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J. Cole Is No Longer Lightskin, City Girl Civil War and Tasha K interview Desi Banks Ex- Talk FNF TV

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Ever wondered why at family gatherings, some folks get to dig into the crab and shrimp while others get the side-eye for reaching for the "grown-up" plates? Pull up a chair as we share the heartwarming and sometimes hilarious nuances of food traditions and the unspoken rules at the dinner table. From the way our parents broke the mold by letting us sneak a taste of 'big people food' to the fierce debates over whether kids or adults should attack the buffet line first, we're serving up a smorgasbord of cultural practices and childhood memories.

But our palates aren't the only things we're indulging in. Tune in for a side of hip-hop culture as rich as grandma's gravy. The conversation gets spicy as we dissect rap beefs, with a dash of disappointment over J. Cole's unexpected onstage apology and the City Girls' very public squabble. Feel the impact of these lyrical showdowns and witness how they shape legacies in the music industry. It's a meal of words and wit you don't want to miss, flavored with our own connections to the beats and bars that soundtrack our lives.

And because life's a balancing act, we're also peeling back the curtain on the real grind behind creative passions and work commitments. From the sizzling debate between Ben Shapiro and Candace Owens to the juicy details of Terrence Howard's wig disaster, we're not shying away from the tough choices and sacrifices made in the pursuit of dreams. It's an episode that's as layered as your favorite lasagna, rich with the essence of what it means to juggle the personal with the public, the artistic with the practical. So, sit back, relax, and let's feast on this full-course discussion that's sure to satisfy your appetite for thought-provoking chatter.

Speaker 1:

be a bang out on the spot. Oh, what you mean? You letting them freaky mickey? That's crazy dude. That's not even the end of it.

Speaker 2:

He said hold on bang out on the spot on the spot that's sick, because I again, once again, I'm being hated and attacked for presenting new ideas. Okay yay so that's, I think that needs to to be respected and understood and acknowledged.

Speaker 1:

And it's so toxic that we have to go get Chris Brown.

Speaker 2:

Yes, Like I have to form the dark, light-skinned Avengers. Like you feel me, I have to assemble those men now.

Speaker 1:

This podcast is sponsored by graffiti tax services. For all your tax preparation needs, you can go to graffiti taxcom. We're going to put the link right here. It should be somewhere. And yeah, you can head to them for during tax season. And if you have any financial or tax preparation questions, head to graffitiffiti Tax Services. They're our new sponsor. Thank you to Graffiti Tax Preparation Services. That's it.

Speaker 2:

All right, we back at it. All right. So I had a question I wanted to ask you. I meant to ask you this a few pods ago too. So it was a picture that was going around and it was a little girl at a barbecue or whatever, like you know family reunion, or whatever. And she said she different, a burger, hot dog and a rib is crazy. And people were saying like at their you know family functions and things like that, they weren't even allowed to touch the ribs.

Speaker 1:

I don't like that.

Speaker 2:

That wasn't your experience.

Speaker 1:

No, not at all. There are some family members that had that like, oh, kids can't have this rule. But my parents were like my child is going to eat what she want to eat Period.

Speaker 2:

No, when I was younger we had, like the adults ate first kind of thing, where you let all the older people get their food first, and then the kids would get their food first, and then the kids would get their food, and then that's how we did it.

Speaker 1:

My family was generally the other way around.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, the kids eat first. I heard that growing up was like the kids were supposed to eat first, but no, it wasn't how it was in most of my family functions and then like I don't think anything that it wasn't allowed. But if you did get some, like you know, big people food you had to like make sure you finished it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like you couldn't play with that definitely like the crabs you couldn't play with when we had the, the seafood boils and all that growing up. You could. You had to finish that crab if you was gonna grab it and he grew up in maryland so they was serious about them.

Speaker 1:

Seafood boils that was part of the culture. Like you couldn't, just you know get that off couldn't just dilly dally?

Speaker 2:

no way the shrimp all that. You had to do it all, so I just thought that was crazy at the haitian functions.

Speaker 1:

The thing would be like they wouldn't want the kids to eat like the lumby, like the conch I don't know if I've made lumby for you. We made it at the barber, it don't matter. But the haitians be like the kids can't eat the lumby, you can't eat the crab, and my parents would be like are you gonna stop me from putting this on my plate and giving it to my child?

Speaker 2:

it has to get physical at that point.

Speaker 1:

I remember there was this one um uh barbecue I went to. It was like a memorial day. It was like for my dad's radio station. One of his co-workers was throwing it and then we went and, um, I asked the lady for crab and then she said no. So I went straight to my dad and then he had a girlfriend at the time and then she went straight up there with me and was like, put the crab on her plate that's how you do it, though you gotta step up, and she did yeah, I never had

Speaker 2:

that I was begrudgingly I was the one who ate the food, so it was like the adults wanted to sometimes give me their food because they couldn't finish it.

Speaker 1:

That's how I was this man is a vacuum, a bottomless pit all right, man, let's get to the music fake ran all over you.

Speaker 6:

Hate rent all over you. All my hoes get slimed in Niggas ain't know no slimy shit. All my hoes get slimed in Four more niggas out of water to risk. All my hoes in the wide body. Pick my ho up in the wide body. You ain't never gonna cry about it. All my hoes get time out. All your hoes get slimed out the AP store. We buy them out. We'll be right back. I'm smoking dope.

Speaker 7:

I'm on my cell phone. I'm selling dope straight off the iPhone. He want a quote. He talking nine zones. He bow, bow, high front you five more Nine piece straight. Eight balls MJG bitch. I got eight balls. Nine piece straight. Eight balls, mjg bitch. I got eight balls. Nine piece straight. Eight balls, mjg bitch. I got eight balls. Suave house still independent Distribution. Mexican he still sending no contract. Take my word, send a hundred packs, bitch them. My birds Shoe box no shoes in them. In the two-seater Me and two women no death jam. Went solo, took your custody's prices solo. I'm smoking dope. I'm on my cell phone. I'm selling dope Straight off the iPhone. He want a quote. He talking nine zones. He both vote. I find you five more Nine piece.

Speaker 2:

Straight eight balls.

Speaker 8:

Mr Disappointment, itching, I'm putting so much work in these streets.

Speaker 8:

He got pinching. I told him chill out. How look having henchmen if shots get the pop and I'm the one doing so. I'm good when it's tension. He's First shit was classic.

Speaker 8:

Yo. Last shit was tragic. Yo second shit put niggas asleep. But they, that was your crime. I was trailing right behind and I I just now hit mine. Now I'm front of the line with a comfortable lead, high running. So I got it.

Speaker 8:

Now he want something with me. Well, he caught me at the perfect time. Jump up and see why. I got here off of bars. Not no controversy. Funny thing about it, bitch, I don't even want the prestige. Fuck the Grammys. Cause them cracks. They never done nothing for me. Hocus Pocus to my Damn with this thing. It's that New Jack City meme. Yeah, I'm aiming at you, but you crying tears before I bust it up, light work like it's BWC. It's a cold world. Keep the heat under your seat. I got a phone call. They say that somebody dissing you want some attention. Come with extensions. My dog like say the word. He on bullshit. He itching I'm putting so much work in these streets. He got pension. I told him chill out. Then I called me when it dropped down. It's sad but sincere, told me. Nas heard you singing. When he hate that shit, said you the one yo why you make that shit. I can't believe I let Nas down. Damn, my heart sunk and I stunk. I can't believe I let Nas down, man.

Speaker 1:

I got the system on the phone. Resistment was in my tongue.

Speaker 2:

You didn't let just Nas down, nigga.

Speaker 1:

Like literally, let's get into it because I'm very Well, let's introduce the show.

Speaker 2:

Oh yeah, this is Talk FNF TV with your host, Rhetoric, and I'm with my lovely and amazing and wonderful co-host, Miss Reality. All right, let's start. So, I'm thinking I'm going to come into this podcast today on our normal recording night. And I'm thinking when I hear this first might delete later, I'm thinking, oh, we got a good one, this is going to be a great week.

Speaker 1:

It was a great album it was going to be.

Speaker 2:

It was going to be a great way to start it.

Speaker 1:

I'm thinking.

Speaker 2:

I know, Remember I said Dreamville Fest was coming.

Speaker 1:

Yep.

Speaker 2:

That was the next thing. I'm thinking boom, as soon as I hear this. Oh, I know what's going on this weekend. Oh, we putting Buddy on the Summer Jam screen. Yep, we got pictures, we got memes, we got all that. I'm ready, I'm hype. I thought that we were going to get like top tier rap, like I thought we was going to get that old thing back.

Speaker 1:

I thought we were.

Speaker 2:

I thought we were gonna get hip hop for real I thought we found it, I thought it was gonna be the moment, and then this nigga went up there and apologized yo j cole went on stage at dreamville his dream his own concert at in his um home state hometown full of people who support the crap out of him, and then got up there and told us how, after he dropped what is it?

Speaker 1:

the, the drill, seven, whatever seven minute drill yeah that he couldn't sleep for 72 hours what you couldn't sleep you. You're a rapper who rapped, and you couldn't sleep after that what is that?

Speaker 2:

I don't understand and see, this is what it comes down to and I and I hate to, I hate to be this guy in the bearer of bad news, but we can't claim all light skins anymore. All light skins are not created equal.

Speaker 1:

J Cole heard that Kendrick song and immediately folded like a lawn chair, turned over, bent over and presented his rear end to Kendrick Lamar. He said, kendrick, where do you want to come?

Speaker 2:

And we know why he actually said on the chin. He said, kendrick, where do you want to come? And we know why he actually said on the chin. But he said that. He said on the chin, he said come on my chin.

Speaker 1:

But we know why this is going on.

Speaker 2:

Like I said, all light skins are not created the same. Some of us have both black parents, some of us have a white dad.

Speaker 1:

And the lowest tier of us have the white mom, not the lowest tier, I'm just saying in the rankings of light skin.

Speaker 2:

That's how it would go. If you got a white mama you at the bottom, I'm sorry it's as I didn't make the rules and I try to not claim these brothers like that, the half and halves, I try to put y'all in the biracial category, like it's biracial, and then I'm light skin, like I'm a genuine light skin like a fully blooded black man who just happens to be light skin.

Speaker 2:

Thank you. I don't like when they put you guys Devin Booker Clay Thompson. I don't like that. I'm not a fan of that. That's not how we give it up. And y'all different, Y'all move different, Y'all do this funny business. The light skins are disappointed. You don't know how often I walk around and I'm told you know who you look like, bro. I'm told I look like J Cole.

Speaker 1:

I don't like it On a regular basis. People have, men have gone up to this man and told him he looked like J Cole.

Speaker 2:

It happens far too often, and now I feel like anytime somebody says that to me, they calling me a hoe because of you, jermaine. It's an insult now it's really going to be shade Like I have to walk around with my face and unfortunately it resembles yours and now I'm going to be the hoe. Now I got to go punch a dark-skinned nigga off top right now. Yeah For like. Right now. Yeah for like. No reason you started this like it's now a real work. You have portrayed every worst light skin uh stereotype ever.

Speaker 1:

You shown up, you talk tough and then when you got on the stage, you folded this is literally a part of hip-hop, like flexing your muscles, saying you the best, calling out other people who are the best and saying that you're not as good as me, and showing everybody why. That's part of hip hop. So when you drop seven chambers, amazing. You did what you were supposed to do. Kendrick dropped his song. You were supposed to come back, but then, I don't know, maybe you niggas have had too much therapy too much.

Speaker 2:

It's just too much time talking to somebody in a chair because why are you right?

Speaker 1:

it was like a. I don't know how long he was talking on stage, but he was like are y'all all kendrick fans? We know that y'all have a very like overlapping fan base. Yes, we don't care. I can like kendrick and j cole and want to see y'all kick each other's backs in. I was so excited as a fan to see y'all like fisticuffs. You know like I really wanted to see y'all duel, but you ruined it. My nigga, like that's you. That's like a wet blanket on the on the whole situation.

