Episode Transcript
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0:00
Music.
0:38
Hello, and welcome back to another episode of Fringe Beyond Limits.
0:46
Now that was sexy. It was great. It was amazing.
0:51
So, thank you for coming back to another episode. Bree, Lynette,
0:56
how have you guys been? Been great.
1:00
It's been a good few days. You know, got to be out in the sun. It was good.
1:07
Yeah. Did some gardening. It was good. How about you? What'd you been up to?
1:11
I've done absolutely nothing. Yeah, the sun is great. I think we need more sun and more sunshine and just more outside.
1:26
Have you had any cicadas? No, I haven't. Have you, Bree? I have not.
1:31
I don't either, but my aunt sent me a photo of cicadas and her house is covered
1:36
in them. She's out in Lombard. So they're coming. They're here.
1:42
I hate the cicada thing. Really? Yeah. Or is it all the hype around it? No, it's so annoying.
1:49
I'm 100% sure my two dogs are just going to go ape shit every single time I open the goddamn door.
1:56
And Rizal's just going to try to eat them. I was just going to say,
1:59
will they eat them? Yeah, probably. Then you don't have to feed them dinner.
2:03
Protein. Yeah. I'm pretty sure there's nutrients that they're missing if they
2:08
just eat cicadas. I don't know. Cicadas eat everything else.
2:11
Do they? I don't know. I don't know. What does their diet consist of?
2:14
I see everybody in my neighborhood with those tree covering things all over the place.
2:20
So I guess they'll get fiber from the tree.
2:23
I don't know, but my mom's neighbor actually bought like a mesh muzzle for her dog or their
2:29
dog just because it's not for biting or walking it's
2:32
just to keep them from eating crap so really to
2:35
keep them from eating the cicadas right that's weird huh are
2:39
you guys going to eat cicadas nope i don't eat meat with feet do they really
2:45
have feet though is that considered meat it's meat enough it has feet i don't
2:51
know if that's considered meat i remember i'm not sure I'm sure it was the last
2:54
time or the last two times, because I'm old.
2:58
People were, like, grilling them. Yeah. And baking, like, dipping them in chocolate. Yeah.
3:05
People who eat bugs creep me out. Like, would you eat those Mexican candies
3:10
with, like, the spiders and the beetles and stuff in it? You know.
3:15
You can get edible crickets online. Crickets, yeah. You can get crickets,
3:19
like, on the side of the street and, like, you would buy from a hot dog stand.
3:23
There's a lot of countries that, like, that's, like, a delicacy.
3:26
Like, you know, there's, like, all those street vendors that are cooking up
3:29
whatever and they have beetles and.
3:31
Mealworms. Oh, yeah, yeah. I can't do that. No.
3:35
That reminds me of maggots, and I puke if I ever. They also bite.
3:42
Mealworms bite? Yeah. Really? I used to have a pet hedgehog,
3:46
and we would feed him mealworms, but I was not afraid of them.
3:48
I didn't know that they bit. Yeah, I used to work at a pet store, and we would always tell people,
3:52
make sure you squeeze off the head or something, because you don't want them
3:56
accidentally lizard-eat-it-whole-eating-through-the-stomach if it's still alive.
4:03
Sick. Yeah. That's a thing. Yeah. So you had a hedgehog that you fed mealworms to?
4:08
They love mealworms, yeah. So how many mealworms do you think it would take to overcome a hedgehog?
4:15
Well, a hedgehog's the size of a grapefruit. I would say like a gallon. Yeah, probably.
4:20
Okay, well, how many are in a gallon? I have no clue. You think I count?
4:23
I mean, they're about, what, an inch long? We're not talking about me, right? I mean, but that's enough,
4:29
right, guys? Like an inch? Like, that's enough? Right? For a good laugh, yeah. Oh, yeah.
4:35
Okay. That's probably why I'm a pretty good comedian, I guess.
4:39
Well, okay. So here's a, here's a question then. How many first graders do you
4:45
think you guys can take on in a fight before they overcome you? Yeah.
4:49
How big are these first graders? I don't know, kids, these are huge.
4:53
They're average size first graders. There's no average size. Yes, there is.
4:57
No, there's not. Yes, there is. No. Yes. No.
5:00
I mean, one is exhausting, so. Well, what I'm saying is, you're in a ring, right?
5:06
And every minute, one first grader comes running into the ring.
5:13
So like the Royal Rumble? Yes. Royal Rumble. Wumble. I did it. I don't think you did it yet.
5:21
That was a tongue twister for me. That is hard.
5:24
Royal Wumble. Guys, English is my second language. I have struggles with my
5:29
R sounds. You have struggles with your native language?
5:31
Yes. No R sounds. English is hard. I actually have speech for it.
5:36
Yeah. My wife, your sister, is a speech therapist. And it looks like you should
5:40
book some more appointments. No. No, you don't want to? Or no, you don't need them? No. Which one?
5:46
Because I have proof. I will go to the tape.
5:50
No. Okay. I guess all she knows is no.
5:54
How many first graders for you? You know, I would say I could probably take on like three.
6:02
Wow, I thought you were going to say many more. No, I could probably take on,
6:06
I would say, like in that capacity, right? I'm in the ring.
6:10
So one swing would knock out a first grader, right? It's Frank. I mean.
6:19
Listen, this is not something I've practiced or I've done. I'm just saying that
6:24
one swing could probably take out a first grader.
6:26
So it all goes to how many swings do I have in me before I have to start kicking?
6:33
And then how many combined kicking and swinging do I have in me before I tire out and collapse?
6:40
I would probably say a hundred. Yeah.
6:45
You have weird thoughts, my friend. Yeah, I would say like 25 of each limb. I got 25 good swings.
6:52
25 of each limb. Yeah. That's like, if you do that, that math, right?
7:02
So it's L to the 25th power, right?
7:08
No. What are you talking about? I don't know. I'm just trying to figure out
7:12
an equation that would show my work.
7:16
Again? Yeah. What are you talking about?
7:20
My mathematical equation for how many first graders. It would be first equals L to the 25th power.
7:28
Where L is represented by one. We're not a math podcast, so. We're not?
7:34
No. No, what do we talk about, guys? Shit.
7:37
Okay, well, to a lot of people, math is shit. it so
7:41
if it's no no okay all right so anyway what are we talking about tonight guys
7:48
we got some time slips that's awesome before that though i do have an article
7:56
boom boom boom so do you guys know,
8:01
the article that i've chosen for tonight nope i have no idea it's from tmz oh
8:08
so it's a good one And let me read you the title.
8:16
So it says, Stormy Daniels' Trump's Ghost Shaming Her Ex-Spooky Partner Vouches For Her.
8:24
What do you guys think this article is about?
8:27
Say that title again. Stormy Daniels' Trump's Ghost Shaming Her Ex-Spooky Partner Vouches For Her.
