big quote. Yeah, didn't say, uh, to understand himself. It doesn't say that in here. That's okay. I feel no worries.
I should have found. I should have had it ready. But the point is it's like, it's a tool. And you could use any tool correctly, or you could use it and abuse it incorrectly. So what's your frequency of smoking? Like, you smoke once a day, once a week? I just wish it was legal. If it was legal, then people could legal many places, isn't it? Yeah, but it's not federally legal. It's just got changed to schedule three. So schedule three is the same as Tylenol with coding.
βSo what does that mean? That means that you have to get a prescription for it.β
So it doesn't carry the same, uh, the crazy thing is it's completely legal in California. And it's generating tax revenue. It's completely legal in Colorado. Generating tax revenue.
And then people always want to point to the negative aspects of it. But like,
you could, you could have negative aspects with everything else that's legal, too. Think about how many people die from obesity every year. obesity related diseases. Let's put that into complexity. Put that into our AI sponsor. What is how many people die because of obesity related diseases every year? So should we regulate food? Should we regulate the amount of food that people are able to consume? Should we stop people? Should we make cake
and ring things and whole host who make a shit illegal? No. You have to have some personal responsibility and self-control and an understanding of like what the ramifications are. What what are the dangers of overeating or eating the wrong kinds of food that's the same with cannabis, the same with alcohol. If you think that alcohol should be illegal, well, you're going to people are going to drink it and then you're just going to empower organized crime. Like they did
during the prohibition. Okay, how about this? World Health Organization reports at at least 2.8
million people die each year as a result of being overweight or obese. That's fucking crazy.
That's crazy. Globally, it's 3 to 5 million people a year. So what is the 2.8? That's here? I don't know. No, here's U.S. is here. So what do you ask? It's 280,000 to 325,000 per year. They knocked out opioids, knocked it out of the park. So we're all worried about opioids and no one's worried about pizza. But that doesn't mean that pizza should be illegal. And that's the thing, especially in New York
piece of blood. That's the best piece of experience, Connecticut, New Haven. Look, there's, you just have to have an understanding of what to do and not to do. Don't eat pizza 24 hours a day every day. You'll die, right? Don't eat an amount of salt. You need a pound of salt. You'll be dead. Wasn't it a documentary with a guy? I'm not talking about that. Super size me. Yeah, that's that. Yeah, what was he in every day? He's eating McDonald's.
Yeah, all day every day for every meal. And that was like 30 days before like the group of people started knocking at the door. Yeah, he wasn't doing well. He, he had all sorts of liver problems. Didn't McDonald's just release some subscription where you get like it's like 52
βhours a month and you could eat as much as you want. I think they just did that today. What's thatβ
luck, Jerry? What's that face? I know. It doesn't make any sense. 52 dollars. I think they just did that today. I saw it on my Google news alert this morning. Did that make sense? No, it doesn't make sense unless they're limiting the amount of meals that you can have in a day. But if you have a subscription, say if you have a McDonald's subscription and it's 52 dollars a month and they, and that's all you eat, you could live off of 52 dollars a month. Wow, not according
to that documentary. No, that's too much. You out of here. Well, what if you only eat their salads and you only eat their beef patties without any bread? So it'll probably be better. It'll probably be okay. But even their beef probably has like fillers in it and shit. I'll still live in a vegan lifestyle. Still? Yeah. Yeah. What do you get mostly for your protein?
βMostly beans. I probably do consume a little bit too much soy, I think.β
I do eat tofu. Shout out to our friends, C.K. Hey, in the building. Oh, yeah, yeah, he bought in. Yeah, he did. Oh, child. That place rules. Yes. He bought us lunch. We will eat after we finish this.
Phenomenal Chinese restaurant here in Austin, Phenomenal.
What? He has those sysporn peppers. Oh, yeah. That's it. It's cracked. They kick. Yeah.
βThey kick. They make my, my bald head sweats. Yes. That's a dripping. Yeah, that's dripping downβ
my eyebrows. Exactly. I'm sorry. Well, we're looking up again, Jamie. I spent Donald's unlimited play. Oh, yeah. You find it up? Is it fake? Well, I'm just, uh, the only places that it pops up are a, there's one Instagram post. It was in my Google news. It, people are reporting it, but it seems to be only based off of a photo, which is most likely a, a, a, a, a, a, a. Oh, yeah, 54 bucks a month. This photo is going around, but there's, there's no
links to make McDonald's isn't saying it. There's no, there's no, there's no. Oh, because so it's bullshit.
It's bullshit. Because I was thinking like, how could they afford? Now, what else I would say
they do do test stuff and it is claiming it's a pilot program being tested somewhere. So actually, they're trying something out somewhere. So again, I don't know. Interesting. Porting of it. Unlimited meals is a weird, if you're going to limit it, you can't say unlimited, because if you don't, if you, if it's unlimited, then you could just feed your whole family for 54 hours a month. Right. You go, you go, you go, take one. Hey, you can go back. Yeah. Well, you could just say unlimited,
I like to eat seven big Macs. Give me seven big Macs, seven orders of fries, seven sodas, and then
βyou're feeding everybody for 54 dollars a month. That's crazy. Does McDonald own Chipotle?β
I don't know. It seems to be all Chipotle. I'm playing in a Chipotle because I got Chipotle.
I did a campaign with them and they gave me a card. Life long card. I could eat at Chipotle for free for the rest of my life. Really? And that's part of the campaign. No, this was like the gift for you. Yeah. I didn't even know that that was a thing. And, and I could, and I could have like 10 people with 24 hour notice. And I think it's I could do a catered event at least once a month. Wow, for the rest of my life. That's
pretty good deal. That is a real thing. Really? That's like a celebrity gold card thing they are. Nice. They're hands on it two different ways. Travis Barker has one here. Interesting. I got one. What Travis is a he's a vegan team. Yeah, I'm a vegan too. Eating the just the bean burritos and stuff.
βBut it's so free to. They got some shit. So free to. What is that?β
Hopefully there's no chicken in there. No, I think it's like a vegan vegan meat. So most of your animal pro or most of your protein is from what they tofu, the chicken I love chicken, peas, and crazy for lentils. My wife at the autopilot is good. Pete protein is really good. Pete protein is really good. Yeah, it was good. Ham protein is I think it's one of the few plant-based proteins that contains all the amino acids. And we're very bio-available to
punk and seeds, punk and seeds, punk and seeds really. Yeah, look up punk and seeds. Well, punk and seeds probably have the most best protein. Really. I'm happy to see. I keep them good too. I keep them in my car when they're roasted. Yeah. Yeah. I keep them soft on some. Mmm. She wants me every time I get in the whip. I can't see, punk and seeds. Wow. What does this say about the, oh, and reduce from risk of cancer and improve bowel and prostate health.
Punk and seeds. Well, that's the rich and protein fiber, unsaturated fats, and must have minerals. Papitas are a great healthy snacking option. All right. Yeah. Pumpkin seeds are delicious. Yeah. So you get those, you get some chick peas. You know, we're the people when they make like their fucking jack and lanterns. They scoop that shit out and throw it away. Yeah. Going to me. Looks like the most healthy part of the pumpkin. That's weird. It's weird. We throw away.
Like we're just so used to like waste. Yeah. So used to like having an abundance of food that we're not concentrating on this part of the plant that has the most protein. Right. In the plant, probably the most nutritious part of the pumpkin. Wow. You know, my buddy was here yesterday. He, uh, you don't throw away too much of that. Uh, too much of that meat for that sexist barbecue. You guys got this mother. Oh, hey, no, no, fuck. Oh, no, no, no. There was a, a 15 minute
weight line around a corner, 200 people. Where were you at? Which place? It was, I don't know the name of it. Terry Blacks. I don't know because I just drove at my man. I was so okay. He said, you know, he couldn't come out to Texas and I get some Texas barbecue. You know, I'm a vegan. I'm a dude. I mean, I only have some good beans and macaroni and it's just a bunch of different stuff that you can get there. Potato salad. Yeah. Yeah. Well, potato salad. Oh, that's right. It's
got some milk and eggs. Yeah, you've been on a vegan for a lot since the 90s, right? Yeah.
Well, no, I started vegetarian and the 90s and by the time I got the 2000, I ...
you don't fuck with eggs at all? No, no, I got with the eggs. No. Yeah.
