The Truth is Somewhere Out in Left Field
Austin Aries ShowApril 12, 2023x
10
00:39:4236.33 MB

The Truth is Somewhere Out in Left Field

Episode 10 of the Austin Aries Show, we share some extra content for you while Austin is settling in during his trip in India.
What's you gonna do? Brother? When Jeff Townsend media runs wild on you? I am looking when you got why do you trust the people you trust? Jeff? And who do you trust? Well? I think, like you said, it really has to come from your own experiences and developing your own beliefs based off of those legitimate experiences. Do you trust the news? Put you on the spot? Here? With everything? The truth is somewhere lies somewhere outside of what's actually being said, whether it's a mile outside, whether it's six feet outside. So to answer your question, no, I don't fully trust the news or or a lot of things unless I personally. And that's it. The old saying is the truth somewhere in the middle, And I'm no, that's a lie too. The truth is somewhere out in fucking left field, right like the truth. The truth's out in the middle. They keep you arguing about two sides of a lie. Therefore you never neither side gets closer to the truth because they're both wrong. Yeah, because the truth isn't there. Yeah, the truth isn't there at all. So we're gonna have him argue about these two sides of a lie. It came from a bat No, it came from a lab league. No, it came from a bat. No, it came from a lab league. Meanwhile, they're like five g no one's said. No, one's talking about this except for those crazy conspiracy nuts. As an example, again, I'm not saying yes, no definitively either. I'm just saying, the minute they have people wound up fighting over these two things, I'm going, Okay, now what's outside of that, because that's where I'm going to get closer to the truth. Right, it's again, Republican Democrat, Republican Democrat, those are two lies you talk about. You're talking about the vaccine. There are still countries in the world, third world countries that have a lot of these illness, these these disease that were by far worse than COVID that just killed almost entire populations. There's actually it's not eradicated completely. Some of these are actually still out there in the world. So claim victory because we might not have polio or I'll just thrown an example out here, but there's shit out there that's still there. Well it's not it's not been like solved per se. So when you really start doing some digging and you start looking at the history of a lot of these things, you know, there's there's there's parts we sometimes miss and so like for polio, for example, because that's the one that people bring up a lot when they talk about vaccines. Well, there was a driver behind polio, right, There was a reason polio became a problem. It was because we were poisoning people, right, we were, and I believe it was DDT And I could be wrong, and I should probably do little could do a little research to make sure I got my facts right. But we were using something, spraying something on crops that was giving people pollio. So a lot of these issues we talk about, these diseases that we're using vaccines to solve, we're not trying to figure out, well, where did this illness come from to begin with, what's the root cause? Right? Because again I believe most disease and illness is the body trying to detox toxins poisons, And we're being bombarded by poisons on several different fronts every day. And when the body can't detox the poisons fast enough and the accumulating the body, you're going to get sick. That's reality. And when you start looking at some of these thorough world countries you're talking about. The unfortunate reality is they've been used as guinea pigs for these vaccines for generations. Bill Gates does not have a good reputation in Africa. Bill Gates doesn't have a good reputation in a lot of these thirdbral countries because he was using them to test his vaccines. And it's funny because actually polio came back around in some of these countries because of the vaccines. The vaccines were giving people polio. So, you know, a lot of times we repeat things that we hear, whether it's in a news article or on the television, and we don't really go and actually do a deep dive into the complete history of these things. And that's what allows us to keep repeating half truths and embellishments or just outright, you know, lies. And so, I you know you're gonna call me an anti vaxer at this point, I'll accept that label if that's what you want to label me, because I do not believe that the human body gets healthier by injecting more poisons and toxics into it. I understand the premise of a vaccine, and it sounds good in the theory, I give you a little bit of this virus, so your body builds up immunity to it so that it doesn't catch the virus, or if it does catch it, it has a less worse reaction. But that's not going to well, where did the virus come from to begin with? And then that goes back to germ theory or terrain theory, and they're both theories neither want have been proven one hundred percent, but we only talk about germ theory as if it's the real thing, right, and so germ is the theory that allows us