Talk FNF

Shannon Sharpe vs Mike Epps, Monique Responds to Her Son and Usher ROCKED the Superbowl

February 16, 2024 Talk FNF tv Season 1 Episode 31
Shannon Sharpe vs Mike Epps, Monique Responds to Her Son and Usher ROCKED the Superbowl
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Talk FNF
Shannon Sharpe vs Mike Epps, Monique Responds to Her Son and Usher ROCKED the Superbowl
Feb 16, 2024 Season 1 Episode 31
Talk FNF tv

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Embark on a journey through the landscapes of parenting decisions, entertainment pressures, and the intricate fabric of familial bonds that challenge us all. Our latest episode peels back the layers of these themes with a candidness that will leave you reflecting on your own life and the society we navigate. We're not shying away from the tough conversations; instead, we're confronting them head-on, sharing personal stories and the experiences of public figures who've walked in those shoes.

Feel the tension as we explore the podcasting community's internal conflicts, particularly around Club Shay Shay's rise to prominence. We'll dissect the scrutiny and pressure faced by artists in the relentless pursuit of their craft, and its intersection with the world of parenting—where the eternal debate of time versus money in a child's upbringing is more relevant than ever. From Usher's Super Bowl moments to the complexities of Beyonce and Taylor Swift's star power, we lay it all out on the table for a riveting discussion.

As we wrap up this episode, we'll touch upon the selective outrage in the entertainment industry, the symbolism of the Super Bowl, and the continued challenges faced by disabled individuals amidst the pandemic. Our community is at the heart of this journey, and we invite you to share your perspectives as we craft this labor of love. Join us, and let's build something meaningful together.

Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Send us a Text Message.

Embark on a journey through the landscapes of parenting decisions, entertainment pressures, and the intricate fabric of familial bonds that challenge us all. Our latest episode peels back the layers of these themes with a candidness that will leave you reflecting on your own life and the society we navigate. We're not shying away from the tough conversations; instead, we're confronting them head-on, sharing personal stories and the experiences of public figures who've walked in those shoes.

Feel the tension as we explore the podcasting community's internal conflicts, particularly around Club Shay Shay's rise to prominence. We'll dissect the scrutiny and pressure faced by artists in the relentless pursuit of their craft, and its intersection with the world of parenting—where the eternal debate of time versus money in a child's upbringing is more relevant than ever. From Usher's Super Bowl moments to the complexities of Beyonce and Taylor Swift's star power, we lay it all out on the table for a riveting discussion.

As we wrap up this episode, we'll touch upon the selective outrage in the entertainment industry, the symbolism of the Super Bowl, and the continued challenges faced by disabled individuals amidst the pandemic. Our community is at the heart of this journey, and we invite you to share your perspectives as we craft this labor of love. Join us, and let's build something meaningful together.

Speaker 1:

I wanted from their parents. I tried that BS too one time and it just that's. All it was was BS, because none of y'all kids would want to be like anything. We've seen where these little other kids in bad situations or less than ideal situations are when they have to wake up and go to school. So it's easy to say, it's easy to look a parent in their eye and say in question what they decisions made when you weren't the one that had to make it, nor would you have to live with the results.

Speaker 2:

Been a performer that puts her soul into everything for mad long. When you watch them, the shows that they put on are not the same. They are not comparable at all.

Speaker 1:

Started off as Cloud Chasey and he just was kept begging and begging in his own comedic way. Chasey had enough of it. I don't think the frequency of money that's been coming in is keeping them afloat on what you don't think.

Speaker 2:

After the Renaissance tour.

Speaker 1:

I think that stuff costs a lot more than what you think.

Speaker 2:

This podcast is sponsored by Graffiti Tax Services. For all your tax preparation needs, you can go to graffititaxcom. 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. They're our new sponsor. Thank you to Graffiti Tax Preparation Services. That's it.

Speaker 1:

All right, we good to go.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

We back to the action.

Speaker 4:

Let's go.

Speaker 1:

We got to get to it, man. So Valentine's Day, so we bringing this to y'all with love. So just be ready, man. We just got a little mix to start the day off. You know how we do.

Speaker 2:

Just a little one, two, a little dance hall mash up.

Speaker 1:

And if it seems like a little wild, we are vibe. Today we are recording way earlier than usual. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

So that's why y'all see a little different vibe from us the sun is out right now, and we're not used to that. All righty, let's go you ready, all righty.

Speaker 5:

Yeah Well, I don't really care what people say, I don't really watch what them want, though Still, I got to stick to my girls like glue and I might not play number two. All I know this time it is getting dead. Need a lot of cheese up in my head, Got a lot of dancing in my bed. Two hundred, we dead. And then we're talking about us going to school. Saint-vierre, la ville de Vierre. Saint-vierre. Je suis né au bord de mer. Bienvenue à Saint-Vierre, la ville de mer. Saint-vierre. Kilomikilomikilomikilomikilomikilometres. I don't come. I don't come. Kilometers, I don't work. I'm an enikilometres Time from the teacher. I don't take for the game. She not beat us. I decide bad mind from my distance. So let's meet up and yell on my pizza.

Speaker 1:

Kilomikilomikilomikilometres. Wake it up, baby.

Speaker 2:

Wooo, that was lit, was it? Not, that was good, that was good.

Speaker 4:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I did none of that. Shout out to DJ Lubbs. Found that on Spotify.

Speaker 1:

That was one of our first outside mixes. Usually we keep it internal. But, it's a heck of a day. That's it. That's it. Alright, man, you are now listening to Talk FNF TV. I'm your host, rhetoric, and I'm with my amazing and wonderful and lovely co-host, miss Reality. Hello, and we back to bring you all another amazing adventure with us as we navigate pop culture and whatnot, and just give you all a right frame of mind set to think about these things.

Speaker 2:

We just here to talk shit. He makes it sound so eloquent and beautiful.

Speaker 1:

What I do.

Speaker 2:

I got you we're here to talk mess about people you like.

Speaker 1:

You're going at your heroes. No apologies we'll be giving. Yup. Alright, man, so last week we did not talk about this, even though we I watch the interview Club. Shay Shay Back in the cycle again, man, this guy Continues, he continues to do it.

Speaker 2:

He's not keeping, he's not letting these niggas breathe at all. He's keeping his foot on the podcasters, necks he is on.

Speaker 1:

All y'all fools necks and he got y'all in the headlock. Y'all don't know what to do. Like everybody that I see that was a bigger podcaster or been doing it a little bit longer. They are just upset that he is able to create this kind of number.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but like I don't know, club Shay Shay isn't really any like that much different from any other podcast that have like a interview form. It's just like I guess people like Shannon. He has like a like an unk vibe. It's like inside y'all drinking cognac, y'all talking shit.

Speaker 1:

It's a comfortable environment. It's a comfortable environment, yeah, but and it's a warm environment too.

Speaker 2:

It seems it gives you, like that, that aesthetic.

Speaker 1:

And it seems like men are upset that they have not been invited to the table Because there has been a lot of conflict. That's been a brewing, so first off, we can just get into my gifts.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 1:

So my gifts has been for the last. Since the Cat Williams episode he's been making mention to Club Shay Shay, either talking about Cat Williams or even making jokes.

Speaker 2:

He straight up said that he wanted Cat to say something about him Because he has a comedy special coming up.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, and it started off as Cloud Shay C and he just kept begging and begging In his own comedic way. Club Shay Shay had enough of it. He went on his show, he spoke about it. He was very discreet. He doesn't throw names out, he just says that mofo and all that other you know country jazz that he likes to pull. But he was just going off that mofo. He was saying you know he's tired of the nonsense, everybody hating on him because he didn't got a lot more popularity. And he just said he was going to see.

Speaker 2:

Which is crazy, because he was mad popular to begin with. He was popular in a very. He was popular in yeah, there you go.

Speaker 1:

But now he's told he's going to pull up on my gifts. He said he was going to pull up on him. He told him what it was.

Speaker 2:

And then Mike Apps was like I'm old, I don't fight, I'm going to shoot you in your ass. You can pull up if you want to.

Speaker 1:

But he did say that he lied. He did say that he did go at club, he did try to get on Club Shay, shay and he hit Shay, so he did yeah he was like I definitely tried to come on, but he has a comedy special coming up Like of course he's going to try to. I mean he even said that earlier he's trying to get some club going on.

Speaker 2:

He's trying to get some marketing.

Speaker 1:

So I just thought it was Lane once he went to the gunplay talk, Because I mean, Once we get there you're taking it out of words. It's not fun anymore after you do that.

Speaker 2:

I think that was the main consensus.

Speaker 1:

It's already not fun? Oh, it's fun when they're talking trash to each other.

Speaker 2:

Well, Shannon already said I'm going to pull up on you, so it already. I feel like it got Not fun when he said that already. He took the fun out of it he did it initially.

Speaker 1:

Once you pull up on him, you can.

Speaker 2:

Plus, shannon is big. Shannon will whoop Mike Epps ass. So, mike, like Of course Mike got on and he was like you could do that. I'm not going to fight you One on one. That's not a smart thing for me to do. I have to have weapons.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because he basically said that Indiana is going to be where the NBA All-Star game is going to be.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he was like I'm going to see you so you could do that. I'm just not. It's not going to be a fair fight. I'm going to shoot you, which I fully support, because he can't as a black man, he can't be like. I'm calling the police.

Speaker 1:

He can't do that, even though that's probably what you would have did you probably wouldn't have shot shit.

Speaker 2:

Probably would have just called the police. That's exactly. I was like oh, he might say that he's going to call the police, but he's probably not Because he's black and that's not going to go over well, we're not Charleston white, so you get Charleston white.

Speaker 1:

You can call the police on niggas.

Speaker 2:

He can't do that, so the only thing he could say was I will shoot you Because Mike.

Speaker 1:

Epps, you know you got into a tussle with Shannon Sharpe. He would have your ass hemmed up.

Speaker 2:

He would fold him up like a chair.

Speaker 1:

It would be like a daddy whooped him. He would be like one of the whoopers he got from his daddy back in the day. That's exactly what it would feel like. Call your daddy that nigga, put him in a handlock, make him say sorry in front of a camera, in front of everybody.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that would not be a fair fight. You have to shoot Shannon Sharpe. You must If he's threatening you with bodily harm. The only option you have Fight or flight If you're not a man of his physical caliber Is to shoot him. It's very few. I don't think it was that serious. He got that pupe on him. He got that thing for him Because that's the only option this man has.

Speaker 1:

So Shannon must have got that call from Disney. Bob Iger and the folks called him up and said hey, shannon, what you doing? My brother Can't be out here doing all that. So he ended up making a tweet where he said he's about him and Mike Epps Going to make things up and they're going to handle everything. Gentlemen and all that stuff.

Speaker 2:

So I mean ended that way, but the bag is way bigger than whatever you would get from a beef with Mike Epps, mr Shannon Sharpe.

Speaker 1:

But Mike Epps again was not alone. Corey Hokem.

Speaker 2:

The bully himself.

Speaker 1:

I'm tired of talking about this nigga, but he been the one. The main one Was going to Shannon, calling him gay. Shannon addressed him too a little bit and the nightcap he was like it's another one of y'all that he just keep running he want me to respond to. And then Corey Hokem, on his page he had said I'm going to shit talk about. We know we just messing with you, but we do think you're a little crazy. And he told me come over here and fuck his co-hosts. You know the little shawty that be on there with him. I don't know, I don't. Yeah, so he got a little female co-host that be acting. You know she be getting thirsty over over.

Speaker 2:

Shannon, love yourself.

Speaker 1:

But no, I just see like it's just hate, that's all it is between these guys. It's nothing but hate they see him on his trajectory. They want a piece of it and he not giving it to him, which I don't blame Y'all niggas is moving away. Corny Mike Epps, you was doing good shit on the mic, you know, once he Went at you you had to do what you had to do. But Corey Hokem just Shannon continued to ignore that brother.

Speaker 1:

You ain't getting nothing from that. That's the actual conversation he had With Monique, so it went into a lot of her. You know beef that we already know she had with Oprah. Tyler Perry was another one that came out with what she said.

Speaker 2:

And she had to record it. She did and she let Shannon listen to the recording Before hand.

Speaker 1:

His response hurt me. That really was.

Speaker 2:

That broke me when his initial response no, he has to do that on the cameras.

Speaker 1:

Ask why are you recording? That's my problem. Don't victim blame. Don't sit here and when she gives you information, somebody admitting it wrong to her, asking her why she recorded it. You know why cause these people?

Speaker 2:

lie. You don't think that Shannon, when she played it for him Like before, was like this is crazy. Fully on your side. Gonna sensationalize this when the cameras come on be prepared for that.

Speaker 1:

I don't feel like that's sensationalizing it, though.

Speaker 2:

You victim blaming On purpose. I don't feel like it cause the way he responded was.

Speaker 1:

It sounds too common Of what I've heard from other men when women have gone to them in distress.

Speaker 2:

Now that I'm on Shannon's side, let me switch it up real quick. That's not my bag at all.