Speaker 2:

It was just so unfun the crazy thing about this album, too, was I'm not a j cole fan at all. Like I don't go to his look for his music. He's not somebody like I don't want to hear about your first time I stood in line for the dollar and a dream tour I, I was gonna go, and the only reason I didn't was because the line was too long it was dumb long I didn't get tickets.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so I.

Speaker 2:

That was the only reason I was gonna go, but that was, and I was with some people who was that wanted to see you. It was cool. We saw the migos that night, so it was all right I met boss and omen that day, though, shout out but uh, it's just.

Speaker 2:

I'm not a fan of his at all, but this was like one of the first albums that I listened to of his that I actually was liking. I like the energy, I like the shots, all throughout the project. It wasn't just seven-minute drill, he had daylight on there. The Cameron joint was tough. I liked it. A lot of people were saying he already rapped on that beat before, but shit, he killed it on this song.

Speaker 2:

It was so much I was coming here to actually give him praise, and I'm so glad I don't have to now, because I can now remain a Jermaine hater.

Speaker 1:

Yes, remain a Jermaine hater, it's just sad man.

Speaker 2:

I hate all the people like Stephen A Smith and Charlamagne talking about. Oh, why are y'all trying to make these brothers be on some bull? I'm like, what are you talking about?

Speaker 9:

be on some bull and I'm like, what are you?

Speaker 2:

talking about this. They were just rapping at each other, nobody was gonna fight, they were just gonna put music out, and then they probably turned into a tour or something we was not telling these niggas to shoot at each other.

Speaker 1:

Neither of these men are like gangsters by any measure. We just really wanted to see a duel and y'all took that away from us, and that's shitty drake if you come with that bull you going into the.

Speaker 2:

I already know you biracial, but I've been letting you slide Like I've been letting him walk that on the light skin tip. It's going away if you don't come with that heat.

Speaker 1:

Drake, I feel like has taken too long to reply. I know you said he was on tour and everything like that. But like the way that he's completely gone, unhinged and unraveled on stage multiple times since this is dropped and has not put out a freestyle nigga, get, get in the booth.

Speaker 2:

They say it's coming Thursday, so get in the booth please.

Speaker 1:

God damn it. That's so crazy that y'all are like Twitter fingers on stage, apologizing, therapizing. All y'all is bitches except Kendrick. Kendrick got his foot on your necks and y'all are just like flailing and crying and apologizing, therapizing. All y'all is bitches except Kendrick. Nah, I'm not going to let you do that. Kendrick got his foot on y'all necks and y'all are just flailing and crying and apologizing and you just let him fuck you. Y'all just getting fucked.

Speaker 2:

I'm not letting you do that to the boy. The boy still can come out when he's ready. He can drop his whenever he's ready Because, like I said, this is from this guy, so just be prepared.

Speaker 1:

The boy is going to do a little freestyle, just get something.

Speaker 2:

The boy is going to hit him up, but it's not just going to be at Kendrick now. It's going to be shots at a lot of people. You're going to get what's necessary for you, Kendrick.

Speaker 1:

This isn't what y'all think it is.

Speaker 2:

Kendrick has been coming at him for too long for him to not be the name of the song, like on some marvel shit, like he's gonna be on that, and I think y'all need to be prepared now again.

Speaker 2:

Apologizing at your own festival is the weakest thing I've ever seen bro, I am just taken aback and I'm appalled at how you just bent over and showed kendrick your butthole, like we got so much issues when it comes to like dark skin, light skin, relations within the men and how they thinking we soft and they think they can call us all kind of names and you just make it all, you validate it all. You make us look crazy, insane, like we can't stand up. For now we got to get Matt Barnes to go steal off, like I got to go get a collection, chris Brown.

Speaker 1:

We got to get the collection going of the light-skinned niggas who don't play and we just have to show it's so bad and it's so toxic that we have to go get Chris Brown.

Speaker 2:

Yes, Like I have to form the dark, light-skinned Avengers. Like you feel me, I have to assemble those men now because I already got folks trying me in the comments on being light-skinned. I'm cool with that, they're haters. But when we out here showing it, we showing our red asses, we can't do that.

Speaker 1:

Red niggas assemble we got to tighten up. Man, that's really crazy. And then, um, when no name came at him, a couple years ago, j cole had mad vitriol. Mad vitriol for this black woman with a way smaller fan base than you. But, kendrick, after you told him that he part of the big three, you were like yes, sir, I see you as a peer Handshake. He said you're not any peer of mine, nigga. I'm better than you. I rap better than you. Everything I do is better than you, nigga. And then J Cole was like I'm sorry.

Speaker 3:

I'm so sorry. I'm so sorry you got niggas lol and on x. What's up with you dog, bro, like come on man punch from td just hitting lol like what is that dude like?

Speaker 2:

come on like see, that's the only time I have to really get on with these niggas when they start getting jumped by dark skin niggas, because it's like yo get up off my do, but this I'm not.

Speaker 1:

I'm not with this right now, I'm just I'm so, I'm so disappointed, man Like as far as like the conscious rappers and stuff like TDE and Dreamville are like, they're the. They're the two groups that you like. The quality of the music they're not. They're not signing, just random people for no reason. They have curated. They both curated a group of artists for a reason.

Speaker 2:

And then when you do this you make the niggas on stage. That was like going at dudes, look crazy. Like Jed was making little subliminals. He had a little subliminal joint going in, I know he didn't know you was apologizing, like could you imagine that I just I'd sneak diss some dudes while I'm on stage for your shit Behind my?

Speaker 1:

nigga back.

Speaker 2:

And you out here doing this Behind my partner.

Speaker 1:

And then he'd turn around and apologize Craziness.

Speaker 2:

It's insane. It's like I'm not coming at anybody. Crazy for you. Ever again. You made the whole team look weak. I can't believe. I got a whole uh shit on instagram going crazy saying you you was prince. No, you not. You the jester. Nigga, not prince. Sorry, that was a disrespectful thing.

Speaker 2:

I apologize, yeah like man it's really crazy and and then, like you got everybody just going at your top like nobody's showing any mercy, everybody's saying the same thing. There isn't really much besides the, the pc people who just trying to get that, uh, that that controversy just being the opposite type shit, there's nobody else really can just say nobody can shoot you any bail no, because it's not.

Speaker 1:

This is the the nature of the sport. This is hip-hop. So when you apologize, instead like it's, it's so, like we've never seen this before like he told us he was the best.

Speaker 2:

Like you you've said that multiple times. You said niggas don't want you and it's like yes what are we supposed to do with that?

Speaker 1:

two rappers of this caliber have never gone head to head, and one of them just backed away and was like now you got it. Why I?

Speaker 2:

mean like jay-z. Apologized, but that was after several shots back and forth.

Speaker 1:

That was after he said something crazy too that was after we got two of the like hardest diss records to this day, they said though I was looking up some stuff.

Speaker 2:

They were saying, you know, jay electronica had apologized to kendrick before, and then lupe. They said lupe apologized. Right now, currently on the internet, lupe is fighting for his credibility.

Speaker 1:

And then eventually between Kanye and 50 Cent. Like one of them apologized Niggas always, eventually after a while.

Speaker 2:

But that Kanye and 50 Cent was staged, that was marketed shit, that wasn't.

Speaker 1:

Niggas always dap it up afterwards. Yeah, daping it up is not apologizing.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Daping it yeah dapping it up is not a polygraph. Yeah, dapping it up is like you're a formidable opponent. That's what this could have ended in.

Speaker 1:

That's what it should have ended in.

Speaker 2:

Like y'all could have went at each other and then maybe y'all could have just sold a song together. Y'all could have did a verse together.

Speaker 1:

Y'all could have did something with Drake, or y'all could have just been on smoke, and then this is just what we do here. I don't have no hate towards you for real. It's not actual hate. It's just we're rappers and I'm rapping and y'all are. You just said that we're all three of us are the best. No, all three of us are not the best. I'm the best. So it was very normal.

Speaker 2:

Like just doing, like the reverse of what y'all did.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and then he's done that before with control. Like I feel like Kendrick once in a while just likes to shake shit up Like here. I mean it's not the first time. Battle me, nigga, battle me.

Speaker 2:

He did the same thing Like, so we said this before he did it on the Keem song the Baby Ke now J. Cole, like that shit is, like this is really career suicide.

Speaker 1:

Cole, you cannot talk your shit anymore as validly as you used to.

Speaker 2:

Like this is now and when people, when I say that it's not like I'm saying he's never going to sell anything. It's just like your fan base is going to stay your fan base. It's not going to exponentially grow, it's not going to be. I don't see much transition going on because, like it's, it's really just unless this is like a play to get attached to people because there's just so much stuff you could have went at with kendrick like it really was the fact that you have no features on your albums and went platinum and all that like and you produce all your own beats.

Speaker 2:

That shit was like something you could have really just went at this nigga head like methodically, like you could have went at some of his little pop features. It was just so much stuff you could have attacked and just for you to fold your hand like you, just because you said his album was whack, like that was the hardest thing you said on him. You say nothing about his kids, nothing about his family. He didn't say his mama, look at him different, like nothing, like you know some shit that could have hurt nigga heart. Yeah, man, it's just, it's. It's disgusting and, like I said, you've been excommunicated from light skin. You are now officially biracial. You logic can stand together over there.

Speaker 1:

Y'all niggas are the same. My brother future. No, drake and Pusha T did it correctly. I want, I want you to dig into this nigga's life and bring us some tea that we would not have known. I want the battle to get ugly. I want it to get right before y'all trying to murder each other. The level right under that is where I want you to get to, and then y'all can cool it.

Speaker 2:

The Taylor Swift bar is just right there. Yo Nigga did a song with Taylor Swift. Kendrick oh shit, it was right there, yo yo yeah, there was so much shit you could have said so much, it was just all right, man we well, we can get to some rap niggas who were giving us a little energy yo meek mill is sick of wale sitting down with his men.

Speaker 2:

Like he don't like that you taking pictures with his men, men he dissing, men he care about. He don't like that. Everybody thinks wale I mean uh meek is mad because he took a picture with his op. That's not why he's mad I don't that picture he took with that white man is why he's mad, mike michael rubin yeah that. That picture wale with michael rubin. He was sitting behind wale.

Speaker 1:

He had it looked like he had his arm around his waist. So meek mill is mad because he got replaced as rick rubin's little play that's what it looks like.

Speaker 2:

That's what it looks like. I'm not okay, I'm just saying what it looks like.

Speaker 1:

I'm not saying that that's what it is I don't want to think that wale would do that. He jumped from. Give me real nigga, but I'm just saying maybe very much.

Speaker 2:

maybe mike might just be doing his little, sending his mark to Wale Like he just and Wale don't know yet. I don't. You know what I'm saying. Shout out to Wale DMV, you know what I'm saying, but I'm just looking at it. That picture was crazy. That man was behind you at an angle and y'all were on a date not on a date it.

Speaker 2:

Just if you look at that picture, it looked like those men were on a date. Like no lie. Like it was crazy. I was sitting there like what? The? That's my, this is my dv, uh, dmv in like you know, I'm saying dmv in shut up, like I'm sitting here looking at my nigga looking sick out here. I don't like that. They was at wrestlemania, which I'm calling begging for the rock to oh my God, meek Mill, on a weekly basis, just embarrasses himself. It was sick Talking about niggas. Think his son think he gay Get up, get up.

Speaker 2:

Shut up. He said his son think he gay, I saw that tweet.

Speaker 1:

Okay, hold on, let me pull it up so I can read it to y'all, because this shit was actually hilarious, y'all they're saying so much crazy stuff that my son think I'm gay and he's confused about it like that's so first of all, why would you tweet that like?

Speaker 2:

that's crazy. Why y'all do that to me? Meek, meek son don't even looking at my he's squirrely. That's crazy like that would have my heart like so disappointed if I'm a secure, straight man and you think that I'm not what am I giving off?

Speaker 1:

he said I don't believe no diddy story, because you were his boy toy. Um once they lied about once they lied about me. Now I'm not reading this incorrectly meek mill does? He doesn't know grammar or spelling like I. I think he fell off one of them fucking four wheelers and got a concussion and just didn't let us know um anybody try to sexually assault me. It will be a gang a bang out oh, why would you say that?