to basically prop up this Western medical system, allows us to prop up the pharmaceutical industry. It allows us to prop up this notion that we can hide from viruses behind a cloth mask or a paper mask, because we've been fooled in my opinion, that the way that sickness and through a virus that we catch. When I believe that, we need to also talk about terrain theory, which says the terrain is everything. If you have an unhealthy body internally, you're going to get sick. So if you want to not get sick or eradicate virus and disease, then look at the environment, arology, or within you that's creating this toxicity to begin with. I saw a picture analogy. It's like you have a goldfish and a fish bowl, right, and you don't clean the water, and now the fish gets sick. Well, what do you do? Do you clean the water or do you vaccinate the fish? And what we do is we just stay in this dirty environment, putting toxins in our body, whether we willfully through food and drinking or through things that we don't control, like what's in what they're spraying on our food, what's in our water. And we think we just if we just vaccinate and keep taking more drugs, somehow that's going to lead us to health. Now, we need to detox, and we need to get off the fucking garbage, and we need to start holding these you know, governments and corporations accountable for poisoning us every fucking day. Which actually brings me to this thing that I bought. Right, It's called clearly filtered, and this is a water bottle that has a high level filtration system in it that gets out like ninety nine point nine percent of all the garbage that's in your water, including fluoride, Fluoride's a big one for me that I try to reduce fluoride. But you got fluoride. There's I mean, as actually has bringing up the website that you know to look at all the different things that you know are in the water, you know, and this this clears like two over two hundred things out. But yeah, you know there's chlorine, there's fluoride, there's a try hallow methane. By'm saying that right. You know, you know halocetic acids, radium, you know, arsenic chromium, chlorate, dioxane, barium, aluminum. I mean, there's a lot of shit in your water, right and not just the water you drink, but every time you shower, your your largest organ in your bodies, your skin. Your skin absorbs all of that really quickly. So again, you know, we can talk about, oh, vaccines have help eradicate these diseases. Okay, maybe that's true. Now let me ask the question where the fuck disease diseases come from to begin with, because they don't just pop out of it, like, they don't pop out of thin air like I've like, I don't know, I don't see a lot of it in nature necessarily, and maybe we just don't see it. But I don't know, So I just I believe the conversation is more apathe and we're allowed to actually discuss because if you speak out against vaccines, you're just labeled anti vaxer and you're you're a crazy conspiracy theorist, and then you're just dismissed and they move on. You know. Anyway, it's my rant on that I just label them austin Aries. Oh so Indiana, man, Yeah, the train derailment, Yeah, big news, big news, it's but it's faded out of the scene a little bit here. Big national news though. No, But here's the thing. But it's big news here now, you know why, because they are taking shit and disposing of it here. So there's a place about an hour south of where I'm at. Everybody's freaking out here. Now. It's not on the national news. It's on the local news because they're freaking out because they're bringing this stuff here to dispose of it. And what are the odds that a movie was made recently in the last few years that literally the plot line was exactly what happened down to the town where it happened. I guess I don't know what you're talking about. Okay, Well, I'm gonna, I'm gonna, I'm gonna find it here, So find it. I think it's It was called White Noise. Let me, let me double check though, A White Noise is some ghost movie if I remember White Noise. Okay, White Noise movie. A derailed train in East Palestine, Ohio, was carrying more toxic chemicals and first reported it was a Netflix movie. Right, it was a Netflix disaster movie, White Noise. It was meant for a dark comedy for the residence of East Palestine living through an early similar event. It's now laughing matter. So the movie was based on a nineteen eighty five book by the same name, and it's about a family that has to evacuate their town after a freight train carrying deadly toxins collides with the tanker trunk and explodes. Oh well, right. White Noise was filmed on location in twenty twenty one around Ohio. Again, this is what we call, you know what us conspiracy theorists call predictive programming. Right, These movies and things that come out is a glimpse of the future, and they get you comfortable with the scenario before it happens in real life predictive programming, right, and so like you know, a lot of people you know that I talked to and that follow this similar train of thought. And if you look at really what this kind of great reset is pushing the world towards, it's the hunger game society. You have your very few halves of the very