Speaker 6:

That's not your brand.

Speaker 2:

No, that's not my brand.

Speaker 1:

I'm not gonna lie, it hurt me because and she said it to a point too where she was like you know, she's a queer woman and black and she's not gonna let nobody just walk all over her For those things. It's gonna rub people the wrong way More often than not and it just show right there and that instance Like that is exactly what she's gotten Through the whole process is why are you doing this to defend yourself Instead of why are these people doing this to you when they shouldn't be and that's where it's like you don't want to see.

Speaker 1:

I've seen that before. Growing up I remember there was a little girl, third grade, and she was a heavy set girl People were so mean to her For no reason.

Speaker 2:

People just be mean to fat people.

Speaker 1:

They were just like no reason to be mean to her. People would just say she was all this nasty stuff and it was like she was just nice, she was just smiling and all that stuff.

Speaker 2:

People were just so mean. I've seen, especially on TikTok, girls who have gone through weight loss journeys, who get skinny, and then they realize that People treat them different. Now People treat them nicer and they get sad. There was one I literally saw yesterday. She was like I'm happy that I lost weight, but I realized that people were treating me Terribly because I was fat and that sucks to realize.

Speaker 1:

I mean, when you kind of just look back at it, people are going to treat you differently. People said, when you wear your hair a certain way, you can say you've experienced that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

It's just awful.

Speaker 1:

Every black woman experiences that when you wear a certain type of hair, you attract a certain type of man, it's tough when you think about it in totality Because you want to rationalize it but at the same time you can only look at it With a prejudice lens. People associate certain characteristics With lower tier and that's why they project that on you. But it just like it came through, even when she said With Teraji and we spoke about what the Teraji thing going on and how people were more receptive to her and her tears because she came as weak rather than Assertive and also her aesthetically more Appealing than Monique would be. She, yeah, and a lot of people didn't want to touch on that, but it was the truth. So we talked about Monique Excuse me, teraji, because y'all, like Teraji and Teraji fixed an aesthetic that You're more comfortable with in a victim standpoint and Monique didn't do that.

Speaker 2:

Do you think that the general like Consensus About Teraji was like People were more Empathetic towards her than they? Were towards.

Speaker 1:

Monique 100%. You don't think it was like the same? Of course there are people like me who have the criticism Overall, because I'm looking at it as a numbers thing, but you also have people who Are just gonna be like shut up and just take you know, take it. So I mean it wasn't like what happened with her Because, remember she even talked about this Charlemagne gave her donkey of the day.

Speaker 2:

They didn't do that for Teraji.

Speaker 1:

No, they definitely didn't. So people were actively shitting her. I was critical of Monique during that time, but it was because of a specific reason she was trying to get money for stand up and her biggest award Was coming from the acting Precious. So to me it just felt like you're asking for, to be Pushed into, to be getting to this, this number that you want, when, at least for the greater Part of the last probably A decade of that time, maybe half decade you weren't in Stand up situations. People were not seeing you in stand up situations On a regular basis.

Speaker 2:

And then let me be messy when you finally did do stand up, it was terrible. It got like maybe one gig A lot of me.

Speaker 4:

You, mother, fucker us to death.

Speaker 2:

It was crazy. I felt like I was listening to like a 60s Hood jive drug dealer. Like why were you speaking that?

Speaker 1:

way. It felt like somebody who doesn't go on Stage regularly. Just thought People were going to laugh at me because it's, I'm onique rather than.

Speaker 2:

I actually got some witty and funny to say it was terrible. Like all of the jokes Were like not well thought out, Like it was weak.

Speaker 1:

No, it wasn't. It was nowhere up the Part of what she was comparing herself to, I mean Grana Amy Schumer's, wasn't that funny? Either, but no, that didn't get a gig a lot of me either, but it wasn't like they were too far so my, thing, I'm always going to support With her because, at the end of the day, what she was talking about when it comes to that acting, yeah, she need to be treated a certain Way when it comes to that.

Speaker 2:

And Monique has had like stand up Specials that are hilarious. This last one, after all of her battles, just it was not in the difference?

Speaker 1:

In time too as well like you have to really Just to kind of get into the nerd stuff of Comedian. Like you really have to go to the club like almost two or three nights Out, the you know what I'm saying you have to hit the stage, so I don't know she's doing that.

Speaker 1:

I don't hear people saying that she's doing that. I don't. I never hear About Monique being at small places, even in, you know, traveling. So if you're not A traveling comedian and you trying to get Stand up money, that's where I wasn't On her side. On that part everything else.

Speaker 1:

When it came to Oprah Tyler Perry what's her buddy name? Lee Daniels I was all on her side For them, 100%. I'm on her side because them folks Was doing you wrong. They ain't trying to pay For no promotion, which, again, that's not Out of the Hollywood thing that happens in Hollywood. Folks don't be paying for promotion and all that other stuff.

Speaker 2:

But no, I mean it is, people don't want to pay for things.

Speaker 1:

No, it's true. Like usually when you go overseas and all that stuff, all they'll do is handle your Accommodations and travel, but they won't actually pay you for your time. I'm not mad at her for saying, hey, that's not what you about to get out of me. I told him I was going to promote in In the States. If y'all want me to Promote somewhere else, pay me. Nobody wanted to do that. Cool, I'm not mad at her for any of that. If you're going to do what? Again, if y'all ain't going out of your way for me, I'm not going out of your way for y'all. Business is business Because, like she said, once people feel like they can take An inch, they're going to try to take the whole mile. So I was the DO Hughley part I wanted to touch on too With her. Did you know about some of the stuff that she was saying with DO Hughley? I didn't even know she mentioned DO Hughley. She did mention it a little bit.

Speaker 2:

I didn't see any of those clips. I didn't watch the whole thing.

Speaker 1:

She did mention it a little bit. She did talk about what happened to one of his daughters In which he had spoken on this too when one of them was assaulted by somebody that he knew and there was just a lot of funny business with that. I ain't going to put nothing on his jacket. In between it she spoke to say, like you sat there and let stuff happen to your family. That's the kind of dude you are. When she went on her show, he wasn't on the show, but I think her name is Jasmine this is co-host. She was on the show with her. They had a good time until they did a little game when she asked her would you rather? And she said would you rather your husband sleep with Lee Daniels with a condom or sleep with friends Stephens without a condom? She took super offense to that and then went out to DO DO, didn't put it out, but Basically said this is how we do around here. He's responded to it and then he said he's got a good husband. Sydney's been catching straights left and right. Yeah, he has. And again, this is what I say. It always goes back to what I say. I'm always right about these situations.

Speaker 1:

Woman's success Is just a measure of the tape for your failure. And that's how everybody keeps doing it. They say he's using her. They say he's taking advantage of her. She got to pay for it. That's what DO is all saying all of this. He's saying he got to pay for attention and he's, like you, messed up too. Sir, I didn't even see any of this. She actually spared you because she didn't talk about the other thing, about how he had another child and that child got killed by the girlfriend's boyfriend. Wait what?

Speaker 2:

So he had an affair on his wife, the woman gets pregnant.

Speaker 1:

She then has a boyfriend that ends up killing the child. What? Yeah, and in his mind. He didn't even do nothing. This is what the story he accounted for. He didn't do anything about it and he was essentially relieved that the child was no longer going to be a responsibility that he would have because of what happened. This is what they all spoke to.

Speaker 2:

So a man is in jail and a child is dead and you're relieved.

Speaker 1:

That's what he. That's what he has said. He was relieved at the time.

Speaker 2:

That's a messed up deal.

Speaker 1:

He'll be the deal has had a yourself deal, has had a track record of being a shit, being like being questionable baby.

Speaker 2:

That's ain't shit. I do feel as though, relieved, the baby is dead.

Speaker 1:

I mean it is questionable, I mean I'm more than questionable. I mean we just had a conversation about ludicrous last week and when he wanted the baby after it got here was yeah, so y'all that's a legend, but that's not stealing, cuz he went to court. But, again, if he say he didn't want it, and then she still had it, he clearly say he didn't want it. Right, that's what y'all saying. But it is fucked up to say you was relieved.

Speaker 2:

That was wild to say the baby is dead and you're saying you're relieved. That's crazy.

Speaker 1:

You could have been like I was questioning.

Speaker 2:

I had questionable feelings, like yeah, you could have been like I was a better it conflicted is a good word to say.

Speaker 1:

You was relieved, was wild.

Speaker 2:

You can't straight up say you're relieved. Even if you were, you cannot admit that, sir you like willing to admit that that's questionable character.

Speaker 1:

It was wild. But then they also got into Monique. She talked about her son and their relationship. She said that she, you know, was praying that they're able to get back to a place where they are, you know mother son in a real way, and that's what he spoke up. So I'm gonna play a little clip from his video. He did a nine minute video.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we're not gonna listen to this whole, not all that. No, no, sir, no, sir, too much.

Speaker 1:

He has a lot of feelings, but I do want to just get into it because I think he discusses a lot of interest in points and it's I'll get into it once we, once we listen to.

Speaker 2:

I don't, I don't want to ruin it and there's one thing about a woman with daddy issues but a man with mommy issues Run.

Speaker 4:

Run.

Speaker 6:

All right, here's your salon here my mother does a fantastic job of Acknowledging a lot of things, but she doesn't take accountability very well and anything that she may take true accountability forwards only at her convenience. In my experience, her interest in being a mother probably started around the time that she married her daddy and had his children. But that it interests, you know, obviously seemed one sided and as it should have been. By that time I'm in my late teens, so to some degree the excuse me, the neglect becomes easier to hide or validate. I guess you could say there are now two baby boys in the house. You know that require attention, but still during that time, however, I still watch her enjoy the love and admiration of total strangers more than my own.

Speaker 6:

To this very day, my mother has never expressed to me when, if ever, she became interested in me as her son, questioning my self-worth and struggling to understand the value of a mother and a child's life. In the interview she also states that she gave me the best of my ability to understand what my mother was like. She also states that she gave me an apology. But an apology to a son from a mother that Consciously showed no interest in him holds no weight. There are still women to this day that my mother will give credit to for being more of a mother to me than she ever could, her assistant, my cousin, being one of them.

Speaker 6:

Every time, though, that my mother would state that she was right here whenever I was ready, that ideology still blows my mind today, that a person could openly admit to being uninterested, not put my best foot forward type of parent and Be so self-centered that they still express to the kid you have to come to me. When you read you got to come to me for us to make this right. Okay, I'm not sure what my mother could possibly think that she has shown me in the past or have for me now. That's not money, then it's gracious. That would make me want to come to her, or whatever that, whatever those feelings are supposed to be.

Speaker 1:

Alright, so you get the gist of what he's upset about Successful kid problems. Oh my god, my rich parent, I can't see them. Alright, so then they respond, sydney and Monique they respond, so I'll get into their conversation well, watch this play out.

Speaker 8:

And I do want to address this though, shalon when you say her daddy her daddy, because you know this has been uncle said your whole life. Uncle said knew you before you knew you. So for you to say her three sons, yes, you're absolutely right. He has three sons. He can't claim you as his son because he's always been uncle said and he knows your daddy very well.

Speaker 9:

And the irony of all of this is Not what is said, but what's left off. Yes See, you're leaving off the fact that the last time we laid eyes on you, your mother got you everything you needed for the newborn baby about three years ago. You're forgetting about how I from.

Speaker 9:

Georgia and Talking you through getting your car after we gave you the half of the down payment for it, and I'm negotiating the deal with the dealer For you. As you sit there and you have the vehicle you're driving right now Because of your mother Leaving out. When you are expressing what you're expressing in reference to your mother, you're not expressing the relationship that you have with your father, where you spoke ill to him, not to mention spoke ill to your mother, but somehow your mother and father and I all have a loving relationship and communicate back and forth because of the love that we have for you.

Speaker 9:

Don't think these individuals and to the individuals out here that Often times speak after they have a relationship with their father, often times speak after they've heard one side of the story. There's an old saying Believe half of what you see and none of what it is that you hear. Please don't take our word for it, but what we will convey is this those who are parents and have raised their parents up to being adults, children, Raise their children up to being adults.

Speaker 9:

Right on those Into adulthood, know that there comes a time and a place In which they determine their own decisions, their own path. You can have multiple children, that multiple children that are raised in one house, but they act and they take on different things.

Speaker 2:

I don't love that.

Speaker 1:

I'm gonna be honest, man, I'm on monique in the messiah.

Speaker 2:

Of course you are.

Speaker 1:

I'm definitely on monique in the messiah.

Speaker 2:

This is the third week in a row that we're having a conversation that falls into the same box about whether Um Money or parenting is more money or time is more important or more integral to parenting, and time and time again we've had Um kids come out and say that throwing money is at me was not the best option, which is what he's saying. And then he sat there at the end of um what's his name, shalon, at the end of his thing before we. Well, when we cut it off because it wasn't the end, he said Um, aside from money. So he acknowledged that, like she has financially supported him and been there for him, and when he needs things, he, she gives him the things. So I find it interesting that, whatever his what's his name, Sydney.