βI don't know, the eggs. We got me off the fucking eggs, bro. I think my personality got me off theβ
eggs personally. Why? You know, it's like, like, I'm, I'm like, what's the word? I could be scornful. Was that the word? Like, when you like, like, like, I don't know. Like, I'm like,
like, I feel it's on good type of shit. You know, I've never watched movies on. Yeah. Like,
there's a couple. Yeah. Like, you don't want pits in his arms, juices. So eggs, like, one day, it's just, it's just, it's just a slime with an egg. It's just, it's just cooking. Yeah, but it didn't got that little little white shit in it. Whoa. Oh, that's a, it's so good for you. And if you have your own chickens, like, I have my own chickens, eggs are karma-free protein. They're like pets. They give you free protein. Right. Right. Because they're, they're laying an egg that will never
be a chicken because it's not fertilized. Exactly. So it's just free protein. Right. And they lay them every day, basically, or close to it. And you feed them, and they run around the backyard,
βand they pick bugs and grass. What do you feed them? Chicken food? You know, you buy chicken feed,β
and we also feed them some table scraps and vegetables and different things. But they're carnivores, man, which is really wild. Like, you see them eat a mouse. It's crazy. Oh, what? They tear mice.
You never see a chicken eat a mouse? And they're missing the chicken. Chickens are straight up
dinosaurs. There's some great videos of chickens around a cat and a cat's playing with a mouse. And the chicken just runs up on the cat and steals the mouse from him and tears it apart. I see that. Yeah. I fed a chicken that, well, it one chicken stole the mouse. But so this is what happened. So in my house in California, we used to have a rot iron fence, and we replaced it with a glass fence. Unfortunately, hawks couldn't tell that it was a glass fence. And we lost a
few hawks. And they slammed into it head versus got cold and some of them. We lost like two hawks died. It was really sad. But one of them survived. And my family, my wife and my daughters, took the hawk and put it in like a large cardboard box. It couldn't fly and they had a feed it over the weekend because the rescue shelter couldn't take it over the weekend. We had to bring it on Monday. And so they go, well, what a hawks? How do you feed it? We went to the store and the pet store
and the pet food store had these things called pinkies and what they are, it's like little baby mice. And so you put these little baby mice in with the hawk and the hawk ate most of them, but one of them lived. One of them, the hawk didn't eat it. I can't say enough. Had enough. Yeah, pinkies. It ate enough. So my daughters were like, what would you keep that one alive? I'm like, it's not going to live. It doesn't have the milk. It doesn't have its mother. It hasn't been
weened. It's going to die. And I said, let me just feed it to the chickens. I didn't even know if they're going to eat it. And then I was going to have it. I put that little mouse down on the cage. And that chicken just ran up and snatch it and they all stole it away. So watch this cat. This cat's fucking with this mouse. The cats, you think cats are ruthless. Yeah, he's playing with this motherfucker. But he's playing with it. He wants to watch it hop away
and then the chicken gets annoyed after a while and the chicken's like, give me that chippitch. And when the chicken runs up on the mouse, I watch this instantaneously, as soon as the chicken realizes it's like, oh god, it's to give me that chippitch. It just starts
βtearing apart. Chickens aren't into playing with things at all. They're just not. That's what it is.β
This is dinner. Yeah, it's just shaking with food and mangled in. But they were all chasing each other around the chicken coop with this one chicken had the mouse and its mouth. And they were all trying to steal it from her mouth. Oh, they wanted it more than anything. That's crazy. They don't act like that with chicken food at all. Right, right. They want to see me. Well, yeah, or you dried worms or that's one of them like worm meal. You probably these like boxes of dried and you
shake it and they come running and you'll like leave that out for them to love that. So okay, so now your chicken's you got your own how many? I have 15, 15 shots. Yeah, so you're getting what? Two, how many? The bunch of eggs like probably at least 10 eggs every day. Wow. And so
because they don't always lay them over there. But it's free protein and it's healthy for you.
You know exactly where it came from. There's no hormones, no pesticides, no herbicides, nothing. Let me let me interview up our podcast for a moment. Okay. This is the riser. I'm sitting here with Joe Rogan. I have a new film coming out of main foods. It's called one spoon of chocolate. It's starting to show me more in Paris, Jackson, produced by Quentin Tino. And there is everywhere. May folks. And that's only a couple days from now. Today is the
27th. So it's this Friday. This Friday. There it is. One spoon of chocolate. Yeah. Because one spoon of chocolate can do what? Change a whole glass of milk. Change the whole glass of milk. Anyway, eggs is good for you. There's a good for you. Healthy and calmer free.
Not only about anything suffering.
as a vegan and I don't cook with it or use it. But there's some butter slipped on my shit.
I'm not going to flip that out. Yeah, you shouldn't because it's just milk that comes out of a cow. Especially if you get it from an organic farm. There's no big deal. Right. So that's the only thing that you know, I don't, I don't, I use all that plant-based butter and they got this thing called well, now a country crock got plant-based avocado oil butter. Really? Yeah, how the fuck did they make that? That's the problem with all that stuff that's like fake meat and fake this is that
βit's really processed. Right. You know, I think if you want to eat vegetables and vegetarian diet,β
like the way to do it is the way the Indians do it. It was like Indian food from India. Oh,
there's a lot of amazing Indian vegetarian food. I stay in the Indian restaurant. Oh, so good.
So spicy and so delicious and they've been cooking just vegetarian dishes for probably thousands of years. Clean as you write out. Oh, that's true. Yeah. It opens up the gates. Bam, Alama. Let's go. Let's go, baby. Don't, don't have a flight. Yeah. Exactly. If you do get to see the back. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. But there was a place that I used to live near my old house in California that was in an Indian neighborhood and it was this Indian restaurant. It was like a,
you know, like a cafeteria style where you just go and I don't even know what the fuck the names of these things were the photos of whatever it was. It was all in Indian. Right. And I would just point it. And it was all everyone who ate there was Indian. Right. It was very few regular, I mean, no white people, no African Americans. What was that? Wait, I feel like I've might have fucking been in the Valley in the Valley. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. It's not a restaurant. No,
it's like a store in the back of the store. You've been to that place. And you could buy some fucking spicy stuff. Oh, yeah. Yeah. God, I wish I remember the name of the place because the spices were awesome, too. It had, it was a great place. And then the back they had this like cafeteria style. Yeah. It was fun. And it was all Indian people. Yep. Yeah. Phenomenal. Phenomenal restaurant. I'm the kind of guy that I do that too. Like I go to the Asian market instead. I'm going to fuck.
I go, I know that I'm getting a bunch of fish. Oh, that's it. India sweet. It's spicy. Damn, Jamie's a wizard. Nice. Where's that joint? No, no, no, no. That's exactly it. That's the spot. That's not for all. And that is our office. But that's real close to where my old studio was to. And I was on, I still got the same office right over there. Yo, bro. Your old studio. Yeah. You know what happened to it, right? No, bro. That whole shit they tore that shit down.
βThey did. It's now in the LA Rams training facility. Oh, wow. Do you remember that AMC?β
Yeah, bro. Really tore it down, bro. They building some other shit there. That's crazy. That is crazy. Because back, that's what it fans. I know I could I could see Joe's office from my window. Oh, his studio from my window. Back in those, back in those days and shit. Wow. But now all that is the LA Rams training facility. So I watched the Rams training and shit from window. Oh, that's crazy. Yeah. That neighborhood is very interesting. There's a lot of cool stuff.
There's a phenomenal Mexican spot down there. What is it called? The big burrito? That's what's called, right? I think that's it. There's this phenomenal Mexican joint. And you go in there. It's all like Mexican soap operas playing. Everybody speaks Spanish. No, no one there to speak in English. And the food is sensational. It's a big burrito. That's it. El big burrito. El big burrito. That place fucking rules. I, when I lived there, I didn't tell people about it because I didn't want to blow off the spot.
I wanted to be able to go in there. I would never bring it up on the podcast.
And they've reached out to me thanking me because we brought it up a few times. But that place fucking rules. You want to get like a legit burrito, legit casadilla, like legit tacos, like language tacos, like calton, I don't want to eat meat. But if you did, even the burrito being burritos are fucking phenomenal. It's just like real legit spicy Mexican food. Well, to me, he's all about the sauce. If, if you got good salsa, you know, I mean, all that place is so good. That's, I mean,
this is places that you find in LA, the real hard to find in Texas. Texas, you get a lot of Tex Mex, you know, whereas in LA, you get straight Mexican. Let's talk about that for a moment.
βBecause I, I honestly thought about that because New York, you, you, you, you, I mean, now it's okay.β
But New York, we, for years, bro, we didn't have good Mexican food, bro. Did you know? Yeah, because now it's been more, some more brothers come and came in and there's, there's some pocket communities. But trust me, in New York, bro, I thought I was eating Mexican food.
