36:46 But there's something that happened surrounding the fire and a quote from Trump, and man, we really got to watch it because this is happening more and more often where there's a little quote. from the president which turns out is, you know, it doesn't just happen with Trump, it turns out with, you know, this should be the defending Trump segment. I need a jingle for this. Adam's gonna defend Trump. We're defending Trump! We're defending Trump! Trump defenders! Trump defenders! Trump defenders! Trump defenders! So I was you know Twitter explodes in front of my very eyes. What an addict what a moron what a dick I've got people up and this is just our producers not even Twitter man. This is just people who we know You know we've got guys from Finland. What what an idiot doesn't even know that it's not the same We don't have the same climate Roy's you're gonna rake everything into safety
37:44 And when you hear the segment, which is out of context of the entire affair, yeah, it sounds kind of stupid. This is actually the longest version I was able to find. Most of them were 37 seconds. This is 43 seconds long, but you'll see quickly why it sounds like the president is a blubbering moron. And I know Gavin's committed, we're all committed, I'm committed to make sure that We get all of this cleaned out and protected. Gotta take care of the floors, you know, the floors of the forest is very important. You look at other countries where they do it differently and it's a whole different story. I was with the president of Finland and he said we have a much different, we're a forest nation. He called it a forest nation. And they spent a lot of time on
38:32 on raking and cleaning and doing things and they don't have any problem and when it is it's a very small problem so I know everybody's looking at that to that end and it's gonna work out it's gonna work out well. So you know it sounds like he just launches into well you know we got to rake the floor just like Finland does because you know we all know they have the same climate and that is real Dimench B thinking It's when you're completely stuck. If you watch this whole news conference and it was Gavin Newsom, President Trump, and Governor Brown all next to each other with a significant distance between Trump and Brown.
39:17 They were not standing really right next to each other. And Trump, for the whole... Newsom, yeah, we had a lot of coverage of that here. Newsom was right. Actually, Newsom was chatting away as much as he could because he knows he has to work with Trump at some point. And California's in huge trouble and he knows he's got to make himself look good if he wants to run in 2024. because that's his goal in life. And Brown is just a grumpy old man, just standing back there, he doesn't even know what happened. So Brown was standing there, Trump thanked everybody, calling out guys off camera who you don't know, everybody except Jerry Brown. And he thanked everybody. What a great job they were doing. And so I skipped a lot of that. I'm just going to play, you know, this is about a minute 45.
40:08 what he was really talking about, then it goes to Brown and when Brown's talking, man you've got to see this video, Trump crosses his arms, he backs off and you know he's doing like a like one of those stances with his head kind of cocked looking over to the left like what do you want to say jerk off, very aggressive. But when you put it all into context what he's saying it's not that crazy and there's a reason why the United States Logger Association agrees with him what he said but that's Out of context he sounds like a dick. for those who lost their lives. It's just a big, massive cleanup after a terrible tragedy. So it's basically people that are right here, local people, state people, they're doing the work. The federal government provides some help and a lot of money. He's clearly saying nothing. He's just blabbering. And some expertise and somehow
41:25 We'll all pull through it together. Is there any way to prevent this from happening again, Mr. President? So, important question. Is there any way to prevent this from happening again, Mr. President? Well, we've been talking about that on the ride over and I think we're all in the same bed. We do have to do management, maintenance and We'll be working also with environmental groups. They've really, I think everybody's seen the light. And I don't think we'll have this again to this extent. We're going to have to work quickly. But a lot of people are very much, there's been a lot of study going on over the last little while. And I will say, I think you're going to have, hopefully this is going to be the last of these because this was a really, really bad one.
42:12 And I know Gavin's committed, we're all committed, I'm committed to make sure that we get all of this cleaned out and protected. Gotta take care of the floors, you know, the floors of the forest, it's very important. You see, when you hear it now in context, it makes a lot more sense. You know, the thing about this, and of course predicting this won't happen again is a joke, because we have nothing but these fires here every year, and it's been going on since I was a little kid. But in the olden days, they used to do brush burn-offs. We had a couple of people write us, some of our producers saying that they've been mismanaging. They stopped doing a lot of stuff they used to do. Burn bags. Yeah, burn bags, sure. When I was at the air pollution district, they used to burn these
43:01 Ducks Unlimited had a huge, had a kind of an unlimited permit to do all these burns. And they do these massive burns in these areas that were very flammable to allow the ducks to come in. And I haven't seen that for 20 years. In fact, it's half the stuff that used to go on when I was at the air pollution district, it was all done for management purposes. mostly burn-offs and controlled burns all over the California. They don't even do controlled burns anymore. I think it's just an accumulation. And we've been lucky until now because in the month of October, usually, especially up there where that fire was, there's always had at least a
43:44 a week of rain that would just soak everything down and there's no way it's going to catch on fire. But we've been dry up there for the whole time. And then this thing catches on fire and goes nuts. And add to that. If it wasn't for that, they would have kept going. But they need to get back to their old policies. of controlled burns all over the state. They don't do them. And you add to that that because they're not really clearing things out and not doing the same amount of logging they used to, that all these trees are competing for the same water and that just makes it drier. I couldn't argue against that. Well, that's what the loggers say. Let me see, where is this? The loggers are right. Yeah, it's the... Let me see what's the name of this loggers organization.
44:31 Loggers don't like this any more than anybody else. They lost a lot of logs. Yeah. Why did they stop logging? I don't understand that at all. And what's the National Logging Organization? The Loggers Council, a coalition of state and regional associations that represents independent contract loggers. There you go. So they agree. And so you have a disaster like this with a bunch of dead people. There's over a thousand still missing. That's the latest number. Yeah, it's pretty bad. A day wrecker. I would say. Yeah. And there's no emergency system to tell people. I mean, there should have been a, but they never thought of something like this happening. It's never happened before in this area. No. And look how much greener it is than usual. Oh, it's kind of brown now, but okay. We'll just not worry about it. Let's talk about... Yes. No, go on. No, I was going to move to another topic. So go ahead.