Sunday Uncensored: Andy Ngo & Patriot J Members Only Podcast
Tim & Co join Andy Ngo & Patriot J Members Only Podcast for a spicy bonus segment usually only available on Timcast.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Tim & Co join Andy Ngo & Patriot J Members Only Podcast for a spicy bonus segment usually only available on Timcast.com. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Welcome to our special weekend show, Sunday Uncensored. | ||
Every week we produce four uncensored episodes of the TimCast IRL podcast exclusively at TimCast.com, and we're going to bring you the most important for our weekend show. | ||
If you want to check out more segments just like this, become a member at TimCast.com. | ||
unidentified
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Now, enjoy the show. | |
It's really good shit. | ||
Here, Hannah-Claire, you read it. | ||
Okay, hi! | ||
Okay, so the Daily Mail says, risks of long COVID have been, quote, greatly exaggerated. | ||
Major global study finds, and I for one am not shocked, but I'm sure our viewers at home are, you know, similarly on the same wavelength. | ||
Long COVID seemed like the strangest please-stay-inside-no-matter-what strawman argument. | ||
I mean, what was it? | ||
unidentified
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It's bullshit. | |
I'm just filibustering until Tim stops chewing. | ||
It's bullshit. | ||
It's a psyop. | ||
It's bullshit. | ||
I mean, there's a lot of theories as to what it is, but I'm not surprised to find out that the whole thing was exaggerated. | ||
And what was likely happening was that somebody would get some kind of chronic illness. | ||
Maybe they were eating a bunch of ho-hos and ding-dongs and shoving fucking Krispy Kremes down their gullet. | ||
And then they were like, man, I just feel like shit all the time. | ||
And it's like, dude, you've got no vitamin D, you're not exercising, and you're eating horse shit. | ||
No wonder you feel like crap. | ||
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And it was an easy excuse to be like, but I'm suffering from lung COVID. | |
Now some people probably do. | ||
Some people probably have lingering symptoms and stuff. | ||
I'm not saying that that's not true. | ||
I'm saying a lot of the people that were coming out were just talking shit. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, people are just not healthy. | |
People need to get healthy. | ||
I'm kind of thankful the pandemic happened because it forced me to look at myself and I was like, oh, I'm not in the best shape. | ||
I'm not eating too good. | ||
I saw that the disease was inflicting mostly old and fat people. | ||
I'm not old, but I was on the borderline of being fat. | ||
So I decided to turn my life around and kind of just, you know, take control of my health. | ||
And a lot of people need to do that. | ||
Look at this one. | ||
Look at this one. | ||
This was linked to it. | ||
This is from July. | ||
Long vacs, they call it. | ||
That when you get the vaccine, you get debilitating symptoms from the vaccine that lasts a long time resembling long COVID. | ||
It fucking is long COVID, dude! | ||
No, the vaccine is good. | ||
We like the vaccine. | ||
Everyone should get 12 of them. | ||
As I was gonna say, a lot of people were saying that... | ||
Long COVID was actually just extended symptoms as a result of the vaccine. | ||
And Harvard and Yale came out and said that several months ago. | ||
And everyone, it's like every single time, this is the funny thing. | ||
Like some people nail these conspiracy theories so quickly, it's mind blowing. | ||
You know, they're like, when myocarditis first appeared, people were like, it's the vax. | ||
And I'm like, well, slow down there, everybody. | ||
And then it's like, CDC says the vaccine can cause myocarditis. | ||
And I'm like, damn. | ||
They were saying it'll cause myocarditis, but it's still ultimately worth taking, which I found very funny, especially when initially they thought it was just young men between a certain age, and then the age group got bigger and bigger, and then it kind of grew. | ||
The CDC was like, well, it's okay. | ||
I mean, ultimately the vaccine is worth it, even if young men die. | ||
I think that's kind of crazy. | ||
I've always wondered- It's for the greater good. | ||
Yeah, it's for the greater good. | ||
Don't question us. | ||
I've always wondered if long COVID is actually part of a more hypochondriac society. | ||
Like people are already looking to feel sick in some ways. | ||
So COVID just fills that void where they feel probably, I mean, like you're saying, they're not empowered enough to maybe take uh charge of their health or because it's you know challenging to get doctors okay to believe you when you have symptoms so they just blame everything on long covid. | ||
I love the conspiracy theory that what they actually did was like one in every 20 shots was sterilization and 19 of 20 so it's like 19 of the shots were saline so it's like oh here's your vaccine they give you a shot and it's nothing but then one in 20 got the one that sterilizes you Population reduction. | ||
But I mean, like, the problem with these conspiracy theories is, like, there's no evidence suggesting that would be true. | ||
It's just someone wanting it to be true, you know what I mean? | ||
Like, they wish that Bill Gates was actually that crazy. | ||
Like, Bill Gates is crazy, but he's, like, very overt about what he does. | ||
You know, he comes out and he's like, we wanna reduce the global population by stopping people from having kids. | ||
And it's like, okay. | ||
Because he believes in it. | ||
I mean, this is part of his moral hierarchy. | ||
So he doesn't think he's wrong. | ||
Why would he hide it? | ||
If you know you're doing something wrong, then you hide it, right? | ||
The sterilization stuff is always interesting because, I mean, especially, I knew a lot of women who had qualms about getting the vaccine. | ||
They weren't sure what the long-term implications were. | ||
It wasn't thoroughly studied. | ||
A lot of the control groups didn't include pregnant women or nursing moms. | ||
And so, The fact that so much of the media levied their concern, their real fears against them and said, you know, you're part of the problem if you think, hey, maybe I want more data on this, is kind of disgusting and I think it breeds another level of mistrust in the medical system that, you know, probably was already there because people are dissatisfied in so many ways, but how could you look at your doctor now | ||
Who maybe pressured you or gave you a hard time for not getting a vaccine and look at this study and say, oh, I'm definitely going to take your medical advice now. | ||
I mean, it's a study, man. | ||
I believe the science. | ||
So the study says that, you know, I'm going to I'm just going to stand here on the street corner and say it. | ||
So. | ||
But not all doctors read every study. | ||
I mean, it's just a gamble. | ||
You don't know which one you're going to get when they get there, and we don't know when the information will come out. | ||
I think that was the hard thing because people who were skeptical of the COVID vaccine immediately became crazy anti-vaxxers, which is not true. | ||
You mean science deniers? | ||
That's true. | ||
I mean, I've never really believed in science. | ||
I think it's all actually magic. | ||
No, I'm just kidding. | ||
unidentified
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My one very anti-scientific opinion, I guess, is that dinosaurs probably didn't happen. | |
Explain this to me. | ||
unidentified
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I can't. | |
What about the bones? | ||
What are the bones in the museum? | ||
unidentified
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Are they fake? | |
The bones in the museum are fake, yes. | ||
But we only found them like, I don't know, 150 years ago? | ||
How real is that? | ||
Well, no, no, no. | ||
We definitely found them prior. | ||
People said that they were the bones of giants. | ||
They said they were the bones that proved the Nephilim, et cetera, things like that. | ||
unidentified
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I'm more inclined to believe that than dinosaurs. | |
