that s an eight-shot revolver. anthony: a bigger kick on this guy, yeah? man: a little bit. anthony: you just can t help silently mouthing, make my day, or feeling lucky, punk? [ gunshots ] i could do this all day. whatever your opinion on the subject, fact is, gun culture runs deep in this country. jesse: this is what i grew up with, yeah. this is i shot my very first turkey with this gun at 12 years old, actually. that s a 22, uh, rim fire cartridge and that is probably the type of firearm that most kids start off with. anthony: these guys, i m guessing, are not people i should be worried about. they are nice and exceedingly patient with the city boy who wants to play with their guns. jesse: uh, that there is a 338 winchester magnum. that s a big cartridge, heavy bullet, kind of for for very large game, like elk.
were busy sandbagging and sneaking away from probable prosecution, cadres of the world s best rocket scientists. did i mention they were nazis? oh yeah. many of them were sent around here. norio: other very mysterious things even took place allegedly in 1947. anthony: 1947, the roswell incident. norio: that s right. that s, uh, still a mystery. anthony: some say you notice how they always say that in those dubious, cheaply reenacted doc shows. some say it was the remains of an alien spacecraft. anyhoo, back then, they were working on some pretty cool stuff. for instance, a mylar-like weather balloon designed to carry high-resolution cameras across the soviet union. when they got way up in the atmosphere, they d pancake out like a flying saucer. might that explain the excessive zeal and mysterious behaviors? i mean, if one of these things crashed in the desert, you can well understand that a whole bunch of sinister-looking bodies would show up and start telling people, neve
now let me ask you, why is it that any time an alien visits like, america man: yeah. anthony: there s always anal penetration involved? man: i ve never heard it before. anthony: really? man: ever. no, am i new to that? anthony: but the pig, the pig. what about that body in the desert? some say the tradition of the matanza dates back to moorish times, when the eating of pig had to be clandestine. but a bit of history we can verify, this pig s been cooked slow over hot coals for the last 17 hours. frank: i, uh, i had a peek of its ass. it looks delicious. [ laughter ] anthony: frank, here, he knows. he runs ponchos barbeque in albuquerque. frank: they start sticking to the part of this. anthony: time to get slicey. i step in and help frank break my piggy friend down into his constituent parts. beautiful. first, off go the legs, which you d call your fresh ham. then, your four quarter your shoulders and whatnot. frank: ah. anthony: the loin and rib section, y
[ laughter ] this this ain t normal. oh god, this hurts. dan: i m going to join you. fate lies right here. anthony: def con one, two, three. it s a slow roll, too. first, you think it s going to be okay. then, it s not. there s nothing to do but wait it out. [ laughter ] i believe they re using the same peppers in, uh, pepper spray. dan: for repelling grizzly bears, if that tells you anything. anthony: yeah. a shot glass of that will put you in the hospital. dan: no kidding. everybody in the restaurant seems so calm. maybe they re not eating this. anthony: they re all just trying to muffle their speech. a better time to try our sprint network. because right now you can get unlimited for just $24 per month per line for five lines. it includes hulu and mobile hotspot. we need to shout this deal from the rooftops. yeahhh. sprint s new unlimited plan. best deal ever! and it s all on the network built for unlimited. (avo) switch to sprint s unlimited
corn and tortillas. and, of course, more chilies. ivan: we call these this dish push-around chili because you gather and push it around. man: you push it around until you see the one you want. ivan: yeah. anthony: the chilies in this state are magical. man: they re zia chilies, not hash chilies. anthony: ah. man: and the seeds have been passed down from generation to generation and stay within the families. anthony: what percentage of young people leave and don t come back? ivan: not too many people will leave. anthony: really? ivan: no. man: there are people who leave, but eventually, there s this yearning inside you that you want to go home, you want to learn your culture, uh, you want to, you know, be a part of everything. anthony: it would be an understatement to say that those first europeans who came into contact with indians the effect was destructive to the culture and given that history, how american do you feel? man: this is this village i