Talk FNF

Draya is Predatory, Lebron and Savannah Are BEEFIN, Candace Owens Is Scared of Diddy - Talk FNF TV

March 15, 2024 Talk FNF tv Season 1 Episode 34
Draya is Predatory, Lebron and Savannah Are BEEFIN, Candace Owens Is Scared of Diddy - Talk FNF TV
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Talk FNF
Draya is Predatory, Lebron and Savannah Are BEEFIN, Candace Owens Is Scared of Diddy - Talk FNF TV
Mar 15, 2024 Season 1 Episode 34
Talk FNF tv

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We're ripping off the bandages to expose the raw truths and challenges in the music industry, celebrity relationships, and the uncomfortable realities of age in romance. No stone is left unturned as we probe the intricate dance between personal identity, resilience, and societal perceptions, all through the fascinating prism of entertainment and culture.

This episode isn't for the faint of heart—it's a deep dive into the heartaches shadowing the glitz and glamour. We shed light on the somber pattern of tragedies within the sex work community, dissect the role that substance use and mental health play behind the scenes, and discuss how these issues are magnified by the stigma they face. Meanwhile, the Oscars and Billboard Music Awards serve up a platter of celebrity gossip, dissected with razor-sharp wit and unfiltered honesty. We take you behind the veneer of celebrity relationships, explore the dynamics of mentorship in sports, and even find space for a laugh or two amidst the serious talk.

As the curtains close on this episode, we bridge humor with heartfelt dialogue, sharing anecdotes on personal hygiene mishaps and dissecting the latest in film and television with unabashed opinions. Join us at Talk FNF TV as we craft moments that challenge, entertain, and connect, reminding you that every conversation is a vital step on our collective journey. There's never a dull moment—so tune in, buckle up, and let's explore this fascinating world together.

Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Send us a Text Message.

We're ripping off the bandages to expose the raw truths and challenges in the music industry, celebrity relationships, and the uncomfortable realities of age in romance. No stone is left unturned as we probe the intricate dance between personal identity, resilience, and societal perceptions, all through the fascinating prism of entertainment and culture.

This episode isn't for the faint of heart—it's a deep dive into the heartaches shadowing the glitz and glamour. We shed light on the somber pattern of tragedies within the sex work community, dissect the role that substance use and mental health play behind the scenes, and discuss how these issues are magnified by the stigma they face. Meanwhile, the Oscars and Billboard Music Awards serve up a platter of celebrity gossip, dissected with razor-sharp wit and unfiltered honesty. We take you behind the veneer of celebrity relationships, explore the dynamics of mentorship in sports, and even find space for a laugh or two amidst the serious talk.

As the curtains close on this episode, we bridge humor with heartfelt dialogue, sharing anecdotes on personal hygiene mishaps and dissecting the latest in film and television with unabashed opinions. Join us at Talk FNF TV as we craft moments that challenge, entertain, and connect, reminding you that every conversation is a vital step on our collective journey. There's never a dull moment—so tune in, buckle up, and let's explore this fascinating world together.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to the drunk he deserved them. White women next to him Like. I feel like that shouldn't even have been any kind of problem.

Speaker 2:

Hey quick, while we're on Jenae Ico, I saw somebody.

Speaker 1:

No, we're not, we're on Karoochee, oh shit.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that's racist.

Speaker 1:

That is racist. That is racist. Ha ha ha, ha, ha ha ha. That's racist, you know, when you just find out Shawty was just the biggest smud in the world and you just like what I thought you was my queen but you were the team the worst feeling ever. So I'm here to give Dre a grace Under one condition. We understand an undeniable truth about the women of her ilk and those who try to follow in her fashion those women are children.

Speaker 2:

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

Speaker 1:

All right, we're back at it. We didn't change the set like we said we were, but that's in the works.

Speaker 2:

We said that we were going to change the set eventually.

Speaker 1:

Well, this part's in the audio anyway. They can't see. All right, we got to get to the business. Let's start this.

Speaker 3:

Don't you see? The universe matters more than your meaningless swabble, Meaningless huh. What do you know of meaningless Ah?

Speaker 4:

Spend most of your life ruled by a nut.

Speaker 6:

Watch your best dwindle to an angle, and then tell me what has more meaning than your own strength man wish death upon me, blood in my eye, dog, and I can't see.

Speaker 7:

I'm trying to be what I'm destined to be and then you're trying to take my life away. I put a hole in the n***a for fucking with me. I'm back on the wall now. You're going to see. Well, I'm trying to talk when you talk about me, because I'll come and take your life away. Many, many, many, many, many many Wish death upon me y'all. I don't cry, no more. Don't look to the sky, no more. At mercy on me. And these pussy n****s put money on my hair. Gone with the n***a, motherfuck. I ain't dead. I'm the diamond in the dirt that ain't been found. I'm the underground king and I ain't been crying when I round. Something special happens every time I'm in the grave. So I'm trying my walk to block with the bundles.

Speaker 6:

I've been knocked on the humble Swing the eyes and I'm hung up and I ain't something that's gonna last forever, and I wish for you back here with the motor madness we gon' set up to have it. Wait, wait, wait, wait, hey, hey, woo, huh, are you fucking sturdy? I'm fucking sturdy. Shake it, huh, shake it huh, shake it, huh, shake it, huh. She like the way I move, she like the way I rock, she like the way I woo, and she let it cry for her n***a. She let it cry for her n***a, and she throwin' back to her n***a, and she throwin' back to her n***a. Mike and Mary, mike and Mary. Billie Jean, billie Jean. Uh, she do do, do? I'm up in all the stores when it rains, it pours. She like the way I, mike and Mary. Mike and Mary. Billie Jean, billie Jean.

Speaker 3:

Cousin, dior, dior, I'm up in the all the stores.

Speaker 5:

This one for Atlanta. Baby, pop up on your block, pop up on my off, pop up with your. I'm gonna lock, lock down on the phone with a thot On the sunflow representin' six Cap and cap can't clone this Big doll. Little my leg and pee Down and wide. Carry him, fuck it. Cemetery them. Shot and fired when they bury him. Put on my mask, jim, carry them. Don't know that poppin' on IG, but we ain't scared of them, we ain't got a ton in his face like he's a e-bag.

Speaker 1:

Hey, one more time for the streets, baby.

Speaker 6:

Fuck it nigga. Hit the streets and live. Got some crack in the corner and I didn't even know where I came. The neighbors, they don't like me. I got Jays in the coat, told my grumbler, I don't need a bid, I'm sleepin' on the floor. Got my two in the middle, got my two manholes Me and not my walls. Sup, I say who got the Y for the love? And I keep birds with me like a straight-eyed hollygrove. Fuck it, nigga, fuck it nigga. I feel this. They itch, they itch for the hype. I'm trying to learn to sit in here. I got that calculator. I'm a motherfucker master. When they come to get that pipe, I ain't gonna fuck. Fuck it, nigga, fuck it nigga. Fuck it nigga. Fuck it nigga. Fuck it nigga, fuck it nigga. I'm trying to run the city in. I got my calculator. I'm a motherfucker master. When they come to get that pipe, I ain't gonna fuck.

Speaker 1:

I'm a miracle. Many of y'all out here talking disrespect for the future. All right, listen and learn. That's all I can say. Listen and learn, get some real game about yourself. And now listen to Talk. Fnf TV Whoo, with your host, redrick and my mazy and a lovely and gorgeous co-host, miss Reality. And we, back here and back at it, spent a lot of things going on, a lot of disappointing things. But we'll get that in this moment. We will, because I'm just gonna tell you, man, like I said, we just moved into a new area, new environment. It's just a lot of stuff I'm just not accustomed to. Okay, I come from a long line of handymen. We fix things on our own, we don't call nobody up. That's how I come in today, you know being out and I see that there's a floor being re-tied. A little shocked at first, but I I'm still a little. I'm still a little tentative, trying to see what's going on.

Speaker 1:

I see up in. The gentleman is there and look over and I scan over his work. You know my dad did tile back in the day so I'm able to navigate You're good at everything. See the ones and twos over. I get a little correction over there. He said oh, you know this much, but why aren't you doing it? I said well, look here, sir, I didn't know you were coming and I was out there cutting wood with my father. Real man shit okay.

Speaker 1:

So, don't over here, come at me. Not a lumberjack About what I got to get going on when there's trees to be cut, real giant oaks to be taken down, sir. Okay, that's what I was on, but I just didn't like that.

Speaker 2:

I'm just trying to adjust and get used to this environment. But it's okay, I'm a handyman, you know like. So we call people up where work needs to be done. Hello, or right? Here, In today's case, we drove up to Home Depot and was like hey, somebody.

Speaker 1:

I am the son of a handyman. Okay, could have had that thing done in a few hours myself, but you were being a lumberjack. I had to cut trees.

Speaker 2:

That's outsourced.

Speaker 1:

What's that dude who be cutting trees on Instagram and TikTok? He be having like little jacked up shirts and stuff.

Speaker 2:

He be like a real lumberjack. Yeah, real Paul Bunyan like.

Speaker 1:

I don't know his name. I don't think his name is important.

Speaker 2:

Just the women like to post them when they want to show like oh, look at a man being a man. Because if you're posting a white man as an example of a man being a man as a black woman, then you need to rethink your brain chemistry Like what are you doing?

Speaker 1:

Post a black man. I'm sure this black man cutting wood.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, somewhere.

Speaker 1:

Alright, man, let's get into this man. It's funny when things that we talk about kind of come into fruition in a way, because one of our earlier episodes was strictly about you young niggas messing with these old bros and come to find out, man, a pregnancy has been announced.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, during women's history month too. Women's history month on International Women's.

Speaker 1:

Day. We got the announcement and it honestly is fitting, I feel like, because all of this is scandalous behavior. It is. And I want to give you your opportunity to say face before I can give my take. My take really depends on whatever you say.

Speaker 2:

Dreia, you obviously are calculated in your movements. A woman of time. You are impregnated by a man who is the same age as your son, actually younger, younger than your son is crazy. How does he feel about this?

Speaker 1:

And then like Jayla, how do you this? This is this, niggas, your age, so why didn't you ask him like so she left you for how long by yourself? Like that's the, that was what she was on to go frolic around with Chris Brown, apparently that is insane. So, like that's already, red flag number one Continue on Chris Brown. I'm like, I'm gonna wait till till you finish to make your point.

Speaker 2:

I feel like if it was a man her age and a woman his age, then people would be like up in arms about it. Everyone would be way more upset about it than they actually are. I feel like people are slightly disgusted, but nobody's like that mad. I think it's kind of weird, like having a child with somebody who is younger than your child. You don't have anything in common with this man other than like he has money and you want some. That's my take on it.

Speaker 1:

I'm glad that you had that, so now I can actually do my point on this Because you were being real and I appreciate that Salute. So we gotta look at this, because everybody starts bringing what you just said into question with Drake. So apparently, drake has been allegedly dating or seeing Lotto's 21 year old sister or cousin One of the two and so people were trying to compare it being the same, I'm gonna hate to break it to y'all. For a lot of reasons, these two situations aren't the same. So I'm here to give Drake grace under one condition. We understand an undeniable truth about the women of her ilk and those who try to follow in her fashion those women are children Straight up. If you don't have a problem with this, to a degree you believe women are children as well.

Speaker 6:

Explain why you think women of her are children.

Speaker 2:

Specifically why you think Drake is tight One.

Speaker 1:

she doesn't want to be accountable for her actions in a real way. Allah, like many children, she wants to be taken care of like a dependent Allah, like many children, she does not want to have any real bearing in this. She just wants to take care of a baby dog. Allah, like a child. These are all the things that come into place To me. I don't have a problem with that, that view of that kind of sweeping generalization of it. It's applied everywhere. But when you start saying, oh, she can do what she wants. She sells swimsuits, she got swimsuits and she get money from child support. She's not a baller. She has a revenue for her swimsuits, but it's not real revenue. Right now it's flating. It can go up or down. She, in a real way, is not in control of her own destiny.