Bro, I got a dinosaur bone downstairs. | ||
unidentified
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Really? | |
Yeah. | ||
How do you know? | ||
Because I bought it from a guy, yeah. | ||
I walked into a store and a guy was like, see that? | ||
And I was like, what's that? | ||
And he goes, it's a dinosaur bone. | ||
And I was like, no shit. | ||
And he's like, yeah. | ||
And I was like, I'll take it. | ||
Cost me a thousand dollars. | ||
unidentified
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That's how I know it's real. | |
Because you spent money on it. | ||
No, in all reality, it has like a certification. | ||
But that doesn't mean the people who are certified are telling you the truth. | ||
unidentified
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But, um... I've got, uh... | |
I don't know, dinosaurs are real. | ||
Can't they carbon date that because it's a living tissue so they could carbon date the bones? | ||
unidentified
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I don't know, man. | |
Or fossilize? | ||
I don't know. | ||
I don't know, but what I can tell you is, dinosaurs had feathers. | ||
You just look at a featherless chicken, you're gonna be like, that's a motherfucking T-Rex. | ||
Okay, my question is, are dragons actually dinosaurs? | ||
Like, when mythology talks about dragons, are those actually related to what science has classified as dinosaurs? | ||
That was the other thing I was going to say. | ||
They probably saw those. | ||
They probably found some, I'm sure. | ||
Look, this is evidence of dragons. | ||
There's no way there's no dragons. | ||
Look at these giant bones. | ||
Look at these crazy teeth. | ||
That's what I would think. | ||
I'm willing to give you dinosaurs if you give everyone else dragons. | ||
That makes sense to me. | ||
unidentified
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Okay, I'll take dragons. | |
Why would so many cultures have their own forms of dragons if they weren't real but that for whatever reason no one ever discovers dragon bones? | ||
unidentified
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The idea that like an asteroid I guess hit one side of the earth and then just killed all the dinosaurs never really sat with me. | |
Except for the ones that flew away because they were dragons. | ||
Yeah, true. | ||
You don't know where they are now. | ||
I'm gonna teach science classes at Sydcast University. | ||
unidentified
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We're solving the world's problems right now. | |
What's your take Andy? | ||
Do you believe in dinosaurs or dragons or both? | ||
Well, I am surprised when you say you think the dinosaur bones in museums are fake. | ||
Fake in what way? | ||
unidentified
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Well, no, they're literally, like, not bones. | |
Like, they're just... Plaster cast. | ||
Yeah, they're like reconstructions of bones. | ||
So the bones that they put on display are not actual bones. | ||
A lot of places just show display models. | ||
They don't actually show real. | ||
But you can go to a place and look at real bones. | ||
Well, there are places that do have real ones, though. | ||
But you think all of them are fake. | ||
Look at this, dude. | ||
unidentified
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I choose to believe that dinosaurs never happen. | |
Look at this picture. | ||
But why would we look at this picture? | ||
It's a featherless rooster. | ||
unidentified
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Wait, are you serious? | |
That's what they look like? | ||
Yeah, see it's... They don't go anywhere. | ||
They just became these things. | ||
unidentified
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Right, so... Yeah, the little arms. | |
We really conquered these things, man. | ||
And the thing is, with all the feathers... | ||
Their wings look very, very different. | ||
But when they pull their pull them out, they're like hands. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And so, I mean, it's like little T-Rex, dude. | ||
unidentified
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I think the Lambeth four time, that movie series is just big paleo propaganda for children. | |
Produced by big science. | ||
That's so funny, dude. | ||
Yeah, but like in people that post, like Tim knows this, I'm sure, like chickens kill mice. | ||
They eat things. | ||
They're not, there are people that, oh, they just, they're like chickens and they're like, it's like, no. | ||
They'll eat each other, bro. | ||
If there was like a 12 foot tall chicken, you would be fucked. | ||
This guy looks inside out. | ||
That's the best description of this chicken. | ||
A beach trip turned breakdown is a drag. | ||
unidentified
|
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Shit, man, you better be careful. | ||
I would hate to run into a four foot tall chicken. | ||
That'd be awful. | ||
Or like, I've told this story before, but I have younger siblings and we used to let them into the backyard, but then we had to equip them with air horns because there was a mom and her cubs of black bears that used to walk through the yard and that's a problem. | ||
But I can't imagine sending my like four year old sister out to play and then she runs into a four foot tall rooster. | ||
That's way worse. | ||
Well, the rooster probably would just like look around. | ||
Roosters are pretty chill. | ||
Unless you're getting too close to the girls. | ||
But the hens, they're ravenous. | ||
And I was thinking about it, because when we have sushi on Fridays, the leftover sashimi we throw to the chickens. | ||
It's very good for them. | ||
And the girls... | ||
They go nuts. | ||
You throw a piece of salmon in there and they're just, they're going crazy and they're fighting and they're running and jumping and chasing each other. | ||
And the roosters are watching. | ||
And I was thinking about it. | ||
It's like the hens lay eggs every day. | ||
So they're probably insanely hungry nonstop and the roosters don't. | ||
So they're probably just standing there like, I don't know. | ||
It's like breastfeeding moms. | ||
Breastfeeding moms need tons of calories. | ||
Cause they're producing so much milk. | ||
That's right. | ||
That motherfucker is a T-Rex dude. | ||
He's just inside out. | ||
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Somebody just needs to flip him. | |
Yeah, it's like them and lizards, too. | ||
I don't know. | ||
I'm not a biologist, but I believe that they split. | ||
One went the right direction, one went the other direction. | ||
But I bet T-Rex tasted like shit because it was so big. | ||
So the muscle would be really dense. | ||
Like whale. | ||
Whale tastes awful. | ||
If T-Rexes were even real. | ||
It was the worst fucking show ever. | ||
Yeah, it was like someone, imagine if someone took a piece of beef, flattened it between like a thousand pounds, put it on a plate with vinegar and left it in the sun for a week. | ||
I was like, how are they eating this? | ||
Was this in Norway? | ||
Norway, yeah. | ||
And I was like, I don't want to eat that. | ||
And they're like, you must, you must! | ||
And I was like, we in America, we don't do whale. | ||
And they're like, oh no, no, it's fine because it is traditional. | ||
And they're like piling on their plates. | ||
And I'm like, And I was like, I should have a taste, you know? | ||
It's food. | ||
I eat cow. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like whales are smart, so I don't eat whales. | ||
Like, well, the whale's already dead. | ||
I'll taste it. | ||
And I was like, it's gross. | ||
It's like pickled meat. | ||
Like the Norwegians are known for the ekstroming, which is like a shark that they take and put in this shack and they leave it outside. | ||
I think that's Icelandic. | ||
It's Iceland, oh yeah, Norway, Iceland, very, very similar. | ||
It literally ferments over like three or four months, and then they take it out, and then they eat it, and they think it's great. | ||
But everyone that tries it, that's not Norwegian, they're like, that's gross. | ||
No, it is though, because when you're in a place like Iceland, and you need certain nutrients, the bacteria has to grow. | ||
