Talk FNF

Jada Kingdon vs Stefflon Don, Joe Budden Joins Homeroom Univ. and NBA YoungBoy's THOUGHTS on Fatherhood - Talk FNF TV

Talk FNF tv

Send us a text

Ever wondered about the tumultuous intersection where celebrity relationships crash into public spectacle? Our latest episode pulls back the curtain on the drama between Burnaboy, Jada Kingdom, and Stefflon Don, giving you a front-row seat to the heartbreak and hilarity that ensues when love and music mix. But that's just the opening act. We're peeling back layers on hot topics from Ryan Garcia's personal life to Ari Lennox's tour trials, and the ever-sensitive discussions surrounding Black men in Hollywood's dress-wearing debate. Strap in as we navigate these turbulent waters, offering our unfiltered takes on the cultural currents shaping our world.

Brace yourselves for a raw look at the challenges that come with age and immaturity in the spotlight. We're talking about the complexities of fame, wealth, and expectations, alongside a dose of reality regarding mental illness in our justice system. You'll hear firsthand accounts of relationship dynamics, a deep dive into financial literacy myths, and the controversial notion of Black capitalism. Our conversations about Joe Budden and the Homeroom crew blend criticism with strategy, teasing out the intricate dance of podcasting politics where every move counts.

We wrap things up with a thoughtful exploration of the often misunderstood world of American Sign Language in media. Disney+'s decision to omit ASL subtitles sparks a debate on inclusion and the deaf community's experience. From the courtroom to the classroom, we dissect language and professionalism, the necessity of code-switching, and the ways Black culture influences and is adopted by other communities. Every chapter of this episode is designed to enlighten, entertain, and provoke conversation long after the last word is spoken.

Speaker 1:

You was going to result in something that he did not want to f***ing partake in, and there was a very easy solution for him to not have that result happen. And these were both Asian boys in an all Asian family, so obviously, the Asians are wearing the zoot suits.

Speaker 2:

now they be jacking us heavy.

Speaker 1:

Hosted three days ago. I'm like, oh my God, that's my position.

Speaker 2:

It was the freak off in the synagogue. Don't say that. No child left behind failed my generation.

Speaker 1:

This podcast is sponsored by graffiti tax services. For all your tax preparation needs, you can go to graffiti taxcom. We're going to put the link right here. It should be somewhere and yeah, you can head to them for during tax season and if you have any financial or tax preparation questions, head to graffiti tax services. There are new sponsor. Thank you to graffiti tax preparation services. That's it All, right, we back.

Speaker 2:

We back baby Gotta. Get to this man, let's get right to it. So, let's play this.

Speaker 3:

You've mentioned Megan a few times. We've seen her right by your side going in and out of court throughout the whole trial. How would you describe your relationship? That's a miracle she's named. She held me down like.

Speaker 2:

I was trying to get us ready, man.

Speaker 1:

That was great.

Speaker 2:

This was for the boys, that was 18 after 2010. Shout out to us one more time Real niggas, speak up, speak loudly, speak highly about yourself. Remember your times?

Speaker 1:

Old ass days.

Speaker 2:

Hey, we out here, we out here, we getting 2010.

Speaker 1:

I was like 15.

Speaker 2:

It's only three year difference. That's not bad. All right, we are here. This is talk F and L TV. You're listening to rhetoric and my lovely, amazing and wonderful co-hosts this reality.

Speaker 1:

Hi guys, look it, I'm accessorized today.

Speaker 2:

You are definitely giving Wednesday Adam. I peeped it, I peeped it, I saved that too, as soon as I seen that I was like, okay, wednesday, adam, joke coming, all right, so it's a lot of stuff for us to get into. We've been good for you, though.

Speaker 1:

It's been a good week. I'm here.

Speaker 2:

I made it, you know every day going to work is not fun, so I've been killing us with that Corey Hogan video, so we've been seeing it.

Speaker 1:

We appreciate that I've been dragging us honestly.

Speaker 2:

I didn't know Corey had so many sons. So I mean I stand corrected on these people, you know being aware of them. But y'all some, some jokerotter y'all, some bald glazes y'all look, corey, a little too much.

Speaker 1:

They crawled up out of the basement, the cave, wherever the fuck.

Speaker 2:

Y'all was in that nasty little hut listening to 5150 and just came out to the light. Nasty ass niggas. We ain't worried about y'all, we appreciate it. We in the algorithm, and we come with more heat. Yep, just be ready. We're here. All right, so let's just get into this. So this topic is a little bit more on your speed, so I'm going to let you just lead us in.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so there's been a bunch of drama. It's like a couple days like a weekend to the year, and I don't know if you've been following. I don't know if this is in your algorithms, but it's all over mine, so do you know who Burnaboy is?

Speaker 2:

Oh, of course.

Speaker 1:

Okay, do you know who Jada Kingdom is?

Speaker 2:

That's party girl with the fat ass.

Speaker 1:

Yes, crazy, just yeah.

Speaker 2:

Just massive 25.

Speaker 1:

She is 25. And then there's another party, Steph London.

Speaker 2:

You probably don't know who she is. No, I'm not familiar with her game.

Speaker 1:

Okay. So she's like a UK rapper. She's Jamaican but she makes like the UK drill rap type Got music. So Burnaboy and Steph were dating for a while, like a couple years ago, and then things transpired, they broke up. He made the song last last, which is basically a diss song to her, Like he was dragging her in that song. So then they break up. Who knows how much time passes by. Now Burnaboy is messing with Jada Kingdom Apparently this is pre party.

Speaker 2:

This is pre party, pre party yes.

Speaker 1:

So apparently Jada Kingdom got that wet wet, that gushy gush, that guap guap 3000. Okay, he made a whole song talk about oh, she got the best pussy in Kingston. Mind you, steph is also Jamaican, so keep that in mind.

Speaker 2:

Was she born in Kingston, though I don't know if she was born in it. Hey, hey, hey it don't matter she's also. Jamaican.

Speaker 1:

She is a Jamaican woman also, so she, she. He said that Jada got the best pussy in Kingston and then he was talking about oh, he gonna buy her Birkins. And then he said he's gonna buy Birkin for Jada Kingdom. He dropped her name in the song, so he was fully talking about her, right? So people are asking her in interviews after he drops that song like oh, what are you? And Burnaboy, blah, blah, blah. This woman never claims him. She's like who is that? Don't know who that is, didn't hear the song, have no idea who you're talking about. And every single interview that she's asked about it right. So then fast forward a couple months. Steph and Burnaboy are back together. He's buying her roles, voices and this and that they're they're a thing again. They're back in love because they were together for a long time. Say, he was hurt when they broke up, so now they back together. Steph is throwing shots at Jada and Jada comes out on her Instagram and she's like who are you? She tagged her. She was like who are you talking about?

Speaker 1:

Smoke right because it seems like you're throwing shade at me in these songs and I want you to let me know now for real, because you've been doing this for a long time, who are you talking about.

Speaker 2:

She been doing that. Drill shit on Jada yeah.

Speaker 1:

So Jada good music. I don't know, I mean I don't know. I'm sorry, I'm talking this. This is girl stuff.

Speaker 2:

The 51 50 fans is killing me now.

Speaker 1:

But um, yeah, so this you're. You're coming out in this, in this girl who your man gushed over in a song. Talk about oh, she got the best vagina, the best box I've ever experienced in my life. I'm buying her things because of it. She never claimed this man You're throwing shade at her. She's coming at you hard Like is this me? Is it me? Talk to me, it's no shade. Like not passive, aggressive at all. Jada was aggressive, aggressive.

Speaker 2:

Was there any response back to that?

Speaker 1:

There was, there was a track.

Speaker 2:

Okay, she's just keeping it all on wax.

Speaker 1:

Wait. So I don't know who's track came first. I think Jada's track came first, or I think Steph's track came first.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so there is, there is music accompanying there.

Speaker 1:

There has been a couple songs, and there's a snippet of another song that has yet been dropped.

Speaker 2:

So I'm here for the smoke.

Speaker 1:

Let me keep, let me tell you. So, steph, drop a song she talked about oh, jada, oh, so Pussy and I heard their allegations of pussy so yeah, and all this stuff and this and that, and then Jada comes and she drops. He, okay, drags this girl. Obviously, burner Boy was laying up in bed with her talking mad shit about Steph, and Jada was in bed like mm. Hmm, mm, hmm. And what else, baby?

Speaker 1:

Uh huh, and and then, and then, what else, baby? And then she was just keeping, she was just keeping that in her roller decks.

Speaker 1:

Have the notes note so then Jada comes out with a song. She was like he left you because your pussy is loose. Every time you come to Jamaica you get ran through. You want him to raise your kids and he don't want to be no step daddy. He don't like them kids and just a bunch of stuff. Oh, get your, get your body fixed, this and that, and yeah. So Jada thoroughly drags Steph and, from what I've been seeing on like tick tock in Twitter and every everywhere, everyone thinks that Jada song is is much better than than Steph. Steph then dropped a snippet to another song talking about how Jada was an escort and all of the all of the things she's done and the the rate that she sold her body.

Speaker 2:

Was it a good rate? Was a good number?

Speaker 1:

What I don't? I didn't hear the song.

Speaker 2:

We need to get to it. Jada kingdom how much was the number?

Speaker 1:

We need to know how much was you selling it for. But then Jada came out.

Speaker 2:

But there's a reason why we need to know this because there's an influx of women who are overvaluing their box out here and, as you, being pristine box, we need, we need that to be the appraisal value. We need to go right here If you, if you charging 3503,535 hundred, shawty can't, shawty, can't ask for two racks. I should have even sitting the same way. So we got it, we got. I'm saying like this is why this kind of stuff is important when the escorts are in business. We have to start going, because this is as the men we can get the appraisal value sometimes. It's a good year 2024 might be a good low rate year where you can get you some some great a quality box. Oh my god, you know what I'm saying. For the low, you got to be able to come up out here. So, like Jada, jada kingdom party, somebody speak to this. I need to know.

Speaker 1:

So I didn't see anything about like the rate at which she was selling it honestly.

Speaker 2:

So there wasn't a number? Yeah, that's disturbing.

Speaker 1:

Jada kingdom also said that Steph pimps out her little sister, that she be going to Dubai to get number two. Don't to make money. She sleeps around in Jamaica, she takes drugs and she be eating booty. If my thing is, if Jada knows that Steph be eating booty, doesn't that mean that Steph was eating burners booty?

Speaker 2:

That's what that may come down to it, but no, that's my math, my girl math.

Speaker 1:

My math equals Steph was eating. Burn a boy booty and burn a boy like his butt in.

Speaker 2:

Okay, wow, are you dropping the team now? Wow.

Speaker 1:

Are we getting down to it? That's the misinformation. I'm giving you the questions that need to be asked, okay. Oh man. And then Steph in her song came out and said that Jada kingdom drinks number one. Okay. Also takes drugs. Got pregnant by a minor yeah. Okay, and then here it goes and sleeps around in charge 10 men 10 K for sex. I don't know if each man was charged one or each each man was charged 10 like that.

Speaker 2:

10 K between 100 K is a large differential. It is. I need clarification Did you stack it up like that's sick to stack it up because if you, if you did 10 for 10 and got a quick hundred, that's different. That's money. But if you did a stack up like you had everyone to stack it up. That's insane. Yeah. That's wild. We need to get down. We need to get down to it. Jada, jada kingdom. You need to put it out there. You need to put the numbers out there.

Speaker 1:

So a lot of tea was spilled, okay, and it's very messy. Burner boy has said nothing. Burner boy is laughing, laughing in his mansion somewhere in Nigeria, just soaking it all up Like he got to find women on the Internet on on this records fighting over him.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so what comes into question now? And we can stay or stay on this, but I party. You're coming into question. You're looking like a little suspect. I want to know. You said the thing about Meg was her past. She was lying about things, she wasn't telling the truth. Did you know the rate? Did you know what was going on? Were you in the freak off? Like the questions need to come out now, because now you ain't looking consistent? Nope, granted, you are a 40 year old man with this 25 year old girl, so it's already suspect. Are you paying questions that need to be asked? It's looking wild. Like I said, may might be coming out on top. Are you writing these diss songs? Because it seems like that might be the slaps.

Speaker 1:

I think I don't think he's because of the fact that the diss songs are in full pot while Gotcha Like they're not. Like I had to, I had to get like translations because I could barely understand they were going off both of them.

Speaker 2:

So damn you getting even. You know you can't even be in this part, you can't even help your shawty. No, unless party is.

Speaker 1:

Jamaican and fully knows how to speak. But I don't. I don't think he is.

Speaker 2:

I think that's an African American man I don't know, I'm not too familiar with parties or partisan fontane. I mean, that sounds something about that. Sounds like some American sounds like I got some of African or Caribbean. Mama would give their son 14 14 is a sick last name off top.

Speaker 2:

Fontane or fontane and then partisan. That's like what you say, what the Congress is doing, they're bipartisan. So no, I can't agree with that. I can't agree with that at all. All right party man. Like I said, you can't be coming out here slut shame and Meg, and then out here having your girl saying she's slinging the pussy for 25 that she's a full escort, like she's admitted to it.

Speaker 2:

I saw the videos she's admitted to. You can't, you can't be down with the full escort unless she's been honest up front. Maybe that wasn't, maybe that was the issue, maybe Meg was lying, she was. He was like hey, baby girl, I'm cool with you. You know, I'm saying again, I was young at one point, you a little bit too old to be moving like this, but I was young at one point. I knew she was a little thoughty, but I was foolish. I'm like hey girl, just stop.

Speaker 2:

You know, I'm thinking like that would just finish, you know, like just stop, please stop just stop being a hope, ma'am.

Speaker 1:

I would like to love you, and then we could keep it going.

Speaker 2:

You know it's a 50 50 chance. It's a coin flip and then sometimes she might stop and then she start again. That's the worst one. When she, when she don't stop, or when she stop and then start again, that's the worst one, the ones who don't stop. At least you can kind of work your way through like she's a bad girl.

Speaker 1:

That means that dick wasn't hidden enough to delete the honus Damn. She go back to the streets. The streets are not enjoyable unless she has no father. Well, I'm saying this is younger time.

Speaker 2:

I'm speaking for the, for the girl who's still learning herself. Her frontal cortex is still being developed.

Speaker 1:

Her cognitive functions aren't fully developed yet, and like.

Speaker 2:

That's all I'm talking about those times. But party you too. You're too young to still, you too old to be dealing with this. This is sick, this is insane.

Speaker 1:

I'm tired of you old niggas that act so foolish and immature that I think you're like 20, 30 something and then I find out that you're like in your late 40s and 50s and I'm shocked, like where are the leaders in the community?

Speaker 2:

When you get the money or fame, like at a later time, you get to go back 10 years and act 10 years ago, like whenever you get the bag. At whatever age you start getting the bag at, you can jump 10 years and start acting at age.

Speaker 1:

So you get a Nicky act like that. I didn't say nothing. I didn't say nothing.

Speaker 2:

No you've been acting scared of the other, of the Nikki. I am scared of them. You've been clipping up none of the Nikki Cardi smoke you've been Well, I didn't, to be fair, I didn't clip that.

Speaker 2:

No, we try to run from it. We try to run from it but no, I heard might be a little different. Women have always been kind of, you know, playing to the younger, because you get more value out of yourself in the media and market from that. So I don't normally keep women in it. I think guys are a more interesting discussion for because you literally can get into some money at like 45 and then start acting like you 35. You get a different kind of fade. You start wearing a little tight shirts with the button ups that had a brain like going across your shoulder to your like middle chest, like I see you nasty niggas out here with the little headsets going on. Y'all disgusting, y'all are vile.

Speaker 1:

It's not fun to watch.

Speaker 2:

It's hilarious, actually, because it's like y'all seeing, like, oh man, I couldn't get it off in my 30, on my 30s, like I wanted to, but now I got the sack, everything Like they even think that they can do the half your age plus seven at the deducted age. It's like no niggas, it's still at your age. You still have to do it at your age.

