00:00:02
H speak Spanish no where are you from
00:00:05
what's that couple streets over H you
00:00:08
living here in Mexico yeah I love Mexico
00:00:10
I don't like the United States okay it's
00:00:12
much calmer than New York it's still
00:00:15
very natural I've had a a little bit of
00:00:18
Mexican uh always in my family but not
00:00:20
by Blood but now I I basically do
00:00:22
internet marketing remote work things
00:00:25
like that the Mexican capital is now
00:00:27
considered one of the top five cities in
00:00:29
the world for remote workers nothing is
00:00:31
stopping me from working remotely as
00:00:33
long as I'm not earning wages here in
00:00:35
Mexico yeah what would you do if you had
00:00:37
that opportunity you know I grew up in
00:00:38
the states my family's only been there
00:00:40
for one or two generations also so you
00:00:42
know obviously I'm from there but I feel
00:00:44
more comfortable here to be honest this
00:00:46
country is more chill in Russia
00:00:48
everybody is on the rush everybody is
00:00:50
running here it's more chill okay thanks
00:00:53
bro thank you very much nice to meet you
00:00:55
nice to meet you too thank you
00:01:00
laica theic in is a big
00:01:18
problem what do you think about the
00:01:20
prices in this swn the prices here
00:01:22
pretty like comparable to Seattle prices
00:01:26
yeah rent in Seattle is back on the rise
00:01:29
average rent steal more than $2,100 a
00:01:32
month for a 700t apartment you tasty
00:01:35
some tacos H see see Pik or no P Pik
00:01:43
much Alo gracias nice to meet you nice
00:01:47
to meet you as well as some of you may
00:01:48
have seen much of our previous coverage
00:01:50
has focused on the issues along the US
00:01:52
Mexico border particularly surrounding
00:01:54
undocumented migrants coming from
00:01:56
developing nations in Latin America
00:01:58
who've crossed our border illegally in
00:01:59
search of Economic Opportunity in the
00:02:01
states many Americans have complained
00:02:03
that this Mass influx of migrants is
00:02:04
taking away job opportunities from
00:02:06
workingclass Americans lowering the
00:02:08
bottom line for coal miners and Veterans
00:02:09
flooding the streets with crime and
00:02:11
violence and leading to a can9 genocide
00:02:13
of Epic Proportions they're eating the
00:02:15
dogs the people that came in they're
00:02:18
eating the pets but what if I told you
00:02:20
there's a reverse border crisis going on
00:02:22
that's right rent and cost of living in
00:02:24
Mexico's largest city has doubled and
00:02:26
now tripled as a result of Americans
00:02:28
this all really began after the co
00:02:30
pandemic of 2020 during which tens of
00:02:32
millions of Americans working in the
00:02:33
tech sector switched to a work from home
00:02:35
model and no longer had to report to the
00:02:37
office in cities like San Francisco and
00:02:38
Seattle where tech companies like uber
00:02:40
Twitter Facebook Microsoft and Beyond
00:02:42
are headquartered so where did they go
00:02:44
the answer is simple they went somewhere
00:02:45
where their paycheck stretches a lot
00:02:46
further some chose cities like Austin
00:02:48
Texas and Nashville Tennessee but
00:02:49
800,000 Americans have moved to the
00:02:51
country of Mexico in the past 4 years
00:02:53
and almost nowhere is their presence
00:02:55
felt more than in Mexico's capital you
00:02:56
see graffiti like this that says Flingo
00:02:59
which means get out Greeno much like the
00:03:01
current situation at our border if done
00:03:03
right this wouldn't be a bad thing after
00:03:05
all tourism accounts for 17% of Mexico's
00:03:07
GDP much like immigrant labor documented
00:03:09
or undocumented accounts for 19% of the
00:03:11
American Workforce but this rapid Mass
00:03:14
influx of what are called digital Nomads
00:03:16
to Mexico City has overwhelmed the
00:03:17
housing market there to such a degree
00:03:19
that native born Mexicans cannot
00:03:20
feasibly live there on a standard salary
00:03:23
look past the Charming cafes flashy
00:03:25
apartments and you'll see this capital
00:03:27
city for what it's becoming a refuge
00:03:29
huge for migrants I grew up in New York
00:03:32
La Atlanta Georgia perhaps not the
00:03:34
border crossing you expected Americans
00:03:36
leaving pricey US cities heading south
00:03:39
to work from home in this episode our
