00:10
welcome back to Lincoln Bio.
00:12
I'm Jenny and I'm Jess.
00:14
And like every episode,
00:15
we have another great episode for you guys.
00:18
Today. We have TS a,
00:20
implementing a new self checkout.
00:23
What 217 COVID shots could do to you and a border
00:26
patrol using a new anti immigrant slur.
00:29
We're also talking Trump money problems.
00:32
art for Gaza by Shakira's niece and Dune two with comedian
00:38
Nikki Peres. Let's get into it.
00:41
Let's do it. I need shoes,
00:46
ears. Wait, hold on,
00:53
I bet to my belt to everything.
00:58
R let's go move the tray,
01:01
the tray. Oh my God.
01:05
It's too early for this.
01:06
I'm stressed out, ma'am the phone,
01:08
the ring. They're real.
01:10
They won't be my mic Jenny.
01:13
Do you love being screamed at by TS A agents at five
01:17
in the morning for not reading their mind.
01:22
Well, those days are over the Transportation Security Administration which stands
01:31
that's what that means is a travel service association.
01:35
Cassy, Cassy Transportation Security Administration has introduced a new virtual self
01:39
screening technology at Harry Reid airport in Las Vegas.
01:43
The new technology is under testing and set to officially launch on
01:48
March 11th. That's in a few days.
01:51
It involves a virtual agent on a screen asking passengers questions,
01:57
eliminating the need for TS A agents to be in person.
02:02
So someone's gonna be screaming at me like from a tele,
02:04
from, from a monitor or something.
02:06
Do you think it's gonna be like someone working from home?
02:10
I don't know, I guess we'll have to wait and see
02:12
what pisses me off the most though is that ts a agents
02:18
expect everyone to be familiar with the procedures.
02:21
Like we're supposed to know like,
02:23
like our mom is like go like you already know what to
02:26
do around the house.
02:27
Like no, that's what that's and then you have like new
02:30
travelers, you know what I mean?
02:31
Who have no idea what to do but I don't know,
02:33
maybe getting screamed at by a monitor is gonna be better than
02:36
getting screamed at in person.
02:39
You have to wait and see.
02:43
It's kind of scares me because it's like,
02:44
I feel like in person it's more security like,
02:49
but we'll have to wait and see.
02:51
Nadia Sala's sister. Get this.
02:57
A 62 year old man from Germany has pushed the boundaries of
03:02
dedication by deliberately obtaining 217 COVID vaccine shots.
03:11
Over 29 months. This man has been getting 217 COVID shots
03:18
But this averages to one jab every four days.
03:25
I wonder if you got any side effects?
03:26
Like I get sick the next day.
03:28
Like, how do you say?
03:31
I haven't even gotten my booster shot and this man got 270
03:36
but I'm ho, I wonder why he does that?
03:39
Oh, ok. We'll get into that.
03:41
Researchers found that while the man's excessive vaccination didn't harm his immune
03:47
response, it also didn't grant him superior immunity compared to those
03:53
following the recommended schedule.
03:56
What was that reason?
03:57
What was the reason?
03:58
However, the che me on the street is that during an
04:01
investigation, German prosecutors confirmed it was for fraud.
04:05
He falsified his documents and resold the vaccination cards.
04:09
Ultimately though no criminal charges were filed.
04:12
Wait, he was getting the shot and selling that card to
04:17
people. So that's why.
04:18
So 217 I wonder how much suppose he's selling them for,
04:23
because that's 217 he got it 217 times.
04:26
Got 217 cards that close my mind.
04:29
Yeah. And then that just means that there's 217 unvaccinated people
04:33
out there claiming that they are.
04:35
So that's a whole other pedal in and of itself.
04:39
217 unvaccinated Germans. All right.
04:45
Moving on to our next story.
04:47
A new report shows that a large number of us border patrol
04:50
agents use the anti immigrant slur Tonk to refer to migrants.
04:55
Many people outside of the agency have probably never heard the word
04:59
Tonk before. It is specific to border patrol and is derogatory
05:04
against people crossing the border.
05:06
Tonk could be an acronym for traveler origin,
05:10
not known, but it probably also represents the sound of a
05:13
flashlight hitting a migrant's head.
05:15
The report put together by huffpost shows that government border patrol officials
05:20
have tried to limit the use of the word but many agents
05:23
keep using it. Experts say the slang word is used in
05:26
a derogatory mocking way towards migrants.