Speaker 1:

You know what? That reminds me of a little bit that I don't know if it's if we were going to talk about this, but you ski skit about the. The cues were now all of the D9 world is up in arms at him.

Speaker 2:

They was upset about him, yeah. The alphabet gang is I didn't have it on doctor because they just be blowing smoke like niggas. Was out here putting a almost like a hit out for like a college hit out for Druski.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, they were. I don't know how the because like I don't know how that works, but I think it's a little bit odd when y'all carry that through after college and into the real world.

Speaker 2:

It's a game.

Speaker 1:

Like I understand that, like these organizations deserve respect because, like y'all were forged through discriminatory times and and these are safe hubs for black excellence, but at the same time, there's like a bunch of black people outside of this world that are just like existing and like, do we not get to make observations about y'all? Like, was that disrespectful just because he was doing the hand signs and stuff? I don't know. It was interesting to see the reaction, though. Educate me please.

Speaker 2:

People always like to hang on to what was their heyday. That's all it is.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so they just remember those parts All right.

Speaker 2:

So anything left on this Jada King Kingdom Burner Boy situation? Do we have anything to expect?

Speaker 1:

is I just think that it's really crazy that this lady decided to go at another woman that didn't claim your man, didn't say nothing about your man, and now you got dragged for no reason because she was out of her business.

Speaker 2:

It happens like that, like when, when you see the chick, that she's younger she's younger, she's prettier.

Speaker 1:

Her ass is fatter.

Speaker 2:

The whole everything from that toe is crazy. It's intimidating. The tats is tatting.

Speaker 2:

It's everything is crazy, like the whole package it reminds me of a time when I was back when I was in college and I was talking to this one girl and she was cool or whatever, and we were kind of maybe getting a little serious. But she had a, she had a kid. And I started messing around with this other girl that was at school with me and she ended up seeing a picture of her and when she seen the girl that I was shooting on her she was like, oh, my god, damn, she's gorgeous. I understand.

Speaker 2:

She's like I'm trying to be mad, but then I keep looking at her and. I can't be mad.

Speaker 1:

You've told me that story before and I understand that reaction, but at the same time I don't understand having that reaction like at 50 50 because I just put my hands on you, but I'm a different woman.

Speaker 2:

She's seen it and was like no, that's, it's different. Like you can, you can really pull them, like the niggas that used to cheat on me. They was cheating on me with mud, like you was cheating on me with a fine diamond.

Speaker 1:

If she was used to getting cheated on, she was like, well, at least, yeah, this was the first time that you cheated on somebody and it was like oh, damn, I got cheated on by yikes.

Speaker 2:

Okay, there was never a chance so I can understand Teflon where it's like. You see that what your man has the capability of pulling and you sitting there a little intimidated A little bit.

Speaker 1:

You know that, you know whenever it's tough to come after that.

Speaker 2:

It is. It's a hard follow.

Speaker 1:

Even though she had them first.

Speaker 2:

but Once you know that they're both beautiful women.

Speaker 1:

They both fine and everything, but like Jada is really on a different level.

Speaker 2:

It's just a different. It's just different scales, like we dealing with with apples and oranges. Honestly, it's a gold brick and some granite. All right, so let's get into this man.

Speaker 2:

So, man, let me give a, let me get some horns for these fellas right here. Man, shout out to the boys at home, new Room University. They were recently on the Patreon for Joe Button podcast, which is definitely a big deal. I haven't watched them before. I spoke with them a little bit when one of the guys, aj, was on NoJumper. But they joined Joe Button. They did a Patreon with them where they kind of just brought their show with him and he sat down and talked with them. And it was really dope.

Speaker 2:

They chopped it up. They was able to, you know, get. I didn't watch it. I seen some of the clips for it because I follow menace, but no, I just want to say like that shit was really cool, like I thought it was really dope just to see these guys who regular dudes and they putting together the hard work to really make a product that is respected by one of the greats in the industry. So now I think that was just really dope.

Speaker 2:

But, joe, I know what you're doing. I peep this. So I'm going to give you all a little background, kind of fill people in. So the homeroom show the gentleman on there is AJ Tone Groove and J Nobles. So again, shout out to y'all fellas. Again, this is no hate on y'all, no, shout out y'all. This is just observation, which y'all like to call potting about potting.

Speaker 2:

So what I noticed was this in a lot of the videos because you've seen me watch they content before they are self-proclaimed what I would deem sons of Charlemagne. They are fans of Charlemagne. They generally want to follow his topics and talk about what is a lot of stuff that he's doing in regards to breakfast club and brilliant idiots. So what I kind of peeped out of this is in the midst of their criticisms of different shows, charlemagne has been taking subliminals at them where he's not. You know. He's talking about the viability of YouTube. Guys sitting around talking about other people's shows and other people who have done things that they haven't done. He's literally shitted on them in their content. One of their biggest videos is called Where's Wax, where it talks about what happened with between Charlemagne and his old co-hosts that used to come on wax. I don't know if you remember Big Wax.

Speaker 1:

I never consumed Charlemagne's wax. That was.

Speaker 2:

Charlemagne's old bodyguard and friend from South Carolina was wax and they end up falling out over him cheating on a girl that they had a mutual friendship with. But that was one of the videos that got really popular and why I say this that they were sons of Charlemagne. We know that there have been a big beef between Charlemagne and Joe Butting.

Speaker 1:

They've been front of me for years and now they're just enemies. Yeah, this time.

Speaker 2:

right now they're at odds at each other and Charlemagne has been critical of Joe saying hey Joe, you don't put other people on your platform, doesn't put other people on and make other products bigger. So if I'm Joe, I completely understand where his mind's going to. Oh, you don't think I put niggas on. You don't think I'm a kingmaker. Let me turn your ops into kingmakers. The niggas you hating on on your show that you won't even say their name. I'm gonna put them on a big profile because these niggas only got 15k again, that's not no shade or no hate. They got 15k subscribers. That's not a lot in the grand scheme of it.

Speaker 2:

They are considered a small channel.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, definitely, they have a good following. A good following, but considered a small channel.

Speaker 2:

So for them, to be at 15, 16k.

Speaker 1:

And on the Joe Butting podcast.

Speaker 2:

Their highest video is done 95k so they haven't even like broke 100k. In regards to a video of you to be on Joe Butting's podcast, yeah, I think that's a great accomplishment for them, but I can see the play. I tried to ask Danny about it in the spaces Danny was running. Danny from the stop he was running. He wasn't giving me no answers. You know he's on. Oh, I'm not going to comment on that. I know what that means, danny. I know exactly what that means.

Speaker 1:

You think, joe, joe paid for them to come out?

Speaker 2:

He said that.

Speaker 1:

No, I was just saying that you think Joe is like being strategic about this bringing them on because they like look up to Charlamagne and then were disappointed by Charlamagne 100%, and he's doing it.

Speaker 2:

just get on, charlamagne, like watch me make these boys bigger because, of. I received folks saying oh thanks, joe Butting, for putting me on to the the minutes. Mentor, you're like. I've already seen the post happening. So, yes, I'm going to put your, the niggas that kicked your back in the most. I'm going to put them on you, I'm going, I'm going at your ass with them. It's amazing, and shout out to your boys, because that's a masterclass on how to properly be used.

Speaker 1:

What if Charlamagne puts Danny on? What if Charlamagne is, like love, to stop going, to start working with them now?

Speaker 2:

Danny said that he did say they Charlamagne, call me up, we can do business, we can talk you know we can do a sit down.

Speaker 1:

You have to show your face, Danny, If you start working with Charlamagne.

Speaker 2:

Oh, he's Danny. Or show his face.

Speaker 1:

Oh.

Speaker 2:

Joe showed Danny's face. Oh, he did. Yeah, he doxxed him during the spaces.

Speaker 1:

Oh, Joe, that's not nice, no it wasn't cool.

Speaker 2:

Danny was a little upset about that, but yeah he took it on the chain. He's a. He's a trooper. But no, I want to say it was going to happen regardless, but I want you to, I want you to speak to this. My, my, my thought was this was a masterclass on how to be used properly without compromising too much of yourself. They were properly used, would you not? Would you not agree?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because they probably don't look up to Charlamagne the way they used to, yeah, and then now the enemy of my enemy is my friend.

Speaker 2:

It was amazing. Like I said, I don't feel like they even really too much compromise themselves. The only thing I would say is I wouldn't agree with the fact that he purchased the tickets for them to come up there, and I don't know if he purchased a hotel, but I know J Nobles did say that in the clip I saw that he purchased a ticket because he thanked them. I feel like that's a conflict of interest, because if you're a show that criticizes other shows, it's just not in good, it's not a good spirit to you know. Take gifts, I would say, from from another popular show.

Speaker 1:

Why do you think that?

Speaker 2:

it's going to make you look compromised regardless, even if you're not you're going to be biased in your, in your critique going forward. Either way, it's going to be one or two things. Either you're going to try to overcorrect so that you don't look biased, or you're going to, you know, be biased because this man did, this man did some three, four tickets it was four of them, four tickets to New York and put them up. That's that's.

Speaker 1:

that's some big money is is a good amount of their content about the Joe Biden podcast now, or is it still about?

Speaker 2:

not that much, not that much. I've seen it hasn't changed too much in regards about them just talking about what happened. But one thing I did want to ask you about, just as being a woman they have been loose with the bitch word and again, guys, I hate just discussion observations they have been loose with the bitch word in relation to Melissa Ford. So, as a co-host of the Joe Biden podcast, would you feel some kind of way if he platforms some lower show? Who has been loose with that word about your name? Because I did. I think that was a little crazy.

Speaker 1:

I would feel some type of way about it If it was something. It wasn't just if it was if it was like a group that you felt like, oh, other than this, like I really want to put them on, then the first thing that you would have to do on camera is address that, make them apologize and let them know that that won't be going forward anymore. Now that we've sponsored you, stop acting, the goddamn fool.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and again I don't want to say they're not sponsored by them.

Speaker 1:

They just had they just did a collab.

Speaker 2:

That was at the end of the day, that's all. There was a collab so. I don't want to add these niggas. I don't want them to be like oh, these niggas lying.

Speaker 1:

Like if, if I were Melissa, like I would be like, just let me do this before anything starts.

Speaker 2:

Oh, let's do it on an episode. Okay, it was just Joe.

Speaker 1:

If, regardless, like I would ask you to address it, then if nobody else was on the episode, just be like address this in the beginning, squash it, move forward yeah.

Speaker 2:

I'm pretty sure she's not familiar with their content at all, so she didn't see that. But I just know when I watched it and seen it, it just it was a mental note type of thing. I didn't think it was too crazy or it was just like, oh, bitch, and things like that, but it was just like in my brain I was like dang, like I can see in a world where she saw that and ingested that, she could be a little bit. Problem was like that these young niggas is being wildly disrespectful to an older woman, and then you, you giving them the applaud because you just trying to go at your up and now you. Now it makes me feel way in the crossfire, but that was the only thing and I want to hate y'all. I think what y'all did was dope man. I just appreciate congratulations guys.

Speaker 1:

Oh, for real, that's a big time.

Speaker 2:

It's a big time. So I wish y'all boys the best. I'm going to continue watching. I want to see what more y'all have to bring, but just know, y'all talk FNF coming on, we right behind y'all, we on the way, we on the way.

Speaker 1:

Join y'all soon. Soon Soon, soon, soon, soon, soon Soon.

Speaker 2:

Soon, soon, soon. So I'm going to go to the part about us. Are they even really married? They even like each other. Do you see the way he has to get permission to laugh around her?

Speaker 1:

Oh my God, what was that? That was really crazy. The way, the way people perceive things is funny to see how y'all are wrong, wrong and loud, loud and wrong All the time. And I didn't even miss for that bitch Dumbass.

Speaker 2:

Alright, so let's get into Dr Boyce Watkins. Are you familiar with Mr Dr Boyce Watkins? Have you seen him on a breakfast club before? Anything like that.

Speaker 1:

I have not.

Speaker 2:

So he's a PhD. Is it economics? I don't think he's in economics. I really don't care to get his information right because he is such a dweeb, especially as of late, so beforehand he was very much so like speaking positive on, you know, black situations and instances. He would be someone who you would call because you thought to him to be a very thoughtful person in regards to a lot of these conversations. But unfortunately it just seems as of recently he's trying to fight and claw back for some type of relevance that he used to have back in like the early 2010s and stuff, and he's like it feels like to me he's trying to rebrand into like Kevin Samuels.

Speaker 1:

We don't need that nigga to be reincarnated.

Speaker 2:

Like it's really wild because I'm sitting here looking at this dude and I'm like nothing about you is even on that Kevin Samuels kind of like time off top.

Speaker 1:

Kevin was like, regardless of how annoying his content was to me, he was a very smooth nigga. He was very clean, cut Handsome. He had that shit on.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and this nigga right here is very tailored short and like he talks with a little congestion, a little bit Like it's not, it's not a very confident discussion when you hear him. When you hear him talking it's it's it's vile, it's it's it's nasally.

Speaker 1:

I don't like a man with a nasally voice.

Speaker 2:

Very dork, dork, like dork behavior, so I want to pull up, pulling up some of his tweets right.

Speaker 1:

What is his content about? Like what is he? What is he rebranded to start talking about?

Speaker 2:

It's like he'll talk about relationships.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, talk about women, like one time, like the high value man, not in a way, not in that kind of like, not in that kind of particular way like you know Kevin would do but he like he'll do the thing, like he'll show a picture of his wife and be like.

Speaker 2:

it's not always about the looks, it's about like that kind of shit.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, his own wife, his own wife. Oh my God, poor baby.

Speaker 2:

He's like. He's like oh yeah, it's about the, the, the money, not the. It's about the, the type of woman she is. Not the way she looks, type of shit, but she's still gorgeous like that.

Speaker 1:

Oh my God, you might as well be like. I hate this ugly bitch.

Speaker 2:

Basically, that's what it feels like. That's the energy it comes off. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Whatever men do that and be like oh, you might not be the most beautiful and you might not have the fattest ass and you might not be the smartest, and but you're a great mother and I love you and you were here. Through all of the dark, depressing trials and tribulations that I put you through, you stayed down and you didn't leave. So, you're the best.

Speaker 1:

You're the best woman, and that makes you better than a woman that would look better, and even though that's what I want, you were the most serviceable at the time and I appreciate you like.

Speaker 2:

Okay. So this is what he said about the video with John the majors black men. The black woman has been holding you down since slavery. Make sure you always proper respect.

Speaker 1:

They deserve it Okay period, so I do not object to that.

Speaker 2:

So then this is another one.

Speaker 1:

That is a fact.

Speaker 2:

This is another one he did. I kind of want to the reason why I wanted to bring him up, because he's been going at another person in the social.

Speaker 1:

I'm taking him with a grain of salt so far, though. I like that first one, though Well, I mean, that was the first one is definitely my bag.

Speaker 2:

Oh, I mean that, like I can find more, that is even stupider. But one of the ones he just recently did was because he's been going at. I don't know if you're familiar with Dr Jerry Ball. He's another person in the kind of all these doctors. These are guys in the conscious community.

Speaker 1:

So so they all have PhDs and they just decided to get on the internet.

Speaker 2:

They did and they be beefing about different ideologies. So this is another one. This is another one. That doctor this is one of the voice walkers that he said. So the definition of hilarious is the black man who tells me black people can't build wealth because we don't have any money, as he hops in his Mercedes wearing Air Jordans on his way to a $200 concert with the girl he plans to take to his 2k a month apartment after going to a fancy steak house. So this comes from I was going to give a little more information. This comes from Dr Jerry Ball's study of the fact of black basic, black will and black money and the kind of myths that have been said. So have you heard about the whole black, the buying power being like a trillion dollars?

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

So that's a myth. What that comes from is marketing agents who are trying to convince other companies to invest in black black businesses. Essentially, so it's a way of just getting black marketing dollars out so that we can, they can get money. So it's a big lie. What they do is they'll take, like, say, if you bought a house that year and you know you only doing a Dow payment and whatever little fees, they incorporate the whole house that you purchase in the that trillion buying, buying power.