00:03:41
Latin American correspondent hos will
00:03:44
investigate the ongoing situation in
00:03:45
Mexico City through the perspectives of
00:03:47
locals Americans other foreigners and
00:03:49
local activists doing their best to
00:03:51
bring awareness to the
00:03:58
problemo for
00:04:47
activists say the formula is simple as
00:04:49
Mexico has sought to attract remote
00:04:51
workers with higher purchasing power
00:04:54
it's created more inequality for
00:04:58
Mexicans for
00:05:44
H did you speak Spanish see your
00:05:47
favorite words in Spanish uh favorite
00:05:50
words
00:05:57
uh no
00:06:00
okay bad words okay
00:06:18
nice let's pause for a moment and talk
00:06:20
about gentrification it's a polarizing
00:06:22
buzzword that often divides people into
00:06:24
two camps on one side you have people
00:06:25
who see it as a great across theboard
00:06:27
thing the neighborhood gets cleaned up
00:06:29
crime goes down and home values rise for
00:06:31
millions of people my age that is a
00:06:33
dream then on the other side you have
00:06:35
those who view it as a form of
00:06:36
colonization and cultural eraser
00:06:38
gentrification is genocide but it's
00:06:40
important to understand that
00:06:41
gentrification doesn't begin maliciously
00:06:43
let's use the us as an example
00:06:45
hipsterism as we know it today began in
00:06:47
New York City in the early 2000s the
00:06:49
first hipsters were Suburban raised
00:06:50
Millennials who adapted grunge and
00:06:52
Lumberjack fashion forms that were
00:06:53
popular in Minneapolis and the Pacific
00:06:55
Northwest in the late '90s most of the
00:06:57
original hipsters were the grandchildren
00:06:59
of white Americans who fled the inner
00:07:00
cities in the mid1 1960s during
00:07:02
desegregation in a mass Exodus known as
00:07:05
white flight the construction of newly
00:07:06
built all-white suburbs and Lev towns
00:07:08
and the farmlands outside cities like
00:07:10
Philadelphia was more than a geographic
00:07:12
resettlement it was essentially a mass
00:07:14
divestment from the cities which
00:07:15
resulted in a near total transferring of
00:07:17
what josue's interviewee calls
00:07:19
purchasing power away from the urban
00:07:21
centers into these private redlined
00:07:22
communities this in turn created half a
00:07:25
century of economic aparte in which he
00:07:27
basically had two parallel societies the
00:07:29
city cities and the suburbs existing in
00:07:31
complete isolation from each other
00:07:33
throughout the ' 80s and '90s cities
00:07:34
like Philadelphia Baltimore and New York
00:07:36
City spiraled into chaos and disrepair
00:07:38
while Suburbia and its sprawl became
00:07:40
larger and larger even connecting Metro
00:07:42
areas like Chicago and Milwaukee but
00:07:44
there was one problem that the
00:07:45
architects of white flight didn't
00:07:47
consider which is the mass loss of
00:07:48
what's called cultural capital that came
00:07:50
as a result of isolation the first
00:07:52
generation born into a post white flight
00:07:54
reality were the Boomers it should come
00:07:55
as no surprise that they loved it and
00:07:57
appreciated it after all most of their
00:07:59
parents were were Hard Scrabble World
00:08:00
War II vets who grew up in a world with
00:08:02
no suburbs so a white picket fence in a
00:08:04
big backyard was like a Utopia the
00:08:05
children of the Boomers gen xers kind of
00:08:08
like the suburbs but were showing some
00:08:09
signs of angst but the generation after
00:08:11
them the Millennials they envisioned a
00:08:13
vibrant New Life a world Beyond cacs and
00:08:16
strip malls put simply they wanted to be
00:08:17
around culture eat interesting food hear
00:08:19
different languages and just not be
00:08:21
bored and so a migration called reverse
00:08:23
White flight began it's generally
00:08:25
acknowledged that the first hipster
00:08:26
neighborhood in America was Williamsburg
00:08:28
Brooklyn a his ially Jewish black and
00:08:30
Dominican area where Vice moved their
00:08:32
headquarters in 2001 the complete cycle
00:08:34
of turning parts of the neighborhood
00:08:36
from diverse cultural corridors to Flat
00:08:38
corporate business Parks took about 15
00:08:40
years and there's actually a science to
00:08:42
how gentrification Works tulan
00:08:44