That's why I went to California.
absolute best Mexican food. San Diego is great. But, but I, I find Texas and New Mexico,
βlike I find this part of the country as well, having, having a lot of good flavors. But I'm interested.β
How do you, like, if you would say, from your travels, the best Mexican food is a California, is it the Midwest, what, what would you say? Well, there's really good Mexican food in Texas, but you got to seek it out, whereas there's a lot of text max here, which is also really good, but you could tell it's not straight Mexican. You know what I mean? It's like a fusion. Right. And in California, you don't have any of that. And California is just Mexican. And there's
so many great Mexican restaurants in California. San Diego was filled with, but LA's filled with them, too. But it's spots like that, like the big burrito, where you go to a place like that,
you're walking, you're like, "Oh my God, I'm home." Because it's like the smells and then you see
the Spanish soap operas playing, right? Oh, this is where this is legit. Yeah, I was driving down the street last night and said, and I, I just found this really funny, right? So I'm driving down the street, I mean, I'm not driving, and post I don't drive, but the car might come on. You don't drive at all? I don't drive. I haven't really since 2012. I haven't driven a car. How come? I just, I just, I'm like, "No, what happened, bro?" Well, I wasn't China. You don't want to drive
in China. Well, I got to be honest, like we were doing the film there. And every time, every morning that they were, I would go to work, it almost, like every day, it almost happened.
βLike it almost, like, that's that most car accident. Yeah, every day. Yeah. That's what I'm saying.β
So, and even, even, even, like, when my brother Russell Crowe, like, we'll get to set on the morning.
I love that dude. And you know, he'll say the same thing like, your Bobby, like, yeah, bro. We made it. Right? But so, so then when I came home, I just stopped driving, bro. He just didn't want to be a part of it anymore. No, I haven't drove since then. Have you ever fucked with any of those waymos? You ever gotten any of those things? You? No. No. No. No. But I do have a Tesla little drive me. Have you did it? Yeah. I've had to drive me all the way home.
Yeah. It's crazy. Yeah. How do you feel, though? Un uncomfortable. I don't like it. I like driving. I do enjoy driving, but with my Tesla, I'll put an address, like, say, if I want to go to a restaurant or something like that and go to, and it'll drive me, it'll stop at stop signs and stop lights. It'll change lanes if there's anything in the way. It hits the blinkers to change lanes. It turns. It does everything. Right. I mean, it literally can drive you from point A to the air
fuck with a Jamie, you ever use it? I just found out through the update that, like, I then, I'm not, I haven't been using full self driving. I've been using whatever was right before that. Which, to me, I thought was the exact same. It drives itself, too. What's the difference? I don't know. Because I, it said that you're, like, it gave me an option to turn it on. I thought I was, what? Hold on. The wall of my doing, then.
Oh, that's still drives itself. I don't remember because I turned, I got, it's a part of us subscription, right? Isn't it? That's when I got, I was like, wait, I thought I had it. Yeah. Well, whatever's been doing, whatever it is, I definitely have it. Is that what you made? It's a part of a subscription. You mean, yeah, an automatic? I think so. I think you pay more for it. I'm not sure. I don't want to talk out of turn.
βThat's what I also did understand it either, but yeah, I think so. I think you pay for it.β
Because I think it's more complex. It's using a bunch of different, I don't know, I'll make it things up. I don't know. But I do know it works. If I press it, I saw a way more on the way here to you. And it was right beside us. I looked in there, and I was like, you know, bro, why have a steering wheel with the old school fucking uh, with a gear changer? Yeah. If nobody wants riders, well, in case it breaks. And then,
if somehow, maybe there's an override, we could just drive it. Yeah, but still, that's the grandma thing. Well, the shifter on the floor. Yeah. It's like, this is, we in the future, this and being no stand will like that. My cat I like has that. My cat I like shifts on the on the call. Like that. That's what, uh, what an excellent. Yeah. I thought I should have just right in. Oh, oh, I don't, I'm not sure. I'm pretty sure. That might be for you. Can I? I'm pretty sure.
Okay. I mean, I have a bunch of cars, but I'm pretty sorry. I don't even know. We're going to put a studio in it, the racetrack, the circuit of the Americas. I'm going to take you around the racetrack. I'm going to put you in a car. You're going to drive around the racetrack. Oh, yeah. I'm going to stop driving the car. Yes. Thanks. Yeah. Yeah. That's not the new one. Yes. This is 2023. No, 2026 Escalade V Escalade gear shifter. Yeah. But it doesn't, that's not how it works.
I'm 90% sure that it is right there on the column.
That's what mine looks like. Okay. See that little, they put it back up. Yeah. They put it back
up there. They because it clears all the room on your console. Right. Like these cops. Yeah. That's, that's where mine is. I love that. Well, so anyway, I'm coming, well, I'm going to escalate yesterday. Right. I don't know what to guess. It was that. But I got the window down, getting some of this beautiful Austin air and a truck drives up beside me, playing this Spanish song. He's blasting this shit. It's shit sound cool like a motherfucker, right? I'm like, yeah, what is this shit?
So I says, damn it. Right. So I say, damn it. And then I get the song, right? Right. And then I start planning my car. And the truck is going on. But then we, you know, he's still driving this low. Then I, I can see the car that beside me, they shazam did. That doesn't happen. I mean,
βthat's what we need again. Yeah. Like, where, like, somebody says, playing some fucking music,β
you never heard the song before you like it. Yes. You got it. Yeah. And so I got love shazam. I got
two Spanish songs now. I'm like, am I, am I joint that is part of my, my new playlist. So they just got from listening to people's cars. Yeah. Just driving by like, oh, no, that's this. I don't know. Yeah. That's a new thing, right? Because we don't have radio as much anymore. There's not a lot of people listening to the radio. A lot of times you're getting new songs like, oftentimes like, I'll be at dinner someplace and they'll be playing music. Oh, what is this? Right. And I'll put my
phone up in the air and try to catch it. Right. You know, that's dope. That's one of the greatest things about technology that may be because is that ability to know, you know, like, you can know now
βif you want to know. Yeah. You got to wait to know. Yeah. Like, everything we, everything you get aβ
door here that we not too sure about, we could hit, he could hit that button exactly. Give us a reference. Yeah. I know. I was sometimes we leave a podcast and I'm like, maybe we should have looked that one up because it turns out that's just not true. Well, I had, I had being Google a few times. Yeah. You won. You can't Google. Yeah. Well, Google's a little disruptive, I think. But if you use AI, like, we use perplexity, it searches for the whole internet. Right. It doesn't just, you know,
use whatever Google, the problem with Google, not, it's not, not that it's a problem. But it's these are curated searches. So like, like, say, like, here's a perfect example. Save you want to find a Mexican restaurant. Right. And you use Google. What Google's going to do is some people are paying so that their restaurant gets to the top of the search list. That's a little bit of a problem. Right. Because that might not be the best restaurant that might just be a restaurant that paid
Google. Whereas if you go to like perplexity and say, in terms of like restaurant or critics, what is the favorite authentic, authentic Mexican restaurant in Austin? And it'll tell you. Right. It'll say these people believe that this is it. And there's no curation yet. Right. I mean, like, my wife is actually, we were talking about this today. Like one day, they're going to fuck that up, too. And people are going to pay to go back to it. But right now, they haven't done that.
So right now, you could find spots like cool spots that haven't, you know, with no curation. Exactly.
And let's, let's, let's, let's do a test real quick. Okay. Okay. So there's 1096 million,
940,000 square miles on the planet. Right. Whoa. There's 63,360 inches. Right. And um, in the mouth. Because it's 5,280 feet in the mouth. So I'm excited over. There's 1096 million, 940,000 square miles in the country. And a planet planet on the planet. Okay. Okay. For one mile, there's 5,280 feet. Okay. And of course, there's 12 inches in the feet. So you multiply that by 12. You'll get 63,360 inches. I want perplexity to tell me
how many square inches on the planet. Whoa. Let's see what you get. Boy, that number's got to be bananas. I guarantee we're going to look at a long, fucking number. Lot is zeroes. That's a good question. That is a good question. Dun, dun, dun. Does it even have an answer? It's probably confused.
βIs that all I want to fuck you talking about? You're flexing me. What are you doing?β
We perplexed, perplexity. There you go. Okay. Eight times 10 to the 17 square inches on earth
Surface.
17 zeros. 10 to the 17th. That's what that is. 17 zeros. So basically, it took, it took the 63,
βthree, six, oh, and they squared it. Uh-huh. And that's how they got to there. Wow.β
But it didn't give us no fucking, uh, a direct answer, right? Well, it did, but it did it with 10 to the seven. Okay. So let's do this now. Type that out. Type that number out and divide it by four. Okay. Let's see, type it out. I'm going to see what this looks like. This must look bananas. And now divide it by four. Before you do that, can you ask it? How would you say that?
Like it's not a trillion. It's not a quadrillion. Like what is that? It's a quintillion. Is it a quintillion?
Yeah. So it's a quadrillion? Wait, no. How would you say that? Please, how would you say that? 800 quadrillion square inches. Wow. Remember when you were kid, you'd think that was a fake word. Yeah, I want a controlling money.
