 here. Fascinating article in the Athletic. Alright, so I subscribe to the Los Angeles Times, the New York Times, the Wall Street Journal, Washington Post, the Athletic, Apple's News, Apple News Plus. Alright, I do that for you to give you the latest and greatest. Alright, so here in the Athletic, alright, how have the Tennessee Titans out-reformed odds-makers pre-season expectations every year under Headcurch Mike Vrable? And you're saying to me, 40, how do the Titans do it? And I'm here to tell you that they are New England 2.0, right? And the NFL's fifth-best record since Mike Vrable became Headcurch in 2018. So some coaches call the plays not Mike Vrable. He coaches the entire team, he focuses on gaining competitive edges in critical moments. So do you want to win? Everyone wants to win, but how far are you willing to go to win? Are you willing to push the rules, even to go past the rules? For example, in trials, plaintiff attorneys, they usually get paid a percentage of a win. And so they tend to be much more adventurous. They tend to push the rules much more, right? They're not nearly as staid and conservative in their approach as defense attorneys. So Tennessee Titans, remember the defeated New England in the playoffs in Tom Brady's final game with the Patriots in 2019? Okay, so Tennessee was leaving 14-13, it was 6-39 remaining, and they incurred intentional penalties to drain the clock to 4-44 without running a play. So the NFL had to close the loophole after this. Tennessee is one of the games after taking intentional penalties while seeking competitive advantages. So the Titans, more than any other team, known for being better than others, laying on top of offensive players during two-minute situations when the Titans are on defense, slow them down, and for also incurring well-timed injuries to defensive players, which opponents see as buying time for defenders to regroup, which is exactly what it is. So the Titans push the limits of the rules, and that's why they win. So it's not like the Tennessee Titans are known for analytics, but they're known for difference making plays in crucial situations. So under Mike Rable, the Tennessee Titans have led the league in opponents' full starts. Why is that? Why have the Titans drawn more of their opponents into full starts? More of them on field goals, more of them on extra points, more of them on 4-1. More of them when opponents run the fringes of field goal range, more of them inside their own 10-yard line. Why are they so good at drawing full starts when the game is on the line, when it matters most? Because the Tennessee Titans defensive linemen are known for moving subtly or not so subtly, which is illegal for defensive linemen to move in a way that leads the offensive players to making a full start. So the name of this is stemming. That's to draw offensive movement in critical moments. So you've got a nose tackle that aligns in a stance with one knee on the ground, that is the snap near as he raises the knee off the ground, that often triggers movement from the offense, but the nose tackle shifts abruptly with similar results. The Titans are far better than anyone else in the league in doing this. All right, the defensive linemen use aggressive waves, they use arm waves, they use all different sort of subtle movements to draw the offense offside. And coming at you right now from the botanical gardens, the Royal Botanical Gardens here in Sydney. So not very good sportsmanship, but it's helping them win games. So Tennessee, like New England, also realizes that defensive hoarding is really called undefensive linemen. So Tennessee's defensive linemen do a great job hoarding, offensive linemen hold them to maximize the penetration from their pass rush stunts. All right, the Tennessee Titans defensive players also mimic opposing quarterbacks cadences. Every little thing you can think of to get an advantage they have. They work the officials. They grasp the rules, they maximize advantages within the rules. Then they also play basic fundamental football, they run the ball well, they stop the run, they maximize pass efficiency through the use of play action. So it's not that they have a ton of talent, right? They're just physical rough tough players who push the limits of the law. So they have a heavy run game, great play action, and their defensive backfield, right? There's a lot of illegal contact and defensive hoarding. So what's the temperature there? It's 70 degrees right now. So 20 degrees Celsius, 70 degrees Fahrenheit. So New England Patriots also do this. They just hold and hold and hold. That's how they all just slow down, paint and manning, right? Because officials just get tired of calling pass interference. So Pittsburgh Steelers did this against the Dallas Cowboys. So when Dallas Cowboys played the Pittsburgh Steelers into Super Bowls Tom Landry told that the Cowboys don't get into fights with the Steelers because the Steelers are bigger and tougher, rougher than you are. The Cowboys in the 70s under Landry were a finesse team. The Steelers were a brawny team built, you know, with extra steroids. So you'd look at the Steelers offensive line and they were just incredibly cut. Like their physique was just unbelievable. Well for the Cowboys offensive line that their stomachs would just be, you know, hanging out over their gut. Because the Steelers were on many more steroids. So Cowboys relied on trickery. And the Steelers reacted by just belting the hell out of the Cowboys received. It's just like breaking their ribs, you know, figuring that the officials would just get tired of calling defensive pass interference. And though the Cowboys played them very tight in both Super Bowls in the 1970s, the Steelers, you know, ended up winning. And in large part because they just beat the hell out of the Cowboys receivers, knocking them out of the game, breaking their ribs. They didn't keep within the law. The Pittsburgh Steelers led the way in the illegal use of steroids in the 1970s. And so that's how they were able to win for Super Bowls. Because they bent the law, broke the law, took the steroids, played dirty, and beltered the hell out of their opponents. They broke ribs, knocked people out of games. And it's a lot like Tennessee Titans football, a lot like New England's Patriots football. So yeah, it's a beautiful day here at the Royal Botanical Gardens. It's just so nice being able to walk all over Sydney. And I've never once felt fear in Sydney. I've never felt concern. So my mind is not occupied by things like that, fear, concern, worry, and keeping an eye out for Super Predators. So instead my mind can roam free to bring more and