Peter Berg
đ€ SpeakerAppearances Over Time
Podcast Appearances
but then thinking, well, this guy's going to have to get out one day and he's going to be in traffic and someone's going to cut him off or he's going to be in Starbucks and someone's going to say some shit. And like the complexity of that kind of mindset to have to adjust to being able to be, like I remember someone once talked about Mick Jagger, right? The Rolling Stones guy.
You met in like 1975 when the Rolling Stones were the biggest band in the world. And Mick Jagger told a story about how he had to come home from a world tour where they were selling out stadiums all around the world. And he's Mick fucking Jagger. And he comes home and his wife, Jerry Hall, this woman, And he has a baby. She hands him the baby.
You met in like 1975 when the Rolling Stones were the biggest band in the world. And Mick Jagger told a story about how he had to come home from a world tour where they were selling out stadiums all around the world. And he's Mick fucking Jagger. And he comes home and his wife, Jerry Hall, this woman, And he has a baby. She hands him the baby.
You met in like 1975 when the Rolling Stones were the biggest band in the world. And Mick Jagger told a story about how he had to come home from a world tour where they were selling out stadiums all around the world. And he's Mick fucking Jagger. And he comes home and his wife, Jerry Hall, this woman, And he has a baby. She hands him the baby.
She says, clean up the baby, and there's dog shit in the yard. And Mick Jagger's like, but I'm Mick fucking Jagger. I just came back from, you know, theâ And I've always thought that moment, just a little moment, where I felt what it means to have that kind of powerâ
She says, clean up the baby, and there's dog shit in the yard. And Mick Jagger's like, but I'm Mick fucking Jagger. I just came back from, you know, theâ And I've always thought that moment, just a little moment, where I felt what it means to have that kind of powerâ
She says, clean up the baby, and there's dog shit in the yard. And Mick Jagger's like, but I'm Mick fucking Jagger. I just came back from, you know, theâ And I've always thought that moment, just a little moment, where I felt what it means to have that kind of powerâ
in a place like iraq well now you got to come home and you have to turn it in you have to retire and you have to move forward i don't i don't think civilians understand that yeah they don't they don't you know but i think that uh that's that's a that's i think that
in a place like iraq well now you got to come home and you have to turn it in you have to retire and you have to move forward i don't i don't think civilians understand that yeah they don't they don't you know but i think that uh that's that's a that's i think that
in a place like iraq well now you got to come home and you have to turn it in you have to retire and you have to move forward i don't i don't think civilians understand that yeah they don't they don't you know but i think that uh that's that's a that's i think that
Well, that was what Painkiller, you know, was for me. The show I did about Purdue Pharma, you know, and the Sackler family. It's interesting. Just todayâwhat's the date today? What is it? The 16th. The 16th. So today on the way over here, someone sent me a New York Times article about a new twist in the opioid epidemic. These companies that serve as the middlemen between the doctors and theâ
Well, that was what Painkiller, you know, was for me. The show I did about Purdue Pharma, you know, and the Sackler family. It's interesting. Just todayâwhat's the date today? What is it? The 16th. The 16th. So today on the way over here, someone sent me a New York Times article about a new twist in the opioid epidemic. These companies that serve as the middlemen between the doctors and theâ
Well, that was what Painkiller, you know, was for me. The show I did about Purdue Pharma, you know, and the Sackler family. It's interesting. Just todayâwhat's the date today? What is it? The 16th. The 16th. So today on the way over here, someone sent me a New York Times article about a new twist in the opioid epidemic. These companies that serve as the middlemen between the doctors and theâ
I'm sorry, between the prescribers and the insurance companies. There are these companies that control what the insurance companies will allow to be prescribed. So if the doctor says you should have 250, you should be able to take 250 milligrams of Oxycontin a day, these companies
I'm sorry, between the prescribers and the insurance companies. There are these companies that control what the insurance companies will allow to be prescribed. So if the doctor says you should have 250, you should be able to take 250 milligrams of Oxycontin a day, these companies
I'm sorry, between the prescribers and the insurance companies. There are these companies that control what the insurance companies will allow to be prescribed. So if the doctor says you should have 250, you should be able to take 250 milligrams of Oxycontin a day, these companies
are in charge of regulating whether the insurance companies will pay for that so they've got this incredible power and there's three main companies can't remember the names of them but it's just today in the paper and now it came out in the times today that the sacklers and other drug companies were bribing these guys to restrict the the amount of pills that were allowed to be prescribed so they would they would get paid off and they would allow
are in charge of regulating whether the insurance companies will pay for that so they've got this incredible power and there's three main companies can't remember the names of them but it's just today in the paper and now it came out in the times today that the sacklers and other drug companies were bribing these guys to restrict the the amount of pills that were allowed to be prescribed so they would they would get paid off and they would allow
are in charge of regulating whether the insurance companies will pay for that so they've got this incredible power and there's three main companies can't remember the names of them but it's just today in the paper and now it came out in the times today that the sacklers and other drug companies were bribing these guys to restrict the the amount of pills that were allowed to be prescribed so they would they would get paid off and they would allow
these incredible prescriptions to be put through and the insurance companies to pay for them. So it's just more of a game within a game within a game. Damn.