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Diddy's Arrest Effect on Hip Hop, Shitz and Gigz Gets Canceled and Angela Rye Sells Out - Talk FNF TV

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Can the Green Party truly champion the working class? Join us as we ignite this fiery debate, only to find ourselves amidst a charged discussion on racial identity and personal integrity. As the dust settles, we pivot to a celebration of our top five hip hop albums of the decade, featuring game-changing records like Rich Gang, Dirty Sprite 2, Acid Rap, and To Pimp a Butterfly. Our differing viewpoints on whether an album's impact or personal enjoyment holds more weight reveal the unique lenses through which we view music.

Our conversation takes a lively turn as we dish about our current musical obsessions, spotlighting artists like Katy Perry, Doechi, and Taylor Swift. But we don't stop there—ever wondered about the ethics of betting on celebrity pregnancies? We tackle this head-on with a dose of humor, all while delving into the bizarre world of modern celebrity life. The playful banter continues with a deep dive into Diddy's ongoing legal woes, Elon Musk's unsettling tweet at Taylor Swift, and the conspiracy theories swirling around Diddy's dramatic fall from grace.

As we wind down, we confront the thorny issues of comedy, race, and accountability, sparked by Andrew Schultz's controversial joke about black women. We unpack the responsibilities of podcast guests in doing their homework and the heartbreak of discovering problematic behavior from beloved creators. Our discussion doesn't shy away from the complexities of genre-hopping in music, using Doechi's transition from hip-hop to pop as a case study. From political intrigue to police militarization, and the challenges of navigating public personas, we invite you to join us in exploring these multifaceted topics.

Speaker 1:

Because what people don't understand is the Green Party is the party that wants to help the working class.

Speaker 2:

Yes and a lot of people don't realize that the Green Party is technically the party that we should be paying more attention to. That's when you're hypocritical, because you do that with interracial women all the time.

Speaker 1:

What.

Speaker 2:

You call them not black. I'd be like, obviously that's a black woman, you'd be like oh she's not black. She's not black woman. You're like, oh she's not black.

Speaker 1:

She's not black enough. I didn't say I did not say she was black enough. I didn't you're stupid.

Speaker 2:

You done had a baby buying in a state that you can't get no money for. The fucking baby fail l that's kind of sold to somebody who uses a black scent and his proximity to black people in the black community and black culture as content on a fucking regular god basic hey, jaguar, right has been right the whole entire time.

Speaker 1:

I think we need to start putting respect on that woman name.

Speaker 2:

I think let's keep holding our tongues on that one she's like. Y'all don't understand how many a thousand looks like, but that multiple like a truckload of baby oil.

Speaker 1:

There's a lot of kids that have rashes because of Diddy. Your whole life is revolved around talking about other people's lives. What the fuck?

Speaker 5:

do you think your podcast is doing? On that podcast now.

Speaker 2:

This podcast is sponsored by Graffiti Tax Services. For all your tax preparation needs, you can go to graffiti tax dot com. 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 the graffiti tax services. They're our new sponsor. Thank you to graffiti tax preparation services.

Speaker 1:

That's it all right. So let's get. Let's get things. Let's get things started. You had some for us that you wanted to discuss oh yeah, do.

Speaker 2:

Oh, I forgot. Do we usually, do we not usually play the music?

Speaker 1:

well, you said the code opens.

Speaker 2:

That's before the music oh, god damn, I forgot the order see, this is what happened when you try to let women you know make things happen listen. I picked the topic for the cold open today, so I wanted us to pick our like top five albums that have been released in the past decade. Loosely, you know, some of mine are like see, I was really strict about that.

Speaker 1:

I didn't like, see, I don't like that.

Speaker 2:

See, I was strict, I literally told you before like five minutes after I told you to make the list that mine was loose so I don't know why you need to tighten it up.

Speaker 1:

You, I don't do no loose shit. This I never been.

Speaker 2:

I've never been a loose nigga that wasn't set for you in the first goddamn place just extra as hell for no reason as he always never been hallucinating. You can go first tell us your list of your your top five albums that have been released in the last decade so I went from 2014.

Speaker 1:

That's the farthest I went back just tell us, I just need to make sure, so people can understand the the boundaries that I thought I had, the limitations I had, because I was under the impression that this was a decade list.

Speaker 2:

So I told this nigga immediately that it wasn't I don't listen to.

Speaker 1:

The first thing rich gang who was young thug? And uh, rich homie corn rip. Uh dirty sprite 2 was that. Shit was a fucking moment when that dropped. Uh, life of pablo also another moment. And then uh views and scorpion okay I just think that, for the most part, then, just some of the best work that's just come out okay.

Speaker 2:

So, um, there's only one on my list that goes past 2014, so and it's not in any particular order at all because I couldn't put them in order. So, acid rap chance. The rapper released in 2013. That's the furthest back that I went. There was no way that I could not include acid rap. Um, sylvia Demo. Isaiah Rashad, 2014. To pimp a Butterfly, kendrick 2015. At Long Last, asap, which is never, but there were so many songs on that album that I just had to include it, so that was released in 2015. And then Black Swan, smino, 2017.

Speaker 1:

See that ASAP shows you, yeah, your New York bias. I think the Rich Gang shows my Atlanta bias.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, and the future Well, I mean future is is he's global now, so let's not do that, don't do that. The future yeah he's global, but uh and then I had um, I had 1999 on there by joey badass, but then I realized that he released that in 2012 and that was a little too far back, so I took that off the list okay, I respect that.

Speaker 2:

At least you had put some type of boundaries on yourself yeah, because one year out I was like okay with and like I love that out. Acid acid rap was such a good album like so, so, so, so good I was I almost put color and book on mine just because, like that literally ran 2016.

Speaker 1:

You can't act like everybody wasn't playing this shit with him in two chains. You don't want no problems with me yeah see the way I look at it is differently from, I guess, from you. Like you looked at it from more of what you enjoyed, I looked at it from what represented moments and at that time no, I told you to pick your favorite from.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but my.

Speaker 1:

I'm explaining how my favorites operate. I don't explain from just what I automatically enjoyed the most. I liked it that I set it up to the way that were different moments in hip hop for me anyway.

Speaker 2:

Okay, I just picked the albums that I can play with no skips or close to no skips, and those albums on my list are albums that I can play full out and enjoy most of the project.

Speaker 1:

I feel like a lot of things that I selected speaks to the time that was going on, especially like with rich gang dirty spark too like that spoke to what a lot of niggas just wanted to listen to at that time, and then I rounded off with drake just because he did.

Speaker 2:

He did clean up yeah, and raven roses would have been on there by remma, but it's an afro beats album and I wanted to keep it. Keep it a hip-hop, you know set. But that album Rema Rema been doing his thing.

Speaker 1:

That's my favorite Afrobeat artist now so now we ever want to talk about you know top 10 Katy Perry songs. Now that's gonna be.

Speaker 2:

I'm just saying we can get into that though those are discussions I'm willing to garbage ass discussion that we don't need to have. I'm willing to get into that.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying.