Speaker 2:

So in the buying power, they say, like you used a whole 400k and the house that you bought, when really you didn't do that, or they'll do it with cars and all sorts of stuff, and it creates this idea that, oh, we're putting our money in places that don't value us and that only serve to take us back, which is not really true. Like and Dr Jerry Ball's work, he shows that no, most of the black people's money goes to needs like rent, food, doing things for your car, things like that. Like you do have a percentage of people who go out, but it's this very small minority of people, and he was basically bringing that into question. To tell people to stop saying, to stop criticizing black people and saying, oh, you need to put your money in the right places when it's like, no, black people don't have money, we need to fight for black people to have more money, and so that's where it came from Black people don't be having money left over to put in the right places after they pay bills.

Speaker 2:

And that's the thing where it's like there's no point of having financial literacy if we don't have the finances to be literate with yeah, and that's always been my thing.

Speaker 2:

That's why I'm critical of Earn your Leisure. That's why I'm critical of all these financial goos and financial people who say that our success is going to be found in black capitalism, because it's just literally not enough, even when it goes back to the other topics we talked about with, like Taraji and things that it's literally not enough of us for us to be able to think that we can generate enough money to do anything.

Speaker 1:

It just isn't, no matter how literate we are in finances and everything, if there isn't systematic change that allows us to have a resource that we can control in a praise at our own will. Yes, like we know, there's never going to be a real way we can say that Our property isn't a praise lower because it's just owned by us and a bunch of stuff, and then we can. If that wasn't the case, then the knowledge and the literacy would help. But that's not. That's not the case at all.

Speaker 2:

I'm trying to find some more of these tweets because, like I said, bro, everything about him, like he used to be more of a calm and cool kind of guy actually putting out information, but now it's just like he just he's like and he'll shit on black women too, like that one that he said was more so on y'all end. So this is another one that went into question. So he talked about the dress that Cat Williams and a lot of comedians were were bringing up in regards to the interview, and so he said question can you name 20, a list, right white male actors who have appeared in Hollywood dresses and dressed as women in the last decade?

Speaker 1:

And then people put tons of people who have been in dresses over this more than the last decade, but over just historically, in theater women weren't allowed so talk about it white men would play women young, young white men like all all of the women were played by men and all theater was white, so all of the men were dressing up as women. It had nothing to do with sexuality. It was sexism, but not had nothing to do with sexuality. That whole conversation, I think, is rooted in something a little bit different than what Cat was trying to say, but continue.

Speaker 2:

I think what it what it comes to with the conversation of the dress. A lot of things get convoluted and they try to mix two things up together and they'll try to say the dress is also a form of assault, like it's some type of sexual assault and it's not. It depends on the on the discussion. So we're talking about a Terry Cruz who said but he tried to grab his dick.

Speaker 2:

That is an assault, but then when you straight up assault but then when you go into Corey Fackham, you know when he said he walked into his dressing room and saw a dress in there. That is not an assault, no, that is a request. That is, hey, this is the story that we're trying to tell and this is the joke.

Speaker 1:

Sometimes the dress works, sometimes it doesn't. I don't think it's. It's a. It's a plan to feminize black men.

Speaker 2:

It's funny that we kind of get into this discussion. We're going to keep discussing the dress for a little bit, but it's funny when a lot of the internet comedians who used to dress up like women and do skits and stuff like that would get shitted on by women by saying, oh, you're disrespecting us by dressing up like us and doing all this, but then, in the same token, black men turn us into this dress. Is something that being forced on you all like y'all niggas really act like someone is forcing y'all to get into these these clothes, like y'all can't leave and just not take the check. Like I don't understand it. Like it's so funny how consistent this conversation is and how the black man is just so intimidated by the, by the dress. Like I've never seen us be so scared of anything. Like it'll happen and we'll sit there and be afraid and somebody to bring that that dress in our dressing room and we'll be sitting there like this.

Speaker 5:

I think, you make me sick. Alone, please, hiding in the shadows, hiding from who you truly are. You know to scare yourself.

Speaker 2:

It's looking like the green goblin when the dress come out Dark twist.

Speaker 1:

I think black men are so afraid of being feminized because of that ancestral trauma that has been passed down of black men being assaulted and literally raped.

Speaker 2:

No, I'm not giving it.

Speaker 1:

Yep, I'm not giving it bro it's homophobia I at the end of the day, it's homophobia. It's 100% homophobia. It's homophobia, it's homophobia. It is like it's homophobia.

Speaker 2:

If your experience is a man asked you, a producer asked you to put on a dress for a show or a movie, and you went in and made a big ass deal of it. That is on you. You are a delusional individual. Now, if he said, hey, let me grab that fat black dick and put this dress on, then that's different. That's a different discussion. If he's telling you like he said Harvey Weinstein, he said he wanted to suck his dick and all that shit, that's a different discussion than somebody asked you to put the dress on, and that's the shit that y'all. Y'all are not trying to have this conversation, y'all are homophobic as hell.

Speaker 1:

It's the truth. The difference between like a Tyler Perry and a Brandon T Jackson is Tyler Perry has his own giant production house behind him. He's a talented writer of this, that and other, regardless of what you think about him, maybe, and then and then Brandon T Jackson, arguably not that great of an actor.

Speaker 1:

Brandon T Jackson already already your skills. The foundation was lacking. You put on the dress to try to like, maybe give you a boost. It didn't work. The dress is not why your career ended. Your career ended because you're just not. No, let's keep it real.

Speaker 2:

Let's keep it real about that. Like Brandon T, you literally mess up the theory Like getting putting in the dress helps your career. Then you mess up the theory. You show that this doesn't exist. It doesn't work because you put on the dress and they got. Where are you? I sent you doing an interview in niggas living rooms. Now you could you know, we appreciate, you know, probably interviewing our living room, but at the same time you and you doing interviews and niggas in Detroit living room.

Speaker 1:

Calling him undalented and then inviting him here is crazy, though I just want to get the clicks. Come here and slap me. I just want to get the clicks.

Speaker 2:

I don't know why you're doing that in front of me. We don't shoot you, please believe. No one's doing anything like that in front of me. But besides, the point of that, no, like it messes it up and I think that's where we kind of just have to keep it a being like a lot of y'all sound psychopath, y'all sound nuts, y'all sound like the people in the women that y'all try to project things on that y'all sound like the brick lady.

Speaker 1:

What happened with the brick lady?

Speaker 2:

She got her got her got her body done or she at least got like lost some weight because I see some pictures.

Speaker 1:

Did we know if she got?

Speaker 2:

hit by a brick or not. Niggas try to say it was fake. Some people say it was real. I don't know. She had documents. I don't know what happened? That little chick with the with the tattoo on her titties on Twitter that be shitting on niggas all the time. She said that she had the documents are going to the doctor. You've been disappointing me. What's her? I don't even know her name. I'm not looking up your name.

Speaker 1:

You be disappointed me. I got twos on the chest on Twitter.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, because you out there shitting on Jonathan majors and you know that only reason you going so hard is because it's the black man. You know you wouldn't and anybody else want some finger injury. You act like this nigga went across his white woman head on camera like he was fucking Ray Rice. Be ashamed of yourself, black woman, you better. I don't even know her name. I got to figure out where her name is, but no, Disney's, just keep them, y'all over here sending money to let.

Speaker 2:

Are we done with the dress? Kill children. Are we done with the dress? Do you have anything more add on the dress? All right, you black men are homophobic. You don't need to do better. But no, can we talk about what I don't get with the Jonathan majors interview? So if you listen on our audio, you heard the little clip we put in there. I'm talking about Megan and his obsession with credit. Scott King. Oh my God, but what?

Speaker 2:

I want to ask is this so? Disney fires you, they take your shit and then you go to Disney ABC to give them the first exclusive.

Speaker 1:

Listen Disney ABC. I don't know. That's the same company.

Speaker 1:

If they do, you think that they're trying to rehab his image? Do you think that they care? Do you think that maybe I don't to me it was invested too much in him and they are trying to PR their way out of this. I think maybe what could be a pump like they're going to kick him out, but actually not Like to me could potentially be that Bro didn't. What's his face. Hawkeye, the guy that plays Hawkeye, didn't he get into like a massive, like car accident Like he was in? He has like domestic violence.

Speaker 2:

He got a car accident. He was like doing some yard work, you got injured doing yard work, but yeah, now he did have his claims weren't legal claims, though, like it was just his wife said it happened publicly.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

I think either in a book or something like that, but then Disney didn't, because I mean we can't compare the same too, because one woman is just saying it and the other woman was with the authorities. Like it's a different because Jonathan called them. Yeah, let's continue, but no, I was just saying like this nigga's obsession is with what Coretta is and saying but I just don't understand why you would get it.

Speaker 1:

Coretta is not alive, right? No, she's not. Actually her daughter just went on record rolling her in her grave.

Speaker 2:

Her daughter just went out and says can you stop using my mom as a prop, please? I said that on the last time. We talked about like why is Coretta the quintessential woman who just took the cheating?

Speaker 1:

Jonathan majors keeps bringing up Coretta. Because Coretta? Because Martin Luther King loved him. Some white women.

Speaker 2:

So I've been hearing that a lot of people saying that's been all misinformation, that we are, we are pushing out FBI.

Speaker 1:

I'm sure it is. Yeah, fbi is evil as fuck.

Speaker 2:

This is why people saying CIA talking points. But I read articles where the FBI had said that they had recordings.

Speaker 1:

You know, the CIA has like a whole propaganda, like division for sure, where they they put out propaganda on purpose.

Speaker 2:

Central intelligence agency. Part of intelligence is telling people what to think. Propaganda is part of the job. But no, I just thought it was just funny that he, just he just laid into it like they literally talked about the Coretta thing, and then he said it again. And bless her heart a little, megan, just sitting there being a soldier.

Speaker 1:

I respect it. She was just sitting there like she, she, she's like, oh yeah, he ate that and then they, they asked him like oh, what is, what has the relationship been like? And then he's like he takes a little pause, and then you could tell everyone's like please don't say, please don't say, please, don't mention Coretta, please don't mention Coretta. And then he's like she held me down, like everyone's like, please don't say Coretta, coretta, scott and I was like oh my god, do you think they ended?

Speaker 2:

out sometimes him laughing because it looked like he was chuckling a little bit in between some of the cuts.

Speaker 1:

Bro, I feel like I don't know. Do you think that him and I feel like him and Megan probably went back there and she was like nigga? Why would you say Coretta again? He probably just started dying of laughter. That's just my. That's just my shit. And she's like you need to take this more seriously. Stop mentioning Coretta. That's how. That's my little headcanon.

Speaker 2:

Coretta was. Hold Coretta be holding it down Like I feel him. Hey, somebody got a whole, whole credit name and high esteem Y'all. Don't y'all be shitting on Miss Coretta.

Speaker 1:

We love, we love Coretta over here Okay.

Speaker 2:

Not all y'all. All y'all be, be vile to Coretta, don't be, don't be holding it down.

Speaker 1:

Do people do people say bad things about Coretta Scott King?

Speaker 2:

I mean, they, they, they lose with her name. You remember that? That the Chicago show, it's like the black shameless and they had like a whole little thing where one of the ladies like fuck Coretta, because she like knew her growing up and all that other shit and she like shitting on her. You never seen that skip before, or not? It's not skip of that show, no, oh yeah. Well, I don't feel like fine in it, but yeah, okay so no, I didn't.

Speaker 1:

I didn't see that at all. But stop shitting on Coretta what Coretta do to y'all. That's such a random person to have smoke for us, coretta Scott. King, you know what?

Speaker 1:

we haven't done, and I think this is a great idea. We need to. We need to do our, our blowing packs segment. So we're going to do a segment where we predict and, like, celebrate somebody's death who we want to die but hasn't died yet. That's coming soon. I'm very excited for that. We're going to do that for the next episode. We're going to prepare that for the next episode, I think that's going to be in the second hour.

Speaker 1:

I think it's very on brand for us, because I don't know how we have become like aficionados of just hate.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, I told you I'm the king of this hate and shit. Like and I've made you my queen.

Speaker 1:

I don't, honestly. Obviously it's in me. I'm a hateful bitch. I love it. I love you yeah.

Speaker 2:

Speaking of relationships, did you see who Ryan Garcia is?

Speaker 1:

Why do I know none of the people that you be bringing up? Because there are most time athletes and OK, I have no idea, what that means.

Speaker 2:

They're the athletes are really smart people and that just doesn't hit your algorithm.

Speaker 1:

They're either athletes or fucking misogynists, I mean.

Speaker 2:

PhDs.

Speaker 1:

But misogynists with PhDs.

Speaker 2:

They can get them to. So this one kind of actually blends into the two of them. So Ryan Garcia is a boxer right. Mm hmm, and he just had a baby, so congratulations to him.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to your little taut.

Speaker 2:

Give a little. So after he posted the child on Instagram, he post another update on his relationship.

Speaker 1:

I saw this.

Speaker 2:

This nigga tells everybody that him and his Freshly postpartum excuse me, freshly postpartum wife Are separated.

Speaker 1:

Are getting a divorce.

Speaker 2:

And when I saw that I said oh this nigga, out here two player. I feel like if You're a wild boy, Ryan.

Speaker 1:

I feel like if he said that that quick, then that was probably already in the clip and he was probably just waiting for her to pop the baby.

Speaker 2:

Oh, 100,. Yeah, for sure, he was definitely waiting for her to do that.

Speaker 1:

But him doing that right after he dropped the baby. Like what did she do? Like girl?

Speaker 2:

like she had to steal some money while she was pregnant.

Speaker 1:

He caught her with dick in her mouth.

Speaker 2:

While pregnant. Yes, whoa, I'm surprised she's still here. That's a fighter.

Speaker 1:

Like.

Speaker 2:

I'm surprised he wouldn't have crashed out for that. That's crazy, because you can't put that on dick in the mouth allegedly, you can't put dick in the mouth. Allegedly, that's misinformation.

Speaker 1:

That's the misinformation and I'm sticking to it, but, um, yeah, like I feel like that's what happened.

Speaker 2:

That's crazy. Now she would have been dead if he With a name like Ryan Garcia. You're gonna put hands on Shardia if you find out she put dick in her mouth Like that's not Probably. That's not finna. Be, that's not finna fly Most likely. That's not gonna fly in any capacity. No, no, ma'am, like that's not, no, ma'am, this is hilarious. Nah but if you're a boxer right, you just maybe think of another story, though Do you want to do yours first?

Speaker 1:

No, but if you're a boxer, aren't your hands technically like? That's a myth? That's a myth, okay, so you can just fuck people up.

Speaker 2:

No, you can go to. You're gonna go to jail for assault, but.

Speaker 3:

Okay, you're not gonna be like, oh, these are weapons of you know.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, weapons of mass discretion.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they're not gonna be. Your hands aren't more.

Speaker 1:

Leap of murder than anybody else. Okay, Like that so.

Speaker 2:

But no, it's funny because it makes me think about this one time where, like, I was talking to this girl and I hate these- stories. She was knocked up and, like you, was talking to a pregnant bitch. Yeah, it was small though.

Speaker 1:

Low ass standards.

Speaker 2:

I was a nasty nigga at my time but like it was funny because we was chilling. And After we was feeling chill, it's like she hit me up and she was like if you would have tried me I would have been dead. A lame ass bitch. And I'm thinking to myself like that's crazy. Your baby daddy would have known you was out there throwing the pussy.

Speaker 1:

What the baby Like literally. And patheticly too. That's what made me think what you said she had to tick in her mouth.

Speaker 2:

Yo, women are liabilities yo.

Speaker 1:

Would you're pregnant? You're much hornier.

Speaker 2:

Could you imagine that, though, like y'all are liabilities, because now you're making me think about Kevin Hartwine X, y, so if y'all not familiar, oh yeah, so if y'all not familiar Tonya, what's her name? Tori Hart, is it Tori? I think there's an L in there, right, it's like a Tori, or is it Tori?

