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Dream Killer Mike, Love is Blind is Back , and Vince Staples Show Is TRASH - Talk FNF TV

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Could love ever truly be blind? We grapple with this question and unveil the raw truths behind the reality TV facade in our latest discussion on "Love is Blind." Experience the ups and downs, the cringe-worthy moments, and the genuine connections. We lay bare the dating show's dramatic love triangles and the complexities of forming relationships sight unseen. From Matthew's tactless responses to AD's personal revelations to Jimmy's visual expectations, we analyze how perception and physical attraction play pivotal roles in the search for love, even when contestants are supposed to be blind to each other's looks.

Parenting, societal expectations, and the ever-present issues surrounding identity politics in media and entertainment are dissected with unflinching honesty. We don't shy away from the uncomfortable – be ready for a deep dive into the portrayal of light-skinned women in media and the influence of celebrities on personal ideals. The dialogue is enriched by challenging the status quo on topics like birth control, teenage pregnancy, and the representation of women through a lens that's often too narrow in scope. Killer Mike's unique take on tackling teen pregnancy provides a fresh angle to the enduring debate, while a Tennessee mother's cosmetology lessons to her daughter trigger a broader conversation about sexualization and child labor.

The realm of comedy and hip-hop takes a front seat as we scrutinize Tiffany Haddish's recent endeavors and Vince Staples' leap into television. Unpack the layered discussions about the reach and impact of celebrities like Mayweather and the ethics of AI-generated content misusing public figures' images. We don't just stop there; we're boosting the signal on the importance of supporting black creators, promising future guest appearances that will continue to enrich our narrative. Tune in for this no-holds-barred episode that promises thought-provoking insights and a fair share of humor, set against the backdrop of reality TV drama and societal reflections.

Speaker 1:

Laura is genuinely my least favorite person of this season because of this specific situation.

Speaker 2:

He is commercial nihilism. He is a guy who will show the pessimism, the dread that we all go through, make the jokes and guess what? We're laughing at the life that we're all living. In the first place Because I'm hair, because y'all ladies in there, y'all know them hairs is deep. You got to get a good tug in that Lil' Shawty. She ain't tugging that.

Speaker 1:

So that was wild. But after you've fallen out of the graces of not black people because you were never in black people's graces black people never found you funny. Tiffany Haddish, your comedy was always white comedy, because it's less than You're not. 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 during tax season and if you have any financial or tax preparation questions, head to graffititaxcom. They're our new sponsor. Thank you to graffititaxcom Preparation services. That's it.

Speaker 2:

That's fair, it's reality.

Speaker 3:

Hello. We're back here, man so we got to get things started. Back at it again.

Speaker 2:

Another installment. You know how we started, man. You know we like to get live for our audio listeners. That's what I tell you. They got to listen to the audio. Audio is the best way to experience the show, honestly.

Speaker 1:

It's good to look at our faces, but I would prefer for you to look at my face, because I specifically enjoy my face, but you should be watching both. I want you to get the full musical experience also.

Speaker 2:

You should be listening to the audio and watching the video, but let's get to the music.

Speaker 4:

I like my engine when I speed up Bitches holding their feet, rolling trees with their pretty feet up, them suckers often imitate, but they can't beat us so super hallowed in the sky. When you won't see me, bro, cut my speakers up, drowning out what the critics say. Just continue to smoke and remain. G is fucked. G is fucked. Polo socks match my polo hat. She leave once. It's a known fact. If she ain't coming back now, tell her game. That shit changed. But the mouth of horses in my motor when I switch lanes, like please.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, bam BAM, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam, bam. Hit Patterson Trump at. I can't dress an AK-47 is my fucking address. I'm not a star. Somebody got a gun, I got a chocolate. I got a gun, I got a chocolate.

Speaker 6:

I got a gun. I got a chocolate. I got a gun. I got a chocolate, I got a gun. I got a chocolate, I got a gun. You blowin' money fast on this side. Niggas Catch up, nigga catch up. I think I'm Big Meach, larry Uva Whippin' work. Hallelujah, one nation under God, real niggas gettin' money from the fucking stars. I think I'm Big Meach, larry Uva, get me work. Hallelujah, one nation under God, real niggas gettin' money from the fucking stars. My rose raised triple black. I'm Deet ya howl Ballin' in the club bottles like I'm Deet ya howl Rose, that's my nickname. Cogaine runnin' in my big vein. Self made you just affiliated. I feel the ground up. You bought it renovated, talkin' plenty capers, nothin's been authenticated. 20, you claimin' the same bitch that I'm penetrating. Hold the bottles up. Where, my comrades, what a fuckin' feelings. Where my dog's dead. I got that Archie Bumper In this old white. I just might charge a double. I think I'm Big Meach, larry Uva Whippin' work, work. I feel like.

Speaker 4:

I beat up, murder, murder, fuckin' on it, but you never heard of heard of that Pope like the leader all about it.

Speaker 7:

Can he do it again? Everything I do, they do. Guess Yeezy set the trend and we in this bitch again time to get rich again. Know your mother fuckin' hands? They lookin' like prey. I guess that's why they prayin'. And when you flyin' private it can't be no delayin'. When I speak my mind it's gon' be some lawsuits and furniture movin'. I gotta haul through, like when you be movin'. I gotta fly to Japan Just to be secluded. They did no damage. Would I give them no chances? Even if they get a chance, his panic like they. No, spanish Hybran, all these clothes, heavy tension, my throat, make an anthropohose. It's my life now to pull. I feel like I beat up murder, murder, fuckin' on it. But you never heard of, heard of. I'ma take all my bawdies to Georgia. Yo bawdies, throw my dick. A party you dressed cold upscale, used to shop at all these. I ran up some numbers. Now I got what you all need Get your home girl to borrow a gas and save the summer as you drop it fast.

Speaker 4:

It's time to come up blackout. Pass it on in and she waking up gorgeous.

Speaker 7:

I'm not racist, it's a preference. And my bitch lookin' like a reference. Don't I make a move about the reference?

Speaker 1:

That's exactly what Kanye wanted his bitch to look like.

Speaker 8:

A reference.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he loves him. A mood board ass girl, like he wants his girl to be the aesthetic. You're right, that's true, he curates his woman to be that. He wants dolls. He doesn't want humans.

Speaker 2:

Alright now. So you're now listening to Talk FNF TV. I am your host, redrick, with my lovely and amazing co-host, miss Reality.

Speaker 1:

Hi guys, what's going on how?

Speaker 2:

you feelin' I'm good, I'm good, you good.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm wonderful.

Speaker 2:

Time to bring another round to the people here. I know y'all missed us. We had some interesting engagement this week.

Speaker 1:

We did.

Speaker 2:

You know, somebody was upset about what I said.

Speaker 1:

You were fully fat shaming this woman.

Speaker 2:

I was just shaming her. And so then she came into the To our, you know, little Witch McCauley here, our comment section and left a little. You know she dissed us A little bit, a little shade. She was just trying to talk about our growth, of what we got gotten so far.

Speaker 1:

I always think it's funny when people come for Like our following when we haven't been Doing this for that long. But Eat, go ahead. I mean, she definitely want to eat we know that.

Speaker 2:

So she's definitely going to be on that time Kind of time, but let's, let's get to it. Man, we got a lot to talk about. I know you're excited about getting into some things.

Speaker 1:

Love is blind.

Speaker 2:

But our boy killer, Mike. I knew this was going to happen. Like once you win the Grammy, that's when you start getting everybody Start getting in your business, Everybody start having something to say about what you doing.

Speaker 1:

When you're at the top, people start like Getting closer and looking for stuff.

Speaker 2:

No, it definitely happens that way. Alright, so I'm going to play this little video Of killer Mike. Some videos have been resurfacing of him and, man, I knew this was going to happen Because he's very even though he was working with Bernie Sanders and all them, he's very like, right, idealized, like he has a lot of right-wing ideology. So this was the first one that got everybody so pissed off Because basically they called him a dream killer. So he's talking to two kids the first kid that you can obviously tell he's going to be a Caucasian kid, and then he talks to a little black boy after that. So I'm going to play this video and this was on his show. I don't know. Did you watch the show?

Speaker 1:

I did watch the show. It was on like Visc lane Netflix. It was a Netflix show. It was during the pandemic right.

Speaker 2:

Either shortly like 2021 it might have came out.

Speaker 9:

I'm a scientist and I'm trying to find a cure for cancer, and I'm going to be. I'm going to make a rocket that can go into the sun.

Speaker 8:

What do you want to be a? Rock A president and I will make a. You want to be a president? Yes, Mason.

Speaker 9:

I forgot to tell you I'm going to be a scientist, remember. And. I'm going to make this potion that will make my whole family superheroes.

Speaker 8:

You owe your parents not to dream big. You owe it to your parents to dream practical and start making money as soon as you can Like. You're not going to be able to be president. Do you guys know what a carpenter is?

Speaker 2:

Yes, Wow why is that the reaction is wow, though.

Speaker 1:

That's great, because Because why would you tell so? All of these kids were in the same room, right?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they all sit down in a classroom together.

Speaker 1:

So he was talking to all of them when he was saying you owe it to your parents To dream practically and start making money immediately.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he was talking to all of them when he said that.

Speaker 1:

And then he points, and then he directs his attention To the little black boy, and then he's like he stopped. You're not going to be president, though you specifically can't dream big, you nigga, everybody can't dream big, but specifically you, little nigga.

Speaker 2:

That is how everybody took that. I didn't take it like that. That's how everybody took that. I thought he was being like kind of what I said earlier On one of our shows, where I was like you have to the carpenters, the plumbers, the mechanics, we have to push that, make that cool.

Speaker 1:

We do have to make that cool.

Speaker 2:

It's one president, it's a million niggas.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I think it's very important for us to put more importance on trades, but at the same time, like these are children that you're just seeing for that day. Like why would you not just be? Like, go ahead. Yeah, it's a very hard job and you have to be a very specific way your entire life. But if that's what you want to do and you want to dedicate your entire life to it's difficult, but go ahead.

Speaker 2:

I'll tell the story. You let me know if we need to cut it out. But when my son went to a camp right, he was a soccer camp and he told me how he scored a goal, but the kids, they lost. So what I told him was, at the end of the day, if your effort is to win the game, you didn't do that. And I was telling him, like when you're special, special people do special things. You have to do it to be there. You can't just be special just because you say you are and you have to do it. So I told him like hey, yeah, you made the goal, but you didn't win. So I didn't feel like I was shooting his dream down, I just felt like I was pushing him to accomplish more.

Speaker 1:

That's not bad if you framed it in that way, yeah.

Speaker 2:

I felt like I did, yeah, but like this is not. He was like 7, so I don't know how he might have missed the turn. He was like 7.

Speaker 1:

Killer. Mike didn't frame it that way. He was like and you're not going to be president, like. That's all he said. Like what?

Speaker 2:

I mean. But the world is going to say that to you In a way less subtle way, like they're going to. It's going to show you you can't be president in a lot more.

Speaker 1:

You think that was a subtle way. He's saying no, I'm saying that was subtle.

Speaker 2:

I'm saying the world is going to show you in more. You know what I'm saying? There's subtle ways but I mean that's a reality and a truth that more often than not, you're probably not going to be president. This kid over here is talking about making a super potion for his parents, like, come on, guys, we're shooting a little too high here.

Speaker 1:

I feel like when he said you owe your parents to dream a little bit more, practically he was talking to that kid, though. You're not going to make a rocket that goes into the sun, while making a potion that makes your parents superheroes.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like I said and he can dream like that too that was a little white boy, but the little black boy you. I feel like it's important to put a shine and a light On these trade jobs, and I think that's important. Now I'm not going to feel like the tradesman is going to fix the black community. You know what I'm saying. I don't think there's a trade for that. But I think it's important to frame these jobs and make them look and treat them as how important they are.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Like you do not want to wake up and your toilet don't work, I promise you, like that sucks.

Speaker 1:

And these people make a good amount of money. Welders, carpenters, plumbers make so much money, like, if you are good at your craft and you're doing it for a long time, then it's almost guaranteed that you're going to be making more than just a good living. So it's not even like a bottom of the barrel option. It's a very, very good option and I like we do need to highlight it more.

Speaker 2:

But so another video came out where he was. It looks like they were at a town hall meeting and they're talking about just some of the things that go on in regards to teenage pregnancy, which I think it's important to note. Teenage pregnancy is down Like statistically speaking.

Speaker 1:

That's because the kids on their phones are not fucking.

Speaker 2:

That and also it's like I mean, that's true, they don't want to do this. Also, two more women also two more girls have access to different birth control, like a lot of y'all are getting a shot at 16.

Speaker 1:

You can order birth control online, yeah.

Speaker 2:

I'm talking about even the shot, Like it's even more, where you don't have to take it to pill anymore. They'll just give you the shot now. They'll give you all sorts of shit to put the UDI up there.

Speaker 1:

Period. Fuck them kids.

Speaker 2:

Hey, no you gotta bring it, you gotta put it all. We hey, we got a little girl, she get all of it. We just gonna super all up, Shot UDI, all that.

Speaker 1:

Don't know about that.

Speaker 2:

We gotta keep her safe. That's our job is to keep her safe.

Speaker 1:

I think we are going to openly talk about sex in a very Candid way with our children from as soon as it's appropriate I think around like 10. Yeah, but we gotta do some. We gotta do some biological policing, but Birth control just does so much to your body as a woman, like as far as like mood swings and this and that, and like she ain't a woman. She a woman, she a little girl it messes you up.

Speaker 1:

So I just don't wanna, I don't want to mess with our kids, hormones and their balance, and all of that before they're even like, fully cognitively, cognitively developed, I'm sure it's sure about that time that happens, the medicine will be shored up, and then you're like such a consent warrior.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but as a child, her consent comes from us.

Speaker 1:

No, that's not how you feel.

Speaker 2:

Yes, it is.

Speaker 1:

That's not how you feel at all.

Speaker 2:

Yes, it is. Her consent comes from us.

Speaker 1:

Hippocrates, I do. He's moving the goalposts because that's not how he feels. Okay, now tell me how I feel and we can get back to when we're talking about, because when it comes to like exploiting your child and this, and that you think that your child needs to give their consent to be able to do that. But when it comes to body and mentally altering Like chemistry altering drugs you don't need their consent for that.

Speaker 2:

When we're trying to make sure the reproductive organs are in control. No, we just rallying that in.

Speaker 1:

I feel like if we foster a space of knowledge and openness, then that is not going to happen.

Speaker 2:

I feel like we can do both.

Speaker 1:

Like my parents did, they fostered a space of knowledge and openness. My mom had sex talks with me once a week Once a week.

Speaker 2:

It was wild. The thing that you're saying doesn't mean that we can't do what I'm saying either, Like we can do both. That's the dope shit.

Speaker 1:

I'm telling you that I don't want to do that, but hopefully, by the time that we have a child, and if our child is a girl, because it's one and done, whatever come out first is what's coming out last Period. Okay, so if we even have a girl, then we'll get there when we get there, when we have to have that conversation. Do not like what birth control does to women's bodies and brains.

Speaker 2:

Alright, so this kind of actually bleeds into the next topic with Killer Mike in it. So this is the other video right here. So again he's at a little town hall meeting.

Speaker 8:

Pregnant is a teenager. Young man and woman get pregnant. This is the two-year plan. First two years are debt free. You don't have to pay the government anything back, so she doesn't get to draft him in the court and the court doesn't say you owe us money for investing in your child's food programs Through early Head Start programs. In those two years the boy has the option or not an option. He has the demand of the co-man to then go to a trade school. You have to go to a trade school which incentivizes the United States to do it, Because we need more trade people. We don't have enough carpenters, we don't have enough electricians.

