- 1 day ago
Playing Little BeachNobeta for PC-browser game by Elle-C X
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Category
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GamingTranscript
00:00:00Hello, that was Arconian.
00:00:23Hello, Villain Ronny.
00:00:30Hello, Villain Ronny.
00:01:00Arconian.
00:01:30Arconian.
00:02:00Arconian.
00:02:02Arconian.
00:02:08Arconian.
00:02:12Arconian.
00:02:16Can you tell me the game, or...?
00:02:30Oh, the game?
00:02:33Yeah.
00:02:34Which is something else.
00:02:36It's this game like this last time.
00:02:41I'll send it to you.
00:02:46I'll just copy and paste it into the chat.
00:03:02Okay.
00:03:16There.
00:03:17I'm happy that they sent it to the chat.
00:03:33I'm happy that they sent it to the chat.
00:03:56Oh, no.
00:05:09Okay.
00:05:10Nice title.
00:05:11Nice.
00:05:12Yep.
00:05:13Does it have control this time, or...?
00:05:14Controller support?
00:05:15Yes, it does.
00:05:16I don't need to enable it.
00:05:17It's just enabled by default.
00:05:18Okay.
00:05:19This drive.
00:05:20For selecting stuff on the title screen, I suggest just use the mouse, but...
00:05:25You just use the twin sticks to control.
00:05:26Okay.
00:05:27It worked this time.
00:05:28Finally.
00:05:29To the key.
00:05:30Yeah.
00:05:31It worked this time.
00:05:33Finally!
00:05:35Thanks, mate.
00:05:36And.
00:05:37You don't need to enable it.
00:05:39And it's just enabled by default.
00:05:40Uh huh.
00:05:41Yes, this drive.
00:05:42For selecting stuff on the title screen, I suggest just use the mouse.
00:05:44But...
00:05:45You just use the twin sticks to control.
00:05:49Hey, it worked this time!
00:05:50Finally!
00:05:51You just use the twin sticks to control.
00:05:58There you go.
00:06:28Yay, now this game should be a little easier.
00:06:49There you go.
00:07:19There's a slowdown, so it shouldn't slow down.
00:07:27There you go.
00:07:37There you go.
00:07:47There you go.
00:07:57There you go.
00:08:07There you go.
00:08:17There you go.
00:08:27There you go.
00:08:37There you go.
00:08:47There you go.
00:08:57There you go.
00:09:07There you go.
00:09:15There you go.
00:09:17There you go.
00:09:27There you go.
00:09:35There you go.
00:09:37There you go.
00:09:47There you go.
00:09:55There you go.
00:09:57There you go.
00:10:05There you go.
00:10:07There you go.
00:10:09There you go.
00:10:13There you go.
00:10:14There you go.
00:10:15There you go.
00:10:16There you go.
00:10:17There you go.
00:10:18There you go.
00:10:22There you go.
00:10:23There you go.
00:10:24There you go.
00:10:25There you go.
00:10:26There you go.
00:10:27There you go.
00:10:28There you go.
00:10:29Oh, I forgot all about that.
00:10:30Yeah.
00:10:31I was telling you I heard your show last time that you said, told me to remind you to play
00:10:36a new smash on your screen.
00:10:39Did I say that?
00:10:40I did say that.
00:10:41I thought I said that two weeks ago, but maybe I said that during the last show.
00:10:44I mean, I must have said it.
00:10:45It sounds familiar.
00:10:46It sounds like something I would have said.
00:10:49I guess I better practice before, you know, I'm on screen.
00:10:54You know, Horace, please go easy on me, man.
00:10:57I'm going to suck at the game, but please don't yell at me.
00:10:59I know.
00:11:00I know you're passionate about the game.
00:11:01I know you know how to play the game.
00:11:02I'm going to suck a little bit.
00:11:04And I'm okay with that.
00:11:06Hey, Mike.
00:11:10How's that?
00:11:13It's painful as much when you're watching a game and you're like, you know how to play
00:11:17it and you watch it and you're just like, you just got to do it like this.
00:11:21Basically, I just started off easy, but the game is easy, man.
00:11:26Yeah.
00:11:27I mean, it's like Tap Tap Revolution.
00:11:28Uh, Step Mania.
00:11:29I miss Step Mania.
00:11:30That shit was cool.
00:11:31It's actually easier than Step Mania.
00:11:33It's actually much easier than Step Mania.
00:11:36I mean, that wasn't too hard.
00:11:39I only have two buttons.
00:11:41I am going to check the screen calibration, though, because, um, it may actually be-
00:11:44You should.
00:11:45Yeah, there very well is a thing there because, I mean, I remember Slimminim brought that up
00:11:50and I thought he was just bringing up random shit and it turned out that was literally the
00:11:54reason I couldn't refueling Top Gun.
00:11:56Yep.
00:11:57It's actually a thing, especially when we're in the game, it's very important to calibrate.
00:12:03Yeah.
00:12:04A bunch of them.
00:12:07They don't need to be a new player, or they don't need to mix it up.
00:12:12Uh...
00:12:13Where's that you?
00:12:14I know.
00:12:15Oh, Peter.
00:12:16How did you guys see me on the YouTube podcast?
00:12:19For, uh, a little bit of a little bit of a little bit of a planter place the AI art
00:12:24with the play art for the editing?
00:12:27And I was asking a question.
00:12:29And, uh, does everyone like the, uh, script style, like, or, uh, should I go for cleaner digital life?
00:12:38But I usually do, you know, like, like, best here.
00:12:41Um, I think clean digital works for the game.
00:12:44I mean, and especially if it's your art, it's your art.
00:12:46It doesn't matter what perception someone else gets of it.
00:12:49If you know you made it, reveal is easy, you know?
00:12:51Yeah, well, uh, I was going for the squishy style because I wanted to, uh, emulate the style of brand new packaging.
00:12:59There's, uh, this, uh, sort of bricky, sketchy style.
00:13:03Oh, well, I'm not familiar with that style, but if that's what works, why not?
00:13:06I'm using the game, just now that I'm using a control.
00:13:11This game has been rebalanced a lot, by the way.
00:13:16So, uh, it's not really interesting.
00:13:21At least, uh, there's no slowdown.
00:13:24There's some slowdown, but I mean, uh,
00:13:26He's happy to be, uh, not so flexible on the GPU.
00:13:36Yeah, so yesterday, while I was watching RM16, I tuned in, I said hi, and I just got, like, lightheaded.
00:13:42And I don't know, like, if it's what I drink at my dinner.
00:13:44I don't think red wine would do that to me.
00:13:46In fact, I still have red wine here.
00:13:47I never finished it.
00:13:48I mean, uh, red wine is healthy for eating functional type, is it?
00:13:51Oh, yeah.
00:13:53I mean, like, obviously, like, you know, uh, there's limits, but, you know, in general, it is.
00:13:57And that's why, like, as an Italian-American, when I eat anything with meat or something like that,
00:14:02red wine is, like, you know, it's got some enzymatic properties to it.
00:14:06I'm sure that helps with digestion.
00:14:07Plus, it just makes me feel like good old-fashioned guinea when I'm drinking red wine with my pasta.