8:38
The ghost is a bully? All right. So you guys are stupid. Let me jump into this.
8:45
All right. Stormy Daniels is getting trashed by Donald Trump's attorneys for
8:50
claiming under oath she sees dead people.
8:53
But a veteran ghost hunter says they're barking up the wrong haunted tree because
8:58
he's seen her skills firsthand. Oh, boy. Oh.
9:03
I think a lot of people have seen her skills at least secondhand.
9:08
I mean, I don't know, would video be secondhand or first-hand knowledge?
9:12
Secondhand? Yeah. Okay. Here's the deal. One of the porn star's side hustles is as a paranormal investigator,
9:19
which came up in court last week as Team Trump tried to use it to mock her and
9:25
discredit her testimony. Now, I kind of take a little offense here.
9:32
Just because you're a paranormal investigator doesn't discredit you in any way.
9:36
Right. Or call it woo-woo. Yes.
9:39
When it's, okay, that's just, you know, that's just silly.
9:43
So I'll continue. David Childers has been in the paranormal field for nearly
9:48
30 years and had a much different take as he watched the trial play out because
9:53
he's gone ghost hunting with Stormy on her show Spooky Babes.
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And he tells TMZ. That's the name of her show. That's the name.
10:00
I've never heard of it. I need to go watch it. And she's the real deal, he says.
10:07
Childers swears to Zuul Z-U-U-L Isn't that the guy from Ghostbusters?
10:16
I don't know Alright Childers swears
10:18
to Zuul He's observed Stormy Daniels on several occasions Know scarily specific
10:24
details About dead people in spooky places With no prior information And for
10:30
him That's documented proof of her abilities And so So there's in this article,
10:36
there is a courtroom drawing of Stormy and it just, it's so bad.
10:43
I don't know who did that, but it's horrible. Anyway, Childers says spirits flock to Stormy because she is a hundred percent good person.
10:51
But interestingly, he adds, they can't have her back.
10:56
As TMZ previously reported, Stormy wore a bulletproof vest while testifying
11:01
in the Trump case due to safety concerns. What?
11:03
Dude, this is so crazy. I mean, so I have filed zero of this court case.
11:12
Yeah, me neither. Because I just don't give two shits. Yeah.
11:16
But you're wearing a bullet. I mean, that's just for show, right?
11:20
It is, yeah. She's just trying to make a point or. Right, right.
11:25
People talking about her or something. Right. And I'm sorry.
11:28
Listen, there's a lot of phenomenal people out in the world.
11:31
No one is 100% good person. You know, I think his, this guy,
11:38
I think he just wants to fuck her. I think that's all it is. So we know what some of you are thinking.
11:45
And Childers says ghosts simply can't protect the living despite the Hollywood
11:49
heroics of folks like Patrick Swayze.
11:54
As for ghost hunting being used to discredit her on the stand,
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Childers called it sad but not surprising.
12:01
Although he thinks it's terribly unfair. affair he recalls the
12:04
same thing happened to him while going through a divorce and
12:07
it ain't cool to have ghost skills used against
12:10
you whether people believe it or not children's
12:13
contents paranormal investigators are a science that deserves
12:16
more respect from the living especially from team trump regarding
12:20
stormy daniels so well i
12:22
agree with the last statement yeah i i do too but i
12:25
mean i just think he wants to bang her i mean
12:30
you know i mean how old is she i don't
12:34
i have no idea but you know she is an attractive woman what is thinking her
12:37
40s no i think older i think
12:40
she's closer to 60 oh it says she's 45 she's really yeah okay i'm looking at
12:46
a current picture of her there is no fucking way she looks the same age as me
12:50
she looks i mean you're saying she looks older she looks young well yeah she's
12:56
lived a rough life been ridden hard.
13:03
Oh god that's amazing you know things that i think and other people say at the same time i find,
13:11
so heartwarming it's because you're psychic you planted that thought in my brain
13:15
you know what that sort of stuff doesn't cross my brain i'm gonna tell you something
13:18
if i had that kind of ability that's not the kind of stuff i'd be planting in
13:22
people's brains yeah you might get bored of that skill after a while and you
13:25
just have to put weird thoughts in people's heads Maybe, maybe, but...
13:28
That would be a cool superpower. That would be.
13:31
I think I might want to add that to my superpower wish list.
13:34
Okay. Yeah. All right, well, we'll talk to Dr.
13:38
Xavier, Dr. X, right? From X-Men?
13:41
Okay, so I'm the only nerd here. All right, I'm getting a weird look.
13:46
So anyway, what do you guys think of that, of Stormy Daniels being a ghost hunter?
13:51
I mean, good for her, doing something like that, that she is inspired by.
13:58
So I'm not sure if everyone's seen, but on our Facebook page,
14:01
I did post that picture of her being a ghost hunter and with the caption I had
14:05
that we need to get her on the show. So what do you guys think is the likelihood of us getting Stormy Daniels on
14:11
our little paranormal podcast? 20% chance.
14:15
Wow, that's high. I know. I don't know. First number that came up to my head. Because if that's the case,
14:20
I'm going to start right now trying to get her. I mean, you never know, No, but that's the first number that came to my head,
14:26
though. All right. Would you guys want to have her on?
14:31
I am open to have anybody on. What would be the first thing you would ask her? Has she ever gotten naked for
14:38
a ghost before? That's actually not a bad question.
14:42
Lynette? I'm blanking. You're staring into my soul and creeping me out.
14:49
I'm trying to think. Is that a way of you saying that my eyes are just as sexy as my voice? Yes. Wow.
14:58
I'm going to have to. See, he doesn't know how to take a compliment. It's weird.
15:02
I'm going to have to timestamp that. And I think that's the first time you've
15:06
ever complimented me. Do you think she knows Jenny? Real quick.
15:09
Jenny is number one on my celebrity list. Oh, well, then she can't be on the
15:15
show. No, she definitely will be on the show. I will sit here. That might be the most quietest I'll ever be on the show.
15:21
I'd be just in shock. Fangirling? Oh, yeah.
15:24
100%. What if she knows Dave and she can get Dave on the show? Who? Dave?
15:29
You're Dave. You're Dave. Oh, Dave Matthews? Yeah. Oh. Dave?
15:36
Maybe Dave's been on The Masked Singer. Mr. Dave Matthews, I just want to say
15:40
how much my wife and I love your music. And it's one of the reasons why we got married. and I would love to hold you
15:48
for a good while. With Jenny there. Oh, God.
15:54
I'm going to have to step out of the room for a moment. Okay.
15:57
Anyway, yeah, so it'd be awesome if we can get Stormy Daniels on our little podcast.
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Would you want to do the hurry here with us in my house?
16:08
Or would it just be more of a call-in show? If I'd be a call-in,
16:13
yeah. Yeah, all right. I'm trying. All right, so anyway, that's our article for today. So let's jump right into time slips.
