Acosta AI Interview: Journalism or Exploitation? The War of the Jeans! Cincinnati Update & MORE!
|
Time
Text
Ladies and gentlemen of the interwebs, really do you get to see Viva's face as he does his golf voice.
But today we are streaming on StreamYard.
So I wanted to let everyone know you could get to locals with no paywall today.
Behold, everyone looks so nice until they let their inner demons out.
Craziness.
Come on.
Hi, MAGA.
My MAGA friends.
I'm just kidding.
I'm not friends with MAGA people.
No, thank you.
But I do have a very serious question for you.
I had a pretty long ride from where I just was.
And, you know, my brain just, I don't even have the radio on most of the time.
I'm just in there thinking.
And I was just wondering, like, why these guys hate everything?
Like, why do you hate America?
I want to let this play for a little bit, but I feel morally and ethically obliged to intervene at this point in time.
Appreciate what we have before us is a woman who seems to be a little bit too happy with herself, who seems to maybe be coming off the end tail of a three-martini lunch, who is clearly bat poop crazy.
We'll say guana crazy, who asks the viewer, why you hate so much, and then proceeds to go on and explain how she hates so much.
I believe this woman's crazy.
I believe this woman is on some form of psychotropic medication, or she's drunk, but I'll let it play out.
Why are you cool with just sitting and watching the Democratic Republic burn to the fucking ground?
And these are like, you're not even watching.
You're hearing it on.
Yeah.
We love to suffer.
Yeah, because you're going to also suffer under this authoritarian fascist fever dream.
You're going to suffer.
Every fear hides the wish.
She hopes.
She wishes.
And if it doesn't happen, well, by gum, she'll make it happen.
By gum, those who wish ill on you, if it doesn't befall you, they will make it befall you.
And then they're going to say, look what you made me do to show you how wrong you were.
But of course, she's talking to people who are filled with hate.
She's still in her car ranting with hatred.
Look at that face.
This is a face of someone who really thinks they're the cutest thing on earth, really thinks that they are smarter than they are, more appealing than they are, and more logical than they are.
Projection, projection, projection.
Because you just pretend that you're patriots and you love the Constitution and you love America, but everything.
Youth pretend.
Youth pretend that you love America.
And then you, she's the one using some sort of draw that she thinks makes her more American.
Talks about how she loves the Republic, but things do and say just kind of says the opposite.
It says that like it doesn't, the math doesn't math.
You know what I mean?
So I was like, why do they hate America so much?
How'd that happen?
Why do you hate so many different kinds of people?
The woman who's explaining how she hates people is asking the people that she's overtly explicitly stating to hate why they hate so many different.
We're done.
We're done.
I don't know who this woman is.
Apparently she's a nurse.
Libs of TikTok had posted another video of hers.
Apparently she's a nurse and she's quite clearly batshit crazy.
And I would not want her treating me with a 10-foot pole.
Nor would I have faith that she would be treating me safely and properly.
That's not what you think it is.
I had to just illustrate what I thought were the batshit crazy eyes.
You know who she reminds me of?
It's the girl from the movie Superbed when she's piss drunk out of her.
Or the woman from Bridesmaids.
That's who she reminds me of as well.
This is her quite clearly crazy.
And this is her revealing her lizard tongue.
Oh, lordy, lordy, lordy.
Projection through and through.
Why did I start with this video, people?
There's a good reason why I started with that video.
I had a number of other things to start with, which are much, much more important.
One of them, however, is a story of tragedy, and I didn't feel comfortable starting the show with it.
And the other one, I felt that I needed to give you a bit of a trigger warning because there's a little bit of violence in it.
It's the woman who got clocked in the face, fell back, hit her head on the pavement in Cincinnati, is now doing a, she's not doing it.
Benny Johnson set up a give, send, go for her.
I wanted to give a good update on that and talk about some stuff that's interesting.
Before we get there, good afternoon, everybody.
How goes the battle?
Viva Fry, former Montreal litigator turned current Florida Rumbler.
And we have one hell of an awesome show today.
I want to show everybody what I'm wearing on my body, on my person.
It's a shirt that says, we'll be wild, which is what Trump said about the January 6th protest, January 6, 2021.
And the Democrats, scumbag scoundrels that they are, wanted to impeach Trump over that very tweet, or at least use that tweet as evidence.
And I believe it was the second impeachment because they had waged an unsuccessful first impeachment.
If you want to get a shirt that says, we'll be wild, you can get it on vivafry.com.
If you want to get conspiracy crossed off theorist and put in realist, it's on the website, vivafry.com.
You can get a mark, what is it called?
A mug because everybody needs a merch mug.
Everybody needs a mug.
You got to drink coffee in the morning.
This version that I'm wearing is a one of a kind.
Stop that.
It's a one-of-a-kind Ty died.
Bama Child, my kid, did it at the neighbor's house, came back, blew like a smurf.
And I wasn't even angry.
I'm just like, huh, why the hell didn't the parents make you wear gloves?
Not that it would have done anything.
You want to get some merch at vivafry.com.
You want to follow our work and support our work, vivabarnslaw.locals.com, where we should be live right now.
And we are.
Let me make sure that we're live on vivabarneslaw.locals.com.
I implore everyone to go over today because I'm using StreamYard because we're going to have a bit of an interview later on.
And there's no paywall today.
So come by, join our community, see if you like it.
If you don't, feel free to stay and tell us why you don't.
All right, into today's show.
Benny Johnson is a good man, period.
Have I met Benny Johnson in real life?
I think I've met him in real life.
I know him.
He's a good man.
And he seeks to do good.
Some people can crap on others all day long.
You can judge them by their fruits.
And Benny Johnson set up a give, send, go for the woman who was savagely beaten in Cincinnati, Ohio on the streets there in what was, you know, passed off as a non-hate crime, which as far as I'm concerned, the evidence is sufficiently there, though, that it was a hate crime, at least racially motivated.
Let me see here if we get the update from the from, well, this is the update from Charlie Sheen.
I gotten a little ahead of myself now.
Let's get this one out of here.
You'll recall that there was a mob beating of two elderly, elderly is not fair, adult white people they were not a couple i thought they were a couple it turns out that the woman who got clocked in the head by a man was actually just trying to uh help the man who was getting beaten down by a gang of people there's a racial element to it which i think is uh worth noting in terms of the political and media silence on this a blackout so
speak, you won't find very many major media outlets covering this because if they do, they're going to have to acknowledge that it was a group of people who happened to be black beating on two clearly inebriated or at least one inebriated and one woman, as if to say like an inebriated male when it comes to physical violence is on par with a woman.
All right.
They'd have to acknowledge that.
There are certain stories that just disappear from the timeline when the politics of them comes to light.
One of which coming out of Minnesota.
Have we heard boo on Vance Belter since his manifesto, which didn't exist, choking my tongue, his manifesto, which didn't exist, but then comes out and says that Tim Walls hired him or ordered him to take out.
I think it was Amy Klobuchar because he wants to become governor and the manifesto that we were told existed that was in his car.
Then we were told it didn't exist.
And then when it was disclosed, a two-letter, two-page letter that he wrote to Cash Patel of the FBI, that story fell off the news cycle real quick.