βWould you believe that the earth weighs the atmosphere weighs 15 quintillion tons?β
Let's see, let's see, just the atmosphere. Yeah, just the atmosphere. The planets, the gases.
The planet earth weighs six, six tillion. Kanye said the wildest shit on my podcast wants to
go, how much does the earth cost? Right. And at the time, I was like, what? And then I thought about, I was like, oh shit, like property is valuable. You can own property. Right. Like everybody kind of everything is owned. Like how much is the earth? That's a big, that's a, well, you could get the number there, too, because, well, if you count in the minerals, right? Oh, yeah. And then there's an oil in the ocean, the ocean and the fish. Yeah, right. And then all the animals.
And then, and then it cast a appreciate day by day. Why don't I put that into complexity? If you were going to sell the earth, how much would it be worth? Oh, including everything on it. That's a mine fucking half. Economists usually estimate the world's real estate. All land plus the buildings on it. A few hundred trillion US dollars, not counting oceans, polar ice, or uno and space. That sounds like a bargain. Yeah. A few hundred trillion. That's it. No. Okay. Let's say, let's ask, what is the
worth of the earth? All its property, all its minerals, animals, and objects? That's a crazy question. That's a crazy question. Yeah. It's a good one, though. Yeah. Everything on our, every watch, every diamond ring, every hat, one dollar, every piece of art. The question I typed in was property and lands. Right. What is the value of everything on earth? Everything. Like what you said at a time. Every electronic value of everything on earth,
including, including animals, minerals, property, and objects. Oh, boy. I wonder how it's going to figure this out. I bet it will. It's going to look off of it. It's going to freak out. It's going to blow your ass. It's not figuring it out. Yeah. It's giving you something. There's no precise number. Oh, it's somewhere in the quadrilions to sex tillions of US dollars depending on what you count and how you value it. It's plausible attempts to add it up. Right.
There's no single agreed upon price tag for everything on earth. But this is the answer to Kanye's question. But you know what? No, no, hold on. Let's learn something there. It's say quadrilions to what? Sex tillions. Now, Axe, how much is the planet overweight?
βYeah. That's why I mean, I already did that, but we had, we had passed it before I could show you.β
Amosphere was quintile. 12 quintillion pounds. Yeah. In total. Yeah. I said 13, so I was, oh, I forgot that number. But Axe, how much does the planet overweight? Whoa. How much does the entire earth weigh?
What's guess?
No, no, no, no, no, no, don't do the atmosphere. We just want to get the value. I want to see if I want to see if it gives you. I mean, the atmosphere should already be included.
βI think that's why I think it won't include it.β
So basically, what is that word? What is that in a word? Ask that what that is that 13?
Yeah. Tell them, put it, put that, put it in pounds. Not kilograms. Because that's not even seven. That's eight. What does that mean? Right. But what does that ask it to say that? Can you say that? Yeah. What does it mean? Well, how do you say it? Serpentillion, 13 Serpentillion pounds.
No. No. Doesn't. It sounds like a couple of lizards. So you know, how believe it's wrong? Well, why?
Because when you take the square mouse, there's a conference, right? And you multiply the,
there's a formula to get that weight, right? It doesn't come out today. What does it come out to? Six, six, six. Yeah. Six, five, about 21 zeros. This is more. This was three more zeros on top of that. Yeah. But it, it sounds good. But if you take the formula of, of of of of of a sphere of the mass, like this, this number is closer, but does it take into account the density of the inner earth?
βBecause I think that's probably where a lot of the weight is coming from, right?β
The density of the inner earth is an immense, yeah. I mean, oh, it's a press in it. Yeah. Oh, cool. Yeah. If it's hollow.
It could be hollow. If it's hollow. Okay. Hold on. It's like we've got to take a, uh, a sponsored break.
This is the result of live on the Joe Rogan podcast. Joe Rogan experience. Have a new movie coming out. May 4th. May 4th. It's called once born to chocolate starring Shameek Moore, Paris Jackson, Blair Underwood. It follows an ex-military convict who comes home and trying to find him better life for himself ends up in this more town where everything goes fucking bananas and theaters everywhere. May 4th. When is it going to be available on streaming? I don't know.
Soon, right? How do you usually do that? Well, to be honest, I'm like, like, Iron Fist was what year was that out? That was 20, 11, 2012. And there was a different atmosphere back then. Right. Pre-COVID COVID changed a lot of, like, movie going and having a different thing. Yeah. I want the movie going. It's about me as to come back though. Oh, yeah. I do too. Yeah. I mean, there's something about going to see a great movie with a bunch of people that's a real experience.
βYeah. I think I'm so, I mean, my art, my career is based on sneaking into a fucking movie theaterβ
and watching three kung-fu movies. Yeah. So, I'm a bigger than cinema. I think what we did, so this particular film is actually coming through my own distribution company called 36 Cinema. And I think we did a deal with the theaters that they can have at least 30 days. A lot of people are doing 17 days in the theaters or 21 days. And cinema is suffering because of that. Because why I would go to the theater if I got at it home. And the home is, of course, a great place to watch
a movie. But when you're making a movie, right, you're making it for the theater. We haven't TV is made for home, but cinema is made for cinema. Like we haven't, um, what can I say? Like the sound, the color, the framing. Like I used animorphic lenses. Right. I mean, animorphic, like the lenses are the fifties when you fucking get this whole fucking scope, you know what I mean. And so, yeah, you go watch it on your phone. What is the difference? It was an animorphic lens in the regular lens.
A regular lens would be the way it bends the light in our reality. So, like you could have like 16.9. Okay. So, that's, most lenses are spherical now. That's that, right? Which is cool. Right. We look at animorphic. It's the way it controls the light way the subject is happening. And so, it kind of gives you more of a cinematic feel. Well, you focus, it's certainly like a little more blurry in the background. Yep. Yeah. Okay. And it kind of, it could, it's way it's
compressed in our light differently. And so, with this lens, do you do everything on film or is it digital? I actually saw this on digital. So, yeah. So, I mean, I'm in a digital way. So, I did this to digital, but I did, we did make 35 millimeter prints of the movie. So, if you, if you
In California and you go to the theater called the Vista, the augmented Vista?
I think it's in Los Filets or something like that. Okay. I'm bad at my Hollywood neighbors.
I'm like, I'm still on New Yorker. Right. But the Vista theater world showed the film on 35 millimeter
βfor like two weeks. It'll be the start of my films. Oh. So, you want to see it, yeah. If you want to seeβ
and with 35 millimeter with, oh, they go in the Vista. I love this guy. It's him. He's the best. He's, he's, he's, his trigger finger is the mother of a girl. Oh, he's a go. Well, he's psychic. He knows what you're talking about before you. Exactly. He's like the Vista. No, no. Yeah. So, that's the Vista. So, that's, so what is the difference? Like the way it looks to you when you see them 35 millimeter for a digital? Well, it's, I think the 35 millimeter kind of, it
makes the colors a little more richer and darker, like kind of how, how, how the 70s films look even up to the 80s. The digital one, because I've watched my film on both formats, the digital was more brighter and actually more familiar now, to us. Right. We're accustomed to
βit. Yeah. We're accustomed to it. But when we, I played it 30, on April 22nd, I had a,β
in fact, I'm going to talk about that a little bit, you know, my, but on April 22nd, we had
I put me in California on 35 millimeter. And it was my first time seeing it on 35 millimeter.
I mean, so, and it felt, it felt very nostalgic. I felt like I was back, it felt like a movie only, right. I mean, not, not, not like a movie and a TV show or a movie. It felt only like a movie. The only or movie is spoken is the flickering. When you, when you, you know, when you're doing 35 millimeter, you need a, you know, a real camera. Right. And so the light is going from this camera, from this one, then they got to switch the real, from this one, and it's like,
it's a certain thing that's happening, a certain pacing, a certain granular thing that's happening that for me, for my film, it felt almost like an honor to watch it like that. That's cool. I want to make a, make a, so check this out, bro. So we talked about this last month, but April 22nd, right. That was the day that I was a quit it from a crime, and just started my life over. I was facing eight years, April 22nd,
that's back in 1992. Okay. As you can see, a year later, I'm a platinum producer, but before that, I was heading to hell. April 22nd, seven, definitely, is the day that my film put me as on 35 millimeter, and at the Vista Theatre in Hollywood, April 22nd. But you've seen the opening of the film as well. So when my character gets out of jail, he walks on the calendar. The day he gets out, April 22nd. It's special. Well, this is a special film, for my life, I'm saying, for me, it's cool.
