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Terrible Tim Local Staten Island Underground Music Cult Icon At Ocean Breeze Fishing Pier
Terrible Tim Local Staten Island Underground Music Cult Icon At Ocean Breeze Fishing Pier Pt 1, 30 Jul 2020
Staten Islander News Organization
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lJl2AL95bhM
Staten Islander News Organization interviewed Terrible Tim, beloved underground music cult icon of CTV fame and local open mics, at the Ocean Breeze Fishing Pier in South Beach. View the article about Terrible Tim at http://statenislander.org/2020/07/24/terrible-tim-terrible-tim-exclusive-interview-with-staten-island-underground-music-cult-icon/
TERRIBLE TIM! TERRIBLE TIM! EXCLUSIVE INTERVIEW WITH STATEN ISLAND UNDERGROUND MUSIC CULT ICON
- Category: Break the Matrix/NotBeDeceived,Interview,Truthers/Truth Community
- Duration: 52:54
- Date: 2021-06-07 03:42:56
- Tags: no-tag
2 Comments
Video Transcript:
I'm going to go to the beach. Alright, terrible temp. Alright, done. It's a bit to finally meet you. I've seen you work for years. I'm going to try and do this quickly. This is a nice spot where it appears. A midland beach. And there's like a nice breeze, a little bit of a mist on us. So, okay, I'll get started. First question, where did you grow up? And what did you do for fun when you were younger? Oh, dude. These are questions I never even think about. Well, I was born in Brooklyn, and then the family moved over here when I was eight years old. And I lived with them for a while. And then when I got old enough, I saved up enough money and bought a bungalow home in midland beach. And then I bought another one, sold the other one. Now I have two bungalows. So, I'm rooted here in midland beach. And I love living here, except for when that excess moisture comes up from the ocean and destroys everything I have. And then I have to get insurance check to build it back up. Yeah, that wasn't a question on my list, but we're happy with the superstars and these inside us. Oh, yeah. I mean, it was difficult. Even if you have insurance, it's difficult. It really sucks being up ended. And I had to live in an apartment somewhere else in a basement for a couple of months. And will it happen again? Yeah, absolutely. Sandy was an engineered event. It's physically impossible for two storm systems. One coming up the coast, and one going this way, and then they converge with each other. And not only that, but they let the people know, like more than a week ahead of time, that it's going to hit New York. How could they know that, unless it was a plan script, whether warfare, whether modification events? There's some people in the office, and they said that water came up in the span of like 15 minutes. It was like six minutes. Yeah. Yeah, when I got the, when I saw it on the news, I seen these two gigantic weather systems that were, looked like a chain saw coming out New York. So I high-tailed it out of here and went somewhere else. And when I came back, I didn't like what I saw. I didn't like walking into my kitchen and seeing that the kitchen table was lifted up and sitting on my chair. And everything was turned to ruin. And you had to throw out practically everything you own, including the walls. Yeah, we came down here to help them. We were helping people just carry out bags of plastic boards and basically everything they had. Yeah. Very sad. A terrible inconvenience, let's say. Okay. Terrible 10. What schools did you go to? What is some memory from school that stand out? PS11, Egg Burt Jr. High School, New Dwarf High School. And then I dropped out of a satinal community college after about a year and a half. That was one of the sunny side of the time? Yes, in the sunny side campus. And schools are indoctrination centers. Nobody wants to be there. They'd rather be outside playing, right? And some of the students will act out by trying to bully the other students. You have to fight in order for people to leave you alone. When I was in PS11, I had a fight with a kid and I gave him a bloody nose. When I was in junior high school, I had a fight with another guy. He gave me a black eye. So he technically won the fight. But as long as you're willing to be violent, then they'll leave you alone. They never bothered me again. So in some cases, violence is the only answer. You can't negotiate with people and say, please stop bothering me. It doesn't work that way. And what did you want to do when you grew up? I had no ambitions whatsoever about what I wanted to do. So I fell into security work. I did jobs where you sit in a box, writing down license plates. Then after a while, I progressed to a hospital security guard job, Lutheran Medical Center in Brooklyn. And at least that was enough money so that I could save up to buy a bungalow home. My mother and father said they were moving to New Jersey. I started getting as much overtime as I could so that I could afford the down payment on the bungalow. Did you used to hang out