05:29
One agent allegedly wrote in an email get this that his coworker
05:35
was marrying a tank because they couldn't get a legal chick.
05:42
Experts say that the word's connection to the sound of hitting a
05:45
migrant's head shows it's violence.
05:47
Others say that Tonk is meant to dehumanize immigrants either way,
05:53
I mean border patrol officials have banned the use of Tonk
05:57
as well as the slur wet back,
06:01
threatening counseling and disciplinary action.
06:04
However, these slurs clearly continue to be used by some like
06:09
any word that we're not supposed to use.
06:12
People still use them.
06:13
It's like, how do you,
06:14
how do you stop people from using some a word?
06:16
You know, but that's insane.
06:25
Ok, so there's been a lot of updates on Trump
06:28
and the whole election situation what's going down.
06:31
So we don't want to waste any time.
06:33
We have Nikki mccann ramirez,
06:34
a political reporter for Rolling Stone to help us break down all
06:38
that's been going on.
06:41
Nikki. How's it going?
06:45
It's great. It's great.
06:49
Let's see. Last time we talked,
06:51
you told us about the 91 charges that Trump was facing.
06:54
How likely is it that he'll actually have to go to court
06:57
for the most serious charges against him before the election?
07:00
It's looking increasingly unlikely.
07:02
Trump has been very successful in introducing a lot of court challenges
07:07
Sort of legal mumble jumble to slow down the case as
07:11
we've seen, he's leveled a couple of Supreme Court challenges both
07:14
related to his criminal cases and unrelated to his criminal cases.
07:20
we're currently waiting to see if any of these criminal cases will
07:23
actually go to trial before the election or if they'll be delayed
07:27
so much that they'll kind of take place at the same time
07:30
as the election is heating up while we approach November.
07:34
So convenient, so convenient.
07:36
Well, you can get away with when you have money.
07:38
Can you tell us about his financial crimes case in New York
07:41
City? How much money does he have to come up with
07:43
And do experts think he's even gonna be able to come
07:45
up with that kind of cash?
07:47
Yeah. So there are two financial crimes cases in New York
07:52
One just concluded it was a civil fraud trial brought by
07:55
the State of New York against Trump,
07:57
several of his adult Children and his company,
07:59
the Trump organization. And they were ordered to pay over 300
08:04
million in damages to the state of New York because the state
08:08
essentially alleged that Trump had misrepresented the value of his companies,
08:12
his corporations, his real estate holdings in order to defraud investors
08:16
and taxpayers. Trump is fighting that money.
08:19
He's gonna appeal the case and he claims he has enough money
08:24
to pay for whatever he wants.
08:25
But the reality is that a lot of the finances paying for
08:29
his legal defense in his,
08:30
in his various criminal trials are coming from his campaign.
08:35
it's not really allowed to pay out penalties for crimes with campaign
08:42
funds. So he'll have to come up with the the money
08:45
elsewhere. And part of that may be,
08:47
the state has said that they are prepared to seize his assets
08:50
his real estate holdings if that's what they need to do
08:54
And then there is a separate upcoming case that's supposed to go
08:57
to trial soon, which is a criminal fraud case case in
09:01
2016. It was alleged that Trump paid a porn star,
09:05
Stormy Daniels a bunch of money to keep quiet about an affair
09:09
before the 2016 election.
09:12
Basically, the state of New York is alleging that that money
09:15
constituted a campaign finance violation and like a form of fraud.
09:20
So that case will go to trial and,
09:23
you know, there's a lot of criminal accounts there,
09:25
there's a lot of corporate mumbo jumbo that they used to try
09:28
and disguise the payments they made to Daniels.
09:30
So, we'll see how that one plays out,
09:33
but he may be on the hook for a lot more money
09:35
Well, I guess we're gonna have to hear about it
09:37
We all remember Stormy Daniels icon.
09:39
Hello. Who could forget?
09:43
what are your thoughts on the Supreme Court ruling the other day
09:46
about keeping him on the ballot?
09:47
So there's kind of two minds here in,
09:53
the federal system of the United States allows states by and large
09:57
to determine how their elections are run.
09:59
There is a clause in the constitution that's referred to as the
10:03
insurrection clause which bars people who have been found to have committed
10:08
insurrection or rebellion for running for federal office.
10:11
This was a clause that was added to the constitution in the
10:13
aftermath of the civil war.
10:14
In the 14th amendment.