Speaker 8:

We don't have enough people to build the cross In my community, the girls- who are going to college and graduate. They have no men to marry because the boys are not going to college. In the same way, my teachers were married to a tradesman. My teacher, who we call Doctor, her husband, owned a locksmith company.

Speaker 6:

Her husband was a carpenters was a mechanic, so they had a good life.

Speaker 8:

Their kids went to school right at the same school we went to. I think that the incentive to solve the child support problem and a part of solving our infrastructure problem, is to incentivize young boys who have gotten a girl pregnant. You must now go through two years of trade school.

Speaker 9:

Wait a minute, so I like what you said you can't do the rest of the answer.

Speaker 8:

After that boy graduates, you get a further incentive if you and the girl marry. If you and the girl marry, we'll give you these incentives Zero finance, home loans, something out of HUD besides an apartment With the leaky faucet and rats and roaches in it, but incentivize marriage, which then strengthens our community, the black community, and strengthens the greater community, because now you have more American marriages, you have people with stronger financial stability and you have trades, people married to women of education, and you begin to recreate communities like what Auburn Avenue was, where Edgewood was. I believe you can do this from the executive order, because the money that Ford funds down from the fairs Through the states to help mothers, then it can be attached to where, not only helping mothers but helping fathers too. If a boy gets a woman pregnant, not only does she receive tanner I see your face, you're right good idea.

Speaker 8:

If a woman receives tanner, she receives this. The boy now has a must. You're federally required now to go to trade school and in those two years, what you put out on the other side Is a person who's those trade, a person who has incentive to marry and a person who becomes a taxpayer and not just a taker of tax.

Speaker 1:

I feel, like he needs to continue on with like what the woman would get and child care and the incentive to keep the child and not abort that shit.

Speaker 2:

Well, that was going to be. My thing is this If you to end all this, to not even get into this discussion and again being in a state that's in the south, where they're trying to limit this, safe, free, knowledgeable abortions, ends all that.

Speaker 1:

Like like what we were talking about before Knowledge, sexual health knowledge, comprehensive sexual health knowledge, and then yeah, the option to choose. Yeah, that's it. The, the, the. All of this is not going to be necessary If there's safe, free abortions.

Speaker 2:

Like you just kind of get all that taken out of the way. Like again, the Teenage pregnancy rate is low and then, when you really think about it, there's studies that show that teenage girls are not sleeping with their teenage boys, Like they're sleeping with older men, which is problematic in and of itself.

Speaker 1:

But yeah, so teenage pregnancies, the.

Speaker 2:

I'm a rare occurrence.

Speaker 1:

Are usually like older, yeah, ooh.

Speaker 2:

I'm a rare occurrence when it comes to that. Yeah, there was an article I read about that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there was an article. I did not know that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, when the people were sending like talking about this, might put an article about that when they were saying, like Girls were having twice as more sex in high school or whatever, than the guys, and it just kind of led to the Wait.

Speaker 1:

So the girls are having more sex than the guys in high school.

Speaker 2:

And they started having sex younger, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Oh, so ooh.

Speaker 2:

Like the article was talking about. We're saying they started to have sex younger, they were having sex more frequently and you can kind of put pieces together that they're sleeping with older guys.

Speaker 1:

Oh wow, that is very interesting, I'm pretty sure that's more common than you know.

Speaker 2:

People would want to believe.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like I said, cause I definitely don't want to believe that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, my teenage story. We were three months apart, so like that's very. I think that's probably rare than most people would think. Yeah. And then how common it you know, like not everybody, not like 16 and pregnant, where they just showed everybody they was all kids Like nah these be nasty men involved with these girls.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, my high school had Alarming amount of teenage pregnancies. But also my high school was huge, so it was. I don't know how Racial-wise that would work out, but there was so many pregnant girls in my school, bro, so many.

Speaker 2:

But our graduating class was also 1,400 people, so I feel like it feels like it's a lot when you're younger cause you're like so you're a kid and you're not used to seeing that. But I think when you actually do that math on it, they weren't as many as you, percentage-wise, as you would think.

Speaker 1:

Maybe not, but it was like y'all are.

Speaker 2:

They getting, yeah, folks was getting busy. Y'all are getting down, a lot of folks is. He's getting a lot of heck, you know, for you know a lot of his opinions. I told you this is what was going on. This is why he did the arrest thing, because he getting held, for you know His opinions. He was talking about it. I remember he had a conversation with what's the Republican camp. He was having conversations with camp Again man.

Speaker 1:

Ooh, they said, teen pregnancy has gone down 77% in the past 20 years it's only been, it's been becoming Less and less and less of a problem.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that just showed you how dumb I was. But you are the dumb kids. But yeah, like the numbers is staggering, you're going down where you have so much more access To birth control and things of that nature. Like it just goes down down.

Speaker 1:

That's what happens. We love that for us.

Speaker 2:

But I mean, I mean, let's just kind of wrap this subject up with it, but I just seen that, like killer Mike is going to he's going to have to do a lot of cleaning up In regards to the community, because I just see where it shows a lot of Trader-like behavior. Man, I said the same thing about him supporting, you know, atlanta PD and shit Like again.

Speaker 1:

How could you support Atlanta PD? After, like all, of the rhetoric that you've been Spewing for.

Speaker 2:

Also a lot of people noted too. This was like some slavery type shit you trying to get niggas in trades and stuff to work Like. I get what people were trying to say. I just hate that they're trying to use trades Like that's a bad option. That was my only problem. I don't want to see it like it's a bad option For what people need to do, for what people need to do.

Speaker 1:

Like you know, I'm not going to be a mandatory. What kind of hands and manual labor is not?

Speaker 2:

Slavery. It doesn't always, it's not synonymous.

Speaker 1:

But when you make it mandatory, but you make it mandatory by the state. Yeah, that was the thing that I was like Very iffy about in his In his whole speech, because if you want to opt out of that, is there a punishment in this system.

Speaker 2:

Those are the questions that I would ask him about this.

Speaker 1:

You want to throw niggas in jail.

Speaker 2:

Like that's the shit they be on man. This is what it is. It always bothers me this brand of black man Because, instead of wanting to incentivize things More so, they want to control. They want to put you in positions where they control your behavior, control who you are, control your outcome, instead of actually giving you opportunities and information and doing the work so that you can make the best decision.

Speaker 1:

I think instead of saying the word mandate or require or any of that verbiage at all, then he should have used and Sentify only and that's it, and then it would have been a completely different conversation. Because if that was the case, if you're offering free trade school to Young people who are having children, and then period, that's it. That's amazing.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean it's just a lot of different things that can be pulled out from it and there's a lot of good stuff that should be addressed. But again we get these guys that are Obsessed with these right wing, you know, talking points. And then we have this guy who's Pretty well off for what he does and you know, again he it tends to make you look like you seem Everybody around you has the help and the work when you try to encourage that. So I get. That's why a lot of people are a little off, put by it, and it just seems like you rather not address the real issues that's going on. Instead, instead, you rather try to enforce whatever ideology you can and create this nuclear family. You know logic that you know people perceive.

Speaker 1:

It's a really pretty bandaid yeah for the most part.

Speaker 2:

It looks nice, but in the same thing, it's like what stops people saying what stops the guy from Having multiple children and going around? Things of that nature, like what things of that nature? But it's like it's supposed to be a woman, like you're supposed to be the one stopping yourself from.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you need to provide the woman with options so that she cannot do this.

Speaker 2:

If she doesn't want to do this, well, I was just saying being the second, third and fourth woman, that's on her to not make her that Alright man. So we got to get into, Want to get into. Love is Blind now, or?

Speaker 2:

Well hold on. We did have that other story Speaking of the traits. We're kind of messed up for that other lady. So there was a woman what state was that was she in? You had the article right. Yes, so there was a lady who she posted a video on Tiktok when she was trying to, you know, teach her daughter a treat In the cosmetology field is what you would call this right.

Speaker 1:

Yes, it's like esthetician, so cosmetology.

Speaker 2:

So she was like well, this girl was like seven, eight, Right young girl.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she's super young, she had this girl waxing pussy. She's five years old her daughter. Oh shit. So the mother of Tennessee the mom was a, so she posted a video of her daughter doing Brazilian waxes, and the daughter is five years old. I don't even know how a five-year-old has the strength to wax in the first place.

Speaker 2:

Cos I'm hair, because y'all ladies in there, y'all know them hairs is deep. You gotta get a good tug in that Lil' Shawty. She ain't tugging that.

Speaker 1:

So that was wild, but I assume it was around Valentine's Day. And then, like as a woman, when you walk into a waxing studio and then like there's a five-year-old doing your wax, like I don't care how desperate I am or what date, like what I have coming up, I'm leaving. I'm leaving immediately because that's creepy as hell. I'm not gonna let a five-year-old wax my pussy. That is wild.

Speaker 2:

And I and I again, I understand that, but I feel like and maybe this is just my weird thought about it I just feel like we were too much in the conversation. People were sexualizing just her being naked in front of the girl, and it's like again, I understand it can't be inappropriate. People can have their thoughts on it, but when we really kind of just dial back what we're talking about here and see like somebody being naked isn't inherently sexual, you know, it's not inherently. Like new beaches aren't fuckfesses, they're people just naked in a particular area.

Speaker 1:

They are actually very nice communities. Can I tell a really quick story? Sure, I went to a nude beach. I think it was in Heist.

Speaker 1:

I went to a nude beach in high school because they have one on Long Island. So I go there with my friends, right, and then we're just like topless. But then, like this, um, this old white, these two old white men like come up to us and then they're like hey, I've never seen you here before Because apparently this is a community of people. So the same people go to this nude beach all the time. They're nudists. This is the only place that they can like really do their thing. So they all know each other. They immediately knew we were new, plus, we're black. So, um, they come up to us and they're like, if anybody gives you any problems, they point like right up the hill. The cops were right there. They were like police are right there, you can also grab us, let us know if you need anything and just walk away. And it was a great experience. They were like we come here all the time, we're always together, just if you need anything, just let us know. And it was really like non-creepy in general, very safe.

Speaker 2:

Now I mean, that's kind of like a big part of it when you have a real healthy community like that. It's making sure everybody feels safe and knows where the safety words are and where the safety people are. But it's not like a sexual environment in a lot of those situations.

Speaker 1:

Not one bit.

Speaker 2:

And we have this culture, especially in America, where we sexualize naked bodies, we sexualize breastfeeding and all that stuff, and it's like I don't think she should go to jail for like anything like sexual or mistreatment of a child or like anything crazy like that, like she was teaching them a trade that just so happened to do with your body and like it's just like to have a five-year-old specifically doing that is just like a little weird, like why do you have your five-year-old doing that with you?

Speaker 1:

And then she said that it was like a lot of women and she made over $700, each waxes like $40. So how long did you have your child working doing that for that long?

Speaker 2:

Like I understand child labor laws, like I'm cool with that, like we can talk about that discussion Because Lil Sharding need to get paid for her money, like I'm with that.

Speaker 1:

But I just don't feel like the conversation of like oh, this is disgusting and gross and like to me, I just I want to move to a world where we pass that like so the Tennessee police, when this came out, put something on I think it was Twitter, but they issued a statement saying that, like anybody that has this footage, Anybody that shares this footage is going to be investigated because you are in possession of child pornography.

Speaker 2:

That's correct, that's what I'm saying. Like that should not be CP at all. That should not be any kind of CP at all. Like it's a part of the human body, yo Like.

Speaker 1:

So I guess, like I said, maybe it's just like video of a child being near a new body, but context doesn't matter, but then like there's no context to be had with it.

Speaker 2:

You know, I'm saying like I. Just feel like it we. It's a weird situation, it is definitely weird, but it's because we tab make sex so taboo. We make it so like this weird thing, especially now, I feel like we're going like backwards in time With everything. We how me, like we got the AI now dressing up the women, so I mean it just seems like man. It's just crazy. All right, man, let's get to the love is blind.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so the woman was arrested and she was arrested for child neglect and child abuse, so she wasn't a charged with any like CP or anything.

Speaker 2:

Well, I mean the the abuse is enough for that, yeah.

Speaker 1:

It's not looking good for her, but she is in jail and she deleted her Instagram and she deleted the video after that, but it was too late. She in jail.

Speaker 2:

See now kind of makes me think about this other dude have you seen? And then we can get to. Love is blind real quick. It's the emerging. It's like an emerging King, do what is his name. He's also been a dude who's been like having the videos where he's showing the kids how to change the oil. You see those videos.

Speaker 2:

I have he's been getting a lot of flak too because he did a Teaching the kids how to talk to the police video and in the video he was on that.

Speaker 2:

Yes, I'm ball shit. You know how to talk to the officer, you know, and he had a black officer in the video stuff with him. And again, I know people like him again have good intentions when it comes to like talking to the kids and explaining, but what you fail to realize is the problem is Directed at the police because they're the, the ones with the job, they're the ones who took the oath, so their conversation with us should be more of a discussion, then, how our conversation goes with them. So that's why people were saying you should be teaching them. Yes, they should know they rights. They need to make sure police officers and trying to lie on them because that you could this. They could told them to open up all they windows. The police can throw something in your car if you open up all your windows like that, like you. What the shit that he was saying to do to try to make the police comfortable, if he had bad intentions, could set up the kid.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it could put you in a compromising position if you're, like willing to bend over like that, like.

Speaker 2:

I understand, like you, you trying your way, thinking you saving kids from A bad experience with the officer by complying, but at the same token, the problem with the police is not us complying. It is them overstepping their bounds and Taking people's lives, when they are not executioners, they are just people who are to enforce the law. And that's where people, guys like that and again it's this kind of just some eyes is everything that we're talking about, where just people just don't understand like the systematic things have to be addressed If you want anything to change, because all you're doing is just basically being a bully, because you're just picking on people who are affected by assist Because you afford, because fortunately you weren't. But, uh, appreciate that, all right, let's get into the good stuff. Love is blind.

Speaker 1:

Let's get into the messy shit. So love is blind. Season six is out. The Lachey's are at it again. I don't know how Netflix keeps let well.

Speaker 1:

Netflix keeps letting them do this because they rack it in the money and we keep watching. So let's just shut up and get into it. The cast this season. I'm just gonna read through it really quickly and then we'll get into the first six episodes. So the first six episodes drop as of now. When you're seeing it, the next three episodes have dropped, so we're up to episode nine now. All right, so the women Brittany, alejandra, amber, desire oh, that's her name, ad, and her name was Amber desire, but AD Mackenzie, amy C, sarah Ann, danette Suni, laura, jessica, danielle, chelsea, amy, amber, ashley. Those are the women. And then, for the men, we have Kenneth, matthew, austin, jamal, jimmy, vince clay, nolan, trevor, drake, ariel is that a man? I don't know, we didn't even see him. No camera time Jeremy, dion, ben and Johnny. So the first episode, of course, starts with the the Lachey's coming into Both the men's and women's quarters and is he still wearing platform shoes?

Speaker 2:

Probably did they look like they were the same height?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, they did.

Speaker 2:

Oh, he's still doing. That's a nasty little man, you're nasty, you're sick.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Nick Lachey apparently wears platform shoes when he's filming. Love is blind because he's shorter than Vanessa.

Speaker 2:

You're a nasty man, nicholas.

Speaker 1:

You just embrace your height and be a short king, like we're definitely gonna judge you. I was gonna say we're not gonna judge you, but we're gonna judge you. Everybody hates short men. Continuing.

Speaker 2:

When you're such an agent of chaos right, like he'd be like in.

