1 00:00:00,080 --> 00:00:03,560 Speaker 1: We'll all miss Jim, but he was delicious. It's one more. 2 00:00:03,400 --> 00:00:13,720 Speaker 2: Thing this was going. That's right, Wow, just the way 3 00:00:15,960 --> 00:00:18,840 Speaker 2: Joe Biden's great uncle died or something. 4 00:00:18,520 --> 00:00:24,360 Speaker 1: Like that, right right, one of the many crack potteries 5 00:00:24,400 --> 00:00:27,880 Speaker 1: in the last two years or so, Joe Biden's rule 6 00:00:27,920 --> 00:00:31,640 Speaker 1: that we can all remember fondly. So I've been sitting 7 00:00:31,640 --> 00:00:34,199 Speaker 1: on this story for a little while because partly it's 8 00:00:34,200 --> 00:00:36,040 Speaker 1: a little kind of aluted and long to present during 9 00:00:36,040 --> 00:00:40,560 Speaker 1: the radio show in which we're during which we're under 10 00:00:40,600 --> 00:00:43,199 Speaker 1: the cruel, cruel oppressions of the clock. But now we 11 00:00:43,280 --> 00:00:46,280 Speaker 1: have a little time, and I guess this is probably 12 00:00:46,479 --> 00:00:49,960 Speaker 1: under Jack, filed under one of your favorite themes, which 13 00:00:50,040 --> 00:00:55,080 Speaker 1: is people aren't nearly grateful enough to be Americans. Yeah, 14 00:00:55,680 --> 00:00:57,600 Speaker 1: so live in America, who've grown up those of us 15 00:00:57,640 --> 00:00:59,360 Speaker 1: who've grown up here or ended up here. If that's 16 00:00:59,400 --> 00:00:59,720 Speaker 1: the case. 17 00:01:00,120 --> 00:01:01,560 Speaker 2: This morning, I won't say what, but I heard a 18 00:01:01,560 --> 00:01:05,320 Speaker 2: story about a dar four and they're in Africa this morning. 19 00:01:05,319 --> 00:01:08,000 Speaker 2: It's all like, jeez, you're so lucky you live here. 20 00:01:09,240 --> 00:01:11,360 Speaker 1: Yeah. I don't know. It's probably costing me part of 21 00:01:11,360 --> 00:01:13,640 Speaker 1: my soul, but I do read those accounts of the 22 00:01:13,680 --> 00:01:15,959 Speaker 1: various wars in Africa, and I mentioned them now and 23 00:01:16,000 --> 00:01:19,360 Speaker 1: again on the air, but the horrors of them are 24 00:01:21,080 --> 00:01:24,039 Speaker 1: I don't want to bring you down to describe them. Yeah, 25 00:01:24,080 --> 00:01:29,760 Speaker 1: but it is human beings who have lost their humanity completely. Yeah, 26 00:01:30,000 --> 00:01:36,800 Speaker 1: committing atrocities on grand scales. Anyway, on a cheerier note, whoops, 27 00:01:36,880 --> 00:01:40,760 Speaker 1: this isn't very cheery, but it's amazing. So there is 28 00:01:40,800 --> 00:01:46,200 Speaker 1: a huge problem in Africa, specifically South Africa, with illegal mining. 29 00:01:47,760 --> 00:01:52,760 Speaker 1: You have companies or groups of people either do their 30 00:01:52,840 --> 00:01:56,920 Speaker 1: digging themselves or find an old mine and decide we 31 00:01:56,960 --> 00:01:59,880 Speaker 1: think there's still some life in this bastard and we're 32 00:02:00,120 --> 00:02:01,920 Speaker 1: to mine it. But they have no right to be there, 33 00:02:01,960 --> 00:02:05,120 Speaker 1: they have no permits, they're not operating under any laws, 34 00:02:05,120 --> 00:02:07,800 Speaker 1: they're trespassing and