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Tyrese Underdelivers With Shannon, Cam Newton Accused of Creating Broken Families and the Pressure Get To Lil Yachty - Talk FNF TV

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Ever wondered what happens when a misdirected bouquet toss turns a wedding into an unforgettable showdown? This episode kicks off with a hilarious yet heartwarming story from a wild family wedding, exploring themes of accountability, family dynamics, and cultural identity. We dive into a candid discussion on the responsibility of black men in their communities, and the challenges journalists face when dealing with online criticism. Prepare for a rollercoaster of emotions, laughter, and some genuinely touching moments.

Tyrese's recent interview on Club Shay Shay left us frustrated and bemused, and we don't hold back in our critique. From his braggadocious demeanor to the drama with his ex-wife Samantha, we unpack the broader implications for successful male celebrities and the importance of honesty and self-awareness. We also explore Dr Cheyene Bryant's controversial views on non-traditional family structures and the societal perceptions that come with dating high-profile athletes, raising thought-provoking questions about ego and societal expectations in relationships.

Ever had a misunderstanding with your favorite content creator? We recount a frustrating encounter with a beloved podcaster, highlighting the importance of thoroughness in media and the impact of hastily drawn conclusions. Our conversation then shifts to the music industry, including Lil Yachty's recent controversies and their influence on female culture. Wrapping up with a humorous debate on casting for a Steve Harvey biopic, and some light-hearted banter on managing online storage and social media practices, this episode is a multifaceted exploration of modern relationships, public scrutiny, and the complexities of our digital world.

Speaker 1:

Um. So she sits down with black men who are destroying the black community and she reads them for king filth.

Speaker 2:

And I just felt so bad after hanging out with her Cause like I kept having this one like pulse and thought that just kept like coming back into my head over and over again and it made me feel bad.

Speaker 1:

What was it? What was the thought? I understood why the did that oh my.

Speaker 2:

God Violator, Yo like that was crazy.

Speaker 1:

I said that. That that's what I said. That's what I said. Like everything that you were tweeting was what I said in the video. You obviously did not watch the video at all and just saw the title and just like ran with it, which like probably don't do anymore because we're technically in journalism.

Speaker 2:

So don't just read headlines oh, my goodness, I felt betrayed. I felt like I knew this was going to happen because I spoke to this beforehand, but I just didn't think I would feel the way that it did. I send this to fair and fair it goes. I don't like this. Nope, this, this isn't. This doesn't feel good. And you know when I took, when I read that, I heard I'm on her side, fred, you. But he said he wasn't trying to let it fly, so we put the clip out anyway snip it out and there we go.

Speaker 2:

So now only has yadi done this. Yadi has also done some things that may spike drake the wrong way talk about. There's been comments about the beef Tyrese. I need you to be honest. Okay, tell us what everybody wants to hear. You was the celebrity fear that all these other celebrities have. What happened to you is what every male celebrity that's super duper successful. That's what happened to you. You found a girl. She said all the right things. She she got into your life. You put a baby in her and then she chucked the deuces at you.

Speaker 1:

Your whole life is revolved around talking about other people's lives. This podcast is sponsored by graffiti tax services. For all your tax preparation needs, you can go to graffiti taxcom we're going to put the link right here. It should be somewhere and yeah, you can head to them for during tax season and if you have any financial or tax preparation questions, head to Graffiti Tax Services. They're our new sponsor. Thank you to Graffiti Tax Preparation Services. That's it.

Speaker 2:

Okay. So it's a lot of things that we had to get to personally, between us, honestly, but I I want you to have your code open the way that you want to have it, but I just think I need you to understand you are in for it.

Speaker 1:

I'm not in for nothing, but I did have a story that I thought about and I was like, oh, I've never told you this, so I wanted to tell you. On the show on air.

Speaker 2:

That's great. I'm shooken. Right now I'm really sweating on the inside.

Speaker 1:

He's shaking in his boots. Um, so my cousin got married a couple years ago. The marriage is already over. This is the first minutes of the show. It didn't last, um, but at her wedding, right when she was doing the first of all, let me open. Let me start by saying she had an open bar and me and all my cousins were of drinking age and this was like one of the first times that we were like all together and of drinking age. Like I used to be the oldest cousin and I would just bring a bottle, but but like we were all like allowed to drink in front of our families. So we were wilding, right. Right, we were taking shots at the bar, glasses of champagne, consistently, me and one of my other cousins, like we, we was going drink for drink.

Speaker 2:

See, this is why you can't take young people around and out here doing stuff like that, because what? Why?

Speaker 1:

because also my family, like we drink, like, like we drink, we're loud. We're Haitian, where we have a good time. We jump, we sweat, like it's, it's a blast.

Speaker 2:

But when that new wave of family members come out and y'all have what, like you said, that new wave of drinkers, y'all ain't really learned how to drink yet.

Speaker 1:

That gets scary so continues my story right. So I'm like at least four drinks and two shots in at this point, and she does the bouquet toss. So at this time I was in a relationship.

Speaker 2:

Disgusting.

Speaker 1:

Right, a very committed relationship. So she does the bouquet toss and she tosses it, and then the bouquet grazes my hand almost got it almost got it.

Speaker 1:

And then so a old white woman who's not even like in the bouquet toss like she threw it like to the tables a horrible throw, by the way, but she threw it like to the tables. This old white woman sitting down catches it. What do I do? I run over to the old white woman. I snatch the bouquet out of her hands. I'm drunk. It grazed my hand, it's mine. You're old. You don't even have enough life left to get married. You don't need this that's just so.

Speaker 2:

I just want y'all to know. When she gets drunk, it's like a totally different person, like y'all got a little bit of a hint of it before on one of our old episodes. God, thank god, I was able to edit everything that needed to be taken out out, but she gets so aggressive so I can only imagine with her family giving her the impunity that she feels like she has wherever she goes.

Speaker 1:

I snatch the bouquet, I run back to my table and her mind With my cousins.

Speaker 2:

In your mind. She felt like she was reclaiming Haiti from the white people.

Speaker 1:

I'm like. First of all, who even are? You See, my family is Haitian, both sides, no mix. You're not part of this family, lady. I don't know who you are, how do you know?

Speaker 1:

You don't even know. You were drunk out of your mind. She could have been somebody's no she. She might have been like somebody on her, her husband, well, her ex-husband's side of the family, or something like that. I don't know, I really didn't care. All I saw was old running out of time. You don't need this bouquet. My cousin came and took the fucking bouquet back and took it to the old lady yes, respect.

Speaker 2:

That's why your marriage didn't last see now, when she come up here and call you, she's not calling me. She don't know my number.

Speaker 1:

She's gonna come see you you know, I'm not, I'm not really in contact with that side of the family. Nor am I super family oriented, but that's because, um, my mom's side of the family is not in this country. So, but yeah, she came and took that fucking bouquet right back from me. I was, I had that bouquet for literally like a hot second she took it back you didn't earn it.

Speaker 2:

You're supposed to catch it on the first like if it hits you. It's like the like baseball if it hits your hand. You got to catch it. Yeah or football yeah, definitely I.

Speaker 1:

But I snatched that bouquet out of that white woman's hands so quick. You didn't want it.

Speaker 2:

I think that's what it was. You was really fighting it. How many years is this before we met?

Speaker 1:

This was mad long ago. Like I was this was like 20.

Speaker 2:

We could have found each other earlier 2018, 2019. You was down here though right?

Speaker 1:

No, I wasn't. I wasn't down here yet. This was before I moved to georgia, so it was much before you yeah no, fucking, yeah it got in.

Speaker 2:

So if y'all, if y'all see us swatting something we we recorded, let's just tell the people a little bit before we go. Start the music we're recording during the middle of the day so like mom, her mom and stuff's going out and opening doors.

Speaker 1:

So yeah, the the all the house doors was open and stuff, so we have Nats and what not and why did they come back? That's not the time of year for Nats. Let's get into it though hey finally nobody knows why, that was an. A Dochi is really that girl.

Speaker 5:

Is that how I sound when I tell girls to step their pussy up? She signs a TBE.

Speaker 1:

Though she drops one song a week On Instagram. She been doing it all year. Mm-hmm, she been. She used to do it on TikTok before she got signed.

Speaker 2:

I always think of her when I hear it and I'm like dark-skinned. Doja. Huh, I always think when I listen to her dark-skinned Doja.

Speaker 5:

They're both super creative. Yeah, put the motherfucking, put the motherfucking money in my motherfucking hands. I'm a Gucci and a Bonnie spinning motherfucking bands. I got haters, I got fans. I got stans in the stands. Do they love her or they hate her? Either way, they spinning bands. I could really give a damn. I could really give a fuck. Don't ask you bitches. No, what's up? It's Dochi bitch, miss D-O-E, don Dada bitch, you know. Hey, get your tits up in my makeup. Face up For the makeup. Hey, fake tough niggas dicks up. Put your sticks up For the motherfucking princess. What Rates up? Jigs up? Put your dicks up. Get your dicks up. Put your motherfucking sticks up. Dates up, that's tough nigga. Pay up, get your rates up For the motherfucking princess.

Speaker 4:

She dropped another one, too. That is going a little viral, because this was Are you tired of paying a lot of money for your vacation? My name is Shirley Proctor and I am a partner with Tevodian, a traveling membership group. I can help you save time, money, help you and your loved ones see the world.

Speaker 1:

One of the first ones she dropped that she made like a music video to. She's amazing. Let's get into it.

Speaker 2:

All right now. You're now listening to talk fnf tv and I'm your host rhetoric, or absurd rhetoric, as you may know me in some of these streets and I'm, with my lovely and amazing and wonderful co-host, miss reality hi guys I missed the clap man I want. I'm getting the core yo one day. I'm just about to pull up to walmart, be like, I don't give a fuck what my wife say and I'm just gonna grab the core so we can start to having a board back, because I need to.

Speaker 1:

I need to let it rain fire I really I need you to roll it back on the board. If you do put the board back into, because we got multiple comments asking you to calm it down no, they wanted the sound to be lower and I did.

Speaker 2:

I obliged, I made the sound lower, but the sound was still necessary no, you were doing too many sounds I don't think so couldn't hear what we were saying over the sound yes, they could.

Speaker 1:

They literally said they couldn't. I don't know he's getting defensive over the soundboard.

Speaker 2:

I do. I get very defensive over the soundboard because that's what I want. I'm mad these shits keep making noise, though I thought I tightened them all up last week well, yeah, you know, way fair got my two, got my toolbox out and shit man mine, isn't squeaky. Well, you don't really have the mass to make it squeak like I do well, maybe you should have less mass.

Speaker 2:

See, there you go all right man, let's get into some of the topics that we have to get into, because we definitely got to talk about Tyrese, man. So Tyrese sat down with club Shay Shay and, I'm gonna be honest, man, like the anticipation was none like none other.

Speaker 2:

I was looking forward to this interview, even though I'm not like a huge fan of Tyrese, but he's definitely gonna give you a moment like we got to put this in perspective too, like when we take a look at this, because this nigga was posting videos in the dashiki. You know what I'm saying. So he had to. All I'm thinking this nigga about to spit some real knowledge. He got the dashiki. He hyping it. He's saying it's gonna be bigger than cat williams. They drop another little clip before shannon knees about to buckle.

Speaker 1:

Way that motherfucker he over there, over here, swimming. He's always about to buckle his knees about to fall apart.

Speaker 2:

He got weak knees. Shannon is shaped like a triangle that nigga got.

Speaker 1:

That was just about to say that he got too much top bro for the bottom to support them.

Speaker 2:

Damn hips, don't let him do shit, no more not his hips, don't lie, no, but his hips. He's got two hip surgeries, so he can't I can't do it. He can't work out his legs, no more. So I was looking at the video because, okay, let's also talk about why you can't work out your legs without working out your hips.

Speaker 1:

You can't do a lay down.

Speaker 2:

That's what I'm saying he can't because his hips is metal so he can't do my bad. He got a big, big upper body. The nigga look like the fucking credible hulk up top and they look like a regular joe, like he a quadriplegic on his legs, like it's crazy the way that shit looks that's what he does.

Speaker 1:

He looks like it's disproportional but you can say that in a different way and then I could tell he was excited because they wasn't even in the studio.

Speaker 2:

He came to atlanta oh, I didn't.

Speaker 1:

I was um listening in my car, so I didn't.

Speaker 2:

I didn't get a visual he did the same thing that Charlemagne did he traveled to talk to Tyrese, because you remember that was the whole beef between Charlemagne and Tyrese was that he went down there, did the interview and the interview never came out oh, being in, and Tyrese had a whole story, he's getting sued for it right now because he told the nigga stole his his footage and the nigga suing him for saying he stole it.

Speaker 2:

So there's a whole bunch of shit going on with Tyrese. That's why I really don't want to talk about Tyrese on the show, because once you get into Tyrese prime like it's it's a vortex, because why was he singing at the Olympics with a fake beard and a fake fro? On yes.

Speaker 2:

So I'm saying like it's, it's a continual, it's like a snowball going down a hill yeah, it's a Pandora's box it's just something you don't really want to get into, but we have to step into this and I'm gonna give my expectations. From what? Everything that I saw, just from what I expected. I thought he was gonna give us a detailed breakdown of what occurred with him and his wife, like I thought we were going to get a day are you doing this to me? See, he was on drugs when that happened, like I thought we were going to get a day today clear break.