Speaker 2:

Nonsense.

Speaker 1:

I should have played some Katie. I think I might play some Katie next.

Speaker 3:

I don't know. I need you on the side, I need you. We vibin' like ayo. All my bitches got real hair chillin' with the top down, screamin' like ayo I'ma take her ass down, she bring her friend around.

Speaker 5:

fuck them both like ayo. I'm a bougie ass nigga, like the proof. At home we vibin' like ayo Ayo, but you'll be actin' like any Ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, Ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy, ayy. Let's hate. This is literally like mole music. This is mole music. No, you love mole music. I like popular music yeah. I like it. I like it.

Speaker 5:

I like it. I told her she my wife for the weekend. You don't roll right. My chain shine brighter than a strobe light. I'm trying to fuck Coco. This don't concern Ice. If I'm over the boat, she gon' motorbike. I'm nigga. I like Dochi a lot. See, we both win here.

Speaker 1:

We both win here. We both win here Good pop music, baby.

Speaker 5:

I always like when gypsy women sing the same song.

Speaker 1:

See we all in here. You get your girl, you get my girl. Get your sample. Love Dochi, don't love the song. Love Dochi's verse, though I can see you flirting. Why you overworking, why On them like a sundae? Love doji, don't love the song. Love though she's versed, though why we could be fine, don't even try.

Speaker 5:

Don't even try, don't waste the time. I'm what he likes. What he likes, I'm his freak. I'm every woman he wants and needs. I'm his dream. I'm his drug. I'm every woman he wants. So what? I'm his freak. I'm every woman he wants and needs. I'm his dream. I'm his drug. I'm every woman he wants or what I'm his boss. I'm that bitch. I'm every woman he knows exists, I'm his main I'm his side. I'm every woman that's in his mind La-da-dee, la-da-da, la-da. Cause baby, now we got bad blood.

Speaker 1:

Hey, I can't take it back. Look where I'm at. We was OG like DOC. Remember that my DOC was quite OD. I D my facts.

Speaker 5:

Now POV of you and me Similar Iraq. I don't hate you, but I hate you. Overrated you these beats of a car, these bass lines to replace you Take time and hate you.

Speaker 1:

I don't get it, cause you know he's a bad blood. You don't get it.

Speaker 2:

Oh, shit, true I'm just talking about the show Cause baby. Now we got bad blood, oh shit.

Speaker 1:

No, I don't, no, I don't Hold on.

Speaker 6:

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Speaker 1:

Taylor is a goat. Yo no cap. Like first and foremost. That has to just be said. Like shout out to Taylor Swift. I heard there's like bidding odds on her getting pregnant this year, so you can bet on that right now. It's the kind of world we live in. There's money on a lady's womb, super pop star lady. What would you put on her? You think she getting pregnant this year? Would you wager it?

Speaker 2:

There aren't enough words for how much I don't give a fuck about Taylor Swift's womb Like. I can't even, like I can't even put it into words.

Speaker 1:

But if you put money on it, then you would care. So that's what I'm saying. Like, do you think it's going to happen over under you guys? Let's just say you got thousands, that's what.

Speaker 2:

Elon said about Taylor Swift, the tweet that he put out and was like all right, I'll give you a child and take care of your cats, that's sexual harassment. Elon, like that's sexual harassment. I don't want your, your, your sperm, or what could? What gives the sperm anywhere near me, mr uh Musk? Like that is scary as fuck. I'm scared. Oh, my godlor must have been shaking in her fucking cowboy boots better than I say that in front of travis.

Speaker 1:

It's gonna be some problems but hey, let's let the people who know they listening to you are now listening to talk fnf tv, I'm your host. Absurd rhetoric with my lovely and amazing and gorgeous co-host miss reality. All right. So we got a lot to get into man yeah, there's been a lot happening we've been. We've been like I said. We've been falling into. It's our rhythm now we're not, we're in our little week. We didn't have two in a row, yeah, so this isn't even like.

Speaker 2:

There's not a lot of good news for us to get into.

Speaker 2:

It's just a bunch of disappointing shit I mean expected as well, though, so diddy has been arrested yeah, diddy was arrested and he's being held with no bail yeah, uh, they tried to his lawyer, tried to offer a 50 million dollar bail and unfortunately that didn't fall through at all no, he said that he wasn't gonna have any women around, which you can't fool us, we know you like the bussy cat too. And he said that he was going to take weekly drug tests. And there was like a couple other stipulations too that he um said that he was going to stick to but he wasn't going to talk to witnesses, even though there's been reports that?

Speaker 1:

uh don I think that's her name- no, the other woman from, but I'm saying it's because of don, oh, yeah, because of don's um her lawsuit lawsuit. Yeah that he has like tried to reach out to this one woman like 54 times yes texts and calls and a bunch. That was the other member of the band right.

Speaker 2:

Yes, I think her name was kalia okay.

Speaker 1:

So no, it's this man and he's already doing wrong right there. That's already putting, uh, an eye on you, that you don't want that you over here tampering with witnesses, so it's kind of interesting.

Speaker 2:

54 is crazy too, like that's. That's the amount that like, if you take that to the police and you're like this person is stalking me. They called me 54 times in one day they actually take that seriously. That's enough right there. That's more than enough, yeah uh.

Speaker 1:

So according to the article that's been uh reported that he knew that he was going to get arrested so that he came into town. That's why he was in new york. We seen him out about. He was in the park taking pictures with fans like it was really nasty.

Speaker 1:

He was taking pictures with his kids too and then he ends up getting arrested, I think the day before he's supposed to turn himself in, and that's where everything that I thought and I said beforehand kind of flipped on itself, because you don't treat somebody like that. They got a red button and it definitely seems like he is out of all his cards, because generally they would just let you turn yourself in and it's over with.

Speaker 2:

But for them to want to come after you, they want to make an example out of you they probably definitely think that he's a flight risk too, like he they thought they might have not thought that they were he was gonna come turn himself in. Well, that's a possibility what's been going.

Speaker 1:

The rumor online has been that they were scared that he was going to off himself. So I mean, we we can't get into that as being a possibility, but I just kind of want to, you know, get into more about the trial, what has started so far. So he is in jail now, like just so y'all know, billionaire diddy is sitting in a jail cell as we speak right now and, like I said, he's already tried to get bailed two times.

Speaker 1:

He's been denied both times. Uh, they said one was basically for potential flight risk, other one was because they were worried he might, you know, try to get witnesses to change their story and things of that nature coercion yep. So I mean, if you read this docket that came out, so they had the whole indictment, basically what?

Speaker 2:

14 pages and if you, yes, it's a 14 page indictment and this shit already starts off sinister.

Speaker 1:

They call this shit the combs enterprise because he's being charged with a rico yeah so it's a, it's a criminal, a frico, not a frico.

Speaker 2:

A frico, if you will, oh my god, that's what it is like.

Speaker 1:

He, they got this caught up in the frico. He, he don't know no way he can get out. And this shit over here is to me the fact that they got sawed off. You know weapons. They got the serial number sawed off, like that's already shows you. It's problematic.