the rest of it. Well, So there 35 00:02:07,880 --> 00:02:10,400 Speaker 1: was one of those in a place you've never heard 36 00:02:10,440 --> 00:02:16,760 Speaker 1: of in South Africa where the authorities found them and 37 00:02:17,040 --> 00:02:20,800 Speaker 1: busted them while there were a ton of guys down 38 00:02:20,960 --> 00:02:26,040 Speaker 1: under the surface. And I think initially the guys refused 39 00:02:26,080 --> 00:02:28,400 Speaker 1: to come up because they didn't want to get arrested, 40 00:02:29,320 --> 00:02:32,880 Speaker 1: and so the government said, yeah, we're going to starve 41 00:02:32,919 --> 00:02:37,639 Speaker 1: them out right, We're going to cut off any food 42 00:02:37,840 --> 00:02:45,080 Speaker 1: and water getting down there, and so the miners have 43 00:02:45,080 --> 00:02:47,720 Speaker 1: been holed up since the police cut off the employe 44 00:02:47,760 --> 00:02:50,080 Speaker 1: use of food and water in August. The story's written 45 00:02:50,120 --> 00:02:53,799 Speaker 1: in August, Yeah, this was story was written in mid January. 46 00:02:55,240 --> 00:02:57,799 Speaker 1: A legal application filed by a human rights group to 47 00:02:57,840 --> 00:03:00,520 Speaker 1: speed up the rescue included an affidavit for I'm a miner, 48 00:03:00,520 --> 00:03:03,280 Speaker 1: who also said that some had resorted to consuming human 49 00:03:03,360 --> 00:03:08,280 Speaker 1: flesh to stay alive. So the government finally initiated the 50 00:03:08,320 --> 00:03:11,480 Speaker 1: rescue operation after a human rights group launched a series 51 00:03:11,480 --> 00:03:14,720 Speaker 1: of legal challenges to the blockade. The government was physically 52 00:03:14,720 --> 00:03:18,720 Speaker 1: blockading anybody from rescuing these miners. They're like, no, we're 53 00:03:18,760 --> 00:03:21,040 Speaker 1: starving them out. You can't help them, you can't get them, 54 00:03:21,760 --> 00:03:26,440 Speaker 1: so before you pay it off, well one more factor 55 00:03:26,480 --> 00:03:30,080 Speaker 1: real quick. But officials refused to allow even after they said, okay, 56 00:03:30,120 --> 00:03:32,600 Speaker 1: they can be rescued, but nobody official is going to 57 00:03:32,680 --> 00:03:36,920 Speaker 1: go down in there because it's too dangerous. 58 00:03:37,480 --> 00:03:42,320 Speaker 2: Hmm, not sure. I have a problem with this. We're 59 00:03:42,360 --> 00:03:45,160 Speaker 2: not making you stay down there, come on out. No, 60 00:03:45,200 --> 00:03:46,960 Speaker 2: we're not coming out. Okay, well we'll wait. 61 00:03:47,960 --> 00:03:51,600 Speaker 1: Well, but then for some reason they couldn't get out 62 00:03:51,640 --> 00:03:55,880 Speaker 1: anymore because they didn't have the Some of the logistics 63 00:03:55,880 --> 00:03:57,440 Speaker 1: of this are a little confusing to me, but like 64 00:03:57,480 --> 00:04:00,080 Speaker 1: they didn't have the elevators down there or whatever, so 65 00:04:00,080 --> 00:04:01,240 Speaker 1: they couldn't come out if they wanted. 