And it's, and it, and it was my, my buddy's shovel from system of a down birthday. We, we, we actually celebrate April 22nd every year because it wasn't my birthday, but it was the birthday of the Rosa, because before that, I was known this Prince Joaquin. But after that, equitting, and my mother telling me, you know, you got a second chance. I was like, exit Prince Joaquin, instead of Rosa.
Nice. That's amazing. Yeah. So when you were talking about the streaming thing, so do you,
is that something that's negotiated beforehand? Like, it'll be in the theaters for X amount of time or do you, once it's in the theater, do you then, like, depending on how well it does in the theater, is that how you negotiate a streaming deal or hasn't worked? No, it works. No, it works. It's, as soon as the negotiated ahead of time. Okay. And the, or the stream was kind of dictate what's going to happen. So since we had, so since we had this on our own company, we had a chance to
make the, the rules ourselves. So I didn't make a stream in deal, but I made the theatrical deal for us. And I gave the theaters 30 days for us. And so now my stream, he would go at my stream in distribution, which is our Samuel Goodwin. They would, they would go in a, hope I pronounced that right,
βbut I'll, I'll, I'll go fuck a word out sometime. I think that's the right word. Okay. Okay.β
What up, Pete? I'm the wrong guy to ask though. Yeah, I can fuck a word up. But anyway, so it, so yeah, here's a listen to streamers, but we wanted a 30 day cinema experience. And in, in the future, I'm going to try for 45 days, but remember when we was kids, Bo, Star Wars was in the theaters three times before you had a chance to see it come home. Yeah. And what did you do? You went back to the theater. Yeah. Because the lights, the sound, the vibe of
What you're creating, I'm making for the theater.
theater. My, when my other film came out doing the pandemic, cut the whole city, since there was a
pandemic, you know, even when my contract said, it was, it should be in theaters, the pandemic of it kind of made it a force. Major like maybe not in theaters. But my producer, Michael Menus, and he, you know, it's a good guy. He, he, he said, I, a classmate, I didn't make no, I didn't make this if no stream and bro. Okay. I sat my shit on the animorphic lenses. I got all the sound, like I made it for the theaters. He was like, yeah, but the theaters, you know, I'm playing. Bro,
nobody's going to the theaters. I was like, well, I don't know, then hold it. But he said, I can't hold it, bro. I was like, you know, it's business. But he still, nobody still said, okay, I'm a picture on 200 screens. And you could go and, you know, any did it, you know what I mean?
So, all my films has always go to the cinema first. And if I have my way, every film I make
will always start at a cinema. Have you ever tried using those? What's the, what's the Apple one, Jamie? Those Apple AR goggles? Yeah. Yeah. I heard watching movies on those is phenomenal.
βYes. Okay. But you have to also design it for that, too. Oh, really? Yeah. I mean,β
to get the full experience because, come on, you're going like this. And some, there's been some artists who have been able to create stuff for that. It's almost like a, I mean, I won't say it's like the sphere. Have you been to the sphere? Yes. But only for a fight. Right. No, they had a UFC there. It was amazing. No, I love it there. But Tana and Oscar had did a movie made directly for the sphere. In fact, there's another movie they're doing, they're doing another movie right now that they, they showed me a clip
of that's going to be made in a sphere. And it's actually very sports base. And so it's crazy. And of course, the Wizard of Oz. I heard that's nuts. Yeah. I see that there. You saw the Wizard of Oz? Yes. I heard there's all sorts of crazy new effects. And they added a bunch of stuff to the
movie. It's amazing. Yeah. It's amazing. And it's fucking, but it's feels amazing anyway. It's an incredible
experience. The new thing AMC has just shown recently in an ounce called Screen X. It's 207
βmillion degrees. It's going to surround the audience in some way. Well, that's how you get peopleβ
to go back to the movie theater. Give them something like this, where they're like, what? It's kind of like recuts, so it might be a fun way to go back and maybe see a movie you really like. Oh, let's see, Avatar and that. But they've got the Matrix like that now. Yeah, that's awesome. That's kind of something. This just sort of is an ounce. It's only in two plate two cities right now. There's a place, um, I know there's a place in Dallas where they show you a C-fights and
causing. That's causing. Yeah, that's where the Matrix thing. That's nuts. I love that he got the answers. Yeah. Is it genius? But with the, the place in Dallas, the causing place, like you're seated here and the screen is like 60 feet tall and it's right in front of you. And you're watching the fights as if. Let's hit the Matrix. Well, so this is the Matrix. Yeah, they worked with the film company. It was sort of like remake it and add extra stuff. Oh, wow. There's also a new screen.
I just saw, I think it's going to be in Clearwater, Florida. It's going to, it's going to be going to be the world's biggest screen. See if you can show, show you the fight thing. Yeah, show me the fight scenes. Like, people were watching the fights there. I was like, okay, that might actually be better than being there alive. Like, look how crazy the size of the screen is. Right. Like, look are you watching? Like, you're sitting right there. I mean, that fight is gigantic. It's huge
because the thing about going to see the fights live. Look how big that is. All the way. Yeah, show that again. Like, look at that. Look how nuts that is. Right. That is nuts. You don't get to see these camera angles at home either. Which is awesome. Not like that. Not like that. I love this because this is giving me hope. Well, like, everything you've just showed me is giving me hope for cinema right. Right. This is like, and this is like cheaper than buying tickets. And this is better
than any ticket you could ever buy for the fights. Like, better than any day, better than my seat. And I'm sitting cage side. How much will how much a ticket like this will cost? It's a good question. They do sell tickets for this. I don't know. Um, click on that one. May 9th. How much is that cost?
β140 bucks. 100 bucks. If you want to sit prior real close, you had 20 bucks to get inside. Okay,β
general mission is 20 bucks. What is the front row? Where's the screen? The display is right there. What are those? Like right there? What says two? Well, like 67. How much? 167? That's a, that's a bargain. How much it would cost if you actually went to see the fight. Nice. And it's probably a better experience. Plus you get commentary. You get to hear everything. And you're right there. And then
It's not just like being at home, which is great because there's a bunch of p...
with. So it adds to the exact and the energy that's the knock I was going to say with the vision
βpro is you're, it's still to right now. You're by yourself. By yourself. Kind of for me, I'm aβ
son, it's like a single guy in my apartment with a dog. Perfect. But yeah, if you're home with anybody, you're like, well, I can watch it. Yeah, I don't know. Right. Yeah, catch up. We catch up to me later. Like, could you watch it with a chick where you hold hands and both that vision pro and we'll start each time. Three, two, one, go. That's fun. Yeah. That's me and my wife on a plane. Oh, you do that. We even on a way here, bro, when we watch, we watch, oh, uh, Sebastian. Uh, I said, Sebastian last
name is he's a. Yeah, thank you. Oh, comedian. Yeah, we watch some, uh, this one, God's hilarious. Oh, fuck up, bro. Very funny. It's so, yeah, so we do that every time, but we watch them one away.
So I don't want to see one of us see me laughing and she ain't laughing yet. So we hit the butt of the
same time. And uh, you guys crazy, uh, he's funny. Yeah, that's the thing. They should have like simultaneous viewing option. Are you going to watch it with someone else? Would you like to view it simultaneously and then have a sync up with each other? One plane does that. One plane does that. Um, with it. Well, I was that. Uh, um, quantum. Quantas. Uh, okay. Quantas is up all they got those 16 hour flights. They got to make things interesting. Yeah, they got to say it's, it says, watch with a friend.
Uh, yeah, that's smart. Yeah, it's interesting. Like, what is the next level past AR with those goggles? It's going to be an immersive experience where you're actually, we had the people from perplexity who were here earlier today. And we were talking about how people, uh, with AI and all the stuff. They're, they're going to want more human experiences. Like, going to see a live concert or seeing, you know, a sporting event live. I'm like, yeah, until it's completely immersive.
And then it's like you're playing a video game, but you're in world of warcraft where you're in
βbattlefield or through whatever, whatever game you're playing. I think, yeah, I think for thatβ
format and to tame in a video game. Yes, but I still think because even, you know, it's more sensitive. Well, it ain't just the sight and sound, it's the smell. Yeah, but what if they can recreate that? Like, what if, what if they get the technology where you can create a movie, but the person who's watching the movie is standing on the street, like in the opening scene where those girls pick that dude up and that, that, that, sob convertible. Yeah. Like, what if you're standing,
you feel the street and you watch the, you get in the car. Right. But you say it home by yourself. Well, you'll be terrifying. You might feel. Yeah, of course. But you'll be in it. Yeah, you'll be in it. And you're interesting. I think that's coming, man. I think that's coming. Well, if that comes, reach out to me and I'll write a script. All right, then make sure that we fucking hit you with it. Right. You're going to have to like capitalize on all the different things that can take place.
