greg: isn t chthonic yes! isn t that sick? yes! happy thursday, everybody. so great to be here. if you want a textbook example of hysteria, look no further than the pronounce craze. a handful of years ago, this was never a thing. no one talked about it. it was as rare as hunter biden wearing pants. then all of a sudden it became a thing it grew and multiplied exponentially. it was like mold, rabbits or mitt romney s family. and the reason for this is pretty simple, kids. create a craze that s about them that brings attention to who they are and why wouldn t they embrace it? it sure beats eating tide on the tide podsor reading a children k written by banderas. suddenly it became compulsory, specifically for those around the kids that are playing along. it s not hello i m greg and i m a z it s hello i m greg and if you don t say i m a z, i ll report you to the principal. what pronouns offered was an option for truly dull but needy people to gain attention and power over any
this. they said, i ve never been with nobody as bold as he is. he just walked in and put a gun on somebody just like it s an everyday thing. they say he didn t have no fear or nothing. ray was born in alton, illinois, and grew up dirt poor along the mississippi river in mark twain country. everybody just called him jimmy. nobody called him james. that came out when king got killed, they started calling him james earl ray. we just all called him jimmy. by his mid-20s ray was a two-bit gunman. this is ray on a hospital table shot by a chicago cop after the botched robbery of a taxi driver in 1952. ray went to prison for two years. then three more years in federal prison at leavenworth for stealing post office money orders. ray turned down a transfer to an honor farm. prison records say he did so because he didn t want to live in an integrated honor dorm.
they re coming. yeah. british. later. sorry. ok.four words. scarecrow in the wind. a baboon. monkey? hot stew saturday!? ronny: hey jimmy, how happy are folks who save hundreds of dollars switching to geico? jimmy: happier than paul revere with a cell phone. ronny: why not? anncr: get happy. get geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more. to prove to you that aleve is the better choice for him, he s agreed to give it up. that s today? [ male announcer ] we ll be with him all day as he goes back to taking tylenol. i was okay, but after lunch my knee started to hurt again. and now i ve got to take more pills. yup. another pill stop. can i get my aleve back yet? for my pain, i want my aleve. [ male announcer ] look for the easy-open red arthritis cap.
he just walked in and put a gun on somebody just like it s an everyday thing. they say he didn t have no fear or nothing. ray was born in alton, illinois, and grew up dirt poor along the mississippi river in mark twain country. everybody just called him jimmy. nobody called him james. that came out when king got killed, they started calling him james earl ray. we just all called him jimmy. by his mid-20s ray was a two-bit gunman. this is ray on a hospital table shot by a chicago cop after the botched robbery of a taxi driver in 1952. ray went to prison for two years. then three more years in federal prison at leavenworth for stealing post office money orders. ray turned down a transfer to an honor farm. prison records say he did so because he didn t want to live in an integrated honor dorm. in 1959, caught after a grocery
as an armed robber, james earl ray was fearless. i moved here in may. his younger brother, jerry, says another crook told him this. they said, i ve never been with nobody as bold as he is. he just walked in and put a gun on somebody just like it s an everyday thing. they say he didn t have no fear or nothing. ray was born in alton, illinois, and grew up dirt poor along the mississippi river in mark twain country. everybody just called him jimmy. nobody called him james. that came out when king got killed, they started calling him james earl ray. we just all called him jimmy. by his mid-20s ray was a two-bit gunman. this is ray on a hospital table shot by a chicago cop after the botched robbery of a taxi driver in 1952. ray went to prison for two years. then three more years in federal prison at leavenworth for stealing post office money orders.