Speaker 2:

Then we got drugs I didn't even know that they found yeah they found guns. Yeah, if you look at it, it's in there he's being charged with racketeering, sex trafficking, conspiracy and um transportation with intent for like prostitution. So um, that's a bunch of charges like he's not bribery.

Speaker 1:

No, he's got bribery on there.

Speaker 2:

It's a lot of yeah, there's a bunch of stuff and all of this under the combs enterprise.

Speaker 1:

This is, like you know, like when they had the mob family names this is his mob family.

Speaker 2:

Well, that's what ricos were were invented for was to get mobs and now we're getting freak boys.

Speaker 1:

Uh, I mean just when you hear about, like the fact that they said they had people being filmed having sex, drugged up to the point where they had to give them ivs. Can we talk about the logistics that happened to get ivs transported to your home for recreation? Like people knew that this was happening, like there's a difference between getting your own personal iv system set up and all that and then having enough for a group people like that's on standby.

Speaker 2:

Do you have a night?

Speaker 1:

nurse like is there a sober nurse on on staff right now ready to give people like right after they climax?

Speaker 2:

probably like that's a sick nurse, just to make sure that, like nobody dies in this situation okay, you.

Speaker 1:

It already sucks being the sober person around a bunch of drunk people. Could you imagine being the sober person working around a bunch of inebriated people in every form of drug that you can get your hand on?

Speaker 2:

this is a person of shaky moral character.

Speaker 1:

In the first place, they're probably unfazed just imagine the first night, though you know it's diddy, you think it's gonna be a crazy thing. And then you in there and you see two niggas dry heaving on each other, after they then deep throated each other in front of diddy while he just laughs and giggles that's absolutely insane.

Speaker 2:

Nothing is dry, because a thousand bottles of baby oil were found.

Speaker 2:

That's and the the fact that's enough, right there I have never finished a bottle of baby oil ever in my life. You eat like you lose it or you just never finish it. The fact that he had a thousand, and then this girl she was like I couldn't visualize a thousand, so she put a thousand bottles of baby oil into AI and it was pallets of baby oil, like y'all don't understand how many a thousand looks like, but that is multiple, like a truckload of baby oil.

Speaker 1:

There's a lot of kids that have rashes because of Diddy. Like no, no shit, Like there's a lot of kids who weren't able to, you know, get the diaper on clean because of diddy I said, and then lube was found too.

Speaker 2:

So I say all that to say that wasn't nothing going in dry at the freak offs they was.

Speaker 1:

It was lubed up. It's the reason why the lube market was low. Like you over here trying to order your lube, you know get your regular lube from the store and it's tough to get because diddy was buying up the market. They bro he probably getting the shipment by. He said a thousand. We don't know how big these bottles are no like you can get the wet platinum, like I don't like industrial.

Speaker 1:

He was getting the mini he's definitely getting industrial size bottles like gallons of lube, is crazy like he definitely type of nigga that he ain't using the little part at the top that allows you to spray a little bit. He opening the whole shit up and he using it like that.

Speaker 2:

You think they're going to repurpose Like you think they're just going to.

Speaker 1:

Or not. That's sitting in the evidence hall.

Speaker 2:

Take them to the homeless shelter so that the homeless can be lubricated and oiled.

Speaker 1:

I think they're keeping that. Could you imagine? That's probably keeping up a whole storage room like just just the lube itself. There's no reason for cops to keep that the lube definitely had to mess up some other evidence like there's no reason, no way you're transporting all that lube and you don't mess up, nothing else yeah, I feel like we might be focused on the wrong part of the story, though no okay, we can get into the right part.

Speaker 1:

Diddy is a monster man, I think it's just I think we're actually seeing the chickens come home to roost. In regards to the fact that everybody keeps trying to put a eye on the black people or the black men who are getting affected on this, uh, affected by this, but we kind of got to understand here like we, in these particular people, we've built our foundation on degeneracy and like decadence, like we can't sit here and be upset.

Speaker 2:

Definitely, diddy's brand is decadent at the highest order.

Speaker 1:

It's it's like it's greed, it's uh gluttony, it's all like the seven deadly sins yeah, you can't get mad at a nigga like diddy and you just see everything he pushes like literally.

Speaker 1:

He's funded by alcohol brands yeah like that just shows you what kind of nigga that and what kind of time he on like his lifestyle you can get into so many conspiracy theories with this, but then when you just look at it, just for the plain fact that it is, he could literally just be an agent that they used until he was no longer valuable. And that could happen in a conspiracy. That could happen in just right now, once they shown that, hey bro, like folks is coming at you, you're no longer in good standing.

Speaker 2:

We got lawsuits coming because we funded your lifestyle there's a conspiracy that, like he had blackmail on, like bigger players and they took him down and this is the only thing I could see.

Speaker 1:

Where that may have some, you know, credence is the fact that when they brought homeland security in, did they get their hands on that kind of evidence? Was he being mindful and thinking like, hey, I need to have this set aside that just in case they come at me?

Speaker 2:

I feel like if you had blackmail, um about very powerful people in the industry that could take you down, then you wouldn't have more than one copy of it and then you wouldn't have it just in your home. You would probably have it like in an offshore but things something but also things change.

Speaker 1:

You might have blackmail on somebody that you didn't know who was legitimate at that time and now they've now rose up the ranks, and that's the thing about these kind of like fbi and stuff like these offices and these people change so fast because of like just incompetence, uh, public scrutiny, like so and regular stuff, just like time regulations and shit like.

Speaker 1:

That's why they'll just end up changing people. So who somebody who you could have been cool with in this system, who you were working alongside with, now is no longer there to defend you. And now this next person who's looking for they come up is getting it off of you. Because, shit, we got all your evidence right here, because we work with you yeah like. It's very possible that diddy could be an informant or an agent like not in the sense that he's like some super spy like tom cruise but he's definitely not he's just basically like hey, we'll give you teddy snowfall.

Speaker 1:

He could definitely be teddy where I were giving you the money. We're letting you fund the life style that needs to happen, and when we need to turn on you, it's easy because we got so much dirt on you. We can just say, oh, you weren't with us, you were a rogue agent, and I just think that's what's happening with diddy now, that's a deep conspiracy.

Speaker 2:

I mean, you got to think about it. This guy I feel like there's so many layers to this is okay, so this has been going back to 2008.

Speaker 1:

What happened four years before that was the voter dash it. He was already in the politics, he was already on their radar.

Speaker 2:

He definitely was you know what I'm saying very big part of that. They see his rise.

Speaker 1:

They see his platform, they see where he's going with it and and then when you look at the charges and I don't I hate to agree with, like somebody like boozy. He did have one point where it's like, if you look at just the sex charges of it, it's like you can say that about any hip hop person, anybody in the in who's entertainment when they try to transport women the difference between anybody and diddy is that, like, multiple women have come out and then we have videos of him oh yeah beating the shit out of cassie.

Speaker 2:

So we know that he's a piece of shit and there's multiple lawsuits from multiple people of different sexes out against him. So this isn't like I don't feel like. This is, uh, a conspiracy of like somebody trying to take him down at all, like be specifically because we saw what he did to cassie I mean.