University Professor Richard Campanella
00:08:46
broke it down into a four-phase model
00:08:47
phase one is the arrival of starving
00:08:49
artist types legitimate penniless as he
00:08:52
calls them gutter punks cuz he's from
00:08:53
New Orleans who are looking for a cheap
00:08:54
place to live that's a reasonable
00:08:56
commuting distance from upscale cultural
00:08:57
centers these types are often troubled
00:08:59
they use use drugs and drink heavily and
00:09:00
for certain never open any businesses
00:09:03
and so don't actively displace anyone
00:09:05
what they do though is signal safety
00:09:06
that makes way for the arrival of phase
00:09:08
2 Phase 2 is hipsters but Campanella
00:09:10
calls them the creative class those in
00:09:12
the creative class fetishize the
00:09:13
starving artist types and are often
00:09:15
semi-ring they kind of follow cool
00:09:18
around the country unlike the broke
00:09:19
Bohemians hipsters are typically college
00:09:21
educated hyper liberal and usually open
00:09:24
businesses like coffee shops organic
00:09:26
food stores juice bars yoga studios
00:09:28
barber shops with OS brick inside vegan
00:09:30
co-ops and essentially introduce oat
00:09:32
milk to the hood gradually the area
00:09:34
becomes a colony of the greater hipster
00:09:36
Network and begin seeing cross traffic
00:09:38
from cities like Portland Oregon who
00:09:40
begin imposing their Aesthetics and
00:09:42
cultural Customs onto the area however
00:09:44
rent and cost of living itself does not
00:09:46
actually rise until the third phase
00:09:48
begins which Campanella calls the
00:09:50
Bourgeois Bohemian phase this is marked
00:09:52
by the arrival of art collectors people
00:09:54
who refer to themselves as socialites
00:09:56
burning man camp leaders cultural
00:09:58
investors and most importantly real
00:10:01
estate developers with a taste for the
00:10:02
hip who are aware of the area's
00:10:04
skyrocketing cultural capital and see a
00:10:06
massive business opportunity which often
00:10:08
takes the form of a city- sponsored Arts
00:10:10
District it's between Phase 2 and three
00:10:12
that you find the most tension because
00:10:14
that's when the displacement happens in
00:10:15
this phase entire neighborhoods are
00:10:17
often bulldozed to make room for luxury
00:10:19
hotels trendy fine dining restaurants
00:10:21
and hip corporate storefronts resulting
00:10:23
in unaffordability for both locals who
00:10:25
are totally out of this coolness Matrix
00:10:28
and the hipsters in both Bohemians that
00:10:29
made the area cool in the first place
00:10:31
after the shiny new apartments are built
00:10:33
and the landlord raises the rent the
00:10:35
fourth phase begins which is the arrival
00:10:37
of the rich the young professional class
00:10:39
like Tech Bros and finance guys who have
00:10:41
absolutely no interest in anything cool
00:10:43
and view cultural capital as basically
00:10:45
meaningless by the time phase 4 is
00:10:47
complete and yuppies have taken over
00:10:49
you're left with a sterile metallic
00:10:51
ghost town full of empty apartments that
00:10:53
basically nobody wants to live in the
00:10:54
developers who banked on the cool Factor
00:10:56
are bummed and the cycle of
00:10:57
gentrification has now re started on the
00:11:00
outer radius of where it began spreading
00:11:02
like a nuclear bomb in all directions
00:11:04
destroying everything in its wake in New
00:11:06
York you could say the bomb was dropped
00:11:07
in Williamsburg the blast radius is
00:11:09
currently incinerating Bushwick bedy
00:11:11
Ridgewood and further out into the
00:11:12
buroughs in Mexico City it's safe to say
00:11:15
the g bomb was dropped in a neighborhood
00:11:17
called Roman Norte a historic district
00:11:19
just Southwest of the center of town I'm
00:11:20
not sure if you know this but Mexico
00:11:22
City is unbelievably large in size and
00:11:24
has a higher population than New York so
00:11:26
there was a ton of neighborhoods for
00:11:27
transplants to choose from but Roman
00:11:29
norte's primary cultural appeal was its
00:11:31
food it's been a hot spot for Mexican
00:11:33
Cuisine since the 1950s dude I mean you
00:11:35
can get you know some chili keiles or
00:11:37
some tacos for four pesos and it's like
00:11:39
[ __ ] good you know I love it it's
00:11:41
great the prices are great here do you
