Rambling 201: Google's Animals

Which animals are the largest? What are their predators? Are any animals born intelligent enough to find food and evade predators instantly without the guidance from their parents? The duo decide to find the answers to this question in a Google search filled frenzy. The king of the mammals is both obvious and unexpected when they finally discover what is the most dangerous of all creatures!

+Episode Details

  • Animal Intelligence
  • Pack Animals
  • Hippos
  • Snakes
  • Sharks
  • Animal Instincts
  • Parenting

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+Transcript

Cristina: Warning. This program contains strong themes meant for a mature audience. Discretion is advised.

Jack: Going live in 5, 4.

Cristina: What does live mean?

Jack: Welcome to the Rambling Podcast. I'm your host, Jack.

Cristina: And I'm Christina.

Jack: And this is the show where we ground humanity's most absurd and baffling ideas.

Cristina: Do you have any baffling ideas?

Jack: well, ideas in general are baffling. Thinking is a complicated process that comes through the evolutionary process of, I don't know, I guess neurons. No, I would. That's a really interesting question. Right, like, because thinking itself is kind of a mind f***. It's a psychedelic experience or something. Like, do creatures think? I know they have processing, but it's a lot of autopilot s*** going on too.

Cristina: Are you talking about animals?

Jack: Creatures in general?

Cristina: Even humans? Well, okay. I mean most of them we know fact.

Jack: I mean, I guess at least I know I can think.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: When I say creatures, I definitely do mean other than I.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Because I'm under the impression I can think.

Cristina: But you're also in autopilot.

Jack: Sometimes I think everything has a little bit of autopilot, but I think animals in general, other creatures in general have autopilot. Like I don't think an insect is really giving it surrounding many thoughts. No, I mean there's a lot of autopilot going on.

Cristina: Yeah. I Wonder how much percent of it is autopilot. How much percent of what it's thinking is autopilot?

Jack: Probably 100% of it.

Cristina: 100%?

Jack: Yeah, there's lit like think of an ant. It's literally hive mentality. It has no sense of identity. It's just part of a bigger thing and its entire being is to support this bigger thing. No sense of self preservation or anything, it's just the Borg.

Cristina: Does the queen at least have mind of its own or is she also an autopilot like them? Like she's doing what her role tells her what to do or whatever.

Jack: Well, my experience as an ant keeper has taught me that the queen is a very overpowered, high thinking individual. She has all the thoughts.

Cristina: So a lot like the queen of Or.

Jack: Yeah, she has all the thinking going on and all the. All the insignificant ants don't think at all. She sends her messages and they're like yes or not even. Yes. They just do it. She waves her hand and they then.

Cristina: Are they better than the Porg because the Borg, they want to get away from the queen?

Jack: No, it's when you get that bug thrown into the system and they then get like identity and individuality.

Cristina: Okay. So they're not. There's not individuality unless something bad happens. A bug. Okay, yeah.

Jack: It was like a virus or something that attacked the board. Right, Because Picard is a savage.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: He was like, send this kid back with a sense of self. Let's destroy this from the inside out.

Cristina: Oh, okay. Yeah. Because once the board gets choose, they don't want to be with the queen anymore. That would suck.

Jack: That makes sense. Right?

Cristina: That makes sense.

Jack: A bit overpowered.

Cristina: Are there any other animals that work like that? Like they just have one. Oh, yeah. Queen bee. Okay. So is the queen. There's gotta be other examples though.

Jack: I mean, herds have a very similar thing going on. Like giant pack animals.

Cristina: But they don't have a leader, do they? I mean, I guess whoever's in the front of the herd.

Jack: No, I'm pretty sure just enough of them start running and there's a survival thing that kicks in that they're like. That's probably what the rest of us should be doing.

Cristina: Ah, okay.

Jack: Like, are they running from something? Let's all run from whatever thing they're running from. Or are they running towards something? Let's all run. Whatever they run, they know something we don't. Yeah, I guess that's the ultimate thought. They know something we don't.

Cristina: Yeah. And birds, are they like that? Because there's always a bunch.

Jack: Fascinating. This is a really interesting visual. Right. So birds in the sky because wings and whatnot. But they move in a weird sync. Like they all tune into this thing and they instantly know. They all instantly know how to move.

Cristina: But is it because the wind or is it they're actually working together?

Jack: No, when they're doing like weird patterns in the sky, how do they all suddenly turn at the same time? Yeah, that's weird. Unless there is a leader and it's happening so fraction of a second that it looks instantaneous to us, but it's like a domino effect that's happening too quick for us to notice. And there is one doing it first, but they're in the sky. It has to all be like split second decision making.

Cristina: Yeah. Maybe more like herds who are worried. Like they're just going because they see everyone else going.

Jack: Well, I don't think it would be worried though. There has to be some other motivation because they're just hanging out in the sky doing tricks or whatever crap is happening.

Cristina: What is happening? Like, what benefit is that? Is that exercise?

Jack: I don't know. Because your school of fish do the same thing a lot of times. Yes. They'll move Away from danger, but also when there's no danger, they're still kind of doing things.

Cristina: Are they eating, though? Is that them eating?

Jack: I guess fish are. Then what's the excuse for bird?

Cristina: No idea. They're battling some creature that we don't know about in the sky.

Jack: All of them?

Cristina: Yeah. Or the wind. They're playing with the wind.

Jack: They're playing with the wind?

Cristina: Yeah. We don't know how that works.

Jack: Interesting.

Cristina: The wind is petting them.

Jack: Could be.

Cristina: That's interesting. Yeah. It's a lot like the fish. The birds in the sky are a lot like the fish in the water moving that weird way.

Jack: Yeah. There is definitely a thing happening where they're kind of like all in sync. I don't know why. It is weird that they do it. And I guess a lot of animals do that. But then what about the solitary animals? What the f***? Like, if there was no. They would just fight each other. Like, wild cats aren't gonna move all in sync, and lions don't move all in sync. No, but like, a. A bunch of horses are already kind of doing their thing. You spook them, boom, they're all one suddenly.

Cristina: Yeah, horses like zebras.

Jack: I guess that's kind of a horse too.

Cristina: Deers. Are they, like.

Jack: No, actually. That's an interesting one. Deer don't pack, run in the same direction under the same logic. They'll just scatter in random directions if they have to.

Cristina: What?

Jack: Interesting.

Cristina: They're breaking the pattern of other animals.

Jack: Yeah, but so is, like, the wild cats, like I just said.

Cristina: Well, that's different. Being the hunter and being the hunty are two different things.

Jack: Why?

Cristina: Because the hunter likes to be those cats, I guess. Like to be alone. A lot of cats.

Jack: All right, so there's a pack of bison. Who's f****** with, like, a herd of bison? Nobody. Nobody's f****** with a herd with bison. But they're still gonna run together, I guess. You mean more carnivore versus herbivore?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Like, herbivores will do, like, their own thing. Then why are deer doing their own thing? Doesn't. Doesn't work.

Cristina: Yeah. I don't know what's going on with the deers, but they must. Is that right? I don't know. That's weird.

Jack: Yeah, they just kind of do random s***. Deer weird.

Cristina: Deer weird. But most even big animals that are veggies eaters are. They're in packs, like giraffes and elephants, I think.

Jack: Not in herds, though.

Cristina: Not in herds.

Jack: There isn't like a herd of giraffes.

Cristina: Oh, there's a family of giraffes.

Jack: Yeah, it's probably a family of giraffes. Maybe some cousins, some friends, but not, like a herd. Oh, there aren't thousands of giraffes hanging all together.

Cristina: That's crazy. They couldn't survive like that if they're all eating the same thing.

Jack: What's hunting a giraffe in the first place, you know? Like, is it even a creature of that nature?

Cristina: I imagine a lion.

Jack: You think a lion. You think something is messing with giraffes to begin with?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Why?

Cristina: Because they're probably easy to. They seem like they might be a clumsy and slow enough creature. Are they fast? I don't think they're that fast for a lion.

Jack: I mean, like, would the lion go out of his way to eat a giraffe?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Why?

Cristina: They would probably try to eat a hippo, and that doesn't make sense.

Jack: A lion?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: I don't think a lion tries to eat a hippo.

Cristina: An alligator would try to eat a hippo. I think there's some animals that will try, even if it's dumb to eat a hippo. I don't think any animal hunts hippo. Not that they could eat the hippo, but at least get after that hippo.

Jack: Okay, so lions, hyenas, and leopards all hunt giraffes.

Cristina: Mm. That makes sense. See, hyenas are pet creatures. I don't care.

Jack: Hyenas don't give a s***.

Cristina: Yeah, size does not matter. The hyena probably goes after that hippo, too. Not that it's successful, but it probably does try. You don't think a hyena would try.

Jack: To attack a hippo?

Cristina: Yeah. Tell me. Nothing hunts a hippo. I imagine something does.

Jack: Holy crap. Yeah. Hyenas go after hippos?

Cristina: Yeah, man. Hyenas don't give a s*** what else hunts a hippo. Or is that it? It's the hippo.

Jack: No, what's funny is that hyenas are more capable of hunting these things down because they work in packs, as opposed to lions that are usually alone. This is the logic of the wolves, Right? The wolves are some f****** problem because strategy is a m***********. This is where the dogs have advantage over the cats.

Cristina: Right, But I thought lions are, like, the only cats that do work together.

Jack: No, they're usually alone. Usually there's one out there hunting brings the food back.

Cristina: Oh, what?

Jack: Yeah, I mean, there could be multiple together, but that's not the common.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: Commonly, one goes out, brings the food back. In.

Cristina: Okay, but when it comes to hyenas, they're just eating anything.

Jack: Well, sure, but the point is that hyenas move in packs.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: This is the whole dog thing. That makes dogs very different at hunting than cats. Now there's less food to go around overall. Yeah. You hunt the Hepple, but there's like seven of you.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So like lion hunts a hippo. If it got the hippo. There's a lion and a hippo. Okay, you win.

Cristina: Yeah. I'm imagining they're eating baby hippos. Like, it's not a. Or an injured hippo.

Jack: I believe in. I believe in all of these cases, it's the baby.

Cristina: It's the baby. Yeah. Like that's the easiest. Like a baby elephant or something.

Jack: Yeah. A pack of hyenas would be hard pressed to take an adult hipple down like that. That's not. Doesn't sound fun or easy.

Cristina: What other animals hunt hippos? There has to be more. Can't imagine the hyena is the only animal. But it's possible. Hippos are a tough, tough animal to take down.

Jack: Hippos, one of the hardest animals to take down. So a hippo will usually be attacked by crocodiles, lions, and spotted hyenas.

Cristina: Okay, I was interested.

Jack: But all the young hippos, only babies.

Cristina: Okay. Just babies. The only thing that messes with adult hippo is probably another adult hippo.

Jack: Adult hippos are not usually preyed upon by other animals due to their aggression and size.

Cristina: Nah, they're the ones eating other animals just for fun.

Jack: Yeah. Cases where large lion prides have successfully preyed on adult hippos have been reported, but that's generally rare.

Cristina: Okay. So a pack of lions can do it.

Jack: Yeah. Now just normally hunting lion can't. A lion has to jump into dog behavior and be like, yo, we need to. We're the most powerful s*** out here. We still need to team up.

Cristina: Yeah. Okay.

Jack: Because f*** adult hippos.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: We go after it and it's just gonna eat us. It doesn't even get nutrients from us. It's just gonna eat us.

Cristina: That is so scary.

Jack: Yeah, it's a monster. The real life monster of the human world. Of the human world, of the like, of the mortal world.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Is the hippo hippo. It's a demon, bro.

Cristina: Yes. It's what demons are based off of.

Jack: Yeah, some s***. It's demon. And it's a water pig, essentially. Right. It's like they're related or some s***. We've. I remember, like recently, maybe like. Like 20 episodes ago or some s***, we, like, ran across the fact that a pig is a hippo. It's just a tiny hippo.

Cristina: Pigs can get really big. But I don't know, what's the biggest hippo size? I mean, what's the biggest pig size?

Jack: The largest? It's pretty big.