Speaker 2:

I thought this was going to be the one moment that he was going to be open and honest, because he doesn't really have too much of a relationship with shannon publicly anyway they're not like they front facing friends or anything. So I'm thinking this is somebody you feel like, this is a black man that you can trust, you can reveal intimate information from and really get your shit off. Come to find out. This nigga just want to be at braggadocious, self-hating idiot the whole time, like it literally was bad I didn't get um past like the first 45 minutes, probably because that's how long my drive is.

Speaker 1:

No, I listened to the whole thing, nigga.

Speaker 2:

It was two and a half hours, by the way shannon started talking about. It's something I never realized, even though I it's shocking to me that he did.

Speaker 1:

He was the nigga in that coca-cola commercial oh yeah, so that was in the beginning of the the shannon.

Speaker 2:

Shannon brought out two coca-colas, like that's what I'm saying. I could tell shannon thought oh, I'm about to ease this motherfucker in, I'm gonna make him feel like he was when he first started coming into the hollywood. Show him the coca-cola, let him know I know a little something about him, and then he gonna give it to me. And nothing happened. They went into their conversations pretty much general shenanigans about uh you, know tyree's his upbringing.

Speaker 1:

Before that though he he lotioned shannon sharp that was on my first note right here. That's my first note he was like brother before you shannon was ashy. That's my first note right there he said, brother, stop before we get into it, we jumping in too quick. I'm distracted by the amount of dryness going on over there. And he was like I brought you a little something, something I felt like that was a commercial.

Speaker 1:

That felt like an ad to me I, because I again I didn't have a visual. I thought that he had his own lotion that he was like promoting to give to shannon, but that was regular lotion no, that was his oil. He said he wasn't oh, okay, okay, that makes sense. He was like yeah, my brother, you ashy, we both dark skin. He tried to get it together.

Speaker 2:

He tried to find the dark skin. You know uh grouping you know he tried to find that tribe then, like I said, it didn't really you can see where it was working early. But as he was not kind of, you know, getting into the topic that shannon probably really wanted him to dive into, that you could see, you could tell in this interview more than the other one, like shannon decreasingly becoming like irritated during the interview and it was two and a half hours, yeah, so like nigga, sat there the whole time now he talked.

Speaker 2:

You didn't give him nothing didn't talk about anything, so he did talk about. Let me see what I got here black unity. So this is the bullshit.

Speaker 2:

I don't want to hear tyree's talk about well when see, this is what he tried to do, because, see, you know, we always talk about. You can't say a certain group, talk about a certain group of people, the six point people uh, a particular way that nigga tyree's found a loophole shit on black people after you do it. Bring it up, say that they, you know, talk about their culture and all this stuff, and then you shit on black people after you do it. Bring it up, say that they, you know, talk about their culture and all this stuff, and then you shit on black people afterwards. Then you can talk about them, but you gotta shit on black people afterwards because they love going to. Especially, I hate hearing rich niggas to have this conversation about black unity, because if y'all really wanted black unity, nigga pay for some shit.

Speaker 1:

Support a union, unify some, some black people support some.

Speaker 2:

Put your money into supporting actively people actively doing something. Stop telling us that just because we don't suck y'all dicks, uh, you know, when y'all get y'all shit off or whatever, we don't see. That's what people say about us. They're like oh, y'all always shitting on black people. It's like no, we just talking about black people the same way they treat us on the and vice versa. People saying about us no, not as personally, but I'm saying like the, the overarching thought of people, especially in working class america, black, you know, young black oh okay, we're just giving that same kind of energy no, I'm saying when we talk about people we're just giving the same kind of energy y'all give back to what y'all think about regular, everyday people.

Speaker 2:

so that's what I'm saying. Like I hate when I hear that black unity talk from them, because it just means y'all can't get people to follow your you know tribe, yeah, without, with impunity. They want you to be part of the cult and you're not acting culty.

Speaker 1:

So what else? What else happened in this interview? Because they lost me at the whole like fingerprint your mom and your dad had different fingerprints, the pseudo deep nigga talk that was on my next. I was just like I'm done with this. Because do you mean like your, your fingerprint, as in, like the, the impact you leave, or do you mean like actual, like genetics and fingerprints?

Speaker 2:

because, like I'm not like I said that that that hour in between that and it was the first hour he talked about himself, that second hour was just pseudo deep nigga shit. You know it was all fake flu gaze he talked and I'm pissed off at this point because I'm sitting here like bro bring up samantha. I don't want to hear about nothing else. Nigga, you ain't got shit else going on that I really want to be in depth about nigga. I don't care about the coke commercial. I don't care about all the niggas you know niggas you did movies with and then they died afterward.

Speaker 2:

I don't care we are messy bitches who live for drama like give us the tea I want to know about that little red light skin girl on instagram who kicked your back in on a daily basis. We were watching that for mad long. He doesn't even really address it into the last 30 minutes of the interview so what did he say about it?

Speaker 1:

because I didn't get there at all.

Speaker 2:

He just gets into his grandstand. But when a man makes a vow, you can't just sit there you got.

Speaker 2:

You came into this. I made a. I made a vow to god, shannon, and I wasn't just gonna break it up like he just gets into all that. Don't give him any details. Nigga tyrerese, I need you to be honest. Okay, tell us what everybody wants to hear. You was the celebrity fear that all these other celebrities have. What happened to you is what every male celebrity that's super duper successful. That's what happened to you. You found a girl. She said all the right things. She, she got into your life, you put a baby in her and then she chucked the deuces at you, nigga, that's what happened. Tell us the embarrassment you felt. That's what I want to hear queen.

Speaker 2:

I want to hear the shame, because you keep trying to do this moral grandstanding about this. When this bitch played you respectfully yeah, she played.

Speaker 1:

That's what happened. It would be much more interesting if you sat down, was like, yeah, I got played, like I don't know I am.

Speaker 2:

I am hollywood's biggest fear. Say that, like, really go out there and talk about this is the shortcoming. This is really. This example is used to validate all the other men saying I don't want to get married yeah because it's gonna.

Speaker 2:

It just actually bleeds into the next topic. But we're not finished with tyree shit. But this is what it is. This is exactly what they want. This is when they can go back and say, hey, why I don't want to get married. You point to tyrese if I got money. Like I look what's going on with him. She's trying to take 40k from him from child support, nigga on drugs asking why you know what can more can I do for you and all this other shit. Like can't see his kids he crying about that he still can't see his kids.

Speaker 1:

He can see him now, but I mean, there was discussions about it prior.

Speaker 2:

That's what provoked the know talking about his daughter didn't want to see him and all that other shit.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

So it's very clear that that's what we need to hear If you're not going to give us detail, because the shocking part about it it wasn't no abuse. Everybody thought that was the first thing when it first happened. We thought he was abusive or he was super duper controlling, and all we've ever heard from me he said he woke up and she said she didn't want to be married. No more nigga, you got played. That's what it is. She ain't got no shame.

Speaker 1:

She was a chick has she done any interviews explaining her side or anything like that?

Speaker 2:

no, she's just a social media person, so she'll talk in vague circles and do all that you know. Oh, I'm trying to find myself. And what it just don't realize is like yo, you just really tyrese. You really just funded this chick's operation. This is like the reverse of DJ Vlad when he got punched by Rick Ross, but she just took a nut to the ovaries and now she got the sponsorship from the nigga in Trance. Let's talk about.

Speaker 2:

Tyrese and who he is too, cause he's not no slouch in this game no, in Shannon's whole, like introduction of him.

Speaker 1:

His movies have made 10 billion dollars in revenue. Yeah, this thing about he's part of fast five and transformers yeah like all that stuff and then the older movies, albums like tgt, like there's a bunch of stuff that tyrese has been a part of and he's been famous for a very long time now for 30 years, 25, 30 years so she definitely that was a very big meal ticket.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, she was like the perfect position for her to be in. Like she wasn't famous that much before. She has a doctor next to her name when he met her oh, so she was a doctor she was like, not a medical doctor, but like you know she has a doctorate. Yeah, advanced uh medical degree not medical, but advanced advanced degree you know, okay or whatever kind of uh shit going on.

Speaker 2:

Like she, she was like she told him oh, I'm not trying to be famous, I don't want to be all out in the woodwork, I'm not about the money, I just want love, I just want to relate. You know, she told him everything that a nigga in his position would want to hear. She read the nigga like a book, and I think that's just the honest truth about him. He just don't want to be played. He doesn't want to admit like that's what happened.

Speaker 1:

Bro, she played you on the other side of that coin, though, same thing that ludacris did, but it worked out for him because he plucked that girl. I remember she was in law school when they started dating and she dropped out of law school and got married to him and everyone was like and now they're married with like three beautiful children and still together but see, he got, even though she caught her straight from kat williams but to be fair, he did the smart thing he did.

Speaker 2:

I found her, she. She has the personality and things that I like I don't need to, I don't need any validation to her career to continue and just being real, like if you're looking at it from a position of that of that man, I found you. You are where I want you to be at for the rest of your life.

Speaker 1:

Now I can stop that growth once I put this lifestyle into you yeah, I'm just saying like it was um, it worked out for ludacris, it did not work out for tyree.

Speaker 2:

So sometimes it works and sometimes it doesn't but I'm just and the reason I'm saying why it worked for Ludacris is he caught her in between the studies. The other girl was already graduate. She already had it by her name. Again, what do I always say? The best lady, when you, in that position, look for one who's been humbled by the world so you don't have to just keeping it a being Tyrese, you I'm. You know how? No, shannon really was fucked up and he was really disappointed. In the interview there's a part where Shannon I mean where Tyrese at the end is talking to the editors. He's like oh, edit this out and add this all in and do it like this. So when you know Shannon opens up the the album, this happens. That nigga didn't edit none of that out, that nigga just left it all in.

Speaker 1:

Come on, hurry up, I'm trying to go home. That nigga shade it was pissed off that interview. I don't blame him though you can.

Speaker 2:

You king messy boots and that's the mess you give me.

Speaker 1:

I think this thing get my pants dirty. He was king messy boots when he wasn't sober, but now he's sober. So now he's not king messy boots anymore. No, and it still been messy.

Speaker 2:

Now there's breakfast club interviews and stuff. He's been going wild.

Speaker 1:

Now let's talk with dj mb I haven't seen any of those.

Speaker 2:

I thought we talked about the shit with dj mb and his wife when they were saying how like he had violated or something and that's why they were no longer cool him and mb, because he had said something to his wife yeah that's what the mbs.

Speaker 2:

Uh, tyrese has said something to had communications with mb's wife in a manner the mb didn't like and that's what kind of just stemmed into they little beef. That's why it was tough for him to go up on the breakfast club. A lot but tyrese, man, like you, you, we know what you want, we want to hear. Man, don't, don't tell me about no interviews, no more. Don't tell me nothing's record-breaking unless you're telling me what samantha Lee did to your heart and how your pride is never going to be the same.

Speaker 1:

Ok, we need you to be vulnerable. I need it.

Speaker 2:

Don't put it in no movie, neither Nigga. I want the truth from your heart. Don't do what Megan Good did and did the divorce movie.

Speaker 1:

We don't know that that's what happened in their relationship either.

Speaker 2:

Like I know, but niggas, that just allows niggas to think when you get into that dramatic bag. All right, so we're gonna stay on. The football player talking to people market. That's crazy. I like the athlete to be. An interviewer is now like a whole, like demographic now yeah, like these niggas don't even really got to have thought out opinions before they even do shit like this. So, cam newton, let me get this note out here.

Speaker 1:

This clip was going viral for a while.

Speaker 2:

So you know, give him a little heads up Because you didn't watch it, I did.

Speaker 1:

So I watched the clip. I didn't watch the interview Because I feel like it was going to give me brain rot. So Cam Newton and Dr. Shanae Bryant sat down and they had an interview. She does these types of interviews, for that's the type of content that she makes, apparently she sat down with nick cannon recently um. So she sits down with black men who are destroying the black community and she reads them for fucking filth like that's.

Speaker 2:

That's what she does. Let me. I watched the whole interview so that's not how this kind of happened, right. So the whole thing is cam newton isn't a serious person at all, not at all. You can tell by simply fucking looking at him well, a nigga who's gonna cut the the top of his top hat off, so his several feathers to said top hat. That nigga's not correct in the head. Do you see how he types? Do you see the font that he uses? Yes, that nigga is thrown off.

Speaker 2:

He types like 2002 myspace so anytime you kind of put cam newton into a situation and he speaks to this too where it's like bro, like niggas, just don't look at you like a serious individual because you just have such antiquated and outdated, you know ideologies when you speak about certain things. And it was just so, oh my gosh, you just. I, when I first saw the clip, I wanted to focus on one point that she said she was trying to say essentially, you create broken families because you choose to have children over marriage.

Speaker 1:

And you're selfish yeah.

Speaker 2:

And to me, the selfish part. I'm not going to disagree. I don't think you're necessarily creating a broken family if you have the finances and the women who are willing to accommodate what has to be done so that a family unit can still be looked at and seen.

Speaker 1:

If the women are willing to accommodate, they both create a broken families, because the definition of a broken like if you want to be very like specific about it it's mom and dad in the house raising the child family yes, but when people say you're broken family but I feel like that's what I'm talking about uh, um, a non-broken family would be mom and dad in the house, a nuclear family.

Speaker 1:

So by definition, he is creating broken families. If you want to get into like semantics and finances and stuff like that, then yeah, but I do want to create the foundation of like this man is not in eight children's homes where they can just walk into the bedroom and be like daddy.