Speaker 2:

Sydney was only able to bring up ways that they've been able to financially support him. Is she? He hasn't? He didn't bring up any way that, they admit emotionally supported him. He mentioned that, oh, we got everything for your baby three years ago last time we spoke. But like, are you? Do you know that baby? Like, have you seen that baby?

Speaker 1:

You can't. You can't basically make them have a relationship, like again, I understand what she says, what she says when you're ready To actually have a relationship. Let me know, because I'm gonna say why. The reason why I say why is because at this time you're an adult, you're not a child. You are an adult now. So I understand like, hey, you have emotional things that weren't addressed during the parenting. Cool, there's reasons for that, you and for him to be a stand-up comedian. It shows in the level of success when passions lie that, because, at the end of the day, that's what got her to drive to what she's doing. There's a lot of people who go after they pass you. A lot of people fail at it. She was successful, but this is what obsession looks like it. This is what sacrifices for what can be a better life in the future looks like you pay a cost so that something in the future can be worth more than what you pay that cost. We agree on that she did.

Speaker 2:

She got her success at the cost of her relationship with her, her child, I mean she got at the cost of time.

Speaker 1:

Everybody's going to have to give up time Doing something.

Speaker 6:

They maybe want to do or could be doing and I mean that's.

Speaker 1:

That's what's going to happen, though, when you're going after this kind of success. When she was in the shana sharp interview she talked about when she was a little girl, so the thing that she knew she wanted to do the most was be on tv and be famous. That was a driving force for her For almost her whole life, and I don't think people understand that, because a lot of people don't have passions. Most people don't aren't passionate about something. Most people won't run through a brick wall for anything in life. They'll never experience anything about passion when it comes to a craft, uh, work, anything kind of, uh, that kind of experience. You're never going to have that kind of passion, and and people can't understand.

Speaker 1:

So it's like you'll see, like how could you not, you know, be there as a mother for your kid? But it's like she's looking at how can I, as a comedian, someone who is an entertainer, not be out there entertaining, going on the road and putting out my, my, my product? Yeah, it's a battle before that, and I can't be mad at her for anybody that makes that choice and that decision. It ain't their fail or their success, because, at the end of day, I would hate to see the woman she would be if she was stuck just being the mom.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

I would hate to see what kind of woman she would be there because he didn't say nothing about abuse. She probably, I don't know if she probably the precious mama but we, we don't know all that now allegedly then but she Probably wouldn't be the best mom she could be.

Speaker 2:

Um, damn it. I forgot what I was gonna say when you were finished what you were saying.

Speaker 1:

Well, no, I was just saying like I'm never going to be upset with someone who has to, who makes those choices, those.

Speaker 2:

Okay, I know what I was gonna say um, if you're so passionate about something, like if you've been passionate about something your entire life and this is your driving force for everything, do not have children. Don't. If you're going to, if you're willing to sacrifice time with your kids time and time and time again, months at a time you know you're not gonna be there, don't fucking have kids. Don't have kids. Every single child that has parents that are super famous, that didn't have time for them but have all of the things say yes, the things were nice, but I still wanted my parents time.

Speaker 1:

I just felt like it's a cop out bro. It's somebody who got everything from their parents don't have kids as a person who got do not have children Every. As a person who got everything they wanted from their parents.

Speaker 1:

I tried that BS to one time and it just that's all it was was BS, because none of y'all kids would want to be like anything. We've seen where these little other kids in in bad situations are or Less than ideal situations are when they have to wake up and go to school. So it's easy to say, it's easy to look a parent in their eye and say in question what they decisions may, when you weren't the one that had to make it, nor would you have to live with the results.

Speaker 2:

Okay, I still think you shouldn't have kids if you're gonna be more passionate about your career than your child. And then, as a person Whose parents had more time than money, I don't look back and be like, oh, I wish they had more money than time. No, I've never Thought that, ever in my life. There's like times where I'm like, oh, maybe I wish I could have done like a summer camp.

Speaker 1:

Well, that's because you didn't get the worst end of the stick, for there's a lot of girls who went through similar situations, you and got hurt, but I was just in the house. I'm not talking in the house. They got hurt, they were not protected. Things happen to them. People let things happen to them, like that's what I'm saying, like you were lucky and fortunate people who have.

Speaker 2:

Things happen to people who are, who don't have money and who do have money.

Speaker 1:

I'm not saying that it doesn't, but like Again those two different things. There's a different experience when you go there and one person's talking to the public school school counselor about it and the other one's talking to a professional therapist and they're able to get treatment.

Speaker 2:

So we've seen Kids over and over from all walks of life come out and be like I wish my parent had more time for me. Even though they provided for me financially, I don't think that we have seen the opposite In equal amount.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because you in a day, for one thing, a lot of those kids they're doing it for a cloud, they're doing it to get attention, they're trying to make something themselves and that's the the classic way. Oh, boo, who me? My rich parent wasn't there, duh Nigga, he's being great Like they were trying to be out here. Be awesome with you.

Speaker 2:

Okay, let me ask you a whole different question. They're like developmentally, your parents do have to be there for you.

Speaker 4:

You know this for me that's not the case, your psychological well-being.

Speaker 1:

I'm not saying that's not the case for your development for your um Like it's like it's one of the case, it's one of the things that you need. Yes, and do you think human being? Do you think she dropped in zero percent of that?

Speaker 2:

No, I don't think she dropped in zero percent, but like it wasn't up too far at all.

Speaker 1:

We don't know that, because we could go out back and look at and think oh, that was it for him, but that's what I'm saying, that's, that's an emotional crush.

Speaker 2:

That's the person that it. It matters.

Speaker 1:

And then that's the person that it was happening to, and we can all look at it objectively and say, my nigga, you're on some bullshit.

Speaker 2:

No, that's not what I'm.

Speaker 1:

I mean you can but I'm saying I can make that a session, I can look at it again. I grew up in a very privileged and fortunate environment and for me to fix my mouth, to ever again say some shit like, oh, I wish you would have put more time Then into the work that was giving me the lifestyle that I had, like I'm never gonna say that, like again, I just look at my life and my experiences. I we joked about my sweet 16 or whatever me having a sweet 16, right?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, gay, my mom could have covered a man. Why would you have a sweet 16?

Speaker 1:

My parents could have covered that party by themselves. They could have covered it by themselves and it just would have been my party. They opened it up to two other people's parents and let them do like a small payment program so they could enjoy it too. And that's what I'm saying, where I understand how fortunate of a life I live when my parents could have done something like that and it would not have hurt them at all. They wouldn't even thought second thought about it. And there was two other kids who are my friends we did a lot of similar things who they could not have that same experience if my mom didn't open it up like that. And it's like I appreciate that. I understand that.

Speaker 2:

I think it's really amazing that you got to like rent out a place for a sweet 16 and all that like I never. I always wanted to have a sweet 16, but I didn't even like ask my parents to do any of that. But I never Didn't like a birthday that I didn't have. I never didn't have both my parents at a birthday. I didn't ever not have gifts and a cake and friends and this and that like. I was always content. Um, I wanted to have a conversation about, uh, privilege and what.

Speaker 2:

What privilege looks like to certain people because I was literally having this conversation with my best friend today and I was saying that Having people in your corner that care and will go to action for you is a privilege. So I feel like having even if I had parents who couldn't financially provide, who couldn't Give me the sweet 16 with the court and the dresses and the tiara and all that stuff like having them there and as my safety net, regardless of anything Is was I grew up privileged also, even though I didn't have no money. I literally was an immigrant living in basement apartments with my parents. Like I remember, one time I asked my mom why why we didn't have a staircase in our house and she still remembered like she brought it up to me a couple months ago. She was like that shattered me and I was like Bro, I don't know why I said that, but I'm saying listen to her, though it shattered her.

Speaker 2:

It shattered her completely, but now we have a.

Speaker 1:

Yeah now, because it worked out, but like yeah, that's what I'm saying. I think that's a lot of the cases that even with this gentleman, I'm just saying from.

Speaker 2:

From my perspective, I feel like my mom always um, this is a good. My mom always was like oh, we're not in a good situation and I never was. I was like what are you talking about?

Speaker 1:

Like, but you didn't know that we're not we're not poor.

Speaker 2:

Like I'm comfortable as hell and I'm happy as fuck. Like you're here with me, my dad, I can call him up and he's here within two hours. Max, and like I was, I felt like that was a privilege.

Speaker 1:

But did you did? Did you ever go to people's houses when you were younger and seeing how they were living?

Speaker 2:

My cousins and stuff yeah.

Speaker 1:

See, that was an experience that I would have common very often when people will come to my house. Come to my home people, young, black kids and stuff and they were shocked to see three levels in the house.

Speaker 1:

You got a basement and upstairs, you got how many bathrooms, how many beds. Like that was a shock. People didn't see black people who live like that. So for me it was always experience. Where I was the person, other kids would realize, oh, my parents are poor. No, for real, that was what it would. That's what what happened. They would realize that because, why? Because friends, mom's always the one taking them to To six flags. Friends, mom's already one taking us everywhere doing things, that she's the one getting us food brings. Like you realize that as you growing up, like whoa, like there's a difference here. My mom could never do this. We talk about anything a quarter of the price of doing something like this, and it's a, a discussion that feels uncomfortable. So it's like never to never have that, to never feel that kind of embarrassment, never feel like I'm I should be ashamed Of anything like that, like, oh, never having to experience something, to say, oh, because I can't afford it. That is that in and of itself is just Does wonders for your confidence in the future?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it does, and that's that's a privilege. I'm that is a privilege. I'm just saying that.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying my experience also, and I'm not trying to drink and I'm not trying to put your under your experience down or make it less than what I'm just saying in reality and what the experience is and what you can weigh in the world and what statistics show, like that is the best thing that you could do. Like even with you. You is a struggling comedian and that's big. It didn't look like he was anywhere struggling. I know a lot of niggas who they got to be in a car when they do a video like that. Yeah, because that's the only decent place. They got around you in a. You was in a living room. You had some funky lights. Like bro, you have to put things in perspective. No, for real, you got to put shit in perspective.

Speaker 1:

Yo, like I really once I was able to do that and I already looked at people's lives compared to my parents, what they were able to create in their efforts. I was no longer upset about that. I was no longer. I could never look at my parents and and and be upset about that. And again, I understand what Monique's saying when she says about that, because with me my parents didn't come from like, oh, i'ma just do a lot of stuff. It was also a lot of things that I spoke to them. And then then we did it Like if I was the right now, if I didn't ask my dad to do anything, he'll never be like hey, let's go to a game or go. He wouldn't never ask me that. He wouldn't even ask me to come over If he hadn't seen me in weeks but he'll just it just wouldn't, happen, but I mean she would.

Speaker 1:

But when it comes to that, like I initiate everything and I don't have a problem with that. You even see what both my parents, I initiate affection yeah, they're just not physical affection.

Speaker 2:

But it's not.

Speaker 1:

But those are things that you would say you can see other people screen for and say oh, why don't you do this?

Speaker 2:

I take it that's why physical affection is such an important love language of yours, I think, because neither of your parents love languages are physical, but I take it from your your dad's love language is acts of service, 100%, because as soon as you need him he's there, and he's there fully, oh for sure.

Speaker 1:

And that's why I don't Bitching complain about the stuff that I I wish I got.

Speaker 2:

I think your mom's Love language is quality time because if she, if you go a couple days without calling her or seeing her, she thinks you don't love her anymore. So they have different ways of expressing their love to you. It just wasn't physical, or or was it like, or it wasn't even verbal. A lot like again a lot of.

Speaker 1:

Of the things, that both those things are very important to you physical touch and.

Speaker 2:

What do I do? His top.

Speaker 1:

Love languages that he needs but that's a thing though.

Speaker 2:

But what do I do? Do I sit?

Speaker 1:

there and bitch about my parents? I do, or do I just go up to my mom and get affection from her? He will force Affection on both his parents on a regular basis and you're not gonna.

Speaker 2:

You're not gonna stop me and make me feel bad about it.

Speaker 1:

They don't. I meet them. If you're saying, this is what you're gonna give me, I'm going to get what I want from my parents. Yeah, he does that and that's, and that's at some point what you have, if I can ask my mom to come here and fix, like he just did, to buy him a car and do us a, then I'm saying just go to the fucking movies. Not You're talking about your mom, I'm just talking about him. Just in the same breath. Just don't put it there.

Speaker 4:

We're going to the movies.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying you're like I'm just saying you're like, meet your mama where she is. She's saying she wants to have something with you. Like all she wants you do is it's a relationship, so you have to give and take something. Again, we don't know the nuances if Monique has been reaching out over and, over and over again.

Speaker 2:

She gave you that option.

Speaker 1:

If she gave you the olive branch and was like son, I'm willing, willing to meet you halfway Then.

Speaker 2:

Meet her halfway. But if she's just been with you for a while, then meet her halfway. But if she's just been like here's some money and then like that over and over again, then I don't know. I don't know.