Cristina: It's pretty big. But it would be nice to know, like, compared to a hippo, to, I guess, imagine. What would one pig standing, one wild pig, I guess, next to a pig hippo look like?

Jack: What would one wild. Oh, crap. I guess it could look like a hippo. Yeah.

Cristina: What?

Jack: That's pretty ginormous.

Cristina: It's pretty ginormous.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: You don't know how big, though.

Jack: It's way bigger than a person.

Cristina: Oh. Oh, my gosh.

Jack: It's the size of a hippo.

Cristina: Oh, that's crazy. Okay, that's scary. And we eat that. Yeah.

Jack: Yeah. Holy s***. What the f*** am I looking at? This is huge.

Cristina: What is it a pig?

Jack: Yeah, it's a huge pig. Okay, that's what I'm looking at. Look at that.

Cristina: That is scary.

Jack: Yeah, that's essentially a giant. Not even giant. That's just a hippo. Okay, I guess. I guess that's the real question because we're looking at the biggest pig. So I guess the real question is how large is the largest hippo? No, I guess that's still more or less the same size.

Cristina: Well, how. How large is it?

Jack: About the size of that pig.

Cristina: Because this pig says length 8 to 7 to 8ft. Height 3 to 4ft, or 3.7 to 4.7 and then 600 to 1,000 pounds. I feel like the hippo still has to be pretty big.

Jack: Like it has way more weight.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: All right, all right, all right. What? Okay, what was this? Were the specs on that pig?

Cristina: It was seven feet. No, sorry. Seven to eight feet.

Jack: Okay, so seven to eight feet long.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Oh, God. So 10ft to 17ft.

Cristina: Oh, my gosh. Height.

Jack: What height do you have?

Cristina: 3.7 to 4.7.

Jack: Okay, 4.3 to 5.4. So just them normal height is like about the size of an average sized female human.

Cristina: Oh, my gosh. And pounds six hundred to a thousand.

Jack: Oh, man. 3,300 to 4,000. Never mind. A hippo will body a pig so effortlessly.

Cristina: Yeah. Yeah.

Jack: Holy crap. 17ft. Dude, what are we talking about anymore? That's absurdly large.

Cristina: But as large as a rhino. I feel like rhinos are probably the same size.

Jack: Rhinos and hippos are like in the same ballpark?

Cristina: Yes. I don't know. See, height, 5.6 to 6 point. Let's say 6.3.

Jack: Okay, so they're taller in height than a hippo. What about lengthwise?

Cristina: Length does not say. Give me the length. What's your question again? Length.

Jack: The length of a hippo.

Cristina: You mean rhino?

Jack: Oh, yeah, of rhino.

Cristina: Give me the length of. We have. Has the length of 7ft 10 inches to 10ft 6 inches.

Jack: No, get body. A 17 foot hippo will body that thing.

Cristina: Oh, 2,000 pounds.

Jack: 3,300 to 4,000.

Cristina: Oh, it's 2,200. Oh, okay. The hippo's still in it by miles.

Jack: Well, I'm just confused as to how something could be so freaking large. This info has to be wrong, right?

Cristina: Sure. Elephants bigger still. That'd be crazy.

Jack: I mean, yeah, elephant is the largest land creature.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But I don't think it's longer. I'm just confused about this length. This can't be right. I refuse to believe a hippo could really, truly, honestly be 17 freaking feet long.

Cristina: 17. Oh my God.

Jack: It's such an absurd length.

Cristina: That is 17. They're long boys.

Jack: They're long boys. 17ft is so freaking excessive, man. Makes you really wonder.

Cristina: It's kind of a hot dog.

Jack: It's gonna have a hot dog.

Cristina: It's a hot dog. It is a hot dog. Although elephants are like 18 to 21ft.

Jack: Yeah, but like Jesus Christ. But I. Yeah, this is nowhere near 17ft.

Cristina: No, the one that. That one.

Jack: Oh my God.

Cristina: It's so freaking huge.

Jack: Oh, God. That one.

Cristina: That one might be.

Jack: Is so crazy looking. I guess. They are so long. They're the wiener elephants.

Cristina: They're long.

Jack: They're wiener elephants.

Cristina: Elephants are long, but they look more proportionate.

Jack: Dude, who the h*** just has a pet hippo?

Cristina: I hope no one. I hope no one. Is this a video of someone with pet hippos?

Jack: I don't know, but that guy just like tapped the mouth of that hippo. That is a long f****** hippo though. But if somebody were to lay down next to it, I'm sure that hippo is like in the lower range. It's like nine feet at most. Doesn't look like seven. 17ft is crazy. That can't be right. That cannot be right. That cannot be right. It's so long. 17ft is three humans stacked end to end.

Cristina: That it. Maybe that's just like the most. The largest hippo they found.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah. Like the most exaggerated hippo ever recorded. That's totally A possibility. Because that's nuts. I just. I don't know. It's just nuts. Oh, my God. The largest hippo ever was 16 foot.

Cristina: 16 tall or still.

Jack: No, that would be nuts. You know how the problem that a 16 foot tall Pippa would be the length of that would be like five houses. Sixteen foot is like a two story building.

Cristina: Once upon a time.

Jack: Ancient hippos of the past.

Cristina: Yeah. Dinosaur hippo. 16ft long, not 17ft long.

Jack: That's not like much of a difference. No, they probably rounded to 17 because like 16.5 or something, you know?

Cristina: Yeah. So ridiculous.

Jack: But like, I need this. I need to see it there. Hat man. How the h*** are you 16ft? Like, who the h*** is f****** with you, bro? You had that. That's a giant hippo. I had to dive a heart attack, right?

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: There's nothing else. He had to dive a heart attack. There's no other option.

Cristina: It's so crazy looking.

Jack: So this is Don, the largest hippo king showing his dominance in the water.

Cristina: It's hard to tell how big he is.

Jack: It is very hard to tell. Let's see if there's some volume to this. Come on. You can't hear him in the water.

Cristina: It's kind of scary. A lot of animals make some horrifying sounds.

Jack: I wonder how they're deciding to measure this though. And here's the problem, dude. How fast a hippo moves in the water is also like a huge issue.

Cristina: How fast it is.

Jack: Yeah. Hippos are crazy fast on land and on in the water. It is such an unnecessary creature. A hippo. 19 miles per hour. No human ever is outrunning that. For contrast.

Cristina: What are we gonna look up? The human? The elephant. I saw an elephant suit being compared to a hippo 13ft in length. This is the seal one for contrast.

Jack: Humans can max out at 8 miles per hour.

Cristina: Running or swimming?

Jack: Running.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And definitely slower swimming. And the Hippo can clear 19. It is twice as. Actually more than twice as fast as any human. As the fastest human probably. It's more than twice as fast as the fastest human.

Cristina: Do you think us swimming is way slower?

Jack: Has to be 5 miles per hour underwater. Oof.

Cristina: Oh, okay. We're not surviving either way.

Jack: There's just no way, man. It couldn't be okay. No. It would be scary. It would be scary. So the fastest human in all of history clears 5 miles per hour. They would be an even match for an average hippo. What average human in the water clears like 2 miles per hour. Still less than half the speed of the average hippo.

Cristina: I think we got a movie there like Jaws, but with a hippo. What?

Jack: Except it'll just follow you out of the water and then suddenly get even faster.

Cristina: That's even scarier. They have alligator horror movies. Why isn't there a hippo one?

Jack: I don't know. I guess the round fatness kind of kills it. It's not like a scary jagged creature.

Cristina: No. Unless it's eating you. It's. It becomes more scary, I guess. Yeah, but you have to be in that situation. I guess watching it isn't as scary. Such a pudgy looking creature.

Jack: Yeah, it is like a. It's just an awkward creature. Really is. But it's so freaking dangerous.

Cristina: But it's so awkward. It's huge. It's heavy looking. It has the biggest looking stomach ever. I don't understand how it's the more.

Jack: To put food away with.

Cristina: How is it so fast with all its weight though?

Jack: That is an interesting question. I don't know, it's just everything is designed to s*** on a human. That's why we have to develop overpowered brains.

Cristina: Okay. Humongous.

Jack: Without a doubt, the human is the smartest creature on earth. At least on land.

Cristina: Mm. Dolphins being the smartest. No. I don't know. Is the dolphins smartest?

Jack: I believe so, yeah.

Cristina: Dolphins, okay.

Jack: Dolphins dominate the oceans, humans dominate the land. And like birds are generally speaking dumb as opposed to these two other comparisons.

Cristina: Oh, even the smartest bird though, it depends.

Jack: What's the smartest bird?

Cristina: Like a raven? No, there's a big bird, isn't there? That's pretty smart.

Jack: Raven. Yeah. Ravens are way up there. Okay, but then that's my point. So like a raven next to like a raven is definitely highly intelligent. But are we saying that it's like dominating its environment? Like non eagle. That's retarded. Will beat the s*** out of a raven effortlessly.

Cristina: Yeah, but they're like smart compared to a child, right? Like you put their intelligence next to a human.

Jack: Oh, yeah, probably. You gotta understand, human babies are dumb, okay? Human babies are the most useless of all like creatures. They're really, really, really down the pole because there's nothing physical that allows this thing to survive. I guess. No, fair enough. Birds are kind of s*****. Like. Like humans.

Cristina: Yeah. When they're babies.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah. Usually other creature mammals tend to be hardcore. Except the domesticated ones.

Cristina: What about like kangaroo babies? Those can't do anything.

Jack: Well, kangaroo babies aren't even born yet. Really? They're just Literally in a womb.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That's external. Yes, that's what's happening there.

Cristina: They're not really born though.

Jack: Yeah, they're not really born yet. But I'm thinking, like, if there are some mammals that are useless, like, but there's a lot of domesticated useless s***. I wonder if, like a wild lion is instinctively great at what it's doing, you know, it's. At least it could run around. Is that a thing or is it like a house cat that when it has its babies, they're just retarded the way humans are probably.

Cristina: They have to learn how to hunt and everything. They don't know how to do any of that.

Jack: They'll follow their mom. But can they move? Can they avoid predators, is my question.

Cristina: Ooh, probably not.

Jack: Like, even turtle babies get born and immediately run towards the water. They don't necessarily have to make it, but they have that. A human baby will lay there.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: A domesticated puppy will lay there.

Cristina: What? A baby lion.

Jack: Meanwhile, a baby deer can dip.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: You see, it'll be awkward.

Cristina: It will be awkward.

Jack: But it can move. It can try to avoid danger.

Cristina: Okay, it can.

Jack: It knows to be scared, but it.

Cristina: Can'T hunt on its own. Like, if it lost its mom, it's probably dying of starvation if it's not hunted. At least most baby animals, I think. I think when it comes to eating, it's the hardest thing. Even if they can move around quickly, they can run.

Jack: No, I think when it comes to a deer, it would also find its own food. What? Deer is like going to find food and bringing it to its baby?

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: It's not how it works. It just knows.

Cristina: I guess a lot of other animals, though, need the parents bring them things.

Jack: You know what? Funny, I guess. Yeah. Okay. Okay. Okay. Yeah. There's a. There's a huge trade off happening, Right. Herbivores just kinda. No, carnivores, although way more overpowered as adults. Way underpowered as babies. Yes, babies. So carnivores are more likely to be killed by other carnivores when they're babies.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Than herbivores are when they're babies. Because herbivore babies at least have some motor function to handle their s***.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Because they need to.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: While usually the carnivores are gonna protect their babies, thus making the weaker baby.

Cristina: Yeah. Because they can't hunt on their own. They can't do it. Like, if that baby gets lost, that's it for that baby.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Can't. What's it gonna do?

Jack: But herbivores don't have that issue because.

Cristina: Their food is everywhere.

Jack: Yeah. That's why dogs, even if they're in the house and you feed them crap that they shouldn't naturally eat, that's still technically carnivore. That's why its babies are dumb, because it's a carnivore and carnivores have dumb babies.

Cristina: Dumb babies.

Jack: Yeah. The dumbest babies are all carnivores.

Cristina: Yes. I guess. So. He's even birds. I'm thinking they're carnivores.

Jack: Yeah, they kind of are. And they got dumb babies. If there are herbivore baby birds, maybe they're better.