Speaker 2:

That's, that's what I'm saying you got to listen on.

Speaker 1:

That's why, if you watch the whole thing, he said all his kids live with me so all his all eight, live with him he said they live with me.

Speaker 2:

They don't have their mamas.

Speaker 1:

Oh I want to get into um how he making this poor lady look. Are they still together, jasmine?

Speaker 2:

well, one of them is, I think is my kid, because I'm talking about the, the girlfriend, oh, the most recent one, oh, I'm not sure. Yeah, I'm not sure. Does she have any kids with him? Did you know?

Speaker 1:

I don't. I think she has one I. My question is are they still together?

Speaker 2:

oh, I think they are. From what everything I've seen?

Speaker 1:

I'm gonna google it real quick.

Speaker 2:

Continue though but no, um. So she talks about that, where she says about the broken family, and I just want to just stay on that, that topic right there, for just a second. With the broken family, I don't feel like if I go in there with intentions that I'm saying, hey, I want this to be this, this, this, and that if I don't make plans like, oh, we're gonna be married, we're gonna have this kind of family, I don't think it's necessarily a broken family in that manner you know, she went on a baby mama number three tour oh yeah for her, for her comedy, shit right yeah yeah, her name is jasmine brown, bro.

Speaker 2:

She has said I would rather be a number three baby mama to a rich nigga than try to build with a regular nigga.

Speaker 1:

Like she said that straight up yeah, I followed her before she started dating him because she was an influencer, she was a comedian, she was kind of funny, but yeah so, um, just to kind of just get into, just to stay on cam just a little bit with the.

Speaker 2:

The arrogance was just seen throughout the interview too, because yo, I don't know how you felt about this woman, but the whole time it was displayed like when she said that she was not interested in a nigga with kids and she called this nigga low functioning. He was upset like you wanted to fuck her.

Speaker 1:

He was he was visual, visibly upset.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he wanted to sleep with her or something, or the fact that she made it seem like she wouldn't sleep with a nigga like him. He was upset like she made it seem like he was below her yeah, it was all pride and ego for his, basically based off of his accomplishments. I'm not saying you don't deserve to do anything. You want mvp and heisman only about seven niggas that did that.

Speaker 2:

So you have a right to feel you know about yourself a particular way when it comes to football, yeah, football, and I mean just general accomplishments in life, but it could just tell like you was just upset the whole time that she didn't want you like the whole argument that he was just trying to make, he was trying to defend his lifestyle and things like that. Again, I don't feel like you're broken home if the one, because it takes two people to make that decision, so I can't and that was the part about her criticism I didn't like was that you paint it as he's creating broken home when he don't have babies?

Speaker 2:

the women have the babies and again, as we've already just pointed out one of his sentiment that you have, but I'm saying, but we just made the point, his the baby mama said I'd rather be baby mama three yeah than be with a regular nigga.

Speaker 1:

Yeah that I agree with you that both parties decided to and it wasn't like the broken homes.

Speaker 2:

After cam newton left the little community college he had to go to and was at auburn. Everybody knew he was going to be a superstar so it wasn't in question if any of these women had his children. Like you knew you was getting a superstar athlete kid. Like you knew this was going to happen for him. It was destined this nigga six, six, two, fucking sixty. Nigga run a fucking four, seven. Like this nigga moves.

Speaker 1:

You niggas need to start saving your nut or make better decisions, but you go eventually that's the one thing.

Speaker 2:

I understand what you're saying.

Speaker 1:

But if I have the money to to support the.

Speaker 2:

all you as the woman got to do is acquiesce. He could have a non-broken family. All the women were just like, hey, let's just be sister wives. But we don't never hear that advocated for, Not in the United States. When these.

Speaker 2:

Cheyenne Bryant, doctors and stuff go on there. We never see them advocating for hey, it's okay to be part of a nigga's tribe. That never gets thrown up. Why not? Why is my more that not in the united states? No, why are we not telling, hey, some of y'all, y'all egos, because you low function? That that was her word that she liked to use well, he, did he not bring it up first?

Speaker 1:

he said that people think that I'm low functioning because of my situation and she asked him in the clip okay, that's what it looks like, but that's her terminology from like her literature and shit like okay, okay, she doesn't base it.

Speaker 2:

Like you know, kevin samuels was high value.

Speaker 2:

She does high functioning high and low functioning okay so in in her regards and like some of the stuff she was kicking was, I feel like I don't think she believes it truthfully, like I don't think she really believes the stuff that she was trying to say because, to be honest, the stuff about a financially uh, a high, high valued woman would definitely take in consideration her partner's value and continue in a relationship, or it's not really a serious relationship. So I think that's one of the things she tries to say. Oh no, it happens all the time. It doesn't happen with the same level of dignity and respect, like that's the main point that people try to focus on.

Speaker 1:

When they had that conversation, Did he have the sentiment throughout the interview that he was still looking for his wife?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, he said that. Both of them said that they both wanted to be married.

Speaker 1:

OK, so my that's my thing with Jasmine Brown, his current girlfriend. Do you remember?

Speaker 1:

the interviews that she was doing about their relationship and how she is there for him and she was she takes it up the ass she okay, other than that she was speaking so poetically about the way she loves him and the way she takes care of him and the love that they have for each other and obviously, like she wants to be the wife so bad, yes, like she wants to be chosen, she wants to be the wife, so bad she wants to be.

Speaker 1:

Miss Cam Newton. Yes, like she wants to be chosen, she wants to get that ring. And then for him, like for one of the first interviews that I see Cam Newton do, talking about relationships and stuff like that, he's like, yeah, I'm still looking, I haven't come across her yet. And this bitch is on interviews talking about I wash his feet and I cook his meals and I take care of all of the kids. Like, come on.

Speaker 2:

Well, can we, can we be honest? There is a world where she knows she's fortunate enough to be in her situation and still not be the individual that he loves. I just think that, like, we have to take ego out of this equation, because sometimes a lot of these women, and maybe she could be considered a low functioning woman. I wouldn't say that, but that's what cheyenne bryan would say she's a low-functioning woman because she's okay with this predicament it's not even about that.

Speaker 1:

It's about, like, how you make your person look in public, like that's important too. He didn't take into consideration. I don't think he was thinking at all. I don't think it even crossed his mind that this is gonna make my girl look crazy it's the same thing and it's also and it's also.

Speaker 1:

It also did. I don't think nick cannon gives a fuck about um, he talked about the deceased member in a very like no, what I'm saying is I don't think nick cannon gives a fuck about reassuring any of those women that he impregnated that they're gonna be his one and only like that's not. But that's not the case for nick cannon at all. But for him to go on there and then say that you're still looking for your wife when this lady is gushing about you every chance she gets like it makes her look crazy, and I don't think he took that into consideration at all for sure.

Speaker 2:

I think I don't think he really cares about that aspect of I think. No, I think he understands his relationship with her. She's a mother of his child and if you hold it down, you gonna get and you give me access. Then we're going to be cool, we're going to do what we need to do in regards to you having a good life and the child having a good life. I just think that I don't think that there's nothing wrong with that being. If you, if you're open and honest with these people, there's nothing wrong with that being. If you're open and honest with these people, there's nothing wrong with that.

Speaker 1:

No, 100%. There's nothing wrong with it at all, but it's just like damn, do I not get some like?

Speaker 2:

No, not you, Like I'm saying, not her, you don't get it, you aren't that kind of woman to him and that's okay.

Speaker 1:

No, no, no. Do I to him? No, no, no. Do I not get some like um, can you not help me a little bit to not make me look stupid, like we both know what it is, but you ain't gotta like fucking blast me and make me look stupid in front of everybody.

Speaker 2:

You didn't have to tell me that, you wrote my feet and let me put it in your ass when I want fair, you know what I'm saying. Like you could have kept that to yourself my nigga.

Speaker 1:

I feel like if it was up to him, nobody would know that they were even like together for real yo, when I watched that interview she brought that shit up like three times.

Speaker 1:

I don't think she can poop regular that is like advertisement, when women are like, oh, I do this for him, I do that for him, I'm such a good woman, I'm such a good woman and they know that this nigga is not about to put a ring on my finger. Let me let these niggas know what they about to get. If they do put a ring on my finger, come here, this is what I give you, and that's like that might be a little bit of why she's doing that. Like you get to put it in my ass and cheat it's open.

Speaker 2:

It's a little loose in there, but it's open, oh man.

Speaker 1:

Okay, so let me make sure I got everything. Muscles work the same way as the vagina muscles do. They just snap back I don't think so.

Speaker 2:

I don't think they're meant to snap back the same capacity because, like you, poop but poop. Sometimes poop can be bigger, but I don't know, man, the way, the frequency that she was bringing it up, it was almost exclusively aimed for no, for real dead ass.

Speaker 1:

I didn't watch that interview either. I hate it's like secondhand embarrassment. You know I'm not about to watch an interview that gives me secondhand embarrassment. I was like oh girl, no, so I didn't watch it all right.

Speaker 2:

So I did, I think, just some of the criticisms I had with the lady who was up there. I will say you do look the part to be able to talk that kind of stuff. I mean, I understand the 41 year old, not married dating coach is the going to be put a card pulled on you? But I mean that's just part of the game. In regards to that, I just think that, like when you are in a position of being a dating coach with women and you stress agency because she said she walked away from two marriages before all the other stuff, it's clear that you value you over anything else. Yes, that's cool, like, but you should like. I think you should express that that comes with plot.

Speaker 2:

You know whole potholes or 100 there's some you, more than likely, will end up the 40 year old, no kids, never been married every lifestyle you choose has its caveats.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, I mean that.

Speaker 2:

I think that that needs to be expressed. I think she tries to hide over that. Jump over that a little bit.

Speaker 1:

She doesn't, you know, shine the light on that reality I can't speak to that because I've never watched this woman's content.

Speaker 2:

I watched one clip, no I watched her, I watched this clip and then I watched a little bit of her nick uh nick cannon uh clip again, I don't just the only thing else I didn't agree with her is the bible.

Speaker 1:

Oh for sure, she read Nick.

Speaker 2:

Cannon too. Oh for sure, 100%. She did the same thing she did with Cam. This is like so this isn't. It was weird, one weird thing, and I don't mean to be mean. She looks so much older with Nick Cannon than she did with.

Speaker 1:

It might have just been lighting and makeup, could have been Because she had her hair up too, like she didn't have it.

Speaker 2:

Interview was like older, like she may have got work done and but no, it was like a couple weeks ago, yeah, so it was crazy. It's really crazy how makeup and hair can change, also five years, how you look, also the bible stuff. I just don't understand why women in these positions love to use the bible when it's convenient for them, because you're breaking the rule when you talk about it.

Speaker 1:

There's literally first timothy look it up, you get you know the bible too well and then, like you, be trying to throw things from the bible that people don't generally know or go by. I know that there's a lot of shit in the bible. I'm just saying the bible is clear about a whole bunch.

Speaker 2:

It's vague about a whole bunch of shit. It's vague about a whole bunch, but christians clear about women.

Speaker 1:

Christians and people who follow the bible pick and choose what they want to what they want to follow.

Speaker 2:

So that part. But see, I don't, I don't, I disagree with that, because then if you pick and choose and the shit ain't real, because if it, if it's real, you follow whatever it say it. That's just like me. I say bankers, you can't be a banker and be christian because it's clearly in the bible that you're not supposed to give money out at a loan as a as an interest rate. So if you're doing that in banking, you can't believe in god.

Speaker 1:

Sorry, hate to break it to you it's crazy that we have in god, we trust on our money and yeah, and it's debt we're, we're literally sinning.

Speaker 1:

It's fucking dead, but um no well, it's all I feel like, uh, these types of content creators and people who are giving out relationship advice, they have to have a religious aspect connected to it, because people who are listening and watching and consuming this content are also God fearing people. I feel like they're also one in the same. If you're a 30 something year old woman that is still single and is watching this content to try to find advice on how to find a man or how you should act and stuff like that, like you probably go into church too.

Speaker 2:

I feel like all of that falls in the box, so you kind of have to do that to connect with your audience I mean back in the day when you aged out to a certain you know marriage for ladies they just put you in an apartment complex and called it a day you just gotta become an old hoe at that point what did that shit used to be called? I forgot it was on that moral oral show spinsters. Yeah, they turn you into a spinster bro, dead ass.

Speaker 1:

Just take some young lovers. You know you help help a couple young niggas lives get a little bit easier. You know, give them 40 once in a while tell them where to put their money at yeah, like you, you, you're a pillar of the community.

Speaker 2:

I just want to go. That's crazy. I just want to have it back in the day when the woman who, like you know, I'm saying either husband died or she got, you know, divorced or just never married it's time for you to take some young dick, yeah when she used to pick the young nigga up and teach him you know how to be an adult, in a way you know she'd get a little and how to back blown out the young hoes better yeah, like tasha mack on the game, remember, yeah her.

Speaker 2:

And uh, what's that nigga name?

Speaker 1:

I don't remember he was in the car. He did watch the game seven times full out. No, but he was a nigga that was on.

Speaker 2:

BET with Rocky Roxy Roxy. Oh, terrence, terrence J. Yeah, terrence J was her young lover on that, yep.

Speaker 1:

I used to have such a big crush on Terrence.

Speaker 2:

J what happened in that car?

Speaker 1:

nigga what happened all right, one last point one last point.

Speaker 2:

I want to stay on this for one last point that's one of the best kept secrets in hollywood and why would terrence?

