fis fear right now so it s right in their toolbox greg: do you think this helps trump? because he s already kind of a folk hero. people are looking at desantis and now it s kind of like, well, no, he s back. and he s back and pissed. it s like rambo 2. alex: yeah. i mean greg: thank you. they like rambo. alex: it s definitely amazing for his story arc, as if it couldn t get any more interesting. the hero s journey just keeps getting weirder and weirder greg: that s true. i think if i was your friend i would tell you that s your next movie, just following trump around. alex: uh-huh. we ll see. he d have to the access might be a problem. greg: yeah. but you both have the same color hair. that s true. tyrus: riveting journalism greg: thank you.
it s that you don t hurt the ancestry or something. i don t know. alex: whenever i m forced to consider an issue like this, it s another example of just like radical first-world access that s gone totally off the rails. and like, you know, the world is like just laughing at us for even having these conversations. and every time i think about like discussing it, i feel like my iq goes down a couple points. so, i mean, yeah, people can get mad about food or whatever, but that s just i m too busy to . tyrus: and it s racist. they took their identity away from us and they had to event food. so racist ass letter. where do you think ribs and sweet potato by and all that good stuff came from? we invented it. cultural that bleep sfwleep once again by ending a sentence with that word.
say. greg: terrible. absolutely awful that somebody would write that and put that in the teleprompter and force me to say it. this is about your generation isn t it? you guys just can t put your phone away kat: i have phone disease. i do. because, i don t know, you think you re going to miss something or you miss it and someone will be bad and it s not the case. i ve been trying to quick and spend less on my phone because i found out a way you can check your screen time and i was disturbed. it was nine hours a day. greg: oh, that s a lot kat: i should be grounded. yeah, exactly. greg: alex are we changing our brains? are people different now? alex: yeah. i mean, if you can t keep your attention span going during a televised baseball game, i mean, that s a pretty good case study for what s going on i guess. greg: yeah. open when you re playing.
you tell kids to share. i remember when i was a kid we had like, in school, they had us all get a recipe from a grand parent in order to come and say like this is what we did. i don t understand where the offense comes from just because someone came over first. like you don t go to taco bell and outside you see protesters that are garbage men. greg: we did the same thing when i was a kid. jamie: you know what i mean though? it s to celebrate it. [laughter] jamie: but you don t see johnny depp outside of a long john silver. you don t see greg:. greg: i don t even know what that means. alex this is a trend, whether it s sports or movies or now it s food, it s like wokism is to move away from the primary purposes, make sports fun or win but now it s about providing equity for trans. and now with food it s not important that you taste good
of plans. we re going to stay in texas and you should just move on. [cheers and applause] greg: alex you live in california. i hate living here. i think that would happen. if you sent anybody from new york to texas, they re not coming back. alex: i live in texas. greg: i thought you lived in california. alex: i actually live in texas. you took my joke i was going to say i don t think they should go knocking on doors in texas. but what s weird about this is sending the migrants to new york, and these bigger cities could ostensibly be an progressive policy just coming that everyone knows that abbott s just flexing. greg: yeah, but the thing is that the cities that have the sanctuary policy and now they re complaining that they have to fulfill that virtue signal,