So that's why you'll see in a lot of these places, they do festering meat, like in the Arctic Circle and stuff, they'll eat like rotten meat, because something about the meat itself is not, It doesn't have everything you need, but the bacteria growing on it will grow like a full amino chain or something like that. | ||
Yeah. | ||
So they eat the rotten meat. | ||
So then you go to a restaurant, you order off the fermented meat menu. | ||
That's a while. | ||
Oh, dude, Norway was the worst. | ||
Like, Norway, the country was awesome. | ||
Like one of the coolest countries I've been to. | ||
And, uh, you know, we, we, we investigated the story of the Isdal woman. | ||
They believe that she was, uh, she was, uh, an Israeli, uh, she was Mossad and she was hunting down and killing Nazis. | ||
And then one of the Nazis got the best of her and smothered in a fire or something like that, choking her out and killing her. | ||
But anyway, I go to the candy shop. | ||
They have salt skulls. | ||
You know what a salt skull is? | ||
Licorice pressed into salt. | ||
So it is. | ||
It's a licorice skull, you know, black licorice and coat the whole thing in salt and they take it and they pop it in their mouth and they eat them. | ||
They have bags of them. | ||
It's disgusting. | ||
And I'm like, I wonder if it's because they like they're out in sea so long, they have like salt sprayed all over them and so they're constantly tasting it. | ||
So they're like accustomed to it or something. | ||
I do think your taste buds change based on what you eat. | ||
I mean, if we're in America and you get tons and tons of sugar, getting something salty or, you know, much more savory must be very different. | ||
I don't know anyone who likes black licorice, so I was already off the boat. | ||
The salt doesn't bother me, but the black licorice is the problem. | ||
So you know, I'm sure you know Vegemite or Marmite, I'm sure, right? | ||
So like, me and you are probably being Anglo sphere or whatever. | ||
Here we go, guys. | ||
Yeah, yeah. | ||
But you don't take a whole dollop of that and throw it on the thing, which many people do. | ||
You take a little bit of that out and put it on buttered toast, and then it's great. | ||
But we're used to it. | ||
But people think it works like marmalade or jam, where you just scoop it on. | ||
I mean, they're fun and spooky. | ||
Look at that candy. | ||
I can't believe that's real. | ||
When I saw it, I was like, that's not salt. | ||
I was like, that's gotta be sugar. | ||
I'm like, no, it's salt. | ||
That is, that is salt. | ||
Imagine taking a teaspoon of salt downstairs, pressing it into any kind of food and just eating it. | ||
And there's a bag of them. | ||
I'm like, won't that kill you? | ||
The only thing I would, and this shows you how long I've, the fact that I've grown up in America, I mean, sea salt and caramel chocolates are nice. | ||
I mean, having a little bit of the salt with that, but again, I can't get past the black licorice. | ||
What are we doing here? | ||
I love how it's skulls too, because they're super into like death metal and black metal. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
Skulls. | ||
Yeah, let's not forget the Norwegians were the ones who were burning those like thousand-year-old turds and stuff just because it was metal. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And cool, I guess. | ||
That's crazy, man. | ||
Do you think goth kids all one day go on a pilgrimage to Norway to see this stuff? | ||
Maybe they should. | ||
They're not really, it's not the same anymore. | ||
No. | ||
When I went there, they were like, oh, that was the 90s. | ||
Norway was pretty cool, though. | ||
It was cool. | ||
It was daylight out around midnight. | ||
Yeah, the midnight sun. | ||
I went to Norway as a kid and remember the midnight sun, but, you know, always would love to go back as an adult. | ||
Yeah, when is that? | ||
In summer, I think. | ||
I went to Bergen. | ||
Oh, flips. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
In summer, it's midnight sun. | ||
And then in winter, it's always dark. | ||
We stayed up really late because we didn't realize what time it was. | ||
And my parents came back and were like, what are you doing? | ||
Yeah, I was in Iceland. | ||
Enough for New Year's and it sucked Like it was really it was really really cool to be in Iceland and they had like this big statue of some guy I forgot the guy's name. | ||
He's like some famous Viking dude or something like that. | ||
Mr Viking And then everyone's celebrating and it was fun, but it get it's like it's barely day out ever. | ||
Yeah, I was like damn It was cool, though. | ||
Reykjavik. | ||
That was fun. | ||
Went to the, uh, the Blue Springs or whatever. | ||
Blue Lagoon. | ||
Blue Lagoon, is that what it is? | ||
Didn't actually go in it, though, because it was like, you need a reservation or some shit. | ||
Yeah, I think it's pretty... This is crazy, though. | ||
I was at a burger place in between Reykjavik and Blue Lagoon, and I'm sitting in this place, there's no one in there, just me and a friend, and then these two guys come in, like we're eating burgers and fries, and then one guy's like, Hey, you're Tim Pool. | ||
unidentified
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And I was like, what the fuck, man? | |
This is what you get for having a uniform. | ||
You have to put on your incognito disguise. | ||
This was years ago. | ||
This was just after Sweden. | ||
Yeah, so I did not have a big following. | ||
I was like, yeah, how the fuck do you know who I am? | ||
unidentified
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What the fuck? | |
That's awesome. | ||
Did he see like your Malmo stuff or how did he, did he say that or anything? | ||
I don't know. | ||
Wow. | ||
No, he just said, oh, I've seen your stuff on YouTube. | ||
I was like, okay. | ||
Well, I guess I'd been at that point working for several years. | ||
So, you know, I don't know. | ||
That's the thing too. | ||
It's like, You do a lot of shit over a long period of time, people recognize you for different things. | ||
I had kids when I was in Berkeley, they were like, yo, it's that dude from Vice! | ||
And I was like, oh. | ||
unidentified
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Well, there you go, I guess. | |
Hello, fellow youth, it's me from Vice. | ||
That's right. | ||
I am the guy from Vice. | ||
People saw that. | ||
I went to the same neighborhoods that you did in Sweden. | ||
Oh, yeah? | ||
How was it? | ||
Disturbing. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, really? | |
Why? | ||
What happened? | ||
Well, I mean, you went to Rynkeby, right? | ||
Yeah, I got chased out. | ||
Yeah, I mean it's, uh... Oh, wait, no, no. | ||
Wait. | ||
Yeah, yeah, Renkobi. | ||
Yeah, that's one of those, uh... Quote-unquote no-go places? | ||
So-called no-go places. | ||
Yeah, yeah, yeah. | ||
That's in the Stockholm area. | ||
But I also went to Malmo. | ||
It's, uh... I used to write about parallel immigrant societies a lot. | ||
Got me in trouble a lot. | ||
That's exactly what it is. | ||
Yeah. | ||
unidentified
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It is. | |
In Renkobi, It's just all Somali migrants and their children, so they are not part of Sweden, in their minds. | ||
Sweden, obviously, is like, it's our territory, but the people there are like, who the fuck are you? | ||
Get the fuck out of here. | ||
It's like, you're in our territory. | ||
They don't view themselves as part of the Swedish government. | ||
And it's mostly because Swedish people are super racist. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Did you not experience that? | ||
No. | ||
I'm surprised to hear that from you. | ||
The Swedish, in my experience and in my opinion, really actually bend over backwards to be politically correct and nice. | ||
And that's the stereotype of the Swedish. | ||
Yeah, right. | ||
So somebody who is overly politically correct Tends to be racist. | ||
So, for example, they put all of the poor Somali migrants into Rinkeby, and then say, fuck off. | ||
We're not racist! | ||
Look how many refugees we let in! | ||
And then shoved into a corner and don't help, creating parallel immigrant societies. | ||
But the more simple examples... They do help, though. | ||