00:14:11You know, it's like, I feel like that fat guy from the godfather that got stabbed by, uh, Don Colion in the old country.
00:14:16So, uh, I have some, uh, I have some pieces who, uh, who have, uh, thalassemia.
00:14:25It's a type of blood disorder.
00:14:29And that's, uh, basically how they survive into, uh, you know, into later parts of life.
00:14:38That's how they survive, by, uh, basically, uh, drinking, uh, red wine together with their diet.
00:14:48So, uh, they're, uh, it's a good thing, uh, because if their mother is a nurse, a medical professional,
00:14:55and, uh, their aunt is a doctor, so, uh, yeah, so even they, though they have, uh, thalassemia,
00:15:05they live, uh, relatively normal lives.
00:15:09They used to go in and out to the hospital for, like, blood transfusions all the time,
00:15:14but, uh, nowadays, not so much.
00:15:16In fact, it's been many years since, uh, they've had to go to the hospital.
00:15:20Basically, it's because, uh, their mother did some research, and, basically, uh, they need to drink wine every now and then.
00:15:31That is interesting.
00:15:32Wow.
00:15:32Okay, so that's what my question was going to be, but you answered it.
00:15:35All right.
00:15:35All right.
00:15:40Can't argue with the results.
00:15:41Yeah.
00:15:46Yeah.
00:15:47I love seeing as a blood disorder, and there's, like, an entire country where it's, uh, like, almost all of it, uh, people have this blood disorder.
00:15:58It's pretty rare, uh, in the hospital, you know.
00:16:01Like, uh, in our part of the world, it's super rare, and then they happen to, unfortunately, have it.
00:16:17Oh, my God.
00:16:35I'm getting, uh, I'm looking at my Twitter feed, and, uh, there's, like, notes, you know, community notes.
00:16:39So, I don't make community notes anymore, because I always wanted the ability to make my own community notes,
00:16:44but you've got to, like, rate a bajillion of them before you can even get that right.
00:16:48So, I just decided I'm not going to contribute to this anymore, unless I absolutely need to, like,
00:16:52just want to post some BS about the series of the Earth and what an Apollo program,
00:16:56and I can post, like, a source saying why they're dumb or why they're wrong more accurately.
00:17:02Because I don't want to call people dumb.
00:17:03I want to just tell them they're wrong, and that they can get on the right track and learn how it works.
00:17:08And, um, that's something I didn't really cover on my last show, either, but I can love this story.
00:17:14But, um, like, this one was about the Space Marines and Warhammer 40K.
00:17:19It's an article that says, why are the, why, do you know why Warhammer 40K is beloved by so many?
00:17:24Because you are the hard line at evil.
00:17:27The chaos factions aren't misunderstood or redeemable.
00:17:29They are completely irredeemably corrupt, only observing of, deserving of resistance.
00:17:35Okay, so I guess the chaos, okay, wait, no, actually, I don't see any issue with this article.
00:17:40I thought it was going to be some workshop.
00:17:41Some person then replies, this is false.
00:17:43Many stories in the 40K universe have astrodes redeem themselves after falling to the influence of chaos.
00:17:49Like, okay, but what are you saying?
00:17:50You know, the article actually seems to actually, well, it seems like I said something like, uh,
00:17:56Warhammer 40K would agree with.
00:17:58In fact, I think I said something like that before.
00:18:00But, you know, it seems to be, like, absolute evil.
00:18:04So, if it's good, it should be, like, absolute evil.
00:18:08I don't like that.
00:18:09Well, like, I mean...
00:18:10Like, a creeper, he, uh, is, uh, he's way too woke.
00:18:14So, like...
00:18:15But, you know, I mean, like, um, like, unlike the demon anime, right?
00:18:21I mean, Warhammer 40K, or whatever you call them, they are bad.
00:18:27I mean, they do fuck shit up.
00:18:28You know what I mean?
00:18:29Like, uh, they are objectively bad.
00:18:31That's basically how it is in pre-written.
00:18:35That's why I was asking the question.
00:18:39If being is a sentence, but, uh, you know, like, in pre-written, there's, like, perfect knowledge that...
00:18:48That there's, like, history, there's knowledge, evidence that they will betray you, they are just plain old evil, they don't operate on the same rules of morality that we do.
00:19:02But, uh, yeah, they are rational beings, and, uh, they can't, um, you can't talk to them until they get to do it.
00:19:10Because that, uh, because they don't operate on the same morality as we do, they will just use communication as a beast to take advantage of it.
00:19:19So, uh, my question then at the Orc was, uh, what if, uh, these demons existed in our universe, and we did not have the benefit of, uh, you know, pure self-evident that, uh, they will betray us all the time.
00:19:39Well, then, wouldn't it be, uh, racist to, uh, conduct them and not try to reason with them?
00:19:48What do you think, Ronnie?
00:19:50Well, if they can be reasoned with, but if every time you reason with them, they're bullshitting you, uh, sooner than you get to a run.
00:19:56If we had not, uh, if, uh, that, uh, lead the love of a life or something, because, uh, we won't have the same, uh, put up the same amount of knowledge about them that they do in free, right?
00:20:11Well, what do we do now?
00:20:13Ooh, well, I mean, we could try to code this by making sure that we deny access to our living space.
00:20:21So, basically saying, look, I don't feel comfortable with your kind here, I'm gonna build a compound with some big walls, and I want you to stay the fuck out.
00:20:30You draw a line in the sand, and basically, if they insist on entering, maybe, you know, you shoot on sight.
00:20:36But, like, you know, I, I, I, if you, if you have an open village, and they can come and go as they please, or, well, you didn't secure your village, so it's kinda on you at that point.
00:20:46You gotta be diplomatic.
00:20:47Yep.
00:20:48Well, that is, that is a super,
00:20:51I mean, it's like, I mean, I understand there's different sensibilities at play, and the logic is, you know, like, all things being equal, are they really immoral?
00:21:08You know, something like that, you know, and maybe they're not.
00:21:11Yeah.
00:21:12Yeah, that's what I wanted, uh, that's what I wanted Orkut to discuss, but, uh, you see, uh, just, uh, I'll bet, uh, you know,
00:21:19I'm not going, like, but in theory, when they are evil, like, uh, the author said, so, I'm like, oh, I'll just, I'll just go with my scenario.
00:21:30But, uh, yeah, uh, I like, I like Rouser, uh, is the most sensible one, uh, is the most sensible one, uh, I've heard so far, on the matter.
00:21:43Oh, okay.
00:21:44I'm glad I'm here to bring it to the table.
00:21:46Yeah, uh, on the table, uh, here's a few stories to love, uh, um, like, from real life.
00:21:53I'm not sure if you've heard, but, basically, like, um, this birdie dog who has ran into a race and jumped into an object, though, by, uh, my backyard video, a few days ago.
00:22:07So, I had to call Animal Control, and, uh, they had to, uh, they had to capture the belt, and I had to, uh, urnulate there.
00:22:21Once it jumped in there, I got some zip ties, and, uh, basically, I, uh, imprisoned it there.
00:22:28And it wasn't going to wait.
00:22:30But, uh, here's what really happened.