10:16
It is in the same amendment that granted citizenship to freed slaves
10:20
that like defined what a natural citizen of the United States was
10:25
What the Supreme Court essentially said was that while states have
10:29
plenty of rights to determine how elections are run within their own
10:33
states, they cannot unilaterally determine the eligibility of a federal candidate
10:39
all of the judges agreed on that,
10:41
but the states could not do that unilaterally,
10:43
however, they disagreed in how far some of the justices wanted
10:48
to take that decision.
10:50
Some of the liberal judges who said yes,
10:52
like we don't think Colorado should be allowed to just like,
10:54
unilaterally remove Trump from the ballot without really having legally determined if
10:59
insurrection or rebellion had been committed.
11:02
The Supreme Court also didn't weigh in on if Trump committed insurrection
11:07
in his actions and like the aftermath of the 2020 election,
11:10
that question remains undecided.
11:12
But what some of the liberal justices said is that most of
11:15
the requirements that determine who can and cannot be president,
11:18
you know, you have to be like a natural born citizen
11:20
of the United States.
11:21
You have to be like 35 years old.
11:23
There's no congressional law that enforces those mechanisms,
11:28
they're in the constitution,
11:29
so they are sort of automatically enforced.
11:32
So the Liberal Justices said that requiring Congress to create a law
11:37
that would determine how states can implement the insurrection clause or how
11:43
candidates, federal candidates would be affected by the insurrection clause.
11:47
They said that would be taking things a step too far.
11:50
And what we do know is that obviously Trump appointed three of
11:54
the current justices on the Supreme Court.
11:56
They are very friendly to him.
11:57
They have made some very conservative decisions in recent years,
12:01
most notably, the overturning of Roe V.
12:02
Wade and Trump has another Supreme court case that the court will
12:06
begin hearing in April where he is arguing that presidents should have
12:11
widespread immunity from being prosecuted for crimes that were committed while in
12:16
office. And of course,
12:16
it sounds ridiculous even the fact that this is being heard by
12:20
the Supreme Court, that is a huge deal in itself because
12:23
the argument Trump is essentially making and he made it in court
12:26
in like the DC Appeals Court is that unless Congress impeach a
12:31
president for a crime that he committed while in office,
12:34
he cannot be criminally tried for it.
12:37
So that is the precedent.
12:39
If the court agrees with that precedent,
12:41
it would just be catastrophic for any potential accountability we could have
12:46
for any president, any federal elected lawmaker.
12:49
So I would definitely keep an eye on that case,
12:52
Trump, I think coming off of the Colorado Supreme Court case
12:55
is feeling really confident,
12:56
but you also have to hold on to the hope that the
12:58
Supreme Court isn't just like completely lost at this point because it
13:02
really would be a complete subversion of pretty much every law we
13:07
have against corruption, criminality in office.
13:11
So that, that's the big one we're keeping an eye on
13:15
Yeah, dude, that's too much.
13:19
So, your magazine had an explosive story this week about the
13:24
kinds of drugs that staffers in the Trump White House were taking
13:30
Can you give us a little taste of what they were
13:33
doing and how your colleagues were able to get the receipts
13:39
Yeah, so that investigation kind of kicked off in January
13:44
where the office of the inspector general,
13:46
which is basically like hr for the Department of defense released this
13:51
massive report of an investigation they conducted into the White House Medical
13:56
Unit. And what they found was that the White House Pharmacy
14:00
was, was to be clear,
14:01
not run by an actual pharmacist was kind of operating as a
14:06
pill mill for prescription drugs just like handing out things like like
14:12
Xanax Ambien. this like anti narcolepsy drug that helps people
14:16
stay awake, not tracking prescriptions,
14:20
not recording, you know,
14:22
who was getting, what sort of the one of the things
14:24
in the report that they had was that when staffers from the
14:28
White House would go on international trips,
14:30
they would just hand out like goody bags of uppers and downers
14:33
So people could like fall asleep on the plane and then
14:35
like wake up and be like peppy for all the media appearances
14:39
and stuff they had to do abroad and they just had bins
14:42
of like medication that like theoretically shouldn't be over the counter that
14:46
people could just like walk up and grab.
14:48
And so when that report was released,
14:50
my colleagues also went in NOA,
14:53
they started reaching out to people who had worked in the administration
14:56
in the White House Medical Unit and it confirmed a lot of
15:00
what was in the report.