Speaker 1:

j have one of the best kept secrets in hollywood. What kind of team you got around? And we haven't heard from him really since no, you're right.

Speaker 2:

Well, he did. He think he did a movie not too long ago. I think he was in a movie, uh. But one thing I wanted to ask about this so she has this like moral code for the low functioning high functioning, essentially, is what she's saying like it's more of a moral, like personal, in-depth thing, like your relationship with god, your relationship with you know how you treat people, how you you know consume when you're angered and all that other things like that. That's how she kind of gauges people with it.

Speaker 2:

I just feel like the moral shit just doesn't work when you're in a society like we are in, no like I like you trying to portray that you can't pay, paid for nothing with morals. We don't live in a moralistic society or we don't work, you know, on meritocracy, where you are done by the actions that you do. We are in a capitalist society. So if you're asking yourself why men of their ilk get to do and act a certain way because of the capital that they generate and they bring in, like it's just, it's very that clear. There's nothing really much else that you could add to it.

Speaker 1:

People with more money have different rules. Yeah, across the board.

Speaker 2:

And the same thing goes. There's also different things that apply to them in a particular way, like they also can't really have a genuine experience. That's the one thing he kept trying to say about men and that's like I don't think that it applies to men not being able to find love in a genuine way. I think it applies for people who have something of ilk and gain that you're not really going to find somebody, especially when you can provide a lifestyle. It's just it's gonna be tough man.

Speaker 2:

So, yeah, I can't get mad at nick cannon. I'm not mad at nick cannon, any of these people, because I don't feel like they're purposely making broken homes. I feel like to purposely make a broken home. You were selling this woman a dream and she had your baby out of the idea that this dream was going to be fulfilled when she had the baby. If you tell her, hey, I got a cattle of kids and I need you to be my next, you know breeding partner, and she's down with it, so be it. That's not a broken family to me, that's just a more organized and you know.

Speaker 1:

You think it's just a different type of family.

Speaker 2:

I think it's not like your traditional nuclear family. It's not nuclear, it's just a different type of it's like back in the day yo, like niggas, had kids everywhere, Like they would go to they different castles and different lands and they'd have a bitch there with they, kids, kids and just just what niggas do when they got power. Niggas and niggas in the primal days wasn't out here. Hey, ma'am, will you want to be my one? And only he was like no, join the troops join the winning team.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, look at lions. Look at these bitches over here. They fed and housed and clothed and clean. Yeah, be one of these bitches.

Speaker 2:

Look how lions operate you know, I'm saying the the lion don't kill nothing. He don't chase nothing. His woman do it, but she just scared of him because he know he can take her out unless all the women team up, because they do they do that. Sometimes they they do do that.

Speaker 1:

If you, if they sick of your ass, all of the all of the female, the lionesses, they'll start biting your balls will out and he will have to. They either kill him or he'll have to leave.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so let's stay on this, since we're talking about animals.

Speaker 1:

Crocodile cam this is some twitter shit that I am not privy to for real like this isn't your algorithm. How not? I've seen a tiktok video and I've seen them making jokes about the eyes. I've just seen his eyes I've just seen, like the eyes, and there was like if, if, if I'm making up a story or something like that, but like I, let me know what happened because this is messy.

Speaker 2:

It seems we talked about crocodile cam before remember him. And nature boy was beefing yes, so we talked about him before nature boy is in jail.

Speaker 1:

He is. That's the, that's the nigga that had the, the, all of the women that was the nigga that got beat up in the in the restaurant oh, okay, okay, no, no, no, no no, my bad, my bad no, it wasn't. Even it wasn't porn okay, he was like a poly guy and he was abusing a bunch of women. He went to jail continue.

Speaker 2:

Well, no, uh, yeah. So he had a beef with him back in the day, but apparently him and this uh sex worker by the name of carrella mulla, car I said that shit right, caramello, caramello caramello. Yeah, yeah, caramello yeah, so she is a sex worker. If you're not familiar, I've seen her before. She's very nicely shaped lady of course you've seen her before she does the velma type of look like the nerdy like'm going to wear these weird glasses while I have, like this 12 inch like drilling me?

Speaker 1:

It does Like. The glasses that she wears isn't even like the. I'm going to get these from the beauty supply and look like a nerd. They're literally like at least three centimeters thick. I feel like she needs those to see. She's doing it on purpose, though.

Speaker 2:

They're bifocals. Doing it on purpose, though they're okay. Okay, there's an aesthetic she's going for. She's trying to be like I'm the nerdy girl, but I get nasty type thing like.

Speaker 2:

that's kind of like her, her. The crazy thing about it is, I'm not gonna lie, she looks better with clothes on, like when she wears the clothes. Well, I mean when she wears the clothes, the type of angle she does, like she does have a nice you know she's, she's well endowed up there, but it's like it looks better in the clothes picture than it does when she's butt at. Because I went to the Reddit Sorry, baby girl, you got leaked and everybody had your shit on there. So let's talk about what's going on?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, what was the beef? So?

Speaker 2:

apparently these two were in a situation. They were exchanging, having conversation with each other, you know, talking what it seemed like to me. They were in the talking stage. Yeah, she comes out on the internet basically says that they're no longer talking or whatever. He was being weird and her followers and the following went to been like oh, he was trying to sexually assault her or he was doing all his other stuff. So crocodile cam comes out and says hey hey, hey, hey, hey.

Speaker 2:

I respect all women and think the best of anyone, no matter what you do. But I want to tell y'all guys the truth.

Speaker 2:

That's literally his whole vibe throughout the whole tweet so he exposes some tweets about them or whatever, and essentially like he was just asking her questions about what she was doing in regards to work and things like that. But she was being very vague so it wasn't like you were giving him the cue to be like oh, this is something I don't want to talk about. She's just not answering the questions and it kind of becomes um an issue because he like he basically asked like well, can I see what you were working on, type? That's the kind of question. You've seen his text messages. She gets upset about it. No, you'll never see it, all this stuff. He's just asking questions, why? So basically what it comes to is.

Speaker 1:

I can see it, if I pay, pay 4.99, what it?

Speaker 2:

basically was going on. Well, he didn't pay. That's that's one thing. He didn't pay. If he wanted to see he could have paid. The problem was what? What it is and what I kind of gathered from everything is this is why you don't really get in relationships with sex workers and women of this ilk, because they're damaged.

Speaker 1:

She didn't understand that she was talking to that stop where I thought this was going no, she is she, she.

Speaker 2:

She doesn't know how to have a conversation with a man that doesn't have a a price tag going on with it it doesn't have. So when I'm talking to you and like just say you say hey, I was at work doing some such, and I say, oh, what would you do? What got into you don't look at it as a bad thing because you do honorable work. But if I know you do sexual work and you're just talking to me and I asked you about it. You're not going to take.

Speaker 1:

It seem like I'm trying to get sexual with you and in her mind the content is sexual in nature regardless, because that's what you do with sex work he didn't know what she was doing at the time.

Speaker 2:

He was just asking like she knew she did sex work on the side. I don't know, that's what encapsulates your whole life unless you tell me you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

You might work in the office and then sell a little pussy, or you might do other genuine content that just don't happen to do with porn yeah so there's a whole bunch of adult film stars that do that.

Speaker 2:

So what I'm saying is she don't understand. She's been in this probably for a few years. I know I've seen her for a few years. She's been in it for a few years. She don't know how to have a genuine conversation with the man. Every conversation she has with the man comes from a damaged perspective. So when you deal with women like that, that's all they know. I got a crazy example about this right. I don't think that's true.

Speaker 1:

I feel like it might be like she has a very transactional view of communicating with men. But it might not be damaged. But I I'm just it's tricky to get into the conversation that, like every single sex worker, is damaged I don't want to just think about the conversations we have.

Speaker 2:

So do you think the conversations you have, your job, make things easier for us in here, or harder? Because your conversations you are putting a more exaggerated version of yourself I I.

Speaker 1:

I turn on a character so.

Speaker 2:

So then you're just turning down, but your character isn't being sexualized. You know what I'm saying?

Speaker 1:

no, I'm.

Speaker 2:

I'm a completely different yeah person but it's, it's more of a positive. It's not not, you're not dealing any degeneracy. No, I feel like shame comes about when you do what you're doing no, not in a real way.

Speaker 1:

No, no, no, no, not at all.

Speaker 2:

Let's imagine now she gets up there, she got a island, kind of like what we got over there the island and she got her fucking plastic going in and out her vagina to the point where she probably can't even look at the camera because her face not in the scene. She can't even look at the camera while she's doing. What do you think that does to you mentally over time, when that's all you're showing and that's the work that you're doing every day? That make that puts you into a position of, like you don't look at the world, like everybody else?

Speaker 1:

definitely not. I don't think sex workers look at the world like everybody else you're. If you're willing to be in that vulnerable of a position publicly, I think you are like your brain works there's no more vulnerable for you you can't be vulnerable anymore. That's not vulnerable to you because you're you're willing to do it.

Speaker 2:

That's what I'm saying, like the, the grounds, the wall that's above your vulnerability, are so thick that it's not even like a you can be vulnerable anymore I think that is something I don't know.

Speaker 1:

If there's like research probably not. There's probably not research into like sex workers, their lives, their relationships. We'll look into it. If there is, we'll talk about it again on the next show, because this is something that I think would be really interesting to talk about. I've always wanted to have a sex worker on the show also.

Speaker 2:

I think that would be great if we were able to find one but I'm just saying it's somebody who you have to put a shell up with, a big part of your life with you.

Speaker 1:

You, your brain chemistry is just damaged after that that's why I genuinely feel like um sex workers are better in relationships with other sex workers yes, if you're in the business, then y'all brains are kind of fucked up the same no, for real.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because I would. I feel like anybody who is just like a regular person would find it difficult to be in a relationship with a sex worker. That's not something that you can, especially depending on what type of sex work they do. Regardless of what type of sex work they do, I could be with somebody that sell feet pics, but like if you're doing porn, if you're, if you're doing any kind of sex work, prostitution, or like I can't get jiggy with that.

Speaker 2:

Hey man, go google brian pumper right now that nigga head is done. You don't understand any kind of reality no, like it.

Speaker 1:

Niggas who run into brian pumper like it's not.

Speaker 2:

The interaction never makes sense, so this isn't just a male thing, like a male female thing. This is when you're in that act, when you're in that environment. Why do you think, like when you see the people who leave it, they have to go super heavy on like religion or something like that because, like their brain chemistry is just so damaged that they need to find a new set of rules to understand the world?

Speaker 1:

if you do it for that long, yeah, yeah, you need to find a new set of rules to understand. There are people, but what? This is a completely converse, different conversation that we've been getting into now. But what about the people who have been doing it for mad long, like your lex steals? Oh, they're not.

Speaker 2:

That nigga is still pounding pussy like their brain is in it, like they're part of it. Like they're not, I'm pretty sure they don't have really real, genuine relationships there's no way unless they're with, unless they're with other people in the business.

Speaker 2:

And then when I talked to willow rider, she said the same thing. She said most people are just. They keep it in the business because it's harder for people outside the business to understand us because, like I said you've been, nobody else is doing this. Nobody else is looking at their job as taking a piece of their humanity a little bit.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I feel like adam 22 and lena kind of have like a cinderella story of the porn community, kind of like that's. That's their situation as a sex, as sex workers is like the most ideal, most loving romantic relationship you can get into that is just stay over there with each other.

Speaker 2:

I mean nobody else can the brain that you'd have to have to do that. Like to deal with that? I knew another nigga was looking at you a particular kind of way and you was even giving him a kind of flavor back. Like it's done, I'm up.

Speaker 1:

It's explosive around now even if the flavor was for work. 100, especially if it's for work. So you wouldn't be able to date like a bottle girl or a stripper either no, I've never been into that.

Speaker 2:

I've talked to strippers before, but it was merely because I wanted to sleep with him. It was never because I actually wanted something. After that, like it was now, like I said, I was gonna bring up the story where I was talking to this one girl and she revealed to me like she had been in like some serious domestic violence situations oh no four different niggas? Oh no, like for real, like she sent one, like what?

Speaker 2:

she's gotta start busting that niggas she sent me a picture, right, and you could see like her eye was almost out her head, like she had like it was crazy like real bad damage, yo. And so I end up chilling with her and hanging out with her or whatever, and we probably hung out one or two times and I just felt so bad after hanging out with her because, like I kept having this one like pulse and thought that just kept like coming back into my head over and over again and it made me feel bad. What was it? What was the thought? I understood why them niggas did that shit, oh my god violator.

Speaker 2:

Yo like that shit was crazy, like she was really a violator what the fuck do you mean?

Speaker 1:

nah, because now I'm imagining you hanging out with this bitch trying not to punch her in the face.

Speaker 2:

I'm not, that's not me, so it's not me saying I want to punch her, I just sit here, understand? I see why I niggas popped you for that.

Speaker 4:

Oh, I see why I got you like I'm saying it in my head from new york no, I don't know where she was from.

Speaker 1:

I can't even remember she actually got crazy mouth, she was actually the girl.

Speaker 2:

Remember when we was out with your dad and I told you I got a crazy call from somebody? Oh, that was her. That's what I.

Speaker 1:

Bitch, I don't say I whoop your ass, but you sound like.

Speaker 2:

You got too much experience at it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you, I would call the police on you.