66 00:04:01,320 --> 00:04:04,240 Speaker 2: But you can't eat somebody unless they're dead. Did they 67 00:04:04,280 --> 00:04:07,720 Speaker 2: start killing some of their compatriots and then eating them? 68 00:04:07,760 --> 00:04:10,400 Speaker 2: And how do you decide who goes? Or did they 69 00:04:10,480 --> 00:04:11,560 Speaker 2: starve and then you eat them? 70 00:04:12,840 --> 00:04:15,520 Speaker 1: Yeah? I mean we I can. 71 00:04:15,400 --> 00:04:17,560 Speaker 2: See donner party of one, Donner party of. 72 00:04:17,560 --> 00:04:25,880 Speaker 1: One, jeez. Yeah. Yeah. So what happened was and the 73 00:04:25,920 --> 00:04:28,520 Speaker 1: way the narratives plays out in this whole long article, 74 00:04:28,560 --> 00:04:32,479 Speaker 1: I apologize for my fumbling with it. It skips back 75 00:04:32,480 --> 00:04:37,800 Speaker 1: and forth like journalism sometimes does. It's not laid out chronologically. 76 00:04:38,200 --> 00:04:42,839 Speaker 1: But so, with hundreds of miners trapped below the ground 77 00:04:42,920 --> 00:04:46,279 Speaker 1: with out food or water, two men from the local 78 00:04:46,880 --> 00:04:50,840 Speaker 1: town volunteered to venture where no police, government officials, or 79 00:04:50,880 --> 00:04:54,840 Speaker 1: professional rescuers were willing to go. So these guys made 80 00:04:54,839 --> 00:04:58,719 Speaker 1: their first descent wearing white hard hats, helmets, t shirts, 81 00:04:59,040 --> 00:05:01,680 Speaker 1: stepped out of a red cage dangling on a cable 82 00:05:01,720 --> 00:05:04,839 Speaker 1: from a crane on the surface forty two hundred feet 83 00:05:04,880 --> 00:05:11,080 Speaker 1: above them. Their lights illuminated a sea of emaciated faces. 84 00:05:11,120 --> 00:05:13,960 Speaker 1: Men crowded into a chamber were crying and pleading to 85 00:05:14,000 --> 00:05:17,320 Speaker 1: be saved from the pitch black of the abandoned gold mine. 86 00:05:17,960 --> 00:05:21,880 Speaker 1: Their lights had burned out weeks or months earlier, and 87 00:05:21,920 --> 00:05:24,480 Speaker 1: they ended up making more than thirty trips underground over 88 00:05:24,520 --> 00:05:28,680 Speaker 1: the next three days, and says the one guy, can't 89 00:05:28,720 --> 00:05:31,600 Speaker 1: explain the smell down there. They told us they were 90 00:05:31,600 --> 00:05:37,520 Speaker 1: eating human flesh and cockroaches. They had lost hope. And 91 00:05:37,720 --> 00:05:40,440 Speaker 1: one of the touchy parts of this was everybody was 92 00:05:40,480 --> 00:05:43,840 Speaker 1: so crazy and panic stricken, and they could only bring 93 00:05:44,080 --> 00:05:48,000 Speaker 1: up thirteen men at a time in a cage designed 94 00:05:48,040 --> 00:05:52,039 Speaker 1: to hold six people stuffed together. Okay, so it was 95 00:05:52,080 --> 00:05:56,279 Speaker 1: completely crammed with these poor, barely hanging on human beings 96 00:05:57,320 --> 00:06:00,799 Speaker 1: trying to assure the others we are coming back. 97 00:06:01,000 --> 00:06:04,120 Speaker 3: Oh, could you imagine seeing that thing going up and. 98 00:06:04,040 --> 00:06:07,920 Speaker 2: Not knowing Yeah, the lifeboats on the Titanic. Yeah, wait 99 00:06:07,960 --> 00:06:08,719 Speaker 2: a second. 