00:22:32So, I saw, I heard some yelping, some, uh, some very big yelping from, uh, the dog.
00:22:42And, uh, when I looked outside, uh, you know, I was like, uh, what's going on here?
00:22:46Uh, when I looked outside, uh, my neighbor, an old neighbor around the swimming pool, and, uh, like a wooden pole, and, like, a wooden pole in both sides.
00:22:58Uh, uh, he's scratching the hole.
00:23:02Also, don't think so, but it's like a peeking point.
00:23:06Take a look at the cat.
00:23:11We were going to play the dog.
00:23:13That was me.
00:23:16I take that.
00:23:18Anyways, I was like, oh, no, he's coming to the dog.
00:23:21We could call the police on it, but it's a moral dilemma because we've been friends since forever.
00:23:36This neighbor, he just thought it was a cultural thing.
00:23:41He just has some very old school vibes when it comes to pet culture.
00:23:48So he thinks it's okay because this dog basically invaded his property.
00:23:55And so he thinks it's okay to attack this dog like that.
00:23:59But anyways, the dog was trying to fight for its life, so it actually jumped over the wall, over the barbed wire, and into our property.
00:24:13That's how it forced itself into the patio in the backyard.
00:24:18Of course I had to take my cats inside the house real fast because the dog was basically running apart.
00:24:27Very obviously because it was having hurt.
00:24:31Yup, that'll do it. If the dog is hurt, they're scared, they're scared.
00:24:35Yeah, I mean like, you know.
00:24:37It was like, I am not putting his dog on my cats, otherwise I'd have to kill the dog.
00:24:43And I don't want to do that.
00:24:45Some people, they would use that as a pretext to harm the dog.
00:24:49But like, you went out of your way to prevent the cats from getting harmed, so that you wouldn't have to resort to violence on the dog.
00:24:56Yeah.
00:24:57But here's a moral dilemma though.
00:25:00Like, what would you guys do in that situation?
00:25:06Would you call the police? Would you tell on the neighbor?
00:25:11Well, that's a good question.
00:25:13So, does the neighbor know I'm ratting them out?
00:25:15And like, well, they're harming the dog, does it matter?
00:25:18Well, you know, you want to be able to get along with your neighbors.
00:25:20I'm fortunate.
00:25:21I live near neighbors who won't harm the dog most likely, but I can see where like, you know, like if you can get away with an anonymous tip, maybe.
00:25:31I think I've called the cops with anonymous tips once in my life, and they try to get you to give the name.
00:25:37They'll be like, yeah, this is anonymous tip, what's your name?
00:25:42So, what I did was basically I called Animal Patrol, and when they got here, they took some pets.
00:25:50They had like some giant pets, and they got the dog.
00:25:54The dog had already calmed down and slept, finally.
00:25:58And I was like, these guys are being way too rough.
00:26:02Because, you know, the dog had just been perfect.
00:26:04It was already calmed down.
00:26:06I could have just let it out, actually.
00:26:09But I didn't want to lose anything.
00:26:11The thing is, what they did was they dragged it outside of our gate.
00:26:17And I was like, aren't you guys going to try to find the owner?
00:26:20We live right next to the highway.
00:26:22What if it starts running against the road?
00:26:24Yeah.
00:26:25And they were like, hey, it knows what to do.
00:26:28Like, our only direction, our only direction was to let it out of your house.
00:26:33So, we don't really care if it dies.
00:26:35That's on the owner.
00:26:37I was like, what's in a clutch?
00:26:40Yeah.
00:26:41It's like, I wouldn't have called you fuckers if I know it.
00:26:43I was just like the poor bastard out.
00:26:44Like, I was calling you motherfuckers because you're the professionals.
00:26:47I thought you were going to do something professional.
00:26:49Yeah.
00:26:50Exactly.
00:26:51There were like, uh, six through seven of them, by the way.
00:26:55Insider.
00:26:56Oh my god.
00:26:57So, El, I think you're in the wrong line of work.
00:26:59You got to get into government work, civil service.
00:27:01Like, you got to become the dog catcher.
00:27:03Because apparently, if you become a dog catcher, you get to join a team of seven people who don't do anything.
00:27:07And you get paid.
00:27:08Yeah.
00:27:09I was kind of disappointed at those guys because, you know, I felt pretty bad for the dog.
00:27:18It had been hurt.
00:27:19I thought that they might do something.
00:27:20Maybe I'd take a few of them before.
00:27:22Yeah.
00:27:23For real.
00:27:24Yeah.
00:27:25For real.
00:27:26Yeah, like...
00:27:27He just let it out.
00:27:28That's it.
00:27:29I think that's how we do it in New York State.
00:27:32Because, um, like, uh, you know, like...
00:27:35And it's so funny.
00:27:36I could ask my dad.
00:27:37He's like, he has some insides.
00:27:38These are a little bit different because in the Department of Sanitation they deal with things like, uh,
00:27:41when we start having more deer on Staten Island, for example.
00:27:44Staten Island is right next to New Jersey.
00:27:46So, some of the deer were swimming across the water.
00:27:50And then, basically, we have forests on Staten Island.
00:27:53Even though it's, like, mostly developed now, it's still somewhat wooded here.
00:27:57We have, you know, some campgrounds.
00:27:58I mean, they're not huge, but, you know, you can walk across the campground within, like, a portion of a day.
00:28:04Or if you walk in circles, you can stay in the campground all day if you want.
00:28:07You know what I mean?
00:28:08It's, like, one of those setups.
00:28:09But, like, anyway, you know, when the deers were getting all over, they would tag them.
00:28:14And they would get them sterilized or spayed.
00:28:16And then, like, if a truck hit a deer, they'd have to call one of their contractors.
00:28:21Like, they'd have someone who, like, during the beginning of the year, they would get contracts written up.
00:28:25And my dad would review the contract, maybe show it to legal counsel, maybe just figure it out himself.
00:28:30And then, basically, it would say, like, we'll pay you this many hundred dollars to pick up the deer.
00:28:34And it would have to have provisions in it.
00:28:36Like, how do they freeze it?
00:28:37Do they cremate it?
00:28:38Where do they bring it?
00:28:39You know, all of these things.
00:28:40And, uh, same thing with dogs.
00:28:42Like, roadkill in general.
00:28:43Like, there's a raccoon.
00:28:44One time there's a raccoon in the sanitation garage.
00:28:46And they had to, like, find a company who could catch the raccoon and release it.
00:28:50But they actually had a process where you can't release it too close.
00:28:54You gotta bring it, like, four blocks away or further.
00:28:57Because if it's too close, the raccoon will find its way back.
00:29:03But, uh, you know, the dogs, similar concept.
00:29:06Like, you know, they have certain processes.
00:29:08But anyway, my understanding was that when they catch a animal, they, uh, bring it to, like, a shelter or a pound or something.
00:29:15Whatever they call it.
00:29:16And, uh, they may eventually kill the animal or euthanize them.
00:29:20But, you know, there's a process before they do that.
00:29:23And I don't know if they try to identify it.
00:29:25I, I think there's, like, a way for people to go to the place to prove it's their dog.
00:29:29And one time my aunt, funny story, my aunt's dog ended up on the news.