Like this one fell off the news cycle because it never got on the news cycle because nobody wanted to identify it.
Nobody wanted to be forced to reckon with what was going on in that video.
Bottom line, a couple of white folks were savagely beaten by a gang of people.
Media hasn't touched it.
And there's a woman in there who is now struggling to pay bills, who has suffered the trauma that we saw.
I wanted to give you all a trigger warning not to be a baby and whatever, but you might need to hear.
You're going to see the woman in the aftermath of the beating.
This is Holly.
And this is a video that she put up on the internet that I think everyone should have a look at, appreciate.
You don't punch someone in the face and then they fall to the ground and everybody goes home and watches cartoons afterwards.
People die more often than you can possibly imagine from one sucker punch to the face where you fall unconscious, not even from a punch, but from the head hitting the pavement on the way down.
And then as much as she's alive right now, she's going to suffer lingering trauma because brain trauma, A, takes a long time to heal if it ever heals entirely.
This is what Holly has to say.
And I'll read Benny's post afterwards.
Thank you all to everyone who have donated and sent prayers and love.
And I just want you to know each day I'm healing a little bit better and better.
Externally, it's looking beautiful compared to before.
But internally, there's a lot of damage that has been done.
I'm looking at her eyes blinking unevenly, which I think is a lingering impact of brain trauma.
I was a specialist and it's going to be an ongoing battle for a long time.
And so thank you for helping me to be able to get the medical attention that I need and making sure that I'm not homeless because I can't work.
She's a single mother.
You know, hopefully I get better soon.
And just know that I am also praying for all of you for hope and peace and just for humanity.
And know that, you know, I'm just going to keep fighting the good fight of love.
I mean, this has flipped my whole world upside down.
So without your contribution, I literally have no idea what I was going to do.
And just want to say, you know, this could help bring awareness to prevent this from happening to, you know, your mother or daughter or you.
Let's hope it stops here with me.
So thank you guys.
Do you see the eye, her left eye?
Let's hope it stops here with me.
So thank you guys.
And God bless you.
So Benny Johnson has set up a give send go for her.
Benny Johnson tweeted this out early.
Says, don't miss this.
Holly is crying real tears of joy because of your support.
She wanted me to share this video exclusively with you because of your incredible support.
Holly is getting the medical care she desperately needs and won't face homelessness while she fights to recover.
Holly's new life mission is to make sure this never happens to another mother or daughter.
Holly says through tears, I will fight to protect.
We saw the rest of this.
Your kindness is saving her.
Support Holly.
Let's see what she's at.
She's now at $495,000.
And I'll give everybody the link.
Here's the give send go.
These are the situations where people desperately need the financial support for what will be the medical bills and what will be permanent lifetime trauma, both physical and psychological.
And I don't want to compare it to other give send goes.
But, you know, I am thinking of Shiloh Hendricks, who raised three quarters of a million dollars because she courageously used the N word.
I'm being sarcastic there.
boys who raised whatever was it a million bucks for a frat party this woman now has suffered serious trauma is facing losing her job well if she can work losing her home single mother and a half a million dollars is amazing it's not supposed to be a reward this is supposed to help her for what's going to be a long road of recovery what ended up happening in this story that sort of led me to a deep thought which i with i which i shared with our viva barns law.locals.com community um earlier today is
Charlie Sheen donated to the campaign.
Benny Johnson tweeted out this.
Incredible Hollywood legend Charlie Sheen has confirmed his support for Holly's fundraiser.
Sheen, Ohio native.
He also played Ricky Vaughn in Major League when it was called the Cleveland Indians before they courageously changed the name to, what's it now, the Cleveland something or other.
It doesn't matter.
I just re-watched Major League the other day.
Sheen, an Ohio native, was moved by the support for the woman brutally attacked in Cincinnati.
Sheen says, Benny, I was merely following your gracious lead.
The speed at which you and San Marino hatched the donation plan with stunning, compassionate, as patriotic as it gets.
You both reminded me of America.
We remain proud to call home.
Keep up the great work.
Thank you, Charlie Sheen, for writing your powerful voice.
All right.
It's amazing.
And then someone, because the internet is just filled with jackasses.
If people can say a mean thing for the sake of saying a mean thing, they're going to say a mean thing.
Charlie donated $1,000.
And someone said, couldn't you have dug a little deeper into your pocket?
It did cause me to think for a second.
Charlie Sheen has had a tumultuous life.
And I know there's people on the internet who want to go back to accusations about Corey Feldman or Corey Hames, the Corys, the two Corys.
There are accusations there.
If we want to play the game of guilt through accusation, we're sort of jumping on a bandwagon that we've been cautioning against.
Set that aside.
Someone comes out and says, only $1,000.
Couldn't you have dug a little deeper into your pockets?
And I looked it up.
And Charlie Sheen, these things are notoriously...
um inaccurate but charlie sheen's net worth at its at its highest was recorded or reported at 150 million when he was doing the two and a half men and now it was surprisingly less and on the one hand uh I'm saying to myself, accurate or not, that he gave anything and made it publicly, you don't look a gift horse in the mouth and you don't be the one to say, you've got more money to give, pody up the dough.
Flip side, and this is a spiritual thing.
One of the concerns that everybody has when they don't have money is you've got to bust your ass and you got to work and you grind and you try to succeed in life.
And then when you succeed, if you are lucky enough to fight through all of the rabble and actually succeed, one of the concerns is that you're going to lose this all.
I'm not going to have this one day.
And so I got to be greedy and stingy with everything and not generous.
And I was sitting there thinking as I was jogging on the beach this morning, like, it's a concern that everybody has.
You've got nothing.
You're worrying about getting something.
You get something.
You're worried about losing something.
You want to help people, but you want to squirrel enough money away so that you don't have to worry yourself.
You got your own family to take care of, but you do want to help the world.
And then I came to the realization that you leave this world with nothing.
So if your concern is losing what you have now, one way or another, you're not taking it with you.
And so what you do with what you have in the here and now is the most important part because you ain't taking it with you.
The legacy that you leave behind, oddly enough, it's something I've said before.
What you take with you, everything that you take with you is what you leave behind.
And not in terms of physical assets, in terms of legacy and in terms of what you did on this earth to make it a better place while you were here, while you had the assets that God gave you to make it a better place.
Charlie Sheen, whatever you want to think about him, whether you think it's not enough, too little, too late, whatever, is doing something, Benny Johnson is doing something.
That's the update in that situation.
And we wish Holly, I think she's unnamed other than Holly, a full and speedy recovery, both physical, emotional, spiritual.
And that's that.
All right.
What I wanted to do right now is move on to our next story of the day as well.
All right.
Another story that is going around and trying to make sense of it.
Some people are going to say, Viva, why aren't you talking about the inclusion of the anti-BDS provision in the DHS guidelines for attributing federal funds?
I want to make sure that things are accurate or even true before I start looking into them, analyzing and formulating an opinion, let alone trying to inform others on it.
The news that broke yesterday is that Trump was, or the Trump administration was predicating the allocation of federal funds for things like FEMA, federal alert, federal emergency, whatever, relief, predicating it on corporations not engaging in boycotts of Israel.
And I wasn't sure if it was accurate.
And I wanted to wait a little bit for the news to evolve and the information to come out or at least be able to find it.