on the abandoned South Beach train line right away? No. Who told you that? I'm just interested in trains. And I know that it used to be there and it filled in with houses. But one time a train over here. And then they built houses where the train was. Now it would have been very useful to have the train. And I know kids used to hang out down there. And then the train tracks somewhere as long going down here. But my childhood was basically playing with the other kids on the block. At the time it wasn't so well developed. And there were a lot of fields and stuff that you could play in. Now when I go back by my old block on Duncan Hills, every square inch of real estate is filled with a house. And they put like ten houses. And they filled the place up with houses during that economic boom that we had some years ago. Now we're in economic gloom and doom. And you kind of answered this already so it might be redundant. What was it like growing up on Staten Island when you were a young kid and then like a teenager? It was alright. You know, I don't have any complaints. I had not a trouble in the world. I knew not of the new world order or the system or anything. I'm at the same level as most people are at now. They just simply don't know anything. They don't want to know anything. They're apathetic. They don't care. They care less. They're never going to speak up in the interests of themselves. They're family or they're country. I don't see that it's going to happen in large enough numbers. How do you feel about Staten Island being cold from the Vagantan borough? And what's good about this and bad about this? Well, there was an opportunity for us to succeed. I forget the name of the politician that killed it. It was a marquee or something like that. I think Martin was one who was developing it. We had an article on that. And then I believe it's when Rudy Giuliani became mayor. He had the votes but he persuaded Staten Island to stay by offering some kind of different deals. But yeah, it doesn't matter though because you have the politicians. Like for example, and not to single out Nicole Mallyatakis. It's Max Rose. It's every politician that you can name. They support the fake bug story. The Nicole Mallyatakis is all over Facebook and Twitter telling us about how she's distributing masks and sanitizers for the fake bug, which essentially and statistically does not even exist where even the CDC, the WHO, or any statistic you could lay your hands on, tell us that the fake bug as I call it, has this awesome killing power of 0.004 of 1%. So if Staten Island was seceded, do you think we would get a different politician? You don't get a different politician anywhere. They just hold their finger up to the wind to see where it blows. The truth be damned. Don't research anything. In fact, there was a video where I tried to ask Nicole Mallyatakis a question when there was a protest for the unbelievable tanning salon in great kills. And the people had had a protest to have it open. I was there to protest to have it open, plus to protest the phone, the fake bug. I tried to ask Nicole Mallyatakis about the absurdly insanely low body counts on the fake bug. She heard me. She don't want to hear me. She walks away from me. And she had a body god literally pushing me away from her. So I can't ask her a question. And I have that up on the tube on 153 news. Tarapultin World Order 153 news. We actually interviewed the owner. He gave a really good interview. Of the sun believable. We have to testify. It wasn't her. It's a test to her. And what did he say in a nutshell? He basically said that if people believe in it, if they believe in the thing they should stay home, then the body else should be allowed to go. Yeah, if you believe the fake bug stay home, put on a mask, hide under the bed, do whatever you can do to save yourself from something that does not even exist. And you're not supposed to quarantine healthy people. You're always, you keep quarantine unhealthy people. They quarantine themselves. They're sick. They're not going to walk around and go anywhere. Do anything till they feel better. Just like if you have a cold. You stay under the blankets for a couple of days until you feel better. And essentially the government has helped us to survive a common cold and flu season. And extended it into the summertime. Okay, so going back to the other question, how do you think it's different for kids growing up today on Saturday? Well, kids are now growing up in a whole new, free world. And to continue that, I'm sorry, not to drop power today's youth, different from kids in your day. Yeah, well, they're growing up in a plastic bubble with plexiglass all over them, wearing a mask with something that doesn't even exist. But even before that, there's been a change in the curriculum in the schools, where they don't teach you so much about the constitution. They change it into social studies. And everything you hear about what they're teaching you in the schools now is