Cristina: But no, because they also have the disadvantage that their babies can't move. Like, they can move, but they can't fly. Like, if they're in a nest, they're not getting out of that nest until they have the ability to fly.

Jack: Yeah. Also, I don't think there's any herbivore birds.

Jack: Okay. There are a hummingbird.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Does a hummingbird baby know what it's doing?

Cristina: I don't know. Like, it doesn't naturally know.

Jack: How would you figure it out? I feel like a hummingbird would struggle.

Cristina: Yeah. But also, they still have to get to a certain age to be able to fly and everything. Because birds don't just naturally are born and then fly. That's. Hummingbirds are one bird that does. That would be crazy.

Jack: That'd be fascinating. Right? Is it just born and badass?

Cristina: No way.

Jack: It couldn't be. But then that would mean that a hummingbird isn't a hummingbird is probably not really a herbivore. That's an interesting question. Right?

Cristina: Isn't that the one that eats the flowers? What's it called?

Jack: Yeah, the, like, nectar of a flower. Oh, crap. No, they are. They're. They're omnivores. They eat, like, insects and spiders and junk.

Cristina: Ah, okay. They do eat nectar as well. But that's not the only thing they do.

Jack: Yes. The fact that they have any. The fact that they're eating living things immediately makes your baby stupid by default. I don't know why, but if you eat anything that isn't a plant, your babies are dumb. There's a pattern there.

Cristina: No, we don't know if herbivores are. Babies are that smart that they know everything with their food or whatever.

Jack: It would be like, can a. Does a baby deer know? Right.

Cristina: Yeah. They still feel like they have to figure out what's the best plant to eat because they can eat the wrong plant and then die of Food poisoning or something. So they gotta still be taught something. It's not all natural, is it?

Jack: I guess. Yeah. So at about two weeks of age, a fawn will start browsing tender vegetation and learn from its mother what plants it eats.

Cristina: Booyah. Wait, how long? Two weeks. Oh my God.

Jack: S**** on the all. All the other things that eat living things. Crapping on it. Lightning speed.

Cristina: Yeah, but it's not automatic either. There's nothing that just automatically knows what to eat. Maybe fish.

Jack: You think there's. Okay. Screwfish. You don't think there's any mammal that just born knowing?

Cristina: No, no. I think they have to figure it out. There's some learning curve going on. You can't just naturally know. Okay, this is what I eat. Maybe insects, maybe frogs. No, frogs have a whole life cycle thing going on. Yeah, frogs are weird, complicated thing going on.

Jack: Additionally, a frog is not an insect.

Cristina: No, I'm just naming animals.

Jack: But insects are not animals.

Cristina: Whatever.

Jack: And spiders are. Arachnids.

Cristina: Yes. Well, I'm talking about creatures then.

Jack: Living creature just born knowing what to do.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Fish for sure.

Cristina: And spiders for sure. Right.

Jack: Yeah, there's probably. Probably all the insects.

Cristina: All the insects, yeah.

Jack: Yeah. I don't think anybody taught an ant how to go be an ant. I just thought this is kind of. Again, it's automatic behavior.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: If you have. If you're entirely automatic behavior, then you're good to go.

Cristina: Yes, but I guess it's not the same with mammals.

Jack: No, Mammals have a whole learning issue going on. So do birds, for whatever reason.

Cristina: Yes. Yes, they do. Except for like one bird I found that it's not. Well, the parent doesn't baby the babies, I guess is.

Jack: What do you mean? Is this born smart?

Cristina: Yes. Well, I don't know if it's born smart, but the parents, like. You know how all birds usually incubate their babies by sitting on them? Yeah, they don't do that. They build a mound that's like a pit for the eggs to stay warm.

Jack: Yeah, I've heard of that. A couple of birds did that.

Cristina: And this one, the. It's called a megapod. Megapod. Megapod. I hope I'm saying that right. Megapods. Megapods. Have you heard this bird?

Jack: No.

Cristina: It looks like a chicken or a rooster. I'm not sure.

Jack: Foul of some sort.

Cristina: Yeah, yeah, they're cute, but yeah, like, they don't take care of their babies like other birds. Like, most birds sit on their babies. These birds don't. And then their babies fly away after 24 hours.

Jack: After they hatch.

Cristina: Well, they don't fly away. They can fly within 24 hours of hatching.

Jack: Hatching, yes.

Cristina: I'm not. I don't know if they can fly away and then just disappear.

Jack: That's pretty hardcore. So that's a super bird.

Cristina: Yeah, and. Yeah, that's why.

Jack: That's pretty impressive. So there's a super bird that within 24 hours. You know what's really haunting me though? I'm just over here thinking about, like, what could really f*** with a hippo. That's all that. I. I'm over all this other s***. Like, I want to take out a hippo. That's it. I just want to kill. I want the one thing that could body a hippo. And the first thing that came to mind was like, what's the largest snake in the world?

Cristina: What? Why would that come to mind?

Jack: Because the snake can eat almost anything. And then in doing that's true, I look this up and it's like, nah, man.

Cristina: Not even the biggest.

Jack: No, the biggest snake could not handle. It's too. It's too. A hippos too big. It'd be like trying to eat an elephant in one shot.

Cristina: Okay, so I'm guessing a snake hasn't eaten an elephant either, right?

Jack: Yeah, for sure. It's too exaggerated. It's really probably the largest snakes ever.

Cristina: What?

Jack: Couldn't eat a hippo, but could they.

Cristina: Eat a alligator or something?

Jack: Easily. Easily the biggest snakes ever. Easily.

Cristina: Like, how big can it get though the animal that eats?

Jack: Pretty big. There's some snakes that have a width of three feet.

Cristina: I can't eat a horse though.

Jack: A width of three feet and then it could expand that.

Cristina: Snakes are stretchy, but not enough to. Has there been a snake that ate a horse? That's what I want to know.

Jack: We're trying to kill a hippo. Why are you trying to kill a horse?

Cristina: I don't know. Because it's smaller. But it's not.

Jack: It's a pretty big animal.

Cristina: It's not compared to a hippo.

Jack: Yeah, fair enough. That's very tiny.

Cristina: Although I don't imagine, like, how the snake would have gotten to the horse. That would be crazy. So what can kill a hippo?

Jack: So first the horse. A python could eat a horse?

Cristina: Oh my gosh.

Jack: Yeah. In fact, Dr. Google says a Burmese.

Cristina: Python can eat a horse.

Jack: Can eat a horse.

Cristina: I wonder if it has eaten a horse. Are they just saying, like, from the size its stomach can get?

Jack: No, here's. Here's what I'll say. Here's what I'll say. A snake can easily eat a horse because a horse is not absorbently fat. You crush the horse.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Its legs fold, it goes into your body. It is about roughly like two humans.

Cristina: But has it done that?

Jack: Don't know. Probably. We wouldn't know. We haven't seen all the horses and all the snakes. We haven't seen all the horse snakes. Interaction interactions, you know. Yeah, but like physical ability alone. H*** no. A snake cannot f*** with a hippo. A hippos as wide as it is tall.

Cristina: So what can do it Eat a.

Jack: Hippo if it wasn't a snake. That's why I thought snake. If it wasn't a snake. It's just not happening. No, it's just not happening.

Cristina: A shark. I don't know how that situation.

Jack: Fair enough. It would have to be that we're not talking mammals anymore, we're not talking predators. We're just at this point like what random animal who couldn't even encounter a hippo would eat a hippo?

Cristina: Yeah. Okay, so then shark works. Okay.

Jack: No, a shark wouldn't like.

Cristina: I'm pretty sure it's too random.

Jack: It's pretty random. Okay, okay, you want to know about shark immediately into. Into forums with some experts and some casuals and the experts immediately jump into saying a great white is the comparison you got to make. That's the top of the line when it comes to sharks. Now, problem being, if any shark or if any creature were to take out a hippo, it would have to be in water where you could find the hippo. And the hippo is not the supreme being. If the hip. If there were to be any animal to survive a great white attack, it would, interestingly enough, be a hippo. So this is the best comparison because it's the water creature that would most likely survive a great white attack and the great white would. And the creature that the great white would struggle the most with simultaneously, these are exactly what it is. So the great white can take out most things. The hippo would be the thing it would struggle most with. And what is most likely to survive the great white attack? It won't be the hippo.

Cristina: So we have no idea what could take them. A hippo still.

Jack: Well, the idea here would be the hippo is faster than a human in the water, but not faster than a fish in the water. So the hippo would have the. The clumsy difficulty happening in the water as compared to a shark. It's very clumsy. And the shark could literally swim circles around it. Yeah, the shark does have the lack of reverse, that's a problem. A lot of sharks can't back up.

Cristina: Another bigger bite.

Jack: The hippo has a bigger bite, Definitely.

Cristina: Has the rougher skin as well.

Jack: Yes. Sharks just happen to be so dangerous. They don't need the sharpest, I mean, the thickest skin, but they do have tougher teeth. While the hippo on the other hand has not the toughest teeth but the biggest mouth. So it could have a lot. Now it has way more pressure in its jaw than a shark. This is pretty like experts hopping popped in here immediately they're just like, this is a fascinating question. So the hippo or the shark, if the shark is hungry enough, it would be desperate enough and just maybe persist and that, that could probably tip the scale. The hippo wouldn't try to eat the shark, it would try to kill the shark, but it has less motivation than the shark has.

Cristina: But they're both doing it to survive.

Jack: What do you mean?

Cristina: The shark needs to eat the hipple to survive and the hippo needs to kill off the shark to survive?

Jack: Yes. Okay, fair enough. Here's the hippo will feel less problems happening, the shark will feel more. The hippo's used to crap trying to with it, but it's always the victor, so it's less worried about things.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: The shark is like, if I don't eat this thing, I'm gonna die. The desperation might be the fuel.

Cristina: Okay, man.

Jack: Interesting. Yes.

Cristina: But is there a better animal or is this the best we can find? Like.

Jack: Well, somebody just. You said shark.

Cristina: Yeah, yeah.

Jack: So I found shark.

Cristina: No. Yeah, but we can think of something better.

Jack: What would be better than a shark? It seems to be the most balanced match. We'd have to find something that's into scale. I suppose the argument would be is there a whale big enough to one shot? A hippo?

Cristina: No way. A blue whale. It's pretty big.

Jack: How big?

Cristina: Bigger than like a bunch of elephants.

Jack: How many elephants equals a blue whale?

Cristina: 14 to 21.

Jack: So it's excessively large.

Cristina: It's humongous. It wouldn't do anything to the hippo, though. I can't imagine that it would. I don't think blue whales eat meat or anything.

Jack: They probably do, just not casually like that.

Cristina: But orcas can do something. Maybe.

Jack: Orcas?

Cristina: Orcas, they can kill whales. The blue whale, I mean.

Jack: Fair enough. Some of them can flat out eat a whale.

Cristina: Eat a whale?

Jack: Yes. Now that they would. I mean, what the h***. I said whale. I mean, I guess they couldn't eat a whale. They would Gang up and just like mess it up. Fight it like a gang. Rape it or something.

Cristina: They would kill it. They would kill a young whale.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: I don't know if they'll eat it.

Jack: Maybe they eat it, but a whale will definitely body a hippo.

Cristina: Yeah, it's huge.

Jack: So will it elephant. Of course.

Cristina: Elephants are hu. Well, I guess compared to hippos, they're pretty big. Yeah, but who's smarter? Cat versus a hippo versus elephant.

Jack: I think it would be an elephant by miles.

Cristina: It's bigger and smarter.

Jack: It's bigger and smarter. It's way more powerful and just one of the most intelligent beings on earth, period.

Cristina: I don't see an elephant fighting a hippo though. Unless a hippo tried to mess with it for fun.

Jack: Yeah, Like a hippo would be like, well, he's an idiot, whatever.

Cristina: And then he will lose.

Jack: It's weird. A hippos think of us as human more than we think of hippos. That's a living thing. Not hippos, elephants. Elephants see humans as humans more than elephants see elephants as a thinking creature.

Cristina: Say that again.