top, and everybody else has split their districts and very controlled and rationed out, you know. And this is in some ways where things are moving And will it happen in completion at the end of our lifetime. Maybe not, But when you start looking at a lot of things that are being implemented and put it in place, it's easy to see how that could lead to a very similar scenario. But yeah, for the fact that this movie was filmed in twenty twenty one and the plot line is basically exactly what happened in the same location, you're either a coincidence theorist or you're more like me and you're a conspiracy theorist. You and you believe that really nothing in this world happens by coincidence. Interist very interesting and there's a lot there's a lot of interesting shit when you start breaking it down again. Event two one took place two months before the COVID outbreak. Event to A one happened. It's verifiable. This was all the top agencies, Billy Millinda Gates Foundation, Clinton Initiative, Central Bank, World Health Organization, and and they basically did a simulas simulation exercise on what would happen if there was a outbreak of SARS COVID, like literally what happened two or three months later. They had a roundtable simulation. I just find that very coincidental, you know, I find a very coincidental that the man that created the PCR test, who who is adamant that the PCR test is not a dignostic tool because it can find anything in anybody, right, that he dies two months before the pandemic happens, and they start using this guy's testing system to basically be the whole, the whole backdrop of everything, whether you can go to work, go to school, do this, get on a plane, go here, go there. They're using doctor Kerry Mullis's a PCR test that he's on record as saying is not a dignostic tool. If you ample file that up, it basically just shows you if something exists. Well, if we have hundreds of you know, thousands of things in our body, and so it doesn't tell you you have anything specifically, It just tells you if it is somewhere in your system, doesn't mean you're infected. Right, And this guy also hated doctor Fauci, called him a fraud. And this guy dies two months before the pandemic, and they use this test for this whole for this whole thing. It's a lot when you start digging, we start going without rabbit holes. You just see there's all these ties and coincidences that are just kind of crazy. And sure they could all be coincidence theories, but I just find that to be a lot more unbelievable. Then powerful people will collude to make sure they stay in power and that life happens exactly the way they want it. We kind of like we've kind of got this tradition where we've named the episode before we end it to me. To me like, I'm thinking, that was what was your exactly your quote on the truth lights somewhere and left field, right field? What did you say? Yeah, the old saying is the truth is somewhere in the middle, And I said, that's bullshit. The truth is somewhere left field, right or shit better yet not even not even in the ballpark, right, you know? It's yeah that decided. That describes this conversation pretty well, though, could be I say, if he keep, if he keep two sides fighting about two fallacies, neither side will ever come close to the truth. And that's kind of the world I feel I'm living in right now. We keep people to sta keep a secret if one of them is dead, and I'll Clinton's you know about that? Oh, I know already know what you're referring to. Oh yeah, Like I know you're referring to. How many? Bro? How many am I referring to? Do you have you ever looked at that list? It's absurdly long, absurdly long, absurdly long, Like, I don't know any person or family that has had to deal with that much tragedy in their lifetime, losing so many people that they're tied to, so many people having accidents or suicide in themselves. It's insane, right, or like Kevin Spacey man, like right, everyone they everyone, they everyone that was like accused Kevin Spacey or is about to testify against Kevin Spacey for being a you know, a fucking sex offending pedophile, like is debt. They all ended up debt and then he put out like some creepy fucking video out in his in his House of cards character literally like the day before or after like one of these one of these people died. It's just a weird shit, dude. It's a lot of weird it man, And I just I A lot of people have a hard time believe in conspiracy theories. I have a hard time believing coincidence theories, you know. And I'd rather be a conspiracy theorist than a coincidence theorist any fucking day of the week. Are we wrapping this one up? Man? What do you think? Yeah, we can if you want to. You look tired. A rough week for you. Well, just on my podcasting grind man, it's a NonStop journey. I mean I'm saying I could, I could. I could probably talk another twenty minutes. We could probably get two episodes out of this. We could do a part one and part two. Sure, you know, let's do it. Unless unless we don't really have anything else to talk about. Man, I've pulled all the tricks out of my bag. Yeah, it's your time. Yeah, but now that kind of lost. I guess I'm kind of going off on a bunch of