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So tell me ladies what what do you think a time slip is like well what what
16:27
would you define that as while you're checking the time you slip and fall that's
16:34
the worst dad joke i've heard,
16:39
it has nothing to do what we're talking about.
16:44
Honestly i didn't know what a time slip was until i read into it for this podcast
16:49
so So that's why I made that joke.
16:51
Really? You didn't know what a time slip was at all? I never really thought
16:55
about it. I never really heard a term until now.
16:59
I'm just surprised. That's all. I'm not making fun of you. That's the first. Okay.
17:05
Ms. Lynette, I know you and I have talked about time slips before.
17:09
It's definitely something I want to experience.
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But my understanding is it happens potentially at random where someone is doing
17:22
whatever mundane life activity and somehow automagically finds them somewhere
17:28
in the same environment, but in a,
17:31
as it sounds, time in the future or in the past and things don't look the way they are.
17:36
And then just as fast as it happens, they're back to where they started. Yeah.
17:42
So, yeah. Why do you want to experience one? It looks fun. Does it? Yeah.
17:49
Okay. I would love to be, I don't know, I find myself walking my dog around
17:55
the block or going for a drive and I was like, man, I really wish I could be
17:59
in this place where there is nobody. Like before people settled in this area and started building houses and roads
18:06
and stuff like that. I just want to see what this planet, where I live,
18:11
looked like before people were here. It sounds cool. No, it doesn't. Why? It's terrifying. Why? Because what if you run out of gas?
18:20
Yeah, well. Yeah. How do you get back?
18:24
What if I don't want to come back? You'd be answering a lot of prayers.
18:28
How do we know that doesn't happen to people who just vanish?
18:32
People who go missing. What if they ran out of gas on the other side of the time slip?
18:38
Listen, I know that this is why we're talking about this, but I don't understand
18:44
why someone would want to do that, though. I find it exciting. I would love to come back and report my experience.
18:51
Yeah. If I come back. Yeah, right. That's the whole thing. That's a big fucking F. Yeah, well.
18:57
I would poop myself.
19:00
Oh, yeah. What if they don't have a change of pants for you? Well, yeah.
19:03
Then you know then i i'll guarantee people will stay away from me so what are
19:09
you afraid of happening everything you're not as scared i'm feared i'm scared
19:15
so i don't want to go somewhere where nobody knows my name.
19:25
Just make sure you're at the cheers bar i
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mean i
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don't know i think that's pretty terrifying just walking down
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the street and all of a sudden being in a different time you
19:41
know i mean like i'm sure it's jarring but
19:44
i mean pretty cool listen okay if
19:48
i'm walking down the street and all of a sudden i'm catapulted back
19:51
to biblical times i'm i'm gonna
19:54
be number one put to death for being like a witch right okay well guess what
20:00
i'm not experiencing that time anymore well what if you just came back just
20:05
as quick i mean you don't know but like what like right before they lit the uh higher yeah yeah,
20:12
then they'll be like whoa he really was a witch and you'll prove them right
20:16
and then history would It would have been rewritten all about you.
20:19
So everyone would know your name. Once there's a guy named Frank. All right. So number one, as amazing as that time would be, but no,
20:26
I don't think that sounds like a good time for me.
20:30
Do you think you can choose? Do you think there's any control over it?
20:34
Like your own mental time machine?
20:38
Right. Do I want, I don't know, if you're actually limited or bound to the place
20:44
where you physically are when it happens and you're only in that spot,
20:48
but just a different time? Or could time slip, all of a sudden you're walking down the street and you end
20:54
up in another country or something like that?
20:56
Yeah, I don't know. That's a great question. I would tend to say that traveling
21:01
through time isn't the same as traveling through space.
21:04
So I would guess that if you do fall into a time slip, you would be in that
21:09
same space, just in a different time.
21:12
I see where you're going with that. Yeah. Yeah. But maybe, I mean,
21:15
maybe time and space are more interlocked than we think.
21:20
And maybe traveling through, or you could look at it this way,
21:25
maybe traveling through time. You're also traveling through space, so you would end up in a different point of the planet.
21:32
You know, just depending on... That would be wild. Yeah, I mean,
21:35
just depending where the planet's rotation and axis and whatever.
21:40
I'm not a scientist, I don't know. You know, but I mean, yeah, you could end up in a different part of the world.
21:47
Then how would you get back? Right. I mean, there's no planes. If I'm going back, you go back 100 years,
21:54
there's no fucking planes. Hmm. Well. You know, I mean. Do you think Amelia Earhart was a time slip?
22:02
No, I think she ran out of gas and crashed.
22:05
Well, that's a very unromantic story. It is a very un, but I'm,
22:10
you know, there's certain things where I just, you know, it just is what it is.
22:15
There is no. Well, what about that pilot? Wasn't he flying through the Bermuda
22:19
Triangle area in, maybe that's more time travel. I don't know if it's time travel or time slip.
22:24
It's very confusing for me. Do you know what I'm talking about?
22:27
There was a guy who was flying, I think, from Cuba to Florida or something like
22:30
that, and he made it there in a quarter of the time. Yeah, in like three minutes. Yeah.
22:36
So would you call that a time slip? Is that a portal? Is that time travel?
22:42
I don't... It could be all of the above. I mean, time slips...
22:44
It's whatever you make it. It's not whatever you make it. I just wanted to say
22:48
something. Okay, well, say something smart. Gee, I sound rude. Duh.
22:55
But no, I mean, time slips and time travel, they can all be interlocked.
23:00
I mean, if you think about it, a time slip could be just a,
23:05
That's the word I'm looking for. Like a compression or expansion of time? Yeah.
23:11
It could be a time hiccup.
23:14
A time fart. Time burp. Time burp. Okay.
23:18
It's a flatulence of time. I think you're just coining new phrases on this show
23:21
right and left. Listen, I'm going to trademark them all. We had butt diamonds
23:24
last time. Yeah, we got butt diamond. We got flatulence of time.
23:30
It's a lot of butt stuff going on. Lots of butt stuff.
23:35
And surprisingly, I am not a fan of butt stuff, as people may think.
23:40
I am not. What people might think.
23:43
The ones of our listeners. Everybody, the shirt that says, I like butt stuff
23:47
that you wear all the time. Yeah, yeah. The ones of our listeners, all ones of them, think this.
23:53
And I blame both of you for that. So how many ones of listeners do we have? Everyone sound off real quick.
24:05
But you know there's there's a lot of stories of like of like uh,
24:11
of like deja vu right what if like deja vu was just like a brief flash of a
24:19
time slip like what if all that is is just like a memory of us having a time slip that was so,
24:27
so small that we didn't really think about until we experienced it again.