beyond absurd and insane and sick. The teaching little kids had to use dildos and oral sex. And mommy has two daddy, was a kid, and has two mamies. Heather has two mamies. It was at the use of your name, Heather. And this has, all this garbage has no business being in the minds of children. You don't even have sexual feelings or an orientation or an understanding or a need for sex yet. In my mind, the first 10 years of self of life, you leave them alone, no father and with that garbage. Heather, do you feel that Staten Island or Aquaman Island or Menachnon is the Lenape native school that is a special place here? Well, what's a special place in Staten Island? Basically, I said, or using the word, the Lenape, the Indians that lived here, they call it Aquahonga Menachnon. You feel this is a special place? Well, my attitude overall is Staten Island. It's just a place to live, just like any other place. What's the difference? Everywhere people live, they do the same thing. They work, they go home, they go to sleep, and then repeat the cycle. And maybe some places have better features. I mean, we have a nice fishing pier over here, just an example. I like other places in Staten Island such as Arbitus Lake in Princess Bay, the people that really know about. And I like Paige Avenue, the other. Last week I was down there, I had the windows rolled open, and there was this most amazing fragrance of flowers. And, you know, we have our special geographical spots, but again, it's just like anywhere else. What's the difference? Okay, next, see some questions about music. What are some of your musical influences and maybe guitarists? You felt the inspiration, you know? Well, I grew up, you know, the first band I really liked, my parents brought home these Beatles albums, a red album and the blue album. And everyone on my block was trying to learn how to play stay away to heaven on the guitar. And I liked all the English invasion bands, Led Zeppelin, Rolling Stones. And I liked the punk rock that came out to Sex Pistols, Rebounds. And now, there's a difference between what I enjoy and what I sound like. Because when I pick up the guitar, I'm terrible at him. I'm not even trying to be like any of those people, I'm just doing terrible at him. Okay, so when my question was, what styles of guitar playing do you draw? It's more like you develop your own style. Yeah, well, I started out like a lot of people. You go to a lane music center or a music center and you have a guitar teacher. And you start out with, if anybody remembers Alfred and Mel Bay Books. Yep, that's right. Are you playing a guitar, Lynn? Well, first I played this piano, like clarinet, but yeah, because all those books were... And even though they're still around, I don't know if they've changed. Yep. And then I went to another guitar teacher, Roy Simmons. And he was teaching tablature. So instead of every good boy does fine and FACE between the lines, you just have the tablature. And when you put the dot on the string, that's what you're playing. And then after... He gave me probably the best advice they ever had. He said, you know how to make songs? Just start writing your own songs. And I abandoned tablature. And all I had to do was just write the chords at the top of the page that I'm going to play. Then write the lyrics. I intuitively know what the melody of those lyrics are in my head. So I never, ever have to have tablature or traditional notes or whatever. And if I wanted to, I could put that music through an app and it'll pump out what the music looks like on paper anyway. What is some bands you've seen with Staten Island? It's also in New York City. And what are some old venues that are now gone forever? I like this band called VENTVNT. And then they changed their name to Ring and Run. But they came and went... You don't hear from them anymore. They don't even have a website for all of them. Now, as far as the music venues, I never really went to them too much. The time, my mind was focused on doing as much overtime as I could. So I could get my own bungalow home and not have to move to New Jersey with my parents. And I accomplished that goal too. Okay, when did you start making music and how did this begin? It started... I had a couple of rudimentary, strong ideas. But what it really took off was I had three songs on my mind that I put together. And my plan was just to go to community television. Okay, and just do those three songs, which I did. But, however, I started noticing something about community television. That everybody there... Me included a chock full of themselves. A chock full of ego. Okay? And I would just start putting songs together about the people there. And at first, some of them liked the songs. Some of them did not. And that remains the case today. So what I really do is I look at a topic or a person. And that topic or the person actually writes the lyrics for me. And then I just slip in a musical template on top of that. Okay, what equipment do you use? What