Speaker 1:

Of course, I'm Nick Lachey. What do you mean? Of course, who are you? Who are you?

Speaker 2:

I missed his his reality show. Yeah, with Jessica Simmson. Check when I chicken up it's tuna chicken of the sea is tuna.

Speaker 1:

I was gonna say that's the only thing I can think about when I think of that show is her thinking that Chicken of the sea was chicken and I can like girl. Okay. So episode one we're gonna go buy episode and then we're just gonna really quickly talk about what we cared about in each episode. I'm gonna skip over a lot of things, because a lot of things happen and I don't care about a lot of these people. So the first thing that stuck out to me the most in episode one was Matthew, my man rhetoric loves Matthew for some reason, but that's because they're both psychopaths, so yo.

Speaker 1:

He came in with a plan he executed so Matthew is Shown with a list of questions that he pre-prepared that he's asking women. When women ask him the question back he's turned off. He's like oh, I know that you were gonna ask me questions too. I thought I was just gonna be asking you questions. And then he's also shown just like getting up and walking out while women are talking, if he doesn't like their answers keeping it a being.

Speaker 2:

we we not all your time we on my man immediately.

Speaker 1:

I'm like does Matthew know how to talk to other humans?

Speaker 2:

Oh, but does he?

Speaker 1:

because how did you not know that probably these women would be asking you and and you, that's a regular human conversation thing and then tell me what your opinion is about the same thing you just asked me you know, I think about yourself in this matter.

Speaker 2:

I'll be. I'm beyond. I think that was a little bit editing. I think there was some editing to do with that. That wasn't all Making him look like fucking Dexter, like they really. At the beginning they had that man looking like a straight. He was trying to put somebody in the fridge.

Speaker 1:

Matthew was literally looking like a psychopath. He did come out in the love is blind comments on Instagram and said that he did not walk out while any woman was talking and that was all editing. He said that they're making him, they're trying to make him look like a terrible guy and he didn't actually do that. Like he said, he didn't get up and walk out on anybody.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I said it looked like it was editing the way they did that.

Speaker 1:

But then the women were, there was. There were some women that were like hello.

Speaker 2:

There was that one. Yeah but that could have been just him being quiet for a second and not responding, and then, he's mad awkward.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so like.

Speaker 2:

I can say anything you could. With editing. You can make anything look like you want. Yeah any kind of conversation you can put people's words in front of them that they didn't say in order so I could tell with him. It was a lot of editing, but I like the kind of what they was trying to do with it like.

Speaker 1:

I might be a dick, he might not, but he definitely Doesn't know how to interact with people. Because he definitely was like well, I didn't think you were gonna ask me back that question. What do you mean?

Speaker 2:

Well, I mean that nigga did look. They played my man to make him look real sinister at the end, but we'll get there.

Speaker 1:

We will get there. So then I'm Matthew and a D make a connection after we're shown that he's just being a menace in these pods. So it's like a little surprising. And she's black and I'm like does he know she's black the whole time, throughout the threat of them interacting in the pods? I'm like does he know she's black?

Speaker 2:

So because he from the sticks, like he from real country, town, what Midwest man.

Speaker 1:

Then a, d and clay make a, make a connection. Clay is a black man. He's like a very like smooth type player, like he's a real, real, chinky type.

Speaker 1:

He's a prototype that we all know as a black man, you know. So, oh, let's go back to Matthew really quickly, because he seems like he hates every woman but his woman. Like after he makes the connection with a D, I'm like, okay, I like this. He seems like he's gonna be like super loyal because he hates everyone but her. But We'll get there when we get there. It was not, I was wrong, I was wrong. So then I'm clay and a D make a connection. Clay admits to like having a big ego, being like this, like machismo type guy Like he admits to being that. He admits to relying on his looks a lot and he also says that he's like worried about how he will be able to make a connection in the pods because they don't know. He's fine.

Speaker 2:

He definitely look like. He definitely look like a change in Tupac or like one person.

Speaker 1:

Mm-hmm, but taller.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, well, let's let their heights kind of balance each other, you know, give each other. But that's what he looks like a little bit.

Speaker 6:

You know he was on, he was right and when he, when he.

Speaker 2:

When he found out about Matt, he was tight.

Speaker 1:

So we'll get there when we get there.

Speaker 1:

That's not this episode Slow down. So that's the first love triangle is clay, matthew and ad. But only ad knows at this point that's that they're in a love triangle. The next Love square this is a mess.

Speaker 1:

So this is Trevor and Chelsea, chelsea and Jimmy, jimmy and Jessica, right, so they all make connections within the the first episode, jessica, eventually in the in the beginning, she says that she's not gonna tell every the men that she immediately she has a child.

Speaker 1:

She eventually tells Jimmy that she has a child and then he's like, oh, like he doesn't take it too too well, but he doesn't Let her know that it's like a deal-breaker for him, which I feel like. Let me know what you think about this and let me know what you guys think about this too, because I feel like Jessica should have. I don't think that was a good plan to have. You should, within the first dates, let these men know that you have a child, because he was like afraid to then tell you that it was a deal-breaker and like, after the fact, you need to like I think you should lead with that, because Jimmy wasted your time for a long, for mad, long before you told him that you had a child. If you told him that you had a child, he probably would have not talked to you and you probably would have been Freed up to make genuine connections, and it would have probably ended different for you.

Speaker 2:

I think she just had an authentic fear of tell they can't see her because, if we're being honest, she probably one of the most attractive women.

Speaker 1:

She is attractive like it made sense why she had a kid her and ad are the most attractive women on this season, definitely, I think. But yeah, she, she can't rely on her looks at all.

Speaker 2:

So so there's a there's a lot of guys who would. When she told him she would have a kid in a normal dating scene, would probably let it Ride because of her overall attractiveness. But in this situation I can understand why you don't throw that out off jump, because that is gonna throw the person off. But anytime you really reveal that information, it's going to throw the person off.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, no matter what does say that her daughter is 10 years old it's not like she has like a baby and then she says that her and her, her baby daddy, have an amazing co-parenting relationship. He's in her life, they're fine. They're not together anymore. They haven't been together. They weren't together after, like her, being like a year old, so it's been a very long time in their own good terms now.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean again, it's still gonna be a difficult situation. It's a hard sell, but especially over just the the talking. It's definitely gonna be hard.

Speaker 1:

Let us know what you guys think, though, because I do think that she should have Revealed that a little bit sooner than she did reveal it, maybe not in the first date, but maybe in the second date, like I don't. I don't know, but um.

Speaker 2:

She didn't want the scarlet letter, babe, she didn't want the scarlet letter.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, immediately after that, chelsea tells Jimmy that she's been Married before. She was married for five years. She was married very young and then they grew apart and got divorced. He she seems to not take his reaction well, but his reaction is like damn, like I'm being piled on like y'all this is this a lot Coming from me from a bunch of different ways. But he does tell her like out of all the news that I got, this is the lightest news. So I'm not even like it's not even that big of a deal.

Speaker 2:

So it was. She didn't take it like that but she didn't. She starts crying like boo, who in like all the way Through the whole girl quarters.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, these people are constantly drunken, underfed. So, like Context and understanding and communication, I don't think is the best. So I don't know if love is blind as a concept is the best thing and I think there might be these people.

Speaker 2:

I think there might be, like, maybe some muffling through the the speakers to for hearing each other, because clearly the Communication just don't become a clear, do, sometimes, I think, a little choppy.

Speaker 1:

We'll get there, but I think that's just Chelsea. So Events during the first episode also clay, after they make a connection. Clay in a D he's like I need to know what you look like. I like I have a showman that person.

Speaker 1:

I have a certain standard. I need to know that you have like full lips, a little waist and a fat ass, and Then ad is like no, absolutely not. Like I could tell you that I have thick thighs, a fat ass and full lips and all that like exactly what you looking for, but like this is not what we came here for. We're supposed to fall in love, sight unseen and so that's why I was confused.

Speaker 2:

Is that not a rule? Is that not a rule where you can't Tell the person what you look like on it? Like, I feel like that's a rule.

Speaker 1:

So a lot of people past Love is blind members have come out and said that like eventually, over time, it's not like unlike People to like give like little hints about what they look like, but in general like people don't straight up like ask if you're an attractive person, like Everybody's gonna say yeah you can't just ask that that's, that's wild everybody's gonna say yeah. Yeah, so Matthew. After that, Matthew asks ad about her father.

Speaker 2:

Can I go back to clay real quick? Yeah, do you think she's what he was looking for? I?

Speaker 1:

Think she is Half of what she was looking for.

Speaker 2:

I think, I think, I think, yeah, I think, if we were like out of ten, she's probably like six or five or six of what he was looking for.

Speaker 1:

I would, I would, yeah, I would say like six, seven okay. Yeah, so We'll get there too. So next, matthew asks ad about her father and like if he would have how he would like to go about Asking for her hand in marriage. She says that her father is dead. Instead of consoling her about that, he's like well, that's a roadblock I'm not gonna have to deal with. Excuse me.

Speaker 2:

I think he said, I think that was just taken out of context.

Speaker 1:

Excuse me, but she did say that, like she, like, even if he was alive, like that's not something that you would have to do, because I'm not close to my father at all.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, she laughed at all.

Speaker 1:

So she was like yeah, fuck that nigga. Honestly, yeah it is.

Speaker 2:

But I'm gonna hate us easy.

Speaker 1:

We don't know what her Deal is with her dad, so stop being such a man. I Was writing for other men, immediately writing for other men.

Speaker 2:

You want me to grab my, my bundle of sticks and break my hand?

Speaker 1:

Don't do that, cuz I'm not a dumb woman. I Not dumb, okay. So After Matthew says that ad, goes back into the woman's quarters and here's Amber. Apparently, matthew has made another connection with another human woman. Whoa, I was shocked. I was like another woman can stand Matthew.

Speaker 2:

I could tell the game was was was laying on thick with him like what?

Speaker 1:

so this woman says Amber says that like Matthew, like, asked him, her to leave with him and everything. So ad keeps what Matthew told her to herself and Speaks to Matthew first about it. So that's how the first episode ends.

Speaker 2:

That would have been my mood too, though, but I was mad like cuz. He even said he's not trying to be no celebrity out of this, he's trying to get his woman to go home.

Speaker 1:

He did say that he was like I'm not here for camera time.

Speaker 2:

So I feel him like that would have been my baby let's go out of. Did that, I'd have told like five woman women in the same night. Let's just leave right now. Together, we, we meant to be with each other. Okay, Okay we can start our own show.

Speaker 1:

That's crazy. That would be a terrible way to go about it, because the women in the their quarters are all gonna talk about it together, and then you're gonna be man. Oh my goodness, you're gonna be in outs with all of the women.

Speaker 2:

I need you to do this one thing for me, baby. I Need to know that you for real for me. I need you to keep a secret, but I want you. And then that's how I know you not the one. And then I'm gonna tell you what. I would never say that to her, just like how he did. This nigga just lied about everything to do?

Speaker 1:

is one of them, to be like this nigga said this and then all of them are gonna realize no, no, it's not cuz all you.

Speaker 2:

All you need is one of them to make them other ones. They, they are just some awesome bullshit. That's all it takes one. That's all they need in this specific situation.

Speaker 1:

If a woman is in the woman's quarters and she's yelling Excited to her friends, talk about the same thing that you said to four other women. That's not gonna go well with you and you're delusional if you think that's gonna go well and work for Matt. We've seen it.

Speaker 2:

It didn't we don't know. We don't know.

Speaker 1:

Matt is in the comments Furiously typing away Matt as hell right now.

Speaker 2:

I thought he went with shawty dog. I found shawty.

Speaker 1:

We don't know that.

Speaker 2:

Matt found shawty dog. Matt was like he was not happy with Matt was planting the seeds yo so. Talk about it episode two.

Speaker 1:

There's another love triangle. I don't care about these people. There's a love triangle between Jeremy, sarah and Laura Moving on a, b confronts Matthew. So she, she, um, she's like. You told Amber that you wanted to leave with her and you basically told her verbatim what you told me. And that makes it less special to me, because I went there on cloud nine and then I immediately got knocked off Because I heard her talking about you telling her that you wanted to leave with her. He goes. I didn't tell her exactly.

Speaker 2:

What I told you talk about it.

Speaker 1:

Samantics. Matthew is very much like a master manipulator, I think so. He was like.

Speaker 2:

I don't like that for Amy.

Speaker 1:

He was like I didn't tell her exactly what I said about you. I said this specific thing to you that was different than what I said to her, which is about his mom. Huh.

Speaker 2:

He said he told he didn't tell her about, he didn't tell his mom about her.

Speaker 1:

Yes, Like like she would love you in this and that it was like one specific thing, but all of the other things that they eventually discuss, he told them both so um. And then he also goes While he's talking to her and he's like I'd choose you right now, today, and ask you to leave with me, but I'm not choosing today, so stick with me, I'm gonna choose tomorrow.

Speaker 2:

I think I have motion that nigga had motion.

Speaker 1:

Because if, if, if you are correct and you didn't tell me the same things that you told her and you feel stronger for me, why do you need more time to pick? Because if I told you I wanted to leave with you today, then you would be like, oh, give me one more day that's not giving me. I'm your bitch energy period that's giving me you. You need more time to mull over your other option, which it's fine for you to have, another option, 100%.

Speaker 2:

I need to tell other shortie I about it no I need other shortie know that I'm about to leave and she got an option to lead to Gotta. Let him know. Okay we live in tonight after.

Speaker 1:

After that conversation, ad and clay talk again. So clay like Apologizes for hold on, did we?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we didn't go into the, the deep into there. Why he's apologizing. To remember, he went off on a when she told no no, no, so we didn't get to this yet.

Speaker 1:

Clay apologizes this time in the beginning of their conversation for asking her what she looks like, and then they get past that. So then, after they get past that, a details clay that she has made another connection and he's not the only person that she's talking to, and the other connection that she has made is with Matthew. Clay goes off after he already apologizes to her about the whole. What like, do you have a fat ass like? After he apologizes about that, she's like okay, we got past that. But yes, I have another person and he's like pacing around.

Speaker 2:

But he knew who it was, though.

Speaker 1:

That's why she she tells him yeah that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

But he knew who bro was. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

So Clay, obviously and he says this he doesn't feel like Matthew is somebody that he should be in competition with. He's like this is a man that is subpar, like there's other people that when he's in the men's quarters he's talking about it to some guy. I don't remember which guy he's talking to, but he's like if it was you then I'd be okay with it, but Matthew that was kind of wild.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, if she was into you like I could understand.

Speaker 1:

But this guy. Yeah, that was a little weird.

Speaker 2:

You wanted to spit on your hand and Jack and Clay relax.

Speaker 1:

But Matthew, like in the men's quarters they show him like not even talking to anybody, like he's very much like an anti social kind of guy. Matthew, you should not have been on the show. You should have went on like married at first sight where, like they, they give you a survey of like who you are and they ask you questions and then they mass you to a specific, to a specific person, and then you only have to deal with that person. It's the social thing has is not for you like, you're not a social person and that's okay. But this show you should not have been on the show.

Speaker 2:

I don't really watch a lot of these shows, but when I do watch them I noticed that a lot of people hold the book. He's the only one ever seen that was writing in it. Like really right now His pages was full.

Speaker 1:

He's a very analytical person.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he was definitely using that book. I can remember he forgot it and I think he's manipulative.

Speaker 1:

The man is very calculated.

Speaker 2:

I mean, that's not. I don't feel like he's not, he's not dumb. I don't like that being pictured is calculated just because I'm predicting.