more of these amazing insights to my live streams. So I'm not preoccupied by Super Predators in criminals and dangerous situations trying to deer away from unsavory characters. And it's not like New York City or Washington DC or LA or San Francisco. It's just imagine all the people living life in peace. And now you say I'm a dreamer, but I'm not the only one. Perhaps one day you'll join us and the world will live as one. So this is right next to the Central Business District. You've got the CBD just behind these trees at half a mile away, the Central Business District of Sydney. I've got the Opera House is that way at half a mile. All right. Concentrated Sydney is just to my left. What is the size of Sydney compared to New York City? So there are about six million people who live in greater Sydney, but I don't think it's as concentrated with people as New York City. Los Angeles is actually more concentrated than New York. And so you don't have 10 people living in an apartment here like in Los Angeles and New York. So you have a lot of people, but there's so many parks. There's so much space and our cathedrals are beautiful cathedrals, beautiful churches, but the real Aussie cathedrals are our beaches. Now beaches are magnificent. And then everywhere you go, there are these great big beautiful well-tended parks. You just don't see any trash, lots of public toilets, no trash, they're very little graffiti. Just see the occasional bum lying on a bench, but they're not causing any disruption. It's just a peaceful easy feeling. Sydney, I know you won't let me down. No migrants hiding in women's restrooms, waiting to assault people. You don't have that in Sydney. This is the lucky country. The hobos, they don't cause problems here. Not that I've seen yet, and he had one person ask me for money and it was a very gentle ask. Oh, I'm riding public transport all around Sydney. Riding light rail buses or the ferry and on average it's costing me 67 American cents a day. I ride the light rail down to circular key, then I take those ferries over to Manly and ride the ferry back and take the light rail back. And at the end of the day I am out one Australian dollar, right, 67 American cents. So are there gang members in Sydney? Yeah, there are the lebos, the Lebanese, right, Lebanese and some Afghans. They tend to dominate the drug trafficking, but there's no legal marijuana. And I'm sure there are people doing illegal drugs here, but I see very little sign up. I haven't smelled that that sickly sweet smell of marijuana since I've been in Australia. That's a giant relief. So I walk through, you know, the busiest streets in Sydney and yeah, I see some bad hombres, right. I see some tough-looking dudes, right, who I would not want to have a run in with, but not bothering civilians. To the extent there's organized crime in Sydney, they rarely bother civilians. Now, there's a lot of entrepreneurship and moderate amount of financial scams in Sydney that are very likely to be introduced to you by an acquaintance, but people by and large are breaking into your home, they're not hoarding you up, they're not sticking a knife in your ribs, they're not shooting you. I hear police helicopters, but they're always monitoring, they're monitoring the oceans, like anyone getting caught in a riptide or something like that. So you'll see signs of the oceans warning about dangerous currents, but I almost never hear sirens. I have this very little sense of panic. So open question for the chat. Why is this Colorado shooting, getting so much attention to shooting Colorado Springs? I remember a few months ago, 50 migrants boiled to death, and that wasn't a top story in the New York Times for five minutes. It's been 48 hours now since the Colorado Springs LGBTQ shooting, and it's still dominating the news. Is it because we've got a sacred group and so their suffering is more important than everyone else's and because the media wants to dispel false stereotypes about the LGBTQ crowd, so he saved a lot of lives. Combat veteran tackled Colorado gunmen, oh yeah because a gun was involved, it can be blamed on MAGA. So the quick actions of retired army major and a drag performer in high heels guys took down the gunman before he reached a crowded patio. So thank god for drag queens in high heels, man. So this guy, Anderson Lee Aldrich, 22, he's been booked on suspicion of murder and bias motivated crime. So we don't know why he did it. We know this guy is a nutter, but the entire media focus for the last 48 hours was oh my god was this a heat crime. This is a bias motivated crime. God forbid there should be a bias motivated crime. I know in America we've had very serial killers who have assured us that they're not racist, right? They killed a lot of people, but they're not racist. Yeah. What's going on in Idaho, right? That's kind of disturbing, right? We have this Idaho college party house murders of five people were stabbed to death and absolutely no idea who did it. That's a frightening situation. Okay, so 70% of active shooter situations end before the police act, right? The police usually just arrive and quite and quite secure the perimeter of four college kids out of six slaughtered at 4 a.m. I want to want to know what's going on there, but they weren't nice to death. So that makes you think it was something personal. So the police usually don't stop active shooters, right? The police, as we saw at that horrible Texas school shooting, they fumble and bumble around for an hour or so establishing the perimeter. So in this case we had a drag performer stomped on the gunman with high heels. Thank God for those drag queens in high heels, man. They're saving us, keeping America safe. And let's never forget these victims of the LGBTQ club. Like these gay, transgendered individuals who suffered because of American homophobia. So this is a well-known LGBTQ bar that only in recent decades has emerged from a long history of hostility toward LGBTQ communities. And that's never because they did anything wrong. Like it's not because of AIDS, monkey parks, transmission of nasty sexually transmitted diseases. It's not because of impurities in the blood supply and thousands of innocent people dying of of AIDS because they got a tainted blood transfusion. It's not because of anything the LGBTQ community has done wrong. They've just been hated for absolutely no reason whatsoever. But maybe if the media can just bang on about how brave these people were at this club and how the the drag queen stomped on the shooter with her high heels. I think we just get 175 more articles like that. We can finally overcome America's very sad long history of homophobia.