guitars, mics, mixing software? I used to have a big, emotional amplifier. But I was always more partial to just playing the acoustic guitar. And all my electric amps and electric guitars and such got washed out in the hurricane Sandy. But the rock and roll and the acoustic guitar remains the same. And I have no problem. I'll put something on an electric guitar too. And I might eventually buy an amplifier again. It does make some add to me. It's just that with the electric guitar, you get that distortion. And electric guitar is easy to play because you always have closer fingerboard action between the string and the fingerboard. The acoustic guitar takes a little more effort. But I like the sound that comes from the wood too. Have you ever played with any bands? If so, what were they? Well, as far as bands, it's been fleeting any femoral. I put a band together briefly with Pat, this fellow named Barry McNamara. Extremely talented drummer, bass player. He recorded with a 4 track. We did the Tarable Tim spreads love CD. But we actually only performed out in public a couple of times. Harry was prone to depression. And at a certain point he couldn't do it anymore. I did. So yeah, the Tarable Tim playing with a band. A very rare thing. And mostly when I perform in public, it's at an open microphone show. I don't even get invited to regular shows with this comedians or whatever. It has to be an open microphone show. That's the only way. I see you on cable. Tell us the Tarable Tim audience. We got to get the top of it. We got a Tarable Tim fan here. Tell them about Tarable Tim culture. I love Tarable Tim. I watch my cable. I used to watch a lot of old cables. And got real television. Sometimes I put you money into that. Yeah. What do you been doing? I've just been maintaining and holding it down. They canceled CTV because of the coronavirus. What do you think about the coronavirus? Well, New York and New Jersey are doing it right. You listen to the governor. We're in a minute. We don't need to stand it around here. Right. But I know Texas, Arizona, Florida. And then what was it? The other night, Queens, everybody was congregating at Queens. If you do everything right, you know, you're all right. I'm 69 years old. Okay. I got diabetes and I got high blood pressure. So I'm in a top category to come down with. But I stay inside and keep safe. And when I do go out, I can see that I come up there. I keep my distance from everybody. Okay, what's your name? George, let me ask you. Do you know what the body counts of people who died of COVID in the United States and worldwide is? Nobody's a lot of things. Worldwide is less than 0.004 of 1%. Only 141,000 people in the United States are the 340 million have died. And worldwide, only 360,000 of 7.5 billion people died. So the government is protecting the hell out of us. And not just this government, but all the governments worldwide. And I ask people not to believe me. Just look up the statistics. There's no reason they should acquire and teens healthy people. There's no reason they should have shut down the restaurants, the bars, the, this, that, and the other. And put all these people out of work. How is that hell to doing if they can't pay the bills? They can't buy a bag of groceries. But when I believe in a very beginning, I think that, you know, that was the thing to do. But as things open up and everything, you know, open up. Just, you know, don't be so crazy, you know. Now, what people, a guy was arrested because he was playing ball with a yard with his kid. Right. Somebody else was making it for some reason they were building it. Putting it on me, they arrested the guy for playing with the dog. Right. He was all kind of serious like that. It's ridiculous. And George, another thing that happens is people, they, they loosen the restrictions in certain places. So yeah, yeah, go ahead, go to the beach. Well, pop opens up his garbage shop, right? Yeah. And then the very next day, the media pounces on them and says, oh, there's thousands of new cases. Yeah, yeah, yeah. And also the CDC has publicly set outright that the taste that the test kits are contaminated. And they're only 50% accurate. Plus, the guy who invented the test said that it's worthless as a diagnostic tool. Are you from Rose Bank? I was living in Rose Bank for a while, Joe. Hurricane Sandy, maybe you slow me down. You know the mayor of Rose Bank, Colondorsix? No, no. Not about everybody from Rose Bank, nose, cold, doors. Yeah, no, I was only living there a few months while they fixed up my bungalow. I saw you on cable. I saw you in a couple of bars, which one today? Oh, yeah, those were open microphones, shall we? Yeah. I used to play at this place on Van Duesa Street, the Muddy Cup, and the Martini Red. Yeah, well, they're now defunct. There's no Martini Red to change it. But they're not even open anyway, I don't think, because of this bullshit with the bug. You want to say anything else, Joe? And then I'll get back to my interview. Okay. I