24:32
Bree, you can say something now. I can't think of anything right now. All right, just sit there and try to look
24:38
pretty. I will. All right, thanks. No, I... Oh, sorry, I didn't mean to kick you, Bree.
24:42
No, I think deja vu... I think the whole concept of time in general gets confusing
24:50
for me because I'm wondering if it is different words trying to express the same thing.
24:55
Deja vu being one of them because I've been there.
24:59
How did I see this? where did I see this?
25:02
But you don't, you only have like a flash. So maybe that, that,
25:05
maybe that's exactly what a time slip is. It happens that fast.
25:08
It's just a flash in time, like a flash in a pan. It's just a moment.
25:13
That's interesting. I mean, yeah.
25:16
So what do you think causes time slips?
25:20
It could be if, if we're thinking from a dimensional perspective,
25:24
it could could be a convergence of dimensions in proximity with each other.
25:31
So if everything's running in parallel, what if time sped up or slowed down
25:36
in one area where these dimensions converge, allowing you to slip into the other one and or come back?
25:43
Does that make sense? Yeah, it makes sense. I don't know. What do you think?
25:49
I'm not thinking of anything, honestly, no. Yeah, you know, I think we've mentioned it before.
25:57
The most current running theory is that all time that's ever happened is happening,
26:02
will happen, is going on at the same time.
26:04
So if we kind of look at it as though slices and just maybe it's just when those two different times,
26:16
sliced pieces of time kind of overlap, you know, they're touching.
26:21
So you kind of experience one over the other in that brief moment.
26:24
And then as they break apart or move away from each other, I mean,
26:29
kind of like what you're saying, speeding up and slowing down. I kind of look at it as though...
26:34
Like a wave right like a wave i
26:37
don't and water so like when waves converge you know
26:40
and you create one big rogue wave and that
26:44
decimates ships i was actually before
26:47
you even started talking about ocean and water or whatever
26:50
i had images of water in my head too so i think you
26:53
are planting seeds in my brain just just saying
26:56
like i was picturing like raindrops or something raindrops could join
26:59
together and they pick up more as
27:02
they're you know running down your window or something them so yeah i'm
27:06
going to keep planning stuff in your head just whatever i do plant just
27:08
take action on those which is i appreciate it he does that
27:11
by when he stares at your soul that's that's what's actually what's happening
27:15
he's planning stuff in your head creep you know get out of my brain so all right
27:19
so this is going to take us somewhere different so i i do believe that the eyes
27:25
are the windows to the soul and i do know that some people when they stare at
27:30
you you're you're like, holy shit. They're like looking through me into the back of my brain. Is that the way you
27:36
guys feel when I stare at you? Yeah. Really? Because I've never gotten that before.
27:41
No one's ever mentioned that before and that just popped in my head because
27:43
Lynette's mentioned it twice now. Because I put that thought in your head.
27:49
There's times when people stare and I'm like, okay, but there's sometimes when like,
27:53
You witness it. Like when you start staring at me, I start getting nervous and
27:55
I'm like, stop staring at me. Do you like that? You're doing it right now. I don't like it.
28:02
It freaks me out. I'm going to have to put a two-way mirror here so you can't
28:06
see it. Pretty much. Yeah. It's like some people do the same thing he's doing,
28:08
but I don't get the same intense. And it's like, I mean, some people, it's the same way. And just like,
28:13
I get so nervous and freak out. Freaking lasers.
28:16
Yeah. See, I've never, I mean,
28:20
at least people, maybe they feel more comfortable when I do
28:23
do it i don't know but like no one's ever said that so now i'm
28:26
just curious if i have that effect and if so i just
28:29
want to stare more intently into people's eyes now and just get maybe he's now
28:32
that's just getting creepy maybe he's a secret man in black and he's wiping
28:36
your thoughts and that's why you try to talk and he just wipes your brain i
28:44
should have wiped anyway Anyway, skid mark, Frank.
28:51
SMF. SMF, baby. So, all right.
28:55
So there is a couple stories that we did pull for this time slip.
29:02
So the first one is a pretty well-known one. I mentioned it to both of you and
29:07
you guys never heard of it. So I kind of want to lead with that real quick.
29:11
So it's July 1954, a hot day. A man arrives.
29:17
Tokyo airport in Japan. He's of Caucasian appearance and conventional looking,
29:22
but the officials are suspicious on checking his passport.
29:25
They see that he hails from a country called Torrid.
29:29
The passport looked genuine, except for the fact that there is no such country
29:34
as Torrid, well, at least in our dimension.
29:37
The man is interrogated and asked to point out where his country supposedly exists on the map.
29:43
He immediately points his finger towards the the Principality of Andorra,
29:48
but becomes angry and confused.
29:50
He's never heard of Andorra and can't understand why his homeland of Tori isn't there.
29:55
According to him, it should have existed for more than a thousand years.
30:01
Customs officials found him in possession of money from several different European currencies.
30:05
His passport had been stamped by many airports around the globe,
30:09
including previous visits to Tokyo.
30:12
Baffled, they took him to a local hotel and placed him in a room with two guards
30:17
outside until they could get to the bottom of the mystery.
30:19
The company he claimed to work for had no knowledge of him, although he had
30:24
copious amounts of documentation to prove his point.
30:27
The hotel he claimed to have had a reservation for had never heard of him either.
30:31
The company officials in Tokyo he was there to do business with,
30:36
yep, you guessed it, they just shook their
30:39
heads no later when the hotel room he was
30:42
held in was opened the man had disappeared the
30:45
police established that he could not have escaped out the window the room was
30:49
several floors up and there was no balcony balcony and he was never seen again
30:53
so you guys that's your first time hearing that story and supposedly this happened
30:59
i think is either the The 50s or the 60s. So it's not like it's something new.
31:04
It's a story, right? This is 1954. Okay, yeah. So, I mean, it's 70 years old. Yeah.
31:13
So, you know, there wasn't too much... Bullshit going on back then you know especially with stuff like this like you know i mean sci-fi.
31:22
Stories were i think were just getting popular at that time so you
31:25
know i don't think this was something
31:28
that was just made up for fun what do you guys uh what are
31:31
your guys thoughts on that story well i think this one's interesting because
31:34
most of the stories i've heard are someone leaving
31:38
and coming back where this one is someone came and
31:41
went right so that's that
31:44
in and of itself unique yeah yeah and it's
31:47
it's a very pretty a well covered story
31:51
i've never heard it yeah that's cool
31:54
yeah it's really cool i just the only
31:57
thing that makes me think that this is potentially fake is that there's no name
32:04
you know so they would that's that's interesting yeah yeah because Because I
32:10
would think that if the officials,
32:14
the airport officials, would have taken this person into custody and put him
32:19
up in a hotel with guards. They would have photocopied his ID and all of that. Right, exactly.
32:24
Exactly. You know, there would have been additional documentation showing that this, you know, Bobby,
32:32
you know, Bobby, Bobby, Bobby Cletus Boucher is from Torrid.