Speaker 1:

Two things can be true the fact that we saw what happened, and it's the reason why we saw it, because the people who are now in control no longer need diddy yeah like we can't act like he wasn't a valuable asset or he couldn't have potentially been a valuable asset. He was a billionaire in hip-hop he made a lot of money.

Speaker 1:

He made people a lot of money, so he was, he was an asset for the black community you can put him in there and say, hey, this is what at least give the front for front facing idea that he was he's a mogul, you know.

Speaker 2:

Pulled himself up by his bootstraps, went to college, all of that. So like it. It sucks having a figure like that crash in this manner, but we have to let him. Somebody else is gonna. There'll be another diddy, I mean there's gonna be another agent.

Speaker 1:

There's gonna be another informant. They're gonna just put somebody else in the position. It's just interesting to see what he may have known. And was he just being so like unprepared? Because that's what it just seems like to me. If you have the the information to blow this whole shit up out the water, you're not worried about this. You know you can go check the house, do the formalities you gotta do. We'll get this all squashed behind the scenes because you know I got the dirt.

Speaker 2:

But if you didn't took my dirt, it just seems like it then I'm, I'm um defenseless yeah so I want to go really quick back to the thing you said about the him offing himself conspiracy, because I also saw that and I saw people saying that, like him, paying off his house was indicative of him maybe planning to hurt himself or they were saying that could be what he would use his leverage for his bail.

Speaker 2:

But no, that was just what I heard oh yeah, but I I saw what I saw, but yeah, I thought that, um, and then somebody was like, why would he pay off his house and then do that? I was like I got kids.

Speaker 1:

Like somebody's gonna have to pay it off. If he kills himself, I'm pretty sure he's not going to get the life insurance policy.

Speaker 2:

So oh, pretty sure that there's.

Speaker 1:

There's clauses for life insurance that covers suicide I'm pretty sure they're not, because you would just off yourself after you signed a multi-million dollar yeah you wanted for your family, you know yeah so, uh, no, but I think there's a possibility. It's on the scale that, okay, I can imagine just from my experience working in the prison. If he's in this kind of jail situation, he's going to be on 24 hours. It's already pretty much 24 hour lockdown or 24 hour.

Speaker 2:

You know we're watching you 24 hours yeah, but he can't be in like gen pop no, I mean he's probably in his own private cell.

Speaker 1:

I can only imagine, like I said, there's probably surveillance on the front of him, inside the cell everywhere. But again, all it takes is one technical difficulty, one little out. You know, the power went out. Somebody, go in there, do what has to get done.

Speaker 2:

If he doesn't do it himself, oh damn, I hope that doesn't happen. He doesn't do it himself, oh damn, I hope that doesn't happen. I mean, that's what they think happened to Epstein.

Speaker 1:

That's what fits the profile for Epstein. The cameras went out. They had already tried to take stuff away from him so he wouldn't kill himself.

Speaker 2:

And then they walk in and he's dead. A lot of people think Epstein is still alive, though I mean some people do. That's the biggest conspiracy I've seen about him. Is that like it went out so he can I?

Speaker 1:

mean I've seen the picture so that looked like that was him did so, but uh, I just think that it's a real possibility for diddy. I can I can definitely see it being on the table for him, like just to go from where he was in regards to luxury and being on top of the world to now being in a nasty, cold, disgusting piss smelling, you know, prison somewhere he's never been before.

Speaker 1:

I mean, I'm pretty sure he's been arrested before, been in jail for a little bit, but for the fact that you know you're not going home, when that was probably not what your lawyer was telling you. Like, this is one of them times where you was supposed to follow your street gut like he wasn't supposed to. You weren't supposed to go to new york, bro, you were supposed to take another plane out the country and we were supposed to just see videos of you here and there from a country that won't extradite you like um what's his face like, yeah, russell in bali, you're supposed to go to bali, like something to bali with russell.

Speaker 2:

You should have went somewhere honestly no, they need to put you in jail like you need to be in jail, so um, did you see kevin lyles?

Speaker 1:

uh step down. There was a lot of people.

Speaker 2:

They said, step down okay, I have a list. I have a list, so shout out to um yeah, put that on that nigga pro prolo tario one Twitter.

Speaker 1:

This is who making these claims.

Speaker 2:

I didn't have time to verify these things, but Kevin Liles, music exec. Eric Pryor, president of fine arts. Jonathan Holloway, rutgers president. Robert B Davis, general manager of Martha's Vineyard, cameron lacrosse coach. Kathy Newsham, bay City mayor. A New York City councilman, allison Green she's a dean at Tisch. Mm-hmm, let me see. Mike Foster president of Nexian Travel, romian Nazaree ceo. Henry levantis, chief prosecutor um and then I was just skipping.

Speaker 1:

I mean, there's not really people that just stand out?

Speaker 2:

yeah, there's not a bunch of people that step out other than kevin.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, other yeah.

Speaker 2:

Other than Kevin Liles, and this prosecutor maybe, and the Bay City mayor yeah. And the general manager of Martha's.

Speaker 1:

Vineyard. What's the note from it is that these are all people who they've either said that they've either stepped down or retired from their position within the last few days.

Speaker 2:

This was he said after Diddy's indictment.

Speaker 1:

OK.

Speaker 2:

Within the last 24 hours, he said.

Speaker 1:

All of these people stepped down, allegedly according to this man, I just see that like I can see it more being people in that kind of position, though like I don't see this being like high up besides like I think Kevin Lyles will probably be up there but I don't see this being like super high official people that everybody would know.

Speaker 2:

I expect this to be people who are like the middle grunt work of government yeah, there's people on here that are like doctors, coaches, ceos, directors, um, there's two doctors on here actually like.

Speaker 1:

I think these are like people who was like maybe like on his son's football team and stuff like these. I feel like that's what we're going to see a lot of those kind of people maybe, and it may not be as worth it. That's why they maybe are taken down. Diddy, he may not have like Eric Adams or like somebody who would shake some shit up.

Speaker 2:

And he didn't. Maybe not have the power that he thought he did because it seems like people was on it. Did he too?

Speaker 1:

kevin lowes is connected to um 300. Okay, but I was uh russell. Yeah, I mean yeah in that in that sense.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they look like cousins.

Speaker 1:

They really do uh, so do we think this is going to shake up? Because, like I said, everybody keeps saying who's next. Do we think this is going to shake up hip-hop in any way?

Speaker 2:

I really keep seeing Naomi Campbell in a lot of these pictures with these same people that keep getting arrested. Oprah in these same pictures with a bunch of people that keep getting arrested. Jay-z, unfortunately.

Speaker 1:

I mean, that's what everybody seems to want for Jayay-z to be the person that falls next.

Speaker 2:

I don't want jay-z to fall next. I don't want another like black mogul figure in hip-hop that we grew up with to fall. If they're doing crimes, 100. But like I'm not praying for this I'm happy when I see it.