Speaker 2:

You're going to jail bitch, but no, it was just like Along with the rest of your old niggas. It was just situations where it was just sitting there, like I can understand, where somebody who has been in a bad situation and you keep those habits up because that's just has been life for you. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

And so that's what I'm just saying, where it's like yo. She was far too far gone for me, though, all right. So, speaking of standing up to two bitches, I think I think we need to have a discussion, because I've said this on this show this will happen.

Speaker 1:

Who is bitches?

Speaker 2:

First of all, I'm just saying women in general. Said this on this show. This would happen. Who is bitches first of all? I'm just saying women in general. I'm just using that as a turn of phrase because it just sounds better. It's called entertainment. People are in the entertainment business. How about they just remember it? Nah so let's, let's talk about this. I said this was going to happen to us, so on a recent post, I went in and I added yesterday it was recent, that's recent.

Speaker 2:

I don't know how much more recent you can get recent post that I put out. I added uh lex and drea and I asked a simple minds I asked a simple question should lex leave drea behind? And I had a little engagement just from our, our local little conglomerate of people who listen to our content. And then Lex showed up.

Speaker 1:

She definitely did. Do you have the tweets?

Speaker 2:

I have the tweets.

Speaker 1:

Screenshot it Okay, so you can pull them up, because she deleted a couple of the tweets that she replied to. Yes, she did, but we have those screenshotted too.

Speaker 2:

I have them here. So she was responding to one of the people who were basically responded to our original post and says this is so lame, y'all create any kind of content for clout. Get the fuck out my mentions that was lex yes, this is all lex what did um?

Speaker 1:

what did the person reply? And like, what was she replying to?

Speaker 2:

somebody just saying like oh no, don't do it, and I was like, well, we got to do the science type of stuff we got to wake it up, so I was just saying that to him.

Speaker 2:

Uh, she didn't also cause it. Big loser behavior. She deletes both of these posts, though. So then I go up to her and I say uh, on another post that she puts out, because she said you're not getting a reaction out of me today. Nope, just know, poor minds isn't going anywhere. I said this is all we asked for in our video. You would have liked it if you watched. I think that's a fair thing to say. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

She responds, not watching it. This is exactly what feeds into pods breaking up. If y'all had a question about anything, simply you could have asked, but to answer the question you tagged me in poor minds isn't breaking up. And then she went. You know, we better, we on the better things, and then I just responded.

Speaker 2:

What leads to a podcast breaking up is greed, jealousy and hate. Speculation and criticism will only help grow you to new heights. But thanks for the response. So I send this to Farrah and, oh my goodness, I felt betrayed affair and oh my goodness, did I felt betrayed? I felt like I knew this was going to happen, because I spoke to this beforehand, but I just didn't think I would feel the way that it did. I send this to fair and fair it goes. I don't like this. Nope, this. This isn't. This doesn't feel good and you know when I took, when I read that heard I'm on her side, fred, fuck you. That's exactly what I heard and I knew this was going to happen. When it came to the girlies that you like and the ones that you want to be friends with and do all the little girlies, let's get our nails done and hair done, all that little shit that you try to do.

Speaker 1:

You act like this. First of all, I didn't um, you betrayed me. I didn't like the way he handled it, because he knows that these are like my favorite podcasters and I feel like if he was talking to his favorite podcasters, he would have handled it in a completely different way. These are people that he don't give a fuck about.

Speaker 2:

I've called my favorite podcaster a dust head to his face okay, fair, you're right.

Speaker 1:

Um, your favorite podcaster is problematic as fuck and he shouldn't be your favorite podcaster so you get, that's fair you.

Speaker 1:

He's problematic as a motherfucker, so you can very fairly criticize him. My favorite podcaster, lex, is not problematic in the slightest bit, not even a little bit, but it was. The whole thing was frustrating for me to watch unfold, not because of him, because of Lex. I was just like this is so disappointing because the title is salacious so we can get people to click on it, but if you watched it for literally 30 seconds, the whole video is me talking about how much I love poor minds. Yeah, the whole thing is me talking about their dynamic and how much I like it and how great they are together. She was like, oh, poor minds isn't breaking up anytime soon, bitch. I said that. That's what I said. That's what I said. Like everything that you were tweeting was what I said. That's what I said. Like everything that you were tweeting was what I said in the video.

Speaker 1:

You obviously did not watch the video at all and just saw the title and just like ran with it, which like probably don't do anymore because we're technically in journalism, so don't just read headlines.

Speaker 1:

It was just disappointing as fuck, like honestly. And then um, in the clip the reason we titled it that in the clip um, I'm talking about how Lex is venturing off to do her own YouTube channel, which I will support, and he asked me are they breaking up? And I said no and that's where we got the fucking title from. So it's just like I don't know it was. It left a bad taste in my mouth Like I still like the girl, I still love, lex Andrea, but it was just fucking weird because it was like if you watch, literally if you dedicated one minute to watching this, then you wouldn't have replied that way. And I think she did watch a little bit, which is why she deleted her first initial tweets talking about oh, big loser energy and blah, blah, blah, because the entire, from start to finish, video was positive and me saying nothing but good things about Lex and Drea together and me saying that I'm so glad that lex is giving me more because I want more of her.

Speaker 2:

What the fuck like that was so disappointing, genuinely it was crazy too, because I was in the spaces later on, because we didn't record like our normal time and one of the guys was like yeah, your wife was super flattering to her, like it was a really good video about yeah, bitch, I fucking love you like what the fuck, and I hate that.

Speaker 1:

I hate the, the feeling of like being disappointed by somebody that you are a fan of.

Speaker 2:

No, I mean it's a shitty feeling they say not to meet your rival, I mean your idols when I met her, it was fine yeah, that's the funny thing. I told somebody I'm like yo they've met before.

Speaker 1:

That's the funny part like I have her phone number. What the fuck. So like it was? It was very odd and I'm trying not to let that get into like me supporting, get in the way of me supporting lex, because I still genuinely enjoy her, so so, so much, and it's rare that I find a content creator that I enjoy as much as like, so I'm still gonna support her. We'll chuck it up to a misunderstanding, but I just don't like it yeah, I mean I wasn't mad about anything.

Speaker 2:

She has every right to respond. I was mad about it.

Speaker 1:

I was. I wasn't mad about it, I was highly disappointed by it. Genuinely, I was so sad. I was like I don't want you to think that I'm talking shit, and if you just took one second to do your research, you would realize that that's the opposite. It wasn't even a gray area. No, it was a shining video of how much I love you.

Speaker 2:

I even tried to like set it up for you to do anything, like when I asked the questions. I asked like I was just setting up questions. Yeah, allow you to either put a good light on them or put whatever you had to say I didn't know what you was gonna say.

Speaker 1:

There's nothing. Everything that he set up for me to say was positive, because I have nothing but positive opinions and thoughts about your podcast somebody.

Speaker 2:

The same person even said she brought up the point where you can't even tell when they've been arguing, like they're so good at what they do and this is so the, the episode after the birthday episode that I was talking about.

Speaker 1:

On the last um one, she they're in. They did a tour in london with, like other popular podcasts. There's another podcast I forget the name of their podcast, but there are three african women and, um, they brought it up again. They were like, yeah, we fight and nobody can tell on the next fucking episode. Like I don't, I don't like it, I don't like it. Lex come on.

Speaker 2:

We can piece it up, we can have a talk. That's it and I.

Speaker 1:

I almost wanted to dm her and be like no like from my personal page, you know but then I don't think she would have even saw it. It probably would have got lost in a sea of DMs.

Speaker 2:

I hate big head.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but like it left a really bad taste in my mouth and I hope that I don't think she's going to go back and watch the video. But I do hope that she comes into the Twitter spaces one day so that I can finally come in there with you and explain to her what the fuck happened, Because I don't. I don't want us to be at ends at odds.

Speaker 2:

That's peace.

Speaker 1:

All right.

Speaker 2:

And I don't want you to make me feel like you won't pick these Internet people over me.

Speaker 1:

That was really this whole conversation was supposed to be about obviously I picked these internet people over you because I didn't even talk about yeah, how you felt about it.

Speaker 2:

Didn't even want to address, like what my problems were with this because fuck your problems, see see that's, that's crazy. You don't want to. I have an issue here. You, I feel like you chose this woman over me.

Speaker 1:

I feel like your issue is invalid, see, because I married you and I don't well, I do know this lady, but like, not really, like I've met her, but I don't know this lady so I feel like even more you should be on my side we'll agree to disagree. See, they don't respect the vows.

Speaker 2:

They don't respect the vows from sickness in porta. That's what tyrese was saying. Yo.

Speaker 1:

Tyrese was kicking knowledge, now that I'm thinking about it yo yeah, you had one more drink in, and now Tyrese's was kicking knowledge I just put more juice in there.

Speaker 2:

I didn't put no more alcohol. Yo, I don't want none of your champagne. Yo Don't put that in my drink. My nigga, I'm not cool with this. You need to get where I am. All right, we got to get into something that's a little bit older. I hate when, like big shit happens after we record. Right after directly literally like two hours after. It's just infuriating in the highest order.

Speaker 1:

This is why sometimes I just wish we had like a permanent studio space so that when stuff like this happens we can just sit down and do it like a little 10, 15 minute.

Speaker 2:

Yeah one day, one day, we'll get it set up yeah, to be like that. That's what your mom always tells me too. Y'all need to get it, so it's always up. She hates seeing me moving all this stuff around.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but we would need an extra bedroom yeah, or someone like an extra space, or like a we, I don't know. Let's continue, though but no.

Speaker 2:

So this happened and I feel kind of close to this. The only reason why I really wanted to keep it in the rundown was because I know one of the girls that was involved in this. So if y'all didn't see, what everybody thinks this starts at was the clip with mitch and yadi. I'm not gonna play all these clips because a lot of these niggas talking shit this nigga's y'all rather rationale, yeah, if you want to hear them talk, talk about it.

Speaker 2:

You can go on internet, it's everywhere. But uh, he talks to mitch. He says like hey, you know you can't give the advice that you are offering to give to kids about getting jobs and stuff like that, when you never did any of that because you essentially wouldn't be nothing without me he said nigga, you was lazy as fuck, you did not want to get a job, and if I didn't pull you up by your bootstraps forcefully, against your will, you would be broken, desolate and nothing and I think that a crazy violation.

Speaker 2:

What, what? That was nuts. But I don't think it starts there, I don't think. I think what we're watching with Yachty is somebody who is in a position that he really is not ready for or he's been prepared for, let alone somebody who probably shouldn't be having the kind of power he has, that he has now. So let's kind of just take this a little step back. So remember when he released the, the clip out to kai, and then he went and bragged about it kai, kaisa, not oh, um the with the the guy that he wouldn't clear his sample.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so he does that, right, he goes on. Uh, flagrant to 2 with Andrew Schultz. And tells everybody hey, you know, buddy said he wasn't trying to let it fly, so we put the clip out anyway.

Speaker 1:

We put the snippet out and there we go.

Speaker 2:

So Not only has Yachty done this, yachty has also done some things that may spike Drake the wrong way. Talk about. There's been comments about the beef that weren't processed maybe the way he hoped it would be About Drake and Kendrick's beef, mm-hmm. I remember.

Speaker 1:

Yachty saying stuff about that when it was happening.

Speaker 2:

He had Joe Budden on the show.

Speaker 1:

Joe Budden has had Joe Budden on his show, yeah on the Safe Place podcast. I never saw that?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that was just last week. Oh, joe was in the spaces telling us to watch it. Oh, so he does it with Joe Already. We know that's beef with Drake.

Speaker 1:

With Joe and Drake, yeah.

Speaker 2:

I don't know Drake. I've never met Drake in my life but Drake comes off like a person to me where I'm not going to tell you how to move.

Speaker 2:

I'm going to watch your moves and move accordingly yeah so if I see you say comments that I don't really agree with or I want you even voicing, if I see you moving in a way, that's going to make me look bad because that shit with, uh, mr hot spot was bad, it didn't make drake look good and made him look more like a culture vulture, and that's not what he needed, because everyone was already looking at him like that because of not like us in the first place.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so like. And then also the fact that the reason why he didn't want to do it because it was a Christian song, you got the nigga coming back out saying I don't want the kids to get beat, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Mr Hotspot was.

Speaker 2:

he took such a like high moral stance against it that it was like whatever y'all do, y'all are gonna look like fucking garbage, and I think drake took note of that and said I have to get rid of you y'all yeah and he dropped him off the song, so he's no longer on the sod.

Speaker 1:

That just came out yeah, apparently I was um. I didn't hear the song, but nobody really liked yadi's verse on that it was horrible.

Speaker 2:

Yadi has a disgusting voice his it's not great. He writes good, he can pick, good beats and all that stuff. He, he sucks vocally.

Speaker 1:

As far as yadi writing, his grasp of the female voice is uncanny, like the the fact that he was writing for caribou and we know that he wrote for city girls. We don't know who else he's wrote for, but stripes, stripes on my ass. So he caught his pussy tigger, fucking on a scheming ass, rich ass, nigga, sir, who, like? Where do you tap in? I feel like that's amazing as a songwriter that you can tap into a completely different state of mind, completely different gender, completely different lifestyle, and give the people who are in that lifestyle state of mind, whatever, an anthem. That is a bop and a hit. That's crazy.

Speaker 2:

I mean, we've already shown with the you know, Jules LeBon that we kind of dictate female culture in a way, so just saying patriarchy jules.

Speaker 1:

Lebron is a man, I mean, it's a woman first of all.