32:40
And, you know, and there'd be a whole report filled out and there's nothing.
32:46
Yeah. You know, and I get it. This is way before computer age, right? Right.
32:51
Or maybe government's just keeping it under wraps and squashing it.
32:54
Maybe they know about this. That could be too. You don't know. I mean, is it possible? Yeah.
33:02
You know, based on our show, anything is possible. Right.
33:05
But again, if this entire story with all these details came out,
33:10
I would have assumed something else physical would have leaked out as well.
33:15
Okay, why are you laughing? I'm just laughing because you said physically leak out.
33:24
Am I sitting in a puddle? I don't understand. I need sleep.
33:30
No, therapy, lots of therapy. Okay. That's the only thing that I have against this story.
33:38
It's weird because there's some stories that are so wild that have an overabundance of details.
33:44
Tells them like oh well that's just too much detail you know i mean
33:46
like we're never happy just like a picture of a ufo why
33:50
are they always fuzzy and then you get a really good clear
33:53
one oh that's just wait that's that that's just photoshopped that's
33:56
too clear like we're never happy with any evidence right but
34:00
there's just so much lacking like i want i
34:02
would love to see you know a copy of the report
34:05
that was written up the person's first name you know
34:08
i don't even even give me a last name that's fine you know but
34:11
a first name what was it you know was it
34:14
maybe it was andora you know maybe if it had a
34:17
first and a last name is that enough proof for you no i would i wouldn't want
34:22
to i'd want a body i physically want this person in front of me telling me he's
34:28
from toward what if he was hey if you're from toward please send us an email
34:33
frank at friend rangebeyondlimits.com.
34:36
Thank you. Sorry, go ahead. I don't even remember.
34:42
So that's a fun story. So I was also kind of looking, and there's some theories about time slips as well.
34:51
So there's a quantum mechanics theory that proposes that time slips could be
34:56
evidence of parallel universes or alternate dimensions intersecting with our
35:00
own, which is what we kind of said in our own crude way.
35:05
Neurological abnormalities speculate that time
35:08
slips may be caused by temporary glitches or malfunctions in
35:11
the in the brain particularly within the areas that process time perception
35:14
which would also kind of make sense since it's it's a whole experience and you
35:20
know if it's a hallucination or a dream like daydreaming kind of thing our brain
35:27
can't decipher between reality and dreams, which is why our dreams are so real.
35:31
And, you know, so, I mean, that is also kind of interesting that it may just
35:36
be a neurological imbalance in that moment because of all the different chemical
35:40
reactions that go on in our brain. If one little thing is off because of, you know, maybe we bumped our head or
35:46
we just ate too much seaweed that day, you know, listen, you're the vegetarian.
35:50
Don't look at me. Seaweed's good for you. Yeah, I know. And guess Guess what
35:54
else is good for me? Meat. Cows.
36:00
So if... Moving on. No pun intended there.
36:10
So would you call it a time slip?
36:14
For those days that drag on like time doesn't
36:17
seem to move or those days that fly by yeah because
36:21
that is that a personal perception of time or is it
36:25
collective you know i i think it it can
36:28
be both and just because i agree
36:31
i think when a day drags on like at work specifically
36:34
right or a time or time flies
36:37
by like and you're just hanging out with your friends at a bar or whatever you know
36:40
i drink so that's where i usually hang out just black out
36:43
on time yes yeah so like we'll
36:46
take the example of that work like it's funny i'll
36:49
go up to like a couple of co-workers like oh today's such a
36:52
long fucking day and they're like it is isn't it yeah you know so i mean i i
36:56
think it's it's it's both i think it's a both it can be collective and it can
37:02
be individual and you just have to like ask people if they're experiencing the
37:08
same thing as you because Because there are times where I'm like, holy shit,
37:10
today is flowing by. And someone's like, no, it hasn't. It's dragged.
37:13
You know what I mean? So there's been examples of both. So it just depends, I guess.
37:19
I guess it just depends where our individual minds are in that day.
37:25
Sometimes we're synced up and it looks fast or slow.
37:30
And if we're on different wavelengths that day, then it is an individual perception.
37:36
And then there's also psychological factors. Those factors suggest that time
37:41
slips might be a result of intense psychological experiences leading to altered
37:45
states of consciousness, which is kind of similar to the one before that, the neurological abnormalities,
37:50
just in a different way, I think.
37:52
So do you think, and I know you have other stories here too,
37:58
but do you think that time slips,
38:02
at least based on some of the examples that I've heard, everyone's going about
38:07
their day, but one person slips through? Like, why do you think that is?
38:13
Hmm. Did they walk through something?
38:16
Are they on a different wavelength that they were able to do that?
38:21
That like yeah possibly i
38:23
mean you have people walking down the street and then does anybody
38:27
notice that so-and-so disappeared like weird right it is weird do they disappear
38:33
i mean no i i wonder if it just if everyone has that pause of time but so if so what if everyone um.
38:46
Crosses that time slip over with you
38:49
and it's only the handful of people that say something that really
38:51
that these stories come from so like for
38:54
example like take a square block right and for whatever reason they have a square
38:59
block travels into a time slip so everyone that was there experiences the same
39:05
thing but only a handful really realize that that's happening And maybe we're
39:10
just so caught up in our own lives, you know? Yeah.
39:14
Maybe it is a select few. I mean, I find it weird that every night I go to sleep.
39:19
I voluntarily do this, right?
39:22
I close my eyes and say, you know what? I'll be safe for the next set hours.
39:28
And I'm just going to close my eyes and shut my body down, which is weird in itself.
39:33
When you phrase it like that, yeah. Right. So I think it's weird that I go to
39:38
sleep every night and I wake up the same person.
39:41
I always wonder that too. You know, so I always wonder that what if our consciousness
39:48
just every time we go to sleep just hops around.
39:51
But when we wake up, whatever body we're in, we only know that.
39:58
Like you assume all of those memories. Right. All those memories.
40:00
And you only know of those memories. Right.
40:03
So I may have been, you know, somebody else yesterday, but since I jump into
40:08
this body, all I have is the memory of this life, this person's life.
40:14
That's wild. Like when you sit and try and wrap your brain around that.
40:18
Oh, it's crazy. It's crazy. I mean, like, who knows? Sounds fun though.
40:24
Yeah. You, you would say that. I can't wait for you to go fall into a time slip
40:29
and never come back. Cause this is just. You'll miss me. well this this
40:34
body will i mean my body yeah but the
40:38
the next soul hopper will be like so do
40:43
you think we go through like you said so if it's take your analogy of that square
40:51
block okay right or you know even just you as a person as an individual do you think that.
41:00
We're always hopping, always going through slips.
41:05
And let's just say you have your road facing forward. Right.
41:08
And we perceive that we're moving forward in a linear fashion.