Speaker 2:

The men that have to support her are she's been popular for a very long time. She's been attractive for a very long time. I wouldn't say that she's rich per se. The swimsuits did good back in the day when she was selling those swimsuits, when she had the whole finance girls line and it was taken over, she was probably making a good amount of money, but then that kind of fell off.

Speaker 1:

Her whole appeal has faded. You don't even see her making the same kind of moves.

Speaker 2:

She's still doing the easy fashion over brand deals and stuff like that I think she tried to clean up her brand so that she could get this, but she did that before the last player, orlando Scandrick, the one who had her second kid.

Speaker 1:

She knows she got two sons. Orlando Scandrick was a cornerback for the Dallas Cowboys.

Speaker 2:

I think he played for somewhere else, I can't remember what if one of those kids that she has becomes like a NBA?

Speaker 1:

or NFL player himself. This one is her being 17, young and stupid. That's her first kid.

Speaker 2:

That nigga ain't promising at all. She has an NFL baby and an NBA baby.

Speaker 1:

No, she got NFL son, but she got a daughter for the WNBA.

Speaker 2:

We already talked about that. She announced that she's having a daughter.

Speaker 1:

That was why she did the whole international women's day and all that jazz, if we're going to view it like that and say that, hey, dreya is a child. But let's be honest, nobody here is making that determination about her. That's why it's wrong, because another thing about this is when you have somebody like Dre and Lotto's cousin, when you look at the grand scope of things, what a woman, regardless of her age, is going to want from a man, dre can provide. What a man, his age, is going to want from a woman a la her youth, she can provide. That's not the same with Jalen and Dreya. She is clearly, like you said, extorting him. This is an extortion move.

Speaker 2:

Let's explore what Jalen is getting from this, because a 60-year-old baby mama in 20 years.

Speaker 1:

That's exactly what he's getting. You're 40 years old with a 60-year-old baby mama.

Speaker 2:

That's sick.

Speaker 1:

Your baby mama is going to be in a walker in your second peak.

Speaker 2:

I genuinely feel like Jalen had literal posters up not posters up, but his background. His wallpaper was probably Dreya for Mad.

Speaker 1:

Long, I'll do you one better. His girlfriend in high school was friends with Dreya. Yeah, her friend, the ex, even confirmed this. She said that yeah, you was looking at my man when we was in high school. You was baiting on him that early, keeping it a being. She is a predator.

Speaker 2:

Why was she friends with a high schooler Like a high schooler Could have been?

Speaker 1:

like a family friend type situation but, regardless the fact that you were scheming on this boy when you seen him as a top prospect in high school because he had a YouTube show, oh damn.

Speaker 2:

so she knew him when she was. Yes, she knew him when he was a child.

Speaker 1:

She's seen him matrace into a man. She was probably not a phone call away on his draft night.

Speaker 2:

And she's out here just extorting him. How long has he been?

Speaker 1:

in the league. He's still on his rookie deal. He's been in the league like two, three years maybe. He's on his rookie deal. He hasn't even signed his big money yet. She got him immediately. She got him before like anything Really. That's why he probably think he love her. You said he getting tattoos of her.

Speaker 2:

What the fuck man? It isn't like a bottom corner, you can't really see it, but he got her name tattooed.

Speaker 1:

It says Dreya, please name the daughter that, because that's going to be the dumbest thing in the world. That's stupid. That's dumb, like nothing about this. And the messed up part about this is these niggas ain't got no OGs Like. It's so evident, clear, and I wanted to get in here.

Speaker 2:

What are your fathers?

Speaker 1:

Well debatable. These niggas might be okay in this. They might not be good OGs too. But in the same token, people were saying Gilbert Arenas, who spoke out him and Nick Young, told an old story about Dre giving them some top in the back of a car one time and everybody was like, oh, you're supposed to be like Devin Booker, patrick, beverly, oh, you're supposed to be OGs. Y'all ain't supposed to be doing that to the young boy. And I'm sitting here thinking like damn, I would want to say the same sentiment, but these young boys don't listen to nothing but disrespect. So, like I could even see when he first saw that they was together, I'm pretty sure he tried to get in touch with this nigga. Like, hey, bro, like that ain't what. Can I get in touch with this guy? We need to know what's going on, like, because this ain't what you want, dawg, this is 2010 work.

Speaker 2:

Dre publicly said that your honus could be deleted Trifling behavior. Nobody had to reach out to Jaylin to let him know that she had a very extensive history.

Speaker 1:

No, sometimes you get a Pussimatized, so I can understand where his head may not be in the right place, but you got to have an OG come to you and you got to be receptive.

Speaker 2:

As your wife, I don't know the answer. I don't want to know the answer to this question, but have you ever been Pussimatized by a hoe, by? A hoe no.

Speaker 1:

Like like someone whose honus should have been deleted, but you was like I was more Pussimatized by somebody I didn't really like as a person, where it was like that's, all I really just wanted to do with them was that and then nothing else. So I would put up with a lot just to be having to get to that portion of it Okay.

Speaker 2:

I don't know if that's Pussimatized or if that makes you a sociopath.

Speaker 3:

Okay, I'll take it, I'll take it, I'll allow it, continue.

Speaker 1:

But, man, this is just so disappointing because this guy has a promising future and now you wrapped it up in this woman who we don't know has your intentions, because she could be somebody in the background, like we talked about before, who could be helping you navigate. But these young, these women, ain't like that. They want to be in front, they want to be the star. She put the whole little caption and everything. She didn't even tag niggie in it. Kyle Kuzma had to, he had to take bus. Everyone's bubble with it. So it's like it's just so disingenuous for her.

Speaker 2:

So nobody knew who her baby was. Remember, it was, the stories was coming out.

Speaker 1:

Everybody was saying that, like she had a pregnant bum, she was seeing out with them. Even when we talked about it, we even said the whole joke about him being her, being her, being his beard, and now you didn't put a bun in the beard. What kind of message is that? We were talking about this, though.

Speaker 2:

I think that if she is his beard, then it's not that crazy that you put the bun in the beard.

Speaker 1:

That is nuts.

Speaker 2:

I don't think that's crazy, because if you have a mutual agreement with a woman like we're going to act like we're together but I'm going to do my thing with the men's is in the penises, I can't. I obviously can't have children with men. I can only have children with women. Let's just have a child together if both parties want a child. Drea probably doesn't want another child. She left her child alone. She doesn't want another child, but she's like, yeah, security, probably. You know she really got security.

Speaker 1:

To she, this is better than social security Like it is. It's way better than Like she's so much better, and she might still collect social security after this. She's going to be 60 after the kid turns 20. And then? So to me that's also irresponsible. 40 years old, come on. Is 40 grand of my parents had me 40 but, still slightly irresponsible.

Speaker 2:

Is Drea 40?.

Speaker 1:

She's 39.

Speaker 2:

Okay, well, close enough yeah.

Speaker 1:

So right there she's knocking on deaf's door. I mean 40's door. I'm sorry, I didn't mean to say that.

Speaker 2:

Wow, I just meant you know the phrase where it's like knocking on 40 year olds. Go at him right now, 39 year olds coming him right now. He said y'all about to die. That's crazy.

Speaker 1:

But this is just indicative of what's going on in this society, man, where, in regards to these celebrities not having the money that they claim to have, crucci out here selling feet pic Talking about she going to donate the money. You're a liar. She deleted the tweet, yeah you're a liar, but you didn't delete that, only fans Just going to tell you. Now all you got to do is hit an inbox hey man, it's $200 for some real stuff.

Speaker 2:

You know what's coming. She said she don't need money. But like why would you just start selling feet pics?

Speaker 1:

And it's the stupidest thing, because it was definitely girl math. Oh, I don't need money, but this is the fastest growing industry, so you need money.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like it's, there's no, there's inflation.

Speaker 1:

All of us are struggling and then she tried to say it wasn't sexual. I come on, you know guys are spanking the feet, it's a fetish.

Speaker 2:

It's inherently sexual. It's not sexual like for you, because you're just taking pictures of your feet but you know what's happening with them. It's sexual, it's a sexual enterprise, another childlike behavior.

Speaker 1:

We redefining things that are clearly defined. That is what children do Like really quick.

Speaker 2:

While we're on Jenae Ico, I saw somebody over. Now we're on a cruisey, oh shit.

Speaker 1:

Oh, that's racist, that's racist. That's racist, yo, because they're belasian.

Speaker 2:

That's the same bitch that's it.

Speaker 1:

Cruci doesn't have any talent, though she cute. She's like Dreyas. They have no talent. That's why I brought her up but continue.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, no, we don't have to bring it up.

Speaker 1:

You sure? Yeah, you don't want to kick a blaze and back in. No, I don't have to All right, respect, respect, all right, let's see.

Speaker 2:

Speaking of Jenae Ico. We were not talking about her at all.

Speaker 1:

At all. All right, let's get into some of these awards, because it has been award season. We caught the Oscars. We did. I'm not mad at it, was actually better than I was expecting it to be. Rain now did fall asleep in the middle of it, but that's because we started watching it late.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying. I mean, it did start late, though. It started at like nine.

Speaker 1:

Doesn't it usually start earlier? I don't know.

Speaker 2:

I always thought it started earlier just so they can get the carpet starts earlier, but the show I don't know. I've never tried to watch the Oscars before. It's just white, whitey fast.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to American Fiction. Yeah, we reviewed that movie, so definitely check out our review. But they won. But it was the best screenplay.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

Best adapted screenplay.

Speaker 1:

Was there anyone who really stuck out to my man? One best actor, buddy from Oppenheimer. He won best actor.

Speaker 2:

And that was his first Oscar. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And Robert Downey Jr Shout out to Robert Downey Jr, that's what I was going to say His first. Oscar as well. Shout out to Iron man and this thing. That's what's up.

Speaker 2:

Did any black people win things? What if?

Speaker 1:

in American fiction. I think there was some more. You could check it out. But I do want to say this about Robert Downey Jr. A lot of folks were surprised that this was his first Oscar. Do y'all realize he spent 13 years on drugs? Like all of the 90s, like, do y'all realize? That he was like part of the 80s and 90s was definitely him on a coke bender.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so DeVene Joy Randolph won best supporting actor. So shout out to her, and then that's the only other black person I see that won things. We won't be staying on this long then.

Speaker 3:

We won't be here long.

Speaker 1:

But no, I just feel like a lot of people just didn't realize his history Because it was like when could he have won one? It wasn't going to be for the judge and the judge's son. No, that shit was ass and do little.

Speaker 2:

Come on, now Fucking trash. That's a joke, that's a joke.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm saying like do little was down the what I'm trying to think, what else?

Speaker 2:

he was in Other than Iron man.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and Iron man. He wasn't going to win nothing for Iron man.

Speaker 2:

No, because Marvel doesn't get nominated for Oscars.

Speaker 1:

But no, I'm glad, I'm happy to see that because he is a long person who's been in the industry for a long time.

Speaker 3:

So it's dope to see that. Let's see, there was anyone.

Speaker 1:

Ken, did you see my?

Speaker 2:

boy Ken perform, yeah, his whole like musical number. I was like okay.

Speaker 1:

Your boy, well, your girl Keating Six. She showed her blind spot. She tried to say it was impressive how he was able to perform like that when that isn't his craft. But she soon found out that the fans of what's his name again, who played Ken Ryan Gosling, ryan Gosling, the fans of Ryan Gosling told her yes, he has a band. He was classically trained and all this other shit, yeah, didn't. Was he a Disney?