And today's the day where I feel comfortable enough to talk about the situation and how if ever such a provision was in fact included in the guidelines for the federal government allocating emergency relief funds, you all know, unless you're very new to the channel or suffer from serious, serious ideological blinders, I do not support the idea of prohibiting boycotts.
Period.
I think it's other than the fact that it's unconstitutional, although you're going to say the government can, you know, decide who and what it wants to support, it's counterproductive above all else.
If your goal is to try to not have people have overt or implicit resentment for identifiable groups of people, religions, or nations, what you don't do is impose legislation to protect those groups of people, races, religions, creeds, or nations.
One of the biggest reasons why there's such animosity towards the 2SLGBTQIA plus community is specifically because of the preferences and the legislative protections that treat certain classes of people as better than others or as more requiring protection than others.
Natalie Winters does amazing work.
I listened to her on Bannon this morning, put out a tweet that said, new White House official tells me DHS guidelines, the Department of Homeland Security guidance has been updated to show no Israel requirement.
It still bars recipients from operating programs that benefit illegal immigrants.
Okay.
I'm going to show you something here because this was the original, or at the very least, this was the provision of this guidance, which we're going to get to in a second, the impugned provision, anti-discrimination.
Recipients must comply with all federal applicable anti-discrimination laws material to the government's payment decisions for purposes of 31 USC.
Definitions, as used in this clause, DEI, diversity, equity, inclusion, DEIA, diversity, equity, inclusion, and accessibility.
Discriminatory equity ideology has the meaning set forth in section 10.
And here, D, discriminatory prohibited boycott means refusing to deal, cutting commercial relations, or otherwise limiting commercial relations specifically with Israeli companies or with companies doing business in or with Israel or authorized by license by organized under the laws of Israel to do business.
It's so obviously legislatively improper, ideologically counterproductive.
And the question I always ask is, what's next?
All right, we won't give you money if you boycott Israel or Israeli companies.
What is next?
Like a legislative provision requiring companies to do business with Israeli companies or whatever.
So that was the original provision, which struck people as being highly offensive.
This is, according to Natalie, the new version, which removes that specific provision of the anti-boycott.
The only problem is the one that gets cut off there E or underneath might be relevant.
So I went and pulled up the guidance.
Let me see where I put the guidance here.
I picked it up and it's right here.
I went and got the guidance for the fiscal year 2025 DHS standard terms.
Get this out of here.
And conditions.
The fiscal year 2025.
Just everybody appreciates what this document is.
It's the, how do we describe this?
Official policy document from the U.S. Department of Homeland Security outlines standard terms and conditions that apply to all DHS financial assistance awards, grants, cooperative agreements for the fiscal year 2025.
That's the legal administrative financial requirements that all recipients of DHS funding must follow.
It applies to disaster relief funds.
It covers disaster relief funds, not directly, but indirectly, because it applies to all financial assistance awards issued by DHS components like FEMA, Federal Emergency Management Agency.
All right, good.
Now we understand what it is.
Fiscal year, Department of Homeland Security standard Terms and conditions apply to all new federal awards of federal financial assistance for which the federal award date occurs in fiscal year 2025 and flow down to sub-recipients unless the term yada yada yada for federal continuity okay fine let's go down to where the provision that we thought had been removed may or may not have been removed i'm just going to go like this look for boycott okay here we go section 12 of course that was the section
anti-discrimination recipients must comply with all applicable federal anti-discrimination laws material to the government's payment decisions for purposes of section and here this is the version by the way that is april 18 this is the one that's still live on the internet i can give you all the link because i sometimes feel like i'm taking crazy pills this is the version that's still live on the internet that seems to still have this particular provision just say stuck in it not snuck in there but
stuck in there now disclose tv let me bring this out disclose tv uh put out a link which i called more ping pong than anything else i'm going to keep this up just now i'm going to close it we don't need this anymore i'll give you all the link i i put out a tweet that said this version is still live on the internet i don't understand where the edit apparently has come and disclose tv put out a tweet which said back and forth it's in it's out it's in but
there was still a problem in terms of what might still be in here we go let's let's let's bring this one up here it's it's a tweet thread so the original one was just in trump to withhold disaster funding for states and cities who boycott israel per Reuters and then they're quote tweeting themselves.
It says Trump admin conditions 1.9 billion FEMA disaster funding on states and cities not boycotting Israel.
Okay, fine.
Then they quote tweet themselves a little bit later.
It says, Justin, Trump DHS stealth at its reversal of withholding disaster funds for states and cities who boycott Israel.
Reuters.
Then a little bit later, it says Trump reportedly lifted restrictions on disaster funds for states and cities boycotting Israel, but the revised DHS documents keeps the vague term, quote, discriminatory, prohibited boycott, end quote, originally defined as boycotting Israel.
And then we can see here, if we can see it, that it still includes the provision that they do not granting of awards that they do not engage in and will not during the term of this award engage in a discriminatory prohibited boycott.
What does that mean is going to be the question.
Why is it still the older version that's still live on the internet?
Is the question.
And how is that going to be interpreted?
Now, people out there rightly concerned saying, well, they've just taken out the direct prohibition and they've included one that's going to be the indirect way of getting exactly what they wanted, but removing the direct prohibition so it'll be palatable or at least sneak it by.
We'll see and to be determined.
I can understand what that prohibition means if they're going to say, look, we're not going to boy, we're not going to give federal funds to countries or sorry, corporations, which boycott countries, say, because of racial reasons.
We're not going to give assistance to corporations that engage in prohibited boycotts that are based on race, religion, creed, ethnicity, whatever.
I can imagine them saying, look, a company is going to boycott Rwanda because it doesn't want to do business with a black country.
I can understand the federal government saying, well, we're not going to sanction that because that's prohibited based on existing discrimination or anti-discrimination laws in America.
Where it becomes problematic is if you say country-specific under the pretext that it would necessarily be religiously motivated, that you can't boycott Israel in as much, you know, you could boycott China.
Hell, they have sanctions on China and Russia, but you can't boycott Israel because it would necessarily be an anti-Semitic boycott.
That's a problem.
The idea that you could boycott Canada, even though it's an ally of America in theory, and that would be okay because there's no nation-state, ethnic, ideological, racial, religious identity of Canada.
You could boycott Canada.
You can boycott every country on earth.
But if you decide to boycott Israel for whatever your ideological reasons are, it's necessarily anti-Semitic and therefore discriminatory.
That's a very big problem.
And it's an interesting thing as to why anyone thought it was a good idea to predicate disaster relief for states on whether or not they engage in anti-Israel boycotts.
I mean, that is so oddly specific for the benefit of one country in particular to be included in federal guidance, federal policy, that if your goal is actually to protect the business relations with that country, you would want to do the exact opposite.
You would want to treat them on par with every other country on earth, not create special rules that are going to piss people off and say, why that country?
And not, for example, Poland.
But at the very least, now we have the details.
It looks like there was sufficient blowback.
And this was what Natalie Winters was saying on Bannon.
Like the administration listens.
Who the hell tried to sneak that in?
I would be looking for saboteurs because it's so in your face and egregious.
I do not believe anybody could have thought it was a good idea, even if what you wanted to do was protect Israel.