100 00:06:08,839 --> 00:06:10,960 Speaker 1: Right, Well, that was one of the reasons that these 101 00:06:11,000 --> 00:06:13,919 Speaker 1: two guys, who are heroes, unquestionably and some of the 102 00:06:13,960 --> 00:06:17,799 Speaker 1: authorities agreed to send them down because they were locals 103 00:06:17,920 --> 00:06:20,360 Speaker 1: and could talk to these guys and relate to these guys. 104 00:06:20,400 --> 00:06:26,160 Speaker 1: They weren't quote unquote the authorities. So oh, by the way, 105 00:06:26,200 --> 00:06:29,440 Speaker 1: it's worth mentioning that even in normal times, gunfights have 106 00:06:29,520 --> 00:06:33,400 Speaker 1: been reported among competing minors thousands of feet underground. These 107 00:06:33,400 --> 00:06:38,440 Speaker 1: are just crazy ass lawless digs that people. They have 108 00:06:38,640 --> 00:06:42,240 Speaker 1: no better options than to do this, so they do 109 00:06:42,480 --> 00:06:46,800 Speaker 1: go down to survive, okay, right. In fact, this one guy, 110 00:06:46,880 --> 00:06:51,200 Speaker 1: one of the rescuers, He last emerged from a stint 111 00:06:51,240 --> 00:06:53,960 Speaker 1: underground in October at a different abandoned gold mine. He'd 112 00:06:54,000 --> 00:06:56,600 Speaker 1: lived in tunnels below the surface for three months at 113 00:06:56,600 --> 00:07:01,719 Speaker 1: a time where underground commerce was functioning. A regularly purchase food, drinks, 114 00:07:01,720 --> 00:07:04,480 Speaker 1: and headlamps from vendors who bring their wares into the mines. 115 00:07:04,480 --> 00:07:08,039 Speaker 1: But you never go out for months at a time 116 00:07:08,960 --> 00:07:11,960 Speaker 1: lest you get arrested. 117 00:07:12,560 --> 00:07:16,400 Speaker 3: God what no outside, no sunlight? What that must do 118 00:07:16,440 --> 00:07:17,000 Speaker 3: to your mind? 119 00:07:17,600 --> 00:07:17,880 Speaker 2: Right? 120 00:07:18,440 --> 00:07:22,080 Speaker 1: Oh yeah, And so then and you're reduced to eating 121 00:07:22,120 --> 00:07:25,240 Speaker 1: cockroaches and dead people. You got to f feel around 122 00:07:25,240 --> 00:07:27,320 Speaker 1: and find them and communicate with each other. 123 00:07:27,400 --> 00:07:30,240 Speaker 2: And then Jim starts looking delicious. 124 00:07:30,480 --> 00:07:32,840 Speaker 3: Oh jeez, there's no way to go back to normal 125 00:07:32,920 --> 00:07:34,320 Speaker 3: after that at all. 126 00:07:34,480 --> 00:07:37,960 Speaker 1: No, No, no, not even close. So it was difficult 127 00:07:37,960 --> 00:07:40,160 Speaker 1: to decide whom to bring up first. Charles said, that's 128 00:07:40,160 --> 00:07:42,160 Speaker 1: one of the key guys here. Each trip up and 129 00:07:42,200 --> 00:07:44,720 Speaker 1: down took forty five minutes. They tried to prioritize the 130 00:07:44,720 --> 00:07:48,680 Speaker 1: weakest second deceased for fear the decomposition would worsen. They 131 00:07:48,720 --> 00:07:51,760 Speaker 1: brought bread, potato chips and water with them to ease 132 00:07:51,800 --> 00:07:54,480 Speaker 1: the last agonizing hours underground for the people who had 133 00:07:54,520 --> 00:07:59,080 Speaker 1: to wait. For about five months. These workers were trapped 134 00:07:59,120 --> 00:08:01,800 Speaker 1: underground as police tried to smoke them out. In the 135 00:08:01,840 --> 00:08:04,680 Speaker 1: words