00:29:33Because it escaped the backyard and it got onto the highway.
00:29:37And it was on the news.
00:29:38And there's, like, news chopper footage of Tennessee.
00:29:40That's her name's dog.
00:29:41Mean dog.
00:29:42I used to be, I used to hate that dog.
00:29:43But now I understand that dog just, you know, is a dog.
00:29:46But I used to hate that dog.
00:29:47The dog scared the shit out of me when I scared it.
00:29:50Like, I remember I wanted to play with their computer.
00:29:53And they were like, they didn't want me to touch the computer.
00:29:55So then I go to sneak into the room.
00:29:57And the dog is there.
00:29:58And one of the reasons his dog scared the shit out of me.
00:30:02And they were like, yep, the dog did his job.
00:30:05Probably just wanted to be friends.
00:30:08Yeah, I know.
00:30:09I know.
00:30:10I know.
00:30:11I know.
00:30:12And I believe that.
00:30:13Like, yeah.
00:30:14He's like, I've had enough pit bulls in my time.
00:30:15Like, don't get me wrong.
00:30:16Like, you couldn't just go, like, I've learned that if your friend is walking their pit bull.
00:30:19You couldn't just bend over and start petting them.
00:30:21Like, you should say, that's a nice dog.
00:30:23You know, build some rapport.
00:30:24But generally, like, I've learned that you can build rapport with any mean looking dog.
00:30:28Unless they're completely unreasonable.
00:30:30Just let it smell your hand for a bit.
00:30:32Like, don't just, don't like, don't put it next to their face.
00:30:37Just let them come up to you.
00:30:39Because they start smelling the, they'll start to press you.
00:30:45Basically, that's what I was trying to do with this dog.
00:30:48Because I had calmed down.
00:30:50And here's the funny part.
00:30:51I had calmed down, so I went to the patio.
00:30:54And I explicitly told my mother, do not peek out here.
00:30:58Please, do not peek out here.
00:31:00You do not need to see anything here.
00:31:02Please, please, please, please.
00:31:04So, I was there and the dog, uh, was, uh, you know, had calmed down.
00:31:10It was still growling a bit.
00:31:11It was like, I got to try to do a sweet dog.
00:31:14And then, yeah.
00:31:19Uh, ran out of the door.
00:31:20Why?
00:31:21Because my mother had to peek out!
00:31:24I was like, why?
00:31:28Do you not see how big this dog is?
00:31:30If it's hesitated, if Misha starts running and it, uh, runs right after it, you could one shot Misha.
00:31:37Dead!
00:31:38Dead!
00:31:39One shot!
00:31:41Just one bite, she's dead!
00:31:44I'm like, why?
00:31:45Why?
00:31:46Why did you have to do that?
00:31:48Why did you need to see?
00:31:50Why, why did you not secure Misha first?
00:31:53Like, a low fight.
00:31:55Exactly.
00:31:56Like, why?
00:31:57It was like a...
00:31:58Why did you not secure the cats first in the end of the dog?
00:32:01And she was like, oh, I didn't see you running.
00:32:03You were so fast.
00:32:04Yes!
00:32:05Like, of course, he's a cat!
00:32:07Oh my god.
00:32:08Yeah, for real.
00:32:09Oh my god.
00:32:10Yeah, cats are nimble like that.
00:32:11Yeah, it's like the whole thing.
00:32:12I think she just ran straight inside the suit that she saw the dog.
00:32:17Like, if he had, uh, run out into the cat show because she was scared, the dog would probably chase her.
00:32:28Cause, uh, you know, a small animal running in front of a predatory instinct.
00:32:36Then I'd have to get, uh, you know, cookie violence.
00:32:41To, uh, save my cat.
00:32:43I would have to restart the clean violence.
00:32:47Yeah, at that point.
00:32:48They don't want to do that.
00:32:51Why does my mother keep doing this?
00:32:59There was one time, uh, there was a shootout actually.
00:33:03There was like a shootout here.
00:33:05It was like, uh, we did not get to see you.
00:33:09We did not get to know.
00:33:11Let's go.
00:33:12She was like, uh, uh, from behind the pillar.
00:33:16She was like, oh, look, um, there's no snow snow guy.
00:33:18He's so serious.
00:33:19She is so serious.
00:33:20I've got to see you.
00:33:21Oh my God, let's get out of the lights out of the lights out of the house.
00:33:22We don't eat this potato.
00:33:23It's pretty much.
00:33:24Hey, what?
00:33:28Aw.
00:33:30Oh, so, what's, uh, stuck out with the cat to you?
00:33:34Whoa, sounds good.
00:33:35Yeah.
00:33:36Don't touch the door, it's a place of curiosity.
00:33:39That's the dog eyestible!
00:33:40Why, you can't help.
00:33:43Okay, I'm scared.
00:33:44Oh, no.
00:33:45Hehe.
00:33:46Hello, uh...
00:33:51Firm 22.
00:33:53Have you ever had any experience like that, honey?
00:33:58Like...
00:34:00No, you're trying to, uh...
00:34:04Really, you want to eat!
00:34:06Like, no time a day so without this one.
00:34:09Usually when I'm up to something mischievous, because like, in my teenagehood, you know,
00:34:15we do dumb shit, and go to places we didn't belong, and, uh...
00:34:19But, you know, usually you'd always have, like, you know, some people in the group who would insist on doing something really stupid,
00:34:25and it's like, dude, like, we're not trying to draw attention here.
00:34:28Why are you blowing up fireworks while we stab this Easter Bunny?
00:34:32Uh, inflatable Easter Bunny, not a person.
00:34:35But it's like, you know, it's like we don't need someone blowing up fireworks while...
00:34:40Like, we shouldn't be stabbing an Easter Bunny, I get that, okay?
00:34:42That was wrong. We had to pay that guy a hundred bucks that night to get the cops to go away.
00:34:46But, luckily, the guy was able to be reasoned with.
00:34:48He was pissed, rightfully so.
00:34:50I didn't stab the Easter Bunny, I simply filmed it.
00:34:52But, anyway...
00:34:53Um...
00:34:54I can even find the tape that you guys want to see.
00:34:56But, um...
00:34:57Like, it's not even a tape, I have it digitized, I mean.
00:35:00But, yeah, like, uh...
00:35:01But, like, it's like...
00:35:02A dude goes up to the Easter Bunny, sneaks up on the Easter Bunny, stabs it once...
00:35:06Then, someone blows up a firecracker or two, like the small ones, but they're loud.
00:35:11And it's like, what the fuck was that?
00:35:13So then, dude goes back to finish the job.
00:35:15And at that point, the guy who owns the Easter Bunny, he's in his window just waiting.
00:35:20So, as my friend goes for the final stab of the bunny, the guy's like...
00:35:24Like, I forgot what he says, but he says something angrily.
00:35:27My friend trips over himself, and we all just go running.
00:35:30I go up a random driveway, hiding behind a garbage door.
00:35:33And at that point, everyone did everything right.
00:35:35Except, like, the guy was...
00:35:37He decided to go back to the house.
00:35:39I went through someone's backyard, into the cemetery,
00:35:42and then looked back from behind my friend's backyard.