Speaker 1:

It's not predicting. It's just like going out of your way to lie about something that you don't have to lie about, because in this specific situation, like we're like speed dating, we're dating multiple people, you don't have to lie to anybody and like say that you're not making a connection. You could have just been like I have a connection with somebody else and I did talk about marriage with her too, because I I can honestly see that with the both of you and I'm having trouble between picking the two of you, which is what Jimmy did.

Speaker 2:

That ain't how you do it, bro, like you ain't no man, so you don't get it.

Speaker 1:

But Jimmy ended up like engaged with somebody and Matthew didn't. So that because.

Speaker 2:

Matthew left.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but Matthew wouldn't end up engaged because because Matthew, okay, so Matthew A D, let's get, let's get to that. So A D and Amber finally talk, they like exchange notes, they finally have their like girly talk, and Matthew was definitely telling Amber the same things that he was telling you was getting his shit off. Yeah, like when they finally exchange notes, he's like yeah, she asked, he asked about my father, he told me he wanted to leave with me, like saying he did the whole.

Speaker 2:

I want to ask for his hand in the marriage.

Speaker 1:

Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom like.

Speaker 2:

I rock with it.

Speaker 1:

It's very crazy, and that's how episode oh what? So episode two ends with Amber leaving. She's like I'm done with this, I'm leaving. So let's move on to episode three. Johnny and Amy meet. They got engaged, so this is a couple. Moving on, there's lots of people that I really like don't care too too much about. Clay is crying in the men's quarters over like a D in the entire situation because he feels like he shouldn't be in competition with Matthew. He goes into the pods, talks to a D and then he like loosely apologizes for his behavior the day before when he was like pacing around, yelling and upset about being in competition with another man. He's like this is what we're here for. So like I overreacted.

Speaker 2:

I think that he kind of just realized how weird he was sounding. Yeah, you sounding like a little cigarette, my guy.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and then he opens up. He's like I cried this morning and then a D being the and she calls herself this being the fixer hoe that she, she is. She's like so touched about the fact that like he cried over her this morning, so like they back locked in after that, when he like barely apologizes to her.

Speaker 2:

Can I, can I just say something about what I had an issue with there, this kind of little love triangle, because what it was when she was madly in love with this white man and when he pulled the wolf from over eyes, then she went back to the black man. I didn't like it made me feel sick to my stomach.

Speaker 1:

She, I think. But she was leaning more towards Matthew because Clay had asked her what he looked, what she looked like.

Speaker 2:

She had already experienced that kind of clay energy before she knew what it was. That was like her old thing. She was trying, but she knew that she wanted to try something different.

Speaker 1:

She. She was leaning towards Matthew because he felt like a newer energy.

Speaker 2:

Like she, knew he was a white boy.

Speaker 1:

She knew that clay was like the like stereotypical.

Speaker 2:

Let's be honest. She wanted to be a divester, she wanted to switch teams.

Speaker 1:

But before everything blew up, clay and no AD and Matthew did have a talk about like racing, everything, and he said that he didn't care about. I mean, what is he supposed to say? But you can't be like, oh, if you're black, then get the fuck out.

Speaker 2:

Could you just imagine, because you just imagine he was like ask me the question, like I just want you to know I'm black, this is pretend, you're AD and I'm Matthew.

Speaker 1:

I just want you to know that I'm a strong African American woman.

Speaker 2:

You're a what. I'm black. You're a nigger, what? That's how you want him to act. You want him to act like that On fucking cameras everywhere.

Speaker 1:

You're right, he couldn't.

Speaker 6:

You're a pic a nanny coon.

Speaker 2:

So, speaking of that perfect segue into Brittany and Kenneth, oh yeah, hold on, I'm going to get my horns out for Kenneth. My boy got him a tall glass of milk.

Speaker 1:

OK, but OK. So Brittany and Kenneth, they are like Jesus freaks. They bond over the fact that they both love God, which is basic as fuck. That's hate it's basic.

Speaker 2:

Can we just say, though, that Kenneth so many people love God. That's what else? Can we just know that Kenneth wasn't in the first two episodes except one time talking to Clay. We're just saying it.

Speaker 1:

I literally I thought that Kenneth was making no connections and we would never see him outside of the pod when I saw Kenneth, the first thing I said was oh, we ain't seen this story at all. Never. I was like we are never seeing this man speak in confessional, but apparently so. Kenneth and Brittany made a connection. Kenneth is obviously a black man. Brittany is a white woman. She talks about how she wants a very traditional marriage. She doesn't want to make any decisions she wants talk about it. She wants you to call her that.

Speaker 1:

She wants y'all to talk about. She's giving Trad wife very much.

Speaker 2:

Trad wife.

Speaker 1:

I had that in my notes so I could say it because it's a hot button word. But, damn, I lost my train of thought. She's giving that, so I don't know that's that's another. One of those situations was like does she know he's black? Does she know he's black? Do you know this is a nut? Let me, not a nigga. He did it for me. Do you know that this is a black man? She, I don't think she knows.

Speaker 2:

So now she knew, she knew he had the voice. He said I like fucking Barry White.

Speaker 1:

Kind of yeah, he does so we're going to speed past. They make a connection. Blah, blah, blah. Traditional Christian, he proposes. She says yes. Next, jess tells Jimmy that he is her number one and she's like it's okay If you're talking to other people. I want you to fully, robustly, explore those connections and if I'm the one that you end up with at the end, then that'll make me feel better about that because, like you explored and you know thoroughly that I'm the person that you want, which is like so mature. Yes, girl, I couldn't do it. Choose me, period. If there's anybody else, don't even consider me, I'm out of. I'm out of the running. If it's another bitch to run in, I'm not running. Period. But Jessica is entirely more mature than me.

Speaker 2:

Was Jessica, the one with the, with the nigga who looked like Aaron Paul.

Speaker 1:

I said Jessica is the girl with the baby.

Speaker 2:

Oh, okay, okay, got you.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. So she tells the man that that's her number one. He's like okay, not really like.

Speaker 2:

he's like yeah he's like I'm your number one, but you come with two.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, basically. So Trevor tells Chelsea that he loves her.

Speaker 1:

We love Trevor. He's such a sweetie pie, he is justice for Trevor. She goes back to the woman's quarters and like starts crying her eyes out because like, oh my God, trevor loves me, but I like Jimmy, and it's so hard to be loved so much by two men. And then this is just. This is Chelsea. So then Jessica is there, just like sitting there like this, this kind of sucks because like choose, choose, choose the man that that's in love with you because the other one I like, so it would. It would genuinely be easier that way.

Speaker 2:

I wish that's how it worked out and technically she wanted the inferior of the two men. Yes, Like.

Speaker 1:

Trevor is like stereotypically.

Speaker 2:

If you like white men, way better looking than Jimmy Trevor could do push-ups with the girl and her baby on on his back.

Speaker 1:

Trevor could bench press Jimmy, and Jimmy couldn't even like.

Speaker 2:

Trevor was the guy who bullied Jimmy in high school 1000%.

Speaker 1:

But like, physically he's the guy that bullied Jimmy in high school, but personality wise that was his best friend in high school.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he would definitely give a very sweet guy. He would like help the kids bully him and then afterwards like I'm sorry, bro, I help him clean them all.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so that's the end of episode three. Episode four Jess gives Jimmy a letter that she wrote to her future husband, mad Longgo. She gives that to him. Girl, you should have kept that for like wedding day, you know, like the gift that you give to your husband the day of your wedding, type shit, because then this is something that you wrote a long time. She makes it seem like this is something that she wrote a long time ago. You wasted that. You wasted that on Jimmy Also. Did you know that he looks like a pinkie toe?

Speaker 2:

I gave more of a big thumb.

Speaker 1:

I wouldn't even give him the big thumb. He's the pinky toe.

Speaker 2:

He definitely looked like he was. He can't be in the sun too long, though.

Speaker 1:

He yeah, the man is translucent.

Speaker 2:

And then the girl. He, oh man, did we get to the part where he made the pic?

Speaker 1:

No. So Jimmy after that is a little indirect bitch and Jess is like fed up with his shit so she's like make a decision, I'm done with this. Immediately after that he goes and tells Chelsea that he loves her After Trevor did it like the day before. So that's great. After that, laura, they go back into the women's pods. Chelsea is talking to Laura about how Jimmy just told her that he loves her. Laura, real bitch energy Go straight to Jessica and was like leave right now. Leave right now, before you look stupid, because that is not your man. He just told another girl that he loves her. That's not your man. Which love that? That's the only thing.

Speaker 2:

She could have went to Trevor.

Speaker 1:

That's. It's too late for that now. Okay, it's only 10 days. So that's the only thing that Laura really does, that up to episode six. So far that I like, because I'm not a huge fan. Laura will get into that more later. Clay and a D they got engaged. They meet. She turned around and look at this body, body, body and like he's like, yes, yes, but then he's not really like not sold on it.

Speaker 2:

She's not Okay, let's be honest. She has a nice body, but she would be, in many cases, what we would call a butter face. Okay, so now, now you doing the thing again.

Speaker 1:

I don't like when you talk about women's physical features on camera, even when I agree with you, but that's what people would label her as. Yes, yes. So I'm like the body is the selling point for a D. Physically, because stereotypically, she, she's not an ugly girl, she's not, she's not like the prettiest girl either.

Speaker 2:

I mean, like I said, it's very clear to him, to me, that the type of women that he would go for an approach for don't fall into an average looking woman, and she is slightly like, slightly slightly above average.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she is.

Speaker 2:

she is a little bit above, so she's so I can see where him we looking at that and like that's not generally his shooting point. So now he feels like, okay, I'm, I'm stepping down now. Granted, you could turn the girl around and she looks amazing from you looking at her from behind, but I mean, it may not be the same way when he's looking at her in her face.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying what. I'm just saying what the makeup face look like. Yeah, that's, that's what I got to. Honestly, you can tell when a man is like fully infatuated with a woman, like engulfed in her beauty, and that's not what Clay was giving me when he, when he saw a D, he loved her body, though he was like, yes, slamming there is. It's undeniable that like she works hard in the gym and she is it. The body is body and girl. Like I'm very jealous as far as that, like I wish I had that body.

Speaker 1:

Alright, so after they meet Jimmy and just talk one more time, where Jimmy is like beating around the bush, he's so indirect, like he is afraid of being the bad guy, he doesn't want to hurt people's feelings. So he's like beating around the bush for Mad Long and she's like just cut the shit and be direct with me, like just let me know what your, what your feelings. So he lets her know that he's going with Chelsea. And then she's like, okay, I don't like how you didn't let me know literally yesterday that you were going with Chelsea, because you knew and we all knew that he knew, because right after they talked, he went and told Chelsea that he loved her so he knew. And then she goes and when you realize what she passed up on, you're going to choke. You're going to need to EpiPen to open up your airways because of how bad you're going to be choking because she's like I know I look better than her.

Speaker 2:

I mean, but she's going to feel the same way about her two choices too. So that was the funny part where it's like, yeah, everything you said about him.

Speaker 1:

But her, she wasn't talking to Trevor like that.

Speaker 2:

But I'm saying, trevor was into her and she chose the no, trevor was not into her.

Speaker 1:

Oh, he was in a Chelsea, yes.

Speaker 2:

Oh shit, oh shit, trevor, you psyched out.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Jessica was the only connection that Jessica had was with Jimmy.

Speaker 2:

Okay, I thought she and I, for some reason, I was to be.

Speaker 1:

I thought no, we had to we wish that, that Jessica and Trevor they would have been.

Speaker 2:

They would have been, they would have won.

Speaker 1:

They were, they would have been the most attractive couple.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they would have stayed on, whatever people would have wanted to see them 100 that's like would have went up and only for Trevor that could have been a $25 99 only fans.

Speaker 1:

Alrighty, so Episode 5 is next. We see Chelsea and Jimmy getting gauged. Trevor is sad about it, but he's like super mature about it. Jeremy and Sarah breakup. He proposed it to Laura, another group of people that we don't care about. Jimmy proposes to Chelsea, and so they finally meet.

Speaker 2:

And then see the what let me, let me, let me, because you didn't say something she said in the past.

Speaker 1:

Let me do this right now. So in the pods, chelsea gave Jimmy a hint about what she looked like. She said other people like I want to let y'all know. She said other people tell me I look like this celebrity, but I don't see it. I don't see it. That's what she said. And then she's like blue eyes, dark hair and he's like Megan Fox and she's like yeah, he's like you look like Megan Fox. And I do think that was a defining factor in why Jimmy ended up choosing Chelsea over Jessica.

Speaker 2:

And the crazy thing is, other girl looks way closer.

Speaker 1:

Prototype. Wise, she does look, she does fit in that box more, but Chelsea she looked like Megan Fox right now. Chelsea in certain angles, like I could see it. I don't know, you can't see it, I could see it man.

Speaker 2:

She looked like Amy Schumer.

Speaker 1:

She got a really sharp chin.

Speaker 2:

Let's keep it a being.

Speaker 1:

She has a very sharp chin but she does have those like piercing blue eyes and I did see somebody post her from like the eyes up on Tiktok, and people were guessing Megan.

Speaker 2:

Fox. Somebody did say, jessica. They did say, if you put your thumb, if you put your thumb over her chin and look at it, you could, you could see Megan Fox.

Speaker 1:

She does give Megan Fox a little bit. They meet. Jimmy goes to the confessional. First of all he accidentally says Jessica's name when he's talking about being engaged to Chelsea and then he's like, straight up, she lied to me about looking like Megan Fox, but we can make it work. They just talk about what I look like I never want. We can make it work to be what he, what he ends up like saying so really quickly the coupleings right are because everyone is like has proposed at this point Jimmy and Chelsea, brittany and Kenneth, jeremy and lawyer Laura, laura, clay and a D, johnny and Amy. We talked about Johnny and Amy that much at all. We don't care about them too much, but they're super cute.

Speaker 2:

Was that the one with the beaning thing you said?

Speaker 1:

that was the like kind of like. She's the Puerto Rican girl with the.

Speaker 2:

Irish white boy. Yeah, that's the Aaron Paul looking guy.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, the end of episode five, the honeymoon start and Jimmy is in there with Chelsea talking about like how hard it was. But choosing between her and Chelsea, which is like not how you want to start your honeymoon, sir, that's not great. Why would you start it like that, like could have been somebody else whole time?

Speaker 2:

My boy is supposed to be somebody else. My boy is looking regret right now, boss, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he really is, and it's hard to watch because you can tell that.

Speaker 2:

Does he know what Jessica looks like? No, oh, that's good yeah.

Speaker 1:

You could tell that Chelsea is like feeling it from him, but she's trying to like stick it out a little bit.

Speaker 2:

I don't know it's like one of those experiences for guys that are listening to, the three guys that are going to watch this video. It's like when you talk to the girl and she like show you just pictures of just the neck up and she got a nice looking little she. You know I'm saying. And then you get there and she takes up two seats. You know I shit.

Speaker 1:

Coming out to a fat woman. Yeah, it's making me uncomfortable, even though I've never been fat.

Speaker 2:

This nigga right here. I thought you was my rider.

Speaker 1:

I am your rider. I don't want you to get canceled. I'm going to stop you before you get there. That's the difference, okay, so episode 6, ad and Clay talk. They're like on the beach. They talk about if her body changes, like she's talking about inevitably her body is changing because she wants to have children and she's like how do you feel about that? Because she knows I feel like in her subconscious, she knows that clay is like the thing that he likes the most is her body and not her face, because it's probably the experience that she has on a regular basis.

Speaker 2:

And Clay hasn't seen her mama yet, so you don't know what you're getting into.