of the minister in the government, a long time. 136 00:08:04,480 --> 00:08:07,400 Speaker 2: To be in the pitch dark eating gym. 137 00:08:08,760 --> 00:08:12,080 Speaker 1: The operation was part of the police's closed the whole 138 00:08:12,280 --> 00:08:16,520 Speaker 1: plan to combat illegal mining, which has reached crisis levels 139 00:08:16,560 --> 00:08:21,200 Speaker 1: in South Africa, a staggering forty two percent unemployment rate 140 00:08:21,280 --> 00:08:24,840 Speaker 1: in South Africa under the brave leadership of the parties 141 00:08:24,880 --> 00:08:26,960 Speaker 1: that took over after all the white people were kicked 142 00:08:26,960 --> 00:08:29,200 Speaker 1: out of government. Not that it's a race thing, it's 143 00:08:29,200 --> 00:08:32,360 Speaker 1: a corruption thing. But it's led to high levels of 144 00:08:32,440 --> 00:08:35,160 Speaker 1: chronic poverty. So people do this sort of thing. Between 145 00:08:35,200 --> 00:08:39,000 Speaker 1: August and January, more than fifteen hundred miners emerged voluntarily 146 00:08:39,080 --> 00:08:42,559 Speaker 1: from this shaft. Others died attempting to climb out of 147 00:08:42,600 --> 00:08:45,040 Speaker 1: the mine, while some became too weak to try after 148 00:08:45,120 --> 00:08:49,720 Speaker 1: hunkering down for months to avoid arrest, and the people 149 00:08:49,760 --> 00:08:51,880 Speaker 1: pulled out of the mine were charged with trespassing and 150 00:08:51,960 --> 00:08:52,559 Speaker 1: other crimes. 151 00:08:53,320 --> 00:08:57,679 Speaker 2: Well thanks, yeah. Do you think you could get hungry 152 00:08:57,760 --> 00:08:58,480 Speaker 2: enough to eat Michael? 153 00:08:58,679 --> 00:09:01,920 Speaker 1: For instance? If I'm starving to death, do we have 154 00:09:01,960 --> 00:09:06,760 Speaker 1: to make it a specific person? Well, yes, is the answer. Yes, absolutely, Really, 155 00:09:07,000 --> 00:09:12,120 Speaker 1: I'm surprised by that. I'm a carnivore and I'm a realist. 156 00:09:12,280 --> 00:09:14,160 Speaker 1: I assume it's ay. If I don't eat him, I 157 00:09:14,200 --> 00:09:16,559 Speaker 1: will be dead. I would prefer to live, So that's 158 00:09:16,600 --> 00:09:19,680 Speaker 1: what I do. Can you cook him first with what 159 00:09:20,160 --> 00:09:22,920 Speaker 1: you're stick down a miron shaft? I don't know, make 160 00:09:22,960 --> 00:09:27,960 Speaker 1: a fire? You're unclear on the concept, dear, so the 161 00:09:28,120 --> 00:09:32,200 Speaker 1: government official. And this is another aspect of how foreign 162 00:09:32,320 --> 00:09:37,560 Speaker 1: this is to Americans. Literally, this government official they quote 163 00:09:37,600 --> 00:09:40,719 Speaker 1: about why they starved him to death like that. He 164 00:09:40,840 --> 00:09:43,559 Speaker 1: compared the calls for humanitarian assistance for the miners to 165 00:09:43,600 --> 00:09:45,560 Speaker 1: asking the police to send food and water to a 166 00:09:45,640 --> 00:09:48,959 Speaker 1: robber hold up inside a bank. Sending sustenance to the 167 00:09:49,000 --> 00:09:51,480 Speaker 1: miners would be aiding in a betting crime and criminality. 