Back to episode — Episode 2695 CWSA 12/20/24
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and it happens now. Go. That is so good. So good. Got to adjust my lighting. Hold on. Lighting adjusted. All right. You'd be surprised to hear that Dr. Alan Sears, he's a doctor, he says there's a compound in coffee called trigonelline. Trigonelline, and it's a unique form of vitamin B3. And did you know that it'll increase your spatial learning and memory, support your nervous system developm…
← Previous segment →ith coffee. Yeah, I feel it. I feel it. My hippocampus is going crazy right now. Yeah, yeah, it all works. You know, sometimes you hear this science and you think, but in the real world, does that work? Sure it does.
Did you hear the horrible story of provocative controversial podcaster Nick Fuentes who was almost murdered in his home? Did you hear this story? This is so shocking. I didn't even talk about it for a day because I was just sort of looking at it like, oh my God.
So somebody murdered, I guess, his family and then went on a road trip to apparently try to murder Nick Fuentes at his house. So he knocks on his door and apparently the only reason that Fuentes didn't answer his door is that he was doing a podcast at that moment. All he had to do was answer the door and he'd be dead. All he had to do was answer his own front door while he was home. But he couldn't because he was on his podcast. It saved his life.
No
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w, I would make the following advice. If you're producing content that's making people want to drive hundreds of miles to your house and kill you, you might want to think about that. I mean, I do like the fact that podcasters will say provocative and risky things because free speech allows it and, you know, as long as it's working in all directions, it can be a healthy thing. But just think about…
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