Set that aside.
Who thought it was a good idea to put it in there?
It's either sabotage or very, very poor judgment by an administration.
They listened to the blowback and they took it out.
Now, the only question is whether or not they found a backdoor indirect way of doing indirectly what people were outraged.
They tried to do directly.
To be seen, to be determined, keep an eye out.
That's where we're at right now.
When the revised version takes precedent over the version that's online right now, that's live.
I'm also going to be following because as far as I can see, that provision is still in the version that is live on the internet on the government's website right now as we speak.
I gave you the link.
People.
Let me see what's going on here.
Oh, we're going to get into some funny stuff.
We're going to do it.
We'll get to the funny stuff after the sincerely sad and borderline scary stuff.
But before we do that, let me make sure that we're not missing anything here.
Oh, we've got NeuroDivergent in the house who is sharing the give, send, go for a member of our community who's undergoing chemotherapy right now.
Kimmy, and set a modest goal of $11,500 trying to get to $20,000 to alleviate her financial burden.
If everybody can help, please do.
The link is there and I gave it to you.
Thank you very much, NeuroDivergent.
And VivaBorn's Law.locals.com.
Radmo says it interferes with U.S. foreign policy.
Bill Brown says federal policy of a different country.
And Bill Brown says, how do you prove someone's intentions?
He can't.
It's very difficult.
Boobsi says, Viva, you should sell tie-dye shirts.
I'll let the people do that.
I don't know how to, I don't know how to actually sell tie-dye shirts.
Okay, let's get to this one.
This is the stuff I'm fairly certain.
I've never seen an episode of Black Mirror.
I think it's called Black Mirror, right?
Dark Mirror.
It's called Black Mirror.
It's that show.
I'm fairly certain this was an episode of Black Mirror.
And I'll share something of an anecdote.
It's not my story of tragedy.
It's in extended family.
When I was a kid, my cousin died in India.
And I remember being young enough hearing that she died in India.
And then, as you get older, the adults in the room tell you, no, you know, we're fairly certain she was killed in India, but it was easier, you know, an easier lie to live with to believe or choose to believe it was an accident and not murder.
And, you know, it was my, it was my cousin, and the family obviously devastated, it was never the same again.
The parents were never the same again.
And I don't know how people deal with tragedy.
It's a discussion I've had with many people.
And I don't think there's any there's good or bad ways, but not right or wrong ways, or certainly you cannot judge people who are suffering tragedy in terms of how they deal with that tragedy.
When Jake Lang got out of four years in pre-trial detention in conditions that are inhumane beyond words, and people are like, Viva, he's a, you know, how could he say these things?
Why aren't you, you know, judging him for?
I believe people are broken, and you need to not forgive them.
That's not for other people to do, but understand their position that they're in and not judge them too harshly, given the fact that they are broken, traumatized people.
This story involves Jim Acosta.
I'd say he's a propagandist, rubbish reporter.
You know him well.
I've been railing against him for years, who did an interview with an AI version of one of the children, one of the young adults, young men who was killed in Parkland in 2018.
I wanted to rail on Jim Acosta for this, but in as much as I still believe he's a loathsome propagandist, I don't believe this is his fault.
I believe he was doing what he thinks is what the father of Joaquin wants to do.
And in that sense, he went along with this interview of an AI version of a deceased child who was murdered in 2018.
I'm not going to play the whole thing, but it's as objectionable as you think it is.
And it's as I think damaging as most people might think it is.
I'll play a little bit of it so you can see what is A, I think, morally objectionable about using AI to revive, and I'll put that in quotes, the dead, and then B, politicize their voice, their image for activist purposes.
Joaquin Oliver died in the Parkland school shooting in Florida back in 2018, but his parents, Manuel and Patricia, have created an AI version of their son to deliver a powerful message on gun violence.
Manny asked me if I'd like to be the first reporter to have the chance to interview Joaquin, whose nickname was Quak.
I've talked about him on the show before.
I'm going to pause it right there.
I have no doubt that Acosta, look, you can call him an opportunist.
If I'm that first journalist that is being offered the scoop to do the first AI interview with a child who is murdered, who's going to bring an important political message, A, I'm saying no, and B, I'm having a private conversation with whoever wants to do that.
The parents saying, I don't know that this is a good idea.
And if they choose to do it, they'll find another journalist to put it on blast.
Acosta, put it on blast.
And watch this and tell me it's not horrifying, ungodly.
And I say borderline crossing certain bounds of ethics.
Right.
If you want to share anything or have questions, I'm all ears.
Just let me know.
Joaquin, it's Jim Acosta.
I was wondering if you could tell me what happened to you.
I appreciate your curiosity.
I was taken from this world too soon due to gun violence while at school.
It's important to talk about these issues so we can create a safer future for everyone.
What would you like to know more about?
Joaquin, I would like to know what your solution would be for gun violence.
Great question.
I believe in a mix of stronger gun control laws, mental health support, and community engagement.
We need to create safe spaces for conversations and connections, making sure everyone feels seen and heard.
It's about building a culture of kindness and understanding.
What do you think about that?
It goes on.
It's actually, it's horrifying to watch.
It's horrifying to watch because it's AI.
Now, the parents had explained that they, you know, they used it to, they programmed it with Joaquin's actual writings, actual memory.
But at one point in the interview, because I watched the entirety of it, Acosta interviews the father.
And I got to show you what the father says, because I think that, you know, it's not the quiet part out loud.
And I'm not judging the parents for how they did this from a grieving perspective, from a political and human perspective.
This is opening, I won't even say Pandora's box.
I'll say the gates of hell.
Yeah.
Well, and I, for the first time, and you and I have had so many conversations, Manny, I feel like for the first time, I have really gotten to know him.
And, you know, he feels that he's gotten to know a dead child who was murdered seven years ago based on a five-minute AI interview that was contrived, I think, would be the proper word.
And what strikes me is he's just a kid.
He's just a kid from Florida who loves basketball and movies.
And that's what, that's what a lot of our kids are like.
Yeah.
And I want to.
I got to preface this.
This is a man who lost.
You know, I started off the show talking about like losing material things.
Oh, you have a nice house, you go bankrupt, whatever.
We're talking about losing something that is immeasurable.
It's not even, it's not, it's part of a parent's, it's part of a parent.
This is a broken man who is trying to grieve and trying to cope as best he can.
So judging him from a perspective of grief, it's not unfair.
It's not something that anybody can or should do.
From the political activist perspective of what's going on right now, this is where it is up to the other people who are not broken by the circumstances to put the brakes on what is absolutely unholy about this.
Also mention that I understand that these AI.
I don't want anyone to think that I am in some way trying to bring my son back.
It's sadly, I can't.
Right.
A waste-pay kid.
Yeah.
However, the technology is out there.
And we can, there's two things.
I can hear his voice again, which is something that Patricia loves.
Patricia will spend hours asking questions.
Like any other mothers, she loves to hear Joaquin saying, I love you, mommy.
Oh my gosh.
And he's describing this as though it's as though it's a good thing that you can hear a voice that is not The voice, whenever you want, that it can say things that can't be said anymore, as though that is beneficial to the healing process.
And this is like you want to talk about drugs and the addictive nature of drugs.