168 00:09:51,559 --> 00:09:53,560 Speaker 1: If they let them die and starve and eat each. 169 00:09:53,400 --> 00:09:55,520 Speaker 2: Other, I agree if they can get out, but if 170 00:09:55,520 --> 00:09:57,440 Speaker 2: they actually if they if they can't get out, well 171 00:09:57,480 --> 00:09:58,360 Speaker 2: then it's a different thing. 172 00:09:59,120 --> 00:10:01,760 Speaker 1: Yeah. See, that's the part of the narrative that confuses 173 00:10:01,840 --> 00:10:05,200 Speaker 1: me because at the point where they're starving to death 174 00:10:05,240 --> 00:10:08,800 Speaker 1: and eating Jim, you'd think they'd think, you know, it's 175 00:10:08,840 --> 00:10:11,320 Speaker 1: like just a misdemeanor charge. I'm gonna go up and 176 00:10:11,320 --> 00:10:12,840 Speaker 1: get busted right. 177 00:10:14,000 --> 00:10:15,439 Speaker 2: And go to subway right. 178 00:10:16,360 --> 00:10:18,680 Speaker 1: So yeah, that that part is not clear to me. 179 00:10:18,880 --> 00:10:23,319 Speaker 1: But between the way the government approached it and that, 180 00:10:23,400 --> 00:10:27,520 Speaker 1: the employment rate and so misery eye. 181 00:10:28,000 --> 00:10:29,880 Speaker 2: So you get hungry enough, So where do you start? 182 00:10:29,920 --> 00:10:32,000 Speaker 1: Do you suppose five? 183 00:10:34,320 --> 00:10:35,600 Speaker 3: Yeah? 184 00:10:36,120 --> 00:10:40,200 Speaker 1: Ribs? You know I love ribs, whether it's babyback, you know, Michael. 185 00:10:40,160 --> 00:10:41,680 Speaker 3: Put some on those, you know. 186 00:10:41,840 --> 00:10:43,880 Speaker 1: Yeah, but you know the thigh has got a nice 187 00:10:44,200 --> 00:10:47,320 Speaker 1: it's in the butt as well, I mean, the the 188 00:10:47,360 --> 00:10:52,040 Speaker 1: gluty's maximus. You're looking for muscle tissue somewhat marbled with fat. 189 00:10:52,640 --> 00:10:54,840 Speaker 1: It's like taking a good steak, Jack. I don't look, 190 00:10:55,000 --> 00:10:58,000 Speaker 1: we're starving to death in this scenario, and you all are. 191 00:10:57,840 --> 00:11:02,280 Speaker 2: Like, oh oh, Ikey, you gotta get practical, I promise you. 192 00:11:02,360 --> 00:11:03,360 Speaker 2: I'm plenty of marbled. 193 00:11:06,640 --> 00:11:09,120 Speaker 1: Yes, it's probably gonna be rare. 194 00:11:10,520 --> 00:11:12,520 Speaker 2: If I'm cooking it. This is one time where I 195 00:11:12,520 --> 00:11:13,959 Speaker 2: want it well done. I want it cooked all the 196 00:11:13,960 --> 00:11:16,559 Speaker 2: way through. No pink police, And Mike is working on 197 00:11:16,679 --> 00:11:22,120 Speaker 2: his glutes as he says, so is it legitimately? 198 00:11:22,360 --> 00:11:22,640 Speaker 1: Is it? 199 00:11:22,840 --> 00:11:22,920 Speaker 3: Like? 200 00:11:24,280 --> 00:11:25,679 Speaker 2: You know, if you're at the grocery store and you're 201 00:11:25,679 --> 00:11:27,320 Speaker 2: not hungry, you just buy the stuff you need. But 202 00:11:27,360 --> 00:11:29,280 Speaker 2: if you're hungry at the grocery store. I tell my 203 00:11:29,360 --> 00:11:31,839 Speaker 2: kids this all the time. If you're hungry at the 204 00:11:31,840 --> 00:11:36,600 Speaker 2: grocery store, everything looks delicious. So if you're even hungrier, 205 00:11:36,720 --> 00:11:38,120 Speaker 2: do you get to the point where it's just not 206 00:11:38,200 --> 00:11:40,280 Speaker 2: even really a battle to eat a human? You're just 207 00:11:40,280 --> 00:11:43,640 Speaker 2: so hungry It smells, looks, taste, tastes great. 