Speaker 2:

kid. Was he in my land? Was that Justin Timberlake or?

Speaker 1:

what white?

Speaker 2:

man was in that movie. Hold on, I'm going to look it up.

Speaker 1:

But you know, I think that he was like he was a Disney kid, though he was part of that group of up and coming folks.

Speaker 2:

I want to say that could be right If he was a Disney kid. He was a Disney kid before we were children.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he was part of, like the Justin Timberlake, britney Spears, disney kid.

Speaker 2:

Oh, okay, that would make sense.

Speaker 1:

Ryan Gosling, you said La La Land.

Speaker 2:

Mm-hmm, are you sure he was in La La Land? I don't. I'm not sure at all. Not one bit. And you were right. Oh, he was.

Speaker 1:

Yes, he was a bad guy when he had the other girl who won Best Actress.

Speaker 2:

Emma Stone Emma.

Speaker 1:

Stone was in that movie as well.

Speaker 2:

She was, and she won, best Actress for Poor Things, which I tried to watch three times and I still haven't finished it.

Speaker 1:

Not because it's bad, though, right, no, I just it's a lot to take in.

Speaker 2:

It's just. It's just not my type of movie, specifically because there's not any black people in it at all. So that's usually what gets me, and then the concept was really interesting to me. And then there was this one scene in the trailer that got me to watch it the second time. She was like he just fast leaked my clitoris and I was like okay, I'm gonna watch this again, I'm gonna give it another try, because she obviously gets more personality. I'm gonna give it another try.

Speaker 1:

I'm gonna finish it. I walked in on one scene. This is, I guess, a spoiler alert here for the movie. Was it Poor Things? Mm-hmm.

Speaker 2:

It's on Hulu, yeah we.

Speaker 1:

I walked in and the girl had found the clitoris and she was out there rubbing that shit like an eraser.

Speaker 2:

She was that? Shit was insane. So you know it's about a mad scientist that puts like a three-month-old's brain in the glass.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it's like.

Speaker 1:

Girl.

Speaker 2:

Frankenstein. Yeah, it is. It's interesting. I'll finish it.

Speaker 1:

It's like Girl Frankenstein through a man's brain, because that's exactly what a man would want.

Speaker 2:

You could tell that they were trying to say something about women's bodily autonomy. I'm gonna finish it.

Speaker 1:

Was that Hold on? Was that just what I said about women being children? Whoa man full circle there.

Speaker 2:

That was wild, odio he always gonna bring it back to the greater world.

Speaker 1:

It got degraded. It was just an observation and literally matched the premise that degrades women, that's hate, that is hate. I'm not a degrader, I'm just an observer. All right, was there anything else we want to talk to? Or we want to get into the other award that you made me watch.

Speaker 2:

So what I wanted to say really quick about the Oscars also was the big difference between the Oscars and the other awards show that we watched. We also watched the Billboard, women in Music Awards and in general I think when the actors do bits like on stage before they nominate, it's so much better and it's so much more entertaining than musicians do it, obviously because the actors are actors. But yeah, I enjoyed that part of the Oscars more. I generally enjoy the Music Awards more because there's more performances.

Speaker 1:

I think what you forget is musicians really can't read like. R Kelly, they're not really good at reading, so like that's why they can't do all that. That's what makes it tough.

Speaker 2:

He said these niggas can't read Before we leave the Oscars.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to them. I can't remember his name. He was the Jewish guy who went up on stage and denounced his Judaism.

Speaker 2:

Yes.

Speaker 1:

In support of a ceasefire. So, what was that gentleman's name? Jonathan. Glazer. That's why I could remember that name. Glazer, that was his name, so shout out to Jonathan Glazer for that. That took heart. He, I would have been scared seeing the rock right there. I thought the rock was by the tackles as soon as he said that shit.

Speaker 2:

So there were a lot of celebrities that had these little red pins on. And then, after I finished watching the Oscars, I saw something that said that they were ceasefire pins. So a lot of celebrities had on the ceasefire pins. Really, I wish in her brother, I think, or her producer, I don't know and Mark Ruffalo was like very vocal about it too.

Speaker 1:

So they usually are. Mark Ruffalo kind of is forced to be in that, because he's literally in every environmental movie. Oh yeah, he is, so it's like you got to kind of be like on the side of right, sincere face. Yeah, I think it's funny that he's the Hulk. That's just so funny to me.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he has to be sincere outside of the Hulk.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

So it's fitting.

Speaker 1:

So was anybody you want to touch on with the Billboard, the Women's Billboard Music Award? Um, because it was, honestly, it was very like not entertaining. No, it was like for, like women that want to be free and live. Like there was no ass shaking, like there was like y'all look like there was a bunch of niggas in the room.

Speaker 2:

They presented the award um, so whoever was getting the award performed, and then they presented it like immediately after that so like slave work too, like like dance bitching, and here's your award for it.

Speaker 1:

So I'm just going to like it was all out of breath every time they was getting the award, and every single time yeah, it was, it was, it was nasty.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so, um, I'm trying to like come. So Charlie XCX was got an award. Carol G? Um. I like it when Carol G performs. I honestly like. I like her very much. She won Woman of the Year Um. Anna Lease won. Anna Leesa won Global Force. I Spice won Hitmaker of the Year oh shit. She had a couple of bops, though, like honestly, let me see if any other black woman, pink Panther is one producer of the year. Consider black woman. She's literally African. Okay, wake up.

Speaker 1:

Wake up.

Speaker 2:

She's just East African. She's light skin, but she's African.

Speaker 1:

So I'd say wake it up, that's all.

Speaker 2:

So, um, I thought that was dope as hell, because I love Pink Panther. This is like production style, I think, like it's. It's very. She's unique. She is Thames won Breakthrough Artist of the Year and Victoria Monet won the Rising Star Award and it was hosted by Tracy Ellis Ross. I thought Tracy would be more entertaining as a host.

Speaker 1:

Now Tracy showed you she part white.

Speaker 2:

She really did, but I also feel like she didn't write her material because that didn't sound like. Tracy, I follow her. I follow her on on Instagram and she makes me giggle way more than she did on stage. She brought up her hair a lot.

Speaker 1:

She brought up a lot of stuff that made the feel like she was just trying to make the white people in the room comfortable.

Speaker 2:

I don't. She brought up her hair a lot.

Speaker 1:

And then she was using the voice you know that was.

Speaker 2:

That was the straight I'm cold switch voice in there she was yeah, it was just it was not super entertaining but it was filled with performances that were entertaining, so I like her better when she has a script.

Speaker 1:

And then Savannah James. I'm sitting there looking at why is Savannah James here? Why she would she sing? She got an album coming out.

Speaker 2:

No, but people who weren't in music were presenting the awards.

Speaker 1:

But what is she in Ball wives?

Speaker 2:

No, she's just LeBron James's wife. Ok well she's that girl, she's a girl. How do you get that?

Speaker 1:

Well, let's, let's give it. Just give a hand clap for LeBron, because you can just be that amazing that your wife cannot do anything and then you still make her a star. He deserved them white women next to him, like I feel like that shouldn't even have been any kind of problem.

Speaker 2:

I saw that video, I started watching it. I didn't even finish watching it.

Speaker 1:

You know, you know, you've been, you've been just that hate was just searing.

Speaker 2:

It was.

Speaker 1:

But he was, he had that. So, player everything they was on the arms. You know, happy, happy, international women's day. You're the most impactful women in sports.

Speaker 2:

You know I'm saying I will say that usually when LeBron is on camera with other women like he's like yeah, I mean he.

Speaker 1:

Usually he doesn't view those as women. Those are the joints.

Speaker 2:

But yeah, he usually just did you that that one video with that girl tabs in and he points to his friend immediately.

Speaker 1:

That was the joint, though.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he was like, not me.

Speaker 1:

He's like y'all can't do nothing around me in the public. These women ain't just normal women. These women got money and prestige.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And they can touch on me like this. And it was playing and I didn't like what y'all were saying. Like I saw a lot of people in there saying, oh, lebron's gonna be in trouble when trouble Trouble.

Speaker 2:

Trouble. Here goes the big goblin.

Speaker 1:

Oh, here she go, right here with the disrespect. No bro, we not going to be doing this man. I hate when I hear y'all try to just dim the light of great men and y'all do it on the regular, like don't worry, you're not going to be in camera. Y'all do it on the regular, like LeBron James don't get checked by nobody. Oh, that's hate. I don't even know how you could even figure that. So you think if LeBron James is who you with, you think you could check him on anything.

Speaker 2:

No, I probably wouldn't, but you sitting here saying it, I'm going to make fun of you. No, that's not it.

Speaker 1:

We need to start putting some respect on the king, because my thing is this if somebody going to get it, it needs to be him. If he going to have the quiet princess, which I've always shouted out, savannah for being the quiet princess until this Billboard Music Award. I just feel like there's something going on. Now I'm going to start a narrative.

Speaker 2:

You think there's some trouble in paradise. Well, what?

Speaker 1:

I've seen is you saw the little picture which, again, that could be anything.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

But I peeped something else. It was a little bit, it was another video and a lot of people don't want wouldn't have peeped this, but as a parent, I saw what was going on. So they're walking in. You could just tell the energy. You know, when you are married to a black woman, I'll allow myself. You know, when they have that energy, it's just that, oh, she's trying to push you away, but in here, you know what I'm saying. So so that's what she was doing. She tries to grab the daughter's hand and LeBron grabs the daughter and takes him, yanks her daughter and takes her in another direction, to the other direction to talk to another gentleman.

Speaker 1:

That's sir. That is what we call a power play. That is what you're doing. You're showing her that this life that you can have, that I provide for you, can be snatched away at any point, and you will be sitting there walking down the little track. Walk by yourself. How special will you be then.

Speaker 2:

When I was watching it it seemed like she was trying to take her daughter's hand, but LeBron already had her in hand and I don't think he saw her trying to take her hand.

Speaker 1:

Power play. You don't have to make it obvious. This man has been famous for years. He does, he talks like this to everybody, he puts his mouth. He's trained.

Speaker 2:

He knows how to do a power.

Speaker 1:

He knows how to do a power move and that's what that was. I was just showing her like it could just be taken in a second Show. Some respect You'll need to be at the Billboard Music Awards getting all giddy, staying out late. That ain't the house that we built, savannah. She was down with LeBron for 10 years before they got married. Two kids you never heard of work. He moves the LA. Now we start seeing this. I can understand it. If I'm a man in his position and his status, I don't want anything to change. Because what? Once she starts doing the Billboard music war, next thing you know She'll be one to be here and one to be there and be seen with this man. I see no.

Speaker 2:

She's done interviews and magazine covers.

Speaker 1:

With the LeBron nod. You think that I gave it. Now he said on a story but I, just to me, I could just feel like where you starting, to you starting to separate the boys, the kids get on.

Speaker 2:

That was before that video came out.

Speaker 1:

No, well, we're before the video game. When he celebrated yeah, it was the same night it was actually the same night he was. They had played okay. That's when they was like, either the day before or the night before.

Speaker 2:

It was like that happened when you go do your own thing. Savannah this nigga surrounded by white women.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's all it takes and that's all that's what he was showing you. Baby girl, you can. You can do all this fast up, but understand where home is. I understand where you, where you built your bearings at this nigga's toxic is fuck. How am I toxic my things? I'm not that nigga, so I understand I gotta be humble in reality they probably.

Speaker 2:

I have no problems and he was probably I wanted to start an area if extremely supportive. Like something fun real quick you know like, oh yeah, baby go present, like whatever. Yeah, I just want to start an area.

Speaker 1:

I just said that, but I just feel like as a man in his position as a man in his position. There's just some accommodations that you're gonna have to make, like you're not gonna just be able to be Miss girly and just be out and about know. Everything that you do needs to be about the LeBron James brand, everything.