conspiracy theorists might not be what people want to listen to. I don't know, you want you a football guy? No? No, I suppose you have a yeah, Hian, it's all basketball man, makes sense? Where are we gonna ask me? I'm not even sure? Okay, why you you You're not a football guy, are you? Oh? Of course, Wisconsin? You know it was Kance and big news, big news there with the old Aaron Rodgers saga, looks like it's you know, by the time this comes out, probably if probably has come to a head one way or other. At the time of recording this. It sounds like he might be heading to the New York Jets, which is an interesting development. So oh, I Brett far we went there. It's very very you know, strange parallel there. If you think Rodgers. I believe he's thirty eight or thirty nine right now, so he probably has two maybe three years left in the tank if he wants to keep playing, right, he just did his darts up. Really last year wasn't his best year. Obviously the two years before that he was MVP last year, you know, wasn't his best season, and I think some of that he would he would take ownership up and played through some injuries, had some new receivers. But yeah, it wasn't as fine as season. You know, he's definitely not as athletic as he used to be, but he can still make all the throws and he's still a very smart quarterback. But of course here's another guy who's taking a lot of heat from certain population because of his beliefs, because of being outspoken against the narrative, and you know a lot of insults and labels have been thrown at him, you know by people who, frankly, I just don't think are very deep thinkers. You think if you win in sports, that overshines the bad things you've done in people's eyes. When I say bad things, you know what I mean, like bad perception. I mean, I think athletes surely get a lot more leeway than uh and and entertainers get a lot more leeway than a normal person would, you know, I think with in Aaron's case, he I think he felt comfortable coming out and speaking about these things because you know, his place was so secure, like nobody's gonna cut Aaron Rodgers because he didn't get vaccinated. You know, if you're if you're an undrafted free agent or a guy that's got a couple of years in the league who's a you know, fringe starter, you don't have that leeway. Again, look what happened to Cole Beasley, right, a wide receiver for the Buffalo Bills. He was outspoken against the vaccines and he got cut, you know, and until that was no longer being mandated. So you know, in Aaron's case, I applauded him for being willing to stick his neck out for a lot of his colleagues that didn't have the same luxury because they didn't have the same job security he did. But felt exactly the same way we're being feeling pressured into this situation that it wasn't in their best interest. And you know, Aaron took the ownership to be the one to speak out, and he took all the heat because of it. But you know, I think he's at peace with that decision and he should be. Only football I watch is the XFL. Oh yeah, I haven't. I haven't caught any games. Have you watched some of the new XFL games? I actually did watch one game. It was TC. It was the other day. It's really good. Actually, yeah, I was like, what are your thoughts. I haven't followed along too much. Is there big differences in the play at all, as far as you know, quarter length, their points, sister or anything like that. It is a pretty similar to NFL. It's pretty similar, but the flow is better, Yeah, faster, it's more on pace. It's it's more enjoyable of a watching like a watching experience for me. Sure, I thought they did a good job a couple of years ago, obviously COVID. So the reason it went under it was actually the ratings that everything were pretty good. I'm not talking twenty years ago. I'm talking three years ago. Sure, but yeah, I mean I thought it was pretty good. I uh. And hopefully it become I think it's a good thing to have around. Hopefully it becomes a platform where it will help and I know it did three years ago people to get into the NFL. Maybe, Yeah, yeah, I think that's a I think that would be a good place for it. Right, there's really no and you have your practice squads on the NFL teams, but there's really no feeder system sort of speak in football, and so this could be one that that could offer guys an opportunity that are trying to trying to get in the league. So yeah, I'll check out a game or two before I head to India if if I can catch one. But yeah, man, baseball, you know baseball follow big you know big baseball fan follow baseball. They've had some changes. Yeah, they've got the pitch clock now and um speeding up the games considerably, which I think for watching it on TV is going to be nice. I think if you actually go to the ballpark for a day, you might feel a little cheated. Um, game's gonna be over rather rather quick. But I think it's just to try to make the game more exciting, pick up the pace. As you know, you know, baseball's America's pastime, but America's changed a lot since its inception, and so that slower pace of the game, I think. You know, sometimes, especially with such a long season, it's hard to compete with the faster paced