Speaker 1:

Oh my God. So Clay is like I'm going to tell you to get in that gym bitch. Essentially like I'm paraphrasing, but that's essentially what he tells me. He's like I'm going to tell you immediately to get in that gym and lose that baby fat Fuck you talk about. That's unacceptable for you to be fat.

Speaker 2:

I'm pretty sure it was more in line of hey, I'm going to be with you and we're going to motivate you so that you can have that.

Speaker 1:

That's after. She's like taking a back. That's the second.

Speaker 2:

That was the cleanup.

Speaker 1:

That was the cleanup, but he was literally. He goes. I'm going to tell you to get in that gym and get to work.

Speaker 2:

Motivation.

Speaker 1:

Like that's what he said.

Speaker 2:

It's motivation.

Speaker 1:

Like what. And then so everyone meets in this episode, all the couples that have coupled, everyone is seeing each other, everyone's seeing the people they could have potentially dated. I don't know who talked to who. So the thing in this there's two things in this episode that I want to talk about.

Speaker 1:

First, jimmy and Chelsea are standing there. He looks over a day. He's like damn, she's stacked. Which she is, bro, that ass is crazy. But then Chelsea is obviously like very uncomfortable with it and she tries to make light of the situation. 80 is right there and she's like yeah, she is 80, let us know how you get your body like that, like Jimmy just said, just said you stacked and 80 is like squats and Jesus. Girl just squats and Jesus like that's literally what she says. And then you could like 80 is like a little bit about it. So Jimmy is like damn, why did you like yell that out to her like that, like you weren't supposed to do that. Now I'm more uncomfortable. And then he goes to 80 and has like what? Editing makes it seem like a 20 minute to half an hour conversation with 80, while Chelsea just gets increasingly uncomfortable and just like walks away.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, whoever does the editing, we want to look up the company's name so we can shot y'all in the next time we talk about y'all. Y'all do a great job of selling whatever little lie y'all trying to build. Y'all do a great job of selling that shit. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

So that situation was extremely awkward to watch. And then so the next thing, he and Kenneth talk about the fact that he is dating the first white woman he's ever dated in his life. Shout out to the milk man.

Speaker 1:

Do you think Brittany is ready to raise black children? So they have this conversation about like the nuances of, like interracial dating and it's a very healthy. It's a very healthy conversation and there have been interracial couplings on love is blind before, but this conversation of this, this caliber has never been had before. So I like that. They included this and it wasn't like her hate in or anything like that, it was just a healthy conversation, so I like it. So the next thing I want to talk about is this bean dip scenario. So Jeremy is sitting there with Clay and he's like oh, clay and a D, I think. And he's like oh, laura told me to bean dip you. So I don't think Jeremy knows what bean dip means at this point when he tells Clay this, but bean dip, so a D is like bean dip is like a titty smack, like like that, like a to both the titties.

Speaker 1:

And then Jeremy is like, yeah, she told me to do that to you. So then I'm like this white woman told you to smack this black woman's titties and you're the body is crazy. And I feel like she was like sexualizing and making a joke out of this black woman in her body by telling her, this white man, to smack her titties. Like that's what I took it as, honestly. So Clay doesn't take it well, well, so what was that we talked about?

Speaker 2:

on show was the black woman that was paraded around like Europe and stuff.

Speaker 1:

Damn I forget her name.

Speaker 2:

That's what you felt like, though. Yes, that's what it was giving.

Speaker 1:

That's what it was giving to me. So I was like you cannot make a mockery of this black woman's body and just make jokes about violating it. That's not okay. So then Laura comes over and she was like, oh, it was just a joke. It was just a joke and you're making a big deal out of nothing, bitch. They're not making a big deal out of nothing. You felt comfortable enough to literally tell a man to violate another woman's body without her consent. And that's what it was.

Speaker 2:

Not just a man.

Speaker 1:

A white man. A white man. It's not to be taken lightly and I don't know how it's taken from here on out, but like I do feel like that needs to be taken more seriously, laura, and that's fucking crazy, and I'm glad that Jeremy said that. And then Clay does not take that. Well, he's like what do you mean? You told another man to smack my fiance's titties. And then she's like oh, calm down, calm down, calm down, you're taking it too seriously. And then walks away. And then she's talking to AD about it and then she's like oh, he needs to calm down. And AD is like don't fucking tell my fiance to calm down, he don't need to calm down about it, because this is crazy. And she checked her because don't tell my nigga to calm down. Like I did not like that situation.

Speaker 1:

And now Laura is genuinely my least favorite person of this season because of this specific situation and there is so much nuance that she's trying to sweep under the rug. And there's something wrong with you, bitch, for you to think that it's okay for you to tell another man to touch another woman's body jokingly. That's not a fucking joke ever. That's weird. You're a weird bitch. Done Love is blind. Episodes one through six done. The biggest thing we got from that. Laura is a weird ass bitch. Talk about it. That's not on that and that's not. I don't like I hold grudges, bitch. You're irredeemable in my eyes. That's irredeemable behavior.

Speaker 1:

I think, as a grown ass woman that that was okay.

Speaker 2:

Ew, ew, shame we'll definitely have more on this one. So we review these next batch episodes so we'll have a three year. We know we did trash on the last. Love is blind. With that, love is blind. I want that. We did review last time. Yeah, we did trash on that last one.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, we only did the first couple episodes, yeah, so we're gonna, we're gonna do.

Speaker 2:

But then we did like a little cleanup touch up on the on another episode. We're gonna do better. Promise you. Talk FNF TV here, we're gonna do better. All right, so let's get into some of this comedian talk cuz Drew ski. He was added again. He dropped another, another classic.

Speaker 1:

It seems like the work husband work, husband work, wife skit. Yeah, so he talked about me so glad that my husband works from home.

Speaker 2:

I mean you know.

Speaker 1:

Field. He knows I'm only around the gaze, so we like that, we fine. No worries over here.

Speaker 2:

Hey they still be trying to jump in on them little messages though I'll be trying to hey, smoking, for I'm a married man. Hey, I can't help, I can't help it. But in this one it was crazy, like because I've seen this. I used to work in factory so I've seen this kind of behavior. Yeah, like when you have your woman working in hard labor, like that she is going to cheat like 100%. If it's in a factory, your girl works, in effect, even if she not doing that, she doing HR in the factory.

Speaker 1:

She is liable to get hit. You always want to throw the blame on the one. The skit was that he was cheating.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but I'm saying like he was.

Speaker 1:

He was like sad when he got home to his wife.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I was trying to lead up to that. You wasn't even let me get to that.

Speaker 1:

Cuz you was trying to throw the woman under the bus. The fact.

Speaker 2:

I'm just saying when you got to watch out for your work wife Cuz your work wife I mean your real wife or your real girl cuz if she got a work husband, that nigga nasty, that nigga is violent. He is waiting for the slip up. That's a nasty nigga. You got to guess why that that kind of behavior can't be.

Speaker 1:

I wish I was in a situation where I could have a work husband.

Speaker 2:

No, you're not. You don't need that. You gonna come straight home from now on, straight home, and you got to FaceTime your whole drive. But I think the interesting controversy that happened with this drooski thing was there's another comedian named killer K. His name's Kyle, but he goes by killer K on Twitter and he had a very similar Post that he did like last year.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it was Just way less the production was. See it the product.

Speaker 2:

I mean, don't get it. We're not like like drooski's over here filming Motion pictures over here.

Speaker 1:

You see, be on scene.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he be at the site. He be on the site.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like he gets the clearance from drooski's inception, regardless of, like, how much followers he had. We were like, how is he getting access to these places? So that's what set him apart. He did that extra little umph that made it much funnier than cause plus I was. I Think I was following Kyle before I was following drooski real, real, I Think.

Speaker 2:

So it's funny. The person who I was following before all them there was this dude and Kyrie the comedian. He's still putting out stuff now, but he was doing the skits first but I always rocked with him because he got on stage. He still do stand up to this day like he really do the jokes and the skits.

Speaker 1:

I was gonna bring that up next. The thing about these two guys is that they do situational lifestyle Like type of comedy skits. That doesn't translate.

Speaker 2:

What's the other dude's name? It's another dude, as he right under drooski now.

Speaker 1:

He was just in the rich baby daddy video. I don't know about that, but he was the next guy that I think about is desi, desi banks, no, no, that type of he above desi right now.

Speaker 2:

He, the light skin negative, the one who did the. He had the red boots on. He did the video. He just did the video. When your girl to hoe, he had tiana trump.

Speaker 1:

Um, are you talking about the thing about that be the one that be with Drake?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he was just in the drink.

Speaker 1:

I don't know his name, but I know exactly what you're talking about.

Speaker 2:

He's a definitely is.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, he does that same type of like situational comedy is what I call it. I don't think that translates well to stand-up comedy. I haven't seen one of these guys do stand-up comedy yet.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I haven't guys who don't like the guy, the guys who write out their skits and they're like a bunch of different Scenarios and different things happen. That's a different thing. But like when you're doing like this funny thing that happens in real life and you're just like Making it a little bit more dramatic and funnier, I don't think that translates well to Stand-up comedy and a lot of people thought that that tour, that juice ski, was gonna go on.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it wasn't gonna be stand up.

Speaker 1:

But it wasn't stand up, it was like a whole talent show thing. I think juice ski Might be afraid of stand up. I mean, he probably doesn't have the material and I don't think he's. I was gonna say I don't think juice ski is funny enough for stand-up comedy. I think, he's like a Host personality. He's gonna be amazing in that.

Speaker 2:

Let me ask you this, though when it comes with Kyle, right cuz Kyle basically him and juice ski the same phenotype?

Speaker 1:

They're the same exact nigga like light skin.

Speaker 2:

That's gotta leave the same, but that's gotta hurt you that he has been so much More successful.

Speaker 1:

But juice he just has a little up and then?

Speaker 2:

oh, he's not a right. People like juice.

Speaker 1:

You know what the thing is, though. Juice ski had characters that we fell in love with Kyle, um, um, the the white boy didn't. Oh, was juice these characters named Kyle that always had his ass crack out. Oh yeah, I don't know that was name was Kyle, but yeah, juice, he had characters that were would be Like I don't.

Speaker 2:

I think I know what you're trying to say, but I don't. I wouldn't agree with that.

Speaker 1:

I think that's what said that and the fact that he was always like on scene, like there were. It was kind of like a script, like there was this same character that he had in a bunch of different like scenarios, but Kyle was always Just like oh, this be funny sometimes. I think. I was always this be funny sometimes.

Speaker 2:

I don't think juice ski had characters per se like that were actually fleshed out. What juice? He had. No, what juice ski had was? He addressed a particular person that you knew, so when you saw his video you knew that person's name who acted like that he had that, that like White frat boy character. That was a he had like the country. Somebody that you knew. They didn't have names, they didn't have personnel, they would, you knew. Let me switch it up.

Speaker 1:

They were just personalities juice ski made comedy that appealed to white people also.

Speaker 2:

Kyle never did okay, I guess even that.

Speaker 1:

He did the white frat boy, he did the white country boy, he did the white Like white trash comedy. He did all that that was funny to. What is Interesting actually, now that I think about it, is that drew see was making fun of white people for mad long and Black people thought it was funny because he's making fun of white people and white people think it's funny because he's making fun of white people.

Speaker 2:

well, or they think that they now know that he made it fun of white people.

Speaker 1:

They just think he made it, but he's making fun of white people. Yeah, no, I agree, makes me like drew ski a little bit, like I already think the niggas hilarious.

Speaker 2:

Don't try to make this nigga like he fucking the comedy, my friend he's not.

Speaker 1:

I Still think that drew ski is not funny enough for stand-up comedy. That basis is still the foundation of what I think. Like, I do think his comedy has limitations but I do like him a little bit more because, like, he gained popularity with everybody and I think he got more popular because he was making fun of white people and people Black people don't do that as much now like they used to yeah now like they used to and I feel like I need to make fun of these crackers more.

Speaker 2:

I'm with it. This, this to stay in the comedy world. You heard about Donnell Rollins and Cory Holcomb going at it now.

Speaker 1:

I Saw a clip of Donnell Rollins.

Speaker 2:

He was shit on.

Speaker 1:

Cory Holcomb, was it at his show?

Speaker 2:

I don't think he was yelling at directly at core. I think he was just talking shit to him on stage because Cory has said some stuff about Dave and you know that's Daniel Rollins walks around with a big ass C on his neck.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying. So, that big ass D in his mouth. I'm sorry, I'm sorry. You can give big ups to you, to you to your boss. Yeah, but no up and then Cory homie.

Speaker 2:

I think Dave is younger than him.

Speaker 1:

Not. Donnell Rollins is the little homie to Dave and Dave is the big homie.

Speaker 2:

No, anytime, age, anytime a nigga makes you Ashley, larry, you're the little homie.

Speaker 1:

You literally made. You put baby powder on and done, done.

Speaker 2:

Donnell Rollins was on Joe Budden's podcast and him and flip was going at it and it was like the battle for the most insignificant. That's exactly what this it was going on. It flipped, lost. Flip showed he was not most pathetic, he was the most insignificant how you a cuck for a man. Like that's exactly what was going on. Like it was. If you know about Donnell Rollins and you watch Joe Budden podcast, they're the same nigga. Donnell Rollins rides Dave Chappelle's dick. The same way flip rides Joe's dick like it was.

Speaker 2:

It was, it was funny, just to see two professional eaters Going crazy preach to two professional goblers. It was just, it was insane. Yeah insanity, but I didn't really care too much about it. You know I don't care about talking about Cory anymore, but uh, because he just not interested, he's just he's just like bottom of the barrel, fucking like like.

Speaker 1:

I don't like that. We talked about him as much, but it's cat Williams fall. I blame cat Williams, to be honest.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, alright, so let's get into this with Floyd. So Floyd, floyd mayweather, is another brand of black men that just rose me the wrong way Because their behavior is just so problematic, and I met Floyd before, when I was in Miami.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, when I was in.

Speaker 2:

Miami. I was drunk as fuck.

Speaker 1:

I was in.

Speaker 2:

Miami drunk as hell, and we was at like a little burger joint and I see miss Jackson walking and she was looking Crazy. I'm looking like, oh my goodness, like, why are you in this normal establishment looking?

Speaker 2:

like this and and folks was over here like I was telling people I was with, like yo, that's, that's one of the Floyd's joints. They even know it's not. No, it's not. And then I see her talking on her phone and she's talking to Floyd on the phone and then Floyd and her pulls up right in front of the restaurant. I just walk out there. I'm like yo, you're the best part ever seen. He just like drugs me off.

Speaker 2:

He wouldn't gonna do nothing to get small yo like when I see him, he was, he was in the escalate and I thought the escalate was gonna eat him. Like that's how. Like he looked like a child in the front seat, like I was gonna tell, like the authorities is gonna pull you over for having a toddler in the front seat.

Speaker 1:

I'll be it's. It makes sense that a short nigga is one of the best boxers because they have to overcompensate.

Speaker 2:

No, low center of gravity is just it's, it's it you would think it's, it's, it's easy to hit them, but it's harder cuz he's small and quick hard to hit him.

Speaker 1:

But this nigga holy and complex bitch, like that's why you hit this quick. I Let me have it. So he was talking about diddy.

Speaker 2:

So this is what he was saying.

Speaker 10:

Even like P Diddy. I'm not gonna speak bad about P Diddy Because he's still a black man. I mean, mistakes happen and I can't say if it is or it's not a mistake, but things happen in life.