Speaker 1:

We both had active moms and dads, so, and the stuff that I did, as an older adult, the stuff that I felt like I didn't get, I made it my business to get it, even if they made them uncomfortable and made them not want anything. They say it's weird, I don't care, I don't care.

Speaker 2:

That's crazy. I had perfect parents. I didn't. I didn't feel like I was neglected in any way.

Speaker 6:

Not. I don't feel like I was neglected. I didn't.

Speaker 2:

I didn't. There wasn't anything lacking. I didn't want anything from my parents At all. I wanted to maybe go to a summer camp once in a while, but we didn't have enough money. That's all I wanted. That's it. But like, as far as like physical affection, like words of affirmation, quality time, all of like my parents both of them covered all of the bases very thoroughly as far as like loving me and making me feel like I I'm wanted and love.

Speaker 1:

My confidence.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean again is is is my parents.

Speaker 1:

Oh, for sure. I mean, like I said, the parent, the confidence I gave him like hey, I'm just gonna say this man, I don't want no hugs from my dad. I mean we broke, you know. You're saying get that PlayStation in that Nintendo, same Christmas nigga. Get that PlayStation up to nigga, Like we up every PlayStation, come out one and right there, nigga. I never had the old shit. That was the all the niggas. Y'all came over to my house and played.

Speaker 2:

I remember there was one Christmas, my mom got me a robe.

Speaker 1:

That was like in the secondary gifts for me, secondary third I was so mad.

Speaker 2:

I was like a robe, but then I kept that robe for like a decade.

Speaker 1:

Like I said, I had the games cats because it used to come over because it was all playing my games. They wanted to be on my telescope. You know what I'm saying? My little tracks I had with the, with everything.

Speaker 2:

Weren't allowed to come over my house because my mom let me watch whatever I wanted on TV.

Speaker 1:

See who wasn't like that? I like that. I watch whatever I wanted. They didn't have a TV lame ass niggas.

Speaker 2:

They didn't even have a watch.

Speaker 1:

Simpsons when I was little, radar movies when I was nerds. I had a good. I had a real good. Appreciate that Shirley and Fred, my niggas, y'all had it straight. Super Bowl Sunday is on, has just passed us here and it was the T Swiftie Bowl. Kansas City Chiefs came out on top. Shout out to Patrick Mahomes, the only person my dad calls his team.

Speaker 2:

A lot of that going on that only he subscribes to because his father gets mad every time he tells it. He's like no, no, that's not a thing, Son. Yes, it is In my head like no son or he'll just look at him and laugh and shake his head.

Speaker 1:

I know you don't care about the game, but again Kansas City, kansas City Chiefs. One shot to them, to suppose in a row First time, I think, like two decades or something. So shout out to that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, the game went into overtime. Oh yeah, for the first time during the Super Bowl in like 30 years or something. Yeah. I was so tight because I was already done. She had checked out Okay.

Speaker 1:

Like we said, we told you all before. You know my honey bun here. She hates being anywhere longer than two hours, you know. That's why I appreciate her this weekend when for her Valentine's Day gift to me, she went out. She took us to the Comic Con. So we'll talk about that later. Stay what three, four hours. It was crazy. Look at her All right, so let's get to the Super Bowl. Usher's performance is what we'll start at that here. I think it was a pretty good performance I wasn't mad at it.

Speaker 2:

The vocals were shaky, but maybe I think it was the mic. It might have been the mic, I don't. I'm not questioning usher's vocals in general. I think we all know that he knows how to sing.

Speaker 1:

But he was.

Speaker 2:

it was a lot of movement there, it was he was doing more dancing than singing and I hated his outfit. His outfit was horrible. What were those three giant buttons? All sequins. Personally, I fucking hate sequence I hate sequence with all of my heart. It was so much sequence. And then it was like big giant straws buttons on his neck. It was like a Balero, like Cape Poncho type thing, I don't know what it was. It was horrible. Continue.

Speaker 1:

So he had a lot of you know different guests there. I think probably the standout was Alicia Keys. You got a little handy Usher got the usher.

Speaker 2:

Usher's on the loose again.

Speaker 1:

This man is problematic and I don't know if he can't be stopped at all.

Speaker 2:

This nigga is going to be spicy. He's going to grind on your, your woman, he's going to shake his hips and he's going to swing that dick Period.

Speaker 1:

It just made me think about what a Kiki Palmer Mama said, kiki Palmer's Mama said, mama said during that video about usher. I don't know about anybody worried about him. They know he liked the man's, maybe thinking that when he did what he did, usher also married longtime girlfriend Whatever her name is of five years during the Super Bowl, yeah, they did say like they have like two kids together or something An announcement that came out before the Super Bowl.

Speaker 1:

They had signed like a marriage license in Vegas and then announced it afterwards. So congratulations on that too. I don't understand why we love, love.

Speaker 1:

I don't understand, as a rich man, why you would feel the need to get married at this age. But hey, do your thing, you just like. You like split in the half, I don't know. That's what I feel like At this point. It's like, hey, baby, you want to ride or not, but that's just my thought. So Swiss beats responded to y'all saying that y'all were uncomfortable with his wife, kiki, and with another man at the Super Bowl Big ass smile, hips wider than a fucking horizon. That's not her fault. You know what I'm saying. Just out here, just looking good, the body was body. You know what I'm saying? Lashes out there, all that.

Speaker 2:

We'll talk about the makeup and the men thinking she didn't have no makeup after continue. Y'all men are foolish, but dumb ass niggas.

Speaker 1:

This was what Swiss beats had to say. He had to say face. So y'all talking about the wrong damn thing. Y'all don't see an amazing dress covering the entire stadium Tonight's performed with nothing but amazing With two amazing Giants. Congrats, usher and my love, alicia Keys. The song is a classic. We don't do negative vibes on this side. We make history. Go see Giants at Brooklyn Museum. It's open until July. Blessings, prayer emoji, prayer emoji. So I mean obviously what you really should, else you could say I'm pretty sure you saw this happen during rehearsals. It wasn't you say. And then we all know Swiss, you got your first baby mama too. Like y'all got a little you know triple thing going on there, a little triangle thing going on over there allegedly and we know that. You know I'm saying you not really tripping about a little extra, because you captain extra, you know you got a lot on the side over there. We seen y'all on vacation together. That don't happen unless you got free range with everyone who's there.

Speaker 2:

I didn't think about that. That does make sense, though they probably they seem like a more tolerant, like hippie, like sort of couple, more than anything. So I wouldn't think that that Swiss beats would be angry about this. Niggas be angry on behalf of other men, and that's so homosexual of you know you just got to look at your woman.

Speaker 1:

When you see something of that and just let her know you're gay. That will never be you. You know that you just look at no. You look at your woman, you say no. That you ain't never getting that familiar with the gentleman.

Speaker 2:

Look at me after that and was like if you do that. That's a body.

Speaker 1:

No, it's not. It definitely is. It is. That's a body. No man needs to be touching you ever like that in any capacity. What do you mean? If I'm a performer, then I'm a performer. That's why I've never liked performers.

Speaker 2:

I remember I was in college. He also said that he was like I wouldn't be with you if he was a leachie. He's fair.

Speaker 1:

I wouldn't. That that's not attractive to me. We could date, but that's not attracting me to be like oh, that's my lady, we aligned. No, sir, you got you could. You could be doing some crazy on on TV. No sir, I was dating a girl who's a drama class and I seen her kissing a nigga for a play. No, we're done. But she has to. Okay, we have to be done too Fair. You know I'm saying no, we're done. That teacher's coming to me. Everything that this isn't fair, you're not putting on. She can keep doing it. I don't want to be a part of it.

Speaker 2:

Live your dream, I'm not in it I'm not emotionally, in talent for that, no, it's not nothing, but no, emotionally, no, it's.

Speaker 1:

I want what I want? No, it's not. That has nothing to do with me knowing what I wanted.

Speaker 2:

Y'all and remove myself from that place. Did I hit that button? Are you triggered?

Speaker 1:

No, yeah, you're trying to trigger me.

Speaker 2:

I think you're just not mature enough to be with somebody.

Speaker 1:

No, it's not. It has zero to do with that Performs in that way Like an actress if you're mad at your actor girlfriend kissing somebody for a scene. I'm just removing myself from the situation. That's not where I need to be at. You don't need to be kissing nobody. Sorry, that's just what it is. You can do all that little fancy, look all you want you. Just that's what it is.

Speaker 2:

I don't know, let's move on. I think you alone.

Speaker 1:

I'll be that. Then AI vocals were fixed because you saw, when Alicia tried to hit that note, she said ah yeah, that shit was wild. Everybody turned to. The adrenaline was rushing man Niggas was nervous Like Lord.

Speaker 2:

she warmed up a little bit and then she got better, but that that initial, that shit was crazy.

Speaker 1:

I'm not a fan of that, though. I don't like that. Don't, don't switch it up. Let us be able to relive that moment again. That's like if they went back and took the Janet Jackson, just put another boob on him when he another bra when he grabbed it, like no, don't take away that moment for us why?

Speaker 2:

Because then she wouldn't have to relive that over and over.

Speaker 1:

Oh my god, the trauma yeah. The trauma.

Speaker 2:

Are you being exposed unnecessarily, when you didn't plan it, to millions of people? Yes, that is trauma.

Speaker 1:

The trauma All right, so let's get into somebody. Well, let me ask the question. I think it's not, but do you think this is one of the better or the best Super Bowl performances of all time?

Speaker 2:

Have time.

Speaker 1:

Super Bowl performance. Yeah, and there's a time to perform. I don't.

Speaker 2:

I'm not a Super Bowl watcher for real. I only watch the the things when the black people are performing, and not even fully Did you watch first. No, okay.

Speaker 1:

How long ago was that? I was like 2014.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, so I'm not. I don't. I don't think I'm the person to ask. Okay, that's fair. I enjoyed it more than Rihanna's.

Speaker 1:

Well, she couldn't do nothing, she was knocked up, you know. Yeah, she shouldn't have been out there anyway. Honestly, you really just wasted the minute fails time. You did.

Speaker 2:

That wasn't. You can't entertain people while pregnant.

Speaker 1:

Just stay your ass home. Thank you. We don't want to see those kind of movements, man.

Speaker 2:

No, protect your child at home.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. So this I want to say I don't think it was one of the best ones that I've seen, because I did see Prince I was too young for Michael Jackson and I did see the Janet and all of them, so I've always been a big fan of Super Bowl performances. But I want to say it's probably top five. I will give it top five. Okay, yeah, it was definitely there.

Speaker 1:

I think it was a little bit better than the one in LA with Dr Dre and all them just because usher is just such a performer. Usher is a great performer and they put on a very extra.

Speaker 2:

He's very theatrical, he puts on a show.

Speaker 1:

That's why I think all of the John up there all of the extraness was for the show.

Speaker 2:

He was behind her like, like he's really just like. That's just him.

Speaker 1:

Little John was up there too.

Speaker 2:

Little John and Ludacris came out. Her came out with her guitar. Apparently that's a customized guitar and she's like the first black woman to get that specific customized guitar for her. So that's dope as fuck. She looked so good.

Speaker 1:

It always sounded amazing. I was disappointed when I see her. Why because she's super talented and like she's a very attractive girl and it just seems like nobody's giving her that push or where she should be.

Speaker 2:

No, she's.

Speaker 1:

I feel like she should be way bigger than what she is right now. She's huge. I think she should be way bigger than what she is right now. She actually has real talent.

Speaker 2:

I think she's huge, though Like she's on Broadway. She's one Grammys already. She's.

Speaker 1:

I feel like what I'm talking about just her overall presence should be way bigger than what she.

Speaker 2:

I feel like white people know her.

Speaker 1:

I can. I feel like she should be way bigger than what she is.

Speaker 2:

I don't know. I feel like you're wrong, I feel like she's huge.

Speaker 1:

If she was huge, she would be the one doing the Super Bowl. What are you talking about? Not yet Now. My thing is, she should be right now with the skill level that she is and the craft that she is.

Speaker 2:

She should be right there right now. How long has her been popular for real? I'm not talking about that.

Speaker 1:

That's what I'm saying. You're keeping ignoring You're talking about listen, listen to the conversation.

Speaker 2:

She is a catalog, yet Listen, that's also maybe dropped like two projects.

Speaker 1:

You're you're saying everything that I'm saying right now the fact that she's only had two projects. She's been a little girl star. She was a child prodigy. She was on the news doing crazy notes that no one else could do.

Speaker 2:

Are you saying that she should be bigger than Beyonce?

Speaker 1:

Beyonce doesn't make music like her, like she actually creates music with the instruments.

Speaker 2:

Rederick with the horrible thought this might be one of your worst takes ever.

Speaker 1:

It's a horrible take that I think somebody who actually is musical talent Her should be bigger than Beyonce.

Speaker 2:

Yes, bigger than. Are you so fucking stupid?

Speaker 1:

No, I don't sound stupid. You sound stupid as shit. No, I don't. Somebody who, with her actual talent? She ain't just sitting there and letting other motherfuckers write for her. She ain't sitting there drinking aquafine at the Super.