Speaker 2:

So I don't know what the fuck you're talking about. I'm just talking about from the male terminology of it. All right, so this is what I feel like I mean, you could be a male woman. Uh, you can't continue.

Speaker 4:

So what it looks like to me and I don't think anybody said I think this is just a man spiral, you can continue so what it looks like to me, and I don't think anybody said I think this is just a man spiral.

Speaker 2:

He lost his big time investor with Drake, somebody who was pushing himself up, and he's just having a trickle down of emotions to everybody else that's underneath him. You know why I say that? Because there's another moment in the podcast where Key Clock lights up in this nigga's room. There's another moment in the podcast where key clock lights up in this nigga's room and if you watch the way that he responded to this man smoking in his house and then you take that and compare it to when he talked about his friends and the people that he's adjacent to hold on how did he react?

Speaker 4:

so he reacts, lighting up in his house because I feel like people probably smoke in the house all the time.

Speaker 2:

No, that's exactly what he said you're the first person to ever light up in my room. He said you're the first person to light up in my house yadi, you're like 20 something 26, just had his birthday.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like people light up in your house, I don't believe that.

Speaker 2:

No, when this nigga the way that he made it seem like that he has a strict rules in his house and this nigga came up here and violated and gave no fuck. You look like a bitch when that happens, I'm sorry as a man you when the fact that you ain't tell the nigga to put it out, there was no discussion. All that base you had for mitch and camille you did not have for key glock. And that's what I'm saying. This man is a spiraling kid who is in over his head right now it's.

Speaker 1:

I feel like it's also very easy to have mad bass in your voice when it comes to your niggas, but when it comes to this key glock, this man that you probably don't know that well, he might have been a little, a little afraid to check him so, but, you're not afraid to check your boy, who you pulled up by the bootstraps forcefully, so you can't say that's not, that's not pussy behavior though it is pussy behavior but I'm just trying to clarify like where his state of mind was.

Speaker 1:

I think, um, you should be able to set your boundaries with anybody when they're in your space, and if you're afraid to do so, then obviously that's a problem and then when you sit here, you show your immaturity because you're mad that your homeboy didn't clear up what was said on the podcast after you.

Speaker 1:

Shit on him I wanted to talk about this. He said that we joke like this all the time. I come from a group of friends where we survived the toxic era of making jokes about our friends, characters and making jokes about our friends that we shouldn't have been making and it was fucked up like it's we. We get it like. This is how you and your friend joke. But sometimes you do take it too far, and I feel like this was the instance where you took it too far. You were way too comfortable shitting on your friend in in a way that like it wasn't just on your friend, it was it was on his character, it was on his worth ethic, work ethic.

Speaker 1:

It wasn't constructive whatsoever. It was like um, I'm on top of you and I'm gonna take a piss on you, basically like you dominant, you tried to show your dominance yeah, and that's not. That's not cool whatsoever, regardless of how y'all banter bicker back and forth, but you shitting on fundamentally who he is as a person is not a joke. It's not funny. He doesn't need to defend that. You offended him and you made him look crazy in front of a bunch of people, so now in front of Key Glock.

Speaker 4:

So now he's not gonna yeah, so now he's not gonna yeah.

Speaker 1:

So now he's not gonna defend you and you get to look stupid and have egg on your face in front of as many people as he did, and it's only fair. All he had to do was address you privately and that's it. He didn't have to say shit to nobody. But you have a giant ego and you think that you're the big boss out of all of the beep, all of your friends, so you think that they should move one way and you get to move another way, and that's weird and then, while all this fire was was burning up the city, camille came with a gallon of gas ready to blow this bitch up.

Speaker 2:

Yep, so shout out to camille, try to get you on the show. Hopefully we can in the future. But she comes in and she's upset because her and mitch have a very close relationship. Yes, the whole cousin thing is the joke about them. They're married cousins.

Speaker 2:

They're cousins by marriage okay, not blood cousins but the whole cousin thing was was brought up and all the other thing. But she held him down. She was upset about that and she was basically saying, like bro, he was doing meetings for you, he's been working with you. You can't say you would be where you at without him because he was doing a lot of the legwork, which I understand. You care about somebody. You're still your friend, you still look at him as a good person. You want to defend them. I don't know this is the place for her to do that, because she really made this shit way worse. There was like spaces about should women stay out of men's business after that how does she make it worse?

Speaker 2:

because afterwards yadi goes into another belligerent rant where he starts calling her a hoe. He says you ain't shit. He disrespects mitch again, saying mitch ain't handling no meetings. I wouldn't have mitch do no meetings. Mitch would just tell you that so he can go be on some other chick, which is lame, you over here shitting on your nigga, though, because when mitch went on poor minds, he was like I'd be cheating on my bitch.

Speaker 1:

He was like I hate my bitch and I'd be cheating on her, and yeah, but I'm not saying that that that probably wasn't the girl that he was talking about.

Speaker 2:

He said that when your nigga come here and throw you under the bus and say this nigga wasn't doing, no means he was fucking bitches, he wasn't taking care of no type of business.

Speaker 1:

I wasn't crazy, I wouldn't. First of all, I wouldn't trust this nigga to handle no business for me, because he's a fucking dumb ass. Second of all, you dumb bitch, he was cheating on you. What like it's?

Speaker 2:

nuts. Do you see, like yadi? Like look what you resort to in a place of need, in a place of despair. Like you resort to shitting on people at any turn, like I had this, the assumption, this nigga's not a good dude, he's not for you to be their first thing. Then you make a stupid point where you say, oh, he just wanted you for your place to stay, you just a hoe. What that make you, yadi? If the nigga live with you, since we, with your mama, he's been hoeing you for years, then like you, that's how.

Speaker 2:

That's how I know you aren't really meant for this position right now. Like you are an artist, you are a person who should be like t-pain and all that other stuff, but in the position where you giving somebody 900k, you dressing people, you can't handle that. You can't handle that responsibility. You don't understand the fact that they have money. Irrelevance is your fault. Anything that happens with them is something you should be taking control of.

Speaker 2:

That is who you are supposed to be. If you are supposed to be uh ahead of this label or whatever that you know this conglomerate that you're building are supposed to be. If you are supposed to be uh ahead of this label or whatever that you know, this conglomerate that you're building like, let's be fucking for real. You, you are out of your depth and the problem with this is because of how the music industry is. The music industry is you don't get money off of you. You sell your rights, so then you can get famous to then buy other people's rights, so then you can make money off of them, and that's the problem is like if yadi can make money off of his money fucked up, convoluted industry.

Speaker 2:

But yeah, if yadi could make money off of his own music, I don't think he would be on no podcast. I don't think he would do any of this extra shit, because he would probably make a good deal of money if he was getting the the good splits on his music. But that's just not how this, this business, operates. So, um, so you failed, for lack of a better term. If your artists don't mature and matriculate into something else that's profitable, you fail, nigga, and you're not cut out for this.

Speaker 1:

He also came at caribou again and so he was on instagram live crashing out. So he said that caribou is rude as fuck, she don't respect nobody. Um, he let her have this like soft, pretty nice girl image when that's pretty, let's not talk about that.

Speaker 1:

But like he let her have this image when that's not who really who she really was, she talks to people crazy. He also said that he writes all of her shit and she never wrote shit in her life and she don't know how to rap. He said you can't rap. I write all your shit, um, including the on the radar remix. He said he slowed down, slowed down the beat, put 808s on it so that everyone would think that she was like the hardest out of the group, right? This made me really like. The main thing that this made me think about, first of all, like we said, yachty's an amazing writer. But the second thing that this made me think about was do you remember I think it was maybe like four or five months ago when Caribou was getting a bunch of backlash for using the N-word?

Speaker 1:

in her music and I don't know if she black or not or what the fuck she is, I don't know. I just assume she was mixed and partly black and I feel like mixed people can say nigga, but that's not the conversation we're having. So everyone was like upset that she was saying nigga. And there was this one interview where she asked Yachty to like defend her for saying nigga. She's like nigga, like tell them that, like it's okay for me to say this. And he was like no, why would I do that? He was like why would I? Why would I do that? That's not my place, but if you were writing all of her music, then you were the one writing. You were the one writing all of the niggas, so why would you not?

Speaker 2:

be like none of my words not even that, but I'm saying that, the fact that they're my words, I should at least back you up on you saying yeah, but at that point we didn't know that he was writing it.

Speaker 1:

So we didn't know that he was writing it. So, like, why wouldn't you be like, nah, it's okay, is she partly black?

Speaker 2:

she could say that, like she a nigga like again he he doesn't understand his business. Bro ti jumped on the sword for iggy azalea. That's a part of the game.

Speaker 1:

That's what you have to do, and he's like I said, he's just not cut out for it, especially if, if you're bringing someone who's not a part of our community into our community, then you, you need to fall on the sword for that but I don't know what caribou is.

Speaker 2:

I always assumed she was mixed of some sort yeah, I mean she looked like she got black features. Yeah, just the way that her hue looks and it's just.

Speaker 1:

A lot of people think that mixed people can't say nigga and they not black, and blah blah. That's a different conversation.

Speaker 2:

I think if you partly black, then you're, you're entitled to um claiming part of your black identity I mean, I just think overall, it just it goes to show where yadi again is not an experience in this realm and we're just seeing the victim, the victims of that, like the victim, with the consequences of that. That. The fact that, bro, when you are involved in this, you got to be, it's reason why executives are tight-lipped, the reason why you don't see them crashing out on artists making investments that don't pan out as a part of the game it is yeah, and you just kind of have to understand that and keep it going.

Speaker 2:

But again, it's just, it kind of goes into what this keith lee having with keith leaving going on, where we have these folks, where people are trying to be like entrepreneurs and business owners and they can't really hack it. So let's get into keith lee. So keith lee went to dc.

Speaker 1:

He went to my home, my hood he said that a lot of the restaurants that he went to, like, he barely, is going to put up any reviews. So basically, yeah, so basically went to dc.

Speaker 2:

he didn't have the best time. I think he showed the mumble sauce. Shout out to that. I appreciate you. You know going out and do that, but apparently you know he has a seafood allergy, so we are seafood based.

Speaker 1:

A lot of. Yeah, maryland DC. Like they, it's a lot of seafood and a lot of the best food is seafood.

Speaker 2:

Because, they're coastal, so so a lot of the problem he has is when they, you know, are trying to save time and money, they make cooking the same grease and stuff like that yeah and apparently I heard this we were just reading about.

Speaker 1:

You know folks with allergies they can smell it yeah, and I have a. I have a friend who has a very like severe shellfish allergy. Whenever we go out like there has to be a whole rundown of like what, what is cooked in the kitchen how is it cleaned?

Speaker 1:

yeah, all of that, or else like it'll be a problem and it'll be a liability for the restaurant, so the waitress or the waiter will literally stand there and ask them a bunch, like it's, it's a very serious matter yeah, no, it's for real, because, like you, don't even have to for the foods to physically touch if you just use the knife on one and then like that's all it would take.

Speaker 2:

You have to be very diligent to not kill somebody but, and then I think what the problem is with him. Is he purposely? Because what I kept hearing, what people were saying was like oh, you went to places, nobody even knows about all this.

Speaker 1:

That's his emote that's my thing keith lee has from the jump when he started doing the food reviews. I started following Keith Lee when he was cooking for Ronnie while she was pregnant OK before the food reviews, but when he started doing them it was like he's going to places that nobody knows of, places that need help with business and traffic, and they might have really good food but really bad business traffic, and they might have really good food but really bad business and he's just trying to help small mom and pop owned businesses gain more notoriety. So your favorite spot is not where he's gonna go to. The spot that's filled, that you can barely get a reservation to, is not where he wants to go at all no, and I think my problem is with this.

Speaker 2:

I think he should put out those videos he has I'm talking about the video he's talking, the ones where he didn't like.

Speaker 1:

I'm talking about for dc, oh okay but for every single state before dc is the first state since he's been doing this that he put out. He did not put out videos about the restaurants that he did not like. He did that in atlanta. It was literally national news I remember that yeah right, we talked about it.

Speaker 1:

I feel like keith lee has now decided to pivot again and his brand is only positivity. It's only uplifting small restaurants that have good food. He's not giving constructive criticism to the restaurants that need it, because people are out of their fucking minds. They would call the restaurants with death threats. Why are you doing that? You are fucking insane. Like that's unhinged behavior. You see a food reviewer on the fucking Internet not like the food, say the service was bad, and then you're like like, okay, let me call the owner and threaten death I don't think he's responsible for that he's not, but he's a person of, like, very high moral standing, so he felt responsible for that.

Speaker 1:

So I think that's why he took the negative reviews completely out. He was getting so much backlash and like it was getting very weird I think that you should.

Speaker 2:

That's part. To me, that's part of the game, it's part of food review, it's part of saying, and to me it's also a part of if I'm being a business owner, I need to be critiqued but keith lee's brand was never about reviewing food.

Speaker 1:

It was always about uplifting small business.

Speaker 2:

Then don't tell us at all that you had something that you didn't even go to there. Just don't even tell us, like, don't say that you had a situation where, oh, I didn't like x, y and z. Don't show us all the people who you know, I don't.

Speaker 1:

That's what I don't like half-stepping I think it's because this is the first time that he he announced that he was going to go to a state. He only reviewed a couple restaurants. It was much less than he usually does. People were asking like you try this place, you try this place, you try this place. And he was like this time I'm only sharing what I enjoy with you guys, which is why you're getting less. Yeah, so people were asking him why there wasn't more and he had to give an explanation you could just say hey, like I told you, the ones I liked, that's all yeah I just feel like.