The Swedish government spends so much on resettlement schemes, access to welfare... Now they are. | ||
When I was there several years ago and they began resettling migrants to break them apart and allow them to integrate properly into Sweden. | ||
Before that, they shuffled them all into corners and then paid money to keep them under the rug and pay to have the problems swept under the rug. | ||
But the other good example is we met a bunch of people who were like, if you don't speak Swedish with a proper Swedish accent, you will be held back in jobs. | ||
You will be discriminated against in commercial business. | ||
They'll make snide comments and giggle about you. | ||
If you are not Swedish, you are looked down upon. | ||
And so what happens is the children of the Somali migrants grow up in Sweden, speak Swedish, and are called immigrants. | ||
So, what do you think that does to a person? | ||
They're like, dude, I'm from here. | ||
I went to school here. | ||
I've never been anywhere else! | ||
And they call them an immigrant. | ||
The people in Sweden were referring to 20-year-old Somali men who were born in the country. | ||
They were calling them immigrants. | ||
And it's just like, holy shit. | ||
And they were explaining to me that if they go back and visit their grandparents in another country, they're called Swedes. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah. | |
They have no country, they have no community, they have no home. | ||
I can relate. | ||
I met several people who are like, I met an American woman, she's from America and I can't get a job because my Swedish is an American accent and they always scoff. | ||
Super racist. | ||
They just pretend like they're not. | ||
The idea, when you're talking about people who grew up as immigrants or their first generation in that country, but they grew up in predominantly immigrant communities. | ||
When I was, I mentioned this before the show, that I'd gone to Paris for summer in college, and one of the things that they talked about was this is what happens in Paris, you'll get enclaves where people are, you know, from Syria or wherever else. | ||
And it's actually what ultimately leads to extremism because people feel as though they are not in any culture and so therefore they seek out a culture online and are therefore radicalized online. | ||
I don't know if that's actually Sweden's fault or any European country's fault, but it is one of the challenges of being predominantly tied to a culture that is not the culture you are being raised in. | ||
And I'll clarify for you, Andy. | ||
Someone who says, I'm not racist, I'm going to help these poor minorities, it doesn't mean they're not racist. | ||
So what was my experience with people of Sweden? | ||
They will bend over backwards to try and prove they're not racist, and then in private, will disparage people of other races. | ||
Interesting you have that experience. | ||
I just, I think Sweden is such a politically correct society that they've done so much to even harm their own nation. | ||
Dude, I had one of the news organizations, when we went to Rinkeby, We get chased out, long story short, police follow us as we're leaving, I filmed the whole thing. | ||
I talked to one journalist, who was a good dude, and he was like, the media's lying. | ||
Every journalist knows if you go into Renkibi, you will be attacked. | ||
And he's like, I got, I got, he's like, I got punched and someone smashed my camera, something like that. | ||
And then he said this publicly, in an interview with me, and he's like, yeah, fuck him. | ||
I had a call from a journalist who was lying and wrote a fake piece. | ||
And I asked them, I was like, they're like, why did you lie about what happened in Rinkeby? | ||
And I was like, I filmed it. | ||
The video's on YouTube. | ||
You can watch it. | ||
And they were like, but the police said you lied. | ||
And I said, didn't a photographer from your organization get punched in the face by one of these people when he went there? | ||
And they're like, yes. | ||
And they smashed his camera. | ||
Yes. | ||
And I was like, Why are you telling me I'm lying when you're the one claiming it? | ||
And they were like, but the police said it's not true. | ||
And I was like, you people are such, fuck, you're full of shit. | ||
It's insane. | ||
So speaking of Scandinavia, in Denmark, lawmakers there have announced that they plan to essentially bring back, to bring a blasphemy law because of these ongoing riots that have happened involving Muslim communities over There's been protests where there has been Quran burning and there's been lots of violence in both Sweden and Denmark and Denmark is now reconsidering that freedom of expression protest because until right now it currently is still protected but they've already signaled that they're ready to change that just because of the | ||
The instability from these violent demonstrations that happen every time. | ||
I mean, car burnings, arson attacks. | ||
Yeah. | ||
Yeah, it's wild. | ||
I mean- Dude, Denmark's awesome, man. | ||
I love Denmark. | ||
I've been to Denmark way too many times. | ||
Been to Christiania several times. | ||
It's so weird. | ||
I don't even know how- I kept ending up in this place. | ||
Does you end up in Denmark for some reason? | ||
Denmark's approach to immigration is the 180 of Sweden, by the way. | ||
Integrate. | ||
Yes, but like through much more, I would say, intensive measures. | ||
Can you elaborate? | ||
Yeah, so a lot of migrant families will depend on social welfare, right? | ||
And one thing a few years ago that the Danish government did is, OK, if you want access to welfare, let's say the mother is not working or the family needs additional social benefits, you have to put your child into the state's preschool programs, which teaches, you know, like patriotism, the language. | ||
It's about integration and specifically it's targeting these migrant communities and upset a lot of them because these communities exist in a way with a separate parallel identity from the wider society. | ||
In Denmark it was the center-left party who was really able to pull the rug under from populist parties by Embracing stricter immigration policies. | ||
So like, whereas in Sweden, you know, you have now a coalition government that involves the Sweden Democrats, which is a right-wing populist party that is anti-immigration. | ||
In Denmark, the centre-left party said, we're going to run on this platform, but from the centre-left. | ||
And they've done very well in government. | ||
I found it Burger restaurant if you're in Denmark go to it's burger right outside of Christiania fucking amazing And this conversation has made me realize I need to get out of the country more. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I only just got my passport in March I went to Cabo Cabo's cool. | |
I haven't been to Cabo, but I've heard a lot about the jet skis and such, I'm sure. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, but no, I gotta expand my cultural power. | |
El Salvador! | ||
Go there! | ||
And like, being from California, it's harder to get to Europe. | ||
I mean, if you're... I felt like I was really privileged growing up on the East Coast and having European ancestors, or like, family in England. | ||
We went, right? | ||
I mean, it's not necessarily easy. | ||
America's such a huge country, we forget that traveling outside of it can be really challenging. | ||
First time I left the country was when I was 25. | ||
I went to Canada. | ||
I don't know if Canada actually counts though. | ||
Because Canada is basically like- I'll give it to you. | ||
unidentified
|
If I'm counting Mexico, you can count Canada. | |
But then it was uh... I was 26. | ||
I went to Spain. | ||
And then after that it was fucking nuts. | ||
Because then I started working for Vice and I basically just went everywhere. | ||
Went to Turkey, went to every country in Europe, basically. | ||
Not really, but a lot of them. | ||
Went to Korea, Japan. | ||
I've been to Japan twice, I think. | ||
unidentified
|
How's Japan? | |
I've always wanted to go. | ||
Fucking amazing. | ||
I love Japan. | ||
Maybe that's your first international, not Mexico trip. | ||
Yo, go to a real Japanese karaoke bar. | ||
unidentified