Jack: Elephants see humans as humans. We're thinking. We're critical. They see that more than an elephant will see a person be completely normal and register that they are people or something like that. I don't know. I lost my train of thought.

Cristina: Are you saying the elephant sees a person more than a person?

Jack: Yes. A person feels an elephant isn't conscious and elephant knows a human is.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: But outside the point we know elephant would body a hippo.

Cristina: Yes, that's the main thing. The elephant be the hippo.

Jack: That's the main lesson in life.

Cristina: Yes. We've done it. We figured it out. It's an elephant.

Jack: Yes. Yeah. So I guess that's the solution. An elephant and a blue whale will both body a hippo.

Cristina: Well, doesn't count. Because it wouldn't.

Jack: Fair enough. If it had to, it would.

Cristina: If it had to, it would. Would it?

Jack: I don't know. It wouldn't. But if it had to, it would.

Cristina: What about the hippo versus the orca? Wouldn't it be the same thing?

Jack: Why?

Cristina: Because if a orca. What? No. Or was it a shark? What did you say before? It was a shark. A starving shark versus a hippo. The starving shark will win.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Because it needs to. Yeah. Yeah.

Jack: Essentially it needs. In order to survive.

Cristina: Yeah. So wouldn't it be the same with the. With what was the thing that we were just talking about? The orca?

Jack: No, hippo.

Cristina: The whale.

Jack: Yes. The other One.

Cristina: The whale versus the hippo. I can't remember.

Jack: It doesn't matter. Point is, hippos are pretty hard to be in.

Cristina: Elephants are probably harder and smarter. And smarter.

Jack: So it is what it is.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Anyways, if you guys like how absurd this conversation was, you can feel free to find us on social media. JustConvopod.

Cristina: Remember to subscribe, rate, and review the show.

Jack: Yes. Word of mouth is kind overpowered. It's awesome. It'll bring you riches.

Cristina: Riches. And let someone who might like this.

Jack: Show know about it, because word of mouth matters.

Cristina: Exactly. This has been the Rambling podcast. Take nothing personal, and thanks for listening. Bye.

Jack: Which is weird because it means to some degree, Martin Luther King is also connected to Santa.

Cristina: That is what? Weird. Yeah. But does he know about the penguins? Do you think he knew about the penguins?

Jack: Who?

Cristina: Martha Luther King?

Jack: I don't know if he knew about the penguins. I know that anybody who has to cross the Arctic must interact with the penguins.

Cristina: And if you are, we just recently learned about chimeras. So how long have they been existing?

Jack: Oh, I'm calling them a chimera. I don't really know. Again, there's no. I don't know what they are. Oh, it's an assumption.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: I don't know what they are. Yeah, they're not birds, because we know that's bullshit.

Cristina: They're not related to Scooby Doo.

Jack: They're maybe. I don't know. They come from the other side of the wall. I could not tell you anything. I am not allowed to research over there. I can venture over there, but it's not our business. Yeah, it's not our job to go over the wall and do anything lame.

Cristina: But I guess, yeah, we work with.

Jack: Earthly affairs inside the wall and anything supernatural outside the planet.

Cristina: Outside the planet, man. Well, how. But how much supernatural things are happening right outside the wa.

Jack: Don't know. Not allowed to look.

Cristina: Not allowed to look. What if it's helpful, though?

Jack: Doesn't matter. We got to figure it out. What's in here?

Cristina: Wow. That's lame. Do you think we could, though? Because the other Earth has an Arctic. What if we examine their Arctic? Or it would be different.

Jack: I'm guessing it'll probably be different. I don't know. There's parallel nests going on.

Cristina: Yeah. So maybe they have a wand.

Jack: Depends. Is there wall? Is there. Do they have flat Earthers? I don't know.

Cristina: Good morning. Good morning. The podcast is hosted by Christina Collazo and Jack Thomas, produced by Lynn Taylor, and published by greatthoughts.info art by Zero Lupo and logo by Seth McAllister. With social media managed by Amber Black.

Rambling 138: The Lore of JCP

JCP Lore.PNG

What happen to the original hosts of the JCP? Why have there been so many clones? What is the one arm eye patch wearing clone doing right now? How many cockroach children does Jack have? And if Cristy’s backyard portal safe for tourism? The duo unpack the lore of The Just Conversation Podcast!

+Episode Details

Topics Discussed

  • Giving Listeners Cancer
  • Subhumans
  • Reptilians
  • Magic Cat People
  • Universe 2 Mars
  • Cockroach War
  • Quantum Computer
  • Time Machine
  • Portal
  • Clones
  • Ghosts
  • Zombie Island
  • Ish Hacking
  • Werewolves
  • Adrenochrome
  • Clinton Road
  • Creepy Pasta

Our Links:

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

Twitter - https://twitter.com/JustConvoPod

Facebook - https://facebook.com/justconvopod

Instagram -https://instagram.com/justconvopod


+Transcript

Cristina: This program contains strong themes meant for a mature audience. Discretion is advised.

Jack: Going live in 5, 4.

Cristina: What does live mean?

Jack: Welcome to the Just Conversation podcast, the show where we ground humanity's most absurd and baffling ideas in childish ways. I'm your host, Jack.

Cristina: And I'm your host, Christina.

Jack: And if you haven't yet, remember to hit that subscribe button to get notified when second episodes are released.

Cristina: Also, this show is most enjoyable with a listening partner to share opinions and ideas on topics we discuss.

Jack: Yes. So be sure to go find somebody, and as usual, thanks for listening. No, that's Michael. Michael. What is his f****** last name? It's my. I don't even know. It's Michael from Vsauce. And as always, thanks for listening. As always, for somebody to listen by endangering them.

Cristina: Yes, that's.

Jack: That's the moral of this show. I'll never tell you anything but endanger somebody and force them to listen to it.

Cristina: Because.

Jack: Because life.

Cristina: Why? What do you get out of it?

Jack: Listeners.

Cristina: Listeners. Yeah.

Jack: Yeah. We definitely have something to gain.

Cristina: But they die immediately. No, they don't.

Jack: No, they don't.

Cristina: Cancer.

Jack: They die slowly.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: They live long enough to tell other.

Cristina: People they can still continue listening to the show.

Jack: Yes. Until they do die a sure. Short, short, short death. Not. I guess, not a short death. A really long death, but a short life.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: I don't know. Is this good? I don't know. It is.

Jack: It's not affecting us.

Cristina: Yeah, well, our listeners could have a very long life and we'd have.

Jack: Why is that our problem, whether they live long or not?

Cristina: It's not. It's just like we're losing listeners eventually when they. When they die. We would have.

Jack: They. It's a trade off. They. The one.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Let's say they tell five people, then we lose one. We made four listeners in the exchange. It's ever growing, so we have to.

Cristina: But why do we have to give them cancer, though?

Jack: Like, we're not giving them cancer. They're getting cancer. There's a difference. I'm not. Like, I'm gonna give you cancer. Like, it's just an unfortunate side effect of listening to the show.

Cristina: Okay, so it doesn't. It's not our fault.

Jack: It's not our fault whatsoever. Yes, it's our fault, but not our intention.

Cristina: But we need them to listen.

Jack: Yeah, we need them to listen because then they can get us more listeners. And as such goes the domino effect.

Cristina: But why do we have to force them to get more listeners?

Jack: We're not Forcing them to get more listeners. We're making them force other people to get more listeners. They have an option to let their children be in danger. I'm not like forcing them to do anything.

Cristina: I guess it's. It's so wrong.

Jack: What, that I'm threatening their families? Yeah, it's totally fine, man.

Cristina: Why?

Jack: How many of them have not listened? And how many children have I harmed? None. They always listen.

Cristina: They always.

Jack: They always listen.

Cristina: This plan always works.

Jack: Always works. 100%, 100% of the time. It's a flawless plan. It's never once planned.

Cristina: But now that you share that news, someone's going to be like, maybe he doesn't kill these people's children. So I'm just gonna.

Jack: Well, no one. That's not. Because everybody's done it. There's no reason for me to kill anybody's child.

Cristina: Yeah, but the person listening doesn't understand that they.

Jack: Why don't they understand? You're assuming our listeners are stupid now.

Cristina: No, just this one listener who's like, I'm just gonna see.

Jack: So they're gonna put their child in danger just to test the waters?

Cristina: Yes. They're the gambling type of person. They're addicted to gambling.

Jack: And they're like, this is the ultimate gamble. I gotta see if I' ma win this one.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Interesting. Interesting. I bet there's people who gamble like that.

Cristina: Whoa. That's pretty risky. But I guess. Well then we'll find out if you mean it or not.

Jack: I do. I do mean it. I will do whatever to get listeners.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: I will go the extra mile.

Cristina: Would you cure the cancer that they're getting?

Jack: I'll do almost anything for listeners.

Cristina: Cuz that's something we could work on, I guess.

Jack: I mean, we have the resources. We have nothing but subhuman power and scientists. We got the freemasons lab.

Cristina: So we got.

Jack: We. We literally have hyper technologically advanced reptilians in imprisoned. And we have cats with magic powers.

Cristina: Magic to cure the cancer.

Jack: We could literally cure the cancer with magic.

Cristina: Why don't we?

Jack: Because then they'd be less committed with the cancer they're all in. They're already. They've already got the cancer. They might as well continue listening. Continue listening and getting other people to listen, lest it be in vain.

Cristina: I guess.

Jack: So like in theory we could just like hey, cat people, tell us how to cure cancer and then we would. But like, it's not helping us to cure cancer. I'd be going particularly out of my way to a different planet.

Cristina: We have Them on a different planet. Mars. Yeah. Okay.

Jack: On Mars from Universe 2.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: We haven't gone back there. I have no idea if that worked out, you know, over there. Yeah, that's done. Planet X destroyed that, right?

Cristina: Yeah, d***. Pretty sure. No, wait, no, we destroyed that.

Jack: We took their Mars.

Cristina: Yeah. We didn't destroy by taking, by stopping planet. I mean the planet X thing that was over here now over there.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah, we solved ours by taking theirs because we blew up our own Mars to stop the cockroach people.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So kind of problematic over there. We're fine using our nifty technology to save our. We saved our solar system by destroying a different one.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And for sure we might have been the cause of what was gonna destroy our system in the first place, but we, we saved it and that's the important part.

Cristina: Did we have anything to do with that?

Jack: We destroyed. Well, I destroyed original Mars because. Ah, cockroaches.

Cristina: Yes, that happened.

Jack: Which is ironic because I ended up marrying one anyways.

Cristina: Yes, well, you're married now.

Jack: Okay, I've been married. You had that same reaction before.

Cristina: Really?

Jack: Yes, exactly the same way.

Cristina: I thought you were just dating. I don't know.

Jack: Was I just dating? No, I think I'm married to. I think I've been married for a while.

Cristina: Okay, then. How many children do you have? Aren't like roaches? Don't they have many children?

Jack: And she's like a good 12ft tall, so it's like weird.

Cristina: So how many children are there? Does she have no children? It doesn't. That part doesn't work.

Jack: No kids? We. It's impossible for us to breed together.

Cristina: Okay, but if she was a breeding cockroach, how many children would she have?

Jack: I don't know. Many.

Cristina: Many, many, many. It is like that. Like with real roaches or is that not right? Is it just bunnies?

Jack: That I have no idea. Maybe.

Cristina: I feel like it's a bunch.

Jack: Like roaches just have a f*** ton. Yeah, I feel like that's wrong.

Cristina: You think so?

Jack: I think so. I think so. Because think about it, when you see a roach, there aren't like a f*** ton of roaches around there. Usually that only happens when there's something particularly disgusting going on that they start kind of collecting in an area. But when you see one roach, you kind of just see one roach. There isn't like a lot of roaches which goes like. If you see spider, you'll usually see multiple spiders in the same area. There's a spider over here, there's another web over there. There's a spider over there. But like a roach. You'll see one roach in a roam. A whole house and then. Okay, it's gone.

Jack: That's interesting. Right?

Cristina: I don't know. I think it's still.

Jack: They have a bunch and they just like, hide. Like there's one scout.

Cristina: There's this one scout. Yeah. Once you kill him, they know. They know.

Jack: And send the other one out. Yeah, you can go now. You've been promoted because he has died.