Speaker 2:

Well, yeah, if I'm a woman like Savannah James, I.

Speaker 1:

Mean you don't have a, you don't have an option of being other like if she would have been out of pocket she would have just been out on a read like you. Gotta think that the one thing stranglehold she had on him was the fact he didn't want to be the player with the baby mama out everywhere and he don't have her under any kind of control. He saw what happened with D weight. When you don't have a control, of your baby.

Speaker 2:

We're high school sweethearts. They, they love each other. She hit the jackpot. She hit the lottery. Like that was take that away also. Like they know, she hit the lottery.

Speaker 1:

Like you. You were lucky that the greatest basketball player to ever touch this earth loved you. Act like it.

Speaker 4:

That's all I'm saying at all times.

Speaker 1:

At all times. I know I'm insufferable.

Speaker 2:

I fell in love with a man who happens to be the world no greatest basketball player. That's how she sees that she knew him before all of the shit, so that's probably a high school. She, yeah, he was dominated in high school. So she yeah, the he, he had all of the articles and all that shit he was.

Speaker 1:

Hey, there was promised there. She knew she was betting on something high Mm-hmm. She didn't know she was getting the greatest nigga ever. It's, it's very. She knew she was gonna get a nigga who was one of four hundred.

Speaker 2:

It's very easy to be the quiet queen when your nigga been in the newspapers With everyone praising him as the best since before you knew him.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying, like you understand, I had to go through Kobe drama when I was a kid with Kobe the Alligations yeah what nigga admitted to it.

Speaker 2:

Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. I had to go to that. So I wanted to RIP.

Speaker 1:

I had to go through that. I had to fight that where my nigga who two years ago was the reason I'm me and my dad got to, spent ample time together because we watching the game is now nasty man McGee and these kids. They never had to have that. My son ain't never seen LeBron in no truck type of trouble.

Speaker 2:

LeBron is never gonna be in that situation. He controls his image too well.

Speaker 1:

And that's why that's all. I and all the asses. He should just be treated like he does. That that's all in any capacity. I don't know she does it or doesn't, but the fact that you not smiling a hundred percent of the time when you whip me, I have a problem with.

Speaker 2:

We can assume she does that, though, because they've been together for a very long time.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and then also, you know who else is like that? Patrick my homes is like that, because there was a Video where you see Brittany my home's talking to a friend next to her and people were reading her lips and she was saying essentially like, oh, patrick gets mad when I have bitch face. And she made like a little face Like but honestly, nobody as a man, nobody wants that like, if I'm with you and I'm lit and I'm up and you, the girl that I chose, you need to be having a Smile ear to ear.

Speaker 2:

I need to go home. What if? What if you fake it? What if your bitch has resting bitch face? Like just my regular face, because people think I'm upset all the time my just regular resting face. People be like, are you okay?

Speaker 1:

Yes, and then what do I ask you to do?

Speaker 2:

What smile, look it.

Speaker 1:

Shit. Y'all don't understand how much of it in the mood that y'all set and the precedent y'all set, and how people judge us Even I eat, how we judge us ourselves when y'all are feeling and y'all don't keep that in mind.

Speaker 2:

Listen, I think it's always about control even right now, when me and Frederick are Around people who care about him, I'm, regardless of how I feel, I'm putting on a smile. I'm acting like I'm happy as fuck. Appreciate that, regardless of it, I'm not. No, I appreciate that All right.

Speaker 1:

Before we get into this next section, I want to give an RIP to Akira Toriyama. I just want to thank you for just all the memories that you created. We lost him to a brain tumor has been confirmed and we lost him to a brain to which has been confirmed. So it was March 1st when he passed away. So that was. It did suck this to have that happen, but I just want to thank you, man. You know we played a little clip from Dragon Ball to the beginning of the episode and I just appreciate everything that you brought me. The friends the time Wanted me to be an artist stuff with my son, so thank you so much. I appreciate it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and one of the first gifts I got him was uh, was the dragon, yeah drag with the dragon balls. You can put it on, it's all. It's like a little collectible thing. He hasn't taken it out.

Speaker 1:

I'm not gonna take it out the box. It's a collectible, yeah.

Speaker 4:

Speaking of that. I have a story about my son, right?

Speaker 1:

So this little nigga, right? He probably about six or seven during this time, maybe a little bit younger, and I have three, twelve inch, I would say, maybe a little bit bigger action figures of Dragon Ball characters like Broly go, jita and, I think, trunks, and he knows they're up. He knew they were up there and I told him you can't open that, these are collectibles. You can play with all my other Dragon Ball toys that were the six inch, you know, normal toys. This nigga, so greedy, go after the big toys anyway, and this is when I was back at school, so he was just with my mom opens up the toys, starts playing with him. My mom comes in, starts yelling at him about it. This nigga lying say I told him he could do it. I'm sitting there like she calls me up. And.

Speaker 1:

I'm like he said what I can open. My goodness, I was sitting there. I was so crazy. I need to just send them back to him, since he compromised him. You know, you can have him figure out, figure out figure out what to do with him now.

Speaker 1:

They're worthless, the messed up the bottom I never touched. I had these when I was like Probably a little bit older than how it's like 12 when I got him and he compromised me like 19, granted, yes, I was. Well, I probably wasn't 19. Probably this one I was like 21, 22 if he was six. Yeah, so you can do the math at home.

Speaker 2:

Teenage father. Yeah, so he messed up.

Speaker 1:

That was always the dope part, though Like even though, like it's not dope and I don't wish that on anybody teen pregnancy that was the dope part was like you still being a kid being able to enjoy your kid stuff with your kid in like a real way.

Speaker 2:

But don't do it.

Speaker 1:

It's not dope that dope, all right. So let's get into a little serious topic here. So there's been a lot of death in the sex work community. A Lot of stuff has kind of. It's been a lot of sad stories, been a lot of eerie stories. They've kind of all happened with each other. A lot of them have been in the same, few of them have been in the same state of Texas. We're like that's what they are. So it was a few people, the biggest one so far and the one who I think a lot of people are feeling like there's a An attack going on. I think her name was Sophia Leon she, and this was like just a few days ago.

Speaker 1:

She was murdered in New Mexico and they believe it was a possible home invasion and it was like the third death in the adult film industry this year.

Speaker 3:

And, but they're all from different causes.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, they're just just this year. So in the three months we're in, it's been almost you can say a death a month, but it was her. There was also Zoe Parker. She was her and her boyfriend died of a parent overdose in Oklahoma. And Then you have. We see Another girl. I think her name was like Emily Willis. Mm-hmm.

Speaker 1:

She had overdosed and went into a coma, and that's how she just recently it's a lot of people overdosing. Yeah, I mean a lot of people are like trying to say like oh, there's somebody attacking the community.

Speaker 2:

But and also Cagney Lynn Carter as enough yeah so she she died in 2024.

Speaker 1:

What was? What was her death from?

Speaker 2:

She is the one that took her own life in the suicide Okay her home. Yeah, she was 36.

Speaker 1:

So yeah, so it was her. Those are the three things here.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and that's just crazy, did you say, jesse Jane?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there's more.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so Jesse Jane, she died from a drug overdose. And that was when that was also in 2024. Oh yeah, this is a just a day, Okay.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, at first I said Zoe Parker, but I was wrong. I read the wrong name. I apologize. It was Jesse Jane. Who's the overdose? Her? And her boyfriend overdosed, so do apologize for me that Zoe Parker did pass, but that was like in 2020.

Speaker 2:

Okay, yeah, so, and then what she says? Yeah, cagney.

Speaker 1:

Lynn, he's, she's the one who turned. She took her own life. So I mean it's, it's just crazy and a lot of people are trying to like in this man.

Speaker 2:

Those comment sections get rough especially when you do something that people feel Make you like less of a human them shit or less. Deserving of respect them.

Speaker 1:

Comments is tough, like they would just call her all sorts of stuff like all of them Honestly even the one that's in the coma, like she might get up.

Speaker 1:

So it's like it sucks and it just some people try to say it's part of the lifestyle, cuz I mean the drug thing. What sticks out to me is that that is a big thing, like, even like, have you been, or have you, if you've been, a Nigger who has been around and can acquire women? You want to see there's different women that have certain things like that where they Don't even engage with you unless they get messed up like that.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and it's just messed up. I think is a that that's different and we as women need to explore if you need to be under some type of influence to engage in in sex, maybe.

Speaker 1:

I mean, when you think to the sex work, I mean they doing it for the money, so they're doing it for livelihood and lifestyle, so they're not thinking of it like they're just like brothers got to get through it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah and in. In that Industry it's very normal for people to be under the influence. Like Every single sex work, like porn Documentary I've watched, every single person is like, yeah, I have to. There's been a point where I had to Completely shut my brain off or put my brain in a different place so that I can be able to do this on a regular basis.

Speaker 1:

And so that's why I feel like that's where it comes from. Do you think it? Do you think that is inherently part of like? Just say, if sex work was Completely legal but everybody had enough in regards to shelter, home, food, you didn't have to do sex work only to your own personal self, do you think it would still be explored that way? Do you think feel like people would still had it? Or is it just simple fact that, like folks are just doing, essentially what nine to five workers do is numb their brain once they finish work. They just have to do it while they're working.

Speaker 2:

That is a good take, because I do need a glass of wine after work most of the times. Um, I I feel like what was the question?

Speaker 1:

No, I'm just like, do do we feel like that's just a part of lifestyle, that? If, yeah, the, the strigger, the triggers of it?

Speaker 2:

So if everyone was able to Live, eat, have health care, everything, I think there still would be sex workers, because there there is that small percentage of people that's just like. I love doing this and I love Just having sex, and especially Now that we have only fans and things of that nature, where women and men can pick their, the partners that they're doing the scenes with, they can pick somebody that they have more sexual chemistry with, that they don't have to get like belligerently drunk To film these scenes with, I think that porn would still be a thing. I think it would be Less easily accessible. I think there would be more paywalls.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I do feel like that would be. I think would be probably more lucrative than it is now.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, for the performer, for the person who does, because I think right now it's a systemic thing, like if you have an operation you can make a lot of money, but if you're an actual performer, then yeah, you wouldn't yeah, because I think the consumption Would, the the need for it is not gonna change, so the people who are doing it would probably Maybe have even more notoriety too, because they're who knows what type of stigma would be around it at that point. If everyone's happy and and like, generally content with their life and they don't need to judge somebody else for doing something that they don't have the balls to do and they're making more money, like, maybe there would be less of a stigma around it and it would just be a better situation all around for sex workers.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and I don't think folks see of sex work in the industry the the respected dessert, like we don't have a lot of this stuff that we have now if what's for sex works, like the readily available of lights and cameras and Microphones and all that shit that comes from sex work.

Speaker 2:

I don't think people know how much the sex industry pushes forward Technology, the reason we have the internet, the way we do valley in general like the stuff that Kai and Aiden Ross are doing in 2024.

Speaker 1:

If you were a real porn head, you was watching that in 2010 of girls streaming real street like sitting in front of camera all day type streaming. Yeah way before. So I said, everything we see, and now is just what the way sex works has been able to push us forward. So, like I think we kind of just got to ease up on that man, I need these folks is real people in a way and speaking at Aiden Ross.

Speaker 2:

What do you mean? In a way, they are real people.

Speaker 1:

I'm saying they are real people, that they are going through things and I'm saying they're like the real people in regards like they're pushing forward Technology, they're pushing for it in 100%.

Speaker 2:

The porn industry is like the the engine in the train of the technology industry.

Speaker 1:

All right. So Aiden Ross was on the the docket right here and we just brought him up Do you think he's telling the truth about him sleeping with sexy red?