Speaker 1:

oh why would you say that a bang out? Why would you, out of all the words he said, anybody trying to sexually assault me? It will be a bang out on the spot. Oh, what shit. You mean you letting them freaky mickey? That's crazy, dude.

Speaker 2:

That's not even the end of it, he said hold on, bang out on the spot, on the spot. That's sick yo, that's a.

Speaker 1:

That's a sick hombre anybody try to sexually assault me, it will be a bang out on the spot. How y'all don't know that, lol, how y'all don't I don't care, but y'all confusing my son he's 12 with people saying his dad gay, it, it's sick out here, so fuck it what.

Speaker 2:

The fuck it part just confuses me even more. I'm just you said it was a bang out on spot. So then you say, fuck it at the end is like yo, what did you want?

Speaker 1:

I think he probably met shootout.

Speaker 2:

But like, the vernacular is not on your side.

Speaker 1:

Why don't you think?

Speaker 2:

about words. I mean, you would think a rapper would be somebody that would think about words.

Speaker 1:

Anybody trying to sexually assault me is a bang out.

Speaker 2:

What Like that's not saying it's not happening.

Speaker 1:

So you mean like you gonna just sexually assault the nigga back?

Speaker 2:

That's what it sounds like you gonna get a one up on him.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you take my booty, I take your booty.

Speaker 2:

Oh man get a one-up on him, yeah you take my booty, I take your booty.

Speaker 1:

Oh man, even exchange. Meek mill is a verse, king, a switcher. That's what I got from this tweet.

Speaker 2:

Let's see let's move on. All right, so there is some civil war going on within the city. Girls uh camp more hip-hop beef it's been some tweets with that too, so this for what I saw. I I was gonna start us with jt and glorilla, but apparently the beef is with jt and young miami jt and young miami have been like from from hold on they from the outside looking in as a fan.

Speaker 1:

There's been like weird energy between the two of them for a while on interviews on the Internet on lives, and it's not surprising that there's like shade and animosity and like pent up aggression between the two of them and over, like yesterday it came and we have the tweets Young Miami was off the pink cocaine, yeah definitely Like.

Speaker 2:

that's what it felt like she had took a nice little line and just went crazy on the ex-post. Like some of the stuff she said, a bitch been sneak dissing for weeks. Mm-hmm. And I ain't say shit. What a bitch mad at me, for I ain't jealous of a soul. I'm always like go, bitch, go. I clap for everyone, I show love to everyone. It ain't a bitch, I haven't shown love too.

Speaker 1:

Here we go, okay so young miami thinks that no bars and sideways is sneak dissing her. But in both those songs JT says like something, something, I'm a city girl, it's city girl shit, it's always city girl shit. I'm a city girl bitch. Like she was not shading Young Miami at all. Young Miami just decided to pull this out her ass, basically.

Speaker 2:

So she was using her first name too, Mm-hmm. Jatavia.

Speaker 1:

She said for you to come here and try to play the victim is crazy, jatavia, you have been sneak dissing me for the past couple days. I haven't said shit back to you. You made two whole songs dissing me and I still wrapped your shit with my chest and showed love. So what's the real problem? And then she said a bitch, trying to kick me, kick me while I'm down. And play into these narratives is dangerous when I've been nothing but a friend to you. I ain't jealous, jealous of a soul. I'm always like go, bitch, go. I clap for everybody. I show love to everybody. It ain't a bitch I haven't showed love to so jt had another tweet.

Speaker 2:

I know I come off crazy, but never in my life did no whack shit to this girl. She literally enjoys seeing me being dragged when people show me love, she go crazy.

Speaker 1:

Call it a hate train but, like I said, we can sit and talk about it so jt and glorilla had a back and forth, because glorilla dissed her and then did some like female empowerment, empowerment shit on her other on the next song, and it was weird. And um, well, no, glorilla did that and then jt um called her out. So let's be for real when, when jates, when they were going back and forth, young miami tweeted all caps, just lol, that's all she tweeted when people were like coming at jt and everything that's the new shade now it is because, but don't, don't do don't do what's what really started with her and glow slapping, rap bitches, yeah.

Speaker 1:

So don't do what really started with her and Glo Slapping rap bitches.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so don't do that.

Speaker 1:

And then we had a little back and forth about this, because I don't think Glorilla actually slapped.

Speaker 2:

JT, she didn't slap her with her hands.

Speaker 1:

She slapped her with her purse. Then we like where is this story from?

Speaker 2:

I mean, this came out it was like a little rumor on the rumor mill or whatever that allegedly they had got into an altercation. And then jt said that girl never hit me. And then glorilla, from what I heard, allegedly you know, she said she confirmed that she, I didn't slap you with my hand but I slapped you with my bag okay, and so that's where that kind of came from.

Speaker 2:

And now they trying to, you know, act like that didn't happen. So, like I said, I thought that was going to be the more interesting story into this civil, this. You know, city girls happening.

Speaker 1:

No, because it's been so much like weird animosity between them that it's more interesting because it's finally coming out. We're like we knew it.

Speaker 2:

We knew it was hate going on. These girls ain't done no music in a while. They ain't been really seen together.

Speaker 1:

JT has been, it seems, distancing herself from Young Miami, but that's probably because she knew Young Miami was a whole prostitute.

Speaker 2:

JT been doing shows by herself right.

Speaker 1:

She's been on a tour by herself. So JT basically has been doing a rollout that seems like she's doing a new artist rollout. She's reintroducing herself to all of us as a new artist. So she's been doing small venues. She's been doing club promotions not club promotions, but like club venues. She's out, she's talking to fans like in the street. She's posting on social media a lot. So you can tell that, like JT and her team, they're completely rebranding and she's not a city girl anymore. She's saying she's a city girl in her songs but like no, that's just JT.

Speaker 2:

No, she hasn't, because you got to remember when they started going on their early run. It was just Young Miami.

Speaker 1:

Mm-hmm Because.

Speaker 2:

JT was in jail. Yeah, she didn't get the chance to really do that with the fans.

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 2:

So this is actually really her first real time to be able to do. She probably was able to get some it, and I think it's just some hate in regards to that too like she's probably getting more.

Speaker 1:

Uh, push on her end. Uh, young miami didn't mess, though she put her eggs in the wrong basket, so that joint looking 100. Okay, really quick. So there's um, young, no, young miami posted on her finsta a picture of her and Diddy and she was hugging him from behind and she said Bobby and Whitney or something like that. Oh shit, yeah, I had it screenshotted. So somebody leaked the picture from her Finsta and the girls are saying that Young Miami thinks that it was JT that leaked it from her Finsta, because this leaked like right after their back and forth on Twitter. So she posted a picture with fucking Diddy After all that shit. It was like, basically, I'm going to stick beside him.

Speaker 2:

She got a ride. Now it's too late. She had her name in the paperwork.

Speaker 1:

Pink cocaine. Yeah, she's literally, she's there. Let me show you the picture, if I can look, look I've seen the video. It was, it was wild she said, bobby and whitney, they were crackheads. And then people think that she's selling cocaine or whatever. And then you're gonna post the picture, y'all, and say, bobby and whitney, now I think you're a drug dealer and a prostitute it's crazy out here.

Speaker 2:

It's crazy, it's, it's crazy it's nuts. It's a sad sight. So I mean we're going to see what this goes into. I hope we get some more bars now. I wish she would have said what bar she was about her. Like you know, we could have did the lyrical breakdown.

Speaker 1:

None of the bars were about her. That bitch is fucking delusional.

Speaker 2:

Nothing was about you. I mean, that would have still been good to like yeah see what she thought was about her. We could try to see how delusional she was, but I mean, it's just sideways was like the whole thing, the whole.

Speaker 1:

You could say that the whole thing was about her. I'll pull up the the lyrics while you talk no, she said sideways was yeah, sideways, the lyrics. You could. You could say that there are a bunch of lyrics in sideways that might be okay, so a reasonable person can come to that, okay, she said bitch, I ain't friendly, I don't fuck with y'all bitches.

Speaker 1:

Try to take who. It ain't enough for y'all bitches, ho. So phony got me looking at him sideways. It'll be the same day. Motherfucker, the motherfucker, the old days oh yeah, that's, that's that shade you could. You could, literally you could think that was shade towards you. But she ate that shit, she ate no bars and she ate sideways and she could rap way better than you, young miami.

Speaker 2:

So I don't know you need to go go, get go to dubai go ahead to call machine gun kelly the rest of your career is in dubai. Ma'am, like I don't know you have to collect all the rest of the bad boys. Whoever's left, you gotta just whoever on the roster. I gotta put them pins together. That's the only way. Now you gotta wrap your way out of this.

Speaker 1:

At this point you gotta become a madam.

Speaker 2:

I don't think that's gonna work.

Speaker 1:

You gotta become a madam, you gotta be like. What's his name?

Speaker 2:

Taz, you gotta become the female Taz.

Speaker 1:

Get a big ass house in Miami. Get a bunch of bad bitches that have no money. Put them up in the house. Get a couple of them BBLs and have. Use your connections and be like come, come you want young Miami cabaret come fuck these, these discreet bitches that's what you want her to do.

Speaker 1:

Young Miami cabaret that's she don't have no musical talent. She's gonna have to use her personality and everything around her to do something interesting. I think she's gonna have to go into reality TV next. Young Miami in five years is going to be on Zeus.

Speaker 2:

Or you're going to have to do a podcast more than once every five months.

Speaker 1:

No, you can't do a podcast because you're not interesting and you don't know how to speak English. I'm just saying Like Diddy was buying her them awards.

Speaker 2:

What is it like four or five pods in in two years nigga I can divide that shit is crazy all right. Uh, let's stay a little bit on city girl kind of behavior. Russell simmons daughter has brought shame to the family oh, lord so she was seen. What's? Her? How do you say her? Name. It was a little.

Speaker 1:

Aoki.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, ok, that's right. So Aoki Simmons, she was seen with Victor Rio Asaf. I think that's how you say his name. This man is a 65 year old man. And apparently they were having some little fling, I guess in the islands. And they got caught on tape and they seen her, you know bathing suit.

Speaker 1:

He's 65 and she's 21, and he's.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying. They seen his old man. I don't know, was they kissing or were they kind of like all upon each other? Like I know one of them, she was just sitting down like kneeling down and he was kind of like off to the side. But they said they had a little brief romance. That's what the tabloids were saying.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's. I don't, I don't.

Speaker 2:

I can't find the picture right now, but Because apparently this morning they said it was over the tabloids and all that were just saying that you know their romance was over.

Speaker 1:

But a lot of people were upset about that Because Kimora was concerned.

Speaker 2:

Was she concerned they weren't together, or were they concerned that they broke up like what?

Speaker 1:

no, she was concerned. Which is um with her choice of men like yeah which? Is the cause of um the breakup. She ain't got she okay we know they her history.

Speaker 2:

Like do we? I don't know, she was, yeah, her and russell was together when she was young. Okay, like this is something that was taught in the family. Like I understand was like I'm not blaming you for what happened, like you was young, you was impressionable, but like you got the good end of the deal out of it so it says kimura was concerned to see her daughter in that kind of relationship due to what she herself went through and it's like, but I mean at this time she grown though.

Speaker 2:

You was there when you was like 15, your daughter grown. She even told her daddy she was gonna get a sugar daddy said if you don't give me my inheritance, I'm going to get a sugar daddy.

Speaker 1:

So I can continue living the life I'm used to living. That's exactly what she did.

Speaker 2:

That comes from in the house, because when she left Russell, she didn't go to no normal nigga, she went to a scammer and that's what Russell mad about. Like that's what I'm saying. Their family like that's what I'm saying their family is so really interesting when you think about all the bs going on. Yeah, like they have such a really really interesting thing. But my, my thing I want to talk about this is I don't understand why these women were so upset about it was so many people saying this was wrong and all this. For one thing, she grown she made that decision.