Speaker 2:

I feel like half stepping is the problem. My thing is this cool, I understand having a heart for these, you know business owners that are trying their best, but my nigga, you chose this art of being a business owner and I, I don't feel like it should always be the criticism to the bottom, because I know that's an easy place to shoot at. I, I, I feel that, but at the same token, you need to be held to a level of accountability, like you are the one choosing to play capitalist.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

These are. You play capitalist games. You get capitalist prizes. And part of it is this Like. So if you are not giving good performances, somebody should expose that. No, yeah, like how do we know bad things are happening if no one's willing to say bad things are happening?

Speaker 1:

you're right. It's just the internet like there's. There's no way for you. If you have a huge flat platform, there's no way for you to control what people are going to react, how people are going to react when you put out this information. So if you know that people are going to make this small business owner's life a living hell, then I do understand. I feel like I would probably do the same as keith. I would probably just upload the things that I have positive opinions on and I would shut the fuck up about everything else, or you?

Speaker 2:

could really make it into long form content. Shit on him, work with him like the charm time nigga does sometimes, where he'll go back to the place after shitting on him and do a separate review so that's what I'm saying, like he's done that, but that content, always the second time around, always gets less views I've been following him for a long time but you, uh, obviously, as journalists too, we know that, like the retraction and the the correction, it never gets as much traction as as much as the mistake did or the the negative thing did so it really

Speaker 1:

yeah it really I don't know. I do feel like he he's moving in a correct manner, like I like the way he's doing things. He probably felt my thing is what I think why I think he's doing this. He probably felt terrible when it came to the restaurants that he left negative reviews on, like it probably morally took an effect on him emotionally so he had to stop doing it.

Speaker 2:

I just feel like, bro, bro, you kind of got to accept what comes with the game man like, because now, anytime I hear you, mike, I'm wondering is it really legit now, because you won't even tell me what's bad? If I could keep hearing what's good from you, how can I know I understand your palate be like to me. I feel like that hurts his credibility, because now I I don't get an honest review of your palate. We talk about. People say, oh, we get on here and talk about shit we don't like. We talk about tons of shit we love and we like to talk?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that doesn't. That never gets as much traction about the shit. Um, it never gets as much traction as the stuff that we don't like, that we talk about. But it's a part of it too, in the same token, where it's like we also have to be honest, like nobody wants to come here and listen to us.

Speaker 2:

If we're not being honest, yeah, if we're not giving, because your opinion does not mean anything if you're compromised and you're like, just yeah, you're purchased, and I think that was the thing about something we're gonna do and I think that's the thing about with him is it was very clear he wasn't purchased, but it was because we got both sides of it. If you didn't like it, you didn't like it and, as a business owner, step your shit up.

Speaker 1:

Step your cookies up. But also Keith Lee has gone back to restaurants.

Speaker 2:

To me. I feel like that shows that's more I know you say, even though the retraction doesn't get the same amount of views.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, not even half as much.

Speaker 2:

That shows you.

Speaker 1:

Your character to me is that you're still doing it, not for the views, but because you want to create a story art, which is why I still follow him from before he started doing this to now, because if you have a fucking brain of any sort, you can tell that keithley's character is unshakable and he doesn't seem like someone who's gonna lie about the food because of anything like, regardless of the fact that he's not putting out negative reviews. You know that the places that he suggests that he's like, oh, go here, then you're gonna enjoy it, and then people also talk about his palate a lot. That he has a.

Speaker 1:

He has a very basic palate. Blah, blah, blah blah. Most of y'all have a fucking basic palate. That's true. Like do you not want the opinion of like a regular everyday nigga versus whoever else?

Speaker 2:

I saw somewhere where Joe was calling him and say he wasn't a real food critic. Like what the fuck you?

Speaker 1:

don't give a fuck about what the fuck food critics have to say. Who do you follow? That is an actual, like michelin rated food critic. And do you? Do you not go to jj's? Do you not go to fucking roscoe's? Do you not go to whoever the mom and pop spots that you go to? Because fucking gordon ramsay was like oh no, that's fried chicken. Is it fried hard enough? No, you go to the places that your auntie tells you to go to. You go to the places that your friends tell you to go to. Everyday people with the same basic ass palate as you do. Bitch, you don't eat escargot. Bitch, you don't eat car um, caviar, bitch, you don't. You don't know the difference between okay, you don't know the difference between like a fresh seafood, frozen seafood. Bitch, your palate is just as basic, if not more basic, than keith lee's. You can listen to him.

Speaker 2:

It's okay, you can take his suggestions you know, what I feel bad about is when I see people on the internet and they kind of like have similar personalities or similar like traits of people I know in real life like I got a home boy who, like, reminds me of kodak black. I always, always tell him like you was Kodak Black. Oh my.

Speaker 1:

God A rapist?

Speaker 2:

No, in the sense of like being real country and, like you know, acting a particular street way.

Speaker 1:

Okay, pick somebody else, because I feel like you have a rapist homeboy now.

Speaker 2:

I was going to say, though, with my young, I was going to say Keith Lee, he be touching bitches against.

Speaker 1:

they will.

Speaker 2:

Keith Lee reminds me of my brother, my older brother.

Speaker 1:

Stephon.

Speaker 2:

Uh-huh, because he be into the food and the carryout places and stuff too. I'm like, damn, my brother didn't know, man, he just would put a camera in front of his face. Yeah, that's it, and especially his personality, his shit would have caught on.

Speaker 1:

You would have got so much money for it.

Speaker 2:

I love you, it's not shade granted, he talked about it on the show with us, so I mean he did, but it wasn't. He is fucking hilarious, it wasn't 17 though we need to like.

Speaker 1:

I really just like we had a episode with my friends, I want to have an episode with your family. I want to have like your cousins, ryan, stefan, like I want that would be, cool. I want that energy.

Speaker 2:

That would be hilarious, that'd be cool, I wouldn't be mad at that. Yeah, we'll see what we can do. All right, so uncle luke man, this, this nigga, he really violating now. Did you hear what he said? He said that all of these rap girlies that are talking about fucking and popping pussy that owe him money yeah, the crazy part about this is, for one thing, so the court case that he's referencing he had to go uh fight. I think it was like it went to the supreme court it did.

Speaker 1:

It was a very monumental case as far as hip-hop.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, my thing is this I'm tired of you niggas who feel like y'all gave niggas freedom but no like like uh structure. I'm tired of y'all niggas thinking y' who feel like y'all gave niggas freedom but no, like like uh structure. I'm tired of y'all niggas thinking y'all did something. Y'all gave niggas the freedom to fuck shit off. Let's keep it a bean. He did. You gave niggas the freedom to fuck around. Yeah, thank you, uncle luke. We can talk about busting pussy hoes on the on the on the news for the white man well, it's not just that, it's uh.

Speaker 1:

We're allowed to express ourselves freely in music without censorship, which I don't want to take away from him because I don't but hold on.

Speaker 2:

If the nigga was making songs about loving a black woman and treating her right, you think he would need to go to supreme court. Did marvin gaye ever have to go to supreme court?

Speaker 1:

definitely not, but I feel like you're getting into, like, respectability politics no, I'm getting into the nature of what he's talking about. Yeah, you wanted the freedom to say oh my god, a nigga can talk about popping pussy if you want to talk about popping pussy, just like he can equally talk about marrying said pussy. If he want to talk about marrying said pussy, he should have a equal fucking foundation, a platform to talk about. Whatever the fuck he wants to talk about if he's not talking about hurting anybody.

Speaker 2:

If he want to talk about licking that pussy down, then he should be able to do that no one's saying that he shouldn't be able to do it, but to say that, oh, you get this landmark because you want to bring, uh, degeneracy into the culture. Oh, my god, you do get a landmark because you brought degeneracy into the culture.

Speaker 1:

Oh my god, you do get a landmark because you brought degeneracy into the culture legally. That should be that is a landmark that should be.

Speaker 1:

No, it's not. It's respectability politics. It's not a stain. If you want to talk about the grimiest sex that you want to talk about on a song, then you should be able to do so, because there is a population of our citizens that are having grimy fucking nasty. You shouldn't even talk about it sex, but they can talk about it if they want to, because we live in America, where we talk about popping pussies and busting ass wide open and Jasmine Brown can get on a podcast and talk about how Cam Newton be putting in her ass every single day because the land of the free and no one's saying that you can't.

Speaker 2:

I'm not. I'm not defending that I'm talking about hey my nigga, how about you actually say some shit of substance?

Speaker 1:

no, because that's not what. Let me finish we have, let me finish go ahead, I'm saying, say something of substance.

Speaker 2:

Say, hey, I want to take these crackers and peckerwoods down. Let that be the prerequisite for the freedom talk.

Speaker 1:

We have Kendrick for that. No, he ain't he loving the peckerwoods Like we have.

Speaker 2:

Like I don't you want to hear Uncle Luke talk about revolutionary I don't want to hear him celebrate himself because I brought degeneracy into my culture. That's why I don't have a problem with you being okay with it cool I disagree with open up and say people can be degenerate. Don't sit here and let me wear like a badge of honor and say oh, you rap girlies need to give me money because I let y'all be hoes on wax I agree with you.

Speaker 1:

He doesn't deserve money. You don't deserve no type of money, nigga like. Obviously you did open that door, very obviously. So, yes, that was due to you doing that first. Right, you were a pioneer for being a nasty motherfucker, so congratulations for that, and it's a morally shaky genre of music, but that's not what the fuck we're here to judge the joke, the music is one step close to rape culture.

Speaker 2:

Like, what are we talking about here? Like on one and one breath, you would sit here and say uncle, uncle luke kind of allegations.

Speaker 1:

He, he. I don't know about that, but in his music that's what I was talking about. In uncle luke's music he prompts you to do what you want. Shake that pussy, baby, you only got to shake.

Speaker 2:

That sounds like a domain.

Speaker 1:

You only got to shake that pussy if you want to shake that pussy, girl. That didn't sound like it was he's telling you what to do but you don't got to. He's not saying, bitch, shake that pussy right now. He's not saying that. He's saying shake that pussy to hip-hop dx.

Speaker 2:

He was accused of allegedly raping both women on the same night, so there's two women according to the suit and the plan of that's why I said music as jane doe, that's what I'm saying. Like your music is synonymous with what ended up being a big portion of rape culture.

Speaker 1:

Doodle brown was just such a big part of, like, my coming to age yeah, according to hip-hop news they say this one it was.

Speaker 2:

They were untrue allegations, but I don't think I had allegations every nigga in every nigga in hip-hop, every man in hollywood has allegations.

Speaker 1:

What we're talking about, though, is respectability politics whether he did something pioneering or not by having that parental advisory sticker placed on the cds so that people can know what the fuck they're listening to, and we're talking about whether he's owed money financial compensation from the new girls for making that type of music.

Speaker 2:

That's not where I was going with it at all. I'm going out where, nigga, you brought the generosity into the culture. You do not get a badge of honor for it. Oh, I music. That's not where I was going with it at all. I'm going out where, nigga, you brought degeneracy into the culture. You do not get a badge of honor for it.

Speaker 1:

Oh, I think that's not that's not the most nuanced conversation that we can have about it, but um, but I, okay. I do think that degeneracy has a place in society. I think it does too. Okay, so is it not a good thing that he opened up the space for degeneracy in our culture.

Speaker 2:

No, not, because if I'm going to bring up a space where degeneracy is possible, I personally would feel like it's my duty to make sure I have a system in place that doesn't make that be the status quo.

Speaker 1:

How would you have done that? As Uncle Luke, step by step.

Speaker 2:

I got to know what Uncle Luke kind of money is.

Speaker 1:

Okay, see you don't even know what the fuck you would have done. I wouldn't have told her to shake what the mama gave you. This is exactly what I was talking about the other day when you said I was to be a shady today, girl, and I was like no, because you were not in this position to give this person this type of advice. You can sit here on your soapbox and be like you should have, you should have, you should have, you should have. But when I asked you for step by step of what they should have, you have fucking no clue, because you were never in that position when you first got there.

Speaker 2:

I don't know exactly everything he had access to. I don't even know his sensibilities at the time you never knew but I can still criticize the outcome and the fact that he won money for being a fucking pimp.

Speaker 1:

How much money did he win?

Speaker 2:

I don't think he won any money. I think he just got allowed to play.

Speaker 1:

You just said he won money.

Speaker 2:

No, I said the money that he wanted money.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he wanted money. Okay, I thought you said he won money. I said, well, he wanted money after he won. Okay, you should add it. There's a lot of W's. I'm sorry this nigga don't be knowing how to use his words in his mouth and tongue after a little bit.

Speaker 2:

Whoa, that just put allegations on me.

Speaker 1:

Like I'm a subpar person in a particular manner. He's not a subpar person.

Speaker 2:

They're not gonna know all right, so now we gotta stay before we wrap up the show. We gotta stay in the comedy sector for just a tad bit. He's responded man, mr potato head, steve harvey, king of comedy. He's responded to uh, cat williams. So this is what he said recently pity any ass hater who has man.

Speaker 3:

You'll never have a hater that's doing better than you always know that. Don't get off the wall to dress some pity-inny-ass boy who ain't got shit going for himself. Now you done. Stopped your climber on the wall so you can come down here and talk to his little punk ass. Don't do that, man. I stay away from it Now. Do I want to? Yes, because I'm a human being and I'm hood. I used to yes, because I'm a human being and a hood. I used to be a fighter and I still got hands.