Speaker 2:

I never think Aiden Ross is telling the truth.

Speaker 1:

She kind of confirmed it with her tweet, though.

Speaker 2:

I think Aiden Ross Calculates every single thing. I think everything that we've ever seen that makes Aiden Ross Like is embarrassing towards him and it's like oh this nigga look dumb. Like he Formulated every single one of those situations.

Speaker 1:

But if you think about that, then if you're saying that this is kind of what we talked about earlier, where his steelo is to have himself be embarrassed by the rappers- what's the that's from you, but? What would this be the embarrassment them? Him sleeping with a black girl.

Speaker 2:

No, her coming out and saying that you paid me to take your virginity. Okay, I was just trying to see like you. Paying somebody to take your virginity is the embarrassing part. I just want to make sure, I just want to her being like I didn't even want to fuck you Is also the embarrassing part of this.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that nigga said when that when that clip leaked, man, I jack my dick and Carter and You're Aiden Ross is academics also, aiden Ross is Trying to have us under the impression that he was a virgin up until like maybe two months ago, when that sexy red video came out, when he was making millions off of streaming. It doesn't matter what you look like, it doesn't matter how corny you are. There will be a at least a line around the corner of bitches. I want to fuck you because you make that much money, so I don't believe you. You weren't a virgin period. This is. This is another one of Aiden's little schemes.

Speaker 1:

I think the version thing came from her, because that's never really been his stick. That's more of another dude named neon. I know you're not familiar, but neon is another guy where he plays that I'm a virgin in cell kind of character to people, mm-hmm.

Speaker 2:

So I think that that's why.

Speaker 1:

I just think I was just a shot, that she was just trying to shoot.

Speaker 2:

No, but I feel like he sent her a script.

Speaker 1:

It was for sure, this is what you're tweeting next.

Speaker 2:

This is like. That's why. I think, he has a part in this. Oh for sure I think.

Speaker 1:

I think it's what you're saying. This could be part of his plan, but that will be a crazy mix tape of the sex tape if they drop that, the Aiden Ross sexy red tape.

Speaker 2:

I don't need that.

Speaker 1:

That would be crazy. That'd be like alien. What's this baby alien? You ever seen any of his stuff? Oh my god, he's so crazy.

Speaker 2:

No, I have no idea what that is.

Speaker 1:

He's like a very small, like Arab looking man, mm-hmm, and he just be sleeping with girls. He looks weird, like he's a little dude, a little arms, little everything.

Speaker 2:

I'm gonna look it up on Twitter really quickly. All right, so let's get his baby alien, yeah, something like that.

Speaker 1:

All right, so Rory and Maul, they had an interesting conversation On their last episode of podcast and it stemmed from Danny, from a stop. And I see what you're doing, danny, you out there being an agent of chaos Pushing these boys together. I like it, I respect it, but it was. It was interesting because I always love when Rory and Maul have conversations that you know For a fact, they've never had off-camera and like you see that look on Rory's face like, oh, this is the nigga who I'm dealing with. It's almost like when you like chillin with a girl and she told you she got like a blowjob in Church and you're like, I mean, she, she gave a blowjob in church. And you're like, whoa, okay, well, you're not the girl who I thought you were anymore, but that's how I was. So what?

Speaker 1:

What happened was Danny did an interview with Rory, so again shot after that and in the interview Rory, from corner mall miss spoken, said that he tech somebody and they didn't respond back to Only left more red Maul. Mr Pride was not having that. He cleared that story up. But in the same token he also said he would never hit anybody up to go on their show, which sparked a big conversation in the group because it looked weird where it's like we're podcasting. One of the things of getting a bigger audience of podcasting is reaching out to your peers and generating that engagement.

Speaker 1:

Yeah like we even like we're planning on talking. I'm not gonna release too much, but we're talking about going on. Some people shows too to try to help build our brand, and I went out and I asked them. I just send a DM and today I and that's why I was just wondering, like, what was your thoughts on after we just both listen to the conversation this entirety? What do you feel about Maul and Rory and in this and that take that they were, that more basically had?

Speaker 2:

I think Maul has always annoyed me with his very like. You can tell that he His his prototype of a man is constructed in a specific way and he has to behave in a very specific set of behaviors. Like he has to fall into that. So Maul is like the overly cool nigga, like he's too concerned with being cool so he doesn't enjoy life. That's what he gives me and that's what he's given me since he was on the Joe Butting podcast. Like he's just like laid back, too cool for school. But you actually come off as lazy and unmotivated and not passionate at all, which this falls in line with. You not wanting to Reach out to other podcasters For not wanting to look lame just makes you look lazy, unmotivated and unpassionate.

Speaker 1:

No for sure. Cuz, and that's the way reason why I hate it, cuz I don't think he's lazy, I think he he puts the effort into the stuff that he wants to put the effort into and that he thinks is cool and fly, and I don't think that's a problem with it. But I do see where, like you say, like that's a part of the game, like okay, even on the old show I used to do when we first started, one of the guys on there knew a pretty relevant Instagram person in the area. I'm talking about these folks. This folk had like millions of followers on Instagram, yeah, and that once they ever talk to them about helping us with the show, coming on the show, trying to give us a look or anything, and his main concern was the same thing oh, I don't want to look lame. And it's like nigga, you don't. You got 400 followers, nigga, you lame, like what?

Speaker 3:

are you?

Speaker 1:

talking about. We try our lane. We are in the game of trying to get, not be lame anymore, and that's what you got to get other folks to give you a look. And, like I said, it just comes off as that because in my mind that's what it came out to. It's like oh, you just either lay, either lazy, or you're scary and you don't want to get what you got. There's somebody I went to elementary school, if I don't put his name on because I talked about my little school here.

Speaker 6:

I don't want to show show them up a little bit.

Speaker 1:

But it's my one elementary school with who's a gangster rapper and I tried to get him on the show and that they left me already. It wasn't no one, nothing embarrassing to me, it was like it is what it is the game.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it was elementary school, like that was my long ago, it's okay.

Speaker 1:

It was middle school too, but that's the kind of the school was like. All the comes in.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, I went to one of those too, so but no, it to me.

Speaker 1:

I just think that it's just crazy. But I just, I just find it so hilarious when Rory just sits there like even makes it. No, like I pride is the same, but like the way we executed is totally different. When you just find out Shawty was just the biggest smud in the world and you just like what I thought you was my queen but you Worst feeling ever.

Speaker 1:

But I just hope that he can kind of cuz. It was funny after, like, after Rory said the same thing five times, maul was able to acquiesce, cuz mom's like bro, I'm not talking about going to somebody you don't know, roy, it's like I'm not talking about going to somebody, you don't know, somebody, you're not familiar. I'm saying like your man's, like gilly wallo nori, like yeah, that's what I'm talking about. And they said well, okay, well, if it's somebody I'm cool with, we didn't had a conversation prior which Rory already used that as a prerequisite. It was like I think, okay, I could do that then. But it's like, bro, you be proven all of. I Correct.

Speaker 2:

I don't like Maul as a podcast personality. I don't think he's the type of personality that you can gravitate towards and like, feel Connected to, because he don't want you to feel connected to him. He wants to. He wants to other himself, he wants to feel above people, he wants to feel like he's cooler than you, he's hooded than you, he's more exclusive than you. That's the feel that he gives and that's not somebody that is going to gain popularity with the masses Because you don't want to appeal with the masses.

Speaker 1:

You want to be a special, unique nigga and the last token I'll say on this, or the last point I'll point on this one, is that it honestly feels like that is really the true example of what crabs in the barrel mentality, like they tried, like you know, I think, if anything, jay-z, steve style, all those guys that were in that Rockefeller New York adjacent Lane, that is truly what y'all legacy art is. Is this ideology of being too cool or not Within you know. So you create this mindset amongst people that they don't want to really build community, like if y'all being for real with it, that's really what a lot of these guys built. And y'all try to call anybody who criticized all that crabs in a barrel when it's like, no, that's what y'all built is crabs in a barrel for everybody. And then y'all just try to call out, you know, whoever doesn't Rock with what, the way you rocking with it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah that shit is just lame, all right. Last thing in regards to the politics we didn't really touch too much with Ben fucking Shapiro, oh, and we get Candace Owens to dinner, yeah, we got we got the double dip in here. We got to talk about both of them real quick here, but we can start with can we? Where you want to start with, ben, are I.

Speaker 2:

I want to.

Speaker 1:

I feel like Ben is, we can kick Ben in quick, real quick real quick, and then I'll.

Speaker 2:

I'll ask you this question before we get into Candace. Let me write it down before Go ahead though.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so Ben Shapiro was on his podcast doing Ben Shapiro things, and he talked about the retirement age and Saying that it needs to be pushed back in this country because right now retirement is at because I was 65.

Speaker 2:

Like what do you mean? It needs to be pushed back.

Speaker 1:

He said it was too early to retire.

Speaker 3:

So here is dumb Shapiro time and age in the United States. It's totally crazy. Joe Biden he's out in the case. Joe Biden should not be running for president. Hey, joe Biden is 81 years old. The retirement age in the United States, and which you start to receive social security and you are eligible for Medicare, is 65. Joe Biden has technically been eligible for social security and Medicare for 16 years and he wants to continue an office until he is 86, which is 19 years past when he would be eligible for retirement. No one in the United States should be retiring at 65 years old. Frankly, I think retirement itself is a stupid idea, unless you have some sort of health problem.

Speaker 2:

Everybody that I know who is we don't, was elderly, who has retired and the problem?

Speaker 1:

His voice is annoying and he's a little stupid like he's just such a fucking lame he's he's a real loser in a prick and the thing I have a real big problem with this is like he tries to later on and he bases it off the life expectancy prior and what his dumb ass doesn't understand. Life expectancy was low because people died real early in life.

Speaker 1:

Like I was talking to my dad today and I was, like most of his brothers and sisters, lived to be 60, 70 years old, but he had four of them who didn't make it either past birth or they died really young and I'm like, if you did the math, it looked like all y'all would have died in like 50, but that's far from the truth. You know, when people actually get an opportunity to pass that portion, people usually live past 65 and folks have known that for years.

Speaker 1:

Yeah that's just a miss, a Misremembering of history, a revisionist history, when you do what he's doing here and it's his clown work, because the real, true problem is if we don't need you old fucks here in this working environment for that long, no, like that's a problem with what we do with a lot of shit and same reason. Recording studios are in the same problem because we got all these old fucks at the top, all of these business doing the same shit. We got these old fucking losers at the top.

Speaker 2:

Government is the quintessential. Y'all are literally about to die. Why are you at the top making decisions for the rest of us who are young and fresh and have like Decades in front of us?

Speaker 1:

we got 40 years and y'all making decisions for us when y'all got ten. Not even for it. We have more than 40 years left. I'm just saying we got 40 years of real movement, yeah and these niggas got ten.

Speaker 2:

Like these nearly that if?

Speaker 1:

and they over here making decisions for us. And that's the reason why retirement? Because if you know when retirement, like that Social security, started, started during the Great Depression and that was to get old people out of jobs so that the young people could work. But again, all of these problems stem because y'all obsession with staying in these positions. Senate, these niggas be lifetime seats almost yeah and it's a freaking problem.

Speaker 2:

I think there needs to be a time limit on Senate seats, just just like there's time limits on the presidency. There needs to be time limits on how long you can be governor, mayor, in the Senate. There needs to be time limits on everything, because you cannot, just for a lifetime, have influence Over a part of our government.

Speaker 1:

That does not make sense, and then your old ass just dies. And then we all got to live with your choices longer.

Speaker 2:

You're living in. The longer you're in this position, you're just gaining more biases, gaining more, more opportunity to be corrupt. Get them out of here.