208 00:11:43,800 --> 00:11:47,160 Speaker 1: You think, I'm not sure I'd go that far, But 209 00:11:47,440 --> 00:11:50,280 Speaker 1: I'm with you eighty percent of the way. Yeah, you 210 00:11:50,280 --> 00:11:54,840 Speaker 1: wouldn't think, you know, this is kind of gross. He'd 211 00:11:54,840 --> 00:11:57,400 Speaker 1: be like a snarling beast, like a hungry wolf. 212 00:11:58,480 --> 00:12:02,360 Speaker 2: You're right, yeah, shop being at the grocery store hungry 213 00:12:02,440 --> 00:12:03,559 Speaker 2: is just the disaster. 214 00:12:04,440 --> 00:12:04,720 Speaker 1: Michael. 215 00:12:04,760 --> 00:12:07,400 Speaker 3: If we're eating your glutes. I need some cho lula 216 00:12:07,600 --> 00:12:09,400 Speaker 3: and some sauce, and they got to be cooked. 217 00:12:10,400 --> 00:12:12,679 Speaker 1: Yeah, a little sweet baby raised or something like that. 218 00:12:12,760 --> 00:12:15,520 Speaker 1: What isla, I don't know what that is. You don't 219 00:12:15,520 --> 00:12:20,840 Speaker 1: know chi lula? What not? That one raised? Right? 220 00:12:21,080 --> 00:12:24,720 Speaker 2: Yeah, my Martian illegal goal. I'll stand up for you. 221 00:12:24,720 --> 00:12:28,800 Speaker 2: Mil I've never heard that word in my life. What what? 222 00:12:28,800 --> 00:12:29,400 Speaker 2: What the hell is that? 223 00:12:29,559 --> 00:12:31,920 Speaker 3: There is something seriously wrong with you too? If you 224 00:12:31,920 --> 00:12:33,680 Speaker 3: don't know what the chilu is. 225 00:12:33,760 --> 00:12:37,160 Speaker 2: No idea, that's probably racist. I guess it's something they 226 00:12:37,280 --> 00:12:39,440 Speaker 2: put on your ass to make it taste better. Michael, Yeah, 227 00:12:39,480 --> 00:12:40,600 Speaker 2: it's it's ass sauce. 228 00:12:40,800 --> 00:12:46,400 Speaker 1: No, it's a delicious, mildly hot hot sauce that comes 229 00:12:46,440 --> 00:12:48,880 Speaker 1: in a couple of different varieties. And I've never even 230 00:12:48,880 --> 00:12:52,000 Speaker 1: heard the word, and Americans are familiar with it. If 231 00:12:52,000 --> 00:12:54,280 Speaker 1: this was the Battle of the Bulge, I'd shoot both 232 00:12:54,280 --> 00:12:56,080 Speaker 1: of you as German spies because you don't know this 233 00:12:56,160 --> 00:12:56,920 Speaker 1: great country. 234 00:12:57,920 --> 00:12:59,120 Speaker 2: We don't have it at eye hoop. 235 00:12:59,200 --> 00:13:04,320 Speaker 3: I can tell you that, you know, I probably wouldn't 236 00:13:04,360 --> 00:13:07,120 Speaker 3: be as tasty these days. I have my blood sugar 237 00:13:07,200 --> 00:13:08,960 Speaker 3: down and so I'm probably not real sweet. 238 00:13:09,000 --> 00:13:10,920 Speaker 1: I've gotta think my taste is pretty dull. 239 00:13:11,400 --> 00:13:15,600 Speaker 2: Point, if I have to eat pre dieting, yeah, well, 240 00:13:15,640 --> 00:13:19,280 Speaker 2: to paraphrase Luis c K, I am literally starving. 241 00:13:20,200 --> 00:13:23,199 Speaker 1: I don't care. Well, I guess that's it.