Speaker 1:

y'all niggas have never done anything for this community and y'all not entitled to us to want the best for y'all. And I don't like, I'm just keeping it to be. I have no intentions on wanting the best from y'all. I hope if y'all have got caught doing anything, that they take y'all all the way to the judge Everybody. I hope they embarrass you. Show all of your shame, like I want to see it all in the public square.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I and again, I want this for the white people too.

Speaker 1:

But I'm just we just talking about the black, all the rich people. Okay, so has those those foxy brown shit been legit? Like, has that legit where they said like she's like saying wait, or like it's info coming, or something like that? I don't because I heard that okay, this is the rumor that I heard about the whole foxy brown yeah, I haven't heard anything about foxy you know, the one that used to be with jay-z yeah, I haven't heard anything, oh okay no, well, she's connected to the whole thing.

Speaker 1:

Everybody keeps trying to expose jay-z on the fact that she was like 15 16 when he signed her and they were supposedly dating. He was like in his early, early 20s or 20 or something like that.

Speaker 1:

But, um, the rumor I've been hearing is that in a few years like either next year, 2026, whatever nda or whatever thing that she was on she's no longer gonna be under and she can speak freely, and so we'll start to see her actually more in the public eye speaking and talking about these things. So I can't wait until that hey jaguar right has been right the whole entire time. I think we need to start putting respect on that woman name.

Speaker 2:

I think let's keep holding our tongues on that one.

Speaker 1:

Where has she been wrong yet?

Speaker 2:

You don't know how much shit she has put out. Like you don't consume her content. She be on platforms on a weekly basis, just talking about shit.

Speaker 1:

Hey, I'm just gonna say man the ones the ones that didn't cut up and they put that little music behind them shits eat and she and she them.

Speaker 2:

Shits was true, them was right yeah, yeah, a clock is uh what clock strikes broken clock yeah, twice a day hey, I don't want to hear that miss right.

Speaker 1:

Hey, keep speaking your truth and, man, we can get miss right to sit down. We talking to her, we talking to jaguar right, she, she's charging, we paying, we paying the three bands ah, you think she's only charging three bands shit if umar was charging four yeah umar was charging four.

Speaker 2:

I told you that I don't know why. I remembering remember it being more. I'm surprised umar is only charging.

Speaker 1:

Well, that was back then, I wouldn't pay more. That was back then, though, when we tried to get him like 2020 yeah, but that's still no, that was good for a friend person. That's good.

Speaker 2:

That was good at that time he ain't just didn't do his second boom yet no, I, maybe he's at like six now, but I wouldn't think that was like right when the the parody page started picking up his profile again.

Speaker 1:

Remember he had that twitter parody page about him. Follow that page, yeah, that one picked up his profile again because he had he started was falling off, and that one picked his profile up. It was hilarious donations, all right, uh, do we got anything else to touch on with this?

Speaker 2:

really quickly did you see him talking about shannon sharp? About the white women he's like we not go talk about, uh, shannon sharp on instagram live with the snow bunnies. We not gonna talk about instagram live shannon sharp with the snow. But we not gonna talk about what uncle shannon sharp did accidentally with snow bunnies on the instagram. He said that. He said instagram live snow bunny and shannon sharp 37 times each and I respect the span of three minutes.

Speaker 1:

I respect it. It was hilarious. He was like he was necessary.

Speaker 2:

He was not gonna talk about it, but he talked about it for at least 13 no, this nigga shannon was selling, like sex pills or something the same day like I think that shit was just more of a scam than what we expected to be um, the way he moved right after it was kind of nasty like you could have been like, oh my bad, haha, but instead he was like you want some dick pills. Do you want to pills, do you? Want to hear me having sex.

Speaker 2:

Do you want to buy some stuff from me now? I planned this, I planned this. I did this on purpose. This was planned.

Speaker 1:

No, he asked you. Do you want to fuck like Unc?

Speaker 2:

That's all Ew, ew, ew Ugh. I have full body hives right now. I am literally uncomfortable.

Speaker 1:

You'd be mad if I did the Shannon Sharp growl.

Speaker 2:

It's because it was Shannon Sharp that I'm disgusted by it. If it was coming from my husband then, but not from Shannon fucking Sharp.

Speaker 1:

All right, well, let's get into two gentlemen that you cared about that you liked uh with shits and gigs, podcasts, james and fuhad went on.

Speaker 2:

What's glorious, whatever flagrant to flagrant.

Speaker 1:

Oh, it's called flagrant, just flagrant. Now flagrant podcast with that little fuckwad andrew schultz and hashan singh with the, with the fucking pedo stache, I hate your mustache.

Speaker 2:

Having a mustache with no other facial hair in 2024 is fucking crazy work.

Speaker 1:

White boys can get that off, though no, they can't. Yeah, they can get that off?

Speaker 2:

No, they can't. Europeans can get that off.

Speaker 1:

He is European.

Speaker 2:

He is American.

Speaker 1:

European, european American.

Speaker 2:

He's American.

Speaker 1:

So let's just get into. Let's just get into because the thing is here. I'm not even a fan of these guys when I was. I don't like the whole British guys talking, unless you, my man kitchen. I don't hear, I don't want to hear all that he thinks that all British people sound just horrible.

Speaker 1:

They do it's the worst and I don't want to hear that. So they've never been fan guys I've been fans of. But then when I see all this going on, I'm like, okay, let's, let's see what's going. And you know what? What happened here? So the joke that I saw that was really having people having an issue with was the fact that I guess andrew said they grew their beards out because they date black women that like to hit them so foohard was talking about the whole like black girlfriend effect thing and he was like oh, like blah, blah, blah, it's explaining it to to schultz.

Speaker 2:

And then schultz was like oh the, the white guys lose their hair because of the stress of dealing with black women or whatever and then yeah, and then grow out their beards to cushion the physical assault.

Speaker 1:

And then james and fuhad was just standing so, okay, I think one thing to be clear is folks aren't familiar with andrew schultz content. I think this is kind of one thing that's happened with them, where you have their audience being transitioned into an area that is no filter.

Speaker 2:

So that's kind of sold to somebody who uses a black scent and his proximity to black people in the black community and black culture as content on a fucking regular goddamn basis it's not just black, though.

Speaker 1:

He does it with everybody he still uses a black.

Speaker 2:

If you look like a motherfucker, where did he go? He's a new yorker.

Speaker 1:

He's from new york, but uh, that's why it's like it's different for him in regards to that. Um, but no, if you listen to like, okay, his, his, uh, crowd work when you stay on his stand-up, the thing that he'll do that makes him a novelty amongst people is that he'll be a white guy that knows intimate information about people's culture.

Speaker 2:

He can scroll on tiktok he can look at somebody.

Speaker 1:

No, but say he'll look at somebody, can guess where they from and their ethnicity and almost have a complete banter with them, almost like he's like their cousin or something and like that's just kind of a gift that he has and that he, he pokes at. So I mean it wasn't like they were talking about black woman getting beaten, like that wasn't.

Speaker 2:

They weren't joking about black woman being violent in domestically in their relationships. That's what. That's what andrew was joking about okay.