Speaker 2:

She's 21, that man and second, y'all all encourage a culture that promotes this we do.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, the whole sugar daddy get your money, shit.

Speaker 2:

I'm not even saying you can say that I'm saying to a point where you're saying you want someone to be a high-end provider, like you want a lifestyle. When you do that, unfortunately that goes to older men. The older men are the ones who usually have that kind of you know funds to be able to just disseminate like that. They kind of, uh, you know funds to be able to just disseminate. Like that they're not really worried about what's going on because they know they ain't got too much long, they spending it for fun, they trying to have a good time, they trying to feel young again. And when you say that's what you want, there's only a small group of men who can provide that kind of experience. So for you to be like, oh, y'all are bad, y'all are wrong, for y'all gonna have to change a whole bunch of cultural ideals before y'all say this is wrong, especially when she old enough to buy a drink.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, did you see that video of them in the car that she recorded?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Did he say something about Mary J Blige when they was talking? Oh, I didn't hear that. Somebody said that. Somebody said that he said something about Mary J Blige trying to get with him a while ago.

Speaker 1:

Oh ago, oh, I didn't hear that. Oh, um, from that video I just got that like she's, she's, she doesn't know how to ask men for things. She was just like oh, you know what I like, cartier, and he literally just laughed yeah, I mean she, she could tell this was her first rodeo.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like the fact that you're even doing a live like that while you're around him shows you're a rookie yeah, because what are you doing? Like that shit was so it was cring're a rookie. Yeah, because what are you doing? Like that shit was so it was cringy. That shit was wild, like you clearly was in over your head. It was hard to watch. That's why it was probably more of a concerning thing, because it's like yo you moving like a Like you new to it. You look real green out here.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but she's's never had to finesse a nigga into getting her stuff. She has no practice at that. This is her first. It's her first rodeo, so it was just like it was funny to watch, honestly, and I'm glad that they're not actually together and I'm glad this Kimora. Well, the story is that Kimora was concerned about this because we don't know if she knew about them actually dating like. And also, ayoki, you have a fucking harvard degree. That doesn't mean anything, what. What did you get that for? You got that like a year ago.

Speaker 2:

You graduated already if it's, it doesn't mean anything. She probably went there to study some type of arts like that's she probably did.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, come on now like that ain't nothing just because the girls be going to har Harvard so that they can meet men who are going to make six figures.

Speaker 2:

No, I mean, when you're somebody who has an elite person like that, when you have an elite father and stuff like that, you're just going there for the prestige. You just had a certain grade point average. You were probably smart. You probably just didn't have nothing that you really liked and so you went in there because your dad's amused you probably did something close to that, or you probably tried to do something out of the box but it really wasn't.

Speaker 2:

You really didn't have the foundation for it. I'm gonna see if I can find what degree she got. I don't believe, like you say, you probably doesn't have the foundation for it because you've never really came from that kind of experience, a lifestyle of seeing that. You've seen the finished product for the most part. You've seen the fat farms and all that. You know all that jazz from that. So I mean I don't blame any young girl from doing that. I would not be the person to be like, oh, you're wrong for trying to get, you know, some money from my old man she got a degree in classics and government.

Speaker 1:

What does that mean?

Speaker 2:

I know what government what you're trying to be aoc classics we said government.

Speaker 1:

That's what I said yeah, it says classics and government.

Speaker 2:

That's her like the, is that like civics?

Speaker 1:

degree that she got. I don't know what that is yeah but that's the degree that she got classics and government.

Speaker 2:

That sounds like a history degree. No disrespect to my history degree folks out there, but that's what that sounds like like when you got a history degree.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you can't do much with a history degree other than like teach history. Yeah, or be like a writer.

Speaker 2:

Like you got to be plugged in for that, but like that's what I'm saying. Most people like her can get those little niche jobs like that, but that's just. That was crazy that I just to see all these people just had this reaction, Like she was fucking 16 and this was going on.

Speaker 1:

This wasn't Aaliyah, it's crazy classics majors go on to become doctors, lawyers, managers, museum curators, business owners, artists, teachers.

Speaker 2:

It just seems like a a fancy liberal arts degree yeah, that's what it seems like, like it's just an all-purpose degree where yeah, that's what I should have got my degree in civics and government classics and government.

Speaker 1:

I don't know what the fuck that means, but yeah all right, let's still, let's stay on some.

Speaker 2:

our girl man, tasha K she back at it.

Speaker 1:

What hot mess is Tasha K in now?

Speaker 2:

So she got Desi Banks ex-girlfriend.

Speaker 1:

Ooh, yes, I saw that.

Speaker 2:

So if y'all don't remember the timeline of this, so Desi was on Club Shea, shea Mm-hmm and on there, you know he was doing his cap shit and he was basically trying to say that his girl wasn't supportive of him on his come up. So he was basically trying to create what they said was a sob story. He told Shannon that Everybody kind of had the conversation. He was talking about how he wasn't working. He was just focused on his career, trying to get his comedy stuff going beforehand. And I even played a little football. Y'all know his history. He also played a little football. Tasha K, you know how a girl operates. She's not going to let a story go one-sided. Nope, you can't just come out here and think you're going to say your piece and that's not going to be investigated. Tasha K here with Desi Banks' ex-girlfriend, saying that his struggle story was bullshit.

Speaker 1:

Hold on one second. He said before on a Club Shea Shea interview that money wasn't coming fast enough. She told me I needed to get a job. I was crying blah, blah, blah.

Speaker 5:

You ain't out here trying to say, oh, I'm Desi Banks X, right, but Desi keeps speaking on you. You are a part of Desi Banks' struggle story on every damn platform and he don't have a struggle story. And he don't have a struggle story. He was blessed.

Speaker 4:

He was blessed To have a me, oh, doing what I was doing. That part, let's go ahead and pour this wine Because, baby, I was doing the struggling and the hustling and getting it out the mud just to take care of the household and invest in his career. He don't have a struggle story. You went from your mama to me.

Speaker 5:

Let me go ahead and get Nyesha's wine. She's ready right now.

Speaker 4:

The support was real. Before comedy it was football. He didn't want to sit here and say I was not supportive. Before comedy it was football. I used to take him to practice. When he wanted to go train with Body by Ted, I used to take him over there to Atlanta Sports Complex. I believe her I used to take him to Body by Ted. He wanted to go to Pantherfield and be working at the stadium.

Speaker 2:

No, but she looked like a girl that he could probably pull when he didn't have no money. That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

This looks believable. She has too many details for it not to be. How long were you guys together? True.

Speaker 4:

From 2013 until 2019. You sit up here, you tell all these lies about me. How could you have loved me, especially if the world knew exactly how much of a real person I was to you and what I've done for you? There's no way you could possibly love me Because the ball was in his court. You didn't do right by me, so I left. That makes sense. Oh, I bet she's punching the air now. You know she's trying to spin a block. I never want to spin a block when they know the truth.

Speaker 2:

No tornado around here, nigga.

Speaker 4:

Why would I want to spin a block? I wouldn't bet. I left you at Dizzy Banks. I'm good sir.

Speaker 2:

At Dizzy Banks.

Speaker 4:

I'm the one from the very beginning, and I'm the one that you dogged out.

Speaker 2:

Alright, winos if you enjoy shows like this. No, you ain't adding on our shit. Hey, I like the smoke she was coming with.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

I was with that. I'm not mad at that. So it sparked a conversation on x and I'm gonna go through because I end up getting a lot of hate from my from my opinions because I again, once again, I'm being hated and attacked for presenting new ideas okay, yay, so that's.

Speaker 2:

I think that needs to be, uh, respected and understood and acknowledged. So I just want to bring this up here. Let me see where is this at. People were killing me on this, god dang. Where did I have it at? Give me one second go ahead.

Speaker 2:

I don't think this was a terrible take, though I don't think it was my worst, all right, so it started from rva reed. He said desi banks ex-girlfriend said he went from football to comedy and lived with her, drove her car, never paid any bills, the the she never supported. My dream was probably her asking him to get a job and contribute to the bills.

Speaker 1:

Nigga be thinking the world is against them niggas do be thinking the world is against them when you just try the world is against us as black men.

Speaker 2:

First off, let's, let's, let's talk about that correctly oh my god so then I said unfortunately, a career in entertainment requires your 100 commitment. A job means could mean missing out on an opportunity.

Speaker 1:

If your partner, if that's your partner, you just have to hope you're making the right gamble yeah and I got 182k views and a lot of people kicking my back in I don't think it's a crazy take to say that, like when, when you're in entertainment, you're going to have to make sacrifices in other parts of your life, like for real, like you're going to have to, like you have to commit to it.

Speaker 2:

And when I say commit to 100 percent, that means that has to be your end goal, be all so. Sometimes, like I said, you could have a little gig or nine to five, and then you get a call. Now you have a little gig or a nine to five and then you get a call. Now you got to make a decision. You go to that, that, that appointment or that, whatever that that opportunity is, you lose that job. You don't get that opportunity because of whatever happens and or it doesn't pan out the way you think it's going to pan out. Now you're back to square one. So why even put that pressure on yourself to have that? If you have an opportunity where someone can, it's cool. They didn't have no, have no kids. Like if she, if she would have, it's not.

Speaker 2:

This isn't a rare story. People try to act like. You know folks who were working and providing for themselves. What was the norm? But there's a lot of people. Kenya Barris he talks about it a lot. His wife was a hundred percent supporting his lifestyle while he was trying to get on. Mike Epps, I believe, even said that too. Like that's not a not normal thing. Like if you really want this and you want to be excellent, everybody can't do the split half. Some people have to really be in it 100% to get 100% out of it.

Speaker 1:

People call it struggling artists for a reason. When you're on your way up, you're gonna struggle and you're gonna need support, it's gonna to happen. Yeah, and then your girl, lex, responded. My girl from poor minds. She said Shout out to Lex.

Speaker 2:

I kept my full time job until my pod was able to sustain my lifestyle. Go to work.

Speaker 1:

She talks about that regularly having a job at European Wax Center and being afraid to let go of her consistent income for the podcast, even when the podcast was growing more and more.

Speaker 2:

But she quit income for the podcast even when the podcast was growing more and more. But Drea quit before Lex did, I think, and also too, the I think what was people missed on that was like doing a podcast is can be very low budget, low uh low maintenance yeah, low overhead and all that. Like you can have a lot of that in regards to being able to especially the type of show they do where it wasn't like they, sitting here, got to read 25, 000 books yeah, to do their show.

Speaker 1:

Their show started as wind down wednesdays it was just them on the floor in drea's room recording, just the two of them. So it didn't take. It didn't take a lot of money and you only needed a couple hours of time so you could have a full-time job and still do what you were doing.

Speaker 2:

Lex and then when you're thinking about, like both of us do somebody like desi. You know what I'm saying. He's doing skits, even with the football.

Speaker 2:

The football is a commitment in and of itself because you gotta get up in the morning, workout you gotta make sure you're eating right like working a job can make you eat bad because you're getting only a 30 minute break, 45 minute break sometimes, uh, maybe an hour, but a job that he probably gonna be working, not gonna give him an hour now he gotta go somewhere get the food, like that takes time, effort, all that kind of stuff. When you can be out doing what you're doing, working, getting those uh, you know, workouts in all that kind of stuff, that stuff takes real time and commitment, like you don't get to be great. That's the reason why that shit usually starts when you're young, usually why a lot of people try to work on you, your craft, while you're a kid.

Speaker 1:

It's because you can really commit to it yeah, if you're trying to be like an actor or something, for example, like you can't control when audition times are, when call times are, you can't control, like, when you're going to get called for something and you have to make the decision, do I show up to my nine to five today or do I call out? Risk, risk losing this job and go for this, maybe temporary money.

Speaker 2:

And then people don't even talk about the fact that what your job could be draining your creativity.

Speaker 1:

It could be Because I had a full bathing suit line that I conceptualized, designed, sketched, did all of the things for right, and I work full time. And after you get home from work, like you really have to like tell yourself that your quality of life is going to be lessened. You're not gonna get as much rest, you're not gonna be able to put time into what your romantic relationship, your social life, you're gonna have to take away from a bunch of other parts of your life so that you can focus on keeping yourself afloat and pumping as much into your passion as you possibly can. It is hard, which is why not a lot of people do this shit.