Cristina: Yeah. Like in a year from now, you'll be there.

Jack: Interesting. Interesting. And there's a bunch of cockroach people still out there. We destroyed your planet, but they were already exploring space.

Cristina: Oh, crap.

Jack: So there's a bunch of roaches out there. Probably.

Cristina: Oh, my gosh.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Don't get in trouble.

Jack: I mean, they're good. They don't know what happened. They're just. I mean, when they get back home, they're just gonna see us having imprisoned.

Cristina: Exactly.

Jack: Be like these guys. This ain't even ours.

Cristina: Maybe they'll be scared of us, though. Like they won't start a war with.

Jack: Us because they're like, these people destroy all our people and imprison all these other creatures.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Cuz we got. Do we got stuff up there.

Cristina: We got werewolves, we got sea monsters.

Jack: We got sea monsters. We got f******. We got so much s***.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So we got resources for days. On top of the fact that we have somewhere down here on Earth, our quantum computer that can do anything and simulate anything. We have a time machine that can take us not just forward, but back. And in your backyard, there is still a portal that we have completely ignored because we have no idea what to do with that.

Cristina: No. We could send some of these roaches in there or something.

Jack: We need to capture some of these roaches. And I'm not sending my wife in there.

Cristina: No.

Jack: Best bet. Send the reptilian in there. We have all of them enslaved.

Cristina: I feel like the right thing to do is to send a clone. No, not a clone.

Jack: A subhuman.

Cristina: A subhuman.

Jack: Fair enough. Fair enough. So the right thing, Keep the Reptilians. We don't know what they might be useful for.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But the Chinese pump out sub humans like there's no tomorrow. So we could just send one of them through.

Cristina: Yep.

Jack: Fair enough. I like that plan. And they'll do it without a fight. The reptilian might be like, no, I don't want to. And then it'll be all sad and annoying.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But the subhuman Will be like, yeah, yeah, this is my job. It's my job. They wouldn't even talk. They'll just nod and walk straight through, just mad, obedient.

Cristina: Oh, my gosh. And then what happens?

Jack: Well, we know nothing happens because Ish jumped straight through and didn't die.

Cristina: I'm pretty sure he died. Are you sure?

Jack: Yeah, he just jumped straight through. You think he died?

Cristina: I don't remember. I feel like there was, like, so many different versions of him jumping in.

Jack: And dying because he also. Yeah, no, there was already. No, it's livable. At least there was already a version over there he tried to kill. It was a mess.

Cristina: There was a version of. But that was before. Was that before or after? Okay.

Jack: I don't know. I know Ish. Some version of Ish lived through the portal.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: That's a fact. We didn't get to explore too long because he was too impulsive. Jumped in and came back and was like, ha. But, like, we know a subhuman won't die just by going through.

Cristina: Yes, okay.

Jack: They might die going farther, but that's a risk I'm willing to take.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And they can come back with information if they don't die.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And if they do die, we'll send two just in case. Between two of them, they can handle whatever killed them.

Cristina: Really? But we wouldn't know. Unless. You think we could just videotape the other side or something?

Jack: Yes, that'd be great.

Cristina: That would be. And then. And then I don't know what we do.

Jack: I don't know. Because we can't move it. It's not like a physical thing we could just grab and walk with. It's just there. Touching it is the other side.

Cristina: That is pretty dangerous.

Jack: It's just floating in your backyard.

Cristina: What do we do with it then? Man, it feels like we should do something with it, though. It's pretty epic.

Jack: I know. We. Okay, we could, in theory, knock down your house.

Cristina: What?

Jack: Build an entire thing around the portal and charge people to go in.

Cristina: We could do that. That sounds very like our zombie island thing.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: That was successful.

Jack: Holy s***. I forgot we had zombie island, which was really successful, but nobody left that island after they got there.

Cristina: Yes. And then we turned it into a toilet paper castle thing.

Jack: Yeah. Where the zombies were kind of protecting us from the virus.

Cristina: Yeah. You forgot about that.

Jack: I forgot about that. We own so many things. The lore of this podcast has gotten.

Cristina: So out of hand because we stole the island from. I think we stole it from you. Or from Dana White. I can't remember.

Jack: Oh, my God. Is this Fight Island?

Cristina: Yeah, I think it was Fight Island.

Jack: I think we stole it. I think we just like built our s*** on his island and then the zombies kind of offed everything that was left. I don't remember how this played out, but yeah, we got Zombie island. I'm pretty sure it was Fight Island.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: But then we made a toilet paper castle in the survive. Because the toilet paper, you know, it defends against the. The virus.

Cristina: Yeah, I feel that's right. Yeah.

Jack: This is basically recap episode. Trying to piece together the narrative of our show. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Because we've done a couple of things, in fact, using the time machine. I remember I went forward in time and saw a version of me that was doing things terrible.

Cristina: Did you?

Jack: Yeah. Like sending people into the future in a touristy kind of way? Yes, the same, I guess the same way that I would be doing with the portal in the first place.

Cristina: Yeah. You think you were making money off of it? No. You were trying to stop the end of the world.

Jack: The cat people who were taking over. That's how we started chasing them to find them in the great Void.

Cristina: Yes. We only found them because there was a version of you who knew about them and was trying to change how much people. I don't know. What was his goal.

Jack: Also, we solved a problem. And I didn't think about this. We can jump anywhere in space now because we know how the pyramids work.

Cristina: Oh, yeah.

Jack: And the cat people in Lake Loch Ness that were being protected by Nessie told us that their people are in the great Void.

Cristina: Oh, yes, we know. We don't know what's in there. But I guess now we know. Now we know we can't actually go in there.

Jack: Except we can, because we can use the pyramids to teleport us straight to the crate void in one clean shot. Just be there one second later. And we know they know the coordinates.

Cristina: Oh, my gosh. So then that has to be another adventure.

Jack: I guess we can actually go kill the cat gods.

Cristina: Why? Why?

Jack: Or capture them, interrogate them for God like things. I don't know. Point is, we can go solve our cat problem.

Cristina: I don't even know if we have a cat problem. I don't know how you're.

Jack: Originally. Originally something resulted in cat people taking over the world.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And what I did was continuously send humans to different points in time from the future of after humanity started declining to counteract the growth of cat people.

Cristina: Yes. With humans. To have sex with humans. Yes.

Jack: Multiply and then overthrow the cat people before they became too strong. Okay, so I stopped the future from being about cat people. I did that. That was me.

Cristina: A version of you.

Jack: A version of me who's dead now or hiding.

Cristina: Hiding.

Jack: I think that one's hiding.

Cristina: Yeah, I think so.

Jack: Also, there were a lot of clones. I'm not even the original person hosting this show. No, neither are you.

Cristina: No, but I think there's way more versions of you out there than there are of me.

Jack: I think they're about the same.

Cristina: Really?

Jack: Yeah, I think they're about the same. I just think the one that was gonna be killed of me ran away. Fair enough. There's one more. There's two of me. There's one of you. Yeah, because one version of me also came back. That same one that is hiding came back to kill Jemaine.

Cristina: Yeah. No, I don't think that was the same you. That's a different you.

Jack: That was a different me.

Cristina: There's three of me that slow you that thought the clone of a clone. Clone of a clone tried to kill.

Jack: You, but couldn't tell the difference between me and Jemaine, who clearly look very different.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And that clone was a one armed. What was the story with that?

Cristina: He's got one arm robot.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Yeah. And we saw him on a billboard.

Jack: We f****** saw this guy in the real world. That's crazy. That's crazy. We just saw him outside.

Cristina: Yep. So he's doing something. He's got a modeling career? I guess so.

Jack: Yeah. That's crazy. Yo, man, man, the retarded clone f***** that up.

Cristina: Why?

Jack: Because wasn't he supposed to kill that guy who was trying to kill who turned. That's the reason that Jermaine was a ghost in the first place.

Cristina: Because he was trying to kill you?

Jack: No, Jermaine was a ghost the whole time. And he was killed by the guy with one arm and one eye, which my clone was supposed to kill but couldn't tell the difference between me and the guy with one arm and one eye, Right?

Cristina: No, the clone is the guy with one arm and one eye.

Jack: Holy crap. What happened to him?

Cristina: I don't know.

Jack: Did we not get to the bottom? We never got to the bottom of what happened to my clone.

Cristina: How? Jermaine remembers the killer that killed him. Yeah, the guy had one arm and.

Jack: One eye, which was just my clone.

Cristina: Your clone? Yes. Who thought he was killing you, but he killed Jermaine.

Jack: And then Jermaine became a ghost?

Cristina: Yes. How he happened. How this happened to him, I don't know, maybe it was part of the copy copy process. Messed him up like such a s*****.

Jack: Copy that he had one arm less and one eyeless. And so he got a robot arm. He got a robot arm. I don't understand. I don't understand what happened. But he ended up modeling, which helped out, which is typical. Models are stupid, on average.

Cristina: Oh, and he's probably not trying to kill you anymore. He probably thinks he did the right thing.

Jack: He's too dumb to realize he did something wrong, but. So there are three clones. There's that r***** out there, and there's the one who's hiding, who was supposed to be dead, who was running this before me but didn't get killed, who I believe Jermaine was supposed to kill.

Cristina: What?

Jack: Something like that. He was original living. Jermaine was here to kill somebody.

Cristina: Really?

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: I don't remember that. Okay.

Jack: There's some. Something's happening there. I don't remember that too clearly.

Cristina: Mm. He might have been.

Jack: We simulated a lot of things using the quantum computer.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Trying to simulate consciousness, trying to tell if consciousness affects movement or not. Just running real pressing issue experiments. It's really interesting. I think that's the only thing we've used without just total recklessness.

Cristina: No, and. Wait, the whole two people. We had two people to see the whole test with the. With the ship, with Baan people. That was in the quantum computer.

Jack: I have no idea what you're talking about. There was lack of description and all of that.

Cristina: The thing about the ship where if you remove all the parts. Is it the same ship?

Jack: Oh, the ship of Theseus.

Cristina: Yes, but we did it with people. Was that.

Jack: Did we do that with people?

Cristina: We did it with two people. It was the same person, but twice, I think.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. No, it wasn't the same person twice. It was. That was just a thought experiment without a computer. It was saying, like, if you think the person is still alive, but you don't know they died, to you, that person is living.

Jack: So it goes to show that your thought of something is more effective than the truth of something.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And in the case of the ship, whichever ship you feel is the one you experience it with, which would be the one that's the new one, because to you it was consistent.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That's real ship. Because that's what you're projecting all your while to the person who shows up late. They see all the panels on the new ship, which is the old ship's parts.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And they're like, that's a ship. I went on. And you're both technically right.

Cristina: Yes. Okay. Yeah. Yeah.

Jack: But we did run consciousness. We did have the. We did have two people, but it was in the ship of Theseus thing. It was testing to see whether consciousness would affect a person at all. By putting consciousness in one person and not in the other and then overlapping them. Phase.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So that they move and behave in exactly the same way.

Cristina: What was that in the machine that.

Jack: Was running the machine? Yes.

Cristina: Okay. Yes. That's what I remember. All right.

Jack: Yeah. And then if they ever break symmetry, then the one with consciousness is the one who did it because they were affected by something. Their consciousness affected the body.

Cristina: Yeah. That's a great test.

Jack: Yeah. Yeah. If we could run that in real life, that'd be phenomenal. But we can't. But that's why we have the quantum computer to run these experiments that would otherwise be impossible.

Cristina: Mm. What else have we done? That stuff with Ish. You and him hacking together or I guess, versus each other. I'm not really sure.

Jack: This is a whole other problem. This is when robots are trying to take over the world.

Cristina: That was when robots are trying. I know. He had a robot buddy.

Jack: He had a robot. Yeah.

Cristina: Oh, he hacked one.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: He hacked one.

Jack: One of the Terminator robot things.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: And then he had the robot carry him. We had a hack off to see who could hack more.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And he was. He was the better hacke.

Cristina: That's what happened.

Jack: He was the better hacker. That was an interesting time. We've been involved in a couple of wars with the cat people, with the reptilians, with the cockroach people, with the robots.

