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[00:13:05.11 -> 00:13:07.61] John: Madeleine Albright was lucky enough to get to go see it.
[00:13:07.75 -> 00:13:08.37] John: Oh, damn.
[00:13:08.43 -> 00:13:12.71] John: And I'm thinking, I'm thinking, why just once a year?
[00:13:13.01 -> 00:13:15.63] John: They could pack, because they can pack this sucker in.
[00:13:15.69 -> 00:13:17.35] Adam: John, they could do three times a day.
[00:13:19.18 -> 00:13:20.66] Adam: Just like Universal Studios.
[00:13:20.78 -> 00:13:20.98] John: I don't know about that.
[00:13:21.10 -> 00:13:22.02] John: Universal Studios.
[00:13:22.06 -> 00:13:22.96] John: We don't get enough people for that.
[00:13:22.96 -> 00:13:23.72] John: Well, maybe.
[00:13:24.02 -> 00:13:26.00] John: They can definitely do once a month.
[00:13:27.82 -> 00:13:28.66] John: That would be great.
[00:13:29.40 -> 00:13:31.50] John: Because these people, they practice all year.
[00:13:31.64 -> 00:13:33.22] John: Why don't they just keep doing the show?
[00:13:33.28 -> 00:13:34.16] John: It's kind of like practice.
[00:13:34.30 -> 00:13:34.52] John: Right.
[00:13:34.64 -> 00:13:36.74] John: And they can just keep doing the show once a month.
[00:13:36.80 -> 00:13:37.60] John: They can do this thing.
[00:13:37.68 -> 00:13:40.28] John: It costs a lot of money to put on, but they can pack that stadium.
[00:13:40.44 -> 00:13:41.82] John: They won't charge, right?
[00:13:41.88 -> 00:13:43.74] John: I mean, this is the amateur hour with these guys.
[00:13:43.80 -> 00:13:49.50] John: You know they're going to – they won't know what they charge to their locals, five bucks to get in, or maybe just an invite.
[00:13:49.58 -> 00:13:50.32] John: I have no idea.
[00:13:50.60 -> 00:13:52.58] John: But I think they can get 100 bucks a seat.
[00:13:52.94 -> 00:13:53.74] Adam: Hold on a second.
[00:13:53.82 -> 00:13:55.32] Adam: The locals are in the show.
[00:13:55.40 -> 00:13:56.20] Adam: They're not in the stands.
[00:13:56.34 -> 00:13:58.56] Adam: Every single seat is for tourists, John.
[00:13:58.74 -> 00:13:59.38] Adam: What are you thinking?
[00:14:00.34 -> 00:14:08.62] John: Well, there's a lot of foreign guests, I'm sure, but the thing is going to be, I'm saying they've got to put somebody in the seats now because they don't have enough tourists.
[00:14:09.84 -> 00:14:15.46] Adam: I'm only one step removed from Dennis Rodman at this point.
[00:14:15.52 -> 00:14:16.38] Adam: I'm still working on it.
[00:14:16.44 -> 00:14:18.76] John: Yes, I'm still, yeah, I hope you keep working on it.
[00:14:18.80 -> 00:14:21.02] Adam: Yeah, we should be doing the show from there.
[00:14:22.89 -> 00:14:25.25] John: Well, I don't know if their internet connection is going to put up a fuss.
[00:14:25.25 -> 00:14:26.27] Adam: What are you talking about?
[00:14:26.35 -> 00:14:27.47] Adam: They hacked into Sony.
[00:14:28.78 -> 00:14:29.64] John: Yeah, they did.
[00:14:29.74 -> 00:14:29.90] John: Oh.
[00:14:30.08 -> 00:14:30.40] Adam: Sure.
[00:14:30.80 -> 00:14:31.28] Adam: Yeah.
[00:14:32.86 -> 00:14:41.42] Adam: There is historic precedence, though, with Olympic Games being important for nasty countries.
[00:14:41.46 -> 00:14:47.06] Adam: I take you back to 1936, the 1936 Olympics, when the Germans participated.
[00:14:47.06 -> 00:14:54.14] John: Despite African-American athletes causing Hitler some embarrassment, the German team achieves overall success.
[00:14:55.21 -> 00:15:00.71] John: They win 33 gold medals, nine more than the Americans, as they top the table.
[00:15:01.63 -> 00:15:04.47] John: And the event itself is a resounding success.
[00:15:05.58 -> 00:15:10.00] John: The ultra-modern feeling showcase receives almost universal praise.
[00:15:11.14 -> 00:15:14.61] Adam: So what if North Korea does extremely well?
[00:15:15.39 -> 00:15:16.17] Adam: They won't.
[00:15:16.17 -> 00:15:18.49] Adam: It was the 33, by the way, 1933 Olympics.
[00:15:20.00 -> 00:15:20.94] Adam: Yeah, that makes sense.
[00:15:21.04 -> 00:15:22.16] Adam: 33 is the magic number.
[00:15:22.20 -> 00:15:22.42] Adam: Of course.