41:12
But what if you're moving more horizontally or diagonally the whole time?
41:17
You see where I'm going with that? Yeah, I do. So this is the way that I see it. I understand your point. And I don't think
41:24
that would be the case because I think there'd be more stories of these time slips than there are.
41:28
So i'll use your analogy of driving down
41:32
the road straight road and instead of
41:35
driving on a slight you know three degree
41:38
angle right is that is that what essentially okay instead of that i would see
41:43
as every once in a while you come to a roundabout so you want to continue going
41:49
straight but you got to do the little round i hate fucking around about they're
41:53
putting them in i'll say right Right, left around here. Everywhere. They used to never be here in the last five years.
41:59
It's like, there's- Wouldn't it be cool in European? Listen, just come to a fucking stop, wait for the other guy,
42:03
and then just go. I mean, how hard is this? But no, we have to sit there and
42:06
judge. Is that guy going to go straight? I don't know.
42:09
And then you got the people in front of you that don't know how to use a fucking
42:11
roundabout. And then it causes traffic that is supposed to help relieve traffic.
42:13
It doesn't help relieve traffic. No, what it's going to do is it's going to make me want to start shooting people.
42:18
I don't think you can say that. Allegedly.
42:22
With a water pistol. as long as you just say allegedly you're fine so so you're
42:28
traveling down and you just you come to this little roundabout that would be
42:32
like your little time slip veered out of that lane right,
42:36
i don't know i mean yeah no that's a good analogy yeah i don't know that's when
42:40
when you were giving yours that's that's what popped into my head so yeah but
42:46
yeah so i would love to find like the science behind it.
42:51
You know, I would like to find something to measure it.
42:55
But I'm too dumb, you know?
42:59
So. Let's take up some courses in, you know, just the light reading of quantum mechanics.
43:04
Yeah. No, right. I can't even.
43:08
A little pamphlet. I don't think I can spell half the word quantum.
43:13
You know, to me it sounds like kumquat. Kumquat. Not even close.
43:17
No, not even close. All right. All right. So here's another quantum mechanics theory is that time is a series
43:22
of probabilities and not a constant progression. Kind of like what we talked about.
43:27
Another theory is wormholes, tunnels, and space time that could allow for time travel.
43:32
And then another theory is parallel universes, multiple realities exist simultaneously,
43:37
allowing for crossover experiences. So these are, you know, possible explanation to these time slips,
43:43
which, you know, so I have a theory on wormholes and death.
43:48
So, you know how like, not everyone, but the vast majority of near-death experiences,
43:55
they always have that white light in the tunnel.
43:58
I think that tunnel is a wormhole that takes our consciousness to our home base, lack of a better word.
44:08
People can call it heaven. We'll just call it home base because we're children.
44:12
So, yeah, I do think that, you know, that's one of the things that happens to
44:18
us when we pass. It's like we go through there. I totally thought you were going to say the other theory.
44:24
Which one? That the light at the end of the tunnel is just the opening of another vagina.
44:29
Of another vagina. So, you know what's amazing is that that would mean that
44:35
all life is is just a series of vaginal openings you're coming through.
44:48
There's your time slip this is an image i can't get out my head now i mean yeah i know you're welcome so.
44:58
This may be our last episode yeah it might be you gotta live life like it's your last episode,
45:06
that's our t-shirt i like that's our t-shirt write that down okay all right that's awesome.
45:14
So so there are some like aftermath effects
45:17
of having these time slips most common
45:20
one is disorientation occasionally you have altered perceptions of
45:24
time and then rarely physical evidence from the past do you think that's possible
45:28
like if i go through a time slip can i bring something physical back with me
45:34
i wouldn't think so no why not because Because my belief or my thought on that is that artifact,
45:43
that item, only exists in that dimension, that vibration.
45:46
And bringing it across to another one, it doesn't exist.
45:50
Assuming it's something that doesn't already exist in the existing universe that you're in.
45:55
So some widget, some animal that doesn't exist in this reality,
46:00
it wouldn't survive if you brought it over from another one.
46:04
So are you saying that the movie Back to the Future 2 couldn't have happened
46:09
because Biff couldn't have brought the Sports Almanac back in time to his younger self?
46:15
Hmm. Well, the Sports Almanac existed, but not the year print version, right?
46:24
No, it didn't exist. It wasn't even a printed document in those days? Right.
46:30
Well then, yeah. The whole movie's a lie. Right. And then also,
46:33
with that, once he brings it back, it splits time into a new timeline.
46:39
So do you think that's possible? Could we travel back in time and create new timelines?
46:46
And if so, how would we get back to our original timeline? Or would we even want to?
46:51
I think we're always creating new timelines. And where I'm going with that is, okay you have a decision to make between a
46:58
or b you make a but you've given thought and energy towards option b that option
47:05
b goes off and creates its own reality and moves forward,
47:10
so it's a series of making a and b choices so let's see you way out.
47:16
You're gonna have to be much funnier at least i got someone to laugh yeah yeah
47:21
corny joke yeah i I know. Yeah, that doesn't mean anything.
47:25
I'm a sucker for corny jokes. I'm pretty sure I can look at Lynette right now
47:28
and just say fart noises. Oh, no, she didn't laugh to that. But God forbid, you know, see you in a while.
47:35
That makes you laugh. It does.
47:39
God. All right. You guys make me happy I have a penis. Do you?
47:47
I mean, it's size-wise, it may not.
47:52
In this reality in this yeah the size
47:55
of it may not warrant itself
47:57
to be called a penis it'd probably be called
48:00
a wee wee okay yeah so like
48:03
different different words you know would tell you like the different sizes i
48:10
would have so like for mine i wouldn't even call mine it would be just a wee
48:15
wee a wee wee yeah the next one up would be wiener okay you know then penis then dick,
48:22
and then I think if you have like, if you're well-endowed, it'd just be a cock.
48:26
You know what I mean? So. Bree's laughing, not because of the words I'm saying, but we had a conversation.
48:33
And I think Lynette and I, I think I've had this conversation with you as well
48:37
as to what do you think it sounds like when people who don't swear talk dirty to each other?
48:43
You know? So like, it would be like, I'm going to give you my wee-wee later.
48:50
That's why he's so laughing. I just think of that Orbit commercial. You lint licker.
49:00
You lint licking you're going to get a
49:02
wienering of a lifetime tonight you know like
49:07
like you don't even like like pull hair you kind
49:10
of just put your hand on the back of her head you just
49:14
grab it you're just like oh feel this
49:18
wiener you know oh my goodness i know it's so aggressive
49:21
but it's not it's so
49:24
weird anyway that's a great conversation so here's
49:30
a little q a that i kind of pulled up as well as what
49:32
is a time slip time slip is a phenomenon where a
49:35
person experiences a temporary displacement in time often feeling
49:39
as though they had moved to a different era of time period or
49:42
time period so i think we kind of touched that right let's see so what are the
49:48
common experiences associated with time slips people may report seeing historical
49:52
figures or events encountering buildings surroundings that appear to be from
49:56
a different time period or feeling as though they have temporarily stepped into the past or future.