Speaker 1:

Tori.

Speaker 2:

Okay. So Tori Hart, kevin Hart's ex-wife, is also a comedian. She also is doing stand-up and, you know, in the light of Kevin Cat Williams, I keep saying their names wrong every time. In the light of Cat Williams' recent interview, she has joined his tour. That is diabolical. Oh wow, that is diabolical.

Speaker 1:

Nah, I like that for her.

Speaker 2:

No, that's cool for her.

Speaker 1:

But that's diabolical. It's definitely diabolical. But you know what else is diabolical? Kevin Hart's whole first, most popular stand-up special, mostly being jokes about her. Oh yeah.

Speaker 2:

I mean.

Speaker 1:

The material that she gave you was literally priceless. Kevin, you have not had anything that was genuinely authentically as funny as the special where you were talking about your ex-wife and you should have kept her around just for material low-key, because nothing else has been as funny since then.

Speaker 2:

But yeah, they caught him walking out to his van Kevin Hart and they asked him about it and he was like I wish you tour the best, nigga mad as hell.

Speaker 1:

That's all he can say, because you can't be mad at your ex-wife when you're cheating on your current wife and you're going through a whole like legal battle you have. Kevin has too many things on his plate. Gotta get this man a break.

Speaker 2:

A lot of y'all he gotta pick his battles. A lot of y'all looking bad. A lot of y'all after this Cat Williams interview, y'all looking real sad out here. A lot of y'all responses like Kevin was trying to like talk shit during the basketball game and shit. You saw that no.

Speaker 1:

I want to talk about Ludacris' response, because Ludacris, ludacris, freestyled. So Cat Williams said that you sold out, that you got a light-skinned ugly, long-faced wife and what else. There was a third thing.

Speaker 2:

He got the Illuminati meeting. Yes.

Speaker 1:

So Ludacris went on social media and did a freestyle against what Cat Williams said and was like I'm not in the Illuminati, I didn't sell out, that's it. What about your ugly, long-faced, light-skinned wife? What about defending her? He didn't say nothing about the wife.

Speaker 5:

This is disgusting. This is so vile. Like fine wine. I'm aging like.

Speaker 2:

Benjamin, Like I don't understand why he's getting this off. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Like there's nothing you can say like oh, my wife isn't ugly you was in the Illuminati meetings.

Speaker 2:

You got the little 100K 10 movie check you ain't fooling nobody. I know when the lights get niggaline you left, I start twitching. I seen that Ludacris.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm peeping at Ludacris' wife is not. She's a beautiful woman. Like she's a gorgeous woman.

Speaker 2:

She's the better looking one out of the seven people they said it was.

Speaker 1:

She's genuinely not even ugly at all. He got the best mom, and she don't even have a long face. Kat was wrong about that part. Maybe that's why he didn't address it. Address it Because Ludacris' wife is obviously a gorgeous woman.

Speaker 2:

It was just like I said. It was just a lot of that coming out of there. It was funny. Kat Wood, you were sick, though Come shop with me, girl.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I'm sorry, Beep that out. Definitely you were so cool I'll be forgetting. You know that's also. So let me tell the story real quick that I told you before. So At work, I get a, I get an email from somebody else in corporate and they're like oh, let's have a touch base. I'm like, oh, my God, I'm about to get fired. Bro, I'm about to get fired. I'm getting fired today. I'm like they saw our content. That was like there was like two, three things that I thought it might be, but like this was like I can't believe. I forgot to tell you this. I saw. I thought they like watched every talk FNF TV episode in corporate. And then it's totally.

Speaker 1:

And it was like you know what? We're firing you. And then there was this girl on TikTok today that said that she worked in the same field as me and recently got fired because of her content. I was like, oh, that's a sign Number one I'm getting fired. And then we at work, we talking, and then we're making fun of this guy that wants to apply. We're like we don't even have no positions open. We check the position open posted three days ago. I'm like, oh my God, that's my position. I thought I was getting fired. I had. The car had nothing to do with me, nothing at all to do with me. So yeah.

Speaker 1:

No, I can say that when we out here doing, we doing man, we risking it all, yeah, I really I thought I was going to have to choose between a paycheck or a pod, like that would have been a hard decision because the pod is not making paychecks yet.

Speaker 2:

What's coming though?

Speaker 1:

If the pot was making paychecks, I easily buy All right.

Speaker 2:

man, we got to get back into New York's information. Man, we got to talk about the underground. You wrote Okay, so let me pull up the articles because we have to be factual about this.

Speaker 1:

We know how they get there's the head of a specific sector of Jewish people in Brooklyn and they built these tunnels in 2020. There were complaints all over the neighborhood about these tunnels. And then now, how would, how would? How did they come across the tunnels?

Speaker 2:

So what it looks like there was there was. From what I was gathering here and this is from the AP there was a conflict inside of the synagogue. That was the younger like a younger group, that were like in training, they were like students in the synagogue and the older synagogue and they were trying to stop the passage from being continued to be built.

Speaker 1:

Because, from what I have researched, there are two sectors of this specific. The first one is the synagogue, and one of them believe that, like the person who started this branch, he's dead. They believe that he's going to come back and he's going to be reincarnated. He's going to come and they need to prepare for him coming back. And then there's another sector that does not believe that. The ones that believe that he's going to come back are upstairs. The ones that don't believe that are downstairs. They have been in a legal fight between them to to prove who has rights to the grounds. So the people that are downstairs are the ones that built the tunnel without the, the people that are upstairs as knowledge of this, and so that's what's? That's probably the fighting. The infighting.

Speaker 2:

One crazy thing to note, too, is that one of the tunnels connected across the street from a Jewish Children's Museum.

Speaker 1:

Yes and I. It was a vice article, so we taking it with a grain of salt, right, because vice does do very hard hitting journalism.

Speaker 2:

This is what it says. The fact the tunnels do not connect to the Jewish Children's Museum, which is located across the street from the Charter Headquarters. So, basically, from what I saw, there was a video where there was a man getting out of a hole and they showed that that hole that he was getting out of was across the street from the Children's Museum. So the headquarters is already across the street from the museum, but it's just not connected to the museum itself. Okay, so it's not like it's not like you can go into the museum and then go out and go and do the tunnels?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but you could. Let's just say somebody was walking across the street, you could grab a kid and jump into the tunnel. Okay, and bring them to the synagogue if you wanted to.

Speaker 1:

Okay, it was the freak off in the synagogue, don't say that.

Speaker 2:

That was too much, that was crazy.

Speaker 1:

No, their children involved.

Speaker 2:

We don't know we don't know that.

Speaker 1:

They said they haven't been no, so what? That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

That's what this article was saying. It says they have stopped proliferation of social media posts, falsely suggesting that the passage is proof of illicit activities such as sex trafficking for children. Like they said that they haven't improved anything, that when I first heard about it I thought it was some pre-war war two shit. And this is just what they use to try to avoid anti-Semitism.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so I've seen that there has been no actual proof of it, no actual proof of any trafficking or anything of that sort yet, and that this whole narrative is just anti-Semitic. I mean, it's gonna be used for propaganda?

Speaker 2:

for sure, it's definitely gonna be used for it. But that is wild though Like there was a mattress in there that was soiled, like it looked wow in that little video where they were arresting some of the people. I think like nine people got arrested at the synagogue. No, it looked wild. It looked nasty, like you pulling out a twin size mattress that's dirty as hell. It looked like somebody been peeing on it and shitting on it.

Speaker 1:

I saw somewhere that there were traces of blood in these tunnels too.

Speaker 2:

I mean that could have been from people working in them. So I mean that's why it's just not. It just like say it does look crazy. It does not help any of the Jewish propaganda against you guys. These do not assist with the allegations at all, Like the adrenochrome allegations are soon coming, I promise you.

Speaker 1:

Especially like after that horrid UN meeting where they let everyone know that over a thousand Palestinian children have been amputated with no anesthesia, either one or both legs.

Speaker 2:

Yeah it's not a good look for y'all.

Speaker 1:

Like what is happening. Y'all looking bad out here.

Speaker 2:

That's all I'm going to say. I ain't saying nothing on y'all.

Speaker 1:

All I'm saying is what the fuck is happening.

Speaker 2:

Y'all are not beating the allegations at all in any capacity. Fill up those Jew tunnels please. Oh no, please.

Speaker 1:

Lord, I know what you're talking about, but that sounds crazy.

Speaker 2:

Jew tunnels.

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

That's what they are, though. They're tunnels, they're underground Jew road.

Speaker 1:

Did you know that there's a specific like the very intense? I think? I don't know if I'm wrong, but I think Hasidic Jews I don't know if it's Orthodox Jews specifically but they have bathhouses that the women are supposed to go into before and after their period. Before, if they're very like traditional Jews, they'll go before and after sex. The women are supposed to go before and after their period If they're super religious. Sometimes I think, if I remember correctly because I was talking to I had a super religious friend in Brooklyn but some women have to stay the whole time during their period there because that's considered like an unholy time and the men have to go.

Speaker 2:

Anything that bleeds for seven days and doesn't die shouldn't be true.

Speaker 1:

They have to go before the holy holidays, like Russia, sean, and all of those things.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean it's funny when you kind of look into a lot of that, because you kind of learn that, like a lot of that stuff really just health related more than actual religious.

Speaker 1:

It was probably rooted then and now it's just tradition.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean. No, it was rooted in health. Even when you think about not eating pork, it was because you saw the pig eat the nastiest shit. So it was like oh, it's probably not a good idea to eat that at all.

Speaker 1:

But, no very rational thought to have.

Speaker 2:

It's just like even with, like the whole. Some people will say this before, like when they say, like you're not supposed to lay with a man, or it's like, well, you were. Men have sex. You're using the whole that you put waste in out of, so why would you want to put that in there? And it was more of a health thing than even though that's not necessarily the case it was more of a pedophile thing than anything in the Bible Doesn't really talk about homosexuality, really in the original text.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like the actual.

Speaker 2:

Hebrew translations.

Speaker 1:

A lot of those man with boy, right yeah more, so more times. It's related to them.

Speaker 2:

But let's talk about Fanny Willis. All right, so we got to get into this. Fanny Willis and her ledge promiscuity.

Speaker 1:

What's going on with this, because I have no idea who this lady, is you got me looking up Fanny May?

Speaker 2:

So according to US today, their headline is Trump. Georgia co-defended alleges DA Fanny Willis had improper relationship with prosecutor. So the gist of what they're saying is the person that they had established to handle the prosecution for Trump is somebody who she's had a prior relationship with.

Speaker 1:

Oh no.

Speaker 2:

And so they're trying to, I guess, try to find.

Speaker 1:

Scandal.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like a scandal here. Trying to basically put this out to from what I would believe would be just to what they're saying here, is just to qualify Willis and the entire county district attorney office, especially prosecuting Nathan Way, because two have been engaged in prior relationship class and time personal relationship during the dependency of this case. So I don't know, is that supposed to be like a conflict of interest? Like I don't get why the prosecutor and the DA, who would be on the same side if there was an alleged relationship, are they trying to say like he got preferential treatment to get it, because that would be the only thing that I would think that, but that wouldn't be something that Trump that would be the only conflict of interest.

Speaker 2:

As he says the court is filing and the alleged contained in them. First report Monday by the Atlanta Constitutional Journal. The motion offered no specific proof of the romantic ties between Willis and Wade. The motion claims that the ledge based on sources close to two, as well as divorce filings. So they're basically just trying to say, like you know, she a freaky gal.

Speaker 4:

From what I'm from, gal, but this is not the first time. Girl, girl.

Speaker 2:

This is not the first time that this is something like this has came out, so I don't know if you heard before there was somebody from YSL. He was somebody who had her as a defendant, I don't know what you mean he was a defendant and she was his prosecutor.

Speaker 1:

No, his public defender. Okay.

Speaker 2:

She was his public defender and he said in the interview that they had a relationship. So this isn't the first time this has come out, where she has gotten busy with people in the field that she worked with. Again, this is all legit.

Speaker 1:

So this is something that she just does on a regular basis.

Speaker 2:

Apparently she might be a free Fanny you a freaky girl, she's a very freaky girl.

Speaker 1:

Hey, get it from a mama.

Speaker 2:

Take it to the judge. Oh shit, but no, that's crazy Cause they try to use that to try to make it seem like she got information from dude from YSL to help her in this case. So that was something that she's like. This has been following her for a while. Like she said, she a decent looking black lady. I can see how she out here is, you know, getting busy. Like she thinking she Molly. You know she thinks she Molly.

Speaker 1:

She? She definitely does not think, she, molly, but she, definitely she, molly. Have you been following the the YSL court case?

Speaker 2:

I've been seeing a lot of different stuff. I've been seeing the different drip from thug. I've been seeing niggas on the stand blowing up.

Speaker 1:

He been looking, not not blowing up like he been.

Speaker 2:

Had that shit on on these last few, last few days he been putting that shit on.

Speaker 1:

So this? I think his name is tick, but he's been on trial lately and no, his name is Slug. So his name is Slug and the his his. What's your? My call it. What is it called when he talks?

Speaker 2:

Accent.

Speaker 1:

No Testimony. Yes, his testimony has been absolutely insane. It's been all over the place. So in the beginning his testimony was like he kind of seemed like he was still on the fence about snitching. When in the in the beginning of his testimony, In the midst of already testifying.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

So it was a lot of like I don't recalls and this and that and the. The lawyer's line of questioning seemed to be falling through until recently. So, like around like day 15, when he was getting questioned, he started coming around and let me, let me play some of the most recent court. So, shout out to I'm not a lawyer on TikTok. She's a black woman, she's not a lawyer, but she's been covering this case beautifully.

Speaker 8:

It's a recall trial. It was a short day but Slug was still on the stand and thugs attorney Brian Steele was doing the cross examination. Brian still starts off with overt act number 156, which is this picture, and the state claims that in this picture young thug is throwing up the bloods gang sign. But Slug says it's the push and P sign for song which had come out during that time. And we all remember that push and P is for push and positivity.

Speaker 5:

He had a record out at the time called push and P, so he making a P in reference to the song. You know whether that song came out with a video?

Speaker 8:

Yes, Okay, and then in open court, the entire push and P music video is played for the jury.

Speaker 6:

Push and P Peace.

Speaker 1:

Push and P Got no numbers In the courtroom. Push and P.

Speaker 8:

After the video, brian still asked Slug about being mad at thug for referencing him in some of his lyrics. Slug had grown a bit of a reputation for robbing women, and people in the neighborhood were teasing him for it.

Speaker 1:

So this case has literally been all over the goddamn place Like Slug. The way he's testifying is comical.

Speaker 2:

I was hearing some people so I was out. You know we are in the city where this is occurring at.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because this stuff was occurring a couple blocks away.

Speaker 2:

What I've been hearing you know on the street is is that the DA and the whole prosecution really don't know how a Rico works. So they've been putting all this focus on lyrics and all this other stuff when a Rico from most people understanding is I give you money and you do, acts that further our initiative in regards to gang movement, intimidation and just making sure people know we are present, and that's where, like at least the information that's been coming out has been a focus on everything. But what actually was the Rico?

Speaker 1:

I think they're having a hard time because of the witnesses. They're differentiating YSL the music group between YSL the gang and it's hard to tell whether Young Doug was head of YSL the music group or YSL the gang. And that's what they're trying to prove. But the witnesses don't seem like they're. The evidence is already there, though the evidence isn't, but the witnesses are not on board with proving this.

Speaker 2:

No, the prosecution is not showing a clear.

Speaker 2:

No, they're not doing a good job. This is from the information that's been coming out. So this could be all misinformation, but from the information that's coming out they haven't been showing a good job of. Hey, here's this individual paying out and giving money out to do particular actions which, again, the evidence is all there. The rental car ain't changed. You know everything that's in that situation. Is there the people who have lost their lives from those particular actions? Who rep y'all particular? You know, gang, it's all there. So we're not no one's out here making up anything, no one's tripping, it's just it seems like the prosecution isn't really knowing what they're doing because this isn't something that's really familiar Like a state Rico isn't something that really is well-known, usually like it's a federal Rico.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Usually the fares are the one handling Rico charges.