Speaker 10:

I hate him and P Diddy business is P Diddy business. It's not my job or anyone else's job to go on the internet and stomp him and kick a man while he's down. My take on it is it's not my business. I don't think it's right at all and I don't condone it. Even if that happened to my daughter I would be hurt. But so I don't want to kick nobody. Why they're down.

Speaker 2:

I think the big thing, cuz I have girls to your daughter has no hope that bitch.

Speaker 1:

She over here chasing behind NBA young boy who knowingly has herpes like you did a terrible job as a dad. She grew up privileged with money and she chasing after a nigga with herpes and 11 baby mothers. Well, she's one of the 11 one of the 11 like come on, like what? Your daughter? Nothing. Your daughter nothing. Floyd, you're a terrible dad.

Speaker 2:

That's crazy. To talk about sexual allegations and then reference your daughter as in like you're gonna just keep Quiet, you're not gonna say anything Like that. Shit is just nuts.

Speaker 1:

Did something happen to her and you did that. Is that why she's so stupid. I'm sorry, let me take that back. That was crazy. Oh it's just so dumb though, like yeah, yeah is really dumb, she's very stupid. I mean, I think I stabbed another girl over NBA young boy and caught charges over that. She fully stabbed another young woman.

Speaker 2:

What do you expect when your dad can't read Like what are we talking about? Like the nigga can't read the pamphlet to tell you the right shit to do?

Speaker 1:

Like, come on, like what is happening, the like, it's just not okay, is he?

Speaker 2:

I don't even know. He's a hundred pressure, hundred percent, sure that those are a hundred dollar bills in front of it wasn't for the blue strip, like he wouldn't be able to read it bro Floyd is literally.

Speaker 1:

Your daughter is just as fucking stupid as you. Both of y'all are stupid. I don't know if this is what I was supposed to get from this, but it just reminded me of how fucking stupid she is.

Speaker 2:

No, I was just. I was just wanting to point out, like that, that brand of black man who's like oh, I don't want to talk bad about another black man when it's like, bro, I'm bad about that other black man.

Speaker 1:

Fuck that nigga.

Speaker 2:

I mean again, it's certain, certain circumstances where you can be like no, there's certain certain that we can put in the question what's going on, and they got political prisoner. You know, I'm saying you're going through some other stuff like this, these niggas not. Malcolm X yeah, these niggas is not Martin Luther King.

Speaker 1:

It's mad videos, the niggas being like Don't go to the good, don't go to the, take that, take that man Sure, and you talk about, oh, you don't want to judge him, he's a girl like no, shut up, you was what you Floyd was you in the freak?

Speaker 2:

What you in the freak offs?

Speaker 1:

This nigga was in the freak off. What's you in the freak off.

Speaker 2:

He didn't even have to get on his knees to suck that he was just standing straight up and sit, oh man, but I just thought that was just from real nasty.

Speaker 1:

Tiffany Haddish is the same fucking brand of stupid as Floyd Mayweather is, because this bitch did you see this?

Speaker 2:

she's flying to Israel.

Speaker 1:

She is flying to Israel. She was like, oh, I want to see it for myself in real life. There are children dying, you dumb bitch. This is not a sporting event.

Speaker 2:

Event you know how she's over there, though. Right like you know about the I think you talked about this the Invitations that they get yes, and she's Jewish technically. I mean, that's what they, that's what they do. They tell they find out you got whatever in your, in you, and they send you to free trip.

Speaker 1:

That's what you were saying right.

Speaker 1:

Yeah that's what she's on you. So she's going to Israel to witness things for herself. Like, after the, the allegations that you had for Grooming that child in that video or whatever, like that whole weird like child grooming video thing you had. Before that you were already not funny. First of all, let's start off by literally just saying that you were not funny. Also, you went out of your way to be a caricature of a ghetto black woman. You brought fried chicken in your purse on the red carpet like I don't like the respectability politics, like argument. But you go out of your way to be a Fucking just like you. You go out of your way to be a like, a character of like a coon, like dancing for the white man. I don't fucking like that and I've gotten that energy from you your entire career so that After you've fallen out of the the graces of Not black people because you were never in black people's graces, black people never found you funny.

Speaker 1:

Tiffany Haddish, your comedy was always white comedy because it's it's less than you're not fucking funny. You make fun of black people. That is your comedy. Your character is a Like, a caricature of a black woman. You're making fun of black people. I don't like, never fucking liked it. And now you're doing this whole like sipping your your mimosa on the way to a War-ridden land, like it's not serious as fuck. You're stupid as hell and you make me a shit.

Speaker 1:

Like I don't like Shaping black women to be a monolith, I don't like lumping us together, but like you make me not want to be the same as you, period. Like I don't want you to. I don't want us to have things in common. I don't want you to be a woman and I don't want you to believe be black. I'm not gonna say that I'm ashamed to be a black woman because of you. I just wish you weren't a black woman. Like ill, bitch, you give me the ick. Fuck. Everything you do going forward I will never support, regardless of like how you switch up, bitch done. Like ill finish. You're done. Tiffany had his ill. I.

Speaker 2:

Think she's like one of those actors and comedians who get caught up in that first real big role of success and then they don't know how to let that go, because it's like Bitch.

Speaker 1:

Why are you nae nae in 2024, like I want to punch. I Want to punch that bitch in the face.

Speaker 2:

I Just think she's just caught up in that character that got her so much attention and she's trying to relive that moment it's done because I mean at the end of the day. A lot of times again, I say this all the time and it's not to be disrespectful, but a lot of these people aren't as talented as not talented folks.

Speaker 2:

Want us to believe and really they just did something really good once and that's just the catalyst for whatever motion they get moving forward, and I just feel like that was just what her like people loved her character.

Speaker 1:

She did it really good and she separate herself from that character, and I don't like that character because it was. It was making fun of lack of it. That's my thing, like I never found Tiffany had a Shbunny. If you ever found Tiffany had a Shbunny, then your your. Your taste in comedy is less than.

Speaker 2:

Talk about it. Do you know who barks boo boo, boozy is?

Speaker 1:

No, I don't know our barky boozy.

Speaker 2:

So he's a Twitter nigga right.

Speaker 1:

Oh Lord, I don't know. Twitter niggas. A few days ago.

Speaker 2:

Where I was seeing this on a timeline and it was just so crazy Because this nigga tweets that he got into a really bad car accident and he doesn't think the other person made it, oh, okay, so I didn't know this man by name, but I did hear about this situation and so Folks who started shitting on him because apparently, like there was a port, came out that the guy that was in the accident With them died, but he didn't die on a scene.

Speaker 6:

So there would may have been opportunity for him to assist.

Speaker 2:

Maybe stop some bleeding, anything like that. But he was, that's what he was made. He was tweeting, arguing with people on Twitter nonetheless, as well about it, and Wildest man was like bleeding out yeah why he's been on his car, whatever accident he had. So it even comes even a more that why people are shitting on him. A lot of the feminist Twitter starts coming out and they start saying y'all niggas are mad because this nigga don't bash women all day and that's why y'all hating on him.

Speaker 2:

Hey, y'all and y'all niggas mad because he put his dick on fleets and y'all seen it and it was bigger than y'all. That's what the conversation was rhetoric Algorithm is crazy.

Speaker 1:

I promise I saw this, this, this thing, and then everyone was like yo, why was this nigga tweeting when he could have been saving this nigga's life? That's the only thing I saw. No. The only thing I saw was this man should not have been tweeting, because he could have used that energy To save this other human being from losing his life. What are you talking about?

Speaker 1:

Yo, there was like multiple tweets from women that were saying this that's how, you know how toxic he is and you know it says something about how toxic I am to indirectly, because I'm married to this man. But that's how you know how toxic he is, because Of how toxic his social media is Like it's crafted for you To like what you like.

Speaker 2:

I'm just saying the messiest most gutter bottom. That's what the chick said. The chick was like y'all mad because the nigga put his dick on the fleets and it was bigger than y'all. So that's why what does that mean? You don't remember when fleets was a thing, when it was like the story.

Speaker 1:

Well, twitter used to have okay, okay, I have stories, so the man that that was tweeting the man who killed the dude in the car.

Speaker 2:

Who put it? He pulled a Caitlyn Jenner had before he had put his dick on the fleets and he was carrying a hammer and the niggas was like, oh, y'all that. The chick was like y'all mad because he got the pipe, and y'all seen it.

Speaker 2:

So because he got a big dick, he could take lives Basically like oh, he can't, oh he shouldn't be shitted on in the process of taking lives. That shit was nuts. That shit was nuts. I'm sitting there like yo. That's crazy. Now internet, I don't even understand the internet never works the way.

Speaker 1:

He did.

Speaker 2:

And then, like the internet never worked the way I wanted to, because I had to wake up a couple weeks ago to the Drake leak. And then now I'm thinking, bobby outtough, nicki Minaj and Ruby Rose got leaked. Oh, that shit is AI.

Speaker 1:

Yo, so let's, I'm pissed, let's get into that next, because it seemed like there were After Drake. It seemed like, first of all, I think it was like yk osiris or somebody that was like posted a big print or not.

Speaker 2:

That wasn't only he put, he put that out.

Speaker 1:

No, I said posted.

Speaker 2:

Yes, I'm saying, yeah, that nigga did that on his own, like that's a nasty little freak boy pathetic Moving on the did he turn you out, and now you don't know.

Speaker 1:

And now he's gone. You don't know what to do with yourself. Go to therapy. You're traumatized. Okay, go to therapy. So, um, and there was apparently a bobby all talk. Is that how you say? Yeah, I'll talk.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but that was all that was. Was just somebody put her face like that was old, this is 2012 porn. Yeah, so they just put her face off, nicki Minaj and Ruby Rose.

Speaker 1:

Apparently All of this, like none of these leaks are, are real, but they all had like AI generated like sexual content, get leaked this this this week and I think we're in like a whole new age of like Content that can be generated with your face on it and it's all.

Speaker 2:

It's a different violation, I think, but it wasn't even that bad, because, if you look at it, the bobby all talk one. I watched all three, the ones that I thought were you did were the three leaks, the bobby, all talk, one was clearly. You could definitely tell that her face was just put on somebody else's face and she was just a picture or was it a video?

Speaker 1:

No, it's a video of a girl rubbing herself and you.

Speaker 2:

They just put bobby's face on her. Then the one that they said allegedly was ruby rose Was a video of her getting backshot, but all there was was a girl who was Lyskin, and I think ruby rose got tattoos. Right, I think she got some tattoos.

Speaker 2:

She but this girl just had long black hair and she had a nice shape to her and she was getting backshots. And then the Nicki Minaj one was, you see, like a girl with red hair, ish, her face kind of looks like Nicki. And then, like you see, see her throwing that ass on on the knee like like a hammer. Okay, you see her throwing it down and it sounded look crazy, but none of it to me.

Speaker 2:

It's authenticated, like it. Nothing that looks like oh, that's really her. This is something that people would really think they got. Somebody got out of her phone or something like that. Well, it was nothing like that. Wasn't like sexy Ray, like sexy red, the only one dropping legit leaks? Yeah, I think.

Speaker 1:

Uh, the whole, because A while ago we talked about the whole Taylor Swift ai generated inappropriate photos that went around on twitter. Some needs to be done about this. Like, oh my god, no, I, I like I do think if, if I was, when we get like more popular and stuff, and somebody super imposes my face on a body that generally gives the same vibe as my body, like I'm gonna feel really yucky about it, that's, that's I'm thinking about how I'm gonna feel, thinking about like People really being like oh just like I'm thinking about how I'm gonna feel, thinking about like People really being like oh, this is what she looks like, and but I didn't give you this.

Speaker 2:

It's just funny that you like you're taking this from me but this is they're imagining it.

Speaker 1:

I know, but if the girl is like close to my body shape, it's I. I would feel weird about this. I'm talking about how I would feel.

Speaker 2:

I know, but I'm saying you just did a whole video, a celebrity dick pics, dick pics that were dropped out without their consent, and you talking about how I'm gonna feel gross because somebody Created a fake image of my body.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but like I didn't send that to nobody, that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

It's fake.

Speaker 1:

That's why it's yeah that's why it's amusing me were real.

Speaker 2:

That's why you should feel wrong for more than somebody making a fake picture of you.

Speaker 1:

That's why I don't. I don't feel bad for men. Y'all can suck my dick again.

Speaker 2:

That's all I'm saying is if I Think about the a, I think is what my whole argument is is like I, somebody could legitimately draw that with a computer. You can draw realistic art with a computer, so you can't Regulate me what I can draw of of if I see your face and you inspire me to draw A salacious or pornographic piece of art, I think you don't have control of that back in the day, right?

Speaker 1:

So there was always like the, that's getting to like a Niche porn topic. There's always, like the, the cartoon things Were like your, your favorite characters are put in compromising positions and you get to see them do different things and whatnot, and that's that's always been a thing, right, like artists that have that, that capability to like, take somebody and put them. But I think a I I gives everybody, like just every creepy nigga, like with no talent, the opportunity to like, put somebody's face on something else and then, like it gets popular. And I, I don't know, I can't get past the, the feeling that I, I personally, would feel violated by this act.

Speaker 1:

If I'm somebody popular and somebody puts my face on and then, like your family might be seeing this, your friends might be seeing this, like Ten years down the line, you don't know if your children know if this is real or not. This is just something that, like, their classmate might show them and you did your due diligence to not put pictures, not do only fans not Do this and that you know like this isn't, this real thing doesn't exist, but people can just make it up like it's. It goes past just sexual content. People can.

Speaker 1:

But okay can make pictures of you doing crimes and this and that, like I think. I think it needs to be. There needs to be a way for for people to, for the government, law enforcement to 100 tell if this is and I'm a generator and.

Speaker 2:

I'm gonna say this I care just as much as bodies, as everybody has cared when they have superimposed small penises On men's bright on men's bodies. I care just as much how y'all care about that and y'all don't care about when y'all disrespect men and make them look small with these same ai projects.

Speaker 1:

Yes.

Speaker 2:

I listen to everything you just said and they do the exact same thing to men with this same technology, and nobody cares. So I'm gonna feel the same way.

Speaker 1:

Okay. I think the overarching problem Is the fact that people can Make very realistic photos and videos now videos and then audio too of like people doing things that they didn't do. I don't want this to morph into Like Pat, like past sexual. Like sexual things are a violation, but like it could morph past. Like people Like sexually abusing other people, people doing crimes they didn't do, like it could, it could morph past like, my thing is this.

Speaker 1:

So you know, you know, I think it needs to be nipped in the bud before it like Do you know, wild Do you know what the world is.

Speaker 2:

No so this was a old old. This is a. It made movies and stuff about it more recently too, but Orrin Wells, or Orson Wells, was a person who was reading it off on the radio and it created massive stereo because people thought aliens were attacking Because they were listening to this on the radio. People don't need much To get into hysteria or craziness, so to kind of take the AI and turn it into this. You don't need AI to get people up in arms and to do crazy stuff.

Speaker 1:

This is just another part of the layers that have already done that you know I is the like Now, one of the easiest ways to get over on people, though it's so easy to get over on people with people was because people are so fucking stupid bro people.

Speaker 2:

I've seen people do the font that they've seen on the, the news and stuff like the Articles on the news, and just post the font and just made it look like it was from a news article and people.

Speaker 1:

I could make our thumbnails look like CNN, like CNN live news broadcast people thought wanted to.

Speaker 2:

A sexy reds video was real, like it doesn't take much.

Speaker 1:

The sexy reds video. Was it real? All right.

Speaker 2:

It wasn't her habit. No, she did not get pregnant. I mean, she did not have a water break during the video.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I thought she meant the sex tape. No, I mean Okay, okay, okay, okay.