What do you think about that, uh, that, do you remember to sob fucking 900? Oh, yeah. Right. I've ran to mind how one of those. It was a cool call when they were, they were interesting. Look at
βthose futuristic. They're different than any other car. That's why in the film, I was like,β
there was like, well, what kind of call do you want? I was like, give me a sob. It's like, why? I said, well, still make them. I don't think so. I think they might have, no, I don't think they definitely don't make a house. Oh, hold on. This is a good one. I don't know. That's a good question. I know they make Volvo still. Yeah, I was in a Volvo. I don't know if they still make shops. Bankrupt and 2011. Yeah, no more songs. But the punch line for me was that this
shop. Oh, and I would, I'll give you one spoiler of the film. Um, as you know, as you finish the
second half of it, um, there's no time. So I'll be moved the time from the film. So you don't
know what year you end. And that's why you a see the saw, but then you'll see when they, when they playing their video game, it's certain. Uh, they playing it. All right, with, yeah, I'll fucking hear our goggles and a glove that don't exist. Right. I caught that, too. When you are seeing a mover, I agree. Yeah, the idea is that I'm glad you brought that up. I want that to happen. I want to see one day, I'll go play a basketball game like this. Right. Right. Right. Right.
That if you don't, right, that would be. Yeah. They're getting real close to stuff like that. They're getting real close to stuff like that. We have, um, uh, an AR game out there that you, you, it's a zombie game. And you put the headphones on, the, the, the, uh, headset on. And you, you run around and you have an actual gun and you're shooting zombies. Right. Yeah. And he pointed at it and it's like, they're getting really close. I show you something I discovered.
This shout to this guy, I think he's doing this all on his own. Uh, if I found him and
Tweeted that on one day, but he didn't answer Daniel, hubby, business name.
called true 3D. He's done this with two movies so far. And I think you have to be in the theater to
experience it. But it's kind of exactly what we're talking about. He, he converted a movie. I think in Sidious, a scary movie. Oh, that's a scary movie. Yeah. He's not showing you what because he's being smart. He's also developing it still. And he also did it with interstellar just recently. Wow. And I want, I almost flew to New York just like I go see it because I want. I was very curious. And this is awesome. Yeah. Looks cool. So he adapted it to the vision, just in meta quest,
headsets, I believe, and you probably have to be at the theater because I think that's where the sound's coming from. You probably have to look them as the user watching it. You get to decide
βhow in depth this becomes because if you want to see the people next to you, you can sort of likeβ
go like level two and still steer neighbor. Oh, four and be like fully in the room and you can't
see anybody else. You can maybe touch them because you know they're there. I like how some people are jumping in the some people that are like dead on the inside. Well, I'm so moving. Because these are jump scares. He has that built in. So you know when a jump scares coming or you don't know when jump scares coming. Oh, you're super scared or you can, you know, and not be scared that, you know, someone's going to come from behind you. Why would you ask? Maybe it's this seems like
it could fucking give you a heart attack. Maybe it's people with weak heart. It's good to let me know. Let me know when we get it. And also Dolby, I saw, you've seen that I saw Dolby made
this thing. These glasses. Have you seen these Dolby glasses? Well, no. That, that uh,
did you give you a ship like like surround sound with glasses on Dolby? Yeah, I may open
βon I'll be feeling a secret. What is it doing different? Like what do you mean you can hear things?β
Like watch C and here. Yeah, and so surround sound. Yeah. Glasses. Yeah. And so the glasses, is it projecting it into your inner ear? Like how's it doing? Is it, does it plug into your ear? No, it doesn't even plug into your ear. So it's one of those things that sits above the ear on that outside. Like pressing against your skull. Yeah, they kind of have headphones like that, right? I've seen that. Yeah, I've seen some headphones that give you 12, 12.1, one. Yeah, like ear buds.
And they, they don't go in your ear. They're like sit on the skull. Yes, if you can find those Dolby those Dolby glasses. I don't know if I went to Dolby uh, some months ago and is this a spoiler alert? That's why I said that you can't edit. You can't edit this shit. Uh, we could. If we can't, if you're not supposed to know, I don't know if there's something in here that doesn't it's showing some of 3D glasses they have, but it doesn't say a sound that's coming out of them.
I would imagine if Dolby's game sound is involved. It has to be, right? Yeah. Dolby's cinema. Oh, it's 3D. They're 3D glasses. I don't know. I don't know. No, no, no. Well, listen, I put them on. Well, you can hear shit. So did you put them on to watch a movie? Like what did you put them on to watch? Yeah, I put them on like they had a whole demo room. I thought that was looking at something. And it sounded like I was in the room with, it sounded like I was in the movie theater,
but not to the glasses off. Oh, look, this is what it is. So it's showing you everything in 3D.
βYou need to have the glasses that thing to get the test. And this end of sound is connect this.β
That's on 2021. So this is five years old already. Again, I don't just mind not. So this is a vision, but what about Dolby at most? At most is the sound. Plus Dolby vision, ASTR. 12, yep, 12.61. What is that? Hmm. That's that's that's 24. Whoa. Oh, okay. That's that's that's what you're okay. That's what you're home. That's that's having your system. But they got some shit with it. It's in the glasses. Well, hmm. Anyway, well, we're in an interesting
time when it comes to technology and all this. Yeah. And entertain your VR stuff and and where it's going. I'm happy about it. Are you? Yeah, it's interesting. I mean, I know a lot of people are freaked out about AI. There's a lot of that. A lot of people are freaked out about AI music. A lot of people are freaked out about AI replacing actors and the their ability to generate images and video. I believe AI, the be a tool. I'm from the hip-hop generation, right? So we sample in a record. And therefore,
it's a digital replication of the record. It's not the record, right? And especially when we sample it at 16 bit or 12 bit or some bit, that's not even where the computer or the AI or the chip has to
Fill in the pieces.
I also noticed nothing like the real thing. Even if I put on a piece of vinyl
βand put that needle on it and play it because in my house, I have it. I got all types of setups,β
right? But when we really want to have a good time, we just put on the fucking vinyl. And it sounds so much better, different or it's got depth to it. It's crackles. It's something else. So it's nothing like the real thing. But in between time, in the main time, listen joy, you know, like I said, if you could, if I could make you feel like you're in Hawaii and you don't have to leave your house, right? Cool. But if you could go to Hawaii, right? Right, right? You know, I mean,
yeah, go to Hawaii. I was trying to tell the AI industry or the AI community that we got to
change the A. It shouldn't be considered artificial, digital intelligence. Well, keep the A because you can't, but don't change the A could be assisted, accumulate it. Depending on the situation, find the find the A word that makes it describe what you're doing. Like for instance, right now it's a system now. Right, this is an assistant, it's an assistant intelligence. Right, artificial sounds cheap. Yeah, it's sort of, well, you don't want artificial, nothing. If I, if you came to your girl and you
proposed to have with some artificial diamonds, right, it ain't working. Okay. Girls don't even like real diamonds that are man made. Then where that is? Well, they have a hard time selling real diamonds that are made in a laboratory. I don't know. Yeah, is that a real diamond? It's a real diamond. I mean, that's, luckily. Yeah, it's a real diamond. Yeah, it's just not created by the earth over time. It's created in the laboratory. So let's tell it. But if you look at it, it's a real, I mean,
it's not like a fake Ferrari. It's a fucking diamond. You know what I mean? Like it doesn't have to do things. Like if you, if you go to China and you buy a fake iPhone, who knows the fuck's in there? Right. How kinds of, it probably won't work with Apple, work with the iTunes store, the Apple store. But diamond is just a fucking rock. They can take that carbon and compress it and make an artificial diamond and ladies like. Yeah. And I want it. Yeah. I want a real one. I'm gonna stick with the
ladies on that one. I'm gonna stick with the ladies on it because I think the value of the diamond is the time that it took to become existence. Unfortunately, that's not diamonds are harvested
βin a similar way as cold bolt. Oh, yeah. That's why they call blood diamonds. Right. Right. Yeah.β
So if you get a diamond from a lab, no, no blood. It's just a bunch of things. I mean, it's compressing carbon. Yeah. It looks beautiful. And I would, if I look, I'm not a chicken. I don't only diamonds. But if I did, I'd want the lab diamond. I'm like, give me that dope shit that some scientists
figured out how to make. Basically, you'll go vegan on a diamond. Yeah. How big can they make them?
How big can they make a lab grown diamond? And how do they even tell? Like how do you tell whether or not a diamond's a lab diamond? Like, is there a way that they can test them? Or is it just like provenance? Like you know based on like a coming from debiers or wherever. But if there's a way that they could test them, but that's you. If there's the way that they could test them, then it's not real time. Yeah. Right. And last
there's a way, maybe they're perfect in a way that doesn't exist in the diamond world. I don't know, I'm guessing completely guessing. Look at the size of that fucking raw. 75 carries. 70. Oh, I just ever grow. Okay. So that's a fake, I'm not a fake diamond, a real diamond made in a lab that's 75 carrots. How much is that pitch cost?