Speaker 1:

They gotta go it. Just, it has to happen at some point, because it in no way, shape or form can we continue to allow for this to happen. And when you have dumb people like him, it's because you bench appear. You do what we do. Sit on your ass. You're not doing nothing hard, what I'm just saying. We sit in our ass when we're talking on the podcast, yeah but I'm saying that's this.

Speaker 1:

That's what he does. He sits on his ass and talks. Of course you can do that till you die. No one's gonna stop you from doing that till you die. But there's people who are doing real hard labor that do not need to tell like. My father is a fortunate person because he did. He did kind of a hard labor job in regards to working in a post office and then that was your mother. No, my dad, my dad working in post office.

Speaker 2:

That's what they met. There was post office. Well, you can tell me, but don't tell the people.

Speaker 1:

It's the truth, it's all documented. But uh, yeah, they was post office pimping, so uh, but no, with him he's different. Like he retired and still enjoys working from time to time. Like he works on small engine he got a small engine license after he retired but, like everybody's, not my pops. So like I understand, we're like, oh, some people want to just live, and if they die five years after, after resting, so fucking big yeah that they choice to make rest Like we over here, we work people to the ground and then when you want to even push even more, you want to push them even harder.

Speaker 1:

You want to give them 20s, another decade of hard labor. Why You're obsessed? That's just mean and that's all you. That's what is man. It's just oppressive. You know what it is, man.

Speaker 2:

Ben, you don't actually fucking believe that you're just saying things to get clicks, to get people upset and it worked. We're talking about it, but like I don't think you actually believe that in your heart of hearts, in your fucking rational brain if you even fucking have one you don't think that people should be working until 75 years old. No, because you're not. You're not a competent human being anymore. You, you are at like you. You gain your cognitive function fully at like 23 to 27. You're great, and then at some point, at at one point, at like 60 something, you start deteriorating. That is how human biology works. I mean, you start doing it like a whole, that whole time even.

Speaker 2:

Yeah speeds up. So at that point is not where you need to still be in the workforce, still be making decisions for people. You're making decisions based off of your skewed experience from 50 years ago, when life is moving in a completely different direction. You should not have say in this. And that's not ageism. You old fuck. If you think that that's ageism. No, it's not.

Speaker 1:

You just shouldn't have opinions a karyatori, ama passed away and rupert murdoch, bitch ass, is still alive.

Speaker 2:

How is rupert murdoch still alive?

Speaker 1:

Got a fucking, a goat heart. He, literally he I mean in his chest stole aturo karyamas brain. It's a kira, a kira tori amas brain.

Speaker 2:

He stole a kira tori amas brain.

Speaker 1:

Well, hopefully All right. So again we'll get off this one. Candice did some interesting Investigation okay, we'll play a part of. I won't gotta play. It's like nine minutes really quick.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, let me ask this question before, because have you been seeing the like slight change in Candice Owens content?

Speaker 1:

So there was a Interesting because you know she's on ben Shapiro's channel like they, they work together and there has been a big conflict between the two of them because that was my question. He's Jewish and she's been very spoken against the israel state.

Speaker 2:

She has been, so she's kind of done a switch up from what I I thought she was gonna do. So I was gonna ask you do you think that candice and ben Are still in the same basket?

Speaker 1:

No, there's conflict. They've been openly conflicting with each other. Okay, he's, he's, she's still on the channel for whatever contract and whatever she got going on must be the razor cut, then you think like their rhetoric and content still falls in the same box, though.

Speaker 1:

I think they're both would say that they're right leaning, but I think in the right leaning box they are fighting like ben has always been kind of fighting for his life because he's a Jew In that, in that environment it's it's kind of like being a black guy in that environment. They're going to shoot at that Uh standpoint and he has to hope that the you're not, you know, uh, a national christ. Well, what is it? A christian nationalist? He has the hope that you're one of those people who want, you know, support the. The jewish, uh, I would say, empire, but the jewish state, yeah, in that way. But she, she just hasn't been apart.

Speaker 1:

She hasn't been part of that and I think this is kind of interesting because it kind of bleeds into this. So we'll play a little bit of it's like a nine minute clip that you guys can check out.

Speaker 4:

We covered this. If you haven't seen it, go back and watch. I believe it was monday's episode. But yes, the diddy lawsuits is absolutely crazy full stop. What if I told you guys that it is about to get even crazier, that there is directly a link to michael jackson's death? I want to be clear that when everything was going on with michael jackson the lawsuits is death I thought that we were in full conspiracy theory territory when people were saying that michael jackson was killed.

Speaker 4:

I actually know a lot of the letter in the industry who believe that michael jackson was killed and I just thought it just sounds too, too whacked out to believe that somebody intentionally killed michael jackson. Of course, why would they do that? And also, I was believing the media. The media was extensively saying Every single day that he was a pedophile, even though he factually won his case. I allowed my image of michael jackson certainly to be corroded by the media throughout that time period. I will fully confess that. Now I want to remind you, before we get back into michael jackson, what we learned in the ditty documents. Just a very quickly recap Well, if you read so, it's a nine minute long video.

Speaker 2:

She goes on to talk about how we learned from the ditty docs. She calls them the ditty docs, which I'm gonna call them.

Speaker 1:

I hate that she do some fly shit like that.

Speaker 2:

Diddy Docs did he docks? That's a little bop. But so she goes on to explain that in these documents we learn that ditty has basically had an enterprise of like blackmail within the hip hop community. That was Um basically equivalent to like Epstein's.

Speaker 1:

Which which another person has said that as well.

Speaker 2:

Ian, yeah, so, which was like equivalent to Epstein's system, but it was for, like, the black people in the hip hop community. Specifically, she talks about how they did the same thing as far as getting you to be recorded doing Lude acts with minors and then using that as blackmail against you. She talks about how this Diddy is like working for like a bigger name and that they are not afraid to Unalive people. She talks about diddy and his son in that case, of them Unaliving somebody and the LAPD covering it up. She talks about how the LAPD the police in general in Miami and la are Like in in Diddy's pockets with this. And she talks about this man named Mr Muhammad who is basically like a fixer. Whenever something like if you get pulled over by the police called this guy, he got it, he got it done right and then.

Speaker 2:

So mr Muhammad is A fixer, but he was also at the scene of Michael Jackson's death, which is what she was talking about. She tied it back in. This is the same guy who works for Diddy as his fixer. He was Michael Jackson's head of security at 21 years old, right after he graduated from college with a business and real estate degree. So her question. The question in the video was how does this man who is 21, fresh out of college, become the world's biggest pop stars? Head of security not just part of his security team, he was his head of security.

Speaker 1:

So it was, and he didn't go to school for that he didn't know.

Speaker 2:

he went, he got a business in real estate and and his concentration are like miners in real estate.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's, that has nothing to do with security not even a little bit.

Speaker 2:

So that's what the rest of the video is about, and she's just like it's. Everything is alleged. None of this is concrete. The person who says that this is a entire enterprise of blackmail Does have video and photographic evidence Proving this, but it has not been let out in courts or made public yet. So this is all still very alleged.

Speaker 1:

So for her to be thinking about backing out of this.

Speaker 2:

And she doesn't want to cover it.

Speaker 1:

That's crazy. We talked about Miss messy McGee and she don't want to cover it no more. That's that. I think that that feels a little compromising, do you think and the Clyde Davis is the person I think you were referring to with Diddy, his overseer kind of Clyde Davis? Oh um Did I say, oh so you say he was working for somebody above.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but I don't think it's one person. I think, well, I.

Speaker 1:

Davis was always the person. He was the person who put Diddy on and he was he's a Jewish exec in the music industry as well and he's had a lot of ties with a lot of stuff I think he also worked with, like Whitney Houston and stuff like that.

Speaker 2:

Okay, she made it. I don't know if he is part of this. He might be, allegedly. This is all like alleged, but there's a bigger enterprise that did he is working for to Like collect all these blackmail.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, well there was another person who kind of connected Clyde Davis to a lot of other other things too. So I mean it's it is a nasty operation, is just. It's crazy how you just these folks can just exist until somebody's tired of you existing and then we pop this shit off on your ass.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's all that. I really think that Cassie was the the first domino.

Speaker 1:

Yeah it's gonna be more, I think. I think we're gonna probably hear about stuff from Jay Z soon. It's gonna come out the.

Speaker 2:

Hip-hop community as we know it is going to start crumbling and we're All of these hope tet niggas are gonna be like, oh, they trying to take down the black man and this and that, but no, like rich men Are disgusting and regardless of their race, black, white, hispanic, fucking, whatever and these men were probably folks who were destroying other black men with either not allowing insane with Allegations or with saying, hey, you won't do this, you can't be part of this.

Speaker 2:

So Hollywood, the music industry, everything look like if it was not off connections and what you're willing to do, and like the how you're willing to degrade yourself. If it wasn't that and if it was just like talented people. Yeah cuz.

Speaker 2:

Now, like we're increasingly knowing that, like the people that we're seeing are just the people who had the most opportunity, had the most connections or did or Did the nastiest shit, or what was the most willing to do the nasty shit. So it's like, maybe what could we have gotten? Better Music and content? And where were there are more talented people out there who just said no to the bullshit and didn't get the opportunity. That pisses me off as someone who loves music and movies and everything Also that sucks. That you like, obviously, obviously, obviously, like Everyone who went through this, should not have gone through this. If you were a victim of Any sexual abuse, any coercion of that nature, oh for sure but, me being selfish.

Speaker 2:

I'm like you shouldn't have been here in the first place. Who are the talented people? That should have been here. How did you get here, bitch? I sucked a dig.

Speaker 1:

Nobody's doing the bendy. All right, amen. So before we get into these to be moving, you have no idea how I just ate that. I was with you.

Speaker 2:

No, I was right next to you, the vine. Okay, you didn't laugh as much like you should.

Speaker 1:

I came with the second. I was trying to stay with you on it. What's up? Okay, cut this out I so let me ask you a question before we get into the to be movies. So there was a big combo going on about do you take a deuce on the first link with somebody when you go to their pace, their place? No, you think that's a violation, or do you just think like it's just something you just prefer not to do?

Speaker 2:

Why would you be comfortable enough doing that yeah?

Speaker 6:

I gotta go.

Speaker 2:

No, unless it's like a bubbling hot shit, but I mean, if that's the case is over with now you're crowning, it's like, right there, of course, go ahead and do it, but like If you can, if you can hold it, I'm gonna hold it. Honestly, I've never taken a shit at the niggas house on the first link. I think that's crazy. I will rather leave.

Speaker 1:

I did off the leave off, like when I left, like before I left, I took the. I dropped.

Speaker 2:

Oh, so you left her with it. I flushed it with your essence slick. If your smell the same as they do now, like they did then, you were not doing that woman a favor. I mean you should have just left with your stomach hurting. I would have preferred that out. She made some good food. I had to let it out rhetoric shits smell like a Roadkill that already died, crawled up his intestines and then he released them again.

Speaker 2:

That's what it's. It's just like unholy. It's just like you have to. You have to move your face a lot when you smell it. Like you can't leave your face. It just Like. It's like I'm being assaulted physically when my husband farts and then he does it in the morning like, just just like He'll turn his butt away from me. Thank God, because I would not be here telling you this story if he didn't. Okay, like he'll turn his butt, but then he'll, and it's always. It's always like that In the morning. One or two, but that max is two. Thank God it's no more than two. But I have to literally like get up and spray or I have to just stop breathing for two minutes, 120 seconds.

Speaker 1:

Now we can get into your snoring if you want to sounding like a chopper.

Speaker 2:

We can get into my snoring if you want to, but that doesn't. That doesn't constrict your airways.

Speaker 1:

No, you suck on air in the room. There's no air for me to to breathe.

Speaker 2:

Oh my god, he thought he ate that. He didn't eat that. He didn't eat that like I, just ate that.