00:35:45That was an old trick I did years ago when we were doing dumb stuff.
00:35:48Also running from cops.
00:35:50And one time we did that, that was really dumb.
00:35:52We ran through the cemetery, and then we came out of a random backyard,
00:35:56and there was kids playing in front.
00:35:57And some of them knew us, too.
00:35:58And one of them was like,
00:35:59Oh, yeah, that's Ronnie.
00:36:00That's Jimmy.
00:36:01I'm like, get the fucking back, man.
00:36:02Shut the fuck up.
00:36:03But anyway, I digress.
00:36:11So, no, I don't have a one-to-one comparison I can think of right now.
00:36:15But, you know, like you say, it's, like, common sense.
00:36:19Like, don't let the animal out while I'm dealing with the other animal outside.
00:36:24These two animals don't mix.
00:36:25So, if they do mix, they mix in each other's join.
00:36:28Which is not good.
00:36:31Yep.
00:36:39This is a good thing, Mike.
00:36:40Cat has the common sense to actually run back inside.
00:36:45That's cool, yeah.
00:36:46Well, cats, you know, aren't really stupid.
00:36:51I mean, that's one thing I've learned about cats.
00:36:53They do have, um...
00:36:54They might be smarter than cats.
00:36:56I think it's...
00:36:57At least don't listen to, uh...
00:36:58Orders.
00:36:59Oh, yeah.
00:37:00Oh, yeah, yeah.
00:37:01No, no.
00:37:02They're defiant, all right.
00:37:03You know, like, uh, they, they...
00:37:04That's the thing.
00:37:05That's why...
00:37:06That's the evidence of the intelligence is they don't give a fuck.
00:37:08Like, they're like, I'm gonna do what I want.
00:37:11I mean, they, they, they won't do it.
00:37:13They won't do it.
00:37:14They won't necessarily do anything that'll hurt themselves.
00:37:15But, like, dogs, they'll do something dumb that'll hurt themselves.
00:37:18Like, they'll jump off a balcony.
00:37:19You'll be like, what the fuck are you doing?
00:37:21What the fuck are you doing?
00:37:22And the dog is just like, doo-doo!
00:37:24You know, but, like, cats, well, they can jump off the balcony and land on their feet.
00:37:28Oh, yeah, my cats, uh, you know, when they, uh, when they get scared of something, they'll
00:37:41run straight into my room.
00:37:43Or, you know, even if, uh, they're outside on the patio, they'll run, uh, straight into
00:37:48the house.
00:37:49Where, uh, they know, uh, they can't be harmed.
00:37:52Yeah.
00:37:53It's like, in a way, if you couldn't count on the intelligence, yeah, they'd be in greater
00:37:59danger if someone opened the door, you know.
00:38:01But at least they know to go in, or they, they have a good sense to make that decision.
00:38:05Yep.
00:38:06I don't let my cats out, by the way.
00:38:09So, they can only go out into the patio, which is, uh, enclosed.
00:38:13That's the thing, because, uh, the dog was strong enough to open, uh, the door of the
00:38:18patio, because it was so agitated.
00:38:24But it's, uh, spring-loaded.
00:38:26Look at this, you know.
00:38:27It springs right back inside.
00:38:28So, now, the dog is trapped inside, because, uh...
00:38:32Oh, no.
00:38:33I see.
00:38:34It's a one-way door.
00:38:35It's a one-way door.
00:38:36So, you can open it from the outside, then the door swings shut.
00:38:39The cats can't get out.
00:38:40But, now, of course, the dogs can get in, but they can't pull it open.
00:38:43They don't have the intelligence, or whatever.
00:38:45They have the strength to push through.
00:38:47But, yeah, I got you.
00:38:49Yep.
00:38:50So, uh, that's how I, uh, managed to secure it.
00:38:53I just secured the door with zip ties to make sure.
00:38:56We truly couldn't force it way out.
00:38:58Uh, when they captured the dog, by the way, uh, the dog was so, uh...
00:39:07The dog was so scared, uh, basically, it left its poop all over.
00:39:11Oh, all over the patio.
00:39:13I had to clean that up.
00:39:14Hmph.
00:39:15Hmph.
00:39:16Hmph.
00:39:19Looks like, why are these guys so rough?
00:39:21Basically, uh, they had, like, two tents on the dog, and then they dragged it out.
00:39:26It was scary, Kaz, but scary, though.
00:39:29It's like, uh, that's not very, uh, that's not very unique.
00:39:33Like, uh, there's probably other ways we could have done that.
00:39:39Yeah.
00:39:40I mean, like, I know, they have the net.
00:39:42They have the, uh, the, the, the metal pole with the hoop on the end of it.
00:39:46Yep.
00:39:47I've seen, I've seen videos of Chinese police using those on people.
00:39:50They have a whole entire method of, like, tripping people over.
00:39:53So, like, someone's giving them a hard time, or if they perceive someone to give them a hard time,
00:39:57or they just want to make you look like an asshole.
00:39:58But usually it's, like, some auntie who's, like, mad about some injustice.
00:40:02Like, like, where it's like, dude, just talk her down.
00:40:04Like, you don't need to trip her over.
00:40:06You just need to talk her down and, uh, you know, convince her that, you know,
00:40:10this is not the time or place or whatever, you know?
00:40:13And I know when people've had it, they've had it.
00:40:16But, like, but, like, yeah, they're tripping the lady over.
00:40:20Like, what the fuck are you guys doing?
00:40:21Like, they're using animal gear on people.
00:40:23But even on an animal, it's not humane, like you said.
00:40:32I mean, uh, animal gear was really rich, but, yeah.
00:40:38I think I just watched that, sort of, uh, some height factor.
00:40:42But that wasn't all that weak.
00:40:44It was just slightly, uh, maybe slightly bigger than, uh, my big fat fish in it.
00:40:49I was just scared, uh, because, uh, you know, it's a dog, it's pretty strong.
00:40:55I think it's, uh, I think it's stronger than that, you know, my cat's.
00:41:00Or at least it's my strength is, you know, they have, like, big mouth, you know.
00:41:05I want to say when they catch the dog, even if you go to redeem your dog,
00:41:09they'll keep the dog until two weeks to make sure it don't have rabies or something.
00:41:14Yep.
00:41:15Because I think that rabies is something you can't really detect.
00:41:17Like, you can only, like, determine if the animal has rabies by literally, uh, you know,
00:41:23like, literally just waiting for it to run its course.
00:41:26Orp!
00:41:27Because the more I learn about rabies, the more it scares the shit out of me.
00:41:30Like, I learned only two or three years ago that rabies is super deadly.
00:41:33Like, I knew it was deadly, but...
00:41:36Once you've been exposed, uh, to, like, an animal bite or a scratcher,
00:41:40you need, uh, then it's an animal you don't know, you need to get, uh,
00:41:44like, uh, your rabies shot.
00:41:46Or also, basically, you're dead.
00:41:49Because, uh, the animals must have rabies.
00:41:52And I think, though, apparently...
00:41:54Watch your symptoms through your death.
00:41:56Yeah.
00:41:57Exactly.
00:41:58And there was actually, there is a protocol.