15:01
Basically, people were like the,
15:03
the sense we got was that people were just popping pills using
15:08
the White House Pharmacy as sort of their personal,
15:11
like medical supply closet to just get whatever they on it without
15:14
really having to go through the process of like getting a diagnosis
15:18
and tracking what they were taking.
15:22
I think the opening line of the article really summed it up
15:25
really well, if you ever felt watching the Trump administration,
15:28
if you ever thought like,
15:29
oh my God, are these people high?
15:31
The answer might be yes.
15:32
The White House turned into Coachella.
15:37
Yeah, Lord of Mercy,
15:39
basically. So the Department of Defense,
15:41
it's the military that runs the White House medical office.
15:44
They made tons of recommendations on what needed to change how to
15:48
restructure the office because,
15:50
you know, it's not a real good thing if people in
15:53
the White House think they just have to sort of like their
15:55
personal little prescription drug market in the basement.
15:58
I, I don't know if it's in the basement.
15:59
I've never been to one.
16:03
Oh my gosh, that's crazy,
16:08
wild times, wild times.
16:10
But thank you so much Nikki.
16:12
We would love to have you back to cover that case in
16:15
April. So of course,
16:18
and I wanted to ask where can people find you?
16:20
So I'm obviously at Rolling stone.com,
16:23
that's where all my articles are,
16:24
are published and I am on Twitter threads,
16:29
blue sky and all of that is at Nikki MC R.
16:34
Thank you Nikki. Thank you so much.
16:36
Thank you so much for having me,
16:39
dude to think that like the same person who had all of
16:44
this happening while they were president of the United States is now
16:49
running for re election.
16:51
He just, I think he wants to be untouchable and he
16:54
wants everyone in the White House that supports him to be untouchable
16:57
I mean, not excuse me,
16:58
not the White House,
16:59
the Trap House. Mm Moving on,
17:05
moving on Jenny. So you know,
17:12
very well that Shakira isn't the only artist and philanthropist in her
17:18
that family is full of talent.
17:20
Last year, her niece Isabella Meva went viral for a sweatshirt
17:24
design of Shakira's famous Las Mujeres.
17:27
No, Yoran, las Mujeres Furan lyric period.
17:31
Now the artist is back in the headlines for another one
17:35
but instead of telling you about it,
17:37
we brought Isabella Meba,
17:38
the artist herself to talk to us about her newest work of
17:41
art titled from the River to the Sea.
17:43
Welcome, Isabella. Hi,
17:44
Isabella. Hi. Thank you guys so much.
17:48
No, thank you for joining us.
17:49
So what were you doing when you were inspired to create this
17:53
work of art? I was actually at my parents' house in
17:57
Miami and I created the piece when I was finally out of
18:03
the paralysis phase of like sadness and anger and into like the
18:07
action phase. So I asked my mom if she could
18:12
buy me a watermelon while she was at the grocery store and
18:16
sure, whatever. And she thought I was gonna eat it
18:20
But instead I cut it open and,
18:22
you know, I just started drawing it.
18:26
I didn't have any plans for it yet.
18:28
I'm just was drawing from like emotions and reason,
18:33
you know, or I just,
18:34
I needed to get something out,
18:37
you know, at what point did you decide that this is
18:40
a piece that you wanted to kind of use to raise funds
18:43
for Gaza and for Palestinians in Gaza.
18:46
Yeah. So originally,
18:47
you know, I had just made it for myself,
18:51
it kind of clicked that I could use the prints as a
18:55
micro fundraiser to actually help the people directly.
18:59
No. Yeah. And hopefully by having you on and sharing
19:01
this amazing story behind it.
19:03
Like we get more people kind of aware about the situation and
19:06
redirect them over to your site so that they can also,
19:09
you know, join in the cause and help raise some funds
19:12
for the people that really,
19:13
really need it. I wanted to ask too,
19:15
how did your collab on Shakira's Las Mujeres Furan sweatshirt happen?
19:19
Can you tell us like details when I first listened to the
19:23
song? I became aess like we all did.
19:28
So I was just like repeating it over and over and
19:29
over. And while I was on the subway,
19:33
I was like, drawing on my ipad and I drew like
19:37
that exact sketch. I sent it to my mom because she
19:42
has a t-shirt business.
19:43
oh, maybe you can like print these T shirts and like
19:46
just sell it to people.
19:47
And she ended up sending it to my aunt and she loved
19:52
it. So she pitched it to her team and that's how
19:55
it all started. Awesome.
19:58
That is awesome. She's really,
20:00
really amazing. Amazing.