Speaker 1:

So on day 15 is when he's on the stand and he finally starts answering questions. I wanna play a little bit of it for you.

Speaker 8:

Trontavia Stevens, aka Slug, aka Tick, is back on the stand for day 15 of the YSL Rico trial, and things are going noticeably different than they were last week. Attorney Love gets right into it with her questioning of Slug this morning. She first asks him about rebranding rock crew to Young Slime Life.

Speaker 7:

And did you testify last week when you told we needed to get away from? The gang activities that rock crew were known for, and so we changed our name to Young Slime Life.

Speaker 1:

So apparently YSL used to be named rock crew and because of the nefarious activity that was attached to their name, they rebranded to YSL. Yes.

Speaker 7:

Who is the we that you were speaking about when you spoke to the jury?

Speaker 1:

This is when he changes his tune.

Speaker 7:

People who I grew up with my age? No, those people were not. Were those people founders of Young Slime Life? No, OK. So why then would the founders of Young Slime Life need to rebrand from rock crew?

Speaker 6:

So using the we were wasn't even like intentionally. That's just the direction I was seeing.

Speaker 7:

And then attorney love asked who in the courtroom are members of the YSL gang and child, let me ask you this which of these defendants in this courtroom right now are members of YSL Young Slime Life again?

Speaker 1:

Right here All of them. Would you please call my name? By name. Clay Wright. Other Clay. Other Clay Doug Is me.

Speaker 7:

And yet you said do you call Jeffrey Williams? Doug? Yeah and Jack, Is that you?

Speaker 1:

She said so do you call Jeffrey Williams Doug? And he said yeah, that was one of the things that they were trying to prove too, that he goes by Young Doug and that's what people know him as.

Speaker 2:

Damn that nigga was talking, but that was real, that shit was crazy, that was talking.

Speaker 1:

Everyone. Them him, him, him, him him. That's wild.

Speaker 2:

Crazy. Called him out by name, called a street name, out in the courtroom.

Speaker 1:

And then, after he calls out all their street names, she's like so this street name is this legal name, this street name is this legal name to clarify. And he goes yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yeah, damn.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Just let y'all know man, the niggas that you be, you be in the rooms with sacking up with and all that they'll trade on you in the instant.

Speaker 1:

They will.

Speaker 2:

They'll trade on you in the instant, man, so.

Speaker 1:

If they, freedom is up a stake.

Speaker 2:

They going to let you know it's up in the stuff. Man, that was wild, that was insanity, yeah. And then you look crazy too. This ain't all great.

Speaker 1:

This whole trial like if y'all can watch it follow. I'm not a lawyer on TikTok, because she's been doing a fantastic job at breaking all of this down. If you don't want to sit through court TV and actually watch all of this, then I'm not a lawyer. It's a great place to go to follow the YSL trial.

Speaker 2:

Yo sit up to her. Sitting up there with a Frederick Douglass afro snitching is crazy.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. He got the salt and pepper afro. Sir, you're not even young and you snitching on these young niggas. You don't even have that much of your life left over compared to the rest of them and you snitching why?

Speaker 2:

That was a wild snitch move right there.

Speaker 1:

But Slug his life generally is sad. I think he said he joined the gang at like 16, 18 years old. He'd never graduated from high school. He's just been in the gangs for his entire adult life and has known nothing else. Has never had a regular 9 to 5 or nothing like that.

Speaker 2:

No, I mean most of these guys have been disenfranchised and the community and system have let them down. So I mean that's why they get into these groups and in these gangs, because it gives them a structure. Yeah, gives them structure, gives them support, all right, so you want to get into this Ari Lenick situation?

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

All right, you want to play the video?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, go ahead.

Speaker 9:

I was never comfortable. I just remember every show, just racing to get off stage, racing to get through my set, and then I found a spot where I was comfortable and I started trying to communicate with the audience and then, when I realized they were getting angry at me, affirming them, I was like, ok, this is you're getting angry, that I'm affirming you. This is not my crowd and it'll never be. And that's all right, that's it.

Speaker 9:

Yeah, that's all right, you know what I mean. So it was tough, like it was tough and it was heavy on my soul, like feeling that energy, especially the day when the bottle happened, because that side of the stage, like I felt the energy. I wasn't surprised that it happened, I felt it. It was, first of all, it was just all darkness. That's literally the energy that was coming from the left side.

Speaker 1:

So Ari Lennox went on tour with Rod Wave and that was her experience going on tour with him. She said that the crowd was just like not feeling her. Their energy was not great. It was dark. I saw a little bit of footage from her performances during that tour and that audience was literally just standing there, silent, no movement, just looking at her. It was really weird. Like Ari Lennox doesn't make bad music, regardless of if you're an R&B fan or not. There should be a couple people like at least doing a little sway back and forth. But there was none of that and it was like a little uncomfortable to watch, like even on my phone. So I can tell. I could only imagine how uncomfortable it would feel for her as an artist when she's like putting on a full show and she was doing all the stuff Like she didn't look uncomfortable but I could tell that, yeah, this is an uncomfortable situation.

Speaker 2:

I want to first just give her a shout out, because a lot of women in her situation would not have finished the tour.

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 2:

So I want to give her 100%, like that's called doing the job. That's called being a professional. She had a contract. Yeah, that's called being a professional. Let me shit, motherfuckers do they break that shit all the time?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's nothing.

Speaker 2:

That's called being a professional and, like I said, I give her even more because of that. She's a woman having to go through that. That's not the kind of atmosphere that you usually expect, like I remember a lot when it was probably like 2008,. I went to the glow in the dark tour and Rihanna opened up for Kanye West.

Speaker 1:

Oh my god, he saw Rihanna.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I saw Rihanna open up for Kanye West.

Speaker 1:

So jealous I've never seen her.

Speaker 2:

And she was amazing and I think it was really important was that she fit what was kind of being led up to, and I think this was one of those instances where these two individuals they're too, content. It don't mesh to people who are like the niggas who listen to Rod Wave were the niggas who called her a dog.

Speaker 1:

The niggas who listen to Rod Wave? Yes, and they're just like depressed, like in the basement. I can see why she would want to join this tour. The niggas, who listen to Rod Wave, don't listen to R&B. They're not niggas who are in love. They are not niggas who like women.

Speaker 2:

R&B's not necessarily love focused at this point either, though, because Rod Wave is a darker, melodic rap type, sound Like it blends. R&b and rap together.

Speaker 1:

He does.

Speaker 2:

So, and what I'm saying in regards to that is like she could blend into that kind of realm in a little bit.

Speaker 1:

I don't think her content does, but I think that's the most.

Speaker 2:

I think the reason why she went on the tour was because she thought the fact that the niggas that fuck with him was the same kind of niggas.

Speaker 1:

she called her. She thought it was going to be R&B niggas in the crowd?

Speaker 2:

No, not that I think the fact that the niggas who fuck with Rod Wave were similar to the niggas that said the dog comment that got her right, that got her in some of the best physical condition that she's in now and she thought she was going to go out there and we was going to be mutual Like y'all got me right, so now y'all got to, now I'm going to get y'all right.

Speaker 2:

And it just wasn't mutual. I think that's what the thought process of everybody who was working this and who set this up was like hey, you have a great story. The niggas said something to you. You went to the girl that I went to school with to work out with. They got that body right. You look an A1 hot sauce out here, mama, and them, the niggas that inspired you and they going to love this music because you inspired. They inspired you to get it right.

Speaker 1:

I fully and robustly disagree with that take. I think that is a terrible take. I think we'll add that to your list of terrible takes. You can't act like a nigga. You can't act like a nigga. They said she looked like a dog. I think I'm going to make a list of your actual terrible takes.

Speaker 2:

You can't act like the nigga. That said she looked like a dog Didn't inspire her to turn into the best physical version of herself that she's been.

Speaker 1:

She obviously internalized that, and turned it into energy.

Speaker 2:

The work that.

Speaker 1:

But I don't think that she went on that, that with Rod Wave because of whatever the fuck you just said. I can't even repeat it. I think she went on that tour with Rod Wave because she thought that the men in that audience were going to be people who appreciated melody, ie people who probably appreciate R&B, and then she would probably tap into like maybe a different audience, a different fan base for herself. But that didn't happen at all. Because Ari Lennox's her content it's not sad, like her music isn't sad, it's, it's, it's sexy. Her last album, specifically, was very sexy. The one before that I wouldn't say it's sad.

Speaker 2:

Like there are like it's not happy music but it's real, but it's mostly leaning towards like so you're trying to tell me she didn't know the fat nigga was going to jump off the balcony.

Speaker 1:

What is that? What the did Rod Wave jump?

Speaker 2:

Yes, that's like part of his set is doing simulating unaliving himself by jumping off a balcony. I didn't know that so you try to tell me she didn't get to realize on that and be like her team should have knew that this may not be the vibe for me.

Speaker 1:

Her team should have knew that. I don't think Ari Lennox should have been there at all. Niggas jumping off. The third, lennox would be better with like a division with, like If the nigga wasn't in jail. Tory Lane's like Like you know, like a summer walker, like stay, stay with the R&B, click Like you didn't need to be at a Rod Wave. He was throwing anything.

Speaker 2:

He was throwing 275 into a ball pit every night.

Speaker 1:

And then if you go on a rap tour girl, just go on a Dreamville tour, like aren't you still part of Dreamville? Like aren't you Rye?

Speaker 2:

Waist, sell, sell more, though that money probably different too. I'm pretty sure that that check that she got going with him on this tour was probably one of her biggest checks. I'm pretty sure she won't even debate Her last.

Speaker 1:

Her last album was amazing. In that tour that she went with I think she went on tour with Summer Walker already, Like I think she. That was probably.

Speaker 2:

That Rye Waist different and white boys go crazy for Rye Waist.

Speaker 1:

They do.

Speaker 2:

It's different. It's different, all right.

Speaker 1:

What's next? Baby cakes.

Speaker 2:

Do you want to get into Meek Mill Homeboy? What he was saying about what he, what he saw with Nicki Minaj and Meek Mill.

Speaker 1:

I didn't see that. But, meek, before we address whatever is going on, would you every time that we bring you up I'm just going to bring up the fries on the lap in the pool picture, because that was nasty work and you should literally be psyched like a valued psychiatrically Because of that picture. But what, what? What did me do this time? We need other than taking a picture of wet fries on his grown black man lap in a pool several years ago, which I will never stop bringing up.

Speaker 6:

Oh, we was on my yeah, I don't get, fucking. Listen, we was on my fucking coms. We just run out by. We run these motherfucking bikes and shit, calling ourselves working out with shit like that. We started we were standing at the fucking job up like the whole new street or some shit. We ride we all. We the fuck down there. We wound up shopping down there. Let's hurry it up. This fucking, this fucking dude.

Speaker 6:

If he grew up with this girl it's all my name and it's fucking store, because she told that, nigga, I ain't fucking paying you a fucking tag. Go get your money off the fucking hotel. He said I just got two thousand on me, much like I can't borrow $6,000 or whatever Many thousand dollars in the Arden. Real bad. They get the car with each other, all kinds of crazy things. This corny dude starts spitting on. I said yo you crazy. And shit. I told him right then and there you lost your fucking mind. That's crazy.

Speaker 1:

That's crazy.

Speaker 6:

I don't know we get on the bikes or a long story short. I'm going to cut this shit short because I ain't on a seat too much. This fucking nut Riding down the street, me and him and Coon I'm still willing, I'm riding, I ain't thinking nothing of it. That's the thing on Instagram right now, long as fucking message. This is great. Fucking not just did that shit because he argued with that girl. All that shit came about that girl and don't know what that beef was about to do. That shit was about that girl because he was insecure. It don't have a bad bitch on his head. He'll not be that nigga. He insecure, telling he can't walk around the house with this and that Thinking nigga's looking at your girl.

Speaker 2:

Hey, man, that was hilarious. I just wanted y'all to just feel that I want to ask you this question Do you think it's lame that he's bringing this up now that they didn't fell out, because this is one of the main homeboy that didn't fell out.

Speaker 1:

It is lame. Yeah, it definitely is lame, because whatever you knew and confidence, regardless of if you fall out with somebody, I think it is your responsibility to keep that locked period. Other regard I don't know what cut that out, but if they did you super, super, super grimy dirty, that's another story. But if y'all just fell out because of differences or whatever, or just life, then no, you can't bring up shady shit.

Speaker 2:

And let's be real, you know he got that spit and shit from her. Y'all in New York motherfuckers love to spit. That's like y'all shit. Don't do that. You know New York niggas love to spit. Yeah. That's y'all thing to do. Y'all love to spit at a nigga.

Speaker 1:

I've never done that and if anybody has ever done that at me, I would probably end up in jail Like I've never been in a fight. But if anybody ever spit on me I would probably like everything would go blank. I would see red.

Speaker 2:

That's a New York, that's a very New York. Thing to do is to spit on somebody. I think he probably learned that from her, and then that's where it kind of started from, because this doesn't sound like a one-sided discussion here. She was out here disrespecting this nigga because he only had $2,000 in his pocket.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, which is crazy. Why do you only have, like you don't have no cards on you either, or nothing like that? Like what's going on?

Speaker 2:

A lot of niggas keep cash on them because they want to flex.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but 2,000 is crazy, because that's nothing.

Speaker 2:

So do you think if he would have said this when it initially happened and he was like exposing this nigga on some old you abusing his girl, do you think that would have been better? Or you just saying any speaking of this? It don't even sound like this is some real domestic, because they label it as say Jesus, this is abuse.

Speaker 1:

If he would have said this Nikki had come out and said that she had a problem with this in general and then he came out and supported her. Then it would. It would come off different, he would be singing a different tune completely, but they fell out and he just starts spilling stuff that maybe he should have Came out and said when it happened, because it was fucked up when it happened and you didn't say nothing and you didn't hold your friend accountable until Y'all fell out. And now it's beneficial to you to say something that is still shady, jet, it's. It is still shady. I.

Speaker 2:

Can agree with that. I Said it is kind of lame to kind of bring that kind of up, that the information up During this time of time where it's like they've not even been together for years.

Speaker 1:

They haven't been together for Mad Long, they haven't said anything to each other or like Nobody's thinking about them together at all, until you said something that was unnecessary and nobody's probably like it's probably just gonna be one of those things that's, we were like it happened and then we're gonna move on Like nothing's gonna come from it.

Speaker 2:

No, I can agree with that. All right, man, let's get into this judge attack. So we didn't talk about this when it happened.

Speaker 1:

I think it happened literally when we were recording last yeah when it started going viral it happened like the third or the fourth, but I gotta tell y'all folks, man, y'all are some Great, y'all have no grace.

Speaker 2:

Y'all folks are harsh, evil people.

Speaker 2:

Yeah because y'all keep trying to paint this man like he don't have a disability, like he don't and as somebody who has family, who is a Bipolar schizophrenic. I understand what this stuff can do to you. I Know it can make you pull up to your neighbor Without and start jacking. You know it can make you do some crazy stuff and it can also be violent in some nature and I understand this man has had a history of violence. But that only shows it only goes to show a systematic failure. I Don't understand why that keeps getting left out, like I see so many people say oh, this black man is out here hurting women and all this other stuff. Yes, because the system is allowing him to be fit to fail.

Speaker 1:

He shouldn't be out on the streets.

Speaker 1:

Or he's heavily monitored or he should be heavily monitored and he should be Medicated and he should have counseling on a regular basis and he should have been monitored until we knew that, like until medical professionals knew that he was okay to be out in the general public. Because if he is a violent Bipolar schizophrenic which Bipolar schizophrenic people aren't always violent, but that can be if he specifically because it's bipolar and Schizophrenic people have been demonized in the media for a very long time. So I did want to make that specific differentiation. But this man Specifically has violent tendencies, so if he has violent tendencies, then he should be treated differently.