Speaker 2:

Or if they do it, it's not to the capability that even they want to do it. Yes, and it's easy to get burnt out like people were talking about willow smith, because I guess she's doing like a rock album or something coming up and somebody had a really good tweet that I like and they was just basically like she's not good, she just can focus on something longer than the rest of us, like if we all had the time we could be great at stuff too, but we have to do all this other stuff on our daily basis just to maintain our lifestyle.

Speaker 2:

She doesn't.

Speaker 1:

It seems like she's grown vocally a lot because she has vocal coaches and she can spend all of her time training. She knows how to play different instruments because she's grown up rich and she's had the resources to pump into random passions and stay with those passions.

Speaker 2:

She's never had to stop doing something because her parents can't afford the the practice anymore yeah, she couldn't have to make a decision between her time going to this so she can eat and live her life, or just have a a something of a life, or focusing on this project that may not make any money that, you know, may not go into anything yeah, she didn't have to come home right after school to take care of siblings because the parents were at work, like that's not something she had to go through and that's why it's like I said it's not hate when we say that.

Speaker 2:

It's just a real reality for people. That's living life like. People get so drained from their just their mundane jobs at that that they can't really have that creativity to express.

Speaker 1:

You don't have much left Like and it's not a bad thing, it's just a human thing Like you have only but so much energy and willpower.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, your reserves are so much and everyone's reserves are different.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so that's why I said like, yeah, I understand. If shit tough and it's rough and y'all got to both do it, then is rough and y'all gotta both do it, then do it. But if you have the opportunity, ability to provide a decent lifestyle that maintains another person while they able to really grind just like that tyler perry movie with uh taraji, where he was a super genius and just had to focus in on that battery and made billions of dollars off of that and all she had to do was hold it down for another like year if you believe in the person.

Speaker 2:

At the end of the day, it comes to not just love, but you got to believe in the person. If you don't believe in them, then yeah, you're gonna make. It's always gonna feel bad yeah but if you truly believe in it and you've seen this person having, he just needs that opportunity and that time. Hey, you just gotta hope you took the right gamble. Like I just said, like that's at the end of the day, you got to hope you made the right gamble, because sometimes you do and sometimes you don't.

Speaker 1:

Real quick. I know there's a topic, but in that movie I think the payout that she got was more than enough. Oh what. For all of the time and suffering that she put into that relationship and it was really crazy.

Speaker 2:

Like she got her house paid off, yeah, and she got some cash, yes, like he set her straight.

Speaker 1:

So that she could like live luxuriously.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, she could have got little young boys and everything she could have been straight. I mean young, like as in 18.

Speaker 1:

She could have got yeah, not children, not 18. Young as in like 25. That too.

Speaker 2:

Because when you that age like you.

Speaker 1:

Sometimes you want a little, a little rabbit to knock the webs out. If I was single in my like 50s, if I was getting a young man, he wouldn't be 18. He would be like 26 some girls like to teach. He'd be like 26 she could.

Speaker 2:

She could have felt like she was starting.

Speaker 1:

That's when she met bro remember you still teaching a 25, 26 year old as a 50 year old, but at 18, though you got more vigor, you know.

Speaker 2:

So I could definitely see her going with the 18, but no, I just thought it was just crazy, just that people were attacking me the way that they were like.

Speaker 1:

They made me seem like I didn't have a job I thought they were coming at me people were internalizing it and they were like, no, I can do this and but everybody kept talking about like this there's their family members and stuff that I'm like yo.

Speaker 2:

What do their projects look like? What do you think their projects could look like if they went?

Speaker 1:

100% If they stopped giving a fuck about the family and just fully focused on the passion.

Speaker 2:

I remember I was working a movie one time and it was like a little independent film and folks was, you know, just talking about stuff and they asked me, did I have a job? And I was like, yeah, he's like you got a nine to five, like he said it, looking like crazy, like that was appalling, oh wow. When he asked me that and I was like, yeah, I do. I just, you know, take my time off to do these gigs when I get them, or whatever, he was like it's gonna be a long, long walk when you do it like that, but it is.

Speaker 2:

It's a tougher walk when you take that, but it's like you make a whole lot of more different decisions. You make totally different decisions when you have to have responsibilities, like with me. I have responsibilities since I was young, so you have to make. You can't do a free internship. You got to work your job so you can stay. Even when I was in school, I had an opportunity to do an internship or I had to take a class. That could be the same thing. I had to take the class because the internship didn't pay.

Speaker 1:

I was trying to find something because I'm trying to find his name, but there's this TikToker that I enjoy very much. He does crime stories, and then there'll be AI photos. It's a lot of work. He's really popular.

Speaker 1:

He's super popular. Every single one of his videos gets millions of views. He's like this, um, he's like, he's brown I don't know which type of brown he is, but he's brown. But he posted a video to I saw it today and he said that each tiktok, each um video is probably like no more than five minutes, but it takes him like 16 hours to do each of them. And, um, he literally said that he is not having children. He is not having children because of the fact that he wants to focus all of his time on his content creation and obviously it's paying off because everything that he does has at least a million views.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's why, like unfortunately, you gotta just see, like when it comes to this it takes a lot of degree of selfishness, like I remember a friend and I were talking about lebron and he was saying like oh, it's cool that lebron you know he still, I don't think it's selfishness, I think it's tunnel vision no, it's.

Speaker 2:

It's definitely selfishness. You have to be um, but he was, because he even spoke to it. But when was talking about LeBron, he was saying it's cool that, lebron, you see him with his kids and still doing his. It's like that ain't what you think it is. He has to sacrifice a lot because now his kids are in the public eye. Everybody knows what all three of his kids and all his family look like. They know where they generally are doing because they're also in the light bit.

Speaker 1:

So you have to sacrifice that and he even said ray william johnson is his name, the guy I was talking about but yeah, he even says that on his, on the show he was talking about.

Speaker 2:

Like it's like I come in, I do my work, I wake up, all that, go to practice all that stuff, and I come home and it's like no, I'm, I need to be away, I need to rest, I need to do all of my things so that I can go up and do it the next day, and it's just like family has to come, has to be on the back burner, unfortunately, and that's just what it comes to. When you committed to anything in life, that's, it comes second. You just have to put yourself in a mindset of my. They're going to have a better lifestyle because of it. We may not have the relationship that would be dope, but the lifestyle that comes from my efforts is going to be how I try to. You know, exchange that time.

Speaker 1:

And you gamble your family resenting you because of that, because you don't know whether your family will value the lifestyle more than they're going to value just you being around actively. Yeah, I mean, it's all a gamble.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it is. It's a. It's a very big gamble, because your kids could have all of the things in the world and resent you as around actively. Yeah, I mean, it's all a gamble. Yeah, it's a very big gamble, because your kids could have all of the things in the world and resent you as a father or a mother because you gave them a bunch of stuff.

Speaker 1:

I have all the bags, I have the things, I have the roof over my head, I know how to play violin, piano, speak Spanish and Mandarin a bunch of stuff, but I don't know who the fuck you are as my mom or my dad. I mean, it happens.

Speaker 2:

It does, yeah, but when folks start putting tweets out saying, hey, he's a good defender, he's a solid player, he's going to make it to the you know he's going to be a draft pick, you kind of be like, hey, appreciate that, Pops, Because we know Bronny. That's crazy. You seen that he's going into a draft.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I saw that.

Speaker 2:

So he's basically we'll stay on this for just a little bit, but he's going. He just put his name in the draft but he also has the ability to come back after he does like a little evaluation with the league. But I think he's going to stay in, I think he's going.

Speaker 1:

they're gonna pick him up probably um my co-workers uh were talking about how the men, the couple men that I work with we're talking about how lebron is probably gonna retire soon. And then I was like, if brawny is going into into the league, didn't you mention that? Like lebron wanted to play with his? Son so, um, if there's a way that lebron would play with brawny I think lebron got like two more years in him.

Speaker 2:

Yeah I could see him doing it like where he may play a year with him and try to retire after that year. He plays with him and just try to get him a contract where he gets like a two-year deal, where he can then the next year have an opportunity to try to, you know, stay in the league.

Speaker 9:

But it's just crazy.

Speaker 2:

Because if you just look at him, one is the condition he had, the heart condition he had. So we do hope he gets better from that, but that's a knock. Most guys. When stuff like that happens, your league discussion kind of you go to the side.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but you're LeBron James' son, so it doesn't matter what happens to you Also too, as a person who wasn't a high performer on the court.

Speaker 2:

when they say that you're just a good defender, you bring energy, that means you suck.

Speaker 2:

Just saying that's what they're trying to say You're not scoring points. That's what they want to see. So when they're saying that that's just code for you're not that good. So they're going to have to really change the narrative and really say some real good stuff about him. Because I think, like I said, I've seen him play in person.

Speaker 2:

I went to him. He was in georgia. I watched him and his brothers play when his brother, younger brother was playing not impressive, he's gotten a lot better but when brawny played, the one thing I kept saying was he's not a force, and what I meant by that was like he doesn't have, he doesn't bring it every time. Like you don't feel his presence. Like you would a top player, you just don't feel every time. He just didn't come down with that every play, even when you don't get the ball, you feel like the energy, the defense shading his way and all that kind of stuff. That stuff wasn't happening with him. So, like I said, I think he's going to get in for his dad's sake and hopefully, just you know, I just don't want to see that be like a bad turnaround for him where it's like oh, all this pressure on me and then you just crash out like that's the worst possible outcome for go back to the work.

Speaker 10:

Um, because I did see where you were coming. You said you want to retire and you came back. Yeah, so what was that transition like and why did you decide to come back, even if it's for a brief fall?

Speaker 11:

well, no, it's because finances, you have the moment that you know you go through this.

Speaker 1:

What platform is he on right now? Who is this lady?

Speaker 2:

I have no clue I'm not familiar with her.

Speaker 1:

What the fuck is Terrence Howard doing? That's what it's called Straight talk. Okay, continue.

Speaker 11:

Six year criminal tax investigation, spend three, four million dollars defending yourself, because it's just paying money to lawyers, and so that whole thing is to bleed you out right now. A fascinating thing. It's me two points. I had an issue with Fox and CA at Fox and and Disney, mm-hmm, because the image that you see for Hustle and Flow, for Empire, that profile that came from a still shot from Hustle and Flow. They took that, flipped it and put it on everything, made a trademark of it, sold it around the world. Didn't ask my permission, are you serious?

Speaker 1:

You probably signed and agreed to that in your contract and they didn't need to ask your permission.

Speaker 2:

Like nigger, like I, like I really wanted to discuss what he was talking about here.

Speaker 1:

Real quick. Let me tell you. Academy Award nominated actor has been pursued by the Justice Department for over a year for nonpayment of five hundred and seventy eight thousand dollars in an income tax um, from what he owed from 2010 to 2019. It was less than 100 000. I mean less than a million dollars, like a little bit over half a million now.

Speaker 2:

That is not now. That's what is that now?

Speaker 1:

yeah, it's 578 578 000 they don't play about that shit dog.

Speaker 2:

But uh, no, I was saying I want to discuss what he was talking about but. But, as you all see here right now, the hair that this nigga had on his head.

Speaker 1:

He was ordered to pay a million in judgment.

Speaker 2:

A word. Yeah. Well, hold on. Again. I want to talk about what he. I would love to get into that, but again the hair. I think you're wholly distracted by the wrong part.

Speaker 1:

Okay, because I had already, like already, processed this in my mind.

Speaker 2:

Why do you have a Tyler Perry wig on my nigga? What?

Speaker 1:

the fuck is happening right now.

Speaker 2:

That was the crazy part. I'm like fuck the nigga tax problems Right, the nigga is gone. I'm talking about the nigga tax problems right, the nigga is gone wrong shit.

Speaker 1:

You're off off a lot of bases off. This nigga is gone. This nigga got the tyler perry no part wig the farrah faucet.