20:04
Where can people find your art piece so that they can also
20:07
part the print for themselves.
20:09
It's Mer art.com on Instagram.
20:12
I'm Isabella Mera as well.
20:16
And you can find all my links there.
20:18
Thank you so, so much,
20:20
so much for having me plenty time.
20:22
No, I need to look that website up because I need
20:32
Everyone is talking dune two.
20:34
So we brought on comedian Nikki Perris to tell us how are
20:44
So he's gonna tell us a spoiler filled review on the Blockbuster
20:50
So I haven't seen the movie but our producers have some
20:54
questions for you. Oh,
20:55
well, I'm so excited to be here.
20:57
I got to see the movie yesterday and I enjoyed all
21:01
It was great. I bought snacks,
21:03
I had lunch and dinner during the showing And did you
21:06
see the original D I did?
21:08
I thought that was wrong.
21:09
Was this one longer than the one was two hours?
21:11
45 minutes. The original dune,
21:13
I saw three times and understood.
21:16
Zero of it. But dune two,
21:18
I have to tell you I enjoyed it.
21:20
Was it four hours of sand?
21:21
Yes. And do I feel like I might have mesothelioma and
21:23
be entitled to some compensation maybe.
21:27
So basically, what's so exciting about this movie?
21:29
And I'm sorry for the spoilers is Paul?
21:31
I always get his name messed up.
21:32
Paul aides, Paul Ar Fides,
21:34
Achilles Heel, something like that.
21:35
Paul is Timothy Chala and he's the prophet.
21:38
And in this film it picks up where the film left off
21:40
and it's about the war between the Freedom and the Hark Hands
21:43
which are the bold people and it was very entertaining and
21:45
Timothy Chalamet, which I just found out was his name.
21:48
I was saying Chalamet for the last four years.
21:50
Timothy Chalamet was incredible.
21:53
And it, and you know what an impressive,
21:54
do you think Timothy Chloe could win a fight?
21:58
I don't know, I mean,
22:00
like that's what I was gonna ask.
22:01
Do you actually believe Timothy Chalo is like a tough guy?
22:04
Like I didn't because to me he,
22:07
he's, I think he's sexy but I'd be afraid to sleep
22:09
with him because I could break him,
22:10
double his side. Like,
22:12
I'm like, Khloe Kardashian,
22:14
you know, I could just snap him in half.
22:16
But I have to tell you,
22:17
I was nervous about seeing him fight because he's so light and
22:20
tiny. I thought his biggest obstacle would be the wind,
22:23
but he was very impressive,
22:24
very real. And I was on the edge of my
22:27
seat. He did an amazing job.
22:29
There was a lot of interesting things that happened in the
22:31
movie. Like I remember from the first one,
22:33
the high priestess, she's like,
22:35
put your hand in the box and don't take it out and
22:37
you'll die. That's what my first girlfriend said.
22:40
That's when I knew that I was,
22:43
you know, a lot happens with his mother in this film
22:46
She becomes the high priestess and she gets all these tattoos
22:49
on her face and they don't explain it.
22:50
She looked like Takashi.
22:52
I was like, is his mother gonna drop a mix tape
22:54
What's going on with her?
22:56
And she reminds me of Lynn Spears.
22:58
What's that planet or Aan Narcan?
23:00
Where they all do fentaNYL?
23:02
I don't know the name of the planet.
23:03
It sounds like Narcan which you take when you need to be
23:05
resuscitated. And you know,
23:06
it's also wait to Austin butler who I didn't even know was
23:09
the bald guy who looks like he identified as Voldemort.
23:14
that was Austin Butler in the film and he was very
23:16
sexy. But here's the thing in the movie.
23:18
Kisses his uncle. But how,
23:20
what did you feel about that?
23:22
But it wasn't in like a,
23:23
like a kid rock Cracker Barrel.
23:25
Let's kiss behind the trailer park type of way.
23:27
It was a dying moment.
23:29
I was sad and turned on it because they're both bald,
23:32
they're both har cons.
23:33
So I was scared and turned out.
23:34
I kind of felt like I was watching a chemotherapy porn.
23:37
Did you feel like the movie was over hyped?
23:40
Because everyone right now is talking about it like,
23:43
Dune Two, it's like out of this world.
23:46
Like, what did you think it was overhyped?
23:49
I, I tell you I paid 20 I would have paid
23:52
That's how much I enjoyed it.