Speaker 2:

I don't think he should be separated. I don't think people understand what's, how schizophrenia even happens so like you can literally live 20 some years of your life Normal, as everybody else around you, mm-hmm. And then you turn 23 and 24 and a motherfucker saying hey, you should just grab that motherfucker's grunt back jacket. You should just take that motherfucker's coat coat. You know you're a dumbass, you should jump off this. Like there's a motherfucker who just starts talking to you at 23. This thing is just saying saying the wild is shit to you.

Speaker 1:

And you know what happens at 23. Usually in general, that's when your cognitive Functions finish getting developed. Your frontal lobe finishes developing around 23 years old, 23, 25.

Speaker 2:

But I'm saying, like your brain is literally firmating itself Incorrectly, like you hearing shit. Why are you out here just walking around like that's what people don't understand? That is scary as hell. Being a hold on, being a pre, a paranoid, schizophrenic bipolar, that is scary as hell. But that shit to stop, but that shit to start in a way, and you not even just to be able to understand you, you over here, experiencing it in real time. You don't know what's going on. These voices just started out of nowhere.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and then this is the black man. So obviously, like if you're black and you have mental health issues and you're a criminal because of these mental health issues, like you're not gonna be treated with the Fragility that you should be treated with talk about it and with the sensitivity that you should be treated with because you are a sick person, you're gonna be treated like a criminal. So, after this bipolar, schizophrenic man attack this judge, which was very hard to watch regardless, like it was very violent and everyone who Was a victim of this violence did not deserve this, but after this happened, they threw the book at him.

Speaker 3:

So that's what I want to play for you this morning you're being charged with count one attempt murder. Victim 60 years of age or older. A felony Count to battery our protective person, resulting in substantial bodily harm. Victim 60 years of age or older a felony count three Extortion by threat. A felony count for intimidating a public officer a felony count five, six, seven, eight and nine.

Speaker 1:

It's over ten counts same name victim.

Speaker 3:

Oh and, by the way, I do not know any of the other victims named in the criminal complaint. Those are all felony offenses. Count ten Performance of actor, neglect of duty and will for want in this regard of safety or persons of property, resulting in substantial bodily harm or death. A Felony battery on a protected person count 11. That's a gross misdemeanor offense. Count 12 battery by a prisoner of felony Count 13 unlawful act related to the instrument or bodily fluid, a felony all allegedly occurring on January 3rd of 2024.

Speaker 2:

You understand these like these folks really think they doing something in regards to Don't want all of these charges on this fucking mentally ill man.

Speaker 1:

That is crazy. He has 13 counts.

Speaker 2:

Like they really like and you can just tell this is obviously a conflict of interest because these folks are in the same circles, y'all literally judge in the same District, so y'all go to events and all this shit together and then they want to make an example of him too, and it's, that's also the thing, and like.

Speaker 2:

I had this exchange with someone on Twitter the other day, because these folks is just so, there's like no grace given to people and they try to take like, they try to project other people's experiences like it's their own. So this person basically was like, in response to him being in front of the judge the same judge that he attacked in regards to you know what he initially was being charged with. Now your goofy ass is in there like Hannibal Lecter about to serve even more time and the individual that I am. I say you know you're talking down on a black man suffering from mental health issues and I also show where it shows that he's a Bipolar schizophrenic. She says I'm talking about a black man with multiple domestic violent charges.

Speaker 2:

Who's danger to others at this point in time, regardless of diagnosis, be well. And it's like it's when it comes to us. It's so ableist and Y'all is so ready to shit on us at any time when it comes to black men. But these white people, when this happens, they don't do that. They band together and say he has a mental health issue. He goes up and shoots a school. That's a mental health issue.

Speaker 1:

We have to protect him, regardless of the fact that he has domestic abuse claims Charges. Those charges should not have happened because had he had the proper Care that he should have had, with all of the mental health issues that he does have, then maybe this would have not happened in the first place. If he had been medicated properly, if he was maybe in a facility that Was taking care of him properly like these People would not have been assaulted if he had the proper care. And that's what y'all need to focus on, versus the fact that he did do this in the first place and he needs to be punished. Things like we need to think more critically about things, and it can't. We can't just think about things surface level like this, because what the fuck is it gonna do for us in the long run as human beings?

Speaker 2:

and it's such a general like people look at this. It's such a gender base, because I even saw people comparing this situation to the boy who was autistic in Florida Mm-hmm, who attacked the teacher, yeah, and they were trying to compare that like he should be thrown the book in the same situation.

Speaker 1:

No, neither of them should be thrown. The both of them need to be evaluated, monitored, medicated properly and put in environments where they can thrive and Not be in positions to hurt other people. If they have violent tendencies, period point blank, like what is wrong with y'all?

Speaker 2:

It's no grace. And then, like, when y'all see the black man out here, y'all just feel like it's just an opportunity to kick the nigga back in. That's, at the end of day, that's who's what it is said and it's like we jump at it. Every opportunity again on this show we gonna kick everybody back in. We gonna kick niggas back. Same. We're gonna kick white people back in. We gonna kick an Asian back in and I'm pretty sure we gonna kick an.

Speaker 1:

Indian or two. Back in y'all read of my son men in high school and Lenny got killed because he was a little mentally disabled and doing some stuff he shouldn't have been doing. And y'all were like you know what? There's what we need to do to them. Instead of getting them help. Let me should have got help. Y'all was the y'all was the type of kids on high school name, right yeah, and of mice and men. I didn't read that, we didn't, we didn't get that that wasn't a sign.

Speaker 1:

We had. We had Huckleberry Finn and nigger Jim, damn, let me. Let me Google that real quick before I look like a dumbass, but I think his name was.

Speaker 2:

Lenny. Nigger Jim was the person I read about in high school, so that was. That was the nigga who I had to had to read up on was nigger Jim. Oh my god. Shout out to them, niggas.

Speaker 1:

We didn't.

Speaker 2:

I was in New York so they wouldn't let me off. They was letting. My teacher was black. Okay so. I can let them white boys say nigger Jim.

Speaker 6:

Oh my god.

Speaker 2:

I felt uncomfortable, told. I didn't like that. I felt like she sold me out.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so Lenny. Lenny was the one that had to.

Speaker 2:

Feel bad for you, mr. Mr Lindahl, don't seem like.

Speaker 1:

Novel from mad long ago. You know I'm not an idiot, okay, I'm from. It was a movie.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I'm familiar. You know, I'm not stupid. I know, I know about the game. No, it was something I was trying to pull up here. That was kind of funny. So it was this teacher, right, and she put up a list of words that were not it was very anti-black. See, that's what I don't agree with that. I don't agree that it was anti-black, because where?

Speaker 1:

they're where there are words that only white children say. On that list was this a black Teacher in? A black School though.

Speaker 2:

I didn't know that. I think it may have been, but because I don't like teacher in a black school.

Speaker 1:

You know black kids, then I Don't.

Speaker 2:

I don't think of it like that in the same way, because the way that we're it's not like how we were when we were kids, like there was different slang for different groups of people. There was even different slangs for different areas that you lived in.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, now not so much. It's a monolith, it's not so much. The children are a monolith. Tiktok has gotten.

Speaker 2:

Everything, so I'll just give the gist of it. She says if you were caught using these words, you have to write a short essay explaining why you choose to use these words in an academic setting to express yourself. And then she goes into some more information. But though this includes brah standing on business, we ski. She put ski twice the teacher. I don't know this is a woman or not, but they put ski twice. You ate that up. Oh, she hates you. That's cap, she hate me. What up gang bet? Oh my god, miss T. So is the woman. Oh god, on my mama, on my dad, mom, you know such a homie Riz. What up G Wade in the cut with my twin.

Speaker 2:

Jubby vibing yeah on bro on hood gang gang, nigga on me on the set Freak you mean period.

Speaker 4:

She definitely hate you period money um big dog, money on motion. That money on motion or big motion, just vibe twin.

Speaker 2:

What up twin Nay it's giving oh, she hates you for real is giving hater like period.

Speaker 1:

My thing, is this my thing?

Speaker 2:

is. Even if this isn't a black teacher, you do need to kind of have an understanding of where you can learn. Where do you certain phrases and terminology? Because I'll just say this I was at my job this week and I heard somebody say you can't hear me, you feel me. So the person they was talking to it's a business. Oh, this is a business. Call yes, not on the phone, I swear to God. He was right next to me. It was like you feel me and I'm sitting there like, oh, my goodness, you just told the person that you're talking to you feel me.

Speaker 1:

You just said you feel me to a client.

Speaker 2:

That is crazy, and so that's why I'm sitting there like now I be. I'll be no child left behind. Failed my generation.

Speaker 1:

My field is different, though you got a my Taylor. My thing is I'm a.

Speaker 2:

My field is similar with the communication, but you still have to have a level of Professionalism yeah, like you can't tell a customer, you feel me you can't tell a client. You feel me you can't tell someone you're partnering with in business. You feel me like that's just not the terminology that you're using. That environment no, not at all so.

Speaker 2:

I think it's important. One bit is very important. I don't think that is necessary and hairling anti-black as it is, letting you know the world is anti-black and this is the language that you can't necessarily use or you'll be judge. I'm not in a professional setting, yeah, cuz you'll definitely be judged, like somebody's gonna hear that and they're gonna put you in a particular Box, like with with me. When I discuss with people, when I try to talk to people, I you've heard me I use a great sentence, I'm clear, I'm very direct. I'm not leaving no middle ground, I'm not stuttering, I'm telling you straight up and you got to go from there. Mm-hmm, I and, but that's how.

Speaker 2:

One thing I've always been kind of taught was how to communicate. I Think I've noticed you hate it most. Most women hate it, though about me that I can't communicate. That's like the worst part of me. You don't behave on me cuz I can communicate. No, but you said your piece. You said it was anti-black. Do you still feel like that? Even though you do, you think there's not a Time that should be relegated if the teacher is black, then I can this white?

Speaker 2:

Okay, what's the?

Speaker 1:

Asian teacher. Pakistani teacher because if the teacher isn't black, then their her intentions aren't as clear to me as they would be if she was black, because your whole argument of this isn't something that you can?

Speaker 2:

Is white kids talking like this?

Speaker 1:

If the school Is it black and the teacher isn't black and it's just mixed students and a random, whatever race teacher 100% why. I assumed that, like this was All black children and a non-black teacher Be this being imposed on, because why would it have any type of outrage if it wasn't this specific?

Speaker 2:

I mean, it would be it was still get put on the internet if somebody felt like this was a wow Request. But my thing is this why, why do you feel? That it is something wrong with it. That person isn't black. Because, is there not? This could be an English class.

Speaker 1:

That's only if.

Speaker 2:

All of the kids are black. What if this is white bunch of white kids? And she said you can't talk like this.

Speaker 1:

I'd be fine with that, because what the fuck are y'all doing?

Speaker 2:

Okay, so if it's a bunch of black kids in inner city, you would have a problem with it.

Speaker 1:

If it's a bunch of black kids in inner city and it's a white teacher, yeah this is the what's that movie with.

Speaker 2:

That's why.

Speaker 1:

That's why my point is it's hard knowing the intention behind the rules, but even with the intention, if, it's not a black teacher.

Speaker 2:

That is a valuable skill. Code switching is a valuable skill. That's the reason I think she's black, because, at the end of the day, this is code switching. I feel like she. She probably is too. I feel like it's code switching because a white person- it's a valuable skill to have as a black person.

Speaker 1:

You need to know how to code, switch like, regardless of how much you think, you need to keep it real and you need to stay yourself, be, be for real. You need to have your white voice. You need to know how to be professional. You need to know how to, regardless of how Comfortable it makes you feel, to go out of your way to make white people feel comfortable. That is something you need to know how to do as a black person to just get by.

Speaker 2:

No, it's. It's definitely a tool that that's necessary.

Speaker 1:

So it's a tool that is necessary, and it's something that I think both of us do extremely Well but doesn't that go against your point?

Speaker 2:

then even it, even if this is being instructed by a white person, it's a critical tool that you to be fully honest with you.

Speaker 1:

When I saw this, like I was, I Only saw it from a Sensationalized point of view and I didn't think about any of the nuances that could be behind this topic until you brought it to my attention.

Speaker 2:

I mean there's a lot of value just in that discussion because it's important that.

Speaker 1:

I do think it's important to teach black kids and Not any other. I think it's important to teach black kids specifically how to code switch.

Speaker 2:

Mm-hmm and I said I feel like a lot of this. This terminology isn't just race coded anymore, like people know what to appear. What was in was hip and if the black culture is cool people are gonna emulate that.

Speaker 1:

There was this tiktok that I saw literally earlier today and this girl was like oh, my older brother came back from college and he's having a conversation with my little brother and they're Asian and it was all African-American vernacular Period, point blank, all of it Like back and forth, back and forth, back and forth. It was like a maybe like 19 year old with like A eight, nine, ten year old and it was just back and forth African-American vernacular and these were both Asian boys and all Asian family.

Speaker 2:

So obviously the Asians are wearing the zoops now, jack and us heavy.

Speaker 1:

Obviously, asian people, literally is it? Asian culture is absolutely gorgeous and beautiful. Your, your cultural garb is beautiful, your Food is delicious. I think your historical background is is very robust. There's a lot to learn. Why do y'all try to? There's so many like random Asian cultures that take on like the cholo aesthetic, the African-American aesthetic, the I don't know where specifically, but I've seen so many videos of Asian people who have done extensive like perms, where they put like the smallest, tiniest little curls in their hair and poor Can of chemicals so that they look like they can have froze.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, when I see once I seen that once I seen you Asian niggas with the froze. I've been twisting your hair and it hit the pic in that shit. I knew y'all niggas were sick in the head.

Speaker 1:

Like that's so crazy. Like age like is. I saw this tweet earlier. Yeah, I don't know. I don't know who it was, but they were like is, is being Asian, that boring Because why? And then I read, so I saw something where they're taking on like the. It's like a whole different aesthetic. It's like the Italian, like slick back hair.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's black people shit. That's not white people shit, that's black people shit.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like like it's. It's just very interesting to see how Enamored they are with different types of like American subcultures Expression over there is a lot different, though, like expression over there is a lot different than what we experience here, like it's a, it's a.

Speaker 2:

It's a totally different experience. It's, but it is what it is, amen. Let you hear this. Let me please, I'll answer your question.

Speaker 1:

Oh my god, it was. Your question, please. Do you normally smoke, mr Biden, who asked that question.

Speaker 2:

Yo Hunter Biden is my American hero, like that's my captain America apparently.

Speaker 1:

I just want to understand that like he is my captain.

Speaker 2:

No, just don't let you. This thing is my captain America.

Speaker 1:

No, I was gonna say allegedly Hunter Biden be be doing that booga sugar one more time.

Speaker 2:

What, hey? This nigga walked out of the proceedings After that question. No, this is like when he was out in the in the regular shit. This nigga, during the proceedings, just walked out of the room like this I didn't. I don't have that. That tweet pulled up. But he just walked out of the proceedings. I said no, I'm done, I'm done, I'm out of here. All right, there's one more topic I want to talk about.

Speaker 1:

then we can go ahead, get into echo.

Speaker 2:

Did you want to talk about 21 Savage's new movie cuz he just dropped out tomorrow?

Speaker 1:

Huh oh my god, because why is childish Gambino playing 21 Savage in a bio pic? Childish Gambino looks nothing like you. Y'all could have genuinely got Stanfield to do that and it would have made a thousand percent more sense.

Speaker 2:

It childish Gambino just want to be in the mix, so bad, but he is dropping an album, so it makes sense why he would try to be in the music scene like that childish Gambino.

Speaker 1:

I thought I thought Donald Glover said that childish Gambino was done.

Speaker 2:

I mean regardless.