Speaker 4:

They slow, no you don't, you get up on me real slow.

Speaker 3:

I can still knock your monkey ass out. I just don't have the quickness I need. But I'm still going to turn my hip and shift that weight and I'll knock your short ass out. I'll shoot your perm straight out your head.

Speaker 2:

I don't even know what I see. Knock your short ass out, shoot your perm straight out your head.

Speaker 1:

Now I think he probably could beat up cat williams, because cat williams got beat about 14 year old.

Speaker 1:

So he did but, 14 year olds are very agile and strong and also yeah, also did you see that like 40, that cat williams ran in like 10 seconds that was a basketball court though yeah, but still like I feel like that's not 40 yards what I'm saying. Oh, whatever, I feel like cat williams is definitely more agile than steve harvey is he's more shifty I feel like steve harvey probably moves slow and regardless regardless of the fact that steve is big cat, could probably dodge most of them shits and he could probably land enough punches or hits that.

Speaker 1:

Could that make him collapse? I'm thinking about it in a very like Anime-ish kind of way and he's like dodging, dodging. Next thing you know Steve is spitting out blood Falling on the floor. That's how I'm thinking about it.

Speaker 2:

Steve on his burly ass. Steve burly ass gonna grab up on Cat as soon as he get his hands on him. That's how I'm thinking about it. Nah, steve on his burly ass. Steve burly ass gonna grab up on Cat in his overwear as soon as he get his hands on him. That's all he gotta do. Get his hands on him, slap, boom. He gonna have Cat looking like that bus driver. He gonna be like the bus driver beating on that nigga's shit. You see that New Jersey bus driver.

Speaker 2:

This nigga got spit on by the driver by the rider, the nigga who was riding the bus man. He yoked that nigga up and took him to the ground. It's like a misdemeanor for you to do that. Also, by the way, don't be trying to fuck up bus drivers and he was slamming that nigga head on the seat. That's why I feel like if, if steve harvey gets a hand on cat williams, it's just like it's over.

Speaker 1:

Is he quick enough to get that?

Speaker 2:

that's the thing though sometimes you don't got to be quick, you just got to just be the right time. You just gotta have good timing yeah, but timing has to do with no speed, I'm saying because timing gonna be. You just looking at his feet, he trip over his feet real quick now, now you on him he stepped on something he wasn't expecting to beat it.

Speaker 2:

Now you on his ass. Yeah, fair, gonna look like them folks that was in the the maryland casino, them old niggas that was going at it. They're going to look like that. The thing I have an issue with Steve Harvey is he just feels like the representative of the black man with white ideologies, long-term ideologies.

Speaker 1:

For a long time he has.

Speaker 2:

It just seems like he feels like he's getting into his Bill Cosby phase. That's what he feel like.

Speaker 1:

Steve Harvey has been on that type of timing for a very long time. I feel like I think that I hope the allegations come out soon.

Speaker 2:

Man, let's wake it up on his ass, what do? You mean you hope that? What allegations?

Speaker 1:

I don't know I'm just saying let's see if they come out.

Speaker 2:

You just want to see a black man I want to see a black man who espouses his type of biologies.

Speaker 2:

I love to see that happen every time yeah, but I, I know because, because their ideologies don't help the black community by and large and I don't I love to see them fail and fall. I love to see their hubris be at the best of them. I want to see them fail, but not fall. Oh, I want to see you fail, fall. And I want to see another black person, hopefully, who has better morals and identities, uh, practices, than you do. I love to see that. So, before we wrap it up, man steve harvey is supposed to be doing a bioptic. Did I say that right?

Speaker 1:

biopic, biopic, what I call bioptic yeah, like that sounds like something medical biopic um who do you think it should be starring him?

Speaker 2:

I saw michael b jordan was cali on fox who cali on fox? Do they look like a?

Speaker 1:

you're gonna be you're gonna be so fucking angry. When you type in this name and see who I'm talking about. You're gonna be so mad. Also, maybe Shannon Sharp. Shannon Sharp, how do you spell that? C-a-l-e-o-n Fox? He's like he's a musician.

Speaker 2:

If y'all talking about that nigga. You want him to be steve harvey. This nigga don't even look like he could get to the weight of steve harvey.

Speaker 1:

He is literally the reason that lil yachty is famous also you remember?

Speaker 2:

yeah, he did the song.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I know you want this for life, taking pictures with all my eyes, but I can't. Okay, they're gonna have, because the only fucking reason I knew about that song was because of calion fox's stupid ass vines I thought that was his song.

Speaker 2:

Me too, I thought that was just his song he was playing with.

Speaker 1:

Yeah yeah, because after yadi went off, everyone was like bitch, we wouldn't know you if it was, if it wasn't for calion. Calion is the reason you need to think that nigga steve, that nigga was your yadi to, that was your yadi to your mitch, you the mitch, he more than that honestly he gave him the super look.

Speaker 2:

But let's see, I was thinking Lou, the comedian, luke James Mm-hmm, I think that's his name the light-skinned nigga who the one I say he's always like super, he's a kind of like oh, the nigga that be on Twitter.

Speaker 1:

That was like oh, where your mom at.

Speaker 2:

No, not that Lou, it's another Lou. Oh, I don't at this point yeah, we talked about him on the 16. Uh him right here, lou, lou, young oh lou young could do that.

Speaker 2:

I don't know who that nigga is at you never seen any of his clips or anything. Nope, you never seen lou young. He's like the comedian. Nope, he's like the comedian you call when you're trying to be like super safe, like you want this to be a super safe endeavor, like he'll go in there and get it that's probably why he hasn't popped up in my algorithms, because I like salacious niggas well he he got one shake it up he got one clip like.

Speaker 2:

He was like how you know when you're not really in the conversation but you're trying to be in the conversation, type thing at the barbecue it's a bunch of niggas like over there he's sitting down, oh yeah, and they just ignored the nigga like corny he got. I think he could play steve harvey, you don't think he could? I think he'd be a good steve harvey. Get him in shape who do?

Speaker 1:

I think, because I don't think anybody young could play steve. I can't think of anybody young that's playing steve harvey right now now other than michael b could. Yeah, that would be funny, that would. I don't think he has the comedic chops in him to do that, like he would have to completely take on a different aura than he has for all of his movies. He's never done something comedic what about kenan thompson? I'm trying to think of.

Speaker 2:

Maybe I don't like him, desi you think desi banks could play steve harvey? That's like the reverse they did with shawty who? Uh, what's that?

Speaker 1:

I'm just trying to think of someone who's like comedic but also like dark skin. Enough. What's the girl name?

Speaker 2:

from a drum line oh what's his.

Speaker 1:

What's his name? Um, god damn it, I can't. Oh, the one with the mustache, the one with the mustache that'd be doing the stuff, oh, they're doing the stuff oh, he's right on the tip of my tongue. I can't remember his name.

Speaker 2:

All right, I'm going to a website, since you can't think of anything yeah this is who they have, for this is a nasty list too. This is the seven actors that family few voted could play steve harvey, so you ready will smith. No chris rock.

Speaker 1:

No michael strahan absolutely the fuck not. I don't think michael strahan could play no he probably can't act.

Speaker 2:

Jamie fox, I just don't think Michael Strahan could play. No, he probably can't act.

Speaker 1:

Jamie Foxx, I just don't see it like physically.

Speaker 2:

Eddie Murphy.

Speaker 1:

It's just he's too distinct of a comedian himself to play that. Distinct of a comedian Eddie Murphy is too distinct of a comedian himself to play somebody like that.

Speaker 2:

It has to be someone we don't know that can take up that, and then the last two was Kenan Thompson and Kevin Hart.

Speaker 1:

I just see, okay y'all. I love SNL, I love Kenan Thompson. I feel like Kenan Thompson has perfected corny white comedy for white people and I don't want to see him in a role like bernie. Bernie mack was too real of a real nigga to be played by kenan thompson talking about steve harvey though oh, I thought you were talking about oh, oh, yeah, yeah, my bad. So, steve harvey is I don't, I don't want him.

Speaker 2:

That wouldn't't be cool. He did the show. Remember he used to be on the Steve Harvey show.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's too much of a caricature. It seems like.

Speaker 2:

Well, he does it on SNL, so I guess that probably would take away from it. Honestly, Lou, if you want to get visual Lou, no, I do I'll? I'm gonna.

Speaker 1:

X out what I said before. Before. Lou is probably one of the best options. Yeah, either lou or michael b jordan. Michael b, I just you don't think he could yuck it up I don't know man, he just be fucking white bitches and I can't have him play steve harvey I would just love the scene where he's talking to, uh, laurie and like the end of the movie.

Speaker 1:

You know, um, when he's talking to a virgin of laurie there's gonna be an episode in october where I come here dressed as steve harvey. I'm not talking about our christmas, I mean a halloween episode no, I actually am probably gonna do a costume for each week of that.

Speaker 2:

Oh the month.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and I was thinking about it a couple days ago Like Steve Harvey would be really easy, because all I got to get is a mustache. I got the whip cap and I got the big ass suit already Like I love an oversized thrift store moment. So I got the big ass suit, like I'm going to y'all are just, are just gonna.

Speaker 2:

It's just gonna be steve one day. I'm not gonna put no makeup on. That's what the black girls was doing last year.

Speaker 1:

Everybody was steve harvey everyone is still steve harvey. He's such an easy costume. It's just big ass suit mustache.

Speaker 2:

It was like a concerted two years before that it was like the thing I thought no, there was like a concerted effort of like, hey, like, let's all be steve hart yes, sit on it like everyone was doing that. It was my button I was like what the fuck was that? All right, we good, we got anything else we want to talk to. I don't really have anything on my list, nothing, except that 100 gigs is the only thing that I didn't want to care if we talked about or not.

Speaker 1:

No, um, there's nothing I want to talk about. Um, the cloud might become a physical cloud again instead of a thing, so you might have to buy hardware to have cloud storage, which is fine for us.

Speaker 2:

I just. That's just a terabyte, that's all it is.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it's four terabytes.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's external hard drive.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, which is, like, very necessary at this point, because what the fuck is going on with the storage? You got to pay for storage everywhere. Um, that's all I have. I don't see anything else. I'm scrolling through the shade room real quick. I unfollowed the shade room at least two years ago. Guys, y'all should do that for your mental health. It's very great.

Speaker 2:

You probably should follow it back, though, so we can chop it up I mean no, actually I didn't unfollow them, I hid them from my timeline I've been doing that on like women's posts, like like, say, if I get a follow from a girl and she's not appealing and like she likes to post a lot of herself, I'll mute that, like I don't want ugly girl on my timeline.

Speaker 1:

Look at what your man just posted.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but he also posted Joe with finger guns. Remember I told you Mm-hmm, that shit was funny. That's a nasty pic of Joe On the beach.

Speaker 1:

Oh my God, Joe finger guns babe toes in the sand.

Speaker 2:

That's disgusting. Are we still doing the show? Joe said well, he had him like together right. He had it linked right. He had the hands linked right disgusting, that's violent behavior. And then he had the short no, I'm not even being dramatic.

Speaker 1:

That's exactly how joe was sitting in the picture light skin, feet in the sand like what he also posted duke on there, dennis duke, duke, dennis.

Speaker 2:

Oh, duke, dennis, my bad, I called him dennis duke, like he was in the military. That's crazy. Like young future why he?

Speaker 1:

yeah, he did well he does look like young future.

Speaker 2:

I'm surprised future ain't never did no content. Well, I ain't no future. Arrogant motherfucker like why wouldn't you do content with the nigga that looked just like you? Future, don't do content I'm just saying you can do anything with them. I mean, I'm in a music video. Being a young you in a music video has future ever done shit like that.

Speaker 1:

Good start, good place to start. He don't need to do. He don't need to start clout chasing like that till the clout start dying down a little bit. He don't need a young nigga to do shit.

Speaker 2:

I don't think that's clout chasing. To do a dope video where it's like me doing some shit. When I was younger you got dennis duke doing it and then you got older, me rapping about it plus dennis duke.

Speaker 1:

Only look like duke dennis.

Speaker 2:

I think his name is duke dennis it might be you sound better though the other way, right, yeah?

Speaker 1:

I think it is duke dennis, but um fuck, I forgot my train of thought.

Speaker 2:

No, he kind of remind you of kiwan a little bit. A little bit he got some. Well, when I watch the clips I think duke is fine, so I don't don't think that about it he don't remind me? No, not at all, he just just the way that he talked it remind me of my partner oh well, yeah, I don't know how.

Speaker 2:

How key won't talks like that's a nice thing to say about somebody though what I don't think that'd be a bad you know I wouldn't want him to listen to him to be like, oh man, what you say that I think that's a nice thing to say you know he don't. He don't have internet, so he would just be thinking I'm shitting on him anyways he's's not going to think that this is a bad thing.

Speaker 1:

Plus, does he look into the shows all? The way through. He probably ain't my real nigga, though Like it's probably two of your friends that watch all the way through, I can guess Rod Eric. That's it All right, we done.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, all right man, all right, we done. Yeah. All right, man. Well, 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 you should be exploiting is these corporations. Let them know what they need to do, baby.

Speaker 1:

Follow us on all of the social media at talkfnftv, Instagram, Facebook, Twitter, all of the things. Thank you very much for listening. Like.