50:01
So let me ask you guys this. I'm going to start with Brie because she's been the most quiet so far.
50:06
If you had a time slip, would you want to go into the past or into the future?
50:13
I would like to probably go in the future.
50:17
Okay. Because I'm just, I'm one of those curious people People like to know
50:20
what happens, not how it happened.
50:23
Okay. So what do you think happens in the future?
50:28
Like, give me a top five list of life-changing things that will happen 200 years from now.
50:36
Like, what five things would be extremely different?
50:40
Well, one, the obvious, like how technology tends to change every year.
50:45
Be more specific, please. I don't know how to be more specific on that,
50:48
just technology in general. The way we use computers, cars, stuff like that, everything technology-related.
50:57
Okay, so will cars be self-driving? I would assume so. I mean,
51:03
we already have a self-driving car in a way.
51:05
Right. But it will be more advanced.
51:10
Will computers be integrated within our bodies?
51:14
I would say I would have to do with like kind of connecting with the mind in
51:19
some way like they're all able to do that so like instead of you having like
51:22
to type something or whatever it's like you just think of it and it goes straight
51:25
onto the computer okay what else,
51:30
it. I can't think of anything else. I just think it'd be interesting to see
51:34
in the future how everything has changed.
51:37
Right, and I'm just trying to get you to use your imagination to give me a little
51:42
insight what you think. Imagination? Like the big imagination you use with Brian?
51:49
Key word there is big. Let's see what else. Oh, I don't know.
51:58
What would it look like
52:01
for people going to work like what
52:05
would work be would we have the same kind of jobs as we do now i feel like that
52:11
part probably won't change as much no no i think it'll be more ways of being
52:19
able to do your job from anywhere rather than it's the people People that have
52:23
to go in the office all the time. There's going to be ways of like, for example, people that are at the front desk or something.
52:29
Instead of them, they can actually be at home and it's like a hologram of them
52:33
at the front desk greeting people. Instead of... What would entertainment be like? Like what movies would have evolved to what?
52:42
I think they'd be like 3D holograms instead of being on flat screens.
52:47
Screens would would a movie
52:50
also have the ability of putting you
52:53
into it so you can kind of uh oh smell
52:57
a vision you can actually smell things forever they
53:00
should have that yeah 200 years they better
53:03
like if like let's say they're just something going
53:05
on you can smell it and like if there's like a like a
53:08
explosion you can feel the air and feel the
53:11
heat and smell the smoke coming
53:14
me from i mean i think how good advertising would be yeah you
53:17
could smell my ass every time i fart i would never
53:19
watch anything that has to do with farting so unfortunately or i'll just bring
53:24
nose plugs so i don't have to smell that part or the shell movie so do you think
53:30
after going to the future would and you saw something would you try and change
53:36
something in the present, to either stop or start something?
53:42
If I saw something, I'd probably go back to the present and just kind of do
53:45
more research and see how it's even possible at the present day and time.
53:52
I don't know if there's anything I would try to change because I'm one of those
53:56
paranoid people that if you try to change something I think that it's...
54:00
It's different than going back and changing the past to change the present.
54:03
I see something original, I kind of don't want to change it even though I may not like it,
54:08
it's like that's how it's supposed to be in my head but even though I know it's
54:11
possible you can change things but I'm always like oh that's how I was taught
54:14
or that's how I was shown and I'm like I don't want to touch it yeah that's fair.
54:19
What about you would you go forward or
54:22
back i am fascinated i love
54:25
history i'm fascinated with the past and i
54:28
think that history is
54:31
written by the victors so i would love to go and
54:35
experience firsthand events from our
54:38
past the first so if i had like a time
54:41
machine i would i would go back
54:44
to like jesus times like i would really want to
54:47
see is he real you know
54:50
i mean because i mean there really isn't any outside the bible which
54:53
i don't use as too much
54:56
of a historical guideline or historical
55:00
book there's not there's there's
55:03
little to none historical evidence of jesus
55:06
but i also get that because if he
55:09
was supposedly just this one normal person to
55:12
everyone else in the the world there would be really no reason to
55:15
be right for normal
55:18
people normal scholars to write about them so
55:21
i i get that i get i get the pros and cons to that but i
55:24
would i would really like to go back there to see that i would love to go see
55:29
what it was like during the i'm trying to blame the templar knights the crusades
55:37
yep i would love i would love to go back and see a dinosaur Heck yeah.
55:41
You know, again, in the safety of a little like space that I know I won't get
55:48
crucified along with Jesus. I don't want to be Barabbas hanging next to him. I don't want to be eaten by a T-Rex.
55:56
I would have to have my own safe space.
55:59
And I'm totally not. So you need a time slip safety bubble. Bubble, yes, yes.
56:04
Yeah, so that's, yeah, I would like that. What about you, Longat?
56:08
I would like to go back as well. Well, I think I mentioned earlier,
56:11
I just want to see what places look like without people.
56:15
Yeah, I guess we did cover this. I don't like people. No, you don't.
56:19
Which is, I wonder why you're doing this with us now. Yeah, it'd be interesting
56:23
to go back with dinosaurs. That's true. So, all right. So, another question
56:28
here is, are time slips considered scientifically proven phenomenon?
56:33
Time slips are not scientifically proven and are often considered to be more
56:36
of a subjective experience or hallucination than a real phenomenon.
56:40
I mean, that makes sense. I can't say, you know, yay or nay on that.
56:46
I think we touched on the scientific process that they always want that smoking
56:50
gun for it to be repeatable and doable and under controlled situations, which I understand why.
56:56
I'm not going to say that that's wrong.
56:59
It's just so hard, you know, because, I mean, you go back 100 years and the
57:04
atom was the smallest thing we had until we had the technology to cut that open
57:10
and all this shit just came out. I mean.
57:14
I'm sure it's going to go smaller still. Right. I mean, well, for me. Yeah. Yeah, for sure. Lucky for you,
57:20
they'll have more things to measure. I know.
57:23
Smaller and smaller things. Yeah. Like right now, I'm up to the size of length, 10 atoms.
57:29
10 atoms. Wow. Yeah. So, you know, ladies don't all come running at once.
57:36
They aren't. They're running away. And that's A-T-O-M, not A-D-A-M.
57:41
Yeah, A-T-O-M. Yeah. No. I don't know any atoms.
57:47
Can time slips be explained by paranormal or supernatural theories?