00:41:59I forgot the name, but it was named after a doctor.
00:42:02Like, the, uh, the Milton Protocol, I just called it.
00:42:05And it is a method of getting, overcoming rabies even afterwards,
00:42:09but it's, like, it's got, like, a low success rate,
00:42:11or it's very complicated.
00:42:13Like, it's not the typical thing that you would expect hospitals to implement overnight,
00:42:16but it is a thing.
00:42:17And I think it's, like, Ohio or somewhere they figured this out.
00:42:22Oh, that's nice of me.
00:42:24You know, uh, this is what I was talking about with how, uh, AI could accelerate us.
00:42:31Oh, yeah.
00:42:32You know, could accelerate our, uh, advances in technology and stuff.
00:42:38Like, uh, the things that, uh, you know, researchers have been neglecting.
00:42:44If, uh, AI improves, uh, a little bit more in the near future,
00:42:53like, uh, maybe we could use AI to accelerate how we do our research on,
00:42:58like, magical advances and stuff, like, like rabies, for example.
00:43:02Like, we need more studies of that to actually find it here.
00:43:07Oh, yeah.
00:43:08And that's the thing.
00:43:09So, like, this is where AI, um, actually, like, or language, uh, not language,
00:43:14models in general, like, uh, I remember learning about the, um,
00:43:18way that they're learning how to describe a whale storm.
00:43:21And it's basically a matter of putting an array of microphones into the ocean
00:43:24and recording them and also having whales that have radio transmitters attached to them
00:43:30so that you know where the whales are using, I guess, low frequency radio
00:43:34while they're traveling in the ocean.
00:43:35So, between those two things, you have data points.
00:43:38You have where the whale is, what sound it's making, when it's at a given place,
00:43:42and, um, you know, like, uh, what it does after making certain sounds,
00:43:46or what does a group of whales, what does a pod do when, after making a certain noise.
00:43:51And, you know, they're able to, like, you know, it's a large data set
00:43:56that will take a human a lifetime to pile through,
00:43:59but there's literally exactly what you do with AI and Python.
00:44:03And, yeah, Python, like, is such a trivial language,
00:44:06but because it's such an accessible language,
00:44:08it means that scientists who, you know, are trained in their field
00:44:12actually know what to program or what, what to do in the scripting
00:44:16to get it to, like, you know, give them the results they're speaking with and stuff.
00:44:20And it's just super interesting, like, and they do this with space too, like, uh,
00:44:23like, you know, imagine, like, you have a data set of stars in space,
00:44:27and you want to determine, like, you know, you know certain patterns
00:44:30match supernovae or something like that.
00:44:32So maybe you look for stars that fit a certain type of criteria,
00:44:35or you look for stars that behave a certain way, uh, you know, not exactly,
00:44:38I don't remember exactly what they're doing,
00:44:40but there's a lot of interesting things you can do in order to find exoplanets.
00:44:44You can, like, you know, look at the way that, uh, stars are wobbling in a large data set,
00:44:48and then something that would have taken, like, a decade,
00:44:51now you have a bunch of, you know, computers doing it in overtime using AI,
00:44:55and boom, you have a list of planets now that real scientists look at and go,
00:45:00why, yes, this does have characteristics of a, uh, star that has a planet orbiting it.
00:45:05Yep.
00:45:06Like, uh, if people, uh, would just stop being so anti-AI,
00:45:11we could, uh, accelerate our, our civilization a lot faster.
00:45:17Mm-hmm.
00:45:18And, like, look, I mean, I can understand, like, the issue, like,
00:45:21we see this real issue with, uh, school.
00:45:24I've seen these videos with teachers, like, talking about, like, uh,
00:45:28I think I mentioned this in chat, like, but I didn't really spound on it too much.
00:45:31It's, like, you know, it's a very, very wordy explanation.
00:45:34It wasn't really on topic, so I didn't really go too deep into it.
00:45:37But, basically, it was like, um, like, this teacher was talking about how one of the students was like,
00:45:44well, miss, why would I need to read that when I can just have AI read it to me?
00:45:47Now, one, AI isn't reading it unless they're using an AI voice model,
00:45:50but I know what the kid means.
00:45:52The kid means that they copy and paste it into probably any AI program,
00:45:56web page, website, web app, and just get it to read it out loud.
00:46:01Okay, yeah, it's true.
00:46:02But, you know, like, some of these kids just don't get it.
00:46:05And then, me, I would have been relentless when I was a kid.
00:46:08Like, if I had AI when I was a kid, my God.
00:46:11Like, I used to dream of a day that I could take an equation, like,
00:46:14and just plug it into a computer, and it's as is.
00:46:17Like, okay, here's my homework.
00:46:18Here's the, uh, you know, the thing that you normally can't type into a calculator.
00:46:22Like, you know, good luck trying to type a, you know, n blah blah equals blah blah times this,
00:46:28or whatever, you know, like, into a calculator.
00:46:30Calculators just don't.
00:46:31I mean, maybe they do it if you know how to type it in the right way,
00:46:34but I didn't know how to use the graphing calculator.
00:46:37And you can do that with, like, AI now.
00:46:39You can take a screenshot of the math problem and be like, solve it.
00:46:43Show me the work while you're at it.
00:46:45What?
00:46:46And then you can write down whatever the AI does.
00:46:48The teachers are having this problem with kids, like, not really learning the work,
00:46:51but getting it done, which, uh, you know, is great, actually, for the hard stuff, I would say,
00:46:57but terrible if they're only using it on fundamentals,
00:47:00because then they're never going to be able to do the more advanced stuff, you know, on their own at all.
00:47:05So, I mean, that's a negative of AI, but, you know, the lesson there, maybe go back to pen and paper.
00:47:10And apparently I'm hearing that some schools are going back to pen and paper.
00:47:12You know, honestly, like I thought about it, I said, well, couldn't you just restrict it?
00:47:15In some respects, you could, especially if the school was issuing the laptop, Chromebooks, for example,
00:47:20they could restrict them.
00:47:22But I remember when I was a kid in school and they had any information system that was restricted,
00:47:27I'd find a workaround.
00:47:29I remember in, um, I figured out that you can open up Internet Explorer from inside Microsoft Word.
00:47:34Like, all you gotta do is go in Microsoft Word, put in the shortcut for the path for where IE is located.
00:47:40So, let's say it's on c colon backslash windows backslash system32 backslash iExplore.exe.
00:47:46You put that into a shortcut inside Word, and then you open the shortcut inside Word,
00:47:50it opens up a new Internet Explorer window that you normally couldn't open.
00:47:53It was fucking awesome.
00:47:58I got those on Microsoft Office for that.
00:48:01Like, you could use them to open, uh, lots of other files just from there.
00:48:05Yeah.
00:48:06Exactly.
00:48:07Like, you could use them to open, like, let your own monitor from just, uh, like,
00:48:11probably as Excel or something.
00:48:13Yeah.
00:48:14And, like, it was just, like, wild, you know, pretty wild.
00:48:17And the teachers didn't really have a comeback for that except for that.
00:48:19Like, see, because you're using that, we're gonna, you know,
00:48:22it's gonna be your fault that we disabled it.
00:48:24Well, of course you should disable it.