00:11:43
feel the upgrade the prices uh no yeah I
00:11:47
feel like in some places the prices are
00:11:48
going up I mean Roman Norte is
00:11:50
ridiculous condesa is so expensive now
00:11:53
uh I looked out cuz I feel like Warez
00:11:55
it's like it's still a little local but
00:11:57
it's it's like the Brooklyn of the CER
00:12:00
yeah in the center um it feel like it's
00:12:02
like a old New York you know beyond
00:12:04
cultural appeal another factor that
00:12:05
makes cities right for gentrification or
00:12:07
natural disasters one example would be
00:12:09
New Orleans Louisiana in 2005 Hurricane
00:12:12
Katrina struck the city killing 1,800
00:12:14
people and displacing half of New
00:12:15
Orleans population one of the hardest
00:12:17
hit neighborhoods was the ninth ward
00:12:19
because of the city's levies breaking
00:12:20
the Lower Ninth Ward was almost totally
00:12:22
flattened by floodwaters however in the
00:12:24
upper 9th Ward a neighborhood now
00:12:26
heavily rebranded as the Bywater
00:12:27
District homes remained intact despite
00:12:29
all of these homeowners having been
00:12:31
relocated elsewhere to cities like
00:12:32
Houston and Atlanta where many of them
00:12:34
lived in FEMA trailers awaiting
00:12:36
Insurance checks and government Aid in
00:12:37
this desperate State and amid an
00:12:39
uncertain future for a broken New
00:12:41
Orleans real estate agents swooped in
00:12:43
and began buying entire blocks of
00:12:44
Bywater homes in cash from the recently
00:12:47
displaced owners setting a foundation
00:12:49
for a hipster Enclave that would Thrive
00:12:51
about 10 years later according to many
00:12:52
Mexico City locals the story of what
00:12:54
happened in Roma Norte is actually quite
00:12:56
similar to what happened in the Bywater
00:12:58
Roma was the EP center of the 1985
00:13:00
Mexico City earthquake which killed
00:13:02
5,000 and displaced 2 million residents
00:13:05
many of whom would never return
00:13:52
EX
00:14:04
you know when I first moved here it was
00:14:05
completely different area you know there
00:14:07
there's been gentrification since after
00:14:10
the earthquake of ' 85 right and it's
00:14:12
been 20 or 30 years but it really got um
00:14:16
scaled up in the last 3 four years with
00:14:18
the pandemic and everything but the
00:14:19
price have gone up a lot then you have
00:14:21
the inflation kick in too a little bit
00:14:23
later here and so the last couple years
00:14:25
have been really tough for locals tough
00:14:27
for foreigners too cuz I mean it's
00:14:29
there's a lot of um I don't know
00:14:32
exploitation of the market I think from
00:14:34
local Mexicans who own the apartments no
00:14:36
regulations from the government and
00:14:38
there's just been kind of this
00:14:39
free-for-all but I think things are kind
00:14:40
of settling down a little bit but yeah I
00:14:42
mean I've been here for 10 years I'm a
00:14:43
permanent resident pay my
00:14:46
taxes Mexican brother yeah I don't have
00:14:50
any plans to go back like I said at
00:14:52
permanent residence I pay my taxes here
00:14:54
I I bought my apartment 10 years ago
00:14:56
here and it's it's probably where I'll
00:14:57
die you pay taxes I don't pay taxes bro
00:15:01
crazy bro no one likes to but
00:15:06
okay Perfecto that's it that's it hey
00:15:09
guys this is not an advertisement if you
00:15:11
speak Spanish or you want to learn
00:15:12
Spanish I have a great suggestion for
00:15:14
you go to our Spanish language Channel
00:15:16
Canal Sino we've gone through the
00:15:18
process of overdubbing all of our
00:15:19
classic videos in Spanish using real
00:15:21
human voice actors so if you want to go
00:15:23
check out Classics like
00:15:26
oock H twins those
00:15:30
San Francisco
00:15:32
street
00:15:36
beyond go to canalo I'm going to put the
00:15:38
link in the description and the pin
00:15:40
comment we're going to be posting there
00:15:41
every single week with new overdubs of
00:15:43
all the classics as well as new content
00:15:45
filmed all across Latin America so if
00:15:46
you want to support head on over adios
00:15:49
the reason that I felt that it was
00:15:50
important to illustrate these phases of
00:15:51
gentrification in such detail is because
00:15:53
it appears that Mexico City is somewhere
00:15:55
between Phase 2 and three while
