from #506 (03-26-2019) buy me a coffee: paypal.me/crackleecrackle?cou... / thebonfiresxm big jay oakerson @ / bigjayoakerson bigjaycomedy.com dan soder @ / dansoder dansoder.com shane gillis bonfire playlist: ru-vid.com?list...
That question "do you believe you are a good person" is a BS question designed to trick the person. Basically everybody thinks they are both good and bad. Almost nobody believes they are just a straight up bad person or completely good person. Most think they are good at heart but fail to behave like they believe they should at times.
On the bright side, she came clean and got 200k in the process. Imagine how many people just live with the secrets. Now she can support herself when her husband rightfully leaves and gives her nothing.
Long-term sociological studies report that single women and lesbians are generally happier and abused/exploited less than straight women with partners🤷
When the lady said she had faked crying to get her way and followed it up with, "I am a woman". Now, let a man say that that is a female trait and listen to the throngs of people say how much of a terrible person he is. I hate the double standard.
I honestly would’ve said “no I am not” lol just cuz that def helps. But they could’ve turned it on her and said that’s a lie too to make it seem like she was lying
The thing is , They knew the questions that were coming up because they had to pre answer them. So she could have stopped right before the bad ones. The ones I seen from the show are obviously people wanting to get shit off their chest lol.
@@bryanallen8207 They have to answer the polygraph before they go on stage, I also just looked up the follow-ups and they didn't finish it, turns out their marriages on the rocks after that lol.
@@bryanallen8207 turns out the husband already kind of knew about the infidelity and didn't want it revealed on TV, and the girl had a feeling her ex was going to go on stage because she was texting him the whole week trying to find out.
A lot of people blow up their life for free. Or send their ex to jail on some horse shit they make up. Really, this is tame compared to the alternatives. Admitted to a bunch of shit he probably already had guessed at or knew, and maybe the kids will see some of that money. Maybe 😂
@@highpineapple Damn dude, that is painful. I stand by what I said; I just underestimated how shameless some people can be. I just can't see myself getting to the point where not only am I doing this kinda shit; also going in front of a camera crew, and the person I'm emotionally destroying, and just being like "yeah I'm just a morally-devoid complete asshole I guess". It's purely irredeemable and that doesn't spend, no matter how hard you try to get rid of it.
25:05 Big Jay's brain would melt down in Wales. We constantly preface both true and false statements in English with, "I'm not gonna lie to you..." It's not a phrase that actually means anything, it's just filler and a stock phrase.
He has been out for like 10 years. He was involved in the murder of a cop but was found not guilty because he wasn't the one that pulled the trigger. He only did a few years for breaking and entering. The other guy got life.
If people thought Springer was scripted with all that crazy dialog from every direction, how are shows like these where no one says more than 4 words in a response seen as real? Shit improve actors work on all of these shows.
Springer wasn't as fake as people think. A lot of those people were actors but a lot of them were not. They were real people with real issues, but then the producers would just encourage them to act as wild as they could and to exaggerate how upset and trashy they were. Basically they would have some sort of problem, go to the show to be on it, probably already resolve the problem before ever getting there, be told how to act and react by the show runners and get paid for making themselves look like utter scum. Basically the "reality" part of it was that the didn't really tell them what to say, they just told them.to wing the rest of it and say whatever they think about each other, but to do it in a wild way. And yes there were other parts that were just straight up actors. There is actually a documentary series that was about garbage TV, I wish I could remember what it was called. But one of the episodes was about The Jerry Springer show and they had interviews with a lot of the backstage people on it and they basically exposed how everything worked. It was kind of interesting. You start to forget just how outrageous that show was and it wasn't like anything else that had ever been on TV. There were other talk shows like it before that dealt with the same kind of shit, but Springer was that turned up by 100. It was kind of like wrestling, how for years it was silly storylines and stuff and then all of a sudden the attitude era started and it all got turned up to ridiculous levels. Come to think of it, that was around the same time in television. I guess that is just what spelled at that time, and as much as everyone knows how trash it is, it is just hard to not watch it.
If I was leaving the planet, to a new world, and I could choose 100 people to go. I would choose Oakerson, Soder, and Gillis as the comedy faction. Gillis is even funnier now, because of the elephant in the room. When subject matter touches race, he winks at the camera. So damn funny. He would have been wasted on SNL. Snl is super weak these days. I would far rather listen to Matt and Shane's secret podcast, then the "popular" theatre kids from New York. Does SNL matter to anyone other then near dead Boomers these days? I hope they pass soon. Meaning die. Boomers, die. Please. You've had your times pigs