think they should think of why it's marijuana. Yeah. You want to, Joe, Joe, do you probably remember back in the 70s, marijuana practically was legal. You could smoke it on the ferry boat and the cops would walk right past you. Then I think at one point, Giuliani came in, and that's one thing, so I'm going to get straight. I think Giuliani would come out with all these CBB stuff, which is really marijuana, what out the THC? So it's really like years ago, they used to grow hemp for growth and canvas, and the army used to take me. Oh, yeah, well. And then they were going to make wool, so I guess this canvas robs everything. And then somebody got it and they thought that's marijuana, and that's good. Yeah, because all the industries got together and said, we're not about to be put out of business. And so they mounted a campaign against it. And you know, it's funny now. Like I am, eligible for the benefit of marijuana. But if I try to go through all the permits and everything, you go and of course you will grant to get marijuana, or I can pay my friend around the house. Yeah, well the government always has to be in on the action. You can't walk on top, even if you don't know what they're about, that is the thing that you'll be testing side to everything out. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. I have a friend who gets stuff from a girl, and she said, you know what I mean? Yeah, if hemp were legalized to the whole out of extent, you wouldn't need lumber anymore, you wouldn't need oil, you wouldn't need cotton. All of that would go out of business. What's his name? He's a community member of Woody House. He was in the organization. He was a criminalized, a criminalized, a criminalized guy. But Woody House, Harold sends an interesting guy, because his father was in the CIA, and he was said to be instrumental in the Kennedy assassination. But we'll never really know the answer today. Alright, Joy, it was nice talking. Let me get back to Don of Staten Island. What was the name of Staten Island? Staten Island something, right? Staten Island. Staten Islander. Staten Islander. Staten Islander.org. Thank you, Joy. Yeah, I went Don with Staten Islander.org. He doesn't want to be on camera, which is fine. I hope I don't have trouble in the editing room where I have the boosted his voice. That'll be a lot of work. Maybe if you raise your voice a little bit, then. Okay, when did you start being called terrible Tim? Had you get that name? Yeah, a lot of people think, terrible Tim, you arrogant, obstinate, megalomaniac calling yourself terrible Tim instead of Tim. But it wasn't even my idea. What happened was, Ed Verulo from industrial television. They would be working on a show in the editing room. And one of the staff members said, hey, how's your friend terrible Tim doing? You guys say you're terrible Tim? Are you going to have terrible Tim on your show? And I was on that show a couple of times. So Ed Verulo said, yeah, they're saying, asking about you saying terrible Tim, terrible Tim. And then it just hit me like a lightning bolt. Yeah, terrible Tim, terrible Tim, terrible Tim Nation. The terrible Tim World Order, terrible Tim. That name was issued to me, suggested, given to me, and I took it and I ran with it. Okay, terrible Tim, can you tell us anything of the iconic poster of you wearing the blunt shirt looking quite days? What year was that from? Not only can I tell you it, but I brought one to give to you, Doug. Well, sir, thank you so much. And what was the full question again, I'm sorry. What year was that from? Maybe you could tell us some of the background behind the poster. Well, that was in the 90s. And it was just simply a friend of a friend shooting in a black and white or whatever. Okay. So he took the picture. Brotherman Bill bought a sort to with that a thousand of these things were made. Most of the original pulses were destroyed in Hurricane Sandy. And brotherman Bill is a key cornerstone of terrible Tim culture because the song that I wrote about Brotherman Bill, which is on the Spreads Love CD, and it's on YouTube. Brotherman Bill, it's coming up on 4.5 million views. Brotherman Bill is an anchor song. I have a couple of other videos, I have a hundred thousand, 150 thousand, 7 thousand. And then I have songs that I think are of that caliber that only have a few hundred views. But brotherman Bill is an anchor song. Find with me the people like what they like and they won't even... They don't like what they don't... Well, they don't even look at the songs. I have over a hundred songs. They just go to terribletim.com and they click the Brotherman Bill song every day. And I have people on there that are day counters. They count from the day they first heard it. And every day they go out on there and say something. And those are the people that are going to drive it towards 5 million views. 