|
That sounds like so much fun. | |
I sang, what's that Aladdin song? | ||
unidentified
|
Arabian Nights? | |
Yeah, that one. | ||
Not part of your world, that's Little Mermaid. | ||
A whole new world. | ||
A whole new world! | ||
That's right, that's right. | ||
I sang that with our Japanese fixer, and I was Aladdin and she was Jasmine, and she was like really old. | ||
Bro, epic memories. | ||
We went to Fukushima, and sad, she died of cancer, man. | ||
Yeah, because when we would go in, me and Luke, we wore suits. | ||
And the point is to keep the radioactive shit off of you. | ||
Yo. | ||
unidentified
|
Wow. | |
Inside Fukushima in the red zone when it was all destroyed and everything was crazy. | ||
And we went to this guy's house and you could see like the calendar and the clocks were all frozen from when the earthquake happened. | ||
And she went in and she's like, oh, I'm old. | ||
I'm fine. | ||
Old people are really unlikely to get cancer because cellular division is minimal at that age. | ||
And I think she was like in her late 50s or 60s. | ||
And a couple of years later, she died. | ||
Yeah. | ||
And so Luke was like, I'm kind of scared. | ||
And he's like, maybe I should go to the doctor. | ||
And I'm like, my health is good. | ||
It's not, it was really stupid to go. | ||
Like, how old was I? | ||
Like 30? | ||
What year was it? | ||
unidentified
|
20? | |
Oh shit. | ||
This was 2015, 2014 maybe. | ||
unidentified
|
Fuck. | |
It was 2014 I think. | ||
Damn. | ||
That was nine years ago. | ||
unidentified
|
Shit. | |
We should have called her. | ||
Yeah, we should. | ||
I thought you were going to say we should go to Japan. | ||
Get your passport, man. | ||
I've only been to, I think, like 35 or maybe 38 different countries. | ||
I think it's pretty good. | ||
There's like 180, 190 or something like that, 192. | ||
Wait till TimCast goes live international. | ||
Alright. | ||
I love Spain. | ||
Spain's my favorite. | ||
Madrid is the best. | ||
Let us... I hate all these names. | ||
They're so long. | ||
Adam... Adam... Setchy? | ||
Adam... Adam Sessy? | ||
Uh, not sure. | ||
You are live. | ||
How do you... How do I pronounce your username? | ||
unidentified
|
Adam Sese. | |
Adam Sese. | ||
Alright. | ||
What's up, Adam? | ||
How you doing? | ||
unidentified
|
I'm doing great. | |
Thanks for having your Canadian friend back. | ||
Thanks for having me back, guys. | ||
Of course. | ||
unidentified
|
All right, so my question is, what wisdom can you give to young adults interested in amateur or professional journalism, considering this era of credentialism in the professional space? | |
Oh, if I may, I would love to answer that question. | ||
Thank you for the question, first of all. | ||
I would say, okay, a few things. | ||
One, pick a beat or related beats and get good at it. | ||
If you want to become professional in your career, you want to become an expert in some type of area, just think of the people that all of us are familiar with. | ||
If you think of Chris Ruffo, you think of CRT and the work he's done. | ||
Um, you know, and this can even go on like, in just the social media realm, libs of TikTok, that's about those CRT and trans videos on social media that's aimed at kids, that's Herbie. | ||
Um, and so on and so forth, so there's that. | ||
And I would say, get good at, focus on developing the reporting skills. | ||
What I see sometimes with new and amateur journalists is that they want to get right into the world of commentary and opinion writing because, you know, they They see the people they like on YouTube or the columns they read from writers they like, but if you're a young person, I assume you are, really the public is, I think, in terms of in the print world, they're not going to be so interested in the opinions of an 18 or 19 year old. | ||
You just have not had enough life experience. | ||
But if you become good at reporting, you can incorporate those skills into a commentary later on. | ||
I mean, the best opinion pieces we read in newspapers or magazines, whatever, are ones that, yes, give an opinion, but it's also able to give out new original information. | ||
So those are the things I would say focus on for new journalists. | ||
I think a good example of this is, like, people on Twitter who quote themselves. | ||
unidentified
|
Mm-hmm. | |
You ever see that? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
They'll, like, say something but put in quotes and then, like, act like it's not them who's saying a thing they said and then trying to act like it was important. | ||
That's so weird. | ||
I do think that's funny though. | ||
Are you talking about how like when journalists do interviews and instead of attributing the quote to themselves? | ||
Okay. | ||
I'm saying that someone will go on Twitter and write, it is best that war is won than victory savored by the enemy and they'll put it in quotes and act like it's a famous quote from somebody but it's just something they said. | ||
My point is that people desperately want their opinions to be validated without doing anything to actually have an opinion worth validating or worth being valid. | ||
So, I agree. | ||
And that's why you see a lot of these trends, these career tracks for a lot of opinion people who did journalism in the past. | ||
They did some kind of journalism, and then later started hosting a show, became an anchor or a commentator. | ||
Yeah, I love the advice, you know, to focus on a beat because I do think that that building of deep and intensive knowledge on a certain subject really makes you probably a better reporter because you're able to start really picking out details other people would miss and it does in some ways make you an expert. | ||
I think the desire to share your opinion is totally honorable, I understand that, but probably being able to share your expertise would be even better. | ||
Here's the easiest way. | ||
You want to be a journalist? | ||
You want to build a career? | ||
You want to be big and famous? | ||
It is simple. | ||
Take your phone, go somewhere, tweet about it. | ||
There you go. | ||
I knew that answer was coming from Tim. | ||
Oh yeah, because a couple things will happen from it. | ||
One, you will tweet things and you are dumb as a box of rocks, but people are going to share the images and videos you post because it's showing relevant context if you go to an event where something relevant happens. | ||
Or, you are really smart and you do it, and then people start asking you more about what's going on, you produce threads, you appear on shows, people ask you, hey, you were there, what happened? | ||
So, I remember I was covering these riots, the Young Turks had me on several- a couple times, twice. | ||
You start getting invited places because you put out a video, you say something like, video shows activist punch cop. | ||
There you go. | ||
It's gonna get shared by people who are interested in it, and they're gonna hit you up and be like, hey, can you comment on this? | ||
Like, what happened? | ||
What else did you see? | ||
And now you're a guest on someone's show. | ||
So for me, I got a bunch of attention after Milwaukee, because I announced to my very small fan base at the time, 20,000 followers on YouTube, that because the people there were saying outright they were targeting white people, if you are not black, if you are perceivably white in any way, they are threatening you with violence, and they threatened me, and I was like, it's not worth it, I'm out. | ||
Then, of course, I think, like, Dave Rubin hit me up, Tommy Loren hit me up, and they were like, would you comment on this and talk about it? | ||
I'm like, yeah, here's what happened. | ||
And, uh, I was covering a Trump rally, I worked for Fusion at the time, and some guy got hit in the back of the head with a bag of, we believe it was rocks, and then Fox News asked me to come on, and it was funny because Fusion was like, yeah, do it, we're super excited, and then all of their millennial woke employees got really mad that I did, but, you know, whatever. | ||
The fact is, seriously, I mean, Go somewhere, film, look at a lot. | ||
He filmed that, we're coming for your children thing. | ||
That thing's got like a hundred million views, a ridiculous amount. | ||
Yeah. | ||
You know, that's it, man. | ||