Speaker 1:

Is that a bad thing to joke about? Like it's not. Like you're saying y'all are getting beat, y'all saying y'all doing the beating.

Speaker 2:

That's subverting the narrative it's still making black women look aggressive and angry and that's a trope that is pushed, that we do not fucking like, and you knew.

Speaker 1:

You know that you're a smart I'm not saying that's not the problem.

Speaker 2:

You know that the trope of the angry black woman has been something that's been pushed in media for decades. For as long as we can, um, remember you either a mammy, you're a jezebel or you're an angry black woman. Those are the only three things that you can be. So him making jokes about that after fuhad was basically trying to give black women a compliment like oh yeah, black women glow up their that is what they do there at the show is to make jokes about things that is also.

Speaker 2:

I get that right, I get that james and fuhad shits and gigs, your production, whatever the fuck like y'all should have. Did y'all research on what podcast y'all were going on. I will assume that majority of your fans, your base, your core, is women, because we like when I scroll through your comments, it's not men in your comments, like no, the tweets that y'all pick when y'all do your episodes. So when you see their episodes and they're reading the tweets, these are like groups that and they, they put out the topic and then all of these are people replying to them specifically. It's not just random shit that they do do that, but now at this point, because their following is so huge, they can just ask people to send them funny shit to read on the podcast. And it's all women. Your whole base is women. So going on a podcast with this motherfucker that's hate that.

Speaker 2:

That I mean, you can think he's funny and blah, blah, blah, because the thing is, you're putting your, but you're blaming it on andrew I'm not blaming it on andrew, I'm blaming it on james and fuhad and their team, and they should have picked the podcast that they went to how you go on poor minds and then go to andrew schultz the next week. I think you. I think you. What type of what type of demographic?

Speaker 1:

that's actually in a similar demographic.

Speaker 2:

But I think one thing you're poor minds and andrew fucking schultz, are you fucking stupid? There's a lot of worlds where those blend together yes or no?

Speaker 1:

85 south show the comedy that blends in with them, yes it does I'm trying to tell you. I'm trying to tell you that would blend. Yes, it would.

Speaker 2:

There are words I'm trying to stop saying.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying that there are words. Those are things that will blend in.

Speaker 2:

There's probably like a 15% blend.

Speaker 1:

Okay, that's a blend. If that, if that still a blend, go ahead say what you were saying. So what I'm saying is it's not just all on andrew because andrew kind of exposed him and woke him up. I'm not saying it's on andrew at all, because he no, he exposed him. He already said he went in. They did a little weak ass apology where they did the bull.

Speaker 2:

Who bullshit he they did that weak ass apology where james was doing all the talking and fuhad was just sitting there not saying shit, not even looking at the camera.

Speaker 1:

Just pathetic ass bitch because, if we being honest, fuan said the wildest shit we was talking about was too many nigerians. That was actually the most egregious shit, and I saw people calling that tribalist?

Speaker 1:

I didn't even know that was a thing but I'm not from places where there's tribes, but they were calling him yeah because they went into, he did a little breakdown, but that's what andrew does. He knows those little, you know inner secrecies of your culture and he's able to bring those out. But no, uh, what I'm saying is, after that little bullshit apology, andrew woken up on the ass and said y'all guys could have took out whatever y'all wanted from the show and y'all were cool with the jokes. Yes, again, I don't feel like the jokes were that serious. I think y'all real problem is is y'all invested in a group of people to be your fan base that are super fickle, like the fact that you can't make any kind of joke around that and they act like they want to destroy you.

Speaker 1:

It's kind of like the worst people to have your, your base, around we don't want to destroy you.

Speaker 2:

These are men who we propped up, who women made jokes for, literally since 2020 about men, oh, using them saying women made jokes, saying that they were the exception, that these were the special guys, these are our special guys, you know. And then they go on and then just fucking, he, he, ha, ha, making jokes and niggas, faces not even. And then I see clips of russ standing up for black people on the same podcast. I was like these motherfuckers, how you let this white man do a better job than you, it's because they have white oh yeah yeah, but they.

Speaker 1:

That's a different kind of thing that they fall under because they know they're going to get heckled in hell for that. They even said in their apology they didn't think us joking about our own culture was going to be an issue, but now they see it. They said that. They said now that they see it as oh well, he's saying things out there. It was stupid. You should have stood on business. You just said, bro, we're out here playing, we're having a good time.

Speaker 2:

It would have looked better if you did that, because that apology was lame as fuck. We just thought it was funny and we were laughing at a funny joke then, okay, but now y'all look even fucking stupider. And then now Schultz is laughing at your dumb ass apology, telling us that your producers their producers, shits and gigs asked them to take out specific shit, but y'all did not deem that as problematic enough to be taken out fucktards like I said, the, the base that y'all invested in was just a horrible base, like the fact that y'all had to even delete y'all first hundred episodes.

Speaker 1:

They found uh clips you saying, oh, the girl said she was a black girl who's like got a problem finding black men. Like they've been exposing these niggas from the jump. Y'all put yourself in a horrible situation by having the fan base that y'all had like it's honestly, it's really the worst, like we talk about before hair care products that y'all turned on that they are.

Speaker 2:

If it wasn't for the fan base that they have, I'm saying you got to cultivate a better fan base where they are we already know black people in general.

Speaker 1:

When you try to cultivate, that fan base will turn on you if you do something that's seen as uh, unideal, not ideal but when you're going against us, but when? You definitely do it with black women. You have already.

Speaker 2:

You you've excommunicated yourself before you even started why do you think black women are hypersensitive about this?

Speaker 1:

I think that we live in a world where like I need you to.

Speaker 2:

Actually, I'm about to tell you I'm about to talk to you.

Speaker 1:

We live in a world where y'all have seen prior people, the where y'all kind of see your identity from prior. Uh, black women have to be silenced, right? So y'all feel as though now any, any slight has to be brought on, with you being heard, even if that slight is being used against you.

Speaker 2:

I think, um, black women are hypersensitive to stuff like this because we don't feel protected in a lot of ways. Like you probably, within like your immediate little community, feel protected, but in general, you've had probably lots of experiences in your personal life where you don't feel protected by black men specifically. And then you find a little podcast that you like and then you feel like these are they're not doing the whole stupid ass red pill shit and they're just light and airy and it feels like your comfort zone. Right, it's, it wasn't mine, I just like watching their clips, but it feels like your comfort zone. And then you see them do the same shit that all these niggas do and then it's, it hurts your feelings, that's literally it, and they fall into the same box.

Speaker 2:

That all of these other niggas fall into but and then that's it like feelings are hurt like the shit hurt.

Speaker 1:

The shit he said on uh, uh, what's the shit name? Uh, poor minds, was way worse. That could be interpreted way worse than what anything he said regards to that, both of those things. That's what I'm saying the fact that he said, oh, there was no baddies in atlanta. That could be more implied that there's no bad. You don't like black women?