23:54
you know, just to sit there and be entertained when I
23:56
saw the movie was two hours and 45 minutes.
23:57
I was like, oh my God,
23:59
what all the things I could do.
24:00
But I enjoyed it and did the person next to me have
24:02
to fiddle their fingers through the nerds rope every 10 seconds.
24:05
No, but shockingly the movie,
24:07
the movie flew by and I enjoyed it.
24:09
I'd go see it and I didn't like dune one but dune
24:11
two. It's kinda like Shrek one and two.
24:14
Shrek two is better than Shrek one.
24:15
Well, I feel like it also dune one.
24:18
I mean, I haven't seen the second one but I feel
24:20
like it sets up for dune two.
24:22
You know how, like if you're watching a series and it's
24:24
like they're introducing people.
24:26
It's like, and then it's like the foreplay for the real
24:30
thing. One was more of like the dry humping over the
24:34
jeans and, and dune two was the penetration.
24:39
that was the set up for it.
24:41
And do you think Zendaya?
24:42
Because people were saying Zendaya could not hang with the other actors
24:46
Is that like what does that mean?
24:48
Like on set? I feel like on the movie people were
24:50
saying that, oh like I felt like she was acting,
24:53
you mean I love Zendaya?
24:56
Very attractive. She reminds me of the type of girl at
24:59
every summer camp. That's like I could do more push ups
25:01
than you. We're like,
25:02
who cares Zendaya? She just seems to me like she's always
25:05
like covered in dirt.
25:06
Maybe it's just the movie and the sand.
25:08
But you know in the movie,
25:09
Paul A K A Timothy Chalamet,
25:12
he chooses, he wants to marry the princess over Zendaya.
25:15
And people were like,
25:17
that's the better choice.
25:18
See, I would have went with the princess because she has
25:20
a lot of different head gear.
25:21
I could tell that she had was her own Etsy shop and
25:23
Ainan, whatever the planet is,
25:25
I could tell that she has an Etsy and she does shipping
25:27
to all the dusty places and,
25:29
and on the planet she had a lot of headpieces.
25:31
I would have chose her too.
25:33
And worms, the worms,
25:35
you love them or hate them.
25:37
Well, when I saw the huge worm come out,
25:40
you know, it remind me of the first time I saw
25:42
a penis under the bleachers in high school.
25:46
I was shivering and scared.
25:48
It took me back to that time.
25:49
They were hideous. Yeah.
25:52
They do look like they,
25:54
no, and, and people and then,
25:55
and then they have to ride the worm.
25:58
we got it. You sick but www Wait,
26:00
I can't believe I almost forgot this.
26:02
So do you know the big June cups that they're giving out
26:06
I hope I can say this.
26:08
It looks like a flashlight,
26:11
the, the the people on X Twitter,
26:14
whatever it is. They're saying that the,
26:16
you know what I'm talking about,
26:17
the large people are putting the toys together.
26:20
This is what our Children remember the days of Fisher Price when
26:22
people used to play with easy bake ovens.
26:24
Not now the dune cup looks like a rectum and it's,
26:30
you can't tell me you make something like that and you're like
26:32
oh how could people think it looks like this,
26:35
which, which group would you be a part of
26:38
the Freeman people or like the sand people or the Harkonen,
26:42
the Haren? Because I have,
26:44
I'm self conscious about losing my hair and I've always wanted to
26:47
be bald all over like a seal and up here and in
26:52
So I feel like there'd be a lot less,
26:54
pressure and you know,
26:55
maybe I'll, I'll kiss Austin butler and his uncle.
26:58
Maybe it'll be a group activity,
27:01
all the bald people,
27:02
all the bald people,
27:02
Mr Clean, if you're watching,
27:08
thank you. Where can we find you rehab?
27:11
No, I you can find me in you can
27:16
find me on Instagram and Twitter,
27:17
Nikki Paris. Beri is my confirmation name.
27:21
Thank you for having me,
27:22
Jenny. I had a lot of fun and go see Dune
27:29
I'm jealous, Jenny because every Friday that you and Alejandro have
27:33
done the show, we have always had something really cool like
27:37
some drinks. It's Friday kind of vibes,
27:41
you know, and I know no mass of Alejandro and it
27:43
all goes on the drink.
27:44
I wanna drink. I want a shot at least.
27:46
Hello, dude. And Alejandro.
27:51
Well, that's it for today's show.
27:53
I'm Jess and I'm Jenny and this was Lincoln Bio.