Speaker 2:

Bowl. That's crazy. She's going to. Beyonce has gained a cult following from her long star. Her longevity in her consistency. Her will eventually get to that point and she might eventually be bigger than Beyonce, but she has not been established in her career long enough to be nobody.

Speaker 1:

That she's been in a career longer than Beyonce.

Speaker 2:

She started her career way before Beyonce. She has started a teenage. She was a little girl. It doesn't matter, she has not been relevant for long enough.

Speaker 1:

You keep making my point, though she should have been being pushed way more relevant than she was.

Speaker 2:

She wasn't even comfortable enough showing us who she was.

Speaker 1:

That goes to get my point.

Speaker 2:

It's a. It's a difference. Beyonce was fully like look at me, I'm a superstar. But she was behind the scenes writing for people and she didn't want to come out. And then she, when she came out, she didn't want to show us her face. She's been slowly getting comfortable with the idea of fame.

Speaker 1:

It's so funny how you make my point. You don't even realize it.

Speaker 2:

She's not supposed to, but I don't think she's okay.

Speaker 1:

So just asking a question If Beyonce had her actual musical talent of her, you don't think Beyonce would be bigger than Taylor Swift. What if Beyonce? It wouldn't be a conversation if Beyonce had the talent that her has when it comes to actually playing instruments and music.

Speaker 2:

So you think Taylor Swift is bigger than Beyonce?

Speaker 1:

It wouldn't be a conversation.

Speaker 2:

You think Taylor Swift is bigger than Beyonce?

Speaker 1:

Listen.

Speaker 2:

I say it wouldn't be conversations, because you, you're, you're comfortable, they're comparable?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I don't think so. Yes, they're comparable because of just the fan bases and all that that comes with it. They're comparable. I don't think they say they go on a world tour. She does she just came off.

Speaker 2:

She came to Japan, did the same world tour like Beyonce did and have people in uniforms like Beyonce did, have people crying, like Beyonce did. Taylor.

Speaker 1:

Swift, yes, taylor Swift is not doing that.

Speaker 2:

She's not doing that. She's had Japanese people doing that. Yes, you're sick as fuck. She's not doing that.

Speaker 1:

I'm telling you she does. You're literally wrong, but I'm saying no, I'm right and that's what I'm saying is, if Beyonce had the musical talent like her actual playing the music, not just the ear that she has and just understanding the, the vibe of the culture she had that she would. It would not even be a discussion between the two. I'm just being honest and that's just 100 percent.

Speaker 2:

Taylor Swift is wildly mediocre. She can barely sing. She plays like three strings on the guitar. She can't dance. She's a horrible performer. Her shows are boring as shit. White women love her. She's like the picture of white mediocrity. When you put her up against Beyonce, who genuinely she does have the ear but then at the same time she's been a performer that puts her soul into everything for mad long. When you watch them, the shows that they put on are not the same. They are not comparable at all You're falling into fucking I'm surprised also that you're falling into this this rhetoric that Taylor Swift is on par with Beyonce. She is fucking not. She's not talent wise no she has a producer and writers also.

Speaker 2:

Just like Beyonce, taylor also writes. She writes more than Beyonce does. That is the only thing I'll give her. But then saying that, like they're, they're on par with each other. No, they are not in artistry, they are not comparable in performance. They are not at all even near. Taylor is down here. Beyonce is all the way up here. When it comes to putting on a show, beyonce has had one of the. Beyonce has the most iconic Coachella performance in all of Coachella history and in the future ever. The. The production she puts into her craft point blank period is crazy. It does not. Taylor Swift does not come near that. And then the her voice. Let's not even come close to talking about, like the science of the octaves that Beyonce can hit and the runs that she does in the way that she uses her voice as a musical instrument. Taylor Swift cannot do that. Okay, they don't come close at all. Point blank period.

Speaker 1:

That's a terrible take. No, because you just misunderstood what I said. I didn't say anything about talent.

Speaker 2:

I said she would be bigger, meaning her fan base and cult following would be a mass, you said, if Beyonce had the same natural talent as her did.

Speaker 4:

Yes, with her work ethic and saying that she had her own natural talents.

Speaker 2:

And then I did say that and then I'll also say that her can play a guitar, but her can't sing like Beyonce.

Speaker 1:

Again, I can agree with that, but I feel like, still, her instrument is really good.

Speaker 2:

Beyonce's instrument. I would say Beyonce's voice is stronger than her learning to play guitar. I would disagree.

Speaker 1:

Being able to know the voice, I would disagree.

Speaker 2:

Oh, really yes.

Speaker 1:

No, her voice is amazing.

Speaker 2:

That was why she was on the news. I'm not, I'm not comparing, I'm saying that. If you're saying instrument wise, I'm talking about if, if her natural talent and gift with music itself.

Speaker 1:

Okay when it comes to playing. She doesn't just play the guitar, she plays a bunch of instruments. Yeah, that's what I'm saying when it comes to actually understanding the art of music and who she is in the product that she's able to take. If she had the confidence and was able to go out like Beyonce, she would be bigger than both her and Taylor.

Speaker 2:

Swift. I don't think she would be. I don't think she would be because of the we got a bunch of more talk about the type of music that she makes and then also what she looks like.

Speaker 1:

No, I think she's a perfect girl, though. Alright, let's get into these ads. Super Bowl ads were crazy, and my favorite one was the Jesus ads, because it showed to me that you can serve propaganda. Do not read, no, it's not proper. Well, you can say it is propaganda, it's all fucking propaganda as media, but it's not it. It didn't even hit the base. Right, the conservatives were pissed about this and it showed that they don't know what Jesus is. They don't know who Jesus, who he was as a person. They don't read the Bible. They keep saying our stuff like oh, jesus would never wash the feet of sinners, yes, he would. He would wash the feet of sin. Like literally, he said he, without sin, cast the first stone. Like this is literally in the Bible, basically telling you that you can't throw judgment at others and punishment at others if you are also with sin, and that's not just oh, outright homosexuality and prostitution, no, it's with sin at all.

Speaker 2:

I wonder who paid for this Dude. Did we look that up? I did look up a little bit of it. I had this ad.

Speaker 1:

So it is a company. Who was it? Because he is us, I believe that's the name of he is us? Yeah, he is us. Is the company who owned this Jesus, who's put out the Jesus ad? And, like I said, I looked up some of the companies that were associated with it. It was only one thing that came up.

Speaker 2:

He gets us.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he gets us. Excuse me, but yeah, basically they're a company associated with. Let me see, I'm on their website. It's another like bigger Christian organization that they work with and that's who they just make all of these campaigns and videos to just talk about Jesus and promote, you know, his teachings and things like that. But people were upset, like because they had, like, the girl getting abortion where he was washing her feet. They had the gay man get his feet washed by the pastor. Like folks is really upset.

Speaker 2:

Let me tell you this so on, I'm on the, he I'm on. He gets us calm. They're like about us. So how, how did the story of Jesus this is there like about me. How did the story of Jesus, the world's greatest love story, get twisted into a tool to judge, harm and divide? How do we remind people that the story of Jesus belongs to everyone? These questions are the beating heart of he gets us. We hope to remind everyone, including ourselves, that Jesus's teachings are warm, are a warm embrace, not a cold shoulder. That he didn't let pro this or anti that opinions prohibit him from seeing the value in all people. He gets us invites you to explore Jesus story on your own terms and at your own pace. Our message isn't from a particular church, nor is it affiliated with any denomination. Our campaign comprises humble perspectives from a diverse group of Jesus fans and followers with a variety of faith journeys and lived experiences, bound by a common desire to rediscover and share the compelling story of Jesus's life in a new way.

Speaker 4:

I like that. I mean, I don't want to get it wrong.

Speaker 2:

He's just like y'all. Y'all are Christians, have done the wrong thing with the Bible, and we're trying to show y'all that Jesus loved everyone. And yeah, that seems like what they're trying to do.

Speaker 1:

See what it is is. It's not that Jesus okay. So Jesus had a commandment of people to love is basically to say that it's not your right. That's the main thing that Christians miss out. It's not your job to judge. It's not your job to go out and make people live a particular way. Jesus never discussed that. Jesus was always. Your job was to be an example to others. So for everybody to look around you say why is he so much different than everybody else? Not because you put in strict and forced people to do these things. No, because you gave them the opportunity to show. This is why you should want to do it. But all of y'all have been lost. Y'all don't even know who Jesus is.

Speaker 1:

If y'all saw Jesus today, most of these conservatives will want to drop a bomb on him If we're keeping it a being Jesus with a revolutionary. He spoke against a lot of the structural forces that the churches, where we're doing and what they were putting out. He would have been against a lot of this banking system that you guys push. He was not. He would have been open borders for everyone. He would not have questioned about anything regarding that, like the man who was in those books who spoke those red letters. Y'all use him as a tool for hate. Yeah, and y'all and this atheist right here was using scriptures to shit on niggas, on X Folks talking about oh, jesus wouldn't want to. Jesus told you to turn the other cheek, my brother. He told you to. If not, you don't have sin, don't cast the first stone. He gave you plenty of parables of taking in the prodigal son he told you so much. I love when these stories come up because I know I know more about y'all God than you do and it's so fun to watch you squirm as I speak about your religion that you know have no clue of. It's my favorite thing to do, I love it, I feast upon it and I'm just sick of y'all.

Speaker 1:

Y'all don't know Jesus. Y'all use him again as a tool of destruction, a tool to you. Lose him. Like the Roman Empire, you manipulate his images Just so that you can live a life of nothing and mediocrity, so that you can sit here and say these little things that they're not your, your challenges, those are the things that you walk through with Christ, those aren't your battle. So then you can just use those as oh, I'm better than you because I that's not my battle, that's not my addiction, that's not my crutch, but you know what is your crutch, you know what all y'all crutches are, y'all know the problems that y'all have, this shit that eats his side of you, this shit that you can't even look in a fucking mirror for because you know how trash and disgusting you are.

Speaker 1:

You niggas talk about that. Oh, they're gay, homeless. You know it's in y'all in our search history. Y'all do, y'all got them. Yeah, I got them. T boys in there, I got them T girls in there. You know what you looking at you nasty square fucks. Jesus sees it too. He sees you being a little dick to the boy, the boys touching each other. Just remember that, oh my god, he does, he does and he still forgives you, you nasty fucking motherfuckers.

Speaker 2:

It's the best thing about Christianity.

Speaker 1:

Jesus will say come out the closet. What will work from there? How about?

Speaker 2:

that You're forgiven for all of the things so then there was an Israel at. They had one promoting Israel crazy course there was, because they have all of the money also to Kanye.

Speaker 1:

He dropped the ad. He spent seven million for a 60 second spot.

Speaker 1:

I didn't even see it. That's why I was crazy. When I seen it on On on Twitter and X, I was surprised. I was like huh, I didn't. I must have missed it, but that was I missed it too. He said it was seven million. He didn't have no money to do it. He did this most Kanye thing you could ever do, because I just go to my website and he's One thing I will say about this that I appreciate it. He was a person of his word cuz he said if he had control of the price point it wouldn't be that high. And they say if you still Going today is still like $20 for a lot of the gear I don't know if he's clearing house or something, but he made 19 million, he said From a seven million dollar play.

Speaker 1:

That's a great flip. Yeah that's a great flip made a profit a real profit.

Speaker 2:

Love that for you.

Speaker 1:

That's over a hundred, that's, that's well over a hundred percent.

Speaker 2:

He made it to get some therapy.

Speaker 1:

Or, you know, just put your wife some more revealing clothing.

Speaker 2:

That was pretty fly to there. He doesn't have to pay for her to wear.

Speaker 1:

He pays the clothes, though probably the material.

Speaker 2:

It takes 15 cents at the fabric store to buy whatever the fuck he's making for her to wear. I'm with it.

Speaker 1:

Hey, keep it up. The shoes cost more than everything. I'm with it.

Speaker 2:

You when she's wearing shoes again.

Speaker 1:

I think I was proving right. About this Vulture album too. You were. He was stealing samples from you white people. He did caught. Name it. And Donna Summers Well, I mean, she didn't. She wouldn't want to give it up either, but I thought this shit I mean the internet was killing Ozzy.

Speaker 2:

Ozzy Osbourne, ozzy.

Speaker 1:

Osbourne was talking about how you want no anti-semitic doing his music. You know sampling his music and all that. And they, they came with you and 4k little nigga, little white boy Is this you did. You just say. That's you saying you admired Hitler, even though he was a bad guy? We saw you, ozzy, it don't die like that is crazy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I can say shit like that to be edgy or whatever, but when Kanye say it, I still don't like it. I think all y'all are dumbasses. But y'all want to come at him for saying it like that's really wild.

Speaker 1:

I don't want to show no grace to nobody else. But then y'all went out here shoot because y'all handle is telling you how this? Who y'all need to shoot at y'all are clowns. Ozzy used to stand for some, but you bitch now. Yeah, you're a real bitch. I used to watch Ozzy Osbourne and you was out there beating on your wife and you know what A lot of niggas looked away from all that. But you know what we expose you, nigga, and all your bullshit.