Speaker 1:

so I mean at this time, right now, he's technically acting regardless of the fact that one of our Not one of our most viral clip is me shitting all over childish Gambino because he obviously, in his content, doesn't black like black women. I have been a childish Gambino fan for a very, very, very, very long time. Um, that horrible now stand-up special that you have on Netflix I loved years ago. I watched it recently, didn't get a laugh out of me, but I used to love it. Community loved it because the internet loved it. All of your mixtapes you putting chance to rapper on, I was there for all of it. Okay, I'm a hipster ass. Black girl, nega, I love you and your content. I just don't appreciate your your fucking shadiness towards black women, nigga, which I still stand on. I'm still gonna listen to your music, though.

Speaker 1:

When he Announced that like he wasn't gonna be doing music anymore and childish Gambino wasn't gonna be a thing anymore, I genuinely was disappointed. So I am looking forward to listening to this album. I'm gonna listen to this album. I love his music. I love his music. I think childish Gambino is an amazing artist. I think he's like low-key, a Renaissance man. I think his comedy is great. His acting is great. His music is great. His writing is great. He needs to be tweaked on the way he represents Black women. Point blank period and you're not gonna change my mind about that work on it so.

Speaker 1:

I love you, but work on it.

Speaker 2:

So let me ask you what would you do if you heard your clip on his album?

Speaker 1:

I'd be hype as fuck. I'd be hype as fuck, and then I would, I Would reach out to him and Then send him this clip too, because this is genuine, like naturally not gonna go as viral as the other one did yeah, but no, it would be funny to hear down album. But like I'm, I'm a fan who has critiques.

Speaker 2:

So no wrong with shooting at your heroes. That's yeah, like that's not my hero.

Speaker 1:

He's somebody that I enjoy. Yeah, I mean he's nowhere near my hero, but you're somebody that I enjoy you. I enjoy your content very much and I hold you up to a standard, and it's very disappointing when you, like a lot of other black men, just Unnecessarily fucking shit on us when all I want to do was enjoy you. That's all I want to do. It's sad.

Speaker 2:

All right, so this is what I wanted to get into, and then we can get into our echo review. So did you hear what happened with NBA young boy?

Speaker 1:

Is he going to jail again?

Speaker 2:

No, he was on the bootleg Kev podcast. You know he had had a lot of things that were being discussed and one of the topics was fatherhood. So let me See.

Speaker 1:

He has like eight kids right 11, 11, wow, gosh Geez, she will occurs. So he says, this man is just spreading his seed all over the United States of America. That's crazy. And also allegedly herpes with it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean that's in his music. So but he actually got. He got. He got Donkey of the day for this from Charlemagne as well.

Speaker 6:

Oh yeah, charlemagne definitely still does that, huh you know, obviously you do have a lot of children and and I've been around you to see in a short amount of time that you're a great father.

Speaker 2:

How important is his? Fatherhood to you, man oh, wrong wrong, to be honest. What do you mean by that? You're not big. Not really big on it, to be honest.

Speaker 6:

What do you mean by that? You're not big on it like you're gonna, you're? I mean, you're a family man. I'm here with you, I see it, yeah, but I'm only out, I'm only like in here cuz you know well, I don't believe it's a crazy topic, cuz I'm not the type like the sugarcoating, but I'm four walls all day, everyday when you say four walls you mean locked in. Yeah just honed in on the music recording. You can take the hat 78.

Speaker 2:

So that that made you have a level of disdain, correct?

Speaker 1:

Yes, 100%, because he has 11 children by 10 different Something okay, so I'm gonna play this here for you.

Speaker 2:

Okay, I want to ask how this, how this makes you feel.

Speaker 9:

I Love my kid. I fucking hate being a parent. I fucking hate it and I feel bad for saying that. But like I wish. I was someone, would have let people with BPD know that they really shouldn't be mom's like my kid is too fucking complicated, I don't want to do it I don't want to be responsible for this tiny human. I'm not responsible for myself and it's too late, though I didn't know, but I hate being a mom.

Speaker 4:

Okay, so well, I may not feel the same way that this mom does about motherhood.

Speaker 1:

I can empathize with how she's feeling. I feel like there are a lot of reasons why a lot of women hate motherhood and a lot. Yeah, I've seen so many of them.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so then why does it bring you disdain immediately when he says that about fatherhood? But then you understand the empathy that comes with women who say I hate being a mother because Cap he has 11 children. What? What does that matter? We like we've had several discussions that men don't make.

Speaker 1:

He has 11 children and the procedure For him to not have any more children Takes less than 24 hours to recover from.

Speaker 2:

But what does a couple hours to recover A wound? He does not have a wound. That means I think he has 10 baby mama, oh my god, baby.

Speaker 1:

If you have 11 kids as a man and you know Specifically that you're in a position of like, there are women who do want to take advantage of me in my position and the Clout that I might get them and the money that they might get from child support. Then, because of the fact that I already have 11 seeds, I'm okay and okay, but I can just get a vasectomy. Okay, but hold on.

Speaker 2:

Why are the women who bring children into this world solely to get the check Not being the ones who are shamed more.

Speaker 1:

They should specifically be shamed what the same amount After because he has made the same mistake 11 times. No, he has not. He has made the same mistake.

Speaker 2:

No, he's not made any mistake. He is slept with women with unprotected sex, who they know. He is wrapped about having herpes and they have chosen.

Speaker 1:

Okay, let's say, regardless of the fact that he's having unprotected sex, why are you not pulling out?

Speaker 2:

why the women are choosing this life Like he cannot make these women.

Speaker 1:

There are two parties in this.

Speaker 2:

But not for pregnancy. For sex there are two parties two parties in the pregnancy to.

Speaker 1:

Inseminate these fucking women.

Speaker 2:

That's not pregnancy, though that is set. That is a part of no, it's not sex in pregnancy are two different things. Sex can result in pregnancy.

Speaker 1:

I don't know how you have experience how you like to fully, 100%, take the responsibility out of the man's hands when it comes to pregnancy, solely because it's the woman that's carrying the child.

Speaker 2:

But you, just when we talked about motherhood, felt all the empathy for all of those women who were saying they hate motherhood, even though they chose to go nine months in turn. Nobody made them take the nine month turn, but they chose to do that.

Speaker 1:

You're taking women making a choice. You're taking women who made a choice Shut up. Let me finish my fucking point. You're taking women who have had maybe one or two children Completely different, who maybe have completely different Scenarios, with the fathers of their children saying that, like, maybe motherhood wasn't for me, and Comparing it to a man who has had 11 children, who has time and time and time and time and time and time and time and time and time and time and time and time again, chose to To commit in act that he knew was going to result in something that he did not want to fucking partake in, and there was a very easy solution for him to not Fucking. Have that result happen. Men, have a responsibility and fucking pregnancy to nigga. You can just get your shit snipped. You can go to the doctor, you can fucking walk the fuck out. After that, you have 11 motherfucking kids. Regardless of there, there will be a hundred other dumb bitches that are ready to have his child. So then, why does he get?

Speaker 1:

a higher standard than a dumb bitch, because he has the money and the standard. So these are women that want to take from him. You can't fucking just continue to spread your fucking seed. He's not. You have to hold your fucking seed. No, because because you have, you have to hold your seat to a higher standard.

Speaker 1:

You can't just fucking continues fucking spreading so funny. You can't just fucking doing that. That should as stupid as fuck. You can't just come in every single thing because the dumb bitch is gonna have the fucking baby. Okay, she's gonna have it.

Speaker 2:

Okay. So if the dumb bitch choose it for having the baby, she chooses to have the baby, because this ain't just one dumb bitch. One of these women that he's had children with is the daughter of a Olympic, a fighter, it's gonna be one of the best fighters ever.

Speaker 1:

It's gonna be 500 other dumb bitches Okay but my thing is the next dumb bitch.

Speaker 2:

Why don't you have a right to be dumb? Why don't you have a right to be dumb? Why is he responsible for you?

Speaker 1:

being dumb. He's not responsible for you being dumb. You should have gotten the abortion right, but Because he's doing no, no, no, no, no, no, the kids have money. We have the term. Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. But he don't feel like he's being fool me. Fool me 11 times.

Speaker 2:

I'm literally. He doesn't feel like he's being fooled.

Speaker 1:

If he doesn't feel like he's being fooled.

Speaker 2:

He's all there doesn't make sense. No, what does it make? It is a woman to sit here, know that she is pregnant with a nigga, who is a gay rapper, who talks about killing and shooting.

Speaker 1:

I just want to let you know that, in the basis of my argument, everybody in this situation is fucking stupid, but even every single.

Speaker 2:

No, I let you talk, you haven't let me talk. The incubator is stupid.

Speaker 1:

I have one more point. Every single one of these women has been stupid this one time. Maybe we don't know, we don't know, but he's been stupid, we know, guaranteed 11 times.

Speaker 2:

Is this stupid? If I can pay for all of them, it's. It is still stupid.

Speaker 1:

Yes, I would disagree if I can pay for stupid it's not stupid, because none of I'm gonna stop yelling now.

Speaker 2:

Are you sure.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because I know that's not optimal for the listening, especially since I have a woman's voice and when I yell it's Generally naturally more shrill than his voice, so I'm gonna stop yelling. But these women, every single one of them, we know minimum. All we can guarantee Is that they have been dumb one time.

Speaker 2:

That's all it takes for y'all, okay.

Speaker 1:

This nigga has been dumb 11 times. Why, if You're a repeat offender, would you not be like, no, this nigga needs to be. Let me ask you a question.

Speaker 2:

I'm gonna ask you a question If he had the ability to say the baby is aborted. Because let me ask you a question.

Speaker 1:

I'll let you talk.

Speaker 2:

He has the ability to say every time he got these women pregnant, he can snap his finger and the child get aborted. Yeah how, what percentage of the time you think he would do it If it's snap of a finger and it's done?

Speaker 1:

and it's gonna be a hundred percent of the time.

Speaker 2:

Okay then, but he does, he have that choice in any capacity.

Speaker 1:

No, but that choice. Then why do you keep having unprotected?

Speaker 2:

Women because I have money and they're dumb enough to take my kids to term, then I'll pay the charge.

Speaker 1:

This is, this is the position that you're gonna be in 11 baby mom and he's not upset about it, but he's not complaining.

Speaker 2:

Everyone in the situation. He didn't say I hate my kids. He didn't say I don't want to support my kids. He didn't say I don't love my kids. He said I'm not big on fatherhood.

Speaker 1:

I don't think either of us are arguing that he's mad about it or anybody's mad about it. I think both of us do agree, though that is fucked up for the kids.

Speaker 2:

No, I think that the women should care about that more than him. I think, if I'm an incubator and I have both.

Speaker 1:

Incubator both if.

Speaker 2:

I'm an incubator and I have to hold something that could potentially in my life. I am going to do that for somebody who is big on fatherhood, not for the nigga who has a check. But if you choose to be reckless and do this for a nigga who has the check, I'm not gonna sit here and tell him oh, you're a bad dude for not being what she needs you to be when you out here covering the tab. I'm not bro. I'm sorry, I'm not, especially when I see plenty of women who are going to bat for other women who say they hate the same thing. This nigga didn't say I hate being a mother or father. These women say I hate being a mother and you went to bat for a while. I hate being a mother and you went to bat for no, these women you went to bat, shut the fuck up.

Speaker 1:

You shut the fuck up cuz you went to bat. These women say I hate being a mother because they are there for their children being a mother on a regular basis. He doesn't hate being a father because he isn't a father. He didn't say he doesn't need to say that he hates being a father. He said that it doesn't, it's not, he's not big on it.

Speaker 1:

He's Because he's not an active father in any of his 11 children's fucking lives. What the fuck these women who, all of these women who hate being mothers, are being mothers on a regular basis. They are waking up, changing, feeding, taking their children to school Okay, so doing them doing this? And that NBA young boy Is not doing that. So he's saying he's not big on fatherhood because he does not do. Oh, fatherhood, he's not raising those children, he's not there day in and day out, like these women are, who are unhappy with the, the, the circumstance of their life, which is why they're saying that they hate being mothers. They're probably saying that they hate being mothers because they fucking have no help. All their entire life, their entire being, is Consumed by motherhood, which is a lot of women's lives Period and again.

Speaker 1:

Life is not consumed by fatherhood, which is why he's indifferent to it.

Speaker 2:

If fatherhood is being a provider and protecting. He has done that exceptionally well.

Speaker 1:

No, he has. He has been a financial okay and that's a large point of being a provider and a protector is financial. Okay, they're literally on house arrest because unreason.

Speaker 2:

He's on house arrest to be able to be around them. It's because he has money that he can be in that kind of a state in place. Those kids ain't never gonna have to worry about.

Speaker 1:

Any kind until he's thrown in prison even then his money is musical.

Speaker 2:

Need to turn up even more.

Speaker 1:

That's people gonna spend even more, that's if his loyalty's go to the correct places for his kids to benefit from. That.

Speaker 2:

I'm sure it's shown it's shown that he's already done multiple diffies with Motown, right now has a new contract that he just Resigned for. Like at the end of the day, he's covering up his end of the bargain. If you're gonna get pregnant, you gonna have my kid that I'm gonna out here and give you the what's provided they can have the resources and everything that's coming from it. But his focus is I'm getting to the work. I'm gonna keep doing what allows me to keep doing what I'm doing, and that is the music he's not a Debbie.

Speaker 2:

He's a Debbie. No, it's not. You're not a Debbie If I'm giving you some money, if I'm providing in a particular way.

Speaker 1:

The state is taking, not garnishing your wages. He's not garnishing his way, he's the state is going to say just against your, your, your fucking will and your own child support Then, and you're not being there physically on a regular basis and your child doesn't feel your presence.

Speaker 2:

The kid was in the house with him.

Speaker 1:

If you're not actively trying to do that, the kid is other than if there's a hindrance on your child feeling your presence. If your child doesn't feel your presence, you're a deadbeat. That's not true.

Speaker 2:

Period. That's not true.

Speaker 1:

If you're doing something that is for the benefit, the beneficial of the child, you can't be a Debbie because you have to work, you have to pay your own bills and if you have child support and they're just taking it out, then but this Niggas, isn't no regular nigga, though we talking about NBA young boy.

Speaker 2:

Okay, these women are getting a very. These women are getting Something more in child support than they would ever earn in their life.

Speaker 1:

He has 11 baby mothers and they're all of them are getting out enough to like we don't know about.

Speaker 2:

I'm talking about from him oh okay, I'm getting money. No, they're getting more money from him in child support than they would ever doing anything else in their life. Keep it a beat. No, but keep it a beat like you keep trying to act like these women that these particular women that we're discussing Are fucking lawyers and fucking women who have they're not I know these are women who want to get on their back, have a kid for a rich nigga and that be their life Like.

Speaker 1:

Come on now multiple times that these are not upper.

Speaker 2:

So again, if I'm holding the incubator more responsible than the inseminate, Sorry.

Speaker 1:

I'm not Sorry, you're wrong, let's continue.

Speaker 2:

You're gonna say that, but that's because you're an inseminator and we discussed that. Y'all are. You're an inseminator, I mean you're an incubator and you're gonna make a G fumbling, I'm fumbling. You're an inseminator, your incubator, and that's just what.

Speaker 1:

I'm gonna get that's your twice.

Speaker 2:

That's your instinct is to put everything on the inseminator.

Speaker 1:

Look at, you don't even know how to say words, so you start saying them louder. Just what? I did, man would I just loud and wrong, but I'm in.

Speaker 2:

Honestly feel like I won that, though Do you know? You didn't say nothing. You just said you didn't say anything. That that that came to the responsibility.

Speaker 1:

No, you literally had the kid in there for nine months your thought of the fact that the person who's having the child is solely responsible is the fact that you think that you won that argument. Let's continue.

Speaker 2:

Ready to review the Echo show?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I didn't even. I fell asleep during it, so I only watched the first couple episodes.

Speaker 2:

I think you watch like the first three, yeah, so yeah, I finished it, I watched it. So, if you're not familiar, marvel Studios has released Echo. This is one of the shows that we said that we were gonna discuss. So this is a Native American character. They did some, a lot of changes from the comic. You know. Actually, the creators of this show said the comic book Power sucked and that's why they changed it. Wow, like real disrespectful to the source material.