NBA, the faster paced NFL. So I think they're trying to find ways to h to change that and to appeal to the shorter attention span of today's sports fan and so yeah, bigger bases, which could you know, getting rid of the shift in the infield, um to try to put some more offense, speeding up the game, all to add some excitement to it. So you know, I'll be extold to watch and see how it plays out in the regular season. It's important of all of over time those as these things do, because that's part of the thing with baseball and with like even the XFL originally the the NFL end up adapting a lot of the camera cameras, that sky you know, whatever skyline going across that line camera. It's important to kind of adapt with the what's going on, and baseball seemed to be one that was really fighting that, Like you're really like NBA has always been. NBA's pretty good about adapting to new things, they really are, but it seems like baseball especially, they're very slow to implement anything new or try something new. Yeah, it's it's it's that delicate balance of try to honor the tradition of the sport with while changing with the times. But if you change too much, you start to strip you know, the sport of of what made it, you know what it was, right, So you was gonna have the purists that don't really want to see any changes, you're gonna have the new generation of fan that want to see these changes. And so, you know, it's it's not an easy job to try to figure out the balance of these sayings or how quickly you adopt new rules or you know, what's too far. You know, the idea of having ghost runners, you know, ten years ago would have seemed absurd, but they started doing that. You know, basically in the extra innings they put a guy on second base so that they're not having these marathon fifteen sixteen seventeen inning games. And you know, if you would have probably pitched that in the eighties or the nineties, the purists would have, you know, had a coronary. You know, now they're gonna have a coronary because they just got their third booster. But slip that in there, Yeah you did. Yeah, it's uh, yeah, that's the that's the dance, right, you know, the NBA at the three point line, you know, and now how the game's evolved, you know, to be a three point heavy products, right, or more teams are taking more and more shots because analytically, when you start doing the math, it makes more sense to shoot three pointers than two pointers because you can miss more of them and still be more efficient at scoring points. So the game has definitely changed there. Yeah, that's just the evolution of these things. At the end of the day, it's entertainment, right, so it needs to be entertaining. All sport, wrestling, boxing, MMA, it's entertainment first and foremost. Right, if no one's out there to watch it and pay money to see it, there is no profession, right, there is no career. So we always have to keep in mind first and foremost is we're entertainers, and so we have to you know, evolve with the times and make sure that we're entertaining what today's fans want to see. They do want to ask you about something that's big in the NBA and get your opinion on it. Yeah. Load management has been brought up a lot, and the NBA has got to the point where the salaries, even though there's salary cap, are exceeding annually. At least the biggest baseball contracts Steph Curry can isn't going to He could make over fifty million dollars a year. YEA. What they're seeing is a lot of these people that they're playing. I'm not just maybe not just him, but they are load manage in managing them, or maybe they only play half of the season. And they came out with an interesting statistic the other day that there's only a handful of people that have played in every NBA game so far this year. Yeah, out of all people NBA, there's only a just there's only a few now that have played every game that they've their team has had scheduled, which is crazy compared to ten years ago, twenty years ago. They just it doesn't seem like anybody's playing eighty two games and NBA anymore. Yeah, and I think you know, you see that a little bit in baseball, but that's one hundred and sixty two games. It becomes a grind, you know. I see both sides of this argument, right. So the one side is as a fan, if you went and paid, you know, one hundred and fifty bucks for a couple of tickets because you want to go see Honis at the Takumbo play for the bucks, and then he sits out because he's got a sore knee, you know, you might not feel like you got your money's worth because you really were coming out to see the superstars play. So from a fan standpoint, I get that complaint. Then from the teams standpoint, you know, you're trying to win a championship, right you're because ultimately you're being judged on one thing and one thing only. Did you win a championship? So if I have to sit Jannis ten games, twelve games throughout the year, you know, back to backs where they got a back to back game, he's got a sore knee. None of these guys. It's just like wrestlers were never one hundred percent, you know when we're in season of basketball. Yeah, you know, like if you're in season or for wrestlers, like you know, we're