Speaker 2:

Freaking. I didn't know he used to beat on his wife.

Speaker 1:

Well, allegedly there was some things going on on the show where they showed they was having some instances too. But now I was, I was somebody else who I was actually talking to a space they had some, some instances of abuse between them. But, um, again, that's all legit. But again, ozzy, stop that bull, we ain't with it, we ain't with that. We gonna protect ours, especially did this coming year. We, the vultures, now we still in all y'all, all y'all little noises.

Speaker 2:

Real shit. Hey, I don't know, is this regardless?

Speaker 1:

We can touch back on that, because Beyonce did have an announcement.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, so Beyonce, um, speaking of Super Bowl, uh, beyonce is dropping a new album. So renaissance act two was dropping an act two is a country act. She dropped two songs it was Texas Hold'em and Something else. I'm gonna look it up real quick.

Speaker 1:

Just so y'all know, this was the water that Beyonce was drinking right here in carriages. You see this aqua fina Don't be over here talking about y'all rich and up and like y'all drinking aqua fina at the fucking Super Bowl.

Speaker 2:

This is messy as fuck.

Speaker 1:

No, for real. Don't fucking and don't tell me oh, it's, that's what the stadium serve. That's Beyonce.

Speaker 2:

If you who you think you are like if the whole stadium is only serving Coca-Cola. No and fucking.

Speaker 1:

No, what's the other trash one, the Sonny? No, if you're Beyonce, you can get what you want if you're who you tell us you are, and also a lot of y'all celebrities in these videos and all these on these ads. I know y'all hurting, because I heard Beyonce for almost a whole minute.

Speaker 2:

I heard Verizon paid Beyonce like 30 million for that act.

Speaker 1:

Okay, we'll see how much is going that going on.

Speaker 2:

I'm over here. I saw that and then I went. I logged on to variety my Verizon app. So how much are y'all charging me?

Speaker 1:

So are we not hold on we?

Speaker 2:

can y'all afford Beyonce? Lower my bill.

Speaker 1:

But are we not looking into the issue with this, because this has never been there? There with their business pattern, verizon, no, beyonce and Jay-Z. This is what I'm saying. This is a money play, like there's something going on. I don't think the the frequency of money that's been coming in is.

Speaker 2:

Keeping them afloat on what you don't think. After the Renaissance tour. I think that stuff costs a lot more than what you think all of the merch that she sold and I think a lot of stuff. I think a lot of again, the fact that she didn't do no visuals.

Speaker 1:

Again, revenue coming in? I think I don't think there's revenue coming in. I think that the revenue that's coming in doesn't match what it takes to be Beyonce. I think that's happening very often in media right now. I Think that's what's coming. I think it takes let's just say it takes Two million a month to be Beyonce. I think it may be generating 1.3, 1.5, like it could be at a loss, and so now we have to do things, because anytime they've ever done deals like this we have had a whole article, press release about this we have never had no surprise. Add dropping.

Speaker 2:

Huh, beyonce does surprise shit all the time.

Speaker 1:

Beyonce, stop listening to half what I said. I Say prize ad where she's working with a company. We've not seen that when they come out they drop.

Speaker 2:

I'm saying when they don't say bag to just do surprise shit point blank across the board. Not, that's her bag.

Speaker 1:

In the past. That has not been how they've done business. They would do a whole press release talking about what endeavor that they're doing. When she's working with Adidas and all that other shit, they put a whole press releases. Remember, with that little ivory park, that didn't do that.

Speaker 2:

Well, I did a strap that every, every time Beyonce does a clothing Related thing, it doesn't do well. Dairy house of dairy on, that's what I'm saying. There's a lot of park, didn't do well.

Speaker 1:

There's a lot of investments that's been going in that have not been panning out and I said this doesn't just stand for her. I think that goes for everybody. Inflation is real. People are doing things, people are on podcast with ads and they say they wouldn't put ads on. Like, inflation is a real thing. Mm-hmm, keep it a bean, but hey, just look at your faves. I just want you to know they may not be having it the way they do. That's all. They said it was gonna pay Beyonce's on the country radio stations. They bring it back real racism. They said they sent an email to the dude saying we are a country station and we do not play Beyonce. Well, beyonce's making country music, so I mean that's what they said, I mean so also Beyonce's, from Texas.

Speaker 1:

Lana Del Rey is from New York.

Speaker 2:

She's also dropping a country album. Let's see what the difference in the reaction is between the two of them, because if Anybody is closer to making a country album, beyonce is, because that's how she. She grew up in Texas. Lana Del Rey grew up in fucking New York. So but, but Lana Del Rey is probably gonna be more accepted with her country album, cuz she's just, she's a white woman. It doesn't matter how country you are, it matters how white you are.

Speaker 1:

You need a little bit of paleon there. All right, so before we finish up a Super Bowl, there was a crazy story about an African billionaire that passed.

Speaker 7:

I want to give Ajah underscore by Some some shine for this reporting she did I find it very weird that no one is talking About how there were six Nigerian billionaires who died in a plane crash, mysteriously went on their way to the Super Bowl, and how Biden just posted this cryptic ass message Right after they died. The CEO of one of the largest banks in the country was on a helicopter with pilots, family and the CEO slash chairman of the Nigeria stock exchange when their helicopter mysteriously caught fire and crashed while on their way to the Super Bowl. And what are the odds that Biden, on his Presidential ex account, dropped this photo with glowing red eyes and this weird caption that shocks all of America? And the caption for this picture that he actually posted on the presidential Twitter account Was just like we drew it up and everyone thought that they were talking about the Super Bowl, when they weren't. I honestly believe that this is what they were talking about and if you are unfamiliar with the Nigerian stock exchange and what they have going on right now with America and Just the overall fight for power, money and greed, you need to pay attention to what is going on.

Speaker 7:

One of the people on that aircraft was a chief executive of Access Bank and his wife and his son were among those six people that were on board and it went down Shortly after 10 pm on interstate 15 and all six people were killed, including two pilots and the former chairman of NGX group, the Nigerian stock exchange. And, what's so crazy, it is saying that authorities are vet are investigating it, which means to me they may suspect foul play. They are trying to say that this could take up to two years. This entire Investigation could take up to two years and they are calling it a terrible tragedy. The Super Bowl was a giant ritual.

Speaker 1:

So I was seeing here because the gentleman that they're talking about his name is Herbert wig we. He was the person who was the the money man, and I guess the other gentleman who she was talking about was the other.

Speaker 2:

So um, it's not two people. So this was, it was one guy.

Speaker 1:

So I'm seeing them all, my yeah, I'm reading the article.

Speaker 2:

Is he's he's group CEO of Access Bank? Okay, no, it's to. And bimbo.

Speaker 1:

Oh, oh.

Speaker 2:

Goon Banjo, and he's the former group chairman of the Nigerian stock exchange. So it was too different. It was too two billionaires.

Speaker 1:

Well, we don't know, he may not be a billionaire. We don't know that and then their families. That's crazy, though, but a helicopter, they said they think I was reading somewhere else. They said they think might be potential weather, to relate it to it but that's crazy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but cuz Stop taking a helicopter's at this point, like it is that especially that far?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because they were trying to fly to Vegas right from California. I think that's what the trajectory I saw. That was.

Speaker 5:

Oh, we gotta talk about one more thing, about this we gotta talk about one more thing.

Speaker 1:

With the Super Bowl, yo, you conservatives keep showing your ass. You know they was upset about the uh lit every voice and saying the black national anthem.

Speaker 2:

They were. They were also um upset about how much they showed Taylor Swift and then everyone. They counted it and it was 54 seconds of airtime that Taylor Swift got during the whole Super Bowl.

Speaker 1:

It was like 1%.

Speaker 1:

Yeah but I don't care about that. Y'all white folks is these new white folks is violent. I'm not cool with this. Yo Y'all really upset anytime y'all see black anything. Now, yeah, like we like. There's literally Contention around. There's literally uh, elected officials Tell them oh, why is there a black national? There's only one. Do you know the original national anthem Mention slavery. Why do we want to talk about that Like I know y'all took it out. We don't go, do we don't do that verse? It's still in there. It still exists. It's mention slavery in your national anthem. Why don't we want that? Why? No, my nigga, we want this. We we want to lift every voice and sing country. Ass niggas, stop hating on our shit, charles Kirk and fucking that Wallace bitch ass. I'm tired of y'all pussy ass crackers.

Speaker 2:

Black people are here, we exist and get used to it. If we want to have our own shit, because all of y'all shit is rooted in our oppression, then we're going to do so and y'all are just going to have to suck it up and shut the fuck up. God damn, y'all call, like our generation, snowflakes and we complain about shit all the time, but y'all cry about every single fucking change that is made, every single change. Y'all cry more than we do. Shut up, we're tired of it. Shut the fuck up.

Speaker 1:

Y'all niggas is corny. Y'all white boys is corny. Y'all ain't really hitting on nothing and lift every voice and, you know, suck my dick till earth and heaven ring.

Speaker 2:

Suck my dick.

Speaker 1:

Clock, clock. 10,000 over here, pussy boy. All right, uh, let me. We gotta get to your girls, man, they which ones poor minds. They are destroying the black community.

Speaker 2:

Those are my girls. I love them.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to them. You did get mentioned on a show before.

Speaker 2:

I have yes.

Speaker 1:

So shout out to that. But I'm not cool with this man. They got this will to be so over here talking to niggas, talking niggas down.

Speaker 2:

Let me, before you, play this um. I am a regular listener Of poor minds. Now I I'm a regular listener of poor minds.

Speaker 1:

I go at joe budden all the time. No, no, no, no, don't be trying to cop please.

Speaker 2:

No, I'm not going. I'm not trying to cop, please, for nobody was coming at lexandrea. I love lexandrea. Everyone was coming at this woman that the guests that they had on first of all. We hate when lexandrea have guests on, hate that shit every time they like we got a guest today.

Speaker 2:

That's a song they do. I'm like, oh fuck, why, why, I just want to hear y'all together do y'all thing, but they be having guests. I listen to this and without I didn't know what she looked like at all. I always listen to them in my car. I assumed that she was bad as fuck. But she's, she's gorgeous. But conventionally it's not. It's not in the box that niggas be wanting the women to be in a box of. So um, after I saw I listened to this. When I listened to it I was like I'm not 100% on board with you. Not this part there were. It was a long episode.

Speaker 2:

I was like you sound a little crazy. You not fully, we not clicking and meshing all the way. And then I saw her on twitter and I was like, oh, this is what you look like while you was talking like that. They are not gonna let you have that at all. Like I wasn't letting you have it as a woman, listening to it fully, like you wasn't, you wasn't getting away with it.

Speaker 1:

Now, that's crazy. This was full big arm energy. Okay, that's all that was. This is big mama, move your arm energy.

Speaker 2:

I just want to let you out of. This woman has happily married to a white man.

Speaker 4:

Vile man German.

Speaker 2:

Jewish. I think he said he was like sweetest Jewish or like German.

Speaker 1:

Jewish. So you're with the man who's fetishing you. He's fetishing your heavy setness and he wants you before because of that.

Speaker 2:

We don't know he. He wants an exotic he want.

Speaker 1:

Okay, he could still be fetishizing her. He wants an exotic fat black woman. So that's what's exotic to him, just like these niggas over here be wanting the, the latinas with the brown, with the dark hair and the in the eyes and all that shit. That's what is the opposite over there. You are being fetishized. So let's let's listen to what this. This is what I don't even understand how you could not hear her breathing hard the whole time she's talking Like I could tell this was a big woman when, before I even clicked on it, I could just tell when I started hearing it.

Speaker 4:

So if you're making $50,000, don't date I'm. I'm just being for real. You're not ready to date again. I'm with you.

Speaker 6:

You're not ready to.

Speaker 4:

You're not ready to date because courtship costs. Okay, everything costs. You can go for 22 walks in the park. Eventually, shorty is gonna need a sip of something. She's gonna be thirsty. This bottle of water is three dollars in Atlanta.

Speaker 1:

Let's not play now. We already know you is not doing no, 33 walks and shit about her walking nowhere.

Speaker 4:

So if you don't, have any Expendable cash, don't date and whatever that looks like for you. You might only make 50,000, but you live in a shoe. And now you got expendable cash or get you a bottom of the barrel bitch, that's gonna date you when you have no money. If she doesn't have the expectation and I'm gonna that's what we go in women Like you for this is what the big women like you are for to be the bottom of the barrel.

Speaker 1:

You can't be talking like that when you are to mend the bottom of the barrel. That's just real shit. You are the niggas. That's why you ain't with the black man, because the black man will look at you as bottom of the barrel. That's just real shit. Like I'm not over here trying to shit at you, but when we gonna be talking about, oh, what you should be dating for, let's really talk about it.