Speaker 2:

I said I'm saying like that stuff, people thought that was real and penetrated people thought that was real.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, people thought that was real so.

Speaker 2:

I'm saying like it's not hard to make convince people otherwise. So to just say, another tool is added on to it. When, literally, we had a whole mass hysteria because a man's voice was on the radio and said some stuff was going on. Like it doesn't take much to convince people, like it's just one of the added tools that's going to create mass hysteria. If possible, like at some point we have to do better job of Giving our people better discernment, like it just has to happen.

Speaker 1:

I don't think that's gonna happen. I think people have less better discernment than they did. I think, in the age of like, when people were like sit in salons and this, read newspapers and discuss like political events that are happening and everyone was generally aware of the same things because their only source of education was the newspaper and they didn't have like little bubbles of Information that were just constantly confirming their own biases like that, it was easier to do that. But now it's not happening. But yeah, let's continue All right.

Speaker 2:

So you know, did you? Do you listen? To see, the thing is with Bridget Kelly and Mandy.

Speaker 1:

No, I've never consumed that, so this was actually originally a Joe.

Speaker 2:

It was originally a Joe Button podcast of Original.

Speaker 1:

He was actually the founder of the podcast so it was the one with the like, the very big white one big light skin girl. Yeah, which one cuz well they were both pretty big right. Yeah, I mean they was.

Speaker 2:

One is tall and thick and the other one is like shorter, okay, okay.

Speaker 1:

So I haven't, I haven't watched a whole episode of their shit ever, because I did try when they got signed, because I was like Well, joe is like I said, joe founded the show and he brought Mandy, olivia dope and Bridget Kelly all together then yeah.

Speaker 2:

Joe came on the show Sexually harassed. Olivia got sued, she left the show and then it was just Bridget and Mandy. They end up leaving during the midst of the the Rory and Maul breakup. They end up leaving and they do their own thing.

Speaker 1:

So apparently what Danny they were.

Speaker 2:

They were independent, but according to Danny from the stop shout out to Danny he was saying that they were part of like this Ad group or whatever, and basically what they did was they kind of help funnel the ads to them and things of that nature. But, they don't have that deal anymore and he believes that that's what's leading to them Breaking up the show. Okay, I'm gonna say this I Never met a light-skinned woman that was hard to get some money for a nigga to fund. Today. They dreams, so I know they ain't breaking up cuz they couldn't find fun.

Speaker 1:

But, that don't mean nothing like skin?

Speaker 2:

No, you're right, like skin. Chicks do be ugly. And there's still a country-ass nigga who is providing.

Speaker 1:

I know, but there are still niggas who like, won't look past the light skin and be like you ugly bitch, and both them bitches is not cute how come when I shit on them, women. It's so it's get so much drama, but when you do it, you called that woman an exotic elephant and all I said was there, simply not. You went in like you, you had a script to To like, degrade that woman, and this is just off the cuff, just like y'all my shit was off the cuff, you know, that's stereotypically face wise an attractive woman.

Speaker 1:

I'm not stereotypically. Stop lying. Because like that I'm skinny, so I am body and face, maybe not skin tall men. So yeah, skin color wise not.

Speaker 2:

I was just saying I don't believe I don't believe those two would have any difficulty finding funding for the show at all. I don't, I Don't like. I know you don't think that that they're that attractive, but two niggas up there Don't know they are attractive women, okay.

Speaker 1:

Let me, let me look them up, because I might be thinking about the wrong set of women.

Speaker 2:

But yeah, see, the thing is I don't see them having a problem. I don't think they like each other. I Don't think they do. I think Mandy. I Think Mandy is used to Controlling the room because she has a really big personality and she's not used to sharing it spaces. Oh, this is.

Speaker 1:

Bridget Kelly from loving hip hop.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I said it was Bridget Kelly.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I didn't even hear that. Like she old.

Speaker 2:

She is old, but they both look old. They are older, they know Mandy's around my age.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but Again my point still stands they can find a nigga right not be old, they might just be mixed. Yeah, they are.

Speaker 2:

That was another thing I was thinking about was why Charlemagne didn't pick them up. Because Mandy's show is on the black effect, but maybe because they got white mamas. The black effect wouldn't didn't want to get them. But, I think I don't think they like it. I think Bridget Bridget is probably used to any room that she walks into, I Would say, 80% of the time, being the most sought-after woman like.

Speaker 1:

Neither of them are ugly girls, but neither of them are like Like fawning over, like they're both. They're not any girls who happen to be light skin, they're not.

Speaker 2:

But if you look at bridge, look especially Bridget Kelly, if you look at what was mad tall too, but you have to look at her, her past trajectory when people were saying as her potential, in the positions that she was kind of pushed into, you can definitely see where, okay, people thought she was gonna be something bigger.

Speaker 1:

They're both a little bit bigger I'm talking about.

Speaker 2:

I meant, bigger as in popularity, I will say I don't not big, but like a little bit bigger. Bridget. They're both thick girls. Bridget got a little bit on her, bridget.

Speaker 1:

Bridget is like. She looks like she likes six to like that's a stallion.

Speaker 2:

But to compare to Mandy. That's why she looks so taller, because Mandy is super short. Okay, mandy but I don't think they like it. I don't think. I don't think Mandy is the type of girl I mean. I don't think Bridget is the type of girl that likes a girl like Mandy around her. Mandy is very Attention-driving. She drives the attention to her when Bridget gets the attention because she's a very tall, light-skinned woman.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so one of them is like please look at me. And one of them is like all eyes are already on me.

Speaker 2:

One kind of it feels like that. Yeah, cuz I said Mandy, even though she has a truck, she can be a generally attractive to a lot of crowds. She still is a heavy-set girl and I can see where it's like and she has a shortcut, no hair and all that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like so and she's also like a very Boisterous freak, so you're going to get a certain kind of nigga. That's gonna come your way. Yeah, even if he do got a little bit of change on it, he again, there's gonna be reasons why People coming through.

Speaker 1:

I just what was the reason for them to? They said it was contracts.

Speaker 2:

But I think they don't like each other. And there, you know, I don't think they like each other. Yeah, cuz they're dropping two different endings to the show, so Mandy's doing her own ending and then Bridget's doing her own ending, and they got different people with them. Oh, so we go get the tea.

Speaker 1:

I also, while we're on this one to get into like really quick, because oh yeah, he was on a, so if y'all know, and.

Speaker 2:

Kid mayoral, yeah doing a podcast together 7 pm.

Speaker 1:

Brooklyn. I Am from New York. Deezus the way that I am putting my hands on my wine glass right now very, very unclassy. Let me just put this over here. So I I like this is a mirror very much. I'm from New York. They, like they hit a special spot in my heart. I really like their content. When they broke up, I was very upset. I Was very excited when I saw that Merrill was doing content again. I didn't even care that it was with somebody else because I was like if it's with Merrill then it has to be funny. I was wrong. Merrill is not funny by himself.

Speaker 2:

He's not these doing stuff too.

Speaker 1:

These is is doing stuff these has been doing, like hosting things, nightly show and things of that nature. Like obviously they had different Views on what they wanted to do Merrill wanted to do niggas shit and these us wanted to be Like a Emmy award-winning host. So that's what it seemed like. But yeah, I was watching the the interview with Joe Budden. I did not get past six minutes of that interview. I think that the lights is the name. Was the kid mayor, right? Yeah, I, I'm terrible with names.

Speaker 1:

But Merrill, I think that his interview style is very thirsty. It's very like double-luchy, like you're waiting to jump in, but it's not. It's not natural. It doesn't seem like a natural form of like speaking. I have the same problem with Drink champs. What's his name? Nori. Nori Gives me the same like thirsty. Like I'm asking you these questions but I don't actually care about your answers to these questions, like I just obviously very much have like a Trail, like a map that I'm trying to get you to go on. I don't like that form of interviewing. He is less funny without these 100%.

Speaker 2:

They need that back and forth, I think so the reason why I don't know if you're familiar reason why, why they was broke, broken up Because you said you don't even jump six minutes out. He talks about a breakup for the first time on a show which is like weird when they're like. Yeah, but I'm saying they're like ten episodes in and this nigga ain't talked about. Even mellow was like y'all been Kind of trying to want you to, you know talk about that a little bit Episode with Joe, but whoever they, oh, joe was gonna get the mess out.

Speaker 1:

Whoever they hosted before that, I think like nobody would have even clicked on that interview to give a fuck. But people are gonna click on the Joe Butting interview, so he might as well Dump that shit off in that interview, you know and before I do this I want to say, joe, shout out to you again a true, true master class.

Speaker 2:

What you did there. You got everything off of you he wasn't worried about. Basically, he got the whole conversation off of him and got Carmelo, and these is the literally talk, the whole second half, an interview. It was almost like Joe, but it was interviewing him.

Speaker 1:

He's a host, so that's naturally what he's gonna do.

Speaker 2:

It was, it was such a skill was such a you could tell like that I'm not giving y'all niggas nothing and I'm making y'all niggas talk.

Speaker 1:

Also randomly. This is really quick. Random, I hope, joe, but it is on this season of Abad elementary because, they mentioned him in the first season. He seemed to have like really appreciated it. He's like he was cemented in like outside of pod in black Culture, as like this pod god, which I like for him. Regardless of all of the Bullshit that Joe spews, I like that for him. So I I hope that he has like a surprise roll on Abad elementary done. Let's move on, be a nasty janitor. Yeah, but no, what?

Speaker 2:

basically, what he was saying was the main Issue was that they wanted two different things. Like you said, this is wanted to be more of a traditional Hollywood star, and yes.

Speaker 2:

Miro wanted to be more in the owner's sphere, he wanted to have control. And one of the things that they talked about was a sports gambling deal that was kind of coming out before it was even like going to be real big. It was like right when they started legalizing it in New Jersey and stuff like that. And the reason why this is what Mero said the reason why they didn't do it was because Deces was ignorant about sports gambling. He wasn't familiar with it, he couldn't understand it and that's what Took him away from doing it. And he was like bro, you really stopped us from getting a bag that would have helped us in the future because we would have been early on this shit.

Speaker 1:

And nobody else is on. They was early on this prize picks and whatnot shit, like they would have made a bag from that and that, if that's the case, that, like Deezus was ignorant and short-sighted much like your friends were, because rhetoric was like way more far-sighted in his, in his view of he can kind of like tell a little bit better Because I think he's smarter than most people like what is gonna happen and he like told his friends are like, oh, let's do this podcasting shit, let's do this, enter internet shit and internet shit. And his best friend literally was like there's no money in the internet. Nega, are you dumb? You are dumb, you're dumb, you're the stupidest nigga I've ever come across. He said there's no money in an internet, in the internet. No money.

Speaker 1:

Stupid ass nigga, short-sighted as fuck, will never trust him to make any like Predictions of anything. I'm glad I didn't marry that nigga, but like you can't trust a nigga, like you can't marry a nigga who thinks that the internet wouldn't make money, I will never trust your intelligence. Let's continue. That was off topic. I feel very passionately about how much Smarter my husband is.

Speaker 2:

Then all of his friends like I genuinely think I I yeah, cuz you didn't listen to me when I could have made. You know, I just don't.

Speaker 1:

I just don't want niggas to hear this and be like you know. She genuinely thinks of us as less than men and human beings and, just like they, she thinks that, like, we're not as smart because I do.

Speaker 2:

Well, I mean, we could put you on the list too, cuz I could have made you 40k in six, six months. You didn't listen.

Speaker 1:

Yeah. So, not gonna, not listen to my husband going forward. So, and guess what? The only time?

Speaker 2:

Did you look at the price of it today?

Speaker 1:

I don't look at prices of things.

Speaker 2:

It's at 50. It was that it's at 52k, when you could have bought it at 16.

Speaker 1:

What all I'm saying is like that this man is Superior as far as, like his brain Amongst the rest of the men, and I'm lucky to be with him. Compared to you are the dumb ass mouth breathing cavemen.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that's. That's appreciated, love like Very much a superior man but you're right, like said, that was just kind of the main problem they didn't have, but they weren't on the same page. Like some people want to be taking care of, they want to come to a place when everything is already right there in front of him, and then other niggas want to. They want to make this shit happen, and it's just. That's just the difference between them. So it happens. Let's get into the Vince Staples show. Yes man I.

Speaker 1:

I've been a Vince Staples fan. Okay, let me not say I'm a Vince Staples fan, because I feel like that's fake to say I've never listened to a full Vince Staples song once ever in my entire life. I've never seen a A project musically of his and be like, oh, let me listen to this album. I don't even want to fucking do that. I have no interest in listening to this, listening to this man's music. But whenever he pops up on interviews I like hearing him talk. We as an audience has have been asking Vince Staples for a podcast specifically for years now. So Vince Staples decides to put out a scripted series on Netflix. It is comprised of five episodes.

Speaker 2:

Yeah and 25 minutes long for most of them.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so we're. We're gonna get into just like a very quick overview of what we got from that show. I'm gonna start really quick with mine. The first two episodes lots of chuckles for me, honestly. I enjoyed the first two episodes. The next three, I was expecting like a little bit more depth, a little bit more like what? What are you expecting me to get from your view of things, from this world? I was confused, honestly. I did not know, vince, what you wanted me to think. I Didn't. You didn't give me enough context for things to be, for me to be satisfied. I, I really I like listening to you talk and I know, as a creative, you probably had to cut out things. That Would have given me more time, more context. If you had it your way, it probably would have been 45 minute episodes. But like I Don't know, I didn't know what you wanted me as an audience, like what you wanted the message fully to be like, because I'm a smart black woman, I could like Reach for things, but I don't know what you wanted for me.

Speaker 2:

Oh, no, I mean okay, so I guess I'll do my little. History I've never listen anything of Vince that's never been somebody I've been I mean there's nothing about. I've never really was into the our future thing Like the only reason.

Speaker 1:

I got it was Not really part of our future at odd futures inception when they started, because I was. Well, let me Speak to what I know. I know that he left.

Speaker 2:

That's what I let me speak to. That when I said I wasn't really into that kind of music or genre, like the only time I did that was just to get with the, you know other other race women like that was the only time. I act like I knew what was on to them.

Speaker 1:

Mentioning Vince in odd future is like just a fun fact. It was never like a thing.

Speaker 2:

I mean, he was just in a picture with him not too long ago when they did like a little reunion.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but like.

Speaker 2:

I know, but he does the little thing. Oh, no, there may know, really my niggas like that.

Speaker 6:

You know my shit, I know he does on that country.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I'll be honest with you. The only time I ever sat and listened to him speak really for real was when he was on Joe but his podcast. I was never really impressed. I thought some of the stuff he said was funny but I always kind of clocked it up. As he he's not really saying too much anything For me, like I always got the feeling when I listened events was that was the smart, the niggah who dumb niggas thought was smart. Like that was always what I got from him and just that capacity, because he would say a lot of things and it would just be his interpretation of events or trying to basically pull out the most of pessimistic parts of it and Show that as reality.

Speaker 1:

So funny that you think that, like Vince's, stories in general were pessimistic. I don't think they always were. I think. I think they were Half and half.

Speaker 2:

I think they always stem from somebody in a poor and in Provis environment and their reactions to that.

Speaker 1:

I think that's because of His environment, because that's the environment that he was in. But he'll also tell you that, like, his situation Was like he had a house, he had a mother that was always there. The house was steady, like it was. It was us, like slightly above, but I Admittedly, like, regardless of what platform he's he's talking on, I'll listen to him speak. So that's why I I feel like I know a little bit, a little bit more.