always we're never hardly, ever, ever, ever, one hundred percent. It just doesn't happen. So now it comes down to do, Okay, well whatcentage is and you know enough to say, you know what, sit out tonight, rest your knee so that come playoff time, you know, when we're going for the championship, which is ultimately what we're paying you for and ultimately what we're going to be judged on, we need you healthy. Then we don't need you healthy. In Game thirty four against a team that's ten games under five hundred on the back on the back of a back to back, right, So I get it. I get why they do it, um and you know, I don't know that I have a problem with it right to an extent, you know. And I think this really started with it started with the Spurs. It really does championships out. Yeah, probably was coy about it, but yeah, when you got aging Tim Duncan and you got some of these older guys, it's like, if I get yeah, yeah, you gotta think about this too. Is it worth playing Janni's eighty two games or would you rather play him sixty four games and have him for two more seasons at the end of his career where he can still affect wins and losses, you know. So it's a it's a it's a compelling argument, and so I understand the fan standpoint, I think, but it's big business now, right, and so we want to protect our assets and if a guy's making fifty million a year, we want them out there when accounts and if and if you rolled his ankle in practice or it's just sore from the constant pounding from the last week of games, give a day off and again, it's a team sport, right, so like you want to have depth, you need guys bill step in and take that role for a game or two. Baseball is the same way that Brewers. You know, the Brewers are big into that. They they're constantly they like guys that have positional flexibilities. They can play all over the fields, they can constantly move guys around and give guys days off when they need to, and you know, I just I think that's part of that's a part of sports. Now. And then here's the other thing too. You know, we're asking these guys. Then then in the off season they're going there, they're playing the Olympics, they're playing, and you know they're in the off season gets shorter and shorter and shorter because then there's you know, Baseball World Series Classic, right like they're you know, or you know the World Classic. You know. So it's like these guys aren't even necessarily having an offseason off anymore. Like it's it's a it's a year round schedules. So you see a lot of them skipping out on the Olympics. Now. Yeah, I mean, frankly, if I was an owner and I was paying this guy thirty forty million dollars. I don't know that I want to risk you know him, you know, tearing his acl uh playing in that competition, right, you know. I mean so there's you know, the arguments being made on both sides, um, you know, and I've seen some people say, well it's you know, these guys are soft nowadays, you know, like they're they're not equipped to handle it. Um. You know, the human body is only equipped to to to withstand so much. And and these athletes are stronger, and they're faster, and they're jumping higher. There's more impact on ligaments and tendons. It's a more physical game and in some sense, um, more athletic game, and playing a lot more games earlier too, to be honest, I know, even from my time playing basketball till now, the AAU and all that is just a whole other level. Yeah. These people are playing in saying amouta games as kids, as children, competing the best. And let's not forget the colleges are grinding these kids too, to get as much money out of them as they can. Final you know, the sweets, you know, the NCAA tournament and you know it's like these yeah, man, these you know, So I'm not feeling bad for any of them. They're going to make a good living to put a ball through a hoop, which when you think about sports in a lot of ways, it's funny, right, Like this guy ran this ball over this line and we gave him six points, and now we pay him twenty million dollars a year to run the ball over the line, or to put this ball in this hoop, or to hit this ball over this fence, and if he hits it over the fence, he runs around these bases and we give him a run. It's all it's all like made up shit, right, It's like completely just eat up stuff that we put this enormous amount of value in. But again it goes back to the old saying, give the people bread and the circus and they'll never revolt. So look where we spend the most money and what we put on the highest pedicials. It's the circus. It's the athletes, it's the entertainers, right, the actors, Hollywood pro wrestlers, Because it's the circus, and it's what distracts people from the fact that this entire setup that we've been born into in a lot of ways is complete bullshit. You just put a bow on this one, didn't you. You tied it right back in YEP, always do pretty good. Well, I think we accomplished your goal of having two episodes. Uh got oh, you put a bow on it, perfectly said, what's what's good? To take care of some of the housekeeping stuff. Yea, man, we want to get more. We didn't get to the big bird today. That's all right, we did it. I did it last week with