2020 is the year of the 5 mil Bill. It's not a year that's good for much else. In the fall phase two of the fake bug is coming according to the WHO website that it was manufactured and prophesied. And you can see it yourself. Back in 2019, when they say phase two of the fake bug begins in September 2020. And Paul Gates said that phase two of the fake bug publicly stated this. Publicly stated it begins in October, November. And he owns the WHO. Bill Gates is the king of the world. He who has the golden rule is he who has the most gold makes the rules. Okay, terribletim. What album said he put out? And can you briefly list some of the tracks? I only put out one CD ever. And it was called the terrible Tim spreads love. And you could buy the tracks on CD baby iTunes. Now, and then everything else is just freely available on the terrible Tim too. Now, here's how it works. The terrible Tim actually makes about $100 a month more or less for those songs. But here's how it works. Anytime somebody streams one of my songs, I get half a penny. And then somebody else gets the rest of it. So you do the math of I'm getting half a penny a click. And I'm getting $100 a month. Open up. I have to get. I was never good at algebra. But I'm sure I could figure out how many clicks I get for $100. And you said people can find your music at terribletim.com and you said, see baby. And terrible Tim YouTube. What style of music would you call it make and what does that genre mean? I would say rock, folk. I can like other genres of music, even rap. As long as there's a hook in there. The terrible Tim is all about the hook. But if there's one genre I favor, I guess that's what you can consider rock and roll or folk. Staten Island was the heart of punk, hip-hop, and later electronic music, and still on vibrant sense of creativity. Yet it's often overlooked. I don't know that any region or any city or province should receive a large amount of credit, except maybe the English invasion. Those people back in the 70s, but this research that indicates that it's not what you think it is. They're trying to save change society and social engineer people. And that came from the Tabestock Institute in England. Now knowing that as an operation doesn't change my mind about the Beatles being good music or lead Zeppelin being good music. But as far as regionally, what did we produce out here that's any better than anywhere else? I mean the remones were here a couple of times, right? But it doesn't matter where you are. If you have that spark and you produce something that people enjoy on respond to, it doesn't matter where it came from. That's a good point. It's terrible to have worked venue service performed at, and what was your favorite stage? And my favorite was? Stage. Stage? Yeah, it's just been locally. Open microphone shows like the muddy cup, the fall cup. They called themselves by an aim of all kinds of cups. And the more teeny red, which is now the font. And I played there when they changed the name of the place too. I'll only probably just before the fake bug hit. I did a few performances there. And once in a while open microphone shows, because I don't have a band. I'm not popular in the local microphone community. And I think mostly it's because I have a lousy personality people hate me. But most of all, they don't like me because I speak out in favor of truth and reality. And against the phone, they fake foul false fantasy world, the delusion that they're all in. And I don't want somebody say that they don't want anyone getting on this stage playing a song about 9-11. I'll tell you a quick sidebar here. A couple of years back, I played at this place called, let me make sure, this place called the Liberty Tavern, which I call the Tierney Tavern. On September 11th, on the day, a few years ago, I went to an open microphone show. But again, it's the only way I get to be in front of people is an open microphone show. And I'm grateful to have them. And I'm grateful for the people who put them together. Like Michelle Conrad, John Percian or whatever. It's the only place that I get to play. But anyway, I did a song that I did about 9-11. And they have a separate area for the stage. And then you go through this large opening, and then they have a place for the bar. Now, a bunch of firemen were there for a dark throwing league. They were throwing darts, all right? I'm playing this 9-11 song. And I was almost done with it. I was up to the third verse. All of a sudden, the bar owner, the proprietor, rushes towards the stage and pulls the plug on the audio on the intercom because the firemen at the bar were objecting to it. And so I went out and I confronted the firemen. One of them said, I don't care. And another guy said, no, it's disrespectful. I tried to explain to, you can't explain to somebody who doesn't know it. And drive the point in that it was a covert action influence, laboration. They don't want to hear about the project for a new American century. They don't want to hear anything about how 9-11 was a manufactured event for the purposes of creating wars and the public's consent in dropping