Cristina: Crazy that the zombies didn't take over. But it's a good thing that we just have them on an island.

Jack: Yeah. We controlled the zombies.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: On the flip side, we also control the lizard people, the cat people. Like, we got pretty. We've got a pretty good grasp on things.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: The power of the Illuminati, right there.

Cristina: Mm. But we don't have control of any most mythical creatures.

Jack: No.

Cristina: Because way too many.

Jack: There's way too many. And it's hard to f*** with them because you got to track them down first.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Just getting the werewolves was not easy.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: That was hard work. It took a lot. We were. We all the invisible. We got more verse in werewolves than f****** Sam and Dean.

Cristina: We had to make some. What was the easiest way to. To lay down on a sunny day or something? On a Wednesday. On a Wednesday. In water. I don't.

Jack: We Needed to find a werewolf footprint that was wet, and then you need to lay down in the puddle.

Cristina: You gotta drink the water, I think.

Jack: Oh, really?

Cristina: Then take a nap. On a Wednesday?

Jack: No, the easier way was the belt, right?

Cristina: Oh, yeah. You just put the belt on, you turn into a werewolf.

Jack: A wolf's belt. A belt made of a wolf, I guess.

Cristina: So like a furry belt.

Jack: Then you're a werewolf, and then you're a werewolf. That's how it goes.

Cristina: It's pretty simple. And then you take it off and you're human again.

Jack: We also found out that werewolves were inherently not a thing to begin with. They became a thing after people spoke of them. Because beforehand it was just Native Americans running around doing ritual things. And somehow between point A, when colonizers showed up and saw people running in the woods that looked like werewolves, and now when we caught a werewolf, they became real. Because originally it was just people.

Cristina: It was just people.

Jack: And we actually found out how that happened, which was adrenochrome.

Cristina: Adrenochrome.

Jack: Adrenochrome created werewolves. Boom.

Cristina: Yes. Because the church somehow.

Jack: Yes. And the church is the colonizers.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Because they brought Christianity over.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So there really wasn't. Wow. We connected those dots pretty nicely. There really wasn't werewolves. Then the colonizers showed up, saw people who were like werewolves, and they're like, we would probably do this for real. Gave them adrenochrome, created werewolves. Some of those werewolves got feral and became other creatures.

Cristina: Yes. Yeah.

Jack: But werewolves were there.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Interesting. And this happened with many things, including the groundhog that tells us how long seasons last. Because that's his power.

Cristina: It's the lame power. He's got the lamest ability.

Jack: It matters to us for whatever reason.

Cristina: Matters to farmers.

Jack: He turned it into a whole career, I guess.

Cristina: I mean, right now it doesn't matter. I'm sure when it did matter, it mattered.

Jack: And now we just honor him because he mattered.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Now it's a respect thing.

Cristina: Yeah, it's respect right now.

Jack: Yeah. It's like you helped us when we needed you most. Now we keep you hooked up until you no longer want to be.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: It's a respect thing.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Does that make sense?

Cristina: I think so. The whole it has its own language thing is pretty ridiculous, though.

Jack: I have a theory. What if we take our time machine to Clinton Road, we put it in the woods, and we hit forward. And we hit forward at a slower pace than crazy flying through time. But faster than now or even slower than now in the time bubble that we form nothing is being altered because we create our own time bubble. But if we can still see the outside being altered, would we notice inconsistencies in how space and time shift around us? Right. If we're walking through Clinton Road and things are changing at random because there are time bubbles, then we don't notice because we're in the time bubble that we seamlessly walk through.

Cristina: But if we could take yourself out. Yeah.

Jack: If we could be in our own time bubble, would we see things that random around us changing and shifting because of the time bubbles? Yes, because we removed ourselves from it. We're not being affected.

Cristina: And if it's not time bubbles, we'll see what it is happening.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: If there is something else. Could be a bunch of fairies playing tricks on people. Yeah.

Jack: Because fairies are douchebags.

Cristina: Yeah. So I didn't realize that could be an option too.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: They love doing tricks on people.

Jack: Good. They could. And some of them are powerful enough to make it seem like you've entered some whole other area and s***.

Cristina: Oh, my gosh.

Jack: Could be fairies.

Cristina: Whoa. I didn't even consider that as an option.

Jack: I thought aliens, but aliens could also be an option. Maybe people are just getting kidnapped and they are getting, like. By aliens who control so such advanced technology that they can alter time momentarily and they go into this sort of bubbled universe where they do things to you. They put you back and to you. It's only been a moment. Of course, in some of these instances, it's been hours. Yeah. Some of these instances it has been, like, ridiculously long for the amount of time we feel passed by. So it's like we kind of weren't there for some time.

Cristina: We.

Jack: That is weird. Like, forever. That's some of the most interesting episodes we've had because that was real experiences. And we even called people in. We called Reaper, we called Noona to hear their sides of these stories.

Cristina: Yeah. We're just missing one person side.

Jack: Yep.

Cristina: Who knows if they even remember because it's such a long time ago.

Jack: It was a very long time ago, and it was a very short part of our life, but we all remember it. Everybody we did call remembers it.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And what's weird is the difference in everybody's story. That's crazy.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Everybody had something different happening.

Cristina: Mm. Everyone had a very strange night, but in a very different way. Yes.

Jack: That's. What's the craziest part about that. Those are some of my favorite episodes, man.

Cristina: How else could we explore Clinton Road?

Jack: Definitely with the time machine. We'll Get a new perspective on things.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Alternatively, we could use the quantum computer and simulate all of the wood and see what we see, because we can stop it. Anything at any moment, move around, look at everything.

Cristina: That'd be interesting. Can we see things in the computer? Like, could we put you guys in that?

Jack: Yeah, we can get the computer to simulate us perfectly and just recreate the series of events that we saw.

Cristina: Yeah. Oh, that'd be so crazy.

Jack: Yeah, that's. That's what it's there for. We do whatever the h*** we want.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: I also remember this one time that we simulated a child in the quantum computer who was born not being able to see, not being able to hear, not being able to talk. We just made some horrible human.

Cristina: That is horrible.

Jack: Just so we could see what their thoughts are like. Remember that?

Cristina: I don't. And I don't know. Like, what did we find, though?

Jack: I don't remember.

Cristina: Do you remember? That is a crazy experiment. That seems so wrong because they think.

Jack: There'S nothing that would stop them from thinking their brain is still functional.

Cristina: Yeah, but how do they think if they can't? If they can't, there's no senses.

Jack: Yes. We removed all the senses. But left everything functioning.

Cristina: But left everything functioning.

Jack: Yes, because if we left the tactile sensations, they would think in sensation, like physical touch. If we left scent, they would think in smell. If we left sound, they would think in audible thoughts. Yeah, but we took everything away.

Cristina: Yes. Wow. It's so weird. I feel like I remember something. What are those creepypasta stories that are similar to that, but it's not like a child. It was a person who. They took his senses away from him just to see what would happen. It's. Of course it leads to something creepy.

Jack: Nicki went crazy. Yeah.

Cristina: Yeah. He goes crazy. Then he starts seeing dead people, he says, but they don't believe him. And then I think in the end, he pretty much sees God or something.

Jack: Yes, but this is all happening when they took away his senses. But he could still talk.

Cristina: Yeah, but he could still communicate to them what he.

Jack: Yeah, they took away his sense of touch, of smell, of sound, of sight.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: But he could talk.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And they put this machine to him, and they left him in a room, and little by little, he devolved into madness.

Cristina: Mm. That's pretty crazy.

Jack: I mean, we had a creepypasta episode.

Cristina: We did. I don't think that story was in that creepypasta episode, but that's a creepypasta for sure.

Jack: Yeah. This really cool creep pastas are Cool. I like them.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: The weird f***** up stories.

Cristina: Yeah, it's just fun storytelling. Just campfire storytelling.

Jack: Fun. Yes. It's the Internet's campfire.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And they're so well done. They're way better than campfire stories.

Cristina: Yeah, they are. They're very similar, though. Like. Yeah, the idea is still there. It's very social.

Jack: Yes, yes, yes. The same thing as you. You telling somebody else a thing.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: They're written really well too.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Like, and not just. I don't mean written as in like novelized narration. It's like they're written in a believable way, which is the tool of the Internet. Like, that's how you write something on the Internet to make it scarier.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: You write it like, oh, this is.

Cristina: A post on Reddit happening right now.

Jack: Yeah, there was actually some like that.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Like, people being hot. Actually, some of these aren't even like, creepypastas. Some of these are just weird people. Or not weird people. People posting about weird things.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And they'll be log. Of course, some of them are bullshit, but they're following the format of people who are doing it in places that are real. And I'll be like, hey, there's something weird happening in my house. And I'll post every day to keep you updated. And then this troll just drops off the face of the earth one day.

Cristina: Yes. Usually the friend of the person writes the last post to say, oh, whoever died or mysteriously disappeared or something.

Jack: Yes, yes.

Cristina: He left me this last message to give you guys or whatever. Like, what? But it's part of the fun, I guess.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah. That's crazy, right? Yeah, I like all that kind of stuff. That's totally dope.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: We've. We've gone places.

Cristina: We've gone places through the Internet or through this podcast. All of it.

Jack: Both. All of the above.

Cristina: All of the above. All of the Part of the Internet anyway.

Jack: Yeah, but we also have access to all the information in the world, period. Not just the Internet. We got straight access to the Freemason's library. We have all the resources of the Illuminati.

Cristina: That's true, but the Internet is so much more fun.

Jack: Yeah, well, not really. Sometimes we just go and wander out and do things.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Talk to people. We found out what the real Scooby Doo is like. We had conversations. I tracked down this f****** scientist, saw his work. He just came out of nowhere and disappeared into the ether just as fast. This real life mad scientist out there.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: There's a real guy. People in The Scooby Doo episode, you will hear about a real human who makes chimeras. Who makes chimeras? That's just his thing. He will go wherever he could go. That they'll allow him to make chimeras. And he did.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: With China, our buddies who give us sub humans.

Cristina: He meets Scooby Doo.

Jack: He could have.

Cristina: He could have. He could have. Yes. Okay, we.

Jack: We don't know anything for sure.

Cristina: No, we can guess.

Jack: Yeah. And we know that Scooby Doo was just one of the failed attempts at making his cousin.

Cristina: Which guy is he?

Jack: The gray, like, superhero dog?

Cristina: Yeah. Oh, that was. I don't understand. No, that guy's a robot.

Jack: Was he a robot?

Cristina: I don't know. He's, like, a Transformer robot.

Jack: That's weird. And that's one of the most recent revelations, too. Transformers.

Cristina: Transformers. Yes.

Jack: The fact that God not only made people, he made robots.

Cristina: Or there's two different gods.

Jack: Or just two different gods. Fair enough. We are yet to confirm this information.

Cristina: Yeah. What? I'm very. I can't wait to find out the answer. Especially if it's two different gods, because.

Jack: I mean, something made those gods.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: If there's two gods. We got to go further back.

Cristina: Yes. I wonder if the show even goes that far back, though.

Jack: But just give up at some point.

Cristina: Yeah. I don't know. That's so crazy. How did we even get there? I don't know. Somehow through he man.

Jack: He man led to Transformers. It makes sense.

Cristina: It's. I don't know if it makes sense. Does it make sense?

Jack: I don't know.

Cristina: Is this a clear connection?

Jack: I'm sure we could connect it if we wanted to. That's what we do here at the Just Conversation podcast. We connect dots.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That's our job. That's what we do. We talk about the big pressing issues in the world. We combine all the dots, and it is what it is.

Cristina: We're no different than conspiracy theorists. Don't they do that? They're just connecting dots from different titles of new news titles.

Jack: Yeah, but their dot connecting doesn't inherently make sense. Like, we're trying to ground things. They're just not connecting.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Yeah. We're trying to say this because that. They're just trying to say, this sounds like that.

Cristina: This sounds like that.

Jack: Yeah. Like, I can explain the things we believe with science.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So we. We've. We've been round, and since there's. We even got episodes in which we're just helping people.

Cristina: When do we help people?