00:15:57
certainly more expensive than it was
00:15:58
Roman Norte hasn't been bulldozed
00:16:00
completely to make way for glass
00:16:02
Condominiums and certainly retains the
00:16:03
Vibrance and energy that made it
00:16:05
attractive to Americans in the first
00:16:06
place which leads me to a unifying
00:16:08
conclusion that's more important than
00:16:09
differences between language and
00:16:11
nationality no one from the locals to
00:16:13
the digital Nomads want Mexico City to
00:16:15
change the Americans Russians and French
00:16:17
transplants hos interviewed possess a
00:16:19
genuine love for the place and they
00:16:21
aren't the ones raising the rent it's
00:16:22
the landlords developers real estate
00:16:24
tycoons and city government that make
00:16:26
these calls seeing an opportunity to
00:16:28
capitalize on Hy hyperinflated foreign
00:16:29
currencies if properly regulated taxed
00:16:32
and accommodated the influx of digital
00:16:33
Nomads could be a great thing for the
00:16:35
city this isn't something that
00:16:36
neighborhood natives are totally blind
00:16:57
to
00:17:00
[Music]
00:17:18
[Music]
00:17:26
for Mexico City Central Boulevard is
00:17:30
undergoing a full-fledged Renaissance As
00:17:32
wealthy Mexican and international firms
00:17:35
stake ever bigger claims on the landmark
00:17:38
[Music]
00:17:42
promon for the
00:17:45
restant okay okay okay it's creating
00:17:48
tourism and and and and money for small
00:17:51
businesses
00:17:57
[Music]
00:18:11
I came here because of the war in Russia
00:18:13
Russians are fleeing the Country flights
00:18:16
from Moscow to all visa-free
00:18:17
destinations selling out quickly okay
00:18:20
yeah I'm afraid of my life okay yeah uh
00:18:25
you working in DJ uh yeah I'm DJing uh
00:18:28
and my friend Lane we are making our
00:18:30
project it called Z
00:18:33
hry
00:18:35
rush
00:18:37
hry and also I'm working as a waiter uh
00:18:41
in a restaurant okay yeah
00:19:03
no
00:19:03
hurry no
00:19:25
rush when you really get to Mexico City
00:19:28
when you stay in these places when you
00:19:29
meet random cool artists on the street
00:19:32
you realize bro it's a beautiful place a
00:19:34
beautiful place that will likely
00:19:35
continue to grow at an exponential rate
00:19:37
in the coming years as inflation in the
00:19:39
US as well as the rising cost of living
00:19:41
make things like home ownership nearly
00:19:43
unattainable for the millions of young
00:19:44
professionals entering the white collar
00:19:46
Workforce a recent study conducted by
00:19:48
MBO business partners suggested that 70
00:19:50
million Americans are currently
00:19:52
expressing interest in adapting the
00:19:53
digital Nomad lifestyle and of those 70
00:19:55
million 9% are already putting their
00:19:57
plans into motion so what's been seen in
00:19:59
Mexico City since Co is just the
00:20:00
beginning in preparation for this Mass
00:20:02
migration a number of countries like
00:20:04
Japan have already introduced digital
00:20:05
Nomad visas which require remote workers
00:20:07
to file taxes in Japan regardless of
00:20:09
where their paycheck is coming from
00:20:10
something similar was advocated for by
00:20:12
Mexico city councilwoman Freda guen who
00:20:14
proposed something called a digital
00:20:15
Nomad tax that would charge them all a
00:20:17
flat fee of roughly 3,000 pesos or
00:20:20
$155 per month but this idea was shot
00:20:22
down by her constituents and never
00:20:24
really came to fruition because after
00:20:25
all this was an inside job in the first
00:20:27
place airb B recently struck a deal with
00:20:30
local authorities to make this place one
00:20:33
of 20 Global destinations for so-called
00:20:36
digital Nomads the mass buyouts of
00:20:39
apartments in these neighborhoods to
00:20:40
convert them into airbnbs and Market
00:20:42
them to wealthy foreigners was directly
00:20:44
facilitated by the city government who
00:20:45
pulled no punches in evicting tenants
00:20:47
without warning this woman has asked us
00:20:49
not to reveal her identity after her
00:20:51
apartment building signed a deal with
00:20:53
the home share company Airbnb she was
00:20:55
given 5 days to move out she says short
00:20:58
notice evictions are becoming common
00:21:00
place across the city
00:21:36
without proper restrictions in place the
00:21:38