Speaker 1:

Ma'am, you are too big to be dating. You are 200 pounds plus. Why are you dating? Whoa? Why are you not? Why? Why, whoa? I'm sorry, I didn't make the rules. She said let's make a rule about dating for men. Why are we not making a rule for you? Then, wow, if you gonna be looking like this, if you want to be looking like you a ham hawk is on your arm why are you dating? Why are you not getting the surgery to fix yourself? Why are you not putting your body through struggles and triggers so that you look ideal for a man that actually has your complexion? Who's not hitting you because, oh, I just want to hit something different. I want to bring the exotic elephant with me when I come to my family reunion.

Speaker 2:

You, keep that camera on you. Right now I'm just keeping it a beam.

Speaker 1:

I'll let her finish.

Speaker 4:

I'll tell you this right now Enjoy it while it lasts, because eventually you're gonna want to run, because she doesn't stretch you, she doesn't make you the man that you. You don't stretch, bitch.

Speaker 1:

You had one last time you touched your toes. When you look in the mirror standing up, do you still see your vagina? Is she that big? Look at her face. What are we?

Speaker 4:

talking about here need to become. She allows you to be the stagnant dude in the same jeans for days. You know what I'm saying. Let me cut.

Speaker 1:

No, I'm just talking about okay, and if nigga allow you to sit there, eat steaks and burgers all day while you get a big ass Pool, I'm just saying you want to get a gravitational pull on you every year, your shit getting stronger than the suns, but you want to shit on niggas because of systematic problems that are coming to when we talk about payment. Fuck you, I'm gonna shit on you. I Can't believe. I'm glad you went to a white man because my brothers don't deserve this. All the struggle and the shit they got to go through. They deserve a very more beautiful woman than you. Niggas who make it 50k deserve better than the woman who weighs 50k. Let's keep it a fucking being yo, straight up and say what you want, nigga. Oh, I'm in sale. My wife is right next to me. Nigga Period. All right, now I want to support some disabled people. I want to support the disabled people now.

Speaker 2:

After she's, he's done fat shaming in body shaming this poor black woman.

Speaker 1:

He wants to poor, but no, she's not, she's got a girl, she got a rich German man, no, no, not poor financially fat.

Speaker 1:

Just call it fat black woman, let's call her that. That's what a money said. It's okay, we just calling it like we see it. I don't mind bigger women. I just think that you shouldn't be going on talking about people's financial situations and what they should do and basically call for eugenics of poor people, because you ain't put no stipulations on you. You over here to eat the whole fucking restaurant out, but niggas, but niggas make supposed to be able to support your fat ass. She's crazy. All right, so back to supporting the disabled. I gotta find this little clip here, cuz they've been killing this lady. So she was going in. She started talking about you know what happened with you know 2020. You know people got shut down, and she was basically speaking to the fact that you know the government let us down during that time. They they went out of their way to not provide the type of resources that they needed.

Speaker 1:

And the thing that kind of got a lot of people upset, though, with her, where she spoke about like masking and not wearing a mask, and that kind of bothered a lot of people because she said that she wasn't wearing a mask basically she was just saying, like masks were bullshit and all that other stuff, and it was just a way of trying to put a bandaid on the fact that the government wasn't doing what they were supposed to do during that time period Seems like they've deleted this video. It is another instance of which y'all have Stopped the disabled. Y'all are trying to stop people from shitting on people who are against the disabled, and I'm not here for it.

Speaker 2:

Do you remember the gist of it?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, basically she was just talking about the what was going on with the government, how they failed, and but the part about the mask was the part that shitted on people. People did not like that and that's important because, honestly, the mask is probably for the betterment of people, and mostly the disabled people like I remember when folks was talking about that. Again, I don't wear the mask everywhere I go because I understand that if everybody's not doing it, it's pointless. From all the research that I've gathered, everybody's not collectively doing it, then it's no point of doing it. So we make a law where everybody has to wear masks. I'll put mine on, but I'm not gonna do something. That's not.

Speaker 2:

No, it is for disabled people. Yes, they're.

Speaker 1:

They're literally begging us to do that. They're saying, bro, you're killing Regular people. We can't go to the stores and feel safe.

Speaker 1:

Because, it's still to this day. Yes, it is not stop, it's only got work. If you look up the people who have Gone to the hospital, it's the numbers have only been either steady or increasing. Like they'll go, they'll have sparks when they go low and then they'll go up and go down, like it's been a state state pattern and disabled people are still getting the brunt force of this. And like it's been a whole bunch of people like what's her name? She's a long, she's a big track record of defending disabled people on on social media. She's been speaking out heavily about it and I just I follow a lot of people and they they've made great points about bro. People have compromising use systems, they have a lot of situations going on and for us to be so half-hazard and not understand like this was a step in the right direction of being around each other and limiting how much contact and how much you know Germs sprayed and stuff, like it was working.

Speaker 2:

I'm sorry, y'all don't live in the right country. Y'all don't live in the right country for people to have a hive mind, to care about other people, to do things that are for the betterment of Everyone if it doesn't directly benefit me. Move somewhere, I'm sorry. Like the United States, our society does not work that way. It's very individualistic. We do what's good for ourselves Individually and our families and the people who we directly care about, but we don't do things that are good for the people who we don't know, who we don't actually directly care about. That's not how we function.

Speaker 2:

If you're somebody who is disabled and you're somebody who is immune, compromised, then In the United States, like, the general public is just not gonna give a fuck about you. That's not how the the American has been trained to behave or think at all. If you were in like Japan, then it would be different. If all of the Japanese elders came out and all of the immune, immune, immune, deprived the immune deficiency people came out and was like we need everybody to wear masks, then they would probably do so. But in the United States that's not gonna happen. We have a difference type of society and that's it's fucking sucks, but y'all are fucked.

Speaker 1:

Well, no, they wear masks over there and it's fashion. They were doing that before us. They've been doing that, yeah, it's fashion and stuff over there they but I'm just saying like people, people care about each other.

Speaker 2:

Like this is not as a group.

Speaker 1:

More than what they do in the United States. That's not exactly why they do that, though. They do it because they talking about the masks specifically.

Speaker 2:

I'm just talking about in their society. They care more about like they don't throw garbage on the streets, like they care more about each other as a group and they Think about the, the general public, more than they think about themselves and just the people in their bubble. I would disagree. American people don't think about people outside of their bubble and we don't even think about people outside of our American bubble. Our new cycle is very egocentric. We're a egocentric society those things are true.

Speaker 1:

The thing is that is, is the system itself forms itself today? Like people over there Don't necessarily care about people more than what they do, there is a system that they understand and that they feed into because they benefit from that system. Okay.

Speaker 2:

So that system is more beneficial to the like hive mind than ours is. Regardless of how you word it, the the people who are handicapped here are fucked period.

Speaker 1:

No, I mean yeah, for sure. That's why she and in a tweet that her name is Imani Barbering and she was just like it's just a frequency which y'all forget. Disabled people exist.

Speaker 2:

Yeah and it just happens I don't, I don't, I'm part of it. I am a selfish American. I don't have anybody who has any immune deficiencies. I don't have anybody who's handicapped, who's directly affected by this. So I had absolutely no clue this was happening.

Speaker 1:

I mean, like I say I, I'm with y'all on the table front. I wish that we could do more if I feel like I need to put on a mask now, just letting me know in the comments that you feel like that's what I should be doing. I really leave the house anyway, so to be fully honest with you.

Speaker 2:

Like I'm not putting on a mask if I'm the only one in a Whole bitch with a mask on, like I just don't feel like that's gonna protect people. That's not gonna do nothing if, if 99% of the population don't got a mask on and I got on a mask you still can't come outside. I'm just uncomfortable. You're dressed fucked. I'm sorry, it sucks.

Speaker 1:

Let's get into this red flags List. This was huge. Okay, those are lack of red flags list of red flags list for women, probably like 40 things.

Speaker 2:

What is it?

Speaker 1:

it's written by women or us against y'all okay. Okay, it's about stuff that we don't want y'all to have. These are I'll read the top first so list of red flags indicating that a woman is a bad bet for a long-term relationship. What else? So basically, this means if you have any of these things, most time men are gonna look at you like you're just something to sleep with.

Speaker 2:

Bitch boy.

Speaker 1:

Y'all definition of real niggas as niggas who go for anything the first thing on the list is Stupid.

Speaker 2:

That's why I call it a bitch boy list has tattoos.

Speaker 1:

Yes, that is something that you need to definitely go. That means she has a she's making ideas about herself. I have two tattoos again, I'm not. I'm not rich either.

Speaker 2:

It's a red flag. You definitely not rich, already has kids, nicotine, cigarettes okay, yes, this the cigarette again.

Speaker 1:

I was a nigga who was who fell victim to the cigarette smokers.

Speaker 2:

I Don't know why well, I thought it was cute though.

Speaker 1:

I mean, I smoke cigarette before but no, you smoke.

Speaker 2:

But I'm saying but that does that smoke? Slash vapes, nicotine, slash cigarettes.

Speaker 1:

Listen what I should say. I did not. Again, ladies and gentlemen, I'll see the trouble. I mean, I just talked about just smoking cigarettes. That doesn't mean, those other two things don't have to or don't exist. I just talked about one point.

Speaker 2:

Go to the next one has guy friends.

Speaker 1:

Yes, it's problematic.

Speaker 2:

It's problematic, so out of the out of the we're at four. I have three of these four.

Speaker 1:

Yes, we're a flag, a walking red flag that you married.

Speaker 2:

Married in the past Is overweight.

Speaker 6:

Okay, we're good Like what do you mean is overweight?

Speaker 2:

I don't enjoy daily cooking. I don't enjoy daily cooking.

Speaker 1:

I'll reflect parents divorce.

Speaker 2:

My parents are divorced. We're sexualized closing I do that relationship with father. I love my dad. No father figure Sexually experienced, good blow job giver.

Speaker 1:

Nobody wants that.

Speaker 2:

You want bad head?

Speaker 1:

No, no I want head that I and I taught you to get okay.

Speaker 2:

Broken cell phone screen? Where's makeup daily? Whereas excessive cake face foundation makeup, I mean she doesn't apply it right, been Grape or abused.

Speaker 1:

Can we get into something about that? Mm-hmm, I Know men who have that thought, because you gotta think like this if I enjoy something and that something was used to you as violence, that's going to be kind of a hard connection. It is want to do that.

Speaker 2:

It's. It's really Messed up, but like I wouldn't want to date somebody who has those like that much baggage around like it is a tough experience, like your sexual.

Speaker 1:

That's a tough experience to be around like that's a real thing.

Speaker 2:

It is, yeah. So I mean I don't think I'm emotionally capable of being in a relationship with somebody who has that much trauma around something that is like that normal in our relationship.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean. So I can definitely understand where it's like especially if it's something that they wear On a sleeve and I really expressive about that will make you feel weird. Where's like oh damn, like, am I doing something that's reminding you of that person? Like what's going on? It's gonna make the situation bad. So I mean, I'm not saying that that person is a bad person for that. I just understand that it's a, that it could be a difficult thing to a circle to square just like.

Speaker 2:

I think this is the same ish Topic, just a different, just a different Part of it. But I wouldn't date somebody who was like a recurring addict or like had substance abuse problems anywhere in their life. That's not something that I want to deal with, especially if you are. If you have been like ten years clean, cool. But like I was watching something on the cut and she said that she was two years ish sober and I would have got up and walked away. Two years ish. You said ish and put it in quotation marks like I'm not dealing with a recovering addict, well, you're your point blank.

Speaker 1:

It depends on the drug. Nope, yes, it would.

Speaker 2:

Bro, it doesn't. Alcohol not doing it. Crack not doing it. Cocaine not doing it. Pills, prescription drugs, all of them not doing it. What else? What else can you get addicted to Trank? Not doing it?

Speaker 1:

you can be addicted to the trink.

Speaker 2:

Honestly, if you have mommy issues, if you have been, if like, oh, I'm not doing it, they would say I got mommy issues you know your mother loved you. So people say you have mommy issues, but you just have a nuanced relationship with your mother. They're not necessarily issues, though there.

Speaker 1:

Is different. You think me, my, me, my mom should do an interview, like logic and his dad.

Speaker 2:

No, I don't think Y'all should do that at all. I Think that would hurt your relationship more than it helps. Do you think what he did was wrong Logic? Um yeah, I think y'all should have worked that out, and probably family counseling if it was that important to you to talk through, if you felt the need to set up cameras and lights and do makeup before you had that conversation. Obviously it was for some type of Benefit. I don't know if it was just for you might have been on some like I just want other people to see this, which is still weird to me, because Putting your trauma on display like that is it's weird and it's unnatural, but that's a whole brand forced like to me.

Speaker 1:

That's his whole brand. So it's always been about putting my trauma up front and being who I am. So I kind of understood what was going on, like, granted, yeah, putting it out I can, I can agree with that fundamentally is not cool, you're? You're literally trying to get over on your parent and make them look bad in a better life at the same. Okay, no, no, no, at the same token. So nigga was, was not the the best parent? And I think that comes with consequences, especially when you have a successful child. Mm-hmm like this is an instance as different from onique, her son, cuz the rabbit got the gun, so again he do. The rabbit got the kid has the gun now. So now I can make you Kind of do a little bit things cuz you want things for me. So if you want things for me, I'm not gonna say put you through the same experiences and abuse that maybe I had to go through. I don't think he was drinking his dad.