That's the secret. | ||
I hope that- Do journalism, go places. | ||
Gave you some answers there, my friend. | ||
unidentified
|
That was wonderful, especially in light of the scandal in our- | |
our parliamentary floor. | ||
Oh boy. | ||
Oh yeah. | ||
unidentified
|
More active and honest journalists. | |
Yeah. | ||
Thank you everybody. | ||
Thanks for calling in. | ||
Thank you. | ||
unidentified
|
Cheers friend. | |
Of course. | ||
Oh, all right. | ||
Oh, I cut him off. | ||
Sorry about that brother. | ||
Let's talk to, I was trying to get this, | ||
this name was sweet, Flayor the Hatebound. | ||
I believe we've spoken to you before. | ||
How are you today Flayor the Hatebound? | ||
unidentified
|
Hi guys. | |
How's it going? | ||
Pretty good. | ||
Pretty good. | ||
unidentified
|
Good. | |
Thank you. | ||
That's awesome. | ||
My question is for the crew. | ||
Anyone wants to answer? | ||
So do you believe that this sudden action taken by Burger King to remove ad revenue from Rumble is just an attempt to show how much power companies have over with us regarding ads? | ||
Or is it just Um, just a random move they made? | ||
Well, and then the second part of that, if you don't mind, will their move against Rumble and Russell be random and nothing, or, and just help Russell, or do you think this will just start a chain reaction of more and more companies? | ||
It's not a power flex. | ||
It is stripping of resources. | ||
They want to strip the influence from people who challenge the narrative. | ||
So, big advertisers, probably horror-aligned. | ||
There could be some, like, 35-year-old woke woman who works at Burger King who goes, oh, no, we shouldn't do Rumble. | ||
And that's it. | ||
End of story. | ||
I talked about this, um... Who was I talking to in the Culture War? | ||
We were talking about Bud Light. | ||
And I was like, before it came out, I said, I bet it's some, when the Bud Light thing first happened, I was like, I bet it's some millennial kid who came in, doesn't know, doesn't care, and then turned out it was some like millennial woman who was like, you know, we're gonna do this trans thing. | ||
So, it's not random. | ||
It has a purpose. | ||
It is someone who is angry and wants to hurt Rumble, but it won't matter. | ||
They will keep doing it. | ||
But Rumble is building a structure, a system to be resilient to this. | ||
You don't need Burger King. | ||
Here's a secret. | ||
The overwhelming majority of acting jobs are not blockbusters. | ||
And people don't know this. | ||
They assume that if you're gonna be an actor, it's like, oh, like, are you in a movie or a TV show? | ||
You could be in a small indie film with a budget of $50,000. | ||
And I know, so especially living out of LA, like I knew a ton of people who were doing acting and it's like, but you know, if you live in LA, that acting could just be like, it could be a film with a $5,000 budget and you get hired and they'll go pay you 500 bucks for the day. | ||
You're an actor, you're doing an acting job. | ||
The assumption that you need big advertisers is wrong. | ||
There is a, for YouTube in fact, the bulk of advertising is like small restaurants and things like this. | ||
This is why when COVID lockdown happened, the COVID lockdowns happened, everybody lost massive amounts of money because I'm getting like five cents from every local diner every day or something. | ||
To them it's meaningless. | ||
They go on YouTube and they say run my videos to promote the diner to only people who live in this area. | ||
Things like that. | ||
Someone in that area is watching a TimCast video, and then a commercial for the diner pops up. | ||
It's like, hey, come on down! | ||
Burgers are on sale, $1.99. | ||
And then they go, oh yeah, you know, I think I will go down. | ||
I get a couple cents or whatever off of that ad deal. | ||
I've never even heard of that company. | ||
So, Rumble probably could give two shits about Burger King. | ||
Rumble wants... They want mass volume from small business that do micro-marketing on the scale of like $500 a month in terms of general marketing to their neighborhoods. | ||
That's the money. | ||
That's where it's at. | ||
So, fuck them. | ||
Fuck these assholes. | ||
Rumble's gonna win. | ||
Yeah, definitely. | ||
Anyone else? | ||
Do you not think that these businesses cower more, not because of a wider conspiracy, but simply because they get immediate... I mean, what I've seen often is, and the Post Maloney has experienced this, like some journalist, and they don't even have to be from a particularly big publication, but nevertheless sends a media inquiry, and ask them, you know, why are you advertising on a | ||
platform that platform is a person who's been accused of XYZ? | ||
And then just in fear, they then make a rash decision to pull the business. | ||
Oh, that happens too, for sure. | ||
But for a lot of this stuff, like, Bud Light was just some millennial moron who made a bad decision. | ||
So I think in terms of Burger King, I assume it's the lady from the UK saying, you know, your funding is going to rapists. | ||
And they were like, I don't know what the fuck you're talking about, we spend like a hundred bucks a year, fuck them. | ||
You know what I mean? | ||
Like, when they say Burger King pulled their ads, What? | ||
What was the market spend for Burger King on Rumble? | ||
I don't think it was substantial. | ||
So it's probably negligible to everybody. | ||
It just sounds bad in the press. | ||
Like, here's what I'm gonna do. | ||
You know what I'm gonna do? | ||
From now on, I am going to start advertising on The Young Turks. | ||
That would be sick. | ||
I'm gonna spend $1 per month to run an ad on The Young Turks, and then as soon as they say anything, I'm gonna be like, oh! | ||
unidentified
|
Oh! | |
We're pulling our ads! | ||
Oh my god! | ||
I can't believe they would say something so racist! | ||
And then, you know, then we'll get all of our friends, like the Post Malone to write, to report, TimCast Media pulls all advertising from Young Turks over sexist, racist remarks. | ||
And here's the best thing. | ||
It's all opinion. | ||
So here's what I can do. | ||
Not to brag on the Young Turks, but, you know, I could buy an ad for a dollar, and then Jen could say something that I personally, here's what I do. | ||
Jen could say, look, you know, poodles are good dogs. | ||
I like poodles. | ||
They're well-trained. | ||
That's why I got a golden doodle. | ||
They're the best. | ||
Golden doodle? | ||
That sounds like Golden Dawn. | ||
And then what I do is I say, TimCast rejects the innuendo and dog whistling of the Young Turks wholeheartedly. | ||
We do not intend to provide funding to those who would make such disgusting remarks. | ||
TimCast rejects Nazism in all its forms, and anyone who would make comments about having sex with animals does not deserve any money from us. | ||
Now, did he say he would do any of... Did he say he was a Nazi? | ||
No. | ||
Did he say that he would bang animals? | ||
No. | ||
The implication... This is a trick they actually do. | ||
So I'll keep the young turks out of it. | ||
Seriously. | ||
What they'll do is, Andy could say something like, I'm not a big fan of Red Bull. | ||
And they'll say a recent statement by Andy Ngo that shocked us to our core. | ||
And they're referring, of course, to saying he doesn't like Red Bull. | ||
They will then say, as a total non sequitur, We will not provide any advertising dollars to Nazis or those who support Nazis. | ||
Well, that statement has nothing to do with what Andy said. | ||
But the average person will make the assumption the shocking thing that was said was support of Nazism. | ||
That's the trick they do. | ||
So, you know, here's what I'll do. | ||
We'll have Kasparu advertise on Young Turks. | ||
That'd be so funny. | ||
We don't support communists, overt communists, and people who call for genocide. | ||
Therefore, we have announced that we'll be making several business decisions which will affect advertising sales in the future. | ||
Stop. | ||
Paragraph over, story over. | ||
In light of recent statements made by Cenk Uygur, we are pulling ads from his platform. | ||
You see how they're not related statements? | ||
But the assumption is, well, anyway, there you go. | ||