Bobby Fish. We did. Doesn't have to every doesn't have to be every episode, you know. But I think what I'm saying is that we encourage you to definitely send some emails. We saw some come in this week as an Aries show at gmail dot com. Yep, austin Aries Show at gmail dot com. Questions comments, A lot of them are people it might be expressing their appreciation of you about veganism. That's a word. Yeah, and let me just let me and let me just yeah, not to cut you off, let me just uh, you know. Shout out a special thank you to those people that have sent in those emails, because if they meet a lot right, Yeah, we're a lot of us. We hear the criticisms pretty clearly right. And when everyone hurls insults or criticisms, you know that that we definitely see a lot of effect, a lot of a lot of effects. Have one star ratings already on Apple podcasts awesome, I have a one star rating. We have multiple one star ratings already on Apple. Oh really awesome. I haven't even looked. Um, I'll bet you they have pronouns in their bio two anyway. I don't, don't, I don't know. It's just it's just a statistical fact. Statistically, over the last handful of years, when I've looked at the people that have been my biggest attractors, that have talked the most shit, they're the ones that have pronounced in their bio pretending to be the most inclusive and loving people on the planet. But yet when it comes to me, fuck me anyway, and they went out of the way to give you one star. Yeah, that's cool, man, I'll take it. But yeah, so I do appreciate, going back to what I was saying, UM, I appreciate those people that take time to send a positive message. Let me know how I've affected their life in a positive way, you know, whether it's wrestling or through the plant based lifestyle, changing some of their some of their lifestyle choices, and bettering their health, their outlook on life. It means a lot when you share those stories of me, It's what makes me want to come out or you keep doing this, you know, because you realize that again, you know, if we all just try to affect the world around us us in a positive way, we effectively all can help change the world. And I can promise you he does see them, because I personally send If he doesn't see them himself, I'm definitely sending him screenshots of every single one. Yeah, that's true, just to keep him in lyne there because I know he likes to go offline from time to time. But no, my point is, we do see it, we do appreciate it. Yeah, just keep them coming. Also Austin arishow dot com. I'm ready to get that up and running. By the way, I'm going to send some stuff on that at Austin Airis Show on Twitter, at Austin Arias Show on Instagram. You can file the channel on YouTube at Austin Airies Show. I think it's awesome. I got some one star ratings. Dude, Well, you know why it goes back to remember private parts to Howard Stern movie. Yeah, and they're they're reading the statistics at the station and they said, oh, the average Howard Stern lover listens to the show for about, like, you know, fifty six minutes a day. The average person who says they hate Howard Stern listens for ninety six minutes a day. Right, And so I am like, people love to hate me, and they'll Actually these people listen to the show ahead of time. No one, they were listening just to shit on it. But they still took time out to listen. This wasn't somebody who was a fan of mine. It took time out to go to another screen and give you a one star, right, It wasn't. It wasn't like some random person who listened and goes, oh my god, that was awful. It wasn't somebody who knows me and likes me and heard the show and said, oh my god, it's awful. It's someone who already knew the show was awful before they heard it, because they fucking hate me because of what they think I'll about. And so they yet they still took time to listen and to write the review, just to shit on me, and that's a special kind of power that I appreciate. This is what they call rent free, just living in people's head, rent free, like they're just yeah, yeah, taking time out of their day to just make sure that I know how much they dislike me, which which unfortunately I've come to learn, is just a reflection of how much they don't like themselves. And so those people that gave me one stars, I sending you love. I'm setting you light and I hope that you're able to look in the mirror some day and smile and tell yourself I love you. That's a good way to end the show. That is perfect. Man. Wow, Well they love to hate you, man, I love to love you. I appreciate the friendship, and I appreciate every time every week we get to spend I don't know, an hour and a half together talking about whatever the hell you want. So again, man, I appreciate it. Thanks Jeff. We'll do it again next week. We'll do it again next week, all right. Oh and until then, it's a great day to be great. Make it a great day to be great. There we go. Yeah, that was from Sam Blair. Sam Blair said, Hey, she used your arresting thing. So that's gonna be my sign off until then, make it a great day to be great. I'm the world. Time never when you can't, no more time lies in the I'm saying this you baby, I yours. Jeff counting media bout