Speaker 2:

Flip with the caramel blonde, like what is happening and then like then it's got like a little wave joint going on in the back, like, bro, what is wrong with you? Like what, what's going on?

Speaker 1:

I, I, just I. Why were you wearing that terrence? I want to. Um, we're gonna put a picture of him up I already said that okay, because this is sick hombre.

Speaker 2:

I said meek was sick.

Speaker 1:

This is a real sick dude, right here, it was the flip this, the flip right here, and then it all, of it just flipped he looked like he's still he's trying to be a like lucid, lucious and cookie combined. Like he looked like he merged them two characters together he looked like he's trying to be his character from hustle and flow because he was a pimp that he do look like bro yeah you are bringing that back.

Speaker 2:

That's exactly what you're. I think he's trying since he said something about the image he's trying to make sure y'all remember that was me in hustle and flow.

Speaker 1:

Part of me thinks that he wore this dumb ass wig on this interview to make it go viral had to be like. He definitely did shawty a solid, because I would have never looked at this if it wasn't for that because I cannot imagine imagine Terrence Howard putting it on and be like, yeah, I'm going to kill him with this one, I'm going to kill him with this one.

Speaker 2:

They're not ready for this one.

Speaker 1:

No, he was like. This shit looks stupid as hell. They're going to drag me and this interview is going to go viral.

Speaker 2:

I knew Terrence was gone a long time ago, though this nigga got his own math. You know, there's a Terrence Howard proof out there that he wrote, and he even presented it in front of a real group of college kids.

Speaker 1:

What does that even mean?

Speaker 2:

So a proof is like a mathematic formula that you create, that you use particular rules and stuff like that.

Speaker 1:

What was the mathematic formula geared towards? What was it solving?

Speaker 2:

Well, his theory was one times one equals two. No lie, he said. You want, if you got one of a, one of a thing, it too that two things right there if you multiply one thing by one thing, it equals one thing.

Speaker 1:

Like where does that math come from? Terrence howard, that's that same math that she was doing to your taxes, which is why the irs is after your ass. Because, because? What does that mean?

Speaker 2:

that's what he was doing. Like that's what it say one time one equals two. There's a whole video, it's like an hour long. You can watch this can you remath, math, like basically? But what he's doing is he's just taking away certain principles that have already been established and he's trying to ignore all that. When you, when you hear this conversation, he tried to do that.

Speaker 1:

You can't do that.

Speaker 2:

He'd be trying to do like some supernatural shit, but you got to expect this from a nigga who, daddy, killed Santa Claus.

Speaker 1:

Excuse me, oh, you don't know what the fuck does that even mean?

Speaker 2:

what does that mean? Rhetoric, so you've never heard of the santa santa line slayer santa line slayer the santa line slayer, that's terrence howard's dad, tyrone howard, this nigga was in a line first of all.

Speaker 1:

His first name being tyrone is just highly problematic and stereotypical continue. So he was it was.

Speaker 2:

It was when he had took little terrence to to the mall to be, you know, at the in the santa. I think either the santa didn't want it was it was when he had took little terrence to to the mall to be, you know, at the in the santa. I think either the santa didn't want, it was going on break or something happened and he gets into an altercation with the santa and he kills the santa and goes to jail.

Speaker 1:

This was all over the news he watched his father stab a man to death when he was two. Yeah, the santa cla.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, this is Santa. This was all over the news. That is crazy. They coined this nigga a name. That's how you know he was doing some shit when they give you a nickname. Yeah, the Santa Lion Slayer. Oh, my God, no lie, this is what I'm saying. Once I learned that about bro and I knew he was doing his own math, I was like, oh yeah, that nigga off he only served 11 months in prison yeah, he was in and out you can stab someone to death and only get 11 months and at that time, at that time, how does that work?

Speaker 2:

I think they may have tried to say it was like some self defense going on in there they used Terrence Howard's math to sentence his father. That's why you think one times one is two.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because what? That doesn't make any sense at all.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, a lot of people didn't know that, though. When I saw that, everything made sense to me after that.

Speaker 1:

The weapon was never recovered.

Speaker 2:

See, that's what I'm saying. Probably wasn't a lot of evidence from it and all that. They just, they just was able to knock him down for that. But Santa Line Slayer, yo is there, look it up. Wow, that's crazy.

Speaker 1:

You learn something new every day. But it also happened back in the day too, so that's probably why he got.

Speaker 2:

he didn't get as much time Like that happened like Terrence. Like I said, he was two years old, I think like almost 60 years old now.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it was 1971. But a black man in 1971 murdered somebody. He would get more time back then than he does now.

Speaker 2:

It just depends, like what the case is of, and he could have been killed. I don't know if DeSanta was a black man or not, but it was in Cleveland. Ohio, so probably a black man. It's just crazy Like Terrence Howard is a wild boy Yo like he died, though the Santa died.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, killed that nigga, slayer Nigga. They ain't calling you the Santa line Stabber. That nigga was a slayer Nigga. Oh shit, tell you, the nigga was a slayer dog. Nigga was fucking Jason Voorhees for the Santa, real shit. I'm just saying folks don't, I just don't feel like folks talk about that enough and I like to you know I, you know my slogan, I remember folks don't talk about that because folks don't know that and you just know a bunch of random nonsense like that's why people don't know that.

Speaker 2:

To remember it hey, I know a nigga when they make, when he make his own math, and I know it when a nigga when a daddy out here spinning blocks on niggas. So I know, I know where that's coming from all right so god damn let's get into what we got next so candace owens has been beefing with ben shapiro.

Speaker 2:

So last time we talked about Candace, you know we talked about her with the whole Diddy thing. She was right about that, she was coming through with a lot about that, so shout out to Candace for that. And then she got fired.

Speaker 2:

You know, after her appearance on Joe Budden's podcast and the Breakfast Club, she then gets fired, uh, from the Daily Wire uh-huh she then challenges Ben Shapiro to a debate on a neutral platform and right now we have her and ben going at it and she's also winning, because a lot of the conservative people are not on ben's side. Oh, because you know, he's a, he's a supporter of israel and right now that is not being. You know, usually if you support in, you're looked at a certain kind of way.

Speaker 1:

They say Andrew Schultz would moderate between Ben Shapiro and Candace Owens.

Speaker 2:

I would watch that. That would be crazy.

Speaker 1:

The only way I would watch that is if Andrew Schultz moderated, because he is very unserious and he's not on either of their sides.

Speaker 2:

Andrew Schultz would be funny. Andrew Schultz or Andrew Tate, I would want either one of those.

Speaker 1:

Andrew Schultz would be funny. Andrew Schultz or Andrew Tate I would want either one of those.

Speaker 2:

Andrew Tate needs to be buried under the jail Top G. So the thing that's just funny is because Ben Shapiro has basically been getting exposed throughout this whole process. It's been shown.

Speaker 1:

Oh, tell me.

Speaker 2:

It's been shown where, like he's been saying oh, we're not worried about your feelings, we're about facts, we're about this and that free speech. Free speech. And then, as soon as somebody says something about israel, now that free speech goes out the door. Now, when it's time to talk about your people, it it changes. The conversation is no longer free speech. We started labeling people names, but you said oh, that's what the left does. You start acting like a snowflake. What you said that was the left does, ben, you're, you're, you're, it's all coming out here again. This is easy.

Speaker 2:

He even said in another Interview oh, israel can take care of Herself. This is a while ago. He said Israel can take care of herself. Now he's Saying oh, it's, it's poignant that America supports Israel. Now, again, the conservatives Are not fans of Israel. That's one thing the left and the right, for the most part, have have been agree on Is it Is the support of Israel. Yeah, a lot of people on conservatives do not want support of Israel. A lot of people on the far left do not support Israel. That's part of the conversation.

Speaker 1:

And for him, why has the United Nations still not stepped in to do anything to stop Israel?

Speaker 2:

Then if generally, Just because that's what the people want doesn't mean what the people elected officials want. We all know that they're part of a death cult.

Speaker 1:

That shouldn't be the case. But yeah, Like if y'all aren't aware.

Speaker 2:

The people who you voted for are all religious nut jobs who are in a death cult, who are trying to get Jews to Israel so that their coming Messiah will come back for the second time. I just want y'all to know that.

Speaker 1:

That's going on right now. I think the main reason why tiktok is being banned now by the government is because of the fact that the youth in america, younger people in general from like 35 younger, do not support israel. We support palestine and we we don't support the genus, the genocide of the palestinian people, and I think that's because everything was made very apparent to us on TikTok that the Palestinian people are the ones being attacked and Israel and Israel are the people who are being the aggressors.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's exactly what it is. They even I don't know how story, how true it is they said they were trying to sell TikTok to a Jewish American company. Like there was a lot of that kind of discussion going on too, because they told me you either had to sell it or, you know, get rid of it. But ben shapiro has been the lead character in all of this. Like you have been exposed, my nigga, like it's done, it is over with. Like your, your, your base has. They already thought you were a dweeb, but now that you have shown them and gave them a reason to, the only thing you can hope for is the fact they don't want to support Candace because she's a black woman. That's the only thing you can hope for.

Speaker 1:

You can hold on to that hope and you can probably.

Speaker 2:

She got them crackers by the balls. Right now she does Yo. She got a Patreon where she's starting off at like $100.

Speaker 1:

Well, you know what? I have very weird opinions about Candace Owens because obviously she panders towards a conservative audience and I don't love that. But if this is a calculated money plan, she doesn't believe all these things at all, and she's actually. Can you see who she's voted for?

Speaker 2:

No, you can't see anybody who's voted for her.

Speaker 1:

Okay, that's not public record. I thought who everyone votes for is public record.

Speaker 2:

She's a foreigner, so that's why she doesn't know that. But no, your vote is discreet.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so yeah, I hope that Candace Owens is pandering towards the conservatives and voting independent every time.

Speaker 2:

What it is is like you can put your name under oh, I'm a Republican or a Democrat or whatever, like that, but you don't have to vote that.

Speaker 2:

You know, what I'm saying but no, I don't think that she's pandering to it. I think she believes a lot of the shit that she said, like the shit Ahmaud Arbery when she said that he was a thug and all that other shit, like when she said he wasn't supposed to be there and all that. Like, I believe she believes that shit. I believe she wholeheartedly is on that side. I just think she's disingenuous and she'll manipulate and use half-truths and half-stories, like remember when I was telling you about that transgender story, about the French person, the French Prime Minister White.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

The whole time. If you listen to what she says, it's all her speculation. She's just taking some articles from other people who are on the same shit she on over there and just trying to sprinkle in her speculation and thoughts, like they even said. This is a picture of her as a baby. She said I don't think so. Like she know the bitch, I don't think that's her. I think this other picture is her. I'm like that's, that's crazy. Like this, this is all coming from your head. So again, I don't mind when she get her shit off. I just don't like when she's being disingenuous and she's not trying to stay consistent. And that's what a lot of these conservatives do. A la Ben Shapiro, y'all say a lot of stuff, but when it's time for y'all turn to live y'all truths, y'all niggas don't live y'all raps, none of y'all do. And that's the only thing I'm saying, like please be consistent, because if y'all was being consistent, maybe y'all would uh get more people on your side in a real way instead of just the racist people did you?

Speaker 1:

you got your all your shit off for this. Yeah, okay, so I just really quickly mentioned independent. I just wanted to quickly ask you have you come across Robert F?

Speaker 2:

Kennedy Jr. Of course, that fucking robot talking nigga.

Speaker 1:

I know I've seen him on TikTok a lot today.

Speaker 2:

I was on the Breakfast Club and I had to yeah that nigga, he's running.

Speaker 1:

He's running. He's running independent. He was an environmental um lawyer for a while. Um all of the comments on his tiktok are like is this hope? Like the he has like 25 percent of like all young people's votes right now. Like I think it's very interesting um his running mate is an asian woman yeah, I saw that too. He did do that and then he, he's very performative, though like he he sounds like trump, but like flipped a little bit.