57:51
While some people may attribute time slips to paranormal or supernatural causes,
57:54
there's no conclusive evidence to support these theories. You know,
57:59
going to say that because there's never going to be enough proof there's not right right
58:02
you know i mean if there's not enough proof for any one
58:05
paranormal or supernatural theory you know then
58:08
of course so i'm surprised that they didn't lump that into that where are some
58:13
famous well-documented cases of time slips we went over the man from torrid
58:19
and there's there's a couple more it was so hard trying to find them because
58:23
they're behind so many paywalls yeah which drove me crazy
58:28
researching this. And it's like, I just want the story.
58:30
Like you don't own the story, you know, unless it was made up,
58:34
which is very possible. Yeah.
58:37
And then are there any ways to intentionally induce a time slip experience?
58:41
There are no proven methods for intentionally inducing a time slip.
58:44
Pretty sure hallucinogenics. But if you do enough mushrooms, you will think that you are time itself. Yeah.
58:50
So. Time's got a sound and a smell. Yeah. And I don't, I've never done hallucinogenics,
58:56
but I am willing to watch other people do it.
59:01
Glorify a babysitter. Yeah. You're hired. Am I? Yeah. I never thought I'd be good at babysitting.
59:10
So there is one last story here that I do want to just go over.
59:15
So in 1901, two English women, Anne Moberly and Eleanor Jordan,
59:21
took a vacation to France. While they were there they visited the palace of
59:25
versailles and while they were
59:28
at versailles they visited what's known as petite trianon a little chateau on
59:34
the palace grounds that louis the 16th gave to marie antoinette as a private
59:38
space for her to hang out and do whatever it is that a teenage queen did when
59:42
she was relaxing back then what do you think she would do back then guys,
59:47
Probably read poetry and sonnets. That's very French of you. Mm-hmm.
59:53
Brie, what do you think a teenage queen would do back in the day when she had
59:59
this chateau all to herself?
1:00:02
Run around naked. Probably. French or frisky. French or frisky? Frisky frinters.
1:00:11
Frisky frinters? French earth. I was going to say that she played with the Ouija board. I don't know why.
1:00:20
Maybe she called a seer in. See her what? A seer. Never heard of her.
1:00:27
Carry on. Okay. I thought you liked corny jokes.
1:00:31
Jeez. But while they were there, they claimed they saw some odd occurrences.
1:00:36
They said they spotted people wearing anachronistic clothing.
1:00:40
Almost sounds like you said Abercrombie. heard mysterious voices and saw buildings
1:00:44
and other structures that were no longer present and indeed hadn't existed since the late 1700s.
1:00:50
Finally, they said they caught sight of Marie Antoinette drawing in a sketchbook.
1:00:55
They claimed to have fallen into a time slip and been briefly transported back
1:00:59
more than 100 years before being jolted back to the present by a tour guide.
1:01:04
What do you think that kind of felt like? Like you see Marie Antoinette sketching,
1:01:09
then all of a sudden you know Pepe Le Pew your tour guide from France is snapping
1:01:17
you back and you think they were just having like a, mutual vision like or do you think they kind of time slept and saw this good question.
1:01:29
Probably mutual maybe okay I don't know okay well your question kind of makes
1:01:36
me wonder when you We go on paranormal things and you pick up on a sense of
1:01:43
what life used to be like in this building.
1:01:47
Is that maybe something that they experienced?
1:01:51
Is some of our paranormal stuff maybe more time slipped than we think? Maybe.
1:01:57
I've been in some old houses. You're like, I can totally vision this family
1:02:00
having Christmas here. Or this is how they would decorate and the table would be here.
1:02:05
And then maybe that crosses over into the Claire's. But, you know,
1:02:09
like clairvoyance, clairsentience. I mean, it's possible.
1:02:14
But, yeah, it just made me wonder if. Yeah. Is our consciousness just kind of
1:02:19
seeing into the past, right? Is it seeing through the different slices of time into that specific point?
1:02:25
Right. And I think the difference would be as if Marie Antoinette looked up and saw them.
1:02:30
That would be interesting. Right? Right. And then you would tell her,
1:02:33
don't make the brioche comment and you're going to lose your head.
1:02:36
Run away. Yeah. Stop being a greedy bee. Yeah. Yeah.
1:02:41
Would you really want her not to make the brioche comment? I mean. I kind of like it.
1:02:48
Brioche is delicious. I know. It's so good. It's so good.
1:02:53
So did they really travel back in time? Probably not.
1:02:57
Various explanations include everything from a fois adieu, basically a joint
1:03:01
delusion, to a simple misinterpretation of what they actually saw.
1:03:05
But for what it's worth, in 1911, roughly 10 years after what they said they
1:03:10
had experienced occurred, the two women published a book about the whole thing
1:03:14
under the names Elizabeth Morrison, and Frances Lamont, simply called An Adventure.
1:03:20
These days it is available as The Ghost of Trianon. Check it out.
1:03:25
I will. I like all things Marie Antoinette. Do you really? I do.
1:03:30
I've never heard you once say anything about Marie Antoinette.
1:03:34
You've got to keep some of your nerd stuff under your hat.
1:03:38
No, because I'm an idiot. So you should feel more than comfortable expressing
1:03:41
and divulging any of that information. I don't want to put listeners asleep
1:03:46
about French Revolution history.
1:03:50
Freaky French. Freaky French. Freaky French.
1:03:53
So, all right, well, if any of you out there have had any time slips,
1:03:58
please, we'd love to know about them. Send us an email at frank at fringebeyondlimits.com or Brianna or Lynette,
1:04:06
also at fringebeyondlimits.com.
1:04:11
Any last takes on this, guys? Bri, what do you think? Like time slips, real, fake, delusions?
1:04:18
I kind of want to go in the delusion category with this. Mm-hmm.
1:04:22
So it's hard to have proof that it's real, and it's hard to have proof that it's fake.
1:04:27
Like it's one of those, I don't know, but it could just be something in your
1:04:32
head that it's like a delusion. Okay.
1:04:36
Okay. Why not? I am so hopeful that they're real, and I can't wait to experience
1:04:40
one and come back and tell you about it.
1:04:43
I think that they. So it could be delusional for you, if that makes you happy.
1:04:47
Yeah, I can't wait for Lynette to have her delusional experience and never come back.
1:04:52
Hey, whatever. I'll go eat brioche with.
1:04:55
Marie. Marie. Yeah. Marie and Tinnit. All right. So social guys,
1:05:00
what are our socials? You guys remember?
1:05:04
No. No one remembers? Oh, all right. Okay. So we're on Facebook.
1:05:07
I was going to say we're on Instagram. We're on Instagram.
1:05:10
YouTube coming soon. We have a website We have a website FringeBeyondLimits.com
1:05:16
You can see a picture of us And our phenomenal bios So yeah,
1:05:21
you guys enjoy Thank you again for listening My name is Frank My name is Brie
1:05:27
And this is Lynette And we are Fringe Beyond Limits.
1:05:37
Music.
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