Jack: Relationship Advice when we're answering science questions. There was one time that we were just trolling people's answer to complicated paradigm.

Cristina: Yes, recently we helped people convert to Christianity.

Jack: Yes, recently we. We. We jumped on our path towards the light and we tried to bring you guys with us.

Cristina: Yeah, well, yeah, that is. That's so crazy because you can convert someone to it and then convert someone away from it.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, I've mastered the art of doing that. Which then, then brings us to the guests and everything. Right. Like we mentioned germs and we mentioned Ishmael. But like, we've had a multitude of guests on this show. A bunch of interesting people, from musicians to artists, directors, other podcasters. Just a lot going on. Some of them multidisciplinary people.

Cristina: And some of us tried. Some of them tried to convert us.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Two very strange things.

Jack: Like what?

Cristina: Into. I don't know, what's the religion called?

Jack: Oh, the. You're talking about Michael Horn.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: To pull us into the religion of Billy Mayer and his UFO contacts and stuff.

Cristina: Yes. It's very, very interesting.

Jack: Ishmael tried to convince me that he saw h***.

Cristina: Oh, yeah, yeah. You can't disprove him.

Jack: I can't. I can't. I haven't crossed that threshold.

Cristina: That's too crazy. I don't know. We'll see.

Jack: We'll see. He'll be back one day.

Cristina: Yeah, we'll have more stories.

Jack: Actually, he literally has another story about a near death experience. We need to get him back on the show. Oh, like he almost died again.

Cristina: How often does this happen?

Jack: Quite often. And he still thinks it had to do with the llama.

Cristina: No way.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah. It was the one that he didn't have. The llama again.

Cristina: Really? Yeah.

Jack: Which would give way credibility to that llama. Like just really protecting him.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Because the one. The another one time he doesn't have it, boom. Almost dies.

Cristina: Yeah. Maybe he is onto something.

Jack: He got the lucky llama. Interesting little artifact to own.

Cristina: Yes. Man, we have so many different guests. I don't know, there's just so many guests, so many topics, so many.

Jack: Yeah, we're all over the place. Yes, all over the place with it. There's no consistency in anything.

Cristina: No.

Jack: Sometimes our whole episode is fueled by an investigation we're running for the Illuminati. They give us an objective. We do our research and we just share it with you guys and we go do our homework and we go on our mission. We accomplish our mission. We let you guys know everything that happens.

Cristina: Did they give you. The mission to try to get. I forgot the name of the guest, but to get him to kill a baby.

Jack: You're talking about Bran, then.

Cristina: Yes. And the baby shaking.

Jack: The baby shaking.

Cristina: That was pretty intense.

Jack: No, they didn't want me to get him to shake a baby.

Cristina: Oh.

Jack: That was just curiosity. Me playing the devil's advocate, which happens with pretty much every guest.

Cristina: And the trolley. He wasn't the only one you've done that with, have you?

Jack: No, with Cliff from Space Skits. I gave him the trolley experiment. But we had a kid, the kid who was starving.

Cristina: Oh, yes. You get him. Oh, my God. Can't die.

Jack: He can't die. And this guy just made his situation ever worse. Yeah, that was a great trolley experiment.

Cristina: Yes. Just making this poor kid's life worse and worse.

Jack: Progressively, like infinitely worse.

Cristina: Because he was trying to be the nice guy. Yep.

Jack: He was trying to not cause problems and as a result made everything 100% worse.

Cristina: That was awesome. Okay.

Jack: We've also, many times, many, many, many times gone down complete thought vortexes with Dave.

Cristina: Yes. But about, like, what, like the Matrix?

Jack: A lot of it. Because the mate, he's so well versed in the Matrix and a lot of, like, everything kind of relates heavily.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: So we end up always going back to that or comparing notes with that.

Cristina: With reality in it.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Mm. He needs to come back. Is he alright?

Jack: He's fine. Thieves lives.

Cristina: He lives life.

Jack: He lives on the ice.

Cristina: Watches movies.

Jack: Watches movies? Yeah.

Cristina: Wasn't there a movie he needed to watch that you were talking to him about? No, he was talking about Supernatural. You think he ever started that journey?

Jack: I have no idea. That's.

Cristina: That's a journey.

Jack: That's a journey, man. 22 episodes, 15 seasons.

Cristina: It's possible.

Jack: That's crazy. Yeah. Who else have we totally gone down weird thought vortexes with? We had Dave, we had Christian. We went through some interesting ones with him. He came an atheist and left a believer.

Cristina: Whoa. And there's Anthony and Ryan.

Jack: Those are such amazing humans. And both trolls.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And I remember one episode where Ryan was trying to troll you. Yeah. He was trying to troll me without realizing. Like, bro, I am not pretending to be a troll.

Cristina: Where did that lead us? I feel like it had to do with tape or something. There was a bow and if you just put the thing.

Jack: Flexial.

Cristina: Flexial. Yes.

Jack: Yeah. Yeah. I don't even know. I know that he was trying to consistently change the topic.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And I was okay with that. And that was bothering him that he was trying to troll and I was following along, which means he had to be able to continue to change the topic without losing himself in thought, which kind of annoyed him because he wanted to lose me in thought. But, like, I don't. This show has no. Yeah, like, this has no direction already, dude.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: What do you. What you. What are you trying to derail?

Cristina: He did not win that battle.

Jack: He did not win the battle.

Cristina: Ah.

Jack: His. He gets an A for effort.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: You know, but it's like, I would need a plan for you to destroy the plan. And like, I don't have a plan.

Cristina: No, but he usually has a plan, I guess.

Jack: Yes. How are you a troll with a plan?

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: He comes in thinking, this is what's got to be done. This is how it's got to be done. It's like, I don't care, dude. Whatever goes, it goes.

Cristina: And you won that. What? That was funny.

Jack: Oh, yes. Oh, yes. He can't handle the trolling, man. We had a conversation about cheese. I remember that. Asking how. How he likes cheese. How much cheese do you like, bro? Freestyling on cheese.

Cristina: Yes, the whole conversation about cheese.

Jack: Whole conversation about cheese. Anthony is. He's the gay me.

Cristina: Yes, he is.

Jack: You precise down to like, though just how he thinks, how casual he is, how little f**** he gives. It's awesome.

Cristina: Mm. Does he like cheese?

Jack: I wonder. I should bring Anthony on and have an entire conversation about how much he likes cheese.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: And he probably can't eat cheese, cuz b*** sex.

Cristina: What?

Jack: It's problematic. You don't want to have cheese and then have b*** sex.

Cristina: Why?

Jack: Because that's a problem. You don't want to have the poops while you. You. You f****** butts.

Cristina: Is cheese making poops?

Jack: Cheese is making you have a loose poops. Yeah.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Gives people runny poops.

Cristina: Do you like cheese?

Jack: I like cheese. I don't have cheese often, though.

Cristina: If you could, would you have it often?

Jack: I could. I still don't have it often, so no.

Cristina: Okay.

Jack: Yeah. Yeah. We went into granular detail about the gayest things known to man with Anthony. I should bring Ryan on and ask him the same questions I asked Anthony as though Ryan himself was gay.

Cristina: Oh, my gosh. That's an interesting episode.

Jack: Yeah. I'll just write the questions down on paper after listening to the episode with Anthony. Then I'll ask Ryan those questions.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: My first interview is gonna be with Ryan.

Cristina: Your first interview?

Jack: Yeah. Because it's always open discussion.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: My first interview will be with Ryan and I'm gonna ask him questions as though he's gay.

Cristina: Okay. I love it.

Jack: And there's two episodes with Anthony that we can take questions from.

Cristina: Oh, my gosh. This is so fun. Yes.

Jack: And has Ryan been on three times or two?

Cristina: I feel like two.

Jack: Two. I know. Dave has been on three times or four.

Cristina: He's the most.

Jack: Yeah, he might be cut in five. I'm not sure.

Cristina: Whoa. Anthony twice. Also.

Jack: Anthony twice, Ryan twice. Ishmael three times.

Cristina: Well, we need some of these guests.

Jack: Back, but I also want, like, brand new guests.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That's what I'm excited about for next year. No repeats. Just all new guests.

Cristina: All new.

Jack: All new guests.

Cristina: All year. All year.

Jack: All year. Everybody's new.

Cristina: Everyone.

Jack: Everyone's new. No repeats.

Cristina: Lame. Okay, that's fine.

Jack: Yeah. Well, then again, no, there could be repeats. Yeah, it doesn't matter. Doesn't matter.

Cristina: Doesn't matter.

Jack: Because there's gonna be at least one new guest per month would be the goal. Repeats could come in no matter when.

Cristina: Oh, yes. We're cha. Okay.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Yes. Things are happening.

Jack: Yeah, yeah, yeah. There's an evolution happening in the works. Thoughts being discussed and whatnot. So that'll be interesting.

Cristina: That will be.

Jack: I hope that plays out accordingly. It's actually why we don't talk about it into Mike, because a bunch of times things change. Consistently.

Cristina: Things definitely change all the time. Yes. We've mentioned so many things that. Yeah.

Jack: Yeah. That's why we don't mention it. Because sometimes we have an idea and we'll, like, throw it away and it's like it never made it on mic, so we don't have to worry.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Since we never talk about it. It's just natural things happening in the background because a lot of it is just free floating thoughts.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So that's the right way. The show is always evolving. Always changing.

Cristina: That's the way it should be.

Jack: That's the way it should be. One format for all of eternity. That sucks.

Cristina: That's boring.

Jack: Yeah.

Cristina: Our show's not boring.

Jack: Our show's not boring. It's also really hard to comprehend. Again, this narrative is crazy.

Cristina: The. Yes, the storyline.

Jack: Yeah, I don't fully comprehend our storyline myself.

Cristina: Yes. This episode, trying to explain it is probably really complicated.

Jack: Yes. Yes, it's really complicated because also some.

Cristina: Of our guests have been in our story, which we already mentioned.

Jack: Ishmael, Jermaine.

Cristina: But also Dave has. And that we didn't mention. But I think he is a clone.

Jack: Yeah, Dave is a clone as well. There's a couple of clones.

Cristina: Yeah. But he also died during this show as well.

Jack: Yes. That's why he's a clone.

Cristina: Yep.

Jack: He was killed early. And then the clone, him is who showed up after a while.

Cristina: Yeah. And it was perfect because his nickname is already clone.

Jack: Yes. Yes, that is perfect. So then he became the actual clone.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That's crazy. There's a. There's a lot going on.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Jermaine's a ghost.

Cristina: He is.

Jack: Ishmael is also clone.

Cristina: He is too.

Jack: There's a lot of clones running around.

Cristina: Is he the clone, though? Because they are.

Jack: We don't know. We actually have no idea what the answer to that question is.

Cristina: The clone.

Jack: They fought each other and won one. We know one of them won. We're just not asking questions.

Cristina: Yes. And I doubt he knows.

Jack: Yeah. Because they both think they're the real one.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So we have an idea. We have an idea.

Cristina: We have no idea. Whoa.

Jack: He might or might not be the clone.

Cristina: There's no way to test that, though, is.

Jack: There's no way to test that they would be genetically identical.

Cristina: Well, all right.

Jack: Well, actually, there is a way to test it.

Cristina: What's that?

Jack: We gotta clone him.

Cristina: How would that help if he ends up flawed?

Jack: Yeah, if he's flawed. If the clone. Clone's clone is flat. Well, if the clone we get is flawed, then that's the clone's clone. Yeah, but if he's a perfect clone, then we cloned the original.

Cristina: Yes, but then the original will look at that clone, decided they need a fight to the death, and then we'll.

Jack: Be in the same situation, so it doesn't even matter.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: All we would have answered is he was the clone. But we'll be left with the same question now. Because we'll be like, I don't know.

Cristina: Yeah, exactly.

Jack: So there's no way to solve that problem.

Cristina: No.

Jack: Ishmael's too impulsive. He's gonna try to kill himself every time on site. Yes, which is exactly what happened. It was no discussion.

Cristina: Like jumping into that hole. No thought doing it.

Jack: Yep. No thought, just straight in.

Cristina: That's why I think it killed him a few times. So I don't know if you were sending in clones. So is he a clone or did he survive?