Speaker 1:

If trump was a robot yeah, well, the voice thing and everything, whatever, but like his rhetoric and like what he's saying, it sounds like Trump. He sounds like he's saying the elitist this and the elitist that he said. He's taking the same like main talking points and he's flipping it to appeal to a younger demographic instead of, like the old white people that that Trump was trying to appeal to. And I'm very excited to see um. I think America needs an independent president. I think we need to shake it up a little bit. I think that the youth needs to come out in hordes and just shock everybody, and an independent candidate needs to win.

Speaker 1:

I think that would just be interesting. So that's all I wanted to say about that. It seems like there's. I don't trust any type of white man in politics, but he's not a career politician, he's a lawyer, but still he's been in um what you call it in the around the white house and stuff for all of his life. So we'll see what happens with this, but it seems like there's like somebody that see um is trying to make our lives as young people a little bit better.

Speaker 9:

And we need to talk about bioweapons. I know a lot now about bioweapons because I've been doing a book on it for the past two and a half years.

Speaker 7:

I mean, I have a better video.

Speaker 9:

The technology that we now have to develop these microbes. We've put hundreds of millions of dollars into ethnically targeted microbes. The Chinese have done the same thing. In fact, covid-19, there's an argument that it is ethnically immune to COVID-19 are because of the structure of the genetic structure genetic differentials among different of the H2 receptor. Covid-19 is targeted to attack Caucasians and black people. The people who are most immune are Ashkenazi, jews and Chinese, and we don't know.

Speaker 1:

Like Ashkenazi, jews have a different genetic code than like other white people. What does that even fucking mean?

Speaker 2:

Hey, when I saw that I said bring back the Kennedy, curse.

Speaker 1:

Ah, that's crazy. I didn't see that at all because all of the other videos I saw of him he seemed very competent. Let me play one really quick. Like this was his was his. This was the first video I saw him like trying to get the young people in general.

Speaker 9:

It's Robert F Kennedy Jr and I'm an independent candidate for president of the United States. If you're under 30, you probably know my name, but you may not know my name. He was a sap. It is that your generation and that of your children will have the same opportunities for dignity and enrichment and prosperity and good health as the communities that earlier generations of Americans gave to my generation.

Speaker 1:

So it's it. He sounded different in this video. He sounded way less incompetent, he sounded a little bit faster. Maybe they sped up the way he was talking, honestly, but I still like his talking point. That I didn't like. I didn't like that, but all the stuff on his platforms officially and all that stuff I did like. So I can't vote anyways. So we'll see.

Speaker 2:

Nah, that was fun. It was just I didn't know he was gonna bring that up, but I had that in the tuck because I was like, as soon as you said his name, let me bring this yeah, I don't have a nigga to oh, it's only here to go after white and black people, like what? And then? But the ashinagi jews, which are white people cosplaying cement, cement, cement like jewish people are white all right.

Speaker 2:

So before we get into this next topic, I want to give an update on young thug trial. So did you see what happened?

Speaker 1:

um, there's been a lot of mess. I'm not a lawyer, but on tiktok has been keeping me updated on all of the young thug.

Speaker 2:

Um, fucking buffoonery so there was a witness who was on the stand and they were asking her some questions and basically she revealed that the investigator was trying to fuck her what I didn't see, that I didn't see that at all yes, this investigator was trying to sleep with the witness that they were talking to.

Speaker 2:

She basically he even lied when she basically said he lied and said that she told the judge to kiss her ass. When she didn't say that. She said she wanted to talk to the judge in the car the next day and they show all the messages and everything about them going forward. He was like yo, you trying to, you know, get together, not on some business type stuff, like on the like. He was trying to fuck her that's crazy. Yeah, that was so, nuts, I saw that and my chest started.

Speaker 1:

Yo, fanny, just wrap it up, it's over, let's wrap it up this case has been going on y'all got her this is day 57 of the trial, so the the most recent update has been day 57 of the trial. I'm not a lawyer, but on tiktok she has been doing the most amazing job at covering this case, because it's a mess. This is her most recent.

Speaker 10:

I'm not a lawyer, but D'Angelo White was back on the stand for day two of his testimony in the YSL trial, and it wasn't much better than yesterday. I'ma just run the clips For context. The state is initially asking D'Angelo about a phone conversation that he had with detectives At some point during that phone conversation. The detective tells D'Angelo about a phone conversation that he had with detectives At some point during that phone conversation. The detective tells D'Angelo he's going to come pick him up, and so the questions will start to be about the alleged conversation that happened in the car after investigators picked D'Angelo up uh, you, actually you know little rod right I don't know nobody in the courtroom right now so you're not tied with little rod this entire court case.

Speaker 1:

Like I'm not a lawyer, but she's been doing a great job at updating us. The entire court case has been the witnesses being like I don't know what that is, I don't remember, I don't recall, nope, like I was high, it's a mess the entire thing yeah it's a wrap, man Fanny, you already got the little nigga with his wife situation all messed up.

Speaker 2:

You got him all embarrassed. We over here laughing at his ass, you over here paying for dick for him Excuse me, she gave him $700K. Apparently that was in the articles. That's how much money he got to be the job that she hired him for. That was the whole scandal? Why?

Speaker 1:

is this trial still happening?

Speaker 2:

It should have been a mistrial a while ago, because she's trying to push herself up Again. I'm not saying these young niggas don't need to go to jail, y'all just got to do a better job at it. But she's trying to push her profile up with this Trump shit and the fucking.

Speaker 1:

But it's not working Because I feel like she's not going to be able to work anymore after this. No, she fucked up.

Speaker 2:

She fucked up. The people that's talking ain't trying to talk the same way anymore, and the Trump shit exposed her with this. So it's like you know, with the nigga they hired for the Trump case. So, it's just it's bad.

Speaker 1:

It's a mess.

Speaker 2:

It's bad, it's bad, it's bad.

Speaker 1:

All right, let's kick some niggas backs in all right, fresh and fit y'all niggas gotta come to the stand. Oh my god like y'all are. Literally it's the most pathetic prototype of nigga that could ever exist on the face of this fucking planet. Y'all have mad vitriol, big ass balls, loud and wrong all the time, not to mention both of y'all are generally just ugly niggas. But let me stop doing that, because I keep calling people ugly and getting off topic. But let me just start off by saying y'all are ugly. Continue.

Speaker 2:

So the new, the new scandal with these clown ass niggas is I never even knew which one was which. I didn't know which one was fresh and which one I just it doesn't matter. I just knew Myron because Myron was the stupidest. He it doesn't matter, I just knew Myron because Myron was the stupidest. He was the one that was talking the most and the stupidest. And I knew the other nigga was just like brain dead.

Speaker 1:

It's fucking the Indian nigga and the African nigga.

Speaker 2:

I mean, I think Myron is African too. That's Indian and African. I think he's African too.

Speaker 1:

It don't matter who fresh and who fit is, they're both little dick bitches.

Speaker 2:

Myron is the Somalian looking nigga, okay. And then indian, this, the person who we about to talk about, is fresh, so it's the african nigga, yeah, so fresh and got himself. He's nigerian. He, I mean, I understand, I can understand that with his actions, so he didn't got himself into a situation with a chinese escort. This nigga didn't got it pregnant, excuse me, got her, her. That was crazy, right right that shit, that shit rolled off your misogyny is showing. That shit rolled off the tongue.

Speaker 2:

That's crazy, that nigga got natural that nigga got her shit, got her pregnant, and so she ends up. Should we play the video, the clip?

Speaker 1:

I don't think we need to play the clip, because Fresh got this woman pregnant. And then what he goes on the podcast saying that like Well beforehand, there's in the back and forth.

Speaker 2:

He's asking her like to get rid of it yeah she starts doing the whole. It's my religion. It's my religion. I can't get rid of the baby type shit, which I hate. When y'all do that because it wasn't to get your religion to be on your back taking dick premarital, it ain't and then you escort so you already been taking cash from money. I'm pretty sure that's a sin in your religion she's literally just a geisha.

Speaker 2:

It's like but don't think don't lie to me and say that's just part of your cult, your religion, to not get an abortion, but it's part of your religion to take dick, but before you get married, for money. I don't want to hear it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I don't want to hear that if it's, if it's against your religion to have an abortion, then it probably is against that same religion to take premarital dick For money, or money Especially for money. For money specifically.

Speaker 2:

But doing it premarital is insane. Like I hate when I hear that that usually falls within the same box and I hate when I hear that, because again it goes back to my favorite saying women are children.

Speaker 1:

Let's get off the um topic of the accountability for the woman. Let's kick this nigga fresh back in, because you move this lady, you, you with your, your whole red pill podcast, all of the fucking nonsense bullshit that you spew On a regular basis. We're fucking an escort Unprotected. Let's very much Put importance On the unprotected part.

Speaker 2:

That's not against their rhetoric. None of this. What's going on is really against their rhetoric.

Speaker 1:

You know what?

Speaker 2:

to be fair, I have never even watched a clip of theirs, so I wouldn't know what their rhetoric is the only rhetoric that you could say he did was basically, is doing all that and loving the girl.

Speaker 1:

You can do all the money, shit, let's, let's get to that, though if you loving the girl, let's get to that after. Because he did all this he was with the girl, got her pregnant, begged her to get an abortion right. She didn't get it, and then he went and dragged her. Yeah, and then made it seem like she was just some random hoe that didn't want to get rid of his baby. Come to find out, this girl that met his mother.

Speaker 2:

Well, no, I'm not going to let you get that shit off. Meeting a mama, I'd have let some joints meet my mama. Why is?

Speaker 1:

Frederick, rhetoric, rhetoric. I'm just saying Shut your mouth and look me in my fucking eyes. Right the fuck now and tell me you would introduce an S court to Shirley I didn't.

Speaker 2:

I didn't show her, I didn't introduce her to work An escort. I've introduced her to worse. I would have got that shit off. I'm a sick nigga. I done brought the joints around my mama. I'm sorry. So when a nigga bring a joint around his mama, that don't surprise me.

Speaker 1:

I done, did it the mama not even in this country. You flew this bitch from China, and then you flew the mom from Nigeria. You flew them together. Link up, you planned this. Link up. You wanted them to. You loved that hoe? Oh for sure he did.

Speaker 2:

He did. My thing is this he loved that bitch, he loved her. But to bring your mama around her joints don't mean you love her, that's all I'm saying. But to bring your mama around her joints don't mean you love her, that's all I'm saying. I didn't brought my joints around my mama Because sometimes my joints be pretty, so I be want my mama to see, like you see what your son doing, like easy she going to be gone in a week or two?

Speaker 1:

Why do you want your mom to know that you knocking shit down? Why is that something that's important to you? We need to unpack that.

Speaker 2:

I don't know why, I don't know. Maybe I just be wanting to let her know because you know why. She would say like a lot of mean stuff to me as a kid, like oh girls ain't gonna like you for x amount of reason, so I'll be wanting to show her like nah, you was wrong because that's wild. I'm just saying what to bring the joints around your mom?

Speaker 1:

yes, that was never, because most men have the the um idea that like you not meeting moms at all unless you're some type of special to me. No, that was never my most I that I get. I get that. But would you agree that, like most men in general, you're not meeting the parents unless you're special to them in?

Speaker 2:

some way for sure or form. I mean, yeah for sure, but that just not how Okay.

Speaker 1:

so we can't say that generally her meeting his mom was not special. I think maybe like 10, 15% of niggas do that that shit over with.

Speaker 2:

Now, though, Especially now with the economy, the way a lot of niggas living with their moms now meeting their mom ain't the same thing that it was anymore. It's just different.

Speaker 1:

Back when I was single. You know, like if you was like picking me up for a date from here, like I live with my mom. So like I always told niggas like you're not special because my mom walked in from work while you was picking me up, or some shit like that, like you met my mom accidentally. Like if you met my mom accidentally, that does not fucking count. And niggas met my mom accidentally all the time I live with the bitch. So like the woman, I love you, I love you mommy, I love you so much, but yeah.

Speaker 2:

I have a funny story. So it was homecoming for college and my mom wanted to come down because she really didn't get to experience her homecoming when she was in school.

Speaker 1:

Uh, I just missed my mouth.