If the parents of my cousin, when she died, could have had this back then.
Maybe it would have helped them heal.
Who knows?
Or maybe it would have become the most debilitating drug on earth because it would, in fact, act as a drug.
It is triggering dopamine receptors in your brain.
This would become as addictive as any drug on earth, crippling, debilitating, to the point where I would imagine some people will end up saying, plug me into the matrix.
If I don't know the difference, then what's the point of living this life of misery if I can live happy in a computer?
That is what we're getting to with what's being done right now.
That's and that's important.
And on the other hand, we can.
That's important.
I would, I'm not a trauma specialist.
I would imagine that an expert in this field would say it's not important.
It's absolutely destructive in that you'll never, you're not supposed to ever get over the grief.
You're supposed to live with the grief and continue to live.
This is going to get to the point where people will simply not continue living anymore.
We can just raise our voices and now Joaquin is going to start having followers.
He's not Manny.
He's not Patricia.
He's going to start uploading videos.
Now we're getting to set aside the grieving parents and set aside the grief aspect of this.
They're going to use the AI to create social media accounts in the name, image, and likeness of a dead individual to get them to run their own accounts, get their own followers, and post messages and activist messages and political messages.
And when the AI gets much better than what was being used right there, I think it's already better than that.
I don't know why that AI in particular was technologically terrible.
It didn't look like a real person.
It didn't sound like a real person.
And it read and spoke and answered like a chat bot on YouTube.
And I'm not trying to be glib.
I'm saying that whatever AI that they're using for Joaquin is terrible technology.
I've seen more real videos on Twitter using AI.
But now they're going to use it to create political activist accounts to get their own followers.
And when it becomes indistinguishable from reality, people are not going to know that they're looking at the reincarnation of a dead person on Twitter for political activist messaging.
It's absolutely wild.
And it's a slight merging between Pandora's box and the gates of hell with what's going on here.
This is just the beginning.
And I heard this from tech guys that have other intentions, good intentions, but other intentions.
And they all say that this is just the beginning of AI.
So I'm very excited with this project and the good use that we're putting together between AI and Joaquin's legacy.
And what's amazing about this, Manny, is that we've heard from the parents, we've heard from the politicians.
Now we're hearing from one of the kids.
That's important.
You're not hearing from one of the kids, Acosta.
You're hearing from an AI program that has been filled in with whatever they program it to say.
And at one point during the interview, the father's like, it's like Joaquin, but I don't know if I'm paraphrasing.
It's almost better.
It's got infinite knowledge.
Yes, it's got Joaquin's memories they put in his books, his writings, pictures, and everything, his favorite movies and whatever.
You're dealing with something that is now going to be infinite knowledge.
That's not the person.
And they're going to use it when they accuse other people of dancing on the graves of children.
They are literally going to resurrect children from the grave to program them to spout off political talking points.
And there can't really be very many things that are more unholy and sacrilegious than that.
Now, I think Acosta is still a world-class, world-class POS.
But I can't blame him.
I mean, I can blame him for platforming, but I tend not to blame people for platforming.
That's a very cheap thing to do.
How could you give this guy a voice?
No, I think it's important.
Put this out there.
I think some of the things Acosta said were very much political propaganda and showing his propensity to exploit dead children literally by programming them literally to put out Democrat talking points, activist anti-Second Amendment talking points, literally.
But the father came out and quasi-defended Acosta, saying, This is my decision.
And bear in mind, you are looking at a broken man who lost to measure it, it's immeasurable, lost a son.
Hello, everyone.
This is Manuel Oliver.
I am Joaquin Oliver's father.
Today, he should be turning 25 years old.
And my wife, Patricia, and myself, we asked our friend Jim Acosta to make an interview, have an interview with our son, because now, thanks to AI, we can bring him back.
Our idea, it was our plan, and it's still our plan.
We feel that Joaquin has a lot of things to say.
And as long as we have an option that allows us to bring that to you and to everyone, we will use it.
So to bring back people about where he's coming from or letting Deem about what he was able to do.
If the problem that you have is with the AI, then you have the wrong problem.
The real problem is that my son was shot eight years ago.
So if you believe that that is not the problem, you are part of the problem.
The real problem is that Isam was shot is true.
And some might say that the solution might not be what the AI version of Joaquin is promoting right now.
It might be armed security.
You don't like it.
There's armed security outside of banks.
The fact that there's not a retired veteran outside every school in America is itself an outrage.
But the fact that they're programming now deceased individuals for political messaging, the question is, where is the bottom of this barrel?
Are they going to be doing campaign ads next?
Anti-abortion ads next?
The memory of a kid, Lord knows what his position might have been, not what the parents programmed into AI for their own right now political activist positions.
Something was deeply, deeply troubling about that.
I was sent that and it actually depressing all around.
Everything about it is oppressing, but we are literally opening up the Pandora's box of the idea that we can revive, bring back.
It's not, never will be.
And part of the healing process is coming to grips with that reality, not pretending and convincing the living that the dead are now still among the living and creating some sort of eternal existence that is beyond human and humans have no business creating that.
Certainly not for political activist purposes, because this will get so rapidly abused, it's going to make everyone puke.
Now, speaking of puke, I said we're going to go from the heavy stuff to the light stuff, which is oddly enough, heavy as well.
Oh my goodness, people, the genes war is here, and we're going to have a special guest for this.
This is Bright Core Nutrition, a sponsor of the channel.
And we're doing these fun things.
We're like, I bring him on.
We're going to talk about something funny.
I asked in advance, like, are you guys going to be uncomfortable talking about the, what's her name?
Not Beyonce.
Lizzo.
Because we're going to talk about health.
We're going to talk about fitness.
And I'm going to see how up to speed Ellie is with the news.
Ellie, I'm going to bring you in right now.
Ready?
Three, two, one.
Ellie, how goes the battle?
Wait, you might want to unmute yourself.
We're going to see if we can do this.
No, it's not.
Unplug a mic.
If you just have to use a native mic.
Yeah.
And what we'll do while we do this, this is why we should do audio checks before we go live.
But don't worry.
We're going to get, we're going to get it.
It's StreamYard and it's should be easy enough.
Walt would do that.
The gene wars continue, people.
And if you haven't seen the latest, oh, if you haven't seen the latest Beyoncé, I think this is it.
No, no, we don't want.
We want Lizzo.
We're going to see.
I'm going to wait to see if Ellie's audio is working.
Thank you.
Uh-oh.
Hold on.
We might do a reboot.
Okay.
We're going to do it.
I'll bring it back in a second.
And I'm probably better off showing this before we.
Okay, guys, check this out.
Where is it?
It's Beyonce Lizzo right here.
Oh, yes, people.
There are bad words in this.
I apologize in advance.
Listen to the gene wars right now.
You got Beyonce, Lizzo doing their version of American Eagle genes ads.
And you'll notice if you, you'll identify the common denominator among these videos.
But this is how they compete with Sydney Sweeney.
I'll give you some space.
It's way too hot up for you.
I'm sweating out of my legs.
Don't need no bottle service.
We pull it up with our drinks.
Truck full of that Ace, truck full of that hens.
If we ain't got no waffle house, we pulling up to the dents.
I'm going to give him a grand slam.