Speaker 2:

No, I mean, I think that kind of stems to what a lot of the criticisms I was having with this show was like. It starts off and you don't even know nothing about the main character. So if you aren't, as you say, a fan of vent staples, the main character means nothing to you the whole time, like you. Literally he gets arrested. You don't know why he gets arrested the whole time.

Speaker 2:

So, they don't tell you if it was like I think it's what, what the warrant was for or anything like that. They just say he had a warrant, but they don't say why.

Speaker 1:

Two things you brought up, I think, or my one of my favorite things and one of my biggest qualms, One of my favorite things about this show and Vince did mention this in his Breakfast Club interview he says that he's not meant to be the main character, Like things are happening around him and they're happening to his character, but the environment and the things that are happening and everything are the things that you're supposed to be focused on, right? My least favorite thing? Damn, I forget my train of thought. What did you say?

Speaker 2:

Well, I'll go back on what I was gonna get into. This shit is really like. If you're being honest, this is like an empty Atlanta or an empty day.

Speaker 1:

My least favorite thing was how he left so much context open for interpretation.

Speaker 2:

I don't even feel like it was open for interpretation. It wasn't even discussed.

Speaker 1:

like I said, it was just things that were missing for me.

Speaker 2:

Let's just get into a few examples, because some of the stuff that I just felt like it didn't hit because there needed to be emotional connection. When you had Byrne and ATL in Atlanta, you got an emotional connection with him. You seen him in a fucked up position, his relationship with his baby mom in the first episode. You see his relationship with his job, his baby mama and what he dreamed or what he wanted in the future. Like you saw all of that and what he and this guy you don't know nothing about Vince in this movie. You think he all you know is he a rapper?

Speaker 1:

He's on his way up. He's not where he is now. People don't know him yet, obviously in this show.

Speaker 2:

Cause most people say his name and don't know who he is. Who?

Speaker 1:

is Vince Laples. It's like a thing that is repeated over and over and over again in the show.

Speaker 2:

So you get that portion of it you don't, where he's kind of just growing up, not growing up, but he's going through the motions of it. But you don't get anything Like. To me, the funny part of episode three is the fact that they were making fun of OJ. But there's no other connection. That's why, if you don't know who OJ Simpson is, the fact that he was a USC, trojan.

Speaker 1:

So what? The, the, the. I knew that there was something that I wasn't getting in that episode. I was like there's something that like but you gotta know Cali shit.

Speaker 1:

I was like why did he go back in his car? Why did we go back to this specific like? It seemed like a magical Negro type of trope because like he looked at the van and he was there, and then he looked at the van and he was gone. So I was like, okay, maybe he's making fun of like the magical Negro thing. But then at the end, when he popped back up and he did the phone video and he was crying, I was like there's a complication in this character that I have no context of. So yeah, vince, I need context. Like I don't know this like off bat, like this is not the, the, the reserves I have in my brain.

Speaker 2:

Well, see what they? They didn't do a good job of relating to cause. They did his name with Uncle James in the show and OJ's name is Ortho James. I don't know that. I know that. That's what I'm saying. You're not going to pick that up unless you know a little bit about.

Speaker 1:

Cali history. If he had an uncle that was Uncle Juice.

Speaker 2:

That might have helped too.

Speaker 1:

That would have been because OJ, OJ the Juice man Like that would have black people wise connected better.

Speaker 2:

No, you're okay. Let's be honest. Black Americans, we know that you Haitian, so you're not going to know OJ.

Speaker 1:

I moved here when I was seven years old, so not, not.

Speaker 2:

Let's just not say that, like I'm Haitian, but you wasn't in the country when OJ was fighting for his life. It doesn't matter Like it like yeah. That's not your man's.

Speaker 1:

I was in the country during all the Dave Chappelle jokes, all the this and this and this and that. But OJ wasn't your man, you are right, Like I wasn't here during that time. Now hold on hold on Pause.

Speaker 2:

Pause for a moment. I want to also make another point of how, since you aren't familiar with OJ, you wouldn't have got when he was in his car, him discussing like oh, hey, everybody, hey there, world on. That is literally.

Speaker 1:

OJ, regardless of when I got here, though. No, you're not, you're not.

Speaker 2:

Listen, relax, relax. Listen to what I'm saying. Oj Simpson right now does that. So you don't, okay? So let me finish my point. Then You're literally cutting me off and you're not talking about what I'm talking about. Oj Simpson does that right now. He does that. Hey world, all that. So you're not going to pick all that up when you don't know who OJ is. That is what I'm saying. It's all of his characters in this movie, even if you go to the last episode they tried to do the Peter Griffin fighting a chicken thing with him and his op and the reason why his op is so fucking. It's not even funny. It's the point.

Speaker 1:

It's not a chicken, it's a man.

Speaker 2:

Okay, you didn't listen again. I said he's doing his Peter Griffin fighting a chicken thing. You know what I'm talking about.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he's fighting like a man and a chicken.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so that's okay, no, who's fighting a man and a chicken? Peter Griffin is not. No, he's not. He's fighting a real chicken. He's fighting a real chicken.

Speaker 1:

Okay, but the in Vince's thing it was Surfman, so it was a human in a human man suit.

Speaker 2:

No, you're on the wrong episode. I'm talking about episode five, White Boy. That is the episode where he went to a school and he talked to the school and one of the boys in the school was his ops son.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

And so that's where he came in. He was like why your dad? Who's your dad? Well, his name is Vincent. What was his? What did they call him? They called him White Boy, and that was the only reason he was upset with Vince was cause the other people called him White Boy because they shared the same name.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I assume that there was a lot that you had to get on your own. I feel like he left a lot up for interpretation. That's my biggest thing. Like I needed more context and watching his breakfast club interview, he said that like all of the episodes were supposed to be longer and he had to cut out so much shit from each episode and it was his first like go around in Hollywood so he didn't know that like this is how it was supposed to happen. But with that specifically like I a lot of the episodes, I did feel like if they were just like maybe 10 minutes longer, then I would have gotten more context and he might have been able to tell the story more fleshed out than he wanted to.

Speaker 2:

Length is an excuse. You can tell the story whatever the time is is just a bear. A trying to think of the word. I want to use A boundary that you for you to use. So even if it's a 10 minute show, you can tell a story in 10 minutes. You have to hit certain beats and this show failed to hit those beats.

Speaker 1:

I think he was trying to tell a too complicated of.

Speaker 2:

You can't say that he was trying to tell a story.

Speaker 1:

No, I think he was trying to paint something that was way more complicated onto a way smaller frame than he was given.

Speaker 2:

He was doing what, and I wanted to wait to say this part. He was doing what Kenyon Bears always does. He does these short, overly-paced shows, these quickly-paced shows that you don't feel nothing at the end of it, you just feel like you wasted time. Kenyon Bears is the king of that. We watch Grownish, and every episode of the last two seasons of Grownish felt like what else I'm missing something.

Speaker 1:

If I had not watched that Breakfast Club interview then I would have 100% agreed with you. But, like already watching that before I finished the series, knowing that he wanted way more context in every one of the stories that he told and that he wasn't able to do that, it gives me a different point of view. But it gives me a different point of view when I'm rating it, because I did watch Vince's interview before I finished the season.

Speaker 2:

And again, I think that's cool. I think you're making excuses for him, because that's exactly what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

I'm saying that because I watched that interview. It's given me a wider opportunity to make excuses for him, because I know what his creative direction wanted to be so like. I simply wanna give him more leeway, because I don't care about what you wanted.

Speaker 2:

What did you get and what did you do with? What you got was empty bullshit.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I told again. I don't know what he wanted me to get from this as a viewer.

Speaker 2:

And what I'm saying is the failure here was I don't care if you had 20 minutes to do an episode. You can't tell the story in 20 minutes. You have to hit beats, and that's what his show failed to do. The entire time was to hit beats. The only part that was actually funny was the second episode, and it wasn't even the whole episode. It was the characters who were robbing the bank, because they were the most interesting characters in the show. They actually had depth and it was shown.

Speaker 1:

Let's talk about why you like those characters versus the rest of the characters in every single one of the episodes, because he also mentioned that he's not supposed to be the main character of the show.

Speaker 2:

Which is stupid. Everyone else is supposed to be. It's called the Vince Staples show.

Speaker 1:

Everyone else is supposed to be the Everything around. Vince Staples is supposed to be the main character.

Speaker 2:

Okay, and before we get to talking about the second episode, let me show you how stupid that point is and how they try to execute it. So in episode 5, where he's talking to the kids, right, one of the kids gets up and leaves and goes to the bathroom. They follow the kid going to the bathroom. He sells drugs. He matches up with his homeboy. He comes back to the classroom. He no longer is in the video, he's no longer in the episode. He ain't the kid who told the other kid that you know, this is my Dad, is your opp, or whatever. Nothing. He means nothing to the video, to the episode. He means nothing to the episode. You mean he's not shown after he's smoked.

Speaker 1:

He's no longer in it.

Speaker 2:

His inclusion in it no longer matters. You mean Vince Staples or the kids, no, the kid who went to go smoke. Oh yeah, he's. That's what I'm saying. Listen to what I'm saying. He goes over, they take the camera away from Vince, they focus on this kid and then, for no reason else, on the show. Literally what he did, the drugs he sold, the interaction he had in the bathroom, meant nothing else to the show.

Speaker 1:

I think you need to calm down a little bit, because there was a kid that was in the class that Vince Staples was talking to that left and I just explained that to. Because I'm just trying to clarify what the fuck you're talking about. Which kid? Because there's the kid that left Vince Staples' class to sell the drugs, and then there's the kid that he matched with. Are you talking about the kid that he matched with?

Speaker 2:

I'm just talking about the drug dealing kid. That's why I just said the whole story about what he did.

Speaker 1:

OK.

Speaker 2:

So what I'm saying is that child meant nothing to the show. No, it was just a random fucking thing and that's the problem that I'm saying. That point that you said about him not being the main character is stupid and that's bad writing. Don't call it the Vince Staples show and then not make your nigga to have character Like. That's horrible writing. If you think it's bad writing, it's horrible.

Speaker 1:

Everything's about it. This is horrible. If you think it's bad writing, then sure, but I just want to talk about the characters.

Speaker 2:

And you can't Because they have no depth. You know nothing about them. You don't know nothing about his friends. You don't know nothing about his interactions. The only people he interacts with is girl and his baby mama. And I get you want to have this old. I'm that tough guy that I don't cool with these niggas. Them niggas ain't my friends. I'm only with my girl and my bitch. But that shit is lame. You can't write a story about that. That shit is stupid. I'm just telling you I know that's your man. You like him Cool. This shit was trash.

Speaker 1:

Overall, did not enjoy the show. The show was bad.

Speaker 1:

I really like when Staples, but like I was really confused at like what he wanted me to get from this as a consumer. The first episode gave me like construction of like what he wanted me to think that maybe this world would be, and I was like, ok, we're here. The second episode made me a little bit more excited. I was like, ok, there's like a lot of like nuance in this and like he has commentary about like the black community that is funny but also like relevant. After the second episode I really think that like he lost it from there and then I feel like I don't know creatively like where he got it wrong. The first couple episodes gave me very like Atlanta vibes and he did say that Childish Gambino like was somebody that he called upon and asked for help on a regular basis, but I don't know Like I feel like you suck.

Speaker 1:

I didn't. I didn't enjoy this the way. I wanted to enjoy something from you, vince. We've been asking you for basic, we've been asking you for a podcast. Like I just generally I want to hear you're off the cuff opinions about shit. I don't want edited shit, like I don't want a scripted series from you. I love that you tried this and I enjoyed it and all that, but like I don't think it was fully fleshed out the way it should have been. It was disappointing. I don't know what you wanted me to get from this. I feel like you're someone that's smart enough that wants me to get something from things. I didn't get anything from it and I didn't. I just didn't enjoy it. I didn't, and I want, I wanted to enjoy it so bad. I wanted to come here and keep for you so bad, but I can't. I didn't enjoy it.

Speaker 2:

So the thing about this Vince Staples is this Vince Staples is the nigga from Black Mirror. He's the guy who you know talking all that revolutionary stuff and then once they gave him a bag in his quarters, he was quiet and he was just doing what he was told. He is commercial nihilism, all right. He is a guy who will show the pessimism, the dread that we all go through, make the jokes and guess what? We're laughing at the life that we're all living. That's really what's going on here and that's why I just I don't find him interesting. I and I think the stuff that you, you like about him, I just see the sham behind it, more so than anything else.

Speaker 1:

I feel like he's always highlighted A part of Blackhood that I genuinely don't see, because I'm a suburban girl Like I've never been, like a hood girlie, so like Vince's idea of Blackhood and my idea of being Black are going to be two completely different things, which is why I always found his interpretation of that Like really enamoring.

Speaker 2:

The typical woman falling for the hood, negro. I didn't do that, shaking my head.

Speaker 1:

I married a hood nigga. I married a nigga with two parents that grew up privileged.

Speaker 2:

Well, you're welcome.

Speaker 1:

Like, and that was my standard also.

Speaker 2:

So before we wrap it up, I just want to show everybody so we, I guess, if we went to Comic Con not too long ago and I want to show everybody one of the comic books that we picked up there, and it's Scarlett Ranger. So I'm not going to spoil too much of it for y'all, but I am going to just give a kind of like a brief synopsis of it. So he's a general, he's a young boy who gets some technology from his family's company. He uses it on his crusades. The reason why I say crusades is because he's not really a vigilante. He kind of just runs into crime and he ends up using the technology from his family to help.

Speaker 2:

The Scarlett Ranger is a moniker that his grandfather, who passed away, once had, and in the midst of his crusades he learns that maybe his grandfather didn't die of natural causes. So, like I said, it's got a good mystery in it. It's going to be a four parter. We have the first two, so they were really, really interesting. This was written by Roland Coy Karyon and Sy Vendaville. I do apologize if I say that wrong, but real good art in this, real good dialogue. And if you just want to support Black Creators man, go do that so you can go online and find this Scarlett Ranger.

Speaker 1:

So it's going to be a four parter. It is amazing, we met a lot of amazing Black artists at Comic-Con this year at Atlanta Comic-Con, so this was one of them. So yeah, support them and definitely go check out their stuff.

Speaker 2:

And we're going to definitely have some more people coming up outside of Black History Month. We just wanted to make sure that we talked about it during this one and we're probably going to make sure we add them and all that other stuff. But hey, it's a dope comic. If you're into comics or you just want to support Black Creators, you know like, do your thing, man, just support this guy. Really dope, and I'm glad we was able to support them and I'm glad we was able to have that moment. So shout out to Black Art.

Speaker 1:

Even though they were amazing to me, everyone was amazing, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and we'll talk more with each person that we had in each experience, but hopefully we can get some of the people on. Yeah, for sure, that'd be really dope.

Speaker 1:

All of the artwork.

Speaker 2:

Actually, one of the guys DMed us on Instagram, but you don't check that.

Speaker 1:

All of the artwork? No, I haven't checked that because I worked all time, all of the artwork and all of the comic books that we've gotten are amazing. Like that is the thing, obviously, that visually stands out the most is the artwork and it's amazing, like these are amazing talented Black people.

Speaker 2:

So yeah, all right, anything else you want to get to before we wrap it up.

Speaker 1:

No, that was it.

Speaker 2:

All right. So just let everybody out there make sure you know life is a labor of love. So let's keep building moments together and remember your job is not your family. The only thing you should be exploring is corporations. Talk F and F, tv, shaboy rhetoric and talk Bye Misreality. And we out of here.

Speaker 1:

Follow us on all of the social medias at talkfnftv, instagram, twitter, tiktok, all of the things. Bye, love you.

Speaker 2:

We out.