Speaker 1:

everyone was already side-eyeing them from that I know when they went on that it was like a solidifying, I think, and I think that makes my point of where it's like you are creating a, you are joining a fan base that wants to find something wrong, like even in the because there is always something wrong. It's not necessarily always something wrong. You don't, you, you make what's wrong there is, there's always something wrong. I don't think it's necessarily you define what is wrong? And you define how egregious it is when we're in our society I'm listening the the way things play out.

Speaker 2:

We're always. We always get the like the the short end when is that?

Speaker 1:

when does that become a self-fulfilling prophecy?

Speaker 2:

you sound like white I'm asking you a question at that point now you sound like white people when black people talk about um uh, systematic oppression. No, I'm asking you literally.

Speaker 2:

no, you I'm not answering that question because I feel disappointed in your asking that question, because you get mad when you say that when your friends tell black people that they need to pull themselves up by their bootstraps, but you'll give a whole laundry list of why they can't, and then you you're telling me that what I'm talking about black women being unprotected is a self-fulfilling prophecy no, I'm asking the question.

Speaker 1:

If you feel like that, going into every situation you interpret when does it hold on? I'm saying yeah, I'm saying when you interpret every situation like that.

Speaker 2:

I don't like that. Does it not always?

Speaker 1:

end up being that you find the things you're looking for that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

That's and I'm saying that's the same argument white people give black people when we talk about systematic oppression yeah, but that's not an argument and a response that is a response? No, it's not.

Speaker 1:

I'm saying because if I'm saying about a specific thing, they'll say something like oh, you're looking for racism, like no, I'm showing you, uh, the police violating people's rights on numerous occasions. What we're saying here is you're listening to people who you have, quote-unquote, grabbed a trust from or a uh, appreciation for, and when they go into an environment, you are now interpreting what they're saying as negative, even when they didn't say the negative thing, even when andrew showed it wasn't like they went on, there was talking black women, ugly, they the worst things in the world. They didn't do that. They made a joke about getting hit, which a lot of black niggas have experienced, though, about black women being abusive I, black and black men, have experienced that.

Speaker 2:

They didn't say all the relationships about black being women being stressful to be with, so men lose their hair. Like that's not. It's not, you're acting like.

Speaker 1:

That's not a real thing. That's what I'm saying. That's not a real thing. That's why it's a joke. Nobody's getting stressed out from just a joke, but it's harmful rhetoric if it's being reinforced in like a real way.

Speaker 2:

It's always being reinforced, but we're talking about this situation, oh, over and over, and, over and over again, and no one's saying that it's not. We're talking so I don't know what your point is.

Speaker 1:

Can you let me talk then? I'm talking about this particular situation, when they're hanging out with a bunch of comedians making jokes. They shouldn't have been there see what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

Like that's the thing. They're there like, make jokes no, because they shouldn't have, they should not have.

Speaker 1:

They are technically internet comedians, but they just read other people's material they're not comedians at all.

Speaker 2:

James nor fuhad are funny on their own. Not one fucking bit so that should even tell y'all even more that y'all are making people famous shit and they laugh at it and their reactions to things are fun that's what I'm saying their reaction.

Speaker 1:

Um, they're a reaction page, but I'm saying, that's the thing, that even even more telling where it's like we cannot call them comedians at all, y'all are making people popular because you like their reaction to something but you don't even know their opinion.

Speaker 2:

There are so many reaction pages, but I'm saying you don't know their opinion, anything. So it's like that's now we know their opinions on things.

Speaker 1:

Now we know y'all opinions and their opinion wasn't even nothing like y'all were bad, and that's what I'm saying the opinion was just joking about. I'm saying what I'm saying. I'm bringing that up to say that's an experience people have had getting hit by their girl, especially brothers, they will tell you.

Speaker 2:

I've had experiences where women have hit me, so to joke about it is, but I'm saying to joke about it is not. Conversation is going and we can move on okay, but I'm still not finished yet.

Speaker 1:

What I'm saying is he can you can joke about that experience without you to try to make excuses.

Speaker 2:

I'm not making excuses when I'm saying he can.

Speaker 1:

It sounds like you're doing he can make the joke about an experience they may have felt, an experience that's not out of the realm of horrible things, that's not painting you with a uh, a broad stroke of saying that you're oh, all black women are like this and they're making jokes about their experiences I started this by saying that I expected this from schultz.

Speaker 2:

This is his content and the his jokes were not. My problem is james and fuhad's reaction the fact that they were there in the first goddamn place. The sorry ass apology that they gave. Fuhad's absolute nonchalantness and passiveness, physically the whole time james was apologizing and it wasn't really even an apology for real. It's all just stupid as fuck and don't support men, just do.

Speaker 1:

What was that? What would have been a proper reaction for them to have? Let's hear that. What would they? Oh, we're not going to joke about black women here, Andrew. That's what they should have did.

Speaker 2:

No, just don't laugh. Okay, yeah okay, there are so many times that, like I've been at work and white men have made jokes about black shit or black people or black men, or hip-hop this or um, this nigga sagging and he looks like a thug and I'm just, and some people laugh at it as a reaction too they don't even think it's funny.

Speaker 1:

They just laugh at it as a defense mechanism. They don't even think it's funny. They just laugh at it as a defense mechanism because they don't want to make everything into a cringy moment all you get is could you imagine them doing that interview? And then the whole time there's like we can't joke about that, we can't like that. Shit would make a horrible interview.

Speaker 2:

That would make a horrible conversation have gone on that specific platform because you should know your audience enough to know where you should go.

Speaker 1:

So let's, hey, james, and james and fufu, whatever your name is my nigga I've said grab hide over and over grab, grab, grab your balls and tell your little female audience they're gonna ride with you regardless and just keep it moving. Dog, y'all got nothing else to worry about. Y'all gonna be all right, they ain't gonna go anywhere. Somebody said people are comparing dolce to who question mark. Her marketing strategy is confusing and misleading. Nikki started doing pop music after she was established. When post malone used hip-hop media and music to pivot to a new genre. Everyone is outraged. But when the black artists do it, we see. So essentially I've seen a lot more posts about this, criticizing her for the Katy Perry song, saying she went pop and that was kind of like her. That was like basically her mission was to do is to be a culture vulture. Take hip hop to get noticed and then move over to the pop sector.

Speaker 2:

So if you listen to Doji's album, the first track addresses this. It's her battle between the two types of fans that she's always had. So she's always sung. She's a really good singer and she makes those kind of pop-leaning songs and she's always been a really good rapper and she's been doing both sounds if you are a fan of her. For the whole time she's been making music. The first track no, it's not the first track, it's Boom Bap, so it's one of the singles on the album and she's basically talking about how she can take over the world. She can do both. You're not not gonna force her to pick one or the other side of herself and she can, um, she can be successful in both of these things. I don't think that doji just started like obviously a katie perry feature, is very like poppy and whatever she's that's the queen of pop yeah, um, but this I don't think.

Speaker 2:

Dochi is a culture vulture. How are you a culture vulture of a culture that you're a part of and you grew up in?

Speaker 1:

that makes no sense why doesn't that apply to drake then?