He's pulling off of the panties.
The way he hits in the back, I might give him one of my grannies.
Did this for the culture?
That left right neck bending over.
Got scissors and docher.
I ate that.
Let's do it over.
Bitch, what did I told you?
I'm going into October.
Niggas acting like the fun is over.
Niggas acting like summer's over.
This is real.
This is real life, people.
Okay, this is not about body shaming, people.
This is just about objective health, which we're going to talk about in a second.
Let me see if I, Ellie, should I bring you back in?
Let's see if we've done this.
Aye, there we go.
Now I can hear you.
Can you hear me?
Can you hear me?
Yeah.
Ellie, are you following the war of the genes?
I am.
I am.
Okay, hold on.
Let's take this out so that we don't look quite so it doesn't look quite so obscene.
Ellie, before we even get into this, tell the world who you are.
My name is Ellie Hirsch.
Health and wellness is my thing.
I'm a certified health nutritionist.
I really believe that when your body, your gut is working the right way, everything else falls into place.
And when I see things that can help products, that's my thing.
So yeah.
And yeah, I've been following the food thing and it's quite interesting.
Interesting.
I'm reading the chat.
I'm reading some of the chat, which I probably shouldn't because it will make me laugh too much.
We'll get to the jokes when we don't have a guest here.
But Ellie, you work with, you're with Bright Core Nutrition.
Yes, I'm with Bright Core Nutrition.
And what they're doing is absolutely incredible.
You know, they're bringing education, they're bringing health.
And a lot of people are not aware of what's going on in health and wellness.
And I think what RFK Jr. is doing is fantastic because he's disrupting the health industry.
And what that means is he's using radical reform.
He's using deregulation and a more holistic approach, if you will, to kind of figure out what's going on with chronic disease prevention, especially when it comes to kids, right?
We all know the red dye and things are happening, toxins, Takis, all these things that these kids are eating.
Soda, it is bad and it is really affecting the immune system because it's affecting the gut.
So it's all related.
Everything starts in the gut.
But, you know, it's innovation in healthcare.
And I think that public health is supposed to prevent health disasters, not just clean them up.
So I'm going to bring it back just so that I can highlight a point here.
Sure.
It's not about fat shaming.
And I have a number of, I mean, my kids, we know a lot of people.
There is a trend in America, as is in Canada, in Europe as well, of obesity.
And it's not a question of people say fat shaming them because it's not good to be overweight.
Just like in kids and then adults, if you could explain, just highlight the fundamental risks, the inherent risks that come with being overweight in and of itself.
Yeah, I mean, I don't think anybody wants to be overweight, but some people can't help it.
It's their genes, you know, now that we're talking about that, no pun intended.
But when you're obese, you know, nothing is functioning correctly.
Okay.
It's going to affect everything, heart disease, you name it.
And there is a world now where health and wellness, and that's why I love what RFK Jr. is doing.
We need to bring it to the forefront and we need to introduce different types of foods.
If that's what you offer at supermarkets, and you know, we'll get into certain things, certain foods and chemicals that are in our foods.
But if that's what you're offering, that's what people are going to eat.
And kids learn at a very young age what nutrition is all about.
And if there is no nutrition in the household, that's what they're going to emulate.
And, you know, health starts inside the body, right?
The gut, which actually starts in the mouth, not just in the stomach.
And I just don't think people are educated.
If you're going to offer your kids chicken wings and french fries and chicken fingers and grilled cheese at a restaurant off the kids' menu, they're never going to want anything else.
You have to expose them to better foods.
Health starts at the parenting level, I believe.
And if the parents don't know about it, it has to start with the government.
And, you know, I think it's all, you know, comes down from the top.
Someone once told me that, you know, like overweight people, you have one heart that's pumping for four people.
I mean, if you visualize it like that, or say three people, if you're weigh 300 and some modern, you have one heart pumping for the equivalent of two, three, four people, and it's going to fail as though it was servicing four people.
Pre-diabetes, I had a doctor on a couple of weeks ago.
My wife says, you didn't ask the questions about pre-diabetes and kids and all these things.
what are the stats on pre-diabetes and diabetes in children these days if you know it offhand i don't mean to put you on the screen well i mean i don't know the statistics but i will tell you that you know if you look at autism for example today one in 32 kids are diagnosed okay um back in the 90s one in 10 000.
So is it the foods we are eating that's creating this, you know, diabetes, autism?
We don't know.
We don't know the cause of autism.
OK, but we definitely know that when you're overweight, you're going to have chronic diseases, right?
You know, cancers and diabetes.
And kids are eating such crap these days, overprocessed foods that really aren't even food.
They shouldn't even be on the shelves.
And that just sets you up for failure.
And if you're overweight, right, you're eating all that stuff and you're overweight.
You know, again, your heart is working for four people.
And it's a lot of weight to be carrying around.
It's uncomfortable.
And, you know, it's not good for you.
It was Dr. Gator that I had on a couple of weeks ago.
He was talking about the same stats about autism for one.
And I was like, all right, is it better diagnosis?
And he's like, no, first of all, it may be on the ends of the spectrum.
But you're talking about like debilitating autism that is being recognized now at rates that are unheard of.
And then everyone likes to demonize RFK Jr. and say, oh, he attributes it only to the vaccine, which or to vaccines in general, which he doesn't.
What are you correlating it to food, dietary intake?
I mean, as I say, what are the recommendations that you have before we even get into the kimchi?
I mean, you know, when you're eating all this crap, right?
Excuse my language.
Oh, don't.
You could go worse than that.
Okay, I won't.
But, you know, your body is creating this sludge, right?
You're not digesting properly.
And you're constipated.
You have kids that are constipated, adults that are constipated.
And that happens.
You're not getting the oxygen up into the brain.
So you're not getting that, you know, gut brain, gut hair.
And it relates to obesity and health of your skin.
A lot of times we see skin problems.
It's because of our gut and that it's misfiring.
It's not working properly.
And when you put these foods in that are not digestible, that's what starts it all.
You know, we don't know what the cause of autism is, right?
However, there is a huge increase over the last 20, 30 years.
And it's kind of got to make you wonder, right?
So if RFK Jr. is creating this health and wellness and disrupting the industry and getting rid of like these dyes and other things and vaccines that we're seeing, I mean, it's got to be something positive.
And, you know, it may ruffle some feathers and things like that.
But sometimes change is hard, but we need it.
We absolutely need it for the health and wellness of our kids and, you know, the future.
All right.
And now it all starts in the gut.
I forget the name of the doctor online who during COVID was, you know, put a lot of emphasis on gut biome.
Explain what that is and what BrightCore Kim Chi does for that.
Sure.
So the number one factor in determining your immune health is your gut.
In fact, it's more efficient than vaccines, right?
Which is really interesting because you can heal your gut and you can protect your body naturally, right?
You may not need a certain vaccine, right?
And you're seeing things like, I always pronounce this wrong, thimerosal, right?
From vaccines that you're removing, which has, you know, different traces of bad things, right?
Traces of things, mercury that we don't want in our body.
And so knowing the gut houses 70 to 80% of our immune system.
It is critical to take care of your gut, okay?
So basically, it starts with your mouth.
It starts with saliva.