Speaker 1:

No y'all, y'all don't hear it. Y'all, y'all. Fortunate that y'all won't ever have to hear that snoring.

Speaker 2:

She caught me off guard with that. I think this is something that's happened recently too, because, like I, I in my, in my last relationship, I Okay. I lived with my ex-boyfriend and I didn't snore that loud. I think this is something that happened in my adulthood yeah, my mom's.

Speaker 2:

I was in the hospital once. My mom stayed with me that night. My dad lives in New York. He made it the second night he was. Both of them were here. I was like mommy, I Was a tiny room. She was right next to me. I was like I did not go to sleep.

Speaker 1:

You know, people are listening to us, though they don't want to hear that they don't want to see what scarred you.

Speaker 2:

Oh, the whole time, the whole time, I was like man, you need to leave. Well, what else we got on the docket was gonna get into the movies if you was ready.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, 100% so we was back on our to be adventure. Before we do that, shout out to Alvin gray. He hit us up, he saw our clip, showed us a lot of love, so we do appreciate that. He even invited us to a virtual premiere for his new trailer.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, the actor who got chased around the city, actor who got chased around. Oh my god, I cannot wait. Alvin is a G. Oh I cannot wait, alvin, I swear to God, if you ever change the format of your titles, I will be so upset.

Speaker 1:

Alvin is black lifetime.

Speaker 2:

They need. He is. That's he's hood lifetime hood lifetime. Definitely like. I love the long ass titles. They need to be at least seven words. I Love that. That's my favorite part of Alvin's movies and and in the speed of which he puts them out after he's putting them clips out, he is recording them shits Like wildfire.

Speaker 1:

He he shitting on Tyler Perry for a Alvin. I got an idea, for you can have this one for free. Do the LeBron James story, the basketball player. They got too comfortable with white women. Free game free game free game All right, so we will definitely probably discuss that on our next episode the trailer.

Speaker 2:

I'm very excited for that. And then did we talk about the nurse who saw the baby on the highway on the show.

Speaker 1:

We never talked about on the show but we watched that we've been watched that. We watched that. We watched that a while ago, so we've been watching Alvin Gray movies for a while. We didn't even know we, we, and now bro Really rocking with us and we rock with bro.

Speaker 2:

So it was like no really like his reaction to Our clip, which, like if he had a negative reaction to it I would have been complete.

Speaker 1:

Like we would have been cool with it.

Speaker 2:

But like he was like such a good sport which is what you said about it that it made him.

Speaker 1:

It's made me like him more, which made me like the movie more indirectly for some reason it just made me like, and we even said in our and our review, we said the first one we liked a lot better because he incorporated what really happened in it. So like we was really I appreciated all that. So, yeah, we are definitely gonna give you a review. He told us to talk our shit watching every Alvin Gray movie.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, we're just gonna be an.

Speaker 1:

Alvin Gray podcast on the song, but we got a few other people to talk about some new Movies that were dropped on to be so this movie that we're gonna talk about is basically hood takers Low budget takers. Yeah it's called distinguished robbers.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I'm gonna let rhetoric take this.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she hated this movie so much. Literally almost ended me so basically, this movie is about a group of brothers, a blue black brothers, who, pseudo, adopt a Hispanic guy into their group. Yeah, they end up all grown up to be relatively successful, and then they find out that a couple things are happening. Their parents are losing their land that they bought when they were all kids and they're good Hispanic friend daughter is having a heart condition and she needs a heart transplant.

Speaker 1:

So during all this they need essentially what? 1.5 million dollars to cover everything? Mm-hmm, things are getting stressful. They're trying their best, you know, keep every each other positive, but there isn't really way for them to get this money. Even though they're lawyers, doctors and stuff like that, it's hard for them to get this kind of money. I think they also said because of him being like an Entrepreneur or whatever, he didn't have an health insurance and that's what kind of put them also in a bind.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he was like a club promoter or like he owned a club or some shit, something like that.

Speaker 1:

So the younger brother ends up Coming up with an idea.

Speaker 2:

He's hothead, yeah, hothead.

Speaker 1:

He comes up with idea to work with the ops when they was growing up to Rob banks and they wasn't really.

Speaker 2:

They ops for real because they're the opulence.

Speaker 1:

They was well, yeah, but I mean they were the rivals.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like they weren't ops because the other like they were doing crime and the opulence brothers were like straight narrow kids. So the criminal niggas was just hating on the opulence brothers for just like being like.

Speaker 1:

Good black folk.

Speaker 2:

Yeah for being like this picture of black excellence, like they, the opulence brothers, very obviously had, like haters for real because, they had a dad. They had an active father and an active mother who were still together.

Speaker 1:

And then, like I said, that, it was actually funny because that's the, that's who was beaten up. The Hispanic friend was the they rivals, they was beating them up and then buddy was doing that weird smile. Speaking love is blind is on. Continue. We're going to talk about, we're going to watch that yeah, but no after that. Basically, they kind of devise a plan where the brother is helping them get the money while at the same time they're copying them and robbing other banks.

Speaker 2:

Yes, so they're.

Speaker 1:

they're taking the, the gangs, like model and doing their own shit because they're trying to get everything directed back to them.

Speaker 2:

Yeah they're also doing it in a way that makes it look like it's the other gang that's doing it whole time.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so they're trying to basically convolut a lot of things and in the process they steal the money from the other group.

Speaker 2:

So in in the first robbery, Hothead gets a security job at the bank that they're about to rob.

Speaker 2:

That his brother helped get him his brother helped the owner of the bank get the loan for the bank to start the bank. So as soon as the brother asked him to get hot head a job, he's like got it done, done, don't even say any more words. So he's a security at the bank. He gets them the information. The niggas come to rob the bank broad daylight, nothing. It doesn't even seem like they needed plans, because Yannick has just ran up in there anyways. And then the hothead is flirting with this girl before they're like, squatted next to each other and then the niggas shoots the girl in the head and the girl's blood splatters all over hothead in the scene and then after that that's the first robbery.

Speaker 1:

And it was funny because like he was kind of flirting with the girl but hotheads married, so like they try to make you feel like an emotional connection for him.

Speaker 2:

Hothead is married, but he's been cheating rampantly on his woman the entire time. There's a scene before this where he's a personal trainer, so he's literally walking around the gym cheating on her.

Speaker 1:

And he even brought like a chick with him to the to meet up with his brother. That was kind of play.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

But so they end up doing the robberies. They continue on. They live in life. They do the montage of you know everybody living good fucking their wives. Jason Ivy, who is the director, and he's also in the movie he plays one of the doctors in the movie gave him so plenty of sex scenes.

Speaker 2:

They gave him like two sex scenes. That's the thing that I noticed the most with these to be movies is the director always has a sex scene.

Speaker 1:

It seems like they love to do that, and so he ends up having to say but I will say, you were the best actor out of everybody.

Speaker 2:

He was. That was very noticeable, because everyone else was very bad.

Speaker 1:

So then the other groups. Do you want to get into it now?

Speaker 2:

I want to get into it because we're already past this scene. This scene happens when they find out that the dog, that the God, that the daughter has a heart condition.

Speaker 2:

So one of the doctors, who's the brother right, One of the other brothers is also a doctor. He's there when he tells the snigger that his daughter has a heart condition. He goes home to his wife and he's like this is what happens. She's like, oh, I'm on my way out with the girls and blah, blah, blah, and he's like I had a long day. Destiny Needs a heart transplant.

Speaker 1:

Was that her name, destiny. I made that up because they kept saying her name.

Speaker 2:

They said it a lot and she was like oh my God, no, let me move the mic away from me, because this bitch yelled so fucking loud. Ok, like her reaction I could tell that she was just a horrible. She was the worst actor in this entire fucking movie. Her reaction was like she thought that the louder she got, the more that she emoted emotion. That is not how that works. She was like no, not my God daughter, don't tell me. Something happened to my God daughter.

Speaker 2:

I was like turn the shit off right now. Turn the shit off Like the fuck. I'm about to, I'm about to, I'm so. I was so irate like the anger was bubbling inside me because of how just horrible of an actress she fell to the ground to this man's feet. Not my God daughter. What bitch? Quit acting like I don't. I don't ever want to see you in shit. I swear to God, bitch, if I ever see you in another fucking movie or in a commercial, or in a skit, or in a gift or Instagram, bitch, I swear to God, I'm reporting that shit. I'm reporting that shit for hate speech, hate crimes, hate everything, because I feel like I shouldn't be alive if you're acting, bitch, you're horrible. I stopped watching the movie after that. I don't know what happened after that. Um, what's his name? Jason Ivy.

Speaker 2:

Jason Ivy never hired this bitch again. I swear to God.

Speaker 1:

We'll be watching more of your movies.

Speaker 2:

We'll be watching more of your movies.

Speaker 1:

But if that bitch isn't it, then my husband is watching that shit by himself.

Speaker 2:

I swear to God, if you ever put that bitch in a movie, ever again I'm not watching that shit. Period, point blank.

Speaker 1:

Period To kind of wrap up how this movie ends. They uh horribly well, you were there.

Speaker 2:

I didn't finish it, so what happens?

Speaker 1:

is the rival game kind of gets clued in on what's going on. They figure out that the guys are also have their money and After way too long, because these things are stupid. It did feel long time Like they even had like a detective who was inside the group with them.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, there was a detective crackhead.

Speaker 1:

So they didn't know who was there. There was just a lot going on the mom, the sheriff's son, he was undercover with them. But basically the movie ends with the rival ops. They basically kidnap everybody's family and they tell them they got to bring them back to money or it's going to be problems.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

And so then that's what it kind of ends off with them saying we gonna burn this motherfucker down.

Speaker 2:

I don't know where it ended, because after that that bitch had knocked my god daughter. I walked away. I was like I'm not fucking. So, Myself through this mental gymnastics.

Speaker 1:

So we might do the. I might watch the second one when it comes out.

Speaker 2:

He's going, that's going to be a.

Speaker 1:

Distinguished robbers is sick.

Speaker 2:

That's a nasty name. Rhetoric reviews by rhetoric by himself.

Speaker 1:

No, I'm gonna watch it because the Shawty probably is going to be in that second one too.

Speaker 2:

She's the wife.

Speaker 1:

I just thought it was funny that they just really took takers to the next one.

Speaker 2:

I need y'all to kill her.

Speaker 1:

They probably will in the next one, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like if all of the spouses survive, I need her to be the only spouse that doesn't Genuinely Like kill that bitch. Look me in my eyes, hold on. What's his name again?

Speaker 1:

Jason Ivy.

Speaker 2:

Jason Ivy. Look me in my eyes. Kill her right now. Go back in your script. If you write in the script right now, murder her immediately. Murder her. That's all I ask.

Speaker 1:

I'm definitely going to catch distinguished robbers too.

Speaker 2:

If you kill her in the second one, I will 1,000% watch.

Speaker 1:

I will give it a Out of 10. 2. I'll give it a 3. It was 3. It was Like a lot of times they kept doing the same bit over where somebody would start talking and then somebody would cut them off and they'd be like you. Let me finish Like I was listening to, they did that a lot. It was like I was listening to Joe Budden podcast. It was two specific brothers.

Speaker 2:

It was the brother that the producer played and the hothead. They had that specific dynamic a lot. It was between those two brothers. So that's why it didn't bother me that much, because I was like maybe he's just trying to make it seem like those two brothers don't get along and that might be something that we're seeing in the next movie. But also I might be putting too much thought into it, because this is a garbage, fucking movie.

Speaker 1:

It definitely felt like Joe Budden flip and ish. It was all in this movie. Every time they Do you. Let me finish, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Can I get my point out? And then one of them, niggas, looked like flip. Oh no, that was in the other movie. That was the other movie by the watch.