β42 carrot diamond for $88,000. Is that real? Is that much a cost? That's how much a cost?β
That's nothing. That buying it from this website. Oh, brilliant, brilliant earth.com. Jamie, just give them your credit card. Don't worry about it. Let's real. You could tell. Yeah. That might not be real. That one might not be real. But let's find out like what is a reputable site and how much is a reputable lab grown diamond? How much? How much is that cost? Largest faceted lab grown $375,000. Do you know how much money that would cost if that was an actual
Diamond from the earth?
Well, that's, that's, hmm. How much would that cost? Find out how much I would cost if it was a real,
βI mean, is there even a real diamond that exists at Big?β
But $375,000? What? The biggest one weighed 3,100 carrots. Whoa. I wonder what's found in 1905. That's a real one. Yeah. Whoa. It was cut under smaller ones. Look at that. Holy. That's the same. It's a long time. The girl's like, Anyway, that one. Give me that one. How old is that diamond? Oh my god. That's been millions and billions of years old. Let's see what is, what does it say here? Let's say the age of it.
That's nuts. 1.18 billion years old. Whenever it's the surface. Oh my gosh.
How are you going? How are you going to replicate that? You can't. If you think of the machine. Is that what I'm going to see here? That's better. So, if you buy a lab grown diamond versus a
βdiamond that came from the earth, how can they tell the difference? Find that out. Can you discern?β
Put this in a perplexity. How do you discern between a lab grown diamond and a diamond that came from the earth? Where they're not, how do you discern? It made a girl smell it to get up on a totally. She's, I don't smell blood. Yeah, men. They can't tell, but women can. They're hair on the back of their neck sticks out. I don't like it. It seems fake. It says you can't.
You can't. It says you can't. It's real. I mean, a specialized scanner is which almost means
and I mean, let me read that to the audience. The visual appearance is the same lab grown in natural diamonds of the same sparkle hardness and basic optical properties. So they look identical to jewelry. Naked eye test don't work. Standard home tricks, fog test, grad test, only distinguish diamond from non-diamond, not lab versus natural. Standard diamond testers don't help. Thermal electric testers will say diamond for both lab grown and natural stones because their physical properties are essentially
the same. In other words, you cannot reliably discern the origin of your on your own just by looking at it
βor using a simple tester. A Jewel or how do they do it? Let's say, what does this have here?β
Literally, it seems like they write the word lab grown that you can see under microscope or something. Oh, amazing. That was on a scribe. Why would you describe it? Because you're an asshole. I don't know. Okay. Inclusions are your features. If you make better, if you're like the best at it, if you're the Rolex of making lab grown diamonds to people can't copy here, maybe. Well, no, no. It goes something as interesting. It says lab grown HP HT and CBD diamonds can show
characteristic of metallic inclusions and geometric patterns or growth striations. They're different
from most natural diamonds. But this is subtle and not always present. But there's a chance to dance, right?
Yeah, as a chance. Natural diamonds tend to have more irregular geologic looking inclusions. Floor essence patterns under UV differences in how the stone floor s's under short wave and long wave UV light can hint at lab grown versus natural, but interpretation requires training and comparison. Okay. There's hints. That's interesting. But it says hints not guarantees and many stones look ambiguous without proper instruments.
Okay. So see you got to be, see you got to complain at the end of the day. Right. You got to bring it to a university. Yes. Yes. Yes. Because he has to be, as he's dissatisfied. He has to, has to, has to, has to complain. Interesting, though, it's the same thing. But some women want it to be from the earth and not from lab, even though it's the same thing. It's like if they could make you a banana and it tasted like a
banana, it had a little vitamins of a banana. It looked like a banana, but it wasn't growing on a banana tree. It just came out of a banana lab. Would you be upset if somebody gave you the fake banana if it's exactly the same? That's the good question. Weird. Well, well, well, bananas aren't, there's no status attached to a banana. That's the thing that we eat. But yeah, what, what about GMO? Are we anti GMO? Yeah, but is it genetically modified? If it's just a
replica of a banana? I mean, a banana is probably a bad thing because you're putting it in your body. Right. But if it's something that is a complete, like, you know, here's a good one. Okay, faux fur versus a real fur. Right. Why would you, why would you complain if I came home with a
Faux meek?
something to suffer in the snow and a trap around its neck. I don't know, it's weird. What
βmovie was that? The revenue? Yeah. That was going. That was crazy. It was good because it also led usβ
on this, you know, just I love the idea that that there was a business sadly and one of the fuckers going looking for animals to kill and going back and make a jacket. Yeah, still is, still is, still is. You know, there's a company in China that makes Rolex's exact to a real Rolex, but it's not a real Rolex. Because of 3D printing now, because they can scan every individual part that are wrote, so that by a Rolex and then recreate exactly to the same type of steel
that they used, the same quarts for the whatever the fuckers, the face, the band, but what is the term I'm looking for? The lens, something lens. What is it called? No, no, no, no, the glass part, that's in the front. God, how could I say the face? No, I forget what it's called. How, it's one of those brainfarts when my brain is like just not remembering what it means. The crystal, that's it, just a crystal. Jesus. But they take it and they recreate everything
with the exact same materials, but it's like 500 bucks as opposed to 11,000. But it is exact. Like you bring it to a watch person and it'll take them hours to figure out whether or not this is an actual Rolex or not. They have to use microscopes. They have to get up in there and look at the finish and the way the hands are made. So we're getting better and better and better. Would you wait? Oh. Yeah, I would wear it. I mean I wouldn't because I have a real one,
but if I didn't have a real one, I would wear it. But that's see now, you know, as a fake one, Hosek, the heavyweight champion of the world. Hosek again, where's a fake Rolex? It's hilarious. You know what, that's that's that's my big question. Like like I was just somewhat, no, the AI
βare talking about whatever it is. I think anything is good until the real thing shows up.β
You know, I think when the real thing shows up, it's going to be real. And it's something about
the real thing, whatever that is, whatever that thing is, that's just like it ain't going to never
not be real. Right. You know, there's something about like a real Rolex. It comes from the company Rolex. It's been making watches for a hundred years. And they figured out the technology, they figured out how to, you know, because these, like a Rolex is an automatic watch. So it's got its moving on, like this is an omega. And this, this watches automatic too. So this is moving on, it's working on my movement. So my movement winds it. So every time I move my arm, it winds it up
in the second hand. And it's incredibly precise, accurate within like a couple seconds a day. And somebody had to figure that out. Right. And they figured it out a long time, looking time ago. These guys figured out how to make the perfect amount of spring tension, these little tiny gears that move around in there. And how long, how long does it last? How long with it, it stayed charged for? Yeah. Like, like, I don't have too much. I do got a couple of Rolexes, but I don't
know, let you see. Oh, wow. But they'll last for decades and decades. I mean, you could buy, there's a place called Bob's watches online. You could buy like a 1967 Rolex. And it still works perfectly. Yeah. Yeah. I mean, they last forever. And sometimes they need service. And all that means is like, they need a clean amount. And maybe they replace a spring or some shit. But then
βit's back to work. I think one in, well, for the, for the ones that's making in China, you know,β
I mean, that's, you know, in the guys super clones. Yeah, the super cloneers. And you can't afford a real one. And you want to be cool with a phone on a budget, follow on a budget. We're not knocking that. But I saw one, then my wife wanted she didn't get it. I told her to get it, but she, um, she thought she'll get it somewhere else in Brussels. Right. They had, you have you ever seen an orange
Rolex? No, exactly. Well, they had it on display for sale. And she never seen it either.
I'm not into watchers, but she's kind of getting there into it. So, and we was kind of moving fast and shit and she was like, you know, she saw it and she wanted it. I said, well, go ahead and get it. I wait. So, no, we can move. I get it somewhere else. You can't get it nowhere else. You only could get it from that one location in Brussels. Also Rolex makes it specifically just for them. Yeah. Well, there's some companies that customize watches that you can buy where they take
A regular Rolex and they customize it.
it's not worth as much to some people because they've altered it. Right. This is not altered,
βthough. Oh, it comes only from the only phone Rolex, but they only sell only sell it there. Oh, wow.β
You know, I mean, take it. See if you could, you might see if you could find out more. People love exclusivity. Hall of time in Brussels. Rolex explored to the primary model, featuring a single bright orange 24-hour hand often found to authorize dealers like Hall of Time in Brussels. Wow. Interesting. So I got to take all the way back to Brussels to get in. Oh, it's so pretty, though. I bet you could buy that online. If you buy it online, you probably have to pay a premium.