Speaker 1:

So in the comic books that this is the, what we got our inspiration from wasn't good enough.

Speaker 2:

Essentially so. In the comic books she is akin to taskmaster, so basically she can manipulate and Copy your fighting style. So whatever you can do, she eventually be able to learn it and throw it back at you. Okay, they didn't do any of that in this this.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, from the first three episodes you barely could see the first scene threw me off.

Speaker 2:

I thought we were watching the wrong thing. I thought they uploaded the wrong show under Echo because I thought this was about to be a street level show and they start this off with the clay people, like I remember just watch. When we were watching it, I'm sitting there to myself. I'm like what is happening? Is this the story of the first Native American? I Was so thrown off by that.

Speaker 1:

but real quick, before we continue, I just want to say that I specifically hate when shows start with like the really cool alien, like Completely different world Right, and it's so foreign to what we know and I'm like, okay, we're gonna, we're gonna get a completely new story, a completely new Canon is completely new like myth to follow and then the place gets destroyed and we end up on earth. I Hate it.

Speaker 2:

I hate it so much, but see my knowledge of everything. That's why it threw me off, because this was supposed to be a street level here. Like Antihero hero kind of individual.

Speaker 1:

You mean street level, as in what. What does that mean so?

Speaker 2:

street level means like vigilante, like okay, okay. Spider-man, like that street level, like you, you're fighting. You're fighting criminals. You're not fighting. Galactic warlords or shit like that. You're fighting like mob bosses and things okay, okay. So if you're not familiar with a lot of things in Marvel, this is a Direct spin-off to the series Hawkeye. It echo was in that Show. They kind of actually cut out a lot of different scenes that kind of took away from her character that they included in this.

Speaker 2:

So like the first episode was a lot of old footage that they had extended scenes of then they just added to the show, so like even where you see like her getting a little pinch on the cheek, stuff like that, like that's old footage from her Kingpin. So basically what this comes out, you see her after the little introduction of how the clay people became natives. That's her people. You see them in a family, the the family ends up leaving because she wants to leave early and you know, her mom dies in a car accident. But one of the things that was early on that I kind of noticed and it was really frustrating watching what they didn't do a clear Translation between the ASL that was being said and the people they were talking to. So there was a lot of scenes like I'm not watching this on no bootleg shit, I'm watching this on Disney Plus like I pay for I'm paying for the shit to watch it.

Speaker 2:

And there are literal scenes, multiple scenes, where they do not do the subtitles For the ASL, like literally. They only do it at the end when it becomes like really important.

Speaker 1:

I noticed that they only did the ASL Translations when she was speaking to a specific character that guy.

Speaker 2:

And then and you fell asleep at this part, but at the end they showed a kingpin has Contacts so that he can know what she's saying and, als, we all happen to learn it.

Speaker 1:

Okay. So um rhetoric had this Complaint about them not having the subtitles For us to be able to understand her. But then I thought that, like I don't know Disney, like they know what they're doing, like they know that they need to put subtitles for things, like maybe this was on purpose, because People who are hard of hearing consistently have this. I don't want to call it a complaint, but uh Well, yeah, well, it's, it's a damn it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's a complaint it's a complaint of like. We don't put captions on things, so people who are hard of hearing don't get enough context when they're watching shows or the incorrect context they do, or the, the captions are incorrect and they they don't get the full context of what's going on.

Speaker 1:

So I thought that maybe Disney did this on purpose, because all of the ASL Wasn't fully translated at all and there was only certain parts of it that were translated. And then I also thought that they did that because the only parts that did fully have captions. They had this little like silent movie episode. That was also very like. It was better for people who were hard of hearing and it was like we could fully understand the, the, the episode too. But I was like this whole series is what's the word I'm looking for. It's like it's made for people who are hard of hearing.

Speaker 2:

It's like garnered for them, like they're the priority, yes, like, I think, the one thing that we were saying If you can hear, then no, I think the one thing that we're saying that it was intentional in a way that it was for us, as people who could hear, able body people, to experience content in a way that our disabled brothers and counterparts would have to experience it. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

We missed out on certain content, certain things, were not allowed for us. And we had to experience that frustration and when you brought that to my attention, that's what made me be able to kind of interpret that differently, because it was frustrating. And then it made me think about all the times that I would read subtitles and I would feel bad that the people who were experiencing this did not actually hear what exactly was supposed to be said.

Speaker 1:

I've in very small locations.

Speaker 2:

I have tweets about that.

Speaker 1:

I have had shows where somebody is speaking Koyol and I'm Haitian and the person that's speaking, koyol is saying one thing and then the captions are saying something else and it's very small but the context is like to make you understand the nuance of the conversation. It is important, so the fact that the caption, like one little word, could be off, but it does change the tone of like how you read it to yourself. So I think maybe if it wasn't just a slip up of like we just forgot this, like Game of Thrones, putting Poland Spring and Starbucks bottles, starbucks cups and on the set, like if it wasn't just a slip up, then I think it was a very smart way to get people who are hearing people to be like oh, this is the frustration that hard of hearing people go through. This is the frustration that everybody goes through Blind people, people who are disabled, hard of hearing people who are mute and I agree Like I thought that was dope.

Speaker 2:

So what did you think about the daredevil fight? I thought that was actually probably one of the better fights in the whole series because there wasn't a lot of action after like that first couple episodes.

Speaker 1:

So the daredevil fight was in, like the second episode.

Speaker 6:

First episode, the first episode.

Speaker 1:

Personally, don't shoot me. I did watch Daredevil. I like more dramatic fight scenes, but that is probably because I watch anime. Like I like anime fight scenes a little bit more. They're a little bit more dramatic. They're not based in reality. I don't like things that are based in reality. So when you have a regular vigilante that's fighting another regular vigilante, like that's just too niggas fucking each other up Like I'm not the story. I think it was dope though.

Speaker 1:

It was, it probably was, but it was still just two humans fighting each other human style.

Speaker 2:

Like to me.

Speaker 1:

I don't think you really kind of appreciated it Like you watched, I probably didn't pay attention as much as I should have.

Speaker 2:

If you watched the first daredevil, like the fight scenes and choreography that was done in there was just masterful. Like the fact of how many scenes they had was just one cut, like there were no cuts, it was just a one shot scene that was done. They did a little bit Some of this in there and there was some CGI that they added onto it as well, but like that was some dope shit and there's a fact that they were able to recopy that and have that done at least for that first instance, and us to be able to see daredevil in MCU like official daredevil in the She-Hawk version with the yellow and all that jazz Like nah.

Speaker 2:

And they also told us that all the daredevil stuff is canon. So all that happened. He survived the blip because this happened after the blip, so he was there during the blip and we got to see it a little bit. To me that's. I always love that. Anytime we can get what happened during the blip content that's my favorite, I think, disney needs to do a. I feel like they should have wrote a novel. You don't have to do no comic book. Write a novel about the blip, the five years of the blip.

Speaker 1:

I think we need a blip show. No, I don't need a show, just give me a novel.

Speaker 2:

Give me a novel and give me a YouTuber that's going to break it down. I'll listen to him.

Speaker 1:

There's always going to be a YouTuber that's going to break it down. I think it's got time.

Speaker 2:

I think it's got time. I did hate some of the montages because at one it was reused footage a lot of it. Montages are generally corny. And it doesn't necessarily bring to me the affirmation that I want from a character, because it doesn't feel like I'm involved in the process. It just feels like I'm just watching things go along and then now I'm supposed to accept whatever realization.

Speaker 1:

It feels like a cheap way to garner character development from the audience's point of view.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it is. It's a very quick, cheap way to do that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

And also I don't know how deaf people have private convos. Why do you need to have a private convo if you're deaf?

Speaker 1:

OK, so there was a scene in the show.

Speaker 2:

And then when it went to the skate ring, and then she was, yeah, she.

Speaker 1:

and then he was like, oh, we need to talk about this privately. And then I was like, why do they need to talk about this privately? First of all, they're in a DJ booth, higher than everyone else in a skating ring, and then y'all speak sign language. Does everybody in the skating ring know sign language? Also, these are all children in the skating ring.

Speaker 2:

It made me feel like. It made me feel like I was problematic for not knowing sign language. Like when I'm watching this shit, everybody just is so fluent as the shit, everybody moving slow when they doing it, and I'm like I'm starting to get like stuff in my algorithm about ASL.

Speaker 1:

I like that Disney Plus made me feel inferior for not knowing American sign language. I think that should be a feeling across a lot of media so that people just start learning American sign language, so that hard of hearing people feel less isolated.

Speaker 2:

I think that's you're going to break up this game. If you do that, I think that's good propaganda.

Speaker 1:

Positive propaganda is making people feel stupid for not knowing American sign language. That's what the CIA needs to focus on.

Speaker 2:

You're going to mess up what's going on, though. You know how many people have got caught up for doing fake sign language.

Speaker 1:

Yes, oh, my god.

Speaker 2:

You're trying to break up this game.

Speaker 1:

Those are some of my favorite stories, Like that lady that was at the speed. She was just like it was like what is that?

Speaker 2:

What speech was that? That happened. That didn't look like nothing, did it?

Speaker 1:

Did I say something just now? You probably said something to a lot of people.

Speaker 2:

No, I probably genuinely said nothing just now.

Speaker 1:

I've seen American sign language and it looks more intentional than what I just did, so you didn't finish up the last few episodes, but I did.

Speaker 2:

What ends up happening is they kind of have the conflict where she reunites with Fisk. She learns that he is back alive. He tries to bring her back. She denies him and they end up having a big conflict. I hate her powers first and foremost. Her powers are feminism, are they?

Speaker 1:

Because from when I left off her powers she didn't have control of, so her powers are feminism. They just come out when she needs help.

Speaker 2:

Her powers are first, second and third way feminism, because what happens is, as a Native American, woman.

Speaker 1:

She did not benefit from any of those waves of feminism.

Speaker 2:

So the reason why I say that is her powers. I know that, we know that.

Speaker 1:

We know that Continue.

Speaker 2:

The reason why I say that is because her powers stem from the fact that she's a special individual, like. It's not even Like. That was the one part I hated so much. She came from the lineage of these people, right.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like, the reason why I hated it so much is because the reason why I hated it so much is because that did not include. Hold on, hold on. Let me finish this.

Speaker 2:

The reason why I hated it so much was because it was not included in the story. In regards to, it didn't matter. Like when you have a story like this and you have the main story was this Her and Kingpin and then finding each other and going from there. That's the story. So if you want to have a supernatural element with it, you have to have it included in the story. For some reason it was not. It was literally this is a special chick for the sake of being special and it's going to help include in the end of the climax, Was it?

Speaker 1:

It was. I do remember one episode saying that her ancestry traced back to the special clay people that came here. So it wasn't random, it was just like she specifically came from this line of women.

Speaker 2:

It's random.

Speaker 1:

We were following her because she came from this line of women.

Speaker 2:

No, we were following her because she was in another Disney Plus. That again, none of this had nothing to do with it, but because she came from this line of women who had these powers.

Speaker 1:

It wasn't just random. That is random. Yes, it is.

Speaker 2:

Because it had nothing to do with the story. She'd learned nothing from it, from the story. The only reason it came into play was because I went back home, like what I'm saying is this, this is the way that you tell the story, okay. So this is the main story is this hey, I shot Kingpin.

Speaker 2:

I'm trying to take over his empire. He's alive, he's trying to get revenge. So in his midst of getting revenge he does something, that is, he tries to take something, he tries to affect something that is part of my heritage. Now I learned about that heritage and now it affects the end of the story, because you know how this motherfucker ends. It ends with him by the fucking tomb Though tomb fist at her fucking head. She does her little special little powers and it just stops. Like they have like a weird little section where he goes back and he's crying like he was a kid, but it's a grown ass man in his room seeing his wall being pushed in by his dad kicking his mom's ass oh no, and you don't see any of it. But it's like her mom was a healer, so in her way that they're trying to show he's healing her but that he's not. Like it's a.

Speaker 2:

The ending was horrible. It was like probably up there with like the secret invasion. Regarding the ending, it was so pointless. It meant nothing, like the fact that you're showing all of her and her relatives together. It means nothing to Kingpin, because you did not show any correlation between the two, you're just like, oh, this is a special bitch. And she in this situation, like the specialness did not include her situation.

Speaker 1:

I wish I saw the last couple at those scenes so you know when they show all the people, I feel like spiritually, I would have gotten something a little bit different from it that I would have been able to.

Speaker 2:

No, this is what happened.

Speaker 1:

She.

Speaker 2:

She. Let me tell you how feminism is her superpower.

Speaker 1:

Now I just gotta let him get his shit off. Let me tell you how it's the superpower. It's so unfortunate.

Speaker 2:

She goes and meets up with Kingpin to do a conflict. I'm so sad. She goes up to Kingpin to initiate the conflict and she ends up giving the powers to her cousin and grandma just out of nowhere so that they start beating up the niggas. These things ain't fought nothing. The whole movie these things ain't got no history. The bitch is a firefighter and a post office worker, Okay, and they all hear kicking niggas ass because she turned on the power. Like come on my G. That is ridiculous.

Speaker 1:

That is hilarious, that's ridiculous. Yeah, no, looking that shit is fucking nuts. No, I still think you're a hater.

Speaker 2:

You can say I'm a hater. Indian feminism was the fucking hero of this movie, because you just gave all the women power, Native American Again.

Speaker 1:

they're not.

Speaker 2:

Indians. They're Native Americans, okay.

Speaker 1:

They call themselves.

Speaker 2:

Indians in the show.

Speaker 1:

Christopher Columbus was a full, robust dumbass, and that show was produced by what? White men Probably yeah, so let's take that with a grain of salt.

Speaker 2:

But that was the only part that like the ending and the fact that you're adding this supernatural. You know you could have just said the kingpin was trying to get a healing relic from your people. And that's why he you know you could do something. But it was like you literally had an A plot and a B plot, that the only reason they connected was because he kidnapped your family. So it was like again, it followed the same format and set up your father to be murdered.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it just followed the same format of a good start, and then they shoot their load too fast. In okay motive.

Speaker 2:

Like I said again, that was already settled when he shot him in the face in Hawkeye how you shoot somebody in the face and not kill them. I think they're going to tell us later on that he has some type of like super soldier serum or something. Yeah, because that don't make no sense, but that was the only thing, I hated the ending.

Speaker 2:

I thought the action scenes were really dope. I thought should have shot that again in the face several times. I thought it'd be really dope if they would have kept her original power and not gave her that like stupid Native American shit, because it didn't mean anything and it was dumb.

Speaker 1:

If they did a Native American superhero, the Native American hero they did in the what if? Cohort cohort that hero. That hero, like her power, was lit as fuck because it was from the Tesseract Right. That's, that's what you should have did. I would have. I definitely want more of that, because she was lit as fuck and then her whole, like. I would want you to go deeper into that. I would want, like, maybe a season of something like that. They'll be lit as fuck.

Speaker 2:

They do have a Native American Captain America. They have a Captain America of the Kikapo tribe.

Speaker 1:

Oh wow, we'll watch that and we'll let you know. No, it's a comic book, it's not a it's not a, it's a comic book.

Speaker 2:

See, that's him right there.

Speaker 1:

All right, is that it?

Speaker 2:

I mean, we can finish up right here. Yeah, all right man? Hey, we just want y'all to know life is a labor of love. Take these moments to unionize, Get your means of production and show these corporate fucks that you ain't nobody to be fucked with. Period. It's just talk F and F TV and we're going to be here to enlighten y'all, entertain y'all, and we're going to shoot at your heroes. So if you hate it, hate it, but guess what motherfucker we're going to make it.

Speaker 1:

And follow us on all of the social media at talkfnftv, tiktok, twitter, facebook, instagram, youtube, subscribe like, appreciate all of the support, all of the comments and see you next week. Bye guys, bye.