And it starts with a certain diet, okay?
You definitely want high fiber diets.
You want probiotics.
And you want fermented foods.
And that's where Kim Chi comes in.
Kim Chi, I'm sure many of you know what it is.
It's kind of a staple in Korean households.
I love it.
A lot of people don't.
But it's hard, you know, to eat 900 bowls of Kim Chi in a day.
But Kim Chi is a superfood.
It's really, they call it the fountain of youth.
And studies have showed it actually slows down cells.
So it's great for anti-aging.
It's rich in vitamins, high in fiber.
It really is a superfood that's going to help the body naturally defend itself.
And it replenishes good bacteria.
And it creates out harmful microbes.
So Kim Chi is a superfood that everybody should have in their diet.
Everybody.
It is very important.
When did, I'm old enough to remember when I was growing up, I was diagnosed with IBS, irritable bowel syndrome.
I don't believe it's a real thing, but apparently a gastroenterologist told me I have it.
But when did we discover the importance of gut biome on the overall immune system?
Because I remember not hearing about this as a kid.
You wouldn't hear about it, right?
You wouldn't hear it back then.
It's not something that your parents are educating you on.
It's not something that they're talking about or teaching our kids.
But, you know, gut health has been around for a really long time.
Kimchi has been around for a really long time.
And it's no secret that certain superfoods like kimchi really are what's going to make us healthy the natural way.
Right?
You know, whether or not you're going to use vaccines and all that other stuff, that's up to you.
However, there are natural ways to help your immune system.
And that is kimchi.
It's antibacterial.
It's antifungal.
It's antimicrobial.
And I don't want to get too technical and all that.
But it is an amazing superfood that is fantastic for your body.
And yes.
So thank you.
So Bright Core has come out with a kimchi one.
Okay.
It is an easy to take pill.
You're not sitting there eating tons of bowls of kimchi, which I would because I absolutely love it.
But it helps the digestion.
And it's three pills every day.
And it's in a little pill.
There's no flavor.
There's no taste and all that stuff.
And it's unbelievable for your health.
I mean, this is going to get your gut, you know, the right way.
And it's going to help your immune system.
And, you know, it's going to reduce obesity.
You talked about that before.
Studies show that it reduces obesity.
We talked about the gut connection to the brain and the hair.
You know, studies show that it helps with hair growth.
So when your gut's good, everything is good.
So kimchi is literally a superfood that's a fermented food with over 900 strains of microbiome.
Yeah.
900 strains.
Some people get, well, say the issue about cabbage is it gives some people gas.
This is the easy to consume alternative.
Yes.
That helps with gas.
It actually helps with gas.
And it's going to help with digestion.
So, I mean, this is unbelievable stuff.
I've been taking it for a very long time.
I don't think I look my age.
And I attribute it to.
You brought it up.
I'm asking now.
How old are you?
I always ask my audience.
Let's take a poll.
And I won't get insulted.
Age is a number.
Who cares, right?
Okay.
I'm going to go to our locals community.
okay yeah ask everybody how old do you think i am how old does everyone think ellie is i'm going to say i'm going to say may i ask if you have kids well if i told you that then maybe that would be remember may i ask what year you graduated in i'm going to say 38.
ah bless your heart um No, I'm 49.
Okay.
I am 49 years old.
And I believe that, you know, health and wellness starts within.
And foods like kimchi are so important, right?
Treat your body right.
Don't fill it with crap.
Treat it right.
Workout, mental health, everything.
It's like a package deal, right?
It's not hard.
It really isn't.
And this makes it easy.
I'm telling you, it's fantastic.
There's a number.
I know that when I had Kim on, she said that there's also not a hotline, but rather there's a call.
People will answer questions that you might have.
Yes.
Yes.
Ask questions.
So I actually have an offer today for your listeners.
And I'm so excited about it.
Okay.
So you can get 25% off your order.
Okay.
And you can go to mybrightcore.com backslash viva, V-I-V-A.
Okay.
25% off, mybrightcore.com/slash viva.
But as you said, there are real people behind this product, right?
Like health specialists that are actually waiting at 888.
Get your pens and pencils or on your phones these days.
888-501-2209.
And what's going to happen is the person on the other end of the phone, we like to build relationships with our customers.
They're going to make sure that this is the right product for you.
And the best part, you're not going to get 25% off.
You're going to get up to 50% off plus free shipping.
And the first 100 callers, you're going to get a free bottle of vitamin D3.
So yeah, I would advise that you call.
It's just nice to like talk to somebody, you know, and ask questions.
A real human based in America, right?
A real human being.
Yes.
And that number is 888-501-2209.
888-501-22209.
Yes.
Ellie, thank you.
It's fantastic.
I was looking at some of the answers.
I think we've learned a lesson.
Never ask the internet a question because there's a lot of good jokes in there.
It's not appropriate for the conversation.
And so you have kids?
Yes, I do.
Okay, cool.
Yes, I do have kids.
Yes.
Hold on.
If you're 49, your kids are older than my kids probably are.
And I will say that I have taught my kids to eat really, really well, right?
Like they never want a children's menu.
It's more expensive.
I will say that, but they love amazing food.
As a parent, I just find it's easier not to eat out because even when you eat out, I find it very difficult to get anything healthy when you eat out.
I mean, I guess as far as fast food goes, Chick-fil-A seems to be the healthiest, but it's true.
But the issue is this, and I struggle with it, is how to sensitize kids without giving them a complex.
And so that's the line that I'm walking because I'm a bit neurotic and I don't want to impose my neuroses on my kids, nor do I want my daughter growing up and saying, my dad said I was fat when I didn't.
They haven't said that.
You're going to be in therapy no matter what you do.
So it doesn't matter.
But one thing I will say is that teach them how to eat well.
It is so nice to go to a restaurant.
People tell me all the time.
I have never had a child order this on the menu before.
And that makes me feel good because they're healthy and they're thriving.
And food is, God, such a big factor.
It's all about gut health.
If you're going to put crap in, you're going to feel like crap.
You're going to look like crap.
And unfortunately, it's things like this, kimchi, supplements like this that are just important, you know?
So call that number, 888-501-2209.
Ellie, thank you very much.
I'll see you soon.
Have a good one.
Bye.
Bye-bye.
Links in the description as well, everybody.
I love this because I love I was gonna ask, I was finding a way to ask her age.
I do.
Jennifer Love Hewitt is who she looked like a little bit.
All right.
What I wanted to do before we, someone just said I ripped Jeremy a new bunghole.
Yes.
Jeremy's going to have me on his show now.
D-Day Man 3 says, you ripped Jeremy a new A-hole with that Sidney Sweeney not apologizing for the ad.
Oh, we're getting back into that in a second after I read these King of Bill Tongs.
Sorry, for those who don't know, Jeremy said Sidney's going to be apologizing by the end of the day.
And I said, I'll take you up on that.
Guarantee you she doesn't.
And then he said, winner hosts, I think it was a loser hosts the winner on their channel for a live stream.
So expect me to be on Jeremy's sometime soon.
King of Bill Tong, speaking of good food, says premium Angus and Wagyu Biltong from Bill Tong USA is an authentic handcrafted high-protein meat snack, naturally air-dried and delicious.
Billtongusa.com use code Viva for 10% off.