00:48:25Why shouldn't you disable it?
00:48:26You don't want us using it.
00:48:27Why would I be the asshole here?
00:48:29Like, you guys didn't secure your shit.
00:48:31Secure your shit.
00:48:38Hello.
00:48:41Oh, yeah.
00:48:42With thunderous applause,
00:48:44Horace and, I mean, I mean, Nobeta is being...
00:48:48It looks like Nobeta is getting attacked by the lightning,
00:48:50even though it's the other way around.
00:48:52Popcorn's mechanic and Brandon the anime guy have both in the industry.
00:48:59They should have rated us.
00:49:01I'm gonna ask Pop to rate us.
00:49:02Sometimes, uh, uh, sometimes Brandon must rate the list now.
00:49:07Every time.
00:49:09That's cool.
00:49:10I'm glad that we, uh, I'm glad that you get along with Brandon
00:49:13because I know sometimes some people in the anime show could be hit or miss,
00:49:15but I think Brandon's a nice guy.
00:49:17He could always be strong on his opinions,
00:49:19but he's never probably as long as ever.
00:49:21I don't, uh, like, uh, yes, uh, some very strong, uh, very conservative opinions,
00:49:26but, uh, we get along.
00:49:28You know?
00:49:29Yeah.
00:49:30There's some people from his community, uh, whom I don't get along with.
00:49:34Yes.
00:49:35Yeah, me too.
00:49:36There's like, I was mentioning it on my stream the other day,
00:49:38there's this one fella, he goes to Jolly's teams,
00:49:40my friend Snowdub, who does the puppets,
00:49:42and, uh, like, I get it.
00:49:45I rub the guy the wrong way one too many times,
00:49:47so he don't like me anymore, apparently.
00:49:49Okay, fair enough.
00:49:50You know?
00:49:51I would love to make a tooth, but I don't know how I'd approach that.
00:49:53You know, like, would I DM the guy and say tooth?
00:49:56You know, he's so fucking.
00:49:57But his name, like, it rhymes with some.
00:50:01So, I made a joke one time where instead of saying somewhat, I said somewhat.
00:50:06And he didn't like that joke.
00:50:08And I was like, I'm just doing a rhyme of words.
00:50:10Like, do it to me too while you're at it.
00:50:12Have some fun.
00:50:13I mean, I come there dressed as a toaster.
00:50:15And then Jolly forgets my name and goes,
00:50:17Ah, the fucking toaster.
00:50:19And that's part of the humor.
00:50:21You know what I mean?
00:50:22Like, um, it's a little self-deprecating,
00:50:24but I'm dressed as a robot that looks like a damn toaster.
00:50:26So, you better be joking about me.
00:50:28I mean, why wouldn't you?
00:50:29I mean, it's God-given right.
00:50:32I digress.
00:50:33One time I got to a debate with this fellow on Brandon's chat,
00:50:35I think I was, uh, you know how people would say,
00:50:38um, America is not a democracy
00:50:40because the Constitution doesn't have to wear democracy in it.
00:50:43It's a republic.
00:50:44And yeah, I get it.
00:50:45It is.
00:50:46It's literally a federal constitutional republic.
00:50:47But you're not going to tell me we don't have democracy here.
00:50:50I mean, like, we literally run a democratic election.
00:50:53Yes.
00:50:55And like, I understand that maybe that's not the main thing that our system is,
00:50:58but don't tell me this is not a democracy.
00:51:00I mean, like, I get it.
00:51:01I get it.
00:51:02You want to draw a line because maybe,
00:51:04I'm going to guess some people are mostly tied to this
00:51:06because the word democracy and Democrat, right,
00:51:09they have the same root word.
00:51:11So, they think that we call this a democracy,
00:51:13we're all Democrats.
00:51:14Like, no.
00:51:15That's not how it works.
00:51:20Yeah, but like, I guess,
00:51:21I don't even know if that's what they think,
00:51:23but they seem to be allergic to the word democracy
00:51:26because I get it.
00:51:27Democracy is mob rule.
00:51:28And one of the things that makes our system better in the series
00:51:31is that what a democracy is,
00:51:34in the words of Ron Paul,
00:51:36a democracy is mob rule.
00:51:39And a republic, in the words of Ron Paul,
00:51:41actually more accurately,
00:51:42forget about democracy,
00:51:43but as Ron Paul used the word often,
00:51:46rule of law.
00:51:47And what that's saying is that, like,
00:51:49rule of law informs on how our system works.
00:51:51So, there's like a cute little video out there somewhere
00:51:54that illustrates the difference between democracy and republic.
00:51:57And it's probably where a lot of people get their talking points from.
00:52:00But, that's an interesting example about like a sheriff in a town
00:52:04and how like, okay, someone killed somebody.
00:52:07So, do we just vote to kill the person?
00:52:09No, that would be mob rule.
00:52:10We have laws that say...
00:52:12And you have a jury that democratizes it.
00:52:15Ironically, oh God, yeah, good point.
00:52:18You know, and, but even then, like, there is a process that you follow.
00:52:21Like, you don't go straight to the vote.
00:52:23There's a judge in there who moderates it.
00:52:25And the jury has to make that call based on certain rules,
00:52:29I guess, if I'm using the right term.
00:52:31You know, there are rules for like, how to do it.
00:52:34Well, I've got their decisions.
00:52:36And, you know, you don't just go straight to a vote.
00:52:39You have a process.
00:52:40You have a, you know, a suspect until they're proven guilty.
00:52:48Even with that, it's like, well, you know, that sheriff got elected.
00:52:53That was democracy at play right there.
00:52:56I'm not saying that makes this a pure democracy.
00:52:58We're not a pure democracy.
00:52:59We're a representative democracy.
00:53:01And I've even used that term before and gotten some pushback on Reddit,
00:53:04from the conservative corner of Reddit.
00:53:07And it's like, okay, well, tell me what to read.
00:53:09Like, read the anti-federalist papers.
00:53:11Like, okay, is that different than the federalist papers?
00:53:14Like, you know, but like, it's like, like, give me a quote.
00:53:18Something like, what is it?
00:53:19And then if you tell me to read the federalist papers,
00:53:21those are letters between the founders of this country.
00:53:24You know, like those are just like letters, like, you know,
00:53:27you know, so it's not really caring for the law.
00:53:29At best, that's informed on the logic that you get the time
00:53:32after you drafted the Constitution.
00:53:34So you don't have to worry about it.
00:53:36Mm-hmm.
00:53:37Mm-hmm.
00:53:38Yep.
00:53:39Oh, regarding, uh, regarding the Brandon's deck.
00:53:41Yeah, there's some, uh, there's some people there, uh, that I don't get along with, um,
00:53:46Oh, regarding, uh, regarding, uh, Brandon's deck, yeah, there's some, uh, there's some
00:53:59people there, uh, that I don't get along with, uh, because, uh, this is usually how it goes.
00:54:05Like, uh, I present, uh, an argument that I think that, you know, sounds controversial
00:54:11at first, uh, instead of hearing me out, I get called stupid for taking that step, and
00:54:18I'm like, oh, you think this is stupid?
00:54:20Okay, uh, let me prove you how stupid you are.