bombs and blowing up the Middle East. He told me, I don't need a history lesson. What really blows my mind is firemen, they go to these fire school, I'm assuming. When they teach them what burns and at what temperature, and this and the other, all that goes out the window. So firemen, or at least the ones I dealt with, been a lot of them. They believe that two planes can destroy three buildings and turn them into clouds of dust. That's it. The fire is the fire that's going right now. People just want to give away all the freedom we want for. Why? Because the enemy is trying to get home to meet you now. Yeah. The enemy is trying to get along with the sea. Well, we didn't say the enemy was going to get along with the destroyers. The country is practically taking over and almost crushed them to the toilet bowl. Without a single shot being fired. It's all about the truth. It's about a twice-a-gray divide. When firemen get fired, you're a person in the stanchions like a wall. Then things will shrink. People don't realize that one of you is not a human. They see a little people's fighting and they'll see a power. Yeah, yeah, yeah. Yeah. All right, let me get back to this. I'm sorry. I had to get a drink of water. All that terrible Tim wins requires water at times. Okay, terrible Tim. What do you most have to attract? I know Brother Manville. What about nature's oxide? Is that I get a lot of hits too? That's a surprising anomaly. Because I always thought that if one of my songs were going to get noticed and was going to get recognized on the tube or wherever, it would beat nitrous oxide. Nitrous oxide, yeah. That song really hits the G-spot as far as having a hook and music and lyrics. But it never took off like the Brother Manville. Okay, what are your personal favorites out of your tracks and why? Brother Manville. Nitrous oxide, Amanda. And I guess most of those songs are even a blurt to me. I would have to look at the CD to be reminded of the playlist. And I have songs that are on the tube. I have a total of four or five songs about the fake bug. But they never break 2,000 views. Because like I said, people like what they like. They don't like what they don't like. They like Brother Manville, which is good, good. But when I'm trying to tell them something in these songs about the fake bug, not so much. But at least the commenters are on my side. You see, I have the people that go to Brother Manville. And then I have the hardcore, radical, fundamentalist followers with extremist viewpoints who will gravitate towards anything I put out or anything I ever did put out. And those are the people that are seeing the songs about the fake bug. And I would say maybe two or three commenters support the fake bug and they're trying to educate me. They're trying to say no. This is science to him. And the science tells us that there's a fake bug killing everybody. Yeah, their science and their education comes off of CNN, where real doctors don't ever get to be on the television. Yeah? Tell us about how you usually go about writing the music. How does it do track begin? Okay, yeah, I kind of touched on that earlier. What happens is the subject or the person literally writes the song before me. I look at the person, their character, the things they say or I look at the fake bug. And I just end up rhyming them up and putting some chords and melody to it. And there you have it. Most of the work is already done for me. All I have to do is put together certain elements about that person and topic and put it in four and three or four chords and time. So my next question is, what do you find inspiring you to create basically? People, current events? Yeah, mostly you spend people and an event such as 9-11, I have a few songs about them, about 9-11 and the fake bug, as I call it. All right, terrible Tim, how do you feel as your music and vibe comes at Internet Code Classic in 2020? An Internet What? Internet Code Classic. Well, it's an underground called classic with an niche audience. Because having 4.5 million views as much as that sounds is not a success that you would have if it was on MTV or even a TV commercial. I think really the last way to get really big that's left is if you can get your song on a commercial. But the people who are on TV doing music, they're all people who made the deal. They're all people and it's not a theory. You know, people put together collages of all these major music people, including the Beatles, you name it, Taylor Swift, Kanye, they're all like this, making that one-eyed symbol. And that's to designate their allegiance to their controllers, whose allegiance is to what they consider to be Satan. So I'm not in the big club. I have a little bit of a club. It's not trying to, again, 4.5 million. It's not a big number in terms of YouTube or anywhere else. But it has a potential to grow. And Tarotal Tim will be an outlier all the way. I'm never putting my hands over my eyes. In fact, what's going to happen is trolls are going to take