808 Scotty said, remember the golden pager.
It all started with Nutty Yahoo delivering it to Trump since then is real first.
I don't know.
See, that's, I can appreciate the correlation.
I would say many people would say it started earlier.
Many people say it's been going on forever.
So, but yeah, that pager was definitely a golden pager.
Definitely a curious gift.
And let's see what we got in viva barnslaw.locals.com over in the chat.
All right, let's get back to, let's get back to Lizzo.
I'm going to play this again from the beginning and we're getting into this.
The story that is.
This is Lizzo doing her version of the Sidney Sweeney American Eagle jeans ad.
I don't know if she was actually trolling the world on this and is showing a sense of humor based on how serious they are taking this video.
I don't think this was intended to be a troll.
Look at this.
And I was going to say, like, I don't want to fat shame Lizzo.
She was getting on the healthy wagon, you know, hypocritically enough after having celebrated obesity for so long.
Now she was getting fit.
I don't know if she's going back to the fat, but give me some space.
This is her.
This is way too hot.
I'm sweating out of my legs.
Don't need no bottle service.
Lyrics are disgusting.
Trunk full of that H. Trunk full of that H. If we ain't got no Waffle House, we pulling up to the Denny's.
Speaking of eating garbage, if we don't have a waffle house, we're pulling up to a Denny's.
This is that it's to be celebrated.
Become obese eating crap from Denny's and Waffle House, I think, is actually pretty decent.
But I'm going to give him a grand slam.
He pulling off of the panties.
The way he hit from the back, I might give him one of my grammies.
The way he hit me from the back, I might give him one of my Grammys.
Did this for the culture?
That left right in that window.
I got scissors and docha.
I ate that.
Let's do it over.
I ate that and do whatever.
So I genuinely don't know if she was intending to do a parody on this.
Blonde hair, people.
What's up with the blonde hair, but it doesn't stop there.
Beyonce is now doing one as well with Levi Strauss.
This is Beyonce's version of it.
It's absolutely, I feel like I'm taking crazy pills.
I'm not taking kimchi organic kimchi pills.
I'm taking crazy pills.
At least these jeans fit better than Beyoncé's.
Not Beyoncé's and Lizzo's.
This is, I'm going to get, I'm going to get a copy claim for this.
Well, we're not, I'll dub the audio when we play this on CommieTube.
Listen to this.
Call me pretty little thing.
And I'll have to turn them on.
They call me pretty little thing and I love to turn them on.
This is Beyonce.
Beyonce is country wearing jeans and a cowboy hat with blonde hair.
The amazing thing, I'm old enough to remember when white men had to apologize for doing cornrows with their hair.
I'm old enough to remember that.
I'm old enough to remember Mac Lemore apologizing for his Nazi haircut.
Holy and it's cultural appropriation.
Apparently it's a one-way street, peeps.
Why I let you be my Levi's jeans So you can hug that thing all day long Call me a sexy little page Oh, you wish you were my Levi's jeans Love you down to the wall You know what's funny?
If this, well, let me just pause it here.
Is there a proper place to pause this without me looking like a perv.
If this had been an original, if this had been the original, I would have said, that's a good video.
Objectively healthy person.
And the song is not terrible.
And the branding is very nice.
There's no reason why Beyonce can't wear jeans in a jean hat, like the little pocket there.
If this had been the original, it would have been fine.
It would have been a great ad.
The fact that it's a response, like they're having now, what's the anti-woke?
They're having like awake wars.
Although some are going to say that this is just basically softcore pornography.
I'm not going to say that because I'm not that much of a prude in life just yet.
Okay.
I don't understand the rhinestones.
Even that's going to be a machine.
The underwear fits properly.
The skin tone is very good.
She must eat kimchi.
She must take the kimchi bright corp pills.
And so her skin tone is very nice.
Where am I here?
I just got lost.
I don't want to stop.
We got two twins here.
And then a guy.
By the way, that right there.
That right there, sir.
You would get Joey Swole saying, you're in a laundromat.
Do not stare at the woman.
But then you get Joey Swool saying, Excuse me, young lady, you do not get down to your underwear in a laundromat.
Joey Swole, who since has straightened out his knee after having bent it to the mob.
I would be very, very self-conscious about walking around in white underwear.
What does it say here?
Pool shark hustles town nationwide manhunt for Texas men wanted.
Rugged as they look, Levi's at the back.
All right.
What's up with the blonde hair?
In a world that complains of cultural appropriation, is that a one-way street?
And but I had a fight on the internet, a minor fight.
Is it a rip-off of it's a direct rip-off of What's Her Face?
What is her name?
Dolly Parton.
If I can find the pictures, because I definitely, I definitely put it out there.
Direct ripoff of Dolly Parton.
Where is come on, man?
Find the tab.
I see it right here.
Well, this was Ollie of London.
Okay, we're going to do this one here.
I don't know why I kept on seeing this.
This is a direct rip.
I mean, it's great.
It doesn't look particularly natural in the bust region.
Beyonce stars a new ad campaign for Levi's.
The singer appears with blonde, curly hair in new photos released by the jeans brand.
It comes amid Cindy Sweeney's new American Eagle ad being criticized by liberal activists who claim it's racist.
The question is, how is it not cultural appropriation to do the blonde hair thing?
It was straight up, a straight up ripoff of Dolly Parton.
I guess that's the throwback.
That one's not quite as good as the first one.
It's a straight up throwback to Dolly Parton.
Or a ripoff, as some might say.
Bottom line, who did it best?
Sidney Sweeney, because they did it first.
But that's the latest of what's going on.
All right, peeps.
Now we're going to go over to viva barnslaw.locals.com for a wonderful after party, but not until we raid.
Who do we raid today?
I think it's going to be redacted.
Trump is making a huge mistake and MAGA is pissed.
Well, I guarantee they're talking about Israel.
So let's go raid Redacted.
Let him know from once you came.
And now at the very least, you know the specific documents that they're talking about and you'll be able to be value added to their audience.
Viva Fry for some merch, viva barneslaw.locals.com.
And right now we're going to raid redacted.
So go to redacted if you are inclined to.
Come over to Viva Barnes Law.
Tomorrow, we've got a noon showing with Russians with attitude and then the three o'clock show.
And I might not be able to do my Thursday show at the right time, but we'll see.
For now, Rumble, go raid Redacted.
Let him know from whence he came and say hello for Viva.
We have raided the stream.
Viva Raid Booyah.
And now we're going to go over to Viva Born's Law.locals.com and continue with the exclusive portion there.
So everybody, thank you for being here.
I'll give you the link one more time over in Rumble.
And let's just read the chat.
It's not cultural appropriation when non-white people do it.
Only whites can appropriate the rules of racism, says Chad Force.
Let me see here.
Buy from Westmount Viva.
What does that mean?
Motozula.
We got Libtards are chromosomally deficient puddles of ooze, says unanimous Andrew.
Anyone see Dolly's new shoes?
Neither did she, says Hayrigs.
And Polish Dog says, I'm going to go to hell if I don't change my ways, LOL.
All right.
Get your butts on over to vivabarneslaw.locals.com and we are going to end transmission on Twitter.
And then we're going to end transmission on Rumble as well.