Speaker 1:

I think he was more neglect. It wasn't really abuse, it was just like his dad wasn't around. Yeah, that's because he was fighting, trying to live history, trying to be a musician. So when you have that, I'm not mad at me. Like, hey, you want some money for me? Cool, you gonna be my punching bag for an hour and I'm gonna express myself in a real way to you, a unfiltered way, and you gonna sit there and accept it and I can be okay with that. Like people. I would never talk to my dad again. Your dad ain't doing his dad party did to him.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that he doesn't. He probably doesn't see him as a father figure, like you would see your dad if he was actively there or respect your father, or you are not gonna.

Speaker 1:

You could have an unhealthy fear of your parent. I know so many people who are yes, ma'am, no sir, to somebody that they fucking hate. That's their pain Way more. They look at me and the way I talk to my parents like I'm crazy, like you're a white boy. Yeah, they're looking me like I'm crazy compared to how they still 30 some years old.

Speaker 6:

Yes, sir, no sir.

Speaker 1:

Folks. They don't even look at their parents any eye people.

Speaker 2:

People can't even like Disagree with their parents, and black people specifically. Take you disagreeing with your parents, you bucking back at the system, you telling them that like no, that is just full-out Disrespecting, you're acting white and that is not the case at all. I feel like not Not aligning with the status quo is inherently white. It is not like when, when you, I forgot the thought, the, the I wouldn't say that was going on. No, okay, that's what I was thinking when?

Speaker 2:

when white kids White kids are regularly trained to not just fall in line like black kids are.

Speaker 1:

No, when you have a fucking mentality, is outside of a slave mentality like yes, some balls, and grandma's give me that Bibles.

Speaker 2:

Children are taught to question things and black children are taught to just take it as it is. Like you just, you just have to, you just have to not question your parents, point blank period.

Speaker 1:

Again it goes around you. A slave mentality yeah, we are. Our lineage, especially in America, with black people has been coming through slavery. Yeah so that is our relationship with authority figures, so we kind of push that for generations so that's why I feel like I Bucking back is White people are more comfortable.

Speaker 2:

It's not even white children are.

Speaker 1:

There's a difference between bucking back and giving or an end giving. Just giving resistance Like bucking back is like your dad steps to you and says you speak to you in a loud term and you push that thing on the ground. Okay, that's bucking back resistance.

Speaker 2:

Yeah resistance is more it's it's.

Speaker 1:

White kids are more comfortable doing that than black kids are I mean, but they're also in an environment that isn't taught from slavery like you, not, even if like white kids get abused.

Speaker 2:

Their environment encourages that.

Speaker 1:

It's it they thrive on that I mean if white, even if white kids get abused, you still see them talking shit today, dad, yeah, like they'll still fuck you, old man, and then they'll get punched in the fucking face. Yeah, white kids are gonna talk shit regardless. You know it's and but it, but then you have it. On the other end was like a lot of black people who they won't even raise they voice at they parent and they pair me wrong as fuck. I Could never. I could never be on that side, cuz I'm gonna speak about my.

Speaker 1:

I'm gonna tell you how I feel, and you can tell me how you feel we can go from there. Yeah, I'll accept it, we go from there. But again, just to say about what logic said I don't. I don't think he's wrong, bro, like I think, if you want things for me and y'all keep asking things for me, cool, come here and share into this what we're going on, going camera with me and you mind now.

Speaker 2:

That's just part of it. I'll change my my opinion on this. I feel like if if you were the one, that If I'm the kid that was neglected, then it's on my terms now.

Speaker 1:

Especially when you have the finances. Yeah, if the find it's on the term of who has the finances at the end of day.

Speaker 2:

But are his terms, a little clout chasey.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but this is, this is to make up for the money that you want from me. Okay, like it. To me it all seems right. Agree on that if I'm the person who's.

Speaker 2:

I'll change my tune up.

Speaker 1:

Like if I'm the person who Charlemagne asked me, who raped my sister, like on on the national who the fuck great Joe sister like what? If I've ex felt that kind of shame. Joe budding regularly goes in and kicks my back in anytime. I try to do anything that I love. Yes, pops, you gonna have to get this work for me. I can't, for some reason I can't punch it. These guys, they got on bulletproof vest.

Speaker 2:

Logic's first EP I enjoyed buried alive I think it was. It was really good. And then I think he started getting to his mixed bag after that and then every, every, every song was I'm black and I'm right and I was accepting here and then here, and then it was just like a lot of complaining Instead of just like rapping about. Like Quentin Tarantino, like you, you did the first time like you were just a nerdy mix nigga, when I fell in love with you and then you started complaining, complaining non-stop, non-stop about being mixed From then on and I was like this is not what else. What else is your identity about logic? What else do you? Because I Know you, you enjoy movies and Quentin and all that stuff. Like that's how I was introduced to you and then you just Went downhill from there. I hate it.

Speaker 1:

Hey man, you gotta kind of do what you gotta do here. I'm mad. I hope you get your whole family up there. Everybody who asked you for a house. You should just go up there and just kick they back in each one and then it's like a married, a white woman.

Speaker 2:

So then, like what do you Kick her back into? What are you doing? Do it bring the kid up there? You kick her back in, daughter, a white woman.

Speaker 1:

Oh, you have a daughter though.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, kick her back in His daughter. Yeah, you have. You have white children now, so just calm down about the mix shit.

Speaker 1:

I'm just telling you just to kick everybody back in. That's gonna be far more entertaining. I want to see the sister next, like whoever's asked you for anything, just go in there, kick they back in and then buy my house Afterward. You like a new mr Beast if you do that. Oh my god, I'm speaking of mr Beast. I fucking was at the gas station the other day, yesterday, because I forgot to ask you to put gas in my car. But I'm over here putting in bucket.

Speaker 2:

I'm putting gas in my car and then there's this family, a car full of light-skinned niggas next to me. I'm gonna put gas in my car. And then I'm gonna put gas in my car, and then there's this family, a car full of light-skinned niggas next to me. And then this man gets out of the car. He's like excuse me, ma'am. And then I turn around and I see his girlfriend or wife and two Little light-skinned children in the back seat and he's like oh, I need groceries, I need money to buy food for my, my children. And then at first I'm like do you want to? I can walk inside with you, we can get snacks and shit. And then he's like no, no, no, no. I'm like what? I don't have any cash. You have cash app. I cash out the man $40. You feel for that? He had two small children in the back okay, that's called the finesse, and they looked poor, I don't know.

Speaker 2:

It was like a. It was maybe like a 2002 2003 Toyota Camry.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, they thought you were sweet. They thought you sweet.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so I cash out him cuz he had he had children in the car and then the the lady was just sitting there like Embarrassed, looking like she looked ashamed of herself. So I mean, yeah, why would you?

Speaker 1:

You over there ask people. I mean that's tough and she was white.

Speaker 2:

No, she was also light skin. Everyone was mad light skin. They were all black and light skin. Okay.

Speaker 1:

Yikes man. Well, I mean she probably was, though it's tough and there was two kids or she could have known.

Speaker 2:

They was finesse. Or then there were two kids in car seats, in the backseat. I mean you got a car man. It wasn't a fishbowl to no tense.

Speaker 1:

You can go up to the, which one can get the food stamp Like they'll give it to her. They may not give it to him, but.

Speaker 2:

And I was like why is he coming out and asking? She should be asking me. I would have gave them more money if she asked me.

Speaker 1:

Maybe he's just trying to stand, be a stand-up dude for his environment. I can't be mad at a young nigga for that, you know, or old nigga, whatever he was.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and he was like he just kept apologizing the whole time. He was like I'm sorry for asking you, just kept apologizing, apologizing, apologizing, like it was an apology Sentence, apology, like every sentence was sandwiched in an apology.

Speaker 1:

Again. A lot of y'all. We talked about this in the Gale King video. Man, I don't feel like when men go through financial things it's a vulnerability, but it truly is. So I'm not proud of you for.

Speaker 2:

He seemed like he was like such a burden, like that's how men feel. Yeah, so that's why so I? I originally I typed in $20 and Then I was like, if this is all real, he has a woman, he has a woman in two kids with him, and it's, it's to 2024. So I was like, let me send them 40 instead, like, even if they're finessing me, like this isn't bad karma on my end At all, it's not hurting me at all to send them this money.

Speaker 1:

So I just did it. Shout out to the AI that's clothing up you nasty women out there.

Speaker 2:

Why, why are y'all using AI to put clothes on women? You fucking noobs.

Speaker 1:

No, that's was it I like that, I like this. See that's. That's the kind of shit I like. I like shit like that. It's so much porn on the on the internet is like yo, can I just get a pretty girl in a nice clothes?

Speaker 2:

dress. There's a lot of that too, like yeah, act like there aren't pretty. No, they're not. Oh, they're not the girl that I follow.

Speaker 1:

Where's the girl that I follow? She tries to do all this shit where she's like, trying to act like she's all Holier than thou and she got like the hairiest armpits ever. Yo, what's her name? Yo, they're not attractive. Yo, the girls.

Speaker 2:

Don't shave body hair like if you know, not when you got a whole midget underneath your arm.

Speaker 1:

She like she got a afro underneath her arm. Yeah, that's just not attractive. And she over here shitting on Untraditional women and all that stuff. Man, oh, go, go, go traditionally, get that hair on the arms. I don't. He's not cute at all, bro. So no, the women who be on the clothes stuff Don't be that cute. It's a reason why they closed. Okay.

Speaker 2:

We just trying to, we try to Close women out there, you saying that they don't be looking good. I don't be looking at them like that for real but they, I'm telling you what's attractive and what's not you. I'll take that back. There are cuz most of the girls that I follow on Instagram like there. I follow them because they fly as fuck may be putting that shit on. So there are pretty girls who be putting that shit on. They just like yeah, like Regina.

Speaker 1:

They don't be having a way to put it on the body. That girl we talked about before, regina J, or whatever.

Speaker 2:

Regina, yeah, regina J the one that went viral on Twitter that she. She specifically don't be putting that shit on, she be having well, it look good. It look good because it's on her body. That's all you looking at. Oh, okay, she don't be looking at, she don't be putting that shit on at all, and this is exactly what I'm talking about, like y'all don't be following women who we don't care, we want you to look good you be complaining.

Speaker 4:

I said that you don't want to see.

Speaker 1:

We just want you to look good. If you want to say hey, hey, nigga, you gotta have 50, more than 50 k to sleep with me, look good saying it.

Speaker 2:

And then the girls that really be putting that shit on you be like oh, I don't like baggy pants, Cuz that's not you.

Speaker 1:

That shit was annoying. Man y'all young girls is crazy now like that's on his disappointing. You going out there like yo, you, 22 years old, 23 years old is the best figure you probably have, your life. Why are you not showing it off? I'm just trying to figure it out.

Speaker 2:

You can serve whatever you want to serve, man. If you want to serve tomboy one day and then whore the next, do that.

Speaker 1:

All right, man you ready, wrap it up. Yeah all right, man, this is thoughtful. This is, excuse me, it's a talk FNF TV. What the fuck talk FNF TV, episode 31. What is good with you, I don't know.

Speaker 2:

episode 31 here we did not even acknowledge the fact that last episode was episode number 30 Three. That's why I said 31. I was about to say three, but I don't. I don't have a finger. Yeah, I know, that's what I Said.

Speaker 1:

Three like this is like you do like three. C, like you going to like three like this is like like there Three.

Speaker 2:

Why was that my automatic thing? 30 Last episode Do your thing.

Speaker 1:

All right, so this is talk. Fnf TV was one thing like follow.

Speaker 2:

Oh, like follow, subscribe All of all of the platforms at talk that FNF dot TV. We appreciate y'all. We've been getting a couple more subscribers so we love y'all.

Speaker 1:

Keep enjoying and tuning in pushing the numbers up baby.

Speaker 2:

Even if you don't like it. Tell us what you don't like. Dislike it.

Speaker 1:

Give us, give us everything all of it and remember life is a labor of love. So keep building together and remember your job is not your family. The only thing that you should be exploiting is these corporations. Period, turn up, show love. Hey, remember here and we out.

Conflict Between Podcasters
Weight, Treatment, and Controversial Figures
Mother-Son Relationship and Family Dynamics
Impact of Career on Parenting
Privilege and Parental Love Languages
Usher's Super Bowl Performance and Marriage
Comparison of Beyonce and Taylor Swift
Christianity, Kanye West, Beyonce Discussion
Super Bowl, Billionaires, and Controversy
Mask Wearing and Disability Awareness
Red Flags for Long-Term Relationships
Financial Vulnerability and Social Media Appearance
FNF TV Episode 31 and Subscriber Appreciation