this. And so Tarotal Tim is down with the new world order. That's the way it works. Okay, the next set of questions are about CTV and the Staten Island Oxen. So how did you first become aware of CTV and how did you first get involved? I first became aware of CTV because I had a cable and I saw this channel. And I saw that the people were kicking out shows. And I said, all right, let me try to, I had a couple of songs. I was just going to make one show. And as I indicated earlier, it's a target rich environment of people with egos. And so I ended up writing songs about people who make those shows. Okay, what was the name of your public access TV show? How long did it run? What was its focus and can it be found anywhere on my account? Okay, I saw it off calling a show Timothy's Terrible Tunes. But when Andy Verrula saw it tell me, yeah, staff member saying, hey, Terrible Tim, what's new with Terrible Tim? Where's your buddy Terrible Tim? And I said, yeah, let me call it that. All right. But CTV being a bureaucracy, it took six months to finally get the name change the Terrible Tim on their schedule. Now, CTV has been right up to the present day, but CTV closed their doors because of the fake bug. I talked to the director and he said, Tim, we can't, they want us to social distance. They only want us to have X amount of employees and we can't operate like that. So the lawyers told them you have to shut down, but lawyers don't actually practice law anymore. They just do what they're told from on high because if they knew what I knew and it was a matter of public record, there's no fake, there's no bugs to be had. That's all there is to it. There was something else you asked me about that. Okay, what was the show's focus and music? Great. Can the people found anywhere online now for anyone who's interested? The actual shows, no, but you can hear all the songs and bits and pieces of those shows on Terrible Tim YouTube. So it's not all as lost as there until they shut down the internet or the power grid. So at this point in time, you can go to Terrible Tim YouTube, thesarribletim.com, but I don't really put much on the Terrible Tim YouTube. Terrible Tim World Order on 153 News and Terrible Tim World Order on Bitshoot. Terrible Tim, what are your feelings about the old Staten Island Community TV? I mean more like from the 90s. Remember the telephone game? I channel 34, what was something I feel? Oh, you remember that episode where it's calling all those shows? What was some of your favorite shows? Yeah, the telephone call show was one of my favorite where I call up and harass the other producers. Now, CTV was a different animal before 9-11. I remember Brother Man Bill, Ed Brulo told me sorry about how Brother Man Bill went down there. And he struck up a conversation with Ed Brulo. And Ed Brulo said, by the way, Ed, what are you doing here today? What are you working on? And he said, I just came here to eat a sandwich. He just wanted to go to eat a sandwich and hang out. Today, you couldn't do that. You have to have an ID card and you have to sign a paper and state your reason why you're there. It was a much freer environment. It was like a college campus where the subject was always stupidity and absurdity. Okay, on that note, do you remember I talked to you about this on the phone when I called you the Staten Island, the backyard wrestling? Yeah, yeah, I remember that too. Yeah, yeah. Why do you think so many Islanders watch CTV more than other channels? Everyone was paying for like 100 channels on cable yet, all of us were watching channel 34 or whatever it was. Well, we're never going to actually know the statistics. I think you could spend $600 and Nielsen will give you the breakdown. So I never know how many people are watching it, but as I was saying to you off camera, if I walk around and I'm thinking to myself, gee, I wonder how many people get it recognized. I mean, recognize, recognize. Everybody I knew was everybody loves CTV. Back in the day, that was pretty much the thing. So if I walk around thinking to myself, people are going to say, hey, terrible term. It'll never happen. It does not happen. But if I'm going somewhere doing something, I'm not even thinking about that I'm terrible term and I have the show. People come at me. Terrible term. Terrible term. People driving by in a car. Terrible term. Hey, I don't want to hear. And you saw George here today. Terrible term. Because I wasn't thinking about it. And yeah, the break that my only parameter as far as assessing how many people watch the show is just when I go out in public. If I go to Home Depot, if I go to the boardwalk, if I go here, there or anywhere. Some people are going to recognize me. Because here's how it works. Of course, there's no CTV now until they ease up on the fake bug garbage. But yeah, people recognize me. And a lot of people watch the show. We just never know how much. But you and all your friends will watch it. And they will watch the industrial television.