That's an interesting answer. | ||
How do you, uh, how do you feel about that, my friend? | ||
Flayer, the hate bound. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, I mean, your points are good. | |
And thanks for answering the best of your ability. | ||
Cause I saw that today at work and I was just like, yeah, it's so random. | ||
It has nothing to do. | ||
With Burger King, I don't understand. | ||
Let's say they got some DEI person in the background going, hey, you might want to do something about this. | ||
Yeah, totally. | ||
D-I-E, as I always say. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, D. Right on, man. | |
Thanks for calling in. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, and don't forget to join Discord for the after after show. | |
Yeah, definitely. | ||
Alright, I'll do it one day. | ||
Maybe. | ||
We'll see. | ||
I'm warming up to the idea. | ||
Anyways, cheers. | ||
I am the user? | ||
Yeah, I am user. | ||
The only one's damn that I could read on this. | ||
What up? | ||
How are you? | ||
unidentified
|
Uh oh. | |
There it is. | ||
unidentified
|
Hello? | |
Nice! | ||
Fantastic. | ||
You there? | ||
There you are. | ||
unidentified
|
Hey guys, thanks for taking my call. | |
I'm really happy to think that you're going to win, or that Rumble's going to win, Tim. | ||
But I'm curious, are you going to help Rumble win? | ||
Are you going to let your awesome listeners put their money where the parallel economy is and support you on Rumble like maybe a day a week? | ||
We put all of our shows on. | ||
unidentified
|
So we can show them that we're tired of YouTube. | |
All of our content is on Rumble. | ||
It is. | ||
All of it. | ||
unidentified
|
Live. | |
Live. | ||
The only thing we don't have on Rumble is the live show. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, that's the first place I look for you tonight. | |
Just saying. | ||
I'm tired of YouTube. | ||
I don't want to give 30% to the beast. | ||
I hear that, I hear that, but it's like saying, you know, my view is, I'm tired of fighting this battle on, you know, on the beaches of Normandy. | ||
I'm tired of being here and consuming German food. | ||
Well, you have to be there. | ||
Like, we are trying to win control of a platform. | ||
Granted, we want Rumble to take over and win, but in the meantime, we want people who are on YouTube to still be able to have access to Rumble. | ||
The one thing I don't want is to be like, we want to be an echo chamber show. | ||
No, no, we want to be an invasive show. | ||
I want to be able to, uh... Like, we want to take over the mainstream. | ||
Force these people out. | ||
And for the time being, in order to get access to the younger generation, YouTube is the best means of doing it. | ||
Rumble's a better place for full shows, which is why I believe it is very likely going to be the case that our Miami show is going to be Timcast members only. | ||
Uh... And then we're going to upload all the clips and everything like normal. | ||
But, we can't do it on YouTube. | ||
So, we could theoretically just do it on Rumble, but that, I still kind of think, doesn't, I don't know, doesn't do enough. | ||
I don't know. | ||
The general idea is, we do this full show as a TimCast.com members only thing, which supports TimCast.com. | ||
And then we take it off YouTube because YouTube is too censorious for the conversation that we need to have in person with all these people. | ||
But I really don't see, like, we have the full show is available on all podcast platforms right after we wrap the show. | ||
And then we even give away one of the members only for free every Sunday as a Sunday Uncensored bonus because we're trying to advertise like, hey, come hang out, you know, these things. | ||
So we should probably put a commercial on that. | ||
But the purpose of the live show is basically just to be the biggest, the biggest live show on YouTube for the time slot. | ||
I think we may be the biggest daily, I guess you can call it nightly, but every day we average the biggest audience. | ||
There is no logical reason to walk away from that control in the space. | ||
Even if we're being surrounded and beaten down and threatened, it's like, if we're holding this bridge, and we can tell people to go to Rumble, and we can defend Rumble, and we can have Alex Jones on the air, why would we be like, abandon ship, go to Rumble, and sit with the refugees, you know? | ||
True. | ||
But we put all of our clubs there. | ||
Yeah, all the clubs. | ||
Maybe one day. | ||
The other thing though is honestly, a lot of people discount X right now. | ||
That's why I tweeted this ad deal that we make more money on X from me tweeting bullshit than we do with all of the clips I get on Rumble. | ||
And I love Rumble. | ||
They just need to get to that point where they're doing more ad sales and they're working out better means of generating revenue. | ||
The thing for Rumble is that one of the core business models they have is membership. | ||
But we do timcast.com. | ||
We're building beyond just a single channel. | ||
And so for Rumble, a lot of what they do is they go to a creator and say, hey, we'll pay you X to do your show here. | ||
That's great. | ||
Their show builds members, the members pay to get exclusive content and things like that through locals, or I think they're just calling it Rumble now. | ||
And then like that's really great, but not if you're running a big company with like 40 employees and trying to do multiple shows. | ||
We're trying to build a media house, not be members of a different platform. | ||
So, you know, it is what it is. | ||
unidentified
|
No, I appreciate that. | |
Thanks for taking my call, guys. | ||
Andy, Tim, I've been following you guys forever. | ||
Thanks for risking yourselves to get the story out there. | ||
It's way cooler than anything Anderson Cooper's ever done. | ||
Thank you. | ||
Right on. | ||
Thanks, man. | ||
Thanks for calling in. | ||
unidentified
|
Thanks. | |
All right. | ||
Cheers, friend. | ||
And this one was another fun one. | ||
JTurbo25. | ||
JTurbo. | ||
Cool names, guys. | ||
You're with us. | ||
What's going on? | ||
unidentified
|
Hey, how's it going, everybody? | |
How's it going? | ||
Good to see you back, Serge. | ||
Hey, thank you very much. | ||
It's good to be back. | ||
I appreciate that. | ||
I'm going to eat this whole bag by tomorrow. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, so my question is basically for everybody. | |
It's mainly about journalism, but obviously everybody can key in. | ||
So I'm Hispanic, I'm Latino, I'm Dominican to be more specific. | ||
I've been spending time at my parents' house lately after I lost my job, and my mom obviously watches Spanish news, or Hispanic news, and I've noticed it's very left-wing biased, and it's probably something I never noticed when I was younger, but now that I'm older and a lot more politically involved, I've noticed it. | ||
So my main question is just being that, seeing Hispanics as the biggest minority, and A massively growing voter bloc. | ||
Do you think this has a lot to do with why we are voting Democrats so heavily, even though we lean so conservative with our values, especially leaning towards the family? | ||
Yep, because conservatives don't do Spanish language media. | ||
You know, when I worked for Fusion, it's Univision, I'm in the Univision building, all Democrat. | ||
And I'm like, Are Republicans creating like, you know, teleconservato or something? | ||
They're not. | ||
What a good name though. | ||
Hey, I just thought of it right now, you know. | ||
unidentified
|
I think, um, growing up with the black family, it was kind of the same in that the TV was always on MSNBC, maybe sometimes CNN, but Unfortunately, I don't think the Republicans do a good job at actually engaging with these communities. | |
They're not opening offices in majority black districts. | ||
They're just kind of writing it off as, oh well, we'll never win. | ||
And that's a losing strategy. | ||
But the media definitely does have a big hold on things. | ||
My grandparents, I love them. | ||
We beef almost every day over Donald Trump and it's just because they won't watch anything other than Rachel Maddow every night or like... | ||