Jack: I think he was the.

Cristina: And he was jumping back.

Jack: Look, I don't know if he was a clone or not. I know he jumped through.

Cristina: Yeah. And he came back several times, though.

Jack: Yes. Just f****** around, jumping like, haha. Jumping in and out. So I don't know. I don't know. I couldn't that in no way tells us whether he was a clone or not. We just know you can survive on the other side. Yeah, which, thanks to his impulsiveness, we got the answer to.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: Meanwhile, we were just trying to get people to come up with clever ways to test.

Cristina: Without going in. Because we have asked other people.

Jack: Yes.

Cristina: Without going in, how would they test it?

Jack: But Ishmael just hopped through.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: And he just proved it's fine.

Cristina: Yeah, that's true.

Jack: So, like, his impulsiveness worked out in our favor.

Cristina: Yes, but if it didn't, then what? I guess we'd continue testing it the way we were.

Jack: Well, no. If he jumped through and died, there's no point.

Cristina: Oh, okay.

Jack: Then we just know it's too hostile. We just gotta, like, build a cement case around that black hole.

Cristina: Yeah, but now we're gonna start. We're gonna destroy my house so that we could sell tickets to enter it.

Jack: Yes. I don't know where it goes, but you guys are gonna have a wait.

Cristina: Are we doing the clones first? Are we gonna send them out just to make sure it's safe to explore it? Yeah, the sub humans.

Jack: Yes. We'll send subhumans in with cameras attached and stuff.

Cristina: And if it's safe enough, then we'll make a business around it.

Jack: Yes, yes. The same way that I did with Time Machine.

Cristina: All right, perfect.

Jack: Which I killed the other me for the time machine, Right? Is that how that went?

Cristina: I thought you ran away. You think you killed you?

Jack: Well, I was. I guess the plan was to kill me.

Cristina: What?

Jack: But I don't think I did. I'm just saying that the goal was.

Cristina: Okay, then.

Jack: That is because I was sending people with the time machine, and I got a hold of the time machine.

Cristina: Oh, okay. That does make sense. Maybe the other you. The copy of the copy was sent to kill you from the Illuminati because they didn't like what you were doing with the machine.

Jack: But that wasn't me.

Cristina: The other you. Whatever. The one that's in hiding right now.

Jack: Yes, I think that's what happened. Yes. Yes. Yes.

Cristina: And then instead of killing him, he killed Jermaine. Jermaine. Okay.

Jack: But still this. And then went and became a model.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That we later saw on a billboard. Also, it looks nothing like me. It looks like an old white guy. So, like.

Cristina: Yeah, I can.

Jack: I can understand how this clone was confused.

Cristina: Does Jermaine look like an old white guy?

Jack: No, Jermaine just looks like Jermaine. Okay, but we really did see this clone on a billboard.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: That is the Most amazing takeaway. We were f****** around, talking about this thing. Went outside into the real world, and we saw the exact descriptions we were talking about.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: We.

Cristina: Whoa, whoa.

Jack: Another argument for this being the Matrix.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: Dave's on to something.

Cristina: Yes. And there was that one time where you and another guest were trying to predict shootings.

Jack: Oh, my God. And we did.

Cristina: Yeah. And then you had a second episode for it. Because.

Jack: Trying to like, you know, disclaimer. We didn't tell him to do it.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Because we predicted one of these mass shootings would happen immediately after the other one.

Cristina: Do you remember that guest name?

Jack: That guess was Blake.

Cristina: Blake Weatherly. Yes. Okay. Yeah.

Jack: And me and Blake Weatherly just really use hard information. We sat down and we thought about it. We worked it all in our heads because of a mass shooting that happened. Talked about society and how it affects psychology, and in doing so, we came to the conclusion that, well, because of how it affects psychology, somebody else is gonna see this. And then we're have a copycat killer. No time. The f****** day the episode went up, six hours later, another mass shooting happened.

Cristina: Unrelated.

Jack: Unrelated. In the exact specifications manifesto and everything. It was like, oh, crap, we need like an emergency.

Cristina: And then you recorded the emergency episode.

Jack: Yeah, yeah. It's just like this f*****. We did not tell this guy to do that. Yeah, but it could totally look to people like he heard the episode and then said some s***.

Cristina: Although that's not your fault if he did that. Do that. If he did hear the episode. Is that your fault? No, because it's not like you told him.

Jack: No, we were just over here theorizing and talking about s***. But you know, just to be. Just to be on the safer side.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And to also pat ourselves on the back for getting it right.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: There's a weird, like, well, this is a tragedy. But also we got it right.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So like, win, lose.

Cristina: Yes. Oh, we also predicted something about Jeff Bezos. He did it. I don't remember what it was about.

Jack: I don't either. We predicted a couple of things though, that did turn out true. I was listening to a clip on our Instagram recently of a conversation I was having with. Was I talking to. I don't remember, but I was actually predicting Biden.

Cristina: Biden winning.

Jack: Oh, I was talking to Aaron from a perspective podcast. I was predicting Biden winning without knowing Biden would even run. I knew somebody from the left would win by default. As I said in the clip. And I said that we would immediately start correcting things as a knee jerk reaction instead of thinking about it, which I said in the clip that we should be talking about. We should be electing Trump again so that we have four years to plan rather than elect somebody from the left who's immediately gonna force all the stupid ideas we had as solutions into law.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: Which is what's happening.

Cristina: Ah.

Jack: I predicted that. And it's taking place.

Cristina: Mm.

Jack: So, yeah. The reality.

Cristina: Yes. You see, we are the best. I don't know. Fortune tellers.

Jack: Yeah. We're really good at our jobs. That's why the Illuminati has us here.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: They don't have anybody else here. Anybody else would lie. Anybody else would bullshit. And the original versions of us weren't doing their jobs too well either.

Cristina: They were fine.

Jack: They were talking too much s*** about the Illuminati, I guess.

Cristina: It wasn't even me. It was you and Dave. I was just there, I guess.

Jack: But you weren't stopping us, I guess. So everybody got killed and here we are, the better versions.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: So it is what it is. We're here thanks to their f*** ups. So, like, what's the argument anyways? If you guys want to discover all those things, that's what the Just Conversation podcast is really about. That was the history. That was all the things that we have done for five years.

Cristina: Five years.

Jack: You guys can go and see five years worth of narrative with a story. Adventures, Missions. We've gone on. Yes. Randomness. We've gone on missions for the Illuminati. We've gone on personal expeditions. We have run experiments. We confiscated a quantum computer. We have a time machine. I put people through h***.

Cristina: We.

Jack: All of it. It's all great.

Cristina: All of it's all great. Yeah.

Jack: And if you guys want this kind of stuff you want to find out, you can listen to the show. You can find it pretty much anywhere. You can find it on the official website, greatthoughts.info, or on Apple podcasts or on Spotify or anywhere you get your podcast.

Cristina: And you can reach us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and TikTok. Uscombopod.

Jack: Yes. And remember to subscribe and rate the show. And if you feel so inclined, you know, leave us a review.

Cristina: Let someone who might like this show know about it.

Jack: Yes. Word of mouth is the most important thing in the world. And if you know friends who want a lovely, chaotic, random story, you tell them, hey, I got some weird sci fi fantasy like documentary show for you. And you can. You can go.

Cristina: It's got everything.

Jack: It's got a little bit of everything.

Cristina: Even romance.

Jack: It does it literally has romance. There are episodes about relationships.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: So, you know, tell them about it. Tell them you want to learn about everything. You want to learn about how your universe works the real way. Here's the Just Conversation podcast where they have conversations about those things.

Cristina: This has been the Just Conversation podcast. Take nothing personal, and thanks. Watching for listening.

Jack: Bye.

Cristina: Like, watching someone. Someone accept award for doing something great. That's kind of weird.

Jack: That's pretty weird.

Cristina: Like, they can get that at home. We don't have to watch them all live together.

Jack: I love award ceremonies.

Cristina: It's the weirdest.

Jack: It's so weird. We're there to watch somebody be given a trophy.

Cristina: Yes. It's like. And we do that in school, though. Like, the person who gets the best grades, honor roll the whole year, they're gonna get a little certificate paper on stage.

Jack: Yeah. You know, here's the thing. It programs us to want that movie star moment where we get the trophy on stage, because we've been taught over and over.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: To. You know, you're gonna go on stage. You're gonna do so well. You get to go on stage.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: And people are gonna clap and they're gonna be happy for how well you did. And it's like, why do you need that validation?

Cristina: It's important.

Jack: But they're teaching us to want that validation.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: It's important for them that we need that validation.

Cristina: Yes.

Jack: I guess that's kind of the programming, isn't it?

Cristina: We're being programmed.

Jack: We're being programmed because then they can control our behavior. We need the validation. And we only get the validation if we do the things that they've put in place. So we have to work to get the promotion. And if we get the promotion, everybody knows because we get promoted on site. This is now we're promoting this guy to do the thing now he's moving up in life. We want to congratulate him for his job well done. And you're like, yeah, I did it. But you're being essentially brainwashed to just follow the line and do the job. And you're gonna get rewarded if you do the job. Exactly. To the T that they told you to do the job.

Cristina: You have to. That's the most important part, that you.

Jack: Do what you're told.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: That's some f***** s***. That's crazy brainwashing.

Cristina: Yeah. But it's exactly what's happening in the military.

Jack: And not just the military. I'm talking about everything.

Cristina: Yeah.

Jack: A celebrity is essentially that.

Cristina: Good morning. Good morning. The Just Conversation podcast is hosted by Christina Collazo and Jack Thomas, produced by Lynn Taylor and published by great dots.info art by 0lupo and logo by Seth McAllister, with social media managed by Amber Black.

JCP 5.07 John Dirté & The American Dream

John Dirté, Podcast, Conversation, Just Conversation, Discussion, Politics, Criminal Justice, Marijuana Stories, Pot, Mary Jane, Drugs, Party, Sex, Rock, Business

Guest John Dirté comes on to discuss his epic marijuana adventures, his sociopolitical views, the criminal justice system, healthy eating, business owning and much much more!

+Episode Details

Topics Discussed

  • Murca
  • Shit Posting
  • Marijuana Stories
  • Drug Taxation
  • How Mullets are Born
  • The Birth of John Dirte
  • The Death Penalty
  • Rehabilitating Criminals
  • Suicide
  • The Border Wall
  • Nazi Germany
  • Good Cops vs Bad Cops
  • Eating Healthy
  • Cigarettes

John Dirté Links

Instagram - @2tone12valve

Twitch - https://www.twitch.tv/john_dirte

Tiktok - https://www.tiktok.com/@johndirte_69

Our Links:

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

Twitter - https://twitter.com/JustConvoPod

Facebook - https://facebook.com/justconvopod

Instagram -https://instagram.com/justconvopod

Rambling 105: Scooby Doo: The Chimera Experiment

Scooby Doo, Science, Research, Episode, Comedy, Discussion, Cartoon, Animation, Anime, Data, Conspiracy, Theory, Podcast, Episode, New Episode, Zero Lupo, Art, Artistic

Unpacking what it would take to make a real Scooby Doo.

Story:
After receiving a recon mission from the Illuminati, the clone duo set out to learn about a mysterious dog named Scooby Doo. The investigation leads to a scientist performing chimera experiments in Chinese facilities, dark secrets, erased and missing documents, a conspiracy to cover up the truth about hybrid creatures and more. What’s more disturbing of all is what they discover when all the information is put together. Find out more on this episode of Just Conversation.

+Episode Details

Remember to leaves us a rating wherever you listen to podcast!

Art by @Zero_Lupo on Instagram

Topics Discussed

  • Scientist Juan Carlos
  • Chimera Experiment
  • Talking Animals
  • Meowth from Pokemon
  • Animal Intellect
  • Great Ape Chimera
  • Scooby’s Intellect
  • The Mystery Gang
  • Family Tree
  • Peta
  • Secret Laboratory

Our Links:

Official Website - https://greythoughts.info/podcast

Twitter - https://twitter.com/JustConvoPod

Facebook - https://facebook.com/justconvopod

Instagram - https://instagram.com/justconvopod