Speaker 2:

Cut that out so she was telling me uh, oh she. She came down to come talk my homecoming and she came into my apartment I didn't know who let her. Somebody let her in and she walked into my room and I had a girl with me in the bed.

Speaker 1:

In the bed, In the bed when she walked in. Ooh, I would have been like. I'm so sorry for being a whore, Mrs Proctor.

Speaker 2:

No man, like I said it was. My mom was never. She was never not around, not aware of the joints. The joints were around, the work was around and she seen it.

Speaker 1:

You had a baby in high school, so she knew you was fucking.

Speaker 2:

It wasn were around, the work was around and she's seen it. You had a baby in high school, so she knew you was fucking. Yeah, it wasn't like a surprise that shit was so funny. When that happened, too, I was like, oh, what are you doing here? Like I really woke up on some that like right next to me and everything. Oh man, that was funny, but no, I like it, just to me we never really had that sleep with bitches next to you unfortunately, man, that was the life I was living.

Speaker 2:

Man, it was crazy. I was a different kind of nigga man I don't like that at all. I was 19, I don't well, yeah, I was 19 when that happened 1920?

Speaker 2:

no, I was 19, for sure, but now that was funny. When my mom walked in on that I forgot she was coming and everything how you forget your mom's coming to um homecoming. Yeah, she was dope, though we had like a little we was that happened to me once, but it wasn't, we was doing college we was doing college stuff and she made a spaghetti I remember my boyfriend came to my ex-boyfriend came to visit me.

Speaker 1:

Okay, you can tell stories, I can tell stories too. My ex-boyfriend came to visit me freshman year on campus and I was passed out sleeping with him and my roommate and both her parents walked in and woke us both up and I was like huh, huh huh, fuck that lame nigga.

Speaker 2:

Okay, hope that nigga stubbed his toe, all right. So this is a tweet that I saw on X. They were talking about your girl, hallie, right, mm-hmm? So Hallie Bailey. Mm-hmm. Because she had posted a picture of her postpartum or whatever. I've seen a little marks there, but it looked good.

Speaker 1:

It looked good, she looks good. Yeah, she tightened up.

Speaker 2:

So this is and I want to make sure I say this right, it's Mr Sotomayor. Mm-hmm. This is who posted this. He said we have the lowest class of women on earth. Right after having their babies, do they show you the new side of them, their mom side, this mom side? Nope, they show us how they're right back to being exactly what they were pre-baby. Black women love to let you know that having a baby don't change your life, but that's the problem.

Speaker 1:

Don't change your body.

Speaker 2:

Well, he said life, but that's the problem. But that's the problem Don't touch your body. Well, he said life, but that's the problem, but that's not what you're trying to prove Can you. Let me finish this nigga's message. But the problem is it should be because it does. If you don't want a baby to change your life, then why become a mother? These chicks have babies simply as a bodily function, Nothing more. How does that make you feel?

Speaker 1:

That's wrong, because not just black women post those pictures. First of all, the moms post snapback pictures all the time. It's just like it's kind of like a. It's a weird woman thing. I think women need to stop doing that in general, because you just push a whole baby out of you and your body not going immediately back to normal is completely fine, but only um celebrities posting snapback pictures is just like oh, my body hasn't changed because of this baby, I'm still fine as fuck. It has nothing to do with their life, has? It hasn't changed? And it's baby, I'm still fine as fuck. It has nothing to do with their life, it hasn't changed. And it's not only specifically black women that are doing this. So I just feel like you don't like black women. He may not.

Speaker 2:

The person who tweeted this. But I want to dive a little bit more deeper into this. So I want to take it off to celebrity and I want to talk to it more into and I think we kind of talked about this a little bit more, but I think it'd be a good time to bring it up just the conversation of posting and presenting the pregnant body yeah, during that time.

Speaker 1:

I know you have very specific feelings about this, I do, and I think they, I think your opinion of this is outside of the general norm. I can see that.

Speaker 2:

But it's just because I just think it's so weird that we have this obsession, especially in our just this post culture, this social media culture, where we have to share something that's so intimate, like childbirth, and that experience that we go, that women go through.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you were saying we You're right. I mean you're right, I just meant we as people.

Speaker 2:

Women only. I mean that women go through like yeah, you were saying we like you're right I mean you're right, I just mean we as people, but, uh, women only.

Speaker 2:

I mean, yeah, you're right, women, pregnant people to be, to be exact, pregnant people go through and I just think that when we we commoditize it like, we make it into just like, we take away the power that it really is like bringing a life into this world and we just do it for likes. It's like I understand that 85 of women the greatest thing they'll ever do in life is bring a child into this world, but I just feel like when you channel, channel it, channel it with like social media posts and your obsession for like likes and engagement, and people are like oh, you look so beautiful, you're so sweet, like it. It takes away from the relationship that needs to be cultivated and the feelings that need to be focused on and it just makes it into like your little baby TV show that you have. Because, like I said, it is something big that women do and it's probably, like I said, probably the most important thing most women will ever do in their life is bring a kid in this world, and it might be even multiple kids.

Speaker 1:

Most women will ever do in their life is bring a kid in this world, and it might be even multiple kids. It's a very significant moment in your life as a woman. Yeah, and it may be a very person to some people.

Speaker 2:

for some pregnant people, that may be the most important thing they ever do.

Speaker 2:

Like the only thing of substance they ever do is birth a child into this world, and it just seems that we just turn it into something that is just like a regular post. Like you post what you ate and stupid stories on the internet, but you want to post your pregnancy, like your body changing and things like that. I just never understand because, like people do nasty stuff with those pictures and they do disgusting things and like why would you want to give folks access to that? And even with this, it's like that's a byproduct of that, where it's like you want to show up other women one. When women do that, like oh look, I'm snapback.

Speaker 1:

like you're showing up other women who don't have yeah, genetic ability that part of that, and it is also only if you have a strong like core do you snap back.

Speaker 2:

It has nothing to do with anything other than genetics yeah, genetics or your whatever kind of training and stuff you may have been doing prior to, but it just seems like we just devalue the experience and not we just turn it into likes, like I understand turning everything almost else into life, into likes was like the life that you bring it into this world. Why would you want to give people access to that?

Speaker 1:

I know it seems that way but like social media for I know social media for a lot of people is just attention seeking but for a lot of people also like non-influencers if you're a regular person with like two 300 followers and you know every single one of them you've met one of them at some point and you're all of them at some point in your life and you just want to share what's going on in your life, then just want to share what's going on in your life, then it's completely normal to.

Speaker 1:

I don't think it's so out of the norm to post your pregnant belly and things of that nature. Like I, you're the only person I've ever came across that has had this opinion that, like sharing your pregnancy and the changes that your body is going through and stuff like that, to you is oversharing and share in oversharing an intimate moment. But to me as a woman, right like my body is going through changes I might not necessarily like every change that my body is going through, but I still want to celebrate this because it's such an integral part of being a woman.

Speaker 2:

But you're celebrating it with who?

Speaker 1:

With whoever it is. That is your social media platform. For some people, it's thousands of people and people who don't know them, and those are the girls who you're you're seeing. But for some people, like I have a bunch of people I follow who have like 200 followers, who follow like 200 people who, um, who circle on social media, are only the people who know them and are their intermediate family, friends, co-workers, things of that nature.

Speaker 1:

And if you want to just post so that people who know you can see the progress that you're going through, and also you want to celebrate it and you want to like, shout it out from the mountains, I'm pregnant and I'm going to bring this product of like these, this abundant love I have with my partner, into the world and I'm so excited about it. And it's not even about attention, it's just about like, oh my God, this amazing thing is happening to me and I want to share it with the rest of y'all. So I feel like that could be a part of it too, because it always, like makes me just, I know where you're coming from. But it makes me a little bit sad when you say that too, because I do want to share my pregnancy with my loved ones when I but you can send them a picture Like that's the thing, like all that stuff, your community and all that stuff, you can send them a picture.

Speaker 1:

And I would have to send each of them a picture. Oh my God.

Speaker 2:

The worst, like that's not a bad thing to do.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean it's a lot of work to protect your privacy.

Speaker 2:

To me, that's not a lot of work to protect your privacy.

Speaker 1:

Because I could just put it on my close friends and just have all the people I want to see it. See it? Yeah, I mean there's a difference though.

Speaker 2:

That's censoring I'm talking about, when you don't have a page that's not blocked, like it's not private and all that stuff people can go and see. Every like that shit is too much of some, of somebody, like of yourself, that you're giving to strangers that's basically making your pregnancy content yeah, and that's that's the problem, where a lot of folks aren't even monetizing and just doing it.

Speaker 2:

And then there's folks who, like you're literally putting content out there that folks are going to pervert and they're going to do other things with that content.

Speaker 2:

It's like that's your sacred moment. This is the thing, like I said, that most people are going to be the greatest thing that you ever do, and then you just give it to the world like it's nothing, like you're just giving it out to the world, this experience, this image of you Challenging, challenging, channeling, channeling, challenging, channeling, like real energy to bring something else into this world, and you just turn it into another post that someone just likes and double taps on. Like, to me it's just sad to see just the state of where it is, because I would just want people to appreciate themselves a little bit more in that regard, like have a little more discretion, a little more discreteness with that. I enjoy the girl who went ghost for nine months and the next thing, you know, she posts a picture of her baby. Like that's cool. I don't really like doing that, but I'm really much against posting children or any of the experiences with children online.

Speaker 1:

This man, his whole social media, doesn't know he's pregnant for the most part, I mean he's married for the most part.

Speaker 2:

I mean, I just don't feel like that's people in regards business, unless they want to watch the show and us talk about that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I don't press it, because his last social media post before we met was like three years ago, so this nigga just don't post on social media in general, not on Instagram anyway. Yeah, I wasn't going to press him regardless, but like he's one of the people that don't share things on social media and me I give updates daily on my life, on my stories. So like we have very different uses of social media. Like I'll update people on, like I'm an oversharer, like I, don't mind if you're making money from it.

Speaker 1:

Like if we don't make no money from it.

Speaker 2:

That's what I'm saying, but like if we're moving forward and our and our show grows to a particular way and we have a particular platform where we get money from posts and stuff like that, then I may have to take a slight you know change to my thought on that, because now it's being used to bring in capital, but just to give it away for free is the stupidest shit in the world when we garner a larger audience, it's going to be very easy to be obsessed with my life because, I share a lot of it, but I mean, it's just it's different when it's being monetized than it is when you're just doing it for free, and then people can pervert the image, at least if they're perverting the image.

Speaker 2:

We got a a a check for their engagement, so to me it's just a little different in that regard. But I wouldn't want to do that. If I could, if we were making good money, we didn't have to do that. I wouldn't be like that, wouldn't be on my first list. I wouldn't want that to happen. I wish that beforehand I could have prevented stuff like that to happen.

Speaker 2:

But I just didn't have that kind of esteem with the individual to do so, I still expressed the same thing. I wasn't. This isn't something new. I've always had this kind of thought about it I think we got everything on my list. Did you have anything else?

Speaker 1:

no, I added that little robert f kennedy. Yeah, because I saw that today and I really wanted to bring it up.

Speaker 2:

But other than that, you know we got to everything good. So, uh, do we want to wrap it up here, like I guess, yeah, let's wrap it up. Oh, let wanna wrap it up here, I guess.

Speaker 1:

So right, yeah, let's wrap it up, oh shit, let's wrap it up, alright, um. It's 11-11.

Speaker 2:

Make a wish Period? Well, not for you guys at home, cause Y'all can't do that. It's probably gonna be 11-11 when you're watching. I need to find my when is the. Sorry everybody, I'm still trying to learn my my sign out. Just cut to it once I find it all right. So remember life is a labor of love, so let's keep building these moments together and remember your job is not your family, and the only thing that you should exploit is these corporations. Talk f and f tv all right, so like comment.

Speaker 1:

subscribe. Follow us Talk FNF TV. All right, so like comment subscribe. Follow us on all of the social media platforms at talkfnftv on TikTok, facebook, twitter, all of the things. Love you guys. Bye, we out.