kid s drunk. with that state of debauchery happening in these shelters, is eric adams a little bit late to the game in finally saying now maybe this isn t a good idea? yes, it is very late. he s feeling the pressure from the migrants coming. their family back at home, hey, we got luxury hotels, come on over to new york, everything s being handed to us. the word of mouth is getting around, and he s feeling the pressure from the very demanding my grants migrants wanting russian luxury hotels luxury hotels but when they arrive, they see they re already all handed out to people. so they re becoming very ang i and more violent than before. and it s starting to look a lot like the riots in paris lately, and that s are where i see this heading. joey: that s interesting. i know what you re talking about, the paris riots a bunch of migrants come into one area, and then they the migrants
i always catch the one thing that always gets me is howe his dad maintains how smart he is. there s evidence of this whatsoever. yeah, i disagree. m name a more successful crackor ad. that is true. g yeah, that s right. yeah, right. that s a great point. i , i m nowhere near as successful as he is, and i ve smoked no crack. the to brag yet. i.s the look, the corruption stuff is thes that concerns.she s of course, this. i mean, she s referring to the man act fromre 1910 and it says- it criminalized a woman across state lines for or debauchery or for any other immoralra purpose. like, okay, immoral according to whom? like if you bring your wife to aruba and she too many mudslides, should you go to jail? so i think w e need to get ridn th of that and focus on like the stuff that actually affects us as taxpayer because t they don t want us to get rich. they don t want us to keep our own money, but geg all kinds of shady
In the book, the narrator - Hemingway's alter-ego - chronicles a tale of excess, of constant and in some ways desperate carousing broken only by trips to the bullring to watch the bloody encounters.
[ screams ] hart: the characters were larger than life. they were more evil and more cunning and manipulative. and more gorgeous. i mean, really. look at the way they were dressed. look at the way they lived. everything, it was fascinating. -alexis? -yes. i didn t thank you for your present. [ gasps ] [ sighs ] it s he you should slap, dear, not i. julie brown: we all wanted to live like, you know, we were on dynasty, like the carringtons. and it all just ended up being a wonderful picture of fun and debauchery. yost: greed was encouraged in the 80s. there was a sense of conspicuous consumption as being okay. and those shows kind of exploited that. catherine mann: prime-time families like the carringtons who live here in luxury on the dynasty sound stage are not the only rich folk on tv. in the last five years, more than half of all new shows have featured the wealthy.
like a hurricane and bring in fema. a, ii see two things there. one. she s providing cover for gavin newsom. she completely jumps the state t level and goes straight to the federal level because maybe they hav fe maybe e cabal to gen into the white house. i m not sure. but the most important thingar that bothered me about that is how dare you compare people who have chosen a lifestyle of debauchery to people that lose their livelihoods and fires and hurricane in floridauntry, and louisiana and texas and places all over this country every single year caus e when that happens, you know what those people do? doey literally rebuild their lives, their communities come to their aid. why? because their communitierhys knw they deserve it and they ll work for it. okad ly. b tour coming up, a dumb tourist learns the hard wais y thats hot springs are really hot. the fastest is uotp there. your brain reaction,