only group of people that could
00:21:39
collectively stop gentrification right
00:21:41
now are landlords local landlords which
00:21:43
makes things even more
00:21:55
complicated I'm going to go out on a
00:21:57
limb here and suggest that if there's
00:21:58
one thing that landlords don't do it
00:22:00
would be supporting the People by way of
00:22:02
voluntarily reducing rent costs so many
00:22:04
locals feel that the only possible
00:22:06
solution moving forward is to impose
00:22:08
government-mandated regulations on both
00:22:10
what landlords can charge and
00:22:12
immigration itself
00:22:55
see
00:23:02
Mexico City one of the world's most
00:23:04
populated cities at nearly 22 million
00:23:06
people could run out of water in just
00:23:08
months it's being referred to as day
00:23:11
Zero and experts warn it could happen in
00:23:14
June tourism plays into this water
00:23:16
shortage a tourist uses between three to
00:23:19
four times more water than a
00:23:26
resident shortly after these interviews
00:23:28
were conducted like actually 24 hours
00:23:30
later Mexico City Government unanimously
00:23:32
approved the largest rent freeze in
00:23:34
their country's history since 1946
00:23:36
prohibiting Airbnb landlords and Roman
00:23:38
Norte from raising the prices any higher
00:23:40
and ensuring Mexican tenants who make
00:23:41
less than digital Nomads make a reduced
00:23:43
rate rent as well as government housing
00:23:45
loans in an effort to combat
00:23:46
displacement the rent freeze will also
00:23:48
require all landlords to register their
00:23:49
rental contracts with the city and
00:23:51
establishes strict fines and penalties
00:23:53
for any of them caught overcharging
00:23:54
foreign tenants or evicting Mexican
00:23:56
renters without proper notice which
00:23:58
overall is great news back to
00:24:05
host where are you
00:24:13
from as hos wrapped up his report we
00:24:16
decided to send another bilingual friend
00:24:18
of ours to a very different part of the
00:24:19
country yet a place where the influence
00:24:21
of Americans and particularly American
00:24:23
dollars has been felt just as hard
00:24:41
the it's the greatest Border in the
00:24:43
world TJ a historic Border Town with the
00:24:46
highest number of homicides in Mexico
00:24:48
but otherwise a great
00:24:54
City however Tijuana like Mexico City
00:24:57
has an American problem specifically a
00:24:59
horny Americans problem every night
00:25:00
thousands of Americans cross the US
00:25:02
Mexico border typically on foot coming
00:25:04
from cities like San Diego Santa Barbara
00:25:06
and Yuma Arizona to engage in commercial
00:25:08
sex acts with often times traffic women
00:25:10
at a full service flat fee of $100 hold
00:25:12
up one those DS guys John here in this
00:25:15
video we're going to speak to sex
00:25:16
workers and TJ recently divorced dads
00:25:18
looking for love Carefree locals dressed
00:25:20
as Nazis for Halloween and most
00:25:22
importantly American dudes paying for
00:25:23
sex via Mexico vivva Mexico I love mexic
00:25:29
everybody come to [ __ ] Mexico this is
00:25:30
a place to be the [ __ ] here are wild
00:25:33
anything you want to do has a price bro
00:25:36
anything dude it's [ __ ] lit it's so
00:25:38
free picked up some stuff off a random
00:25:41
street dealer and probably got skimped
00:25:43
but it was lit I've already done some
00:25:45
you know blow offs some titties and [ __ ]
00:25:47
but like I'm not trying to get too
00:25:49
[ __ ] up or El so I'm going to start
00:25:50
eating stripper's ass up out of Hong
00:25:52
Kong bro oh my God you can't get better
00:25:54
than this doggy oh see baby for obvious
00:25:57
reasons it'll be difficult for this
00:25:58
video to ever be posted on YouTube due
00:26:00
to the content it contains so if you'd
00:26:02
like to see this episode go to our
00:26:03
patreon
00:26:04
www.patreon.com Chann 5 as many of you
00:26:08
know we are a completely independent 95%
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00:26:28
Channel 5 live worldwide Hollywood
00:26:30
andine [ __ ] the authority Channel 5 News
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Channel 55 we don't [ __ ] with custers
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and five is the best number next
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question