Meet the press and these things and they're only getting their information from one source and I can't really blame them because they're old and they've always trusted the TV. | ||
They don't have the luxury of being able to freely navigate through the internet and figuring out what to believe on their own. | ||
They've only listened to the TV for decades. | ||
So it's tough. | ||
But I think it's just going to take having conversations and Republicans not being so afraid to go into these communities and present themselves and even not being afraid to lose because it's going to happen. | ||
But eventually, if you keep at it, the tide might turn. | ||
Yeah, I feel like you're right. | ||
I feel like sometimes conservative media is waiting for people to wake up and then come to them rather than finding ways to connect with people in the spaces that they already consume media. | ||
Yeah, I think you're right there. | ||
I think also that Republicans don't think that there's anyone in those communities that don't have any viewpoints that would match with the Republican Party, but it's just not true, I think. | ||
Or it's just like lost ground. | ||
unidentified
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Or they'll find the one and then they just parade around the one person. | |
They're like, we've done our job here, see you later. | ||
unidentified
|
Right. | |
Yeah, yeah. | ||
Anything to add to that? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, I know one thing, thinking back. | |
Cause I remember seeing it a while ago, but I remember the Republicans used to cater at least towards Hispanics. | ||
Cause I remember like I was extremely young, but during the 2000 convention, you know, when George W good old W was representing Texas, he invited like a lot of high profile Mexicans there. | ||
And like everybody was loving and cheering them and they were performing and all kinds of things. | ||
So I know, I know the Republicans have had it in them in the past. | ||
So it's just weird. | ||
It's like you said, it feels like they almost gave up, but the Democrats kept going, so unfortunately they've kind of taken a hold of just the minority community in general, and it's kind of like us independents that are trying to pull them all out and pull us back. | ||
I had to point out to my mom today, watching, and I was like, I told my mom, she's very peace and loving, I was like, mom, you know Nikki Haley's a warmonger? | ||
And she's like, what? | ||
And I'm like, yeah, she's like shocked, because they're not going to tell her that, obviously. | ||
Right. | ||
They want you to forget about war. | ||
They want you to worry about nothing but domestic issues. | ||
So if we were to go on TimCast and probably just talk about, like, Whatever the Young Turks said we argue about, we're good. | ||
But as soon as we start saying, giving real reasons about war and Burisma and all this stuff, that's a real risk to the machine they hate. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Andy? | ||
I think there aren't that many Spanish language television networks available in the US but it's from my understanding that from their inception they were not as partisan as they are today and this is just the You know, with time, these institutions become left-wing, and to take them back to the center is very difficult. | ||
They get infiltrated, and the right needs to counter. | ||
Yeah, but I mean, you know, the type of work it would take to build up now a conservative alternative is significant and huge. | ||
unidentified
|
Oh, no. | |
Have you seen that video that's going viral of the guy who made the AI language translator? | ||
It films a video of you, translates, it renders, turns all of your speech into any language and even lip syncs. | ||
Wow. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, I saw that. | |
I think they translated like Trump to German or something. | ||
Bro, as soon as that app comes out, all of my videos are going to be in every language. | ||
Nice. | ||
unidentified
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Oh, that's so smart. | |
If it works, right? | ||
Cause for all you know, it translates wrong. | ||
And I say something like, and then I'm going to eat the moon cheese and throw it at a dog. | ||
And it's like, whoa, whoa, wait, what? | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah. | |
Yeah, it'll be like, uh, we'll have like that, uh, international reach like Mr. Beast, you know? | ||
Just start making, well, let's do a podcast where nobody talks and it's all gag humor. | ||
Cause that's the international audience. | ||
Anyway. | ||
unidentified
|
Uh, all right. | |
It was getting late. | ||
Did you want to wrap up? | ||
I cut you off. | ||
Okay. | ||
Uh, well then good, sir. | ||
Was that a good. | ||
unidentified
|
Yeah, that was very sufficient. | |
You know, we covered it all and you know, just want a few follow ups, simple, you know, plug the discord, you know, We've got the after after show is what I like to jokingly call it because we have so many like after shows now. | ||
I know. | ||
unidentified
|
So if anybody you know we got the events tab there's like five or six events coming up. | |
Oh cool. | ||
If people want to join in, you could just set a notification and it'll notify you later | ||
about when it's coming up. | ||
Because like I said, we have so many events coming up soon. | ||
We are setting up the coffee shop. | ||
It is coming. | ||
The second floor is going to be the physical club. | ||
It is going to be epic, but you have to come out to West Virginia to hang out there. | ||
But this is the plan. | ||
This is the idea. | ||
So the Tim pool, the Timcast.com members club, private, you can come in, you got to be a | ||
member. | ||
It's gonna have, like, a pool table. | ||
I want there to be a poker table. | ||
But then we'll have, like, we wanna do, like, sell skate gear, have drinks and stuff. | ||
We could basically do whatever, cause it's a private club. | ||
But that's coming, man. | ||
So all this awesome shit y'all are doing in the Discord is fantastic. | ||
It's gonna be very, very cool when we have the physical space, and then people can actually hang out, and we can even have, like, room for activities, man. | ||
But anyway, dude, yeah, we'll try and figure out better ways to promote the Discord for everything that it is as part of the membership, so I do appreciate all the stuff that you guys are doing, and thanks for calling in. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, definitely. | |
Thanks. | ||
Good hearing from you guys today. | ||
You know, Patriot J, Andy Ngo, Obviously, Tim. | ||
Good to see you back again, Serge. | ||
And just one little proposal for Hannah Clare. | ||
Okay. | ||
unidentified
|
You being a Whalers fan, and seeing as they're based out of my home state of Carolina now, you wanna go to a game with me? | |
Well, I can't accept any invitations unless they're screened by my dad, and there's like an exchange of goats, and like property. | ||
unidentified
|
See, I'm working on the goats. | |
How many goats? | ||
unidentified
|
I'm working on the goat. | |
You know, I'm not supposed to know. | ||
Nice girls don't know how many goats they're worth. | ||
unidentified
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Yeah, I need to find a good goat, because I know a few goat herders, so... You're not gonna stall me there. | |
Thanks for calling in, dude. | ||
unidentified
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Yep, yep. | |
Thank you, thank you. | ||
Take care. | ||
Cheers, man. | ||
Gentlemen, it has been a pleasure having both of you here on the show. | ||
Good to see you both, and thanks for hanging out. | ||
unidentified
|
Thank you, man. | |
I appreciate it. | ||
It's an honor to sit here. | ||
Yeah, right on. | ||
Thanks for coming, Andy. | ||
We'll see you, like, come anytime. | ||
Thank you, Tim. | ||
And for everybody who is a member, you guys rock. | ||
Seriously, thank you so much. | ||
We are working with Chef Andrew Grewal to get the ball rolling on not just Casper number one, but creating the process by which we have all of the Caspers opened up. | ||
So he's teaching us about the basics of franchising and how we can get to that point and helping us build it. | ||
So we're hopefully going to be very, very soon. |