Look at that. 11,000. You can buy it online. 210,000. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. 210. Maybe I won't be going
back to Brussels. It's just crazy how much cheaper those super clones are. They're looking exactly the same. I bet you out that is pocket. As a super clone, they're going to say, he's going to make those now. See if you can find one of the super clone sites from China because what they're doing is just taking
βadvantage of the fact that like everybody wants these status symbols. And that's what a lot of it is.β
You know, it's like it's to hear it is. What is this company called superloggeryreps.com? Let's go with the scroll up a little bit. Please right there. The Daytona. That's the classic black dial Daytona. That's it. Ooh, look at that blue one right there to the right. Do one. Yeah. Look at that by the fucker. Look on that. 1600 bucks. Yeah. Boy, that would be so much more money. Look how pretty that is. That looks perfect. So everyone would ever know. So for 1600 bucks,
no one is ever going to fucking know. It's a pretty good chance. That's a picture of a real one, too. Oh my god. Good point. Damn. Jamie's taking levels ahead. I like that. I like that. That's true. They might be fucking with you. Yeah, when you get it home, it ain't like it was in the fun of in the picture. Is the water is not the size it is when it comes to good though. Okay. So luxury super luxury reps. Let's put this into a search. Super luxury reps reviews. See how good the watch is from super luxury.
That's crazy. Yeah, look at that. Super clone date just 36 millimeter floral dial. Thousand bucks. Oh, trust pilot. That's a good guy. That's crazy. They just stuck that on there. Come on. This is in China. What's Apple? Yes. This is in China. Video proof. Okay. She's video proof on every website. Show me video proof. Oh, how about, okay.
Go to reshard me a leg. Those watches are like a million bucks. Oh, video proof. Show me the video proof.
Oh, so they're getting very close to it. Oh, yeah. I guess maybe they're trying to show the microscope. Yeah. So you're seeing all the action and all the movement. So reshard me a watch. Click on those. Please because that's like a million dollar watch. Those watches are insanely expensive from here. How much did they cost? 1600 or so. Fourteen hundred bucks. Yeah. So 14 hundred bucks or a million a half a million. All right. You know what I just learned from watching that thing though?
What? The other one you had with the moving gears. It'd be my enemy of the quantum computer. Oh, okay. Yeah. Something they won't bring this buck down, but those things are weird. But I saw, I saw, I saw the science of a quantum computer there. Right. So let's stop moving. Yeah, because it takes all those gears. It takes that. Well, the quantum computers are so crazy. Because all that shit is all cooling and the actual computer is like the size of a with a
trisket. Right. You kind of, you think about the human heart, right? It's, it's, it's doing a lot of
βfucking work. Oh yeah. You know, I mean, it's doing it. And it's digital. It's not really a pump. That's whatβ
they say now. Yeah. It's like a cycle. It's like a vortex vortex. Yeah. But it's, I just think it was a pump. But it makes sense. Right. The quantum computer, the brain, all these things is, it's almost like our biology is teaching. It science is now catching up to the science of our biology and now finding them in a way to mechanically, um, emulate our biology. So what superluxerreps.com is, they sell, proplexity says they sell super clone luxury watches, emphasizing that their pieces mirror,
the design, weight, and performance of genuine models. They present themselves as a premium alternative to cheap replicas, focusing on workmanship, durability. We just didn't add for these people.
It was just, we basically just gave them an ad.
there. You're not thinking you're buying the real thing here and you shouldn't. Right. But the thing
βis, it's like it mirrors the performance. It looks exactly the same. That's my point. It's like,β
why does a Rolex cost that much money then? If they can make it for 1,400 bucks, why is it, like, how much does a Daytona cost if you bought it retail? Like, what is a Rolex? Let's take a guess. I got a match in 15,000. I got a match in, it's at least 10 times more. What is a Rolex Daytona cost? So you're saying that the material is all the same. But yeah, but they're stealing the idea. Yes. They're stealing everything. They're stealing the design. You're paying the deal. You're paying
15,000. You're paying for the idea that design and everything. Not just the material. It's a 30 gram. So it's more than 10. Look at that. Yeah. Yeah. So that black one, the black face one is exactly
like the one that they had there. That's pretty. But you can sell that though. The thing is that comes
the paperwork and you can sell it probably even more than 30 afterwards. That's the difference. That's the difference. Right. Yeah. It can appreciate. Yeah. This is a serial numbers and paperwork. And all that. It's an actual investment. I want to take a moment to once again, this is the riser on the job of an experiment. Black and I do this. Yes, please. Okay. Thanks. This is the riser on the job of an experience. Have a new film coming out. May folks in theaters. It's called
one spoon of chocolate. Quentin Tarantino presents the riser. One spoon of chocolate in theaters everywhere. Me froze. It follows the story of an ex-military convict trying to find a better way in life ends up in a small town and shit calls bananas. Action pack, bone shattering. And available in streaming and maybe a month or so. Yeah. Maybe a month or so. Maybe 40 five days. It's going to see in the movie this. And you know what? Go to the theater show. You know, I'll call them because
tell them if you agree with this. I don't care where you get popcorn from anywhere else. I like I like Disney land. I like their amusement parks. But no popcorn touch this movie theater popcorn. They know what they're doing. They got something going on there. But whatever that butter is, what is that shit? That stuff when you go to the machine, you press the button. Oh,
βI don't know what that is. I think it's vegan. It can't be good. It can't be good. It's hand.β
Good. Well, at the animal drought house that you was real butter. Oh, these real butter. Yeah. At the animal drought house. Uh, you ever been to Senopolis? Yes. Yes. Senopolis is awesome. That's a joint. Oh, they have everything there. Is that a nice night? Yeah, man. Beautiful seats. You like laying back. They have waiters and waitresses. Did you in a wife like going to see more? Oh, yeah. Yeah. It's wish it wish your favorite did it. I love Senopolis. That's my favorite. Yeah.
That's the place. Because the seats are the best. They were crying. They're perfect. Yeah. They know what they're doing. Plus it costs a little bit more to go there. So like no one's on their phone. Making noises. People aren't talking. You know what I mean? Oh, great. So crazy. Thanks. I will say, though, Senopolis isn't as my favorite did as well for the date night of my wife. But I strongly believe festival my experience that it was the animal drought house that
pioneered their whole concept of food. Yeah, bro. Yeah. I'm going to come in out here. I don't know. It might have been 2004 or something like it was just one animal
βdrought house. I think that's how it had it on. On 6th Street or 6th Street. Is that's my building now?β
That's the building. That's the mothership. Yeah. I bought that place. That's the RIT. Bro. That's my that's my school. Yeah. That's the RIT. That's why I was coming out to the QT. I mean, that's my, that's my film college. Yeah. I've seen so many movies there. I've, I've, I've, that's my six movies in one day. Tantino screen depth proof there. Yeah. Yeah. They had so many movies out of that place. That place was everything, man. It used to be a rock and roll club.
It was at one point. I was a pool hall. Right. It's been a bunch of different things. You owe my college now. Yeah. It's a dope spot, too. It's, it's a perfect place. And it's, we still have the original marquee because it's all the historical side. Right. So it's building from 1927. You got fried pickles in there because we don't sell food. No food. No food. No. We're comedy club. This food next door is a pizza joint on one size of Mexican joint in the other. So
I just plenty of food. You don't want to be eaten while you're laughing. We, we have one thing. We sell jokes. Nice. Jokes and drinks. That's it. I got it. I got a pop in and uh, and uh,
who's uh, who's uh, who's uh, who's uh, who's uh, who's the next guest? Oh, we always. I mean,
I do shows there every Tuesday and Wednesday and every weekend. We have national headlines that are there. I don't even know who's there this weekend. Who's there this weekend, Johnny?
It's um, you know, it's set up with two rooms just like the Alamo ones.
theaters there. So we have two rooms. We have a small room that seats like 110 people. Nice. And the
βbig room. It's like 250 people. Nice. Nice. And it's set up perfect. We had it all like the ceilingsβ
lowered and everything, the tightened up and set up the ship, comedy mothership, rich voss. The rich voss? Oh, my boy. My boy, rich. He's awesome. Uh, the riso. I'm glad we did this time
βwithout Donnell. Sorry, Donnell. I love you to death, but it was better without you.β
Better without you. And I'm sorry. I'm sorry. Indian gave you. Yeah. I got some coming to you, kid.
A spoonful of chocolate out everywhere. Everywhere made first. All movie theaters see it in the
βmovie theater first. That's definitely where you want to see it. You want to have that experience withβ
a bunch of other people. And thank you, brother. It was always good to see you. And Wu Tang forever.
Wu Tang forever. Lock him all whole of fame. Bon, bon, here we come. Here we go. All right. Bye, buddy. [MUSIC]