00:54:24This is what you said, and, uh, I played a part of your arguments.
00:54:29Now, uh, let me show you how stupid this is.
00:54:31This is what you're saying.
00:54:35Here you go.
00:54:36You would have liked it when you put a mirror up.
00:54:39Yep.
00:54:39I think one of your friends, actually, uh, was siding from that person.
00:54:44I'm just kidding, my buddy.
00:54:47Yeah, uh, cuddle.
00:54:50Oh, you know, we're just trying to, uh, we're just trying to, uh, moderate things.
00:54:54But, uh, basically, I said, uh, I said, uh, okay, uh, I'll hear you out.
00:54:59You, you stupid, stupid, not, not, not all over the other person.
00:55:03Oh, no, stupid, okay, I'll hear you out.
00:55:05And then, uh, this person, uh, she doubled down on what?
00:55:09Who was saying, uh, you know, it turned, like, uh, insults, like,
00:55:14I was scared of this, like, and, uh, punked me, like, uh,
00:55:18I'm not sure if you're not working.
00:55:19Like, uh, who did, uh, what I was saying about hearing her out?
00:55:23I was like, yeah, I'm not here.
00:55:24Mm-hmm.
00:55:39They, they did, well, they, they gotta be able to receive it, too.
00:55:43I guess this is my outfit.
00:55:47I think I've got a few stuck things with me in the fashion.
00:55:54She's winning you.
00:55:57I'm sorry.
00:55:59I'm sorry, you're winning ours.
00:56:03I can't change me.
00:56:07Oh, he's contemplating.
00:56:09He's contemplating.
00:56:11Well, that's good.
00:56:13At least you don't have to send it to a camp where you don't know how to constate.
00:56:21But, you know, um, like,
00:56:23I was saying, you finished it,
00:56:25and it's like, uh,
00:56:27some people don't want to finish it once they get to the point that they're losing the...
00:56:31Almost easier by the control now.
00:56:37I was just like, oh, you're being illogical.
00:56:39Okay, tell me how I'm being illogical.
00:56:41Hehehe.
00:56:43You keep accusing yourself,
00:56:45and I'll prove it.
00:56:47Mm-hmm.
00:56:49But here's my logic for you.
00:56:51Remember, I'm not so happy.
00:56:53Like, you told me something.
00:56:55Right? And so, yeah.
00:56:57Just, uh, break apart.
00:56:59What do you say?
00:57:01Oh, nice.
00:57:03What do you say?
00:57:05Okay, let me explain.
00:57:07But anyhow, people don't like it when I argue like that.
00:57:09Oh, I come from, uh,
00:57:11I come from the background of T.J.
00:57:14You know?
00:57:15Because, uh,
00:57:16the undergrad course was political science,
00:57:19uh, college course.
00:57:21My, uh,
00:57:22graduate school course is law, so,
00:57:25yeah, that's how I argue.
00:57:27Yeah.
00:57:29Yeah.
00:57:30It's actually a property of law you.
00:57:31It says law you.
00:57:32Yeah, it says law you,
00:57:33so if, uh,
00:57:34if you can't, uh,
00:57:35if you can't feel it,
00:57:36then don't start stuff with me.
00:57:40I'd be okay, like, you know,
00:57:42it's not that I don't law you the best way,
00:57:44but, you know,
00:57:45I'll concede something.
00:57:46I'll be like, okay, well,
00:57:47I'm not familiar with that,
00:57:48but based on my understanding of this and that,
00:57:50da-da-da-da-da-da,
00:57:51and it's like,
00:57:52Yeah.
00:57:53I agree to elucidate on the parts I'm missing,
00:57:55but.
00:57:56Yeah.
00:57:57You know, I try to, like, you know,
00:57:58lay down some kind of definitions
00:58:00of where I'm coming from.
00:58:02Yep.
00:58:03It's just problem.
00:58:04What's, uh,
00:58:05anything about I look at the GP?
00:58:08It's just a problem.
00:58:09It's a problem,
00:58:11which, uh,
00:58:12define absolutely everything,
00:58:14because,
00:58:15you know,
00:58:16we probably made the goal for us over and over.
00:58:23And there's not going to be any meeting of the minds there if just one side defines absolutely everything that we're talking about.
00:58:34He's like, what is cute? Oh, but cute is objective. Okay, cute is objective.
00:58:40But there are actually some objective measures.
00:58:45An actual study, there's two different studies open.
00:58:49Hehehe.
00:58:51Like I was talking with Arnie.
00:58:55I was like, there's actually two...
00:58:57Like, he says that Obeta isn't cute.
00:58:59And I was like, really?
00:59:03But I do think Obeta isn't cute.
00:59:08Blah.
00:59:14I'm glad to replace the...
00:59:16Yeah, he brought up the Obeta not being cute thing the other day.
00:59:20Like, she's a cute girl in a witch hat.
00:59:22Like, I mean, she's not ugly.
00:59:24I mean, I don't know, like, you know...
00:59:26What? Oh my god. Is she ugly then?
00:59:28She says she's not cute, she's not attractive.
00:59:31Then what is she? Is she ugly now?
00:59:34Like, where is that coming from?
00:59:36You're not...
00:59:38Oh, the sound that you're hearing?
00:59:40No.
00:59:41Uh...
00:59:42Oh...
00:59:43Oh, yeah.
00:59:44He's...
00:59:45She's not cute, she's not attractive.
00:59:47Then what is she? Is she ugly?
00:59:49Like a...
00:59:50Yeah.
00:59:51Like...
00:59:52Maybe he's gotten the impression that, that...
00:59:54Somewhere along the line, you...
00:59:56the group established that she's cute
00:59:59and he wants to challenge it
01:00:01because he believes that she's not
01:00:02his type, but it's like
01:00:04I don't think we've ever gone around
01:00:06anyone's ever gone around saying she's the paragon of cute
01:00:09I don't think it's cute about her being
01:00:14not his life
01:00:16she's as cute
01:00:17there's a
01:00:18there's a prediction
01:00:19it's not oral permission to
01:00:24goon on her
01:00:25I think that's so much
01:00:29that's what he's trying to avoid
01:00:31we're not saying you're a
01:00:33contractor
01:00:34if you admit that she's cute
01:00:38but no one is saying
01:00:39that you're a contractor
01:00:40there's a
01:00:45you know
01:00:47he picked up
01:00:47something like
01:00:49my friend's kids
01:00:52they were cute when they were
01:00:53I was like
01:00:53we're not talking about real people here
01:00:55no Becca is a totally fictional individual
01:00:57we don't talk about that
01:00:58like we avoid
01:01:01stuff like that
01:01:02yeah I mean they're literally fictional characters
01:01:05it's a cartoon
01:01:05yep
01:01:09anyways
01:01:10like Harris is that
01:01:11would you like to
01:01:12would you like to show us something
01:01:15product
01:01:16I was uh
01:01:19let me just uh
01:01:20see if I could resize my screen real quick
01:01:23it fits neatly in the middle of my screen
01:01:26because I have a game open
01:01:27Owl
01:01:31you
01:01:33you
01:01:35and
01:01:36you
01:01:39you
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