Speaker 1:

So we'll wrap this up. But, like I said, if you want to go see it, it's on Tubi. But we got one more movie to get into. This was Moet, also known as Hood Players Club. Low budget players club.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

But yeah, in that movie they did have somebody who looked like Flip and Maul.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Like they look, like they fused Like Flip and Maul's son.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like they fused together. Mm-hmm, you want to get them the 401 on this one. What happened?

Speaker 2:

So this movie.

Speaker 1:

Follows Gorilla.

Speaker 2:

It starts out with like this couple is fighting. She doesn't think that he's going out to work. He's a cop. He's like I'm going out to work. He goes out to work, immediately gets killed. He gets killed at a strip club. So then we. Next scene is his daughter. His daughter is struggling to pay bills and stuff. She has a little brother. They're about to get kicked out of the house. They have a mortgage. She goes from her friend.

Speaker 1:

You missed the second part oh go ahead With her mama. Remember the mama, oh, okay.

Speaker 2:

So that's the part that's the crazy yeah. That's the craziest part. So after her father gets murdered, her mom is like comforting her and is like baby, it's going to be okay, it's going to be okay. He walks to the back, boom, shoots herself in the head. It's not successful. How do you shoot yourself in the head?

Speaker 1:

unsuccessfully, but they didn't tell us that until later on in the movie. So yeah, you're correct.

Speaker 2:

They didn't even let us know that her mom survived. We didn't know that until later. So right now she goes to her friend. Her friend. She's explaining her struggles to her friend. Her friend is like you know what you should do Start shaking that pussy for money. So that's exactly what she starts doing.

Speaker 1:

I just want to add I was so mad they didn't switch those two. I would have loved to watch the movie about the friend.

Speaker 2:

So the friend did seem like a better actress, Like sure Her and she was way more cute.

Speaker 1:

And she was way more cuter, and she was cuter than her.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I think that both the girls were cute. But as far as like who is more striking, then the dark skin girl was more striking Definitely. I would have liked to see her more. The light skin girl kind of just seemed like a regular, like round-faced guy in these girls. I've seen her in New York 17 times.

Speaker 1:

And she had, like the baby hair was just like tattooed on almost she.

Speaker 2:

So her baby hair was. Her hair was like dry-ish, like she had a Just like a fresh silk press, but then they used like very oily edge control on her baby hair. So it was very shiny and then it looks like they used a wax stick on her leave out. So then her leave out was shiny but then the rest was like matte, it was just, and then my husband notices shit like that for some fucking reason. So the difference in like textures between her hair and the rest of the hair stuck out a lot.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it did. It was very distracting, which is what he's.

Speaker 2:

I had to explain it in girlier more detail so y'all can get what his actual problem was so her friend is like yeah, start shaking that pussy. She go to the club. She doesn't even audition.

Speaker 1:

She seemed like the other girl knew the mistress.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but you still gotta show us that she know how to shake that ass.

Speaker 1:

Honestly, you just gotta make sure that she doesn't smell, right? No?

Speaker 2:

you smell good. All of the stripper vlogs that I've seen on YouTube. They have to audition. I mean they might.

Speaker 1:

But you are watching a vlog, it's usually a man.

Speaker 2:

I mean, I think, vlog is like day in the life, like this is what happens throughout the day. This is a movie, so I think the vlogs are a little bit more accurate. So she gets the job Her first day. She don't make no money, she don't have no clients. There's this girl called Hurricane in the strip club. That's on some schisey shit. She eventually, hurricane, convinces her to start doing the schisey shit with her. So she's basically just putting air tags in Niggas pockets while she is giving them dances in the private room. And then schisey I mean that's what I want to call her Schisey. Her name is Hurricane, but Hurricane and her Niggas Not her specifically, but her Niggas, rob, them, rob, whoever. She puts the air tags on after they leave the club.

Speaker 1:

So let's talk about that part real quick. Stupidest plan ever, because for one reason, they made her take them to the back room. Every time, every single time, all you had to do was just drop it into his pocket while he was at the bar.

Speaker 2:

You're a stripper Like you could go up to a Niggas and feel on him and put an air tag in his pocket without him noticing, without him taking you to the private room.

Speaker 1:

And then why do you need an air tag when the fucking thieves were at the club every time?

Speaker 2:

They followed these. It seemed like they followed the men from the club. Like the air tag was not necessary, it wasn't necessary at all. The air tag was necessary for the plot. So let's move on. So they've been doing this for a while. They eventually get caught.

Speaker 1:

So Well, they get caught because of the girl who was doing it before her Not Hurricane, but there was a girl, Hurricane that hired before them, who pushed them in the right direction to find what was going on.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so in the beginning, Hurricane was like we need a new face to be added so that we don't get caught. So this is probably why, Um, this movie was just a little it was. I think it was better than I mean you stayed and watched this one.

Speaker 1:

You watched it with your brothers?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, definitely.

Speaker 1:

So her Distinguished robbers, robbers.

Speaker 2:

So, um, the police is on a S at this point and they catch up with the main character. What was her name?

Speaker 1:

Uh Moet.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so they catch up with Moet and.

Speaker 1:

They find that her prints were on a tag.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so this is the point of the air tag. Like there was no reason for the air tag other than her prints are gonna be found on it. The detective that found the prints was very close to her father, and this is the detective that was trying to financially give her help in the beginning of the movie and she refused it and decided to start Shagahal Pussy instead, which is like what Bitch. Are you dumb? Like you decided to not get help from a very close friend of your father's and you decided to start selling your body instead. You are, are you dumb?

Speaker 1:

Standing on business.

Speaker 2:

Like this movie just stood on nothing from the beginning to me, because I was like a girl who has raised this shelter to her, who had both their parents would not have made this decision, but whatever. She was a dancer, someone in the house shelter she was a trained professional dancer, with a cop father and a mother in the same house, she would not have chosen to shake her ass for money.

Speaker 1:

Alright, now get to the twist.

Speaker 2:

So the twist? What is the twist? So, um, you want me to do it? Yeah, go ahead.

Speaker 1:

The twist was you find out that her father was in a relationship with the girl Hurricane, that's who he was cheating on his mom with.

Speaker 2:

Hurricane gets questioned by the police and then she's like well, his wife found out that we were still messing around. And then the cop makes a face and you can tell that he realizes something. So he goes to Moe. I think there's a flashback and they show that the mother who's in the mental hospital is the one who shot her dad. The police officer.

Speaker 1:

She shot, killed her father.

Speaker 2:

Because she found out that he was still cheating.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and then the fact that she tried to kill herself was a fake move to basically throw everybody off.

Speaker 2:

Which is why she missed so hard because you can't act. You can't miss when you shoot yourself in the head.

Speaker 1:

And then it's funny too, because they tried to give her a wound and it looked like they just put a bottle cap on her head really hard until they made a little red circle on her head.

Speaker 2:

They put a dot of red lipstick on her forehead. No, it didn't look like a lot, it looked like they put a bottle cap on her head. No, because if you put a dot and then you just go like that, that's what it looked like. It literally looked like they put a dot and then they spread it out.

Speaker 1:

It looked like a pure circle to me. That's why, but no, it was just funny that they kind of did that, and then that was pretty much the end of the movie. They found out that the mom was the one, but then Moet doesn't ever go to jail. Whoa, no, that's actually ends on a cliffhanger.

Speaker 2:

So if she doesn't, go to jail, she gets back together with this thing that she been messing with throughout the whole movie, which we did not mention who meant nothing, because he literally means nothing, like he doesn't drive forward the plot in any manner or fashion at all. He's just there, so they're walking down the street together and.

Speaker 1:

Hurricane is in the car not in jail for some reason.

Speaker 2:

And it was like oh, this bitch thinks she's sweet and then it ends on a cliffhanger and I'm trying to figure out why is that bitch not in jail? I just need to figure out why black people think that cliffhangers eat. No, I mean like the no go ahead, but why do the small black creators? This is why I like Alvin.

Speaker 1:

Alvin keeps it. Alvin universe.

Speaker 2:

He wraps up his stories. Because why are we doing a cliffhanger on a movie where these niggas are going to go to? We know these niggas is going to jail, we know? Please be more interesting. God damn it. It's frustrating. You know, black people have more mental capacity than you think, because you directors are making me think that that and producers are making me think that y'all think that black people are fucking stupid. With this content that you're fucking making for us, we're not stupid. We like complex characters and character development and we like plot twists that aren't comical and soap opera and contrive.

Speaker 2:

Just stupid as shit. I don't like it. You need to put more effort in Be smarter. I don't know, I don't even care if I, if I, sound like you know who the director was.

Speaker 1:

Be smarter, you wrote the director's name right. We got a shout out director for this to movie.

Speaker 2:

Which one from? Away?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, moe, you wrote it down, remember you tried to follow them on Instagram and everything. So you know, we want to make sure we give a shout out to the director, because we probably going to tag you in this, just like we're going to do.

Speaker 2:

We definitely are, because that shit, that shit was just a clusterfuck of fucking black stereotypes.

Speaker 1:

Now he tried to do his best players club impression to the best that he could. I just feel like this was Thomas L Harris. Shout out Thomas L Harris, man, we'll get this one. We're going to get this ranking of this one.

Speaker 2:

I'll give this a 2.5.

Speaker 1:

At least give it a 4.

Speaker 2:

That was better than the other, no because I gave the first movie a zero and then I gave the second movie a one. This is a 2.5. This is the highest rating I've given a 2B movie.

Speaker 1:

I was going to say it was four.

Speaker 2:

No out of five stars I thought we're doing 10. No out of five stars.

Speaker 1:

Okay, then it's. 2.

Speaker 2:

2.5 at max. I'll do three.

Speaker 1:

It's about a and we're doing out of five. Then it's basically the same as definitely out of five. It's the same as the same as Roberts, I was going to say a zero out of 10.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you still get a zero out of 10 because it's zero regardless, but you gave album to zero. Yeah, alvin also. Honestly, I should have gave Alvin a one.

Speaker 1:

I mean you're going to give him a little bit more, since we understand the concept more now.

Speaker 2:

No, no, because I'm starting to like Alvin a little bit more personally, but that doesn't mean that his content is better. It doesn't mean the mic work, the camera work, the writing, the production, the yo y'all to be movie, stop doing that week.

Speaker 1:

As from the bottom angle Yo, I hate that shit. That shit does not look good Like it. Looks like you got the cameraman squatted in a corner Like he's taking a selfie for a bad bitch.

Speaker 2:

The cameraman like this, like he's taking a selfie for a bad bitch All the way down here. What the fuck is going on, what the fuck.

Speaker 1:

So, yeah, it's just, it's just crazy, but we're going to be here to talk about all your to be movies. We're going to kick y'all back in if they.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I'm going to keep torturing myself because I'm a fucking masochist. For some goddamn reason, I'm going to keep watching y'all bullshit black movies because y'all still black.

Speaker 1:

We support black creators, baby, All right. So I think we good yeah that's it. We can talk about Don Lemon, but you know him and Alon are having beef. Y'all want to know from an interview. Yeah, but I think we, good man, we're going to wrap this up, let's wrap it up, baby. I didn't say my my little jingle. Last time I was upset about that when I was watching back over. I didn't say the jingle. The jingle is the most important part. It makes us all feel like we're one and together.

Speaker 2:

Make sure you follow us on all the social media platforms at talkfmftv, on Instagram, TikTok maybe if it still exists, we don't know Facebook, YouTube, talkfmftv Period.

Speaker 1:

And don't forget, life is a labor of love. So let's keep building these moments together and remember your job is not your family. The only thing you should be exploring is these corporations and white men. Them too Talk F and F TV. We back in. We'll be seeing y'all next week. We outta here.

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