[00:15:22.72 -> 00:15:24.60] Unknown: Of course.
[00:15:26.72 -> 00:15:28.04] Unknown: Well, I don't know.
[00:15:28.50 -> 00:15:30.10] Adam: It's a positive development.
[00:15:30.28 -> 00:15:31.46] Adam: You don't hear much about it.
[00:15:31.98 -> 00:15:34.64] John: No, because nobody wants it to be any positive development.
[00:15:34.92 -> 00:15:41.72] John: Mimi says to me, why don't you guys try to do one whole show without ever mentioning Trump?
[00:15:42.12 -> 00:15:44.18] Adam: Oh, she's on this bandwagon now, too.
[00:15:44.98 -> 00:15:46.40] Adam: Who else is on the bandwagon?
[00:15:46.54 -> 00:15:46.92] Adam: Everybody.
[00:15:47.34 -> 00:15:53.18] Adam: everybody no the past couple of shows it's you know people just i said we could we could do it
[00:15:53.18 -> 00:15:57.40] John: it wouldn't be a problem no but we can't do it today we can't do it when there's you know
[00:15:57.40 -> 00:16:02.14] John: there's stuff going down now we can do it let me let me can i read something from carl rove put in
[00:16:02.14 -> 00:16:14.09] John: this little article you read carl rove interesting uh yeah i do not not a lot but i do i just want
[00:16:14.09 -> 00:16:19.87] John: to i just think this will give us a little perspective um long before the presidential
[00:16:19.87 -> 00:16:24.51] John: election, the populist candidate's mental state was under attack. The New York Times ran a series
[00:16:24.51 -> 00:16:29.49] John: over several days suggesting he was unfit for office and included a letter from an anonymous
[00:16:29.49 -> 00:16:36.31] John: psychiatrist diagnosing the candidate's megalomania and saying he presents in speech and
[00:16:36.31 -> 00:16:41.89] John: action striking and alarming evidence of a mind not entirely sound. Another piece said the political
[00:16:41.89 -> 00:16:47.79] John: outsider was laboring under the delusion he is persecuted and possess an enormous passion for
[00:16:47.79 -> 00:16:53.13] Unknown: haranguing every time he sees a crowd gathered. One psychologist refused to call the condition
[00:16:53.13 -> 00:16:58.63] John: ordinarily crazy, but added, I would like to examine him. Well, another said he was beset
[00:16:58.63 -> 00:17:05.79] John: with what I believe to be delusions. These articles appeared in 1896, targeting William
[00:17:05.79 -> 00:17:11.02] John: Jennings Bryan, the Democratic presidential nominee. A little one of those switcheroos
[00:17:11.02 -> 00:17:16.64] Adam: that we like to do every so often. Ah, very nice. So I'm thinking when I'm reading this,
[00:17:16.64 -> 00:17:23.04] John: This is the Democrats' payback for what we did to them in 1896.
[00:17:23.20 -> 00:17:24.32] John: I have a list.
[00:17:24.36 -> 00:17:34.06] Adam: I have a list of psychiatric disorders in U.S. presidents from 1776 to 1974.
[00:17:35.52 -> 00:17:36.48] Adam: Nice catch.
[00:17:36.72 -> 00:17:37.40] Adam: Wherever you got it.
[00:17:38.08 -> 00:17:39.52] Adam: From my sources.
[00:17:40.26 -> 00:17:42.58] Adam: So we have a little column here.
[00:17:42.62 -> 00:17:43.26] Adam: We got the president.
[00:17:43.34 -> 00:17:44.18] Adam: We have the diagnosis.
[00:17:44.18 -> 00:17:50.37] Adam: Diagnosis, confidence level, which is, it seems like that's only a one or a two.
[00:17:50.47 -> 00:17:51.91] Adam: So two is less confident, apparent.
[00:17:52.07 -> 00:17:52.25] Adam: No?
[00:17:52.49 -> 00:17:54.10] Unknown: I don't know.
[00:17:54.94 -> 00:17:57.12] Adam: I don't have a legend on this for some reason.
[00:17:58.42 -> 00:18:04.86] Adam: Evident in office, persistent or recurrent, impaired, evident to others or sought treatment,
[00:18:05.40 -> 00:18:10.60] Adam: and if it is, by today's standard, a DSM-IV criteria.
[00:18:12.39 -> 00:18:13.21] Adam: Are you game?
[00:18:14.84 -> 00:18:15.42] Unknown: Hit it.
[00:18:17.43 -> 00:18:20.09] Adam: John Quincy Adams, bipolar disorder.
[00:18:21.34 -> 00:18:22.80] Adam: It was evident in office.
[00:18:22.84 -> 00:18:23.74] Adam: It was recurrent.
[00:18:24.20 -> 00:18:25.70] Adam: He was impaired by it.
[00:18:28.06 -> 00:18:35.28] Adam: Jefferson, social phobia, which is not a DSM-IV criteria, so we're going to skip that.