Speaker 2:

because drake is a jewish boy who grew up in the fucking suburbs, in white neighborhoods, in goddamn canada he also grew up in the south, in memphis, with his father fucking don't. You grew up in florida. He grew up in memphis, with his father too, though niggers with the hard r he grew up with a father whose dates back to slavery.

Speaker 1:

You always capping for drake, stop glazing I'm just asking a question, I just think it's funny I just make a to make a to make a point and revert it back to glazing drake.

Speaker 1:

You gonna do that I just think it's interesting to make a compilation of you glazing drake. I think it's just interesting that you have these points that are circumstantial to the individuals that you're talking about, and I just like to point those out when you do so and then drake is not a fully black man either okay, so he still has black lineage, he still has slavery in his blood, his father, that's.

Speaker 2:

That's when you're hypocritical, because you do that with interracial women all the time what you call them not black. I'd be like obviously that's a black woman. You're like oh she's not black.

Speaker 1:

She's not black enough I didn't say I did not say she was black enough.

Speaker 2:

I didn't say she's black out of here those women yo those women I don't recognize we be watching tv and I'll be like, obviously that's a black woman. Oh, that's a black woman to you. That's a black woman to you, that's a black woman to you.

Speaker 1:

Sometimes I'm being funny. Sometimes I'm being funny when I say that. Other times I'm saying I don't, I don't know. Sometimes they're racially ambiguous for a reason. That's's why they're on TV, he's obviously black fucking people.

Speaker 2:

He's hypocritical as fuck.

Speaker 1:

If they're racially ambiguous, that's more the reason why they're on TV. Fuck, that's what they want on TV is racially ambiguous people. So I'm sorry, I get the ambiguous part wrong.

Speaker 2:

They be obviously black, y'all Not all the time.

Speaker 1:

No, I swear to God, she's lying. Because the example you're trying to use. The most recent example was the girl from Bel Air, the one who was Jeffrey's girlfriend or his baby mama. That was the last one we had a conversation about.

Speaker 2:

And I couldn't tell Come on now.

Speaker 1:

I couldn't tell at the beginning.

Speaker 2:

I thought Jeffrey liked vanilla cream. The lady from Deliverance.

Speaker 1:

I knew that she was mixed. Did you do that with her? I knew that I caught her lotto. Okay, I knew she was mixed. This man is a hypocrite. That's not true. The goalpost no, you're a hypocrite.

Speaker 2:

You literally just moved the goalpost for dolce and drake. I don't consider drake as to be grown up in this culture that's.

Speaker 1:

That's just so disingenuous to his experience, like literally he's experience and fuck drake, he's literally spoke on it.

Speaker 2:

Fuck drake, fuck your mama, fuck your daddy, fuck your whole experience. Let's continue talking about doji no, fuck her whole experience.

Speaker 1:

How about that?

Speaker 2:

okay, we're gonna continue talking about her, because you put her on the list.

Speaker 1:

I didn't that was to talk about her being a culture vulture, which you just clearly don't want to admit she's not a culture, she's she's abusing the culture because when while he had like, while they do this shit it destroyed his career did what when he? Did the fucking pop record with the pop?

Speaker 2:

girl, which one like lady gaga?

Speaker 1:

I love that song okay well, that's because, that's because you who you are, but most people hated that song, that song, no kidding.

Speaker 2:

Well, that's because you who you are, but most people hated that song. That song was a Wait. Hold on, I have to see what song was.

Speaker 1:

Is DC chillin', pg chillin'. That was on Lookin' at, lookin' at, lookin' at me, that song.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that was my shit.

Speaker 1:

Niggas hate that destroyed Wale's career.

Speaker 2:

Like this.

Speaker 1:

Dol normally destroy people's careers, though she is not at a point where it's gonna destroy her career. Yet her career hasn't even taken off to where it needs. This is when wale did it, while they did it this early in his career wale was already no like on 106 in part no she's on vmas because of katie perry well, she was on joe button podcast. She was on some people other places because she's a rapper and her album did really good she's a yeah, it's a really good, that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

So for her amazing, for her to have a really good rap album, then be on the vmas doing pop shit she the album, she is singing, she is rapping I'm just telling you what the optics look like from the outside, but if you are somebody who listens to her, she is always. Drake has never done this. Drake has never. What white pop artist, besides that recent girl he did this summer?

Speaker 2:

I don't even listen to Drake.

Speaker 1:

Enough to tell you what features he be doing, and what I'm saying is that this is usually career suicide for an early act.

Speaker 2:

To cross over like this. This nigga, literally before the show, started the show with all of these dumb ass tracks like katie perry like I don't. And then I was. I was talking about how I don't like on any of these tracks. Most of the time I don't like the doji katie perry track. And then what did you play after that? Bad blood. Yeah, I didn't like the taylor. Swift kendrick shit too.

Speaker 1:

Stop doing that that's never gonna stop yeah, especially, especially in this next way. It's just a money thing especially with this next wave that's going on.

Speaker 2:

They're getting rid of all the hip-hop moguls I was really surprised that doji and katie were on a song together, because I was like, where did, where did this come from?

Speaker 1:

the same place that kendrick and taylor came from yeah, it's, it's always an obvious money, grab it tde is not very coy about their strategy no, obviously not they're.

Speaker 2:

They're an organization that needs to make fucking money. But I I was just like this is very fucking random, but I never like it. It never seems genuine when the random rapper just hops on the pop, out the pop song, like yeah, it's always yucky to me they tried to kill trump again no, they didn't yes, they will, according to the report, you know okay, so this one is so I know b613 when I see it. All right, all right, olivia okay command said go, and that's, that's what that was the story.

Speaker 1:

This one just sounds so crazy. So apparently he was like 500 yards away from trump, which is for his particular gun that they said he had they said they saw his rifle through a bush yeah, so they said the secret service saw.

Speaker 1:

This is what I don't understand. Okay, so the nigga the nigga's name was ryan ruth, whatever they said, he's ukraine. I got a little video we can play in a little bit. This is what I don't understand. Okay, so the nigga sees him with the gun and he just takes off and runs. Why don't you shoot this nigga?

Speaker 2:

That might give you more time to run.

Speaker 1:

Because, because it wasn't like he was in a fence, they said he was behind a bush.

Speaker 2:

Don't take my words very seriously, but like if if I'm trying to kill a president right, not that I'm trying to, but if I was, let's say, hypothetically I feel like I probably know that it's only gonna end up two ways dead or in jail. If I'm gonna end up either of those things, I'm gonna take the shot. Why wouldn't you take the shot?

Speaker 1:

I mean, this is I'm just talking about. Why did not just take it at the the fbi guy?

Speaker 1:

I mean, they've got a secret service guy and just take, take anything because he was at that point gonna be dead or in jail he was still able to get away for a little bit until they arrested him later on, like they found out, because they said he took off. The dude said he saw him with the gun. He tried to go over there and address it. The dude took off and ran, got to his vehicle or whatever and they had to find him. It took him a little bit to find him wasn't this also a spontaneous golf trip?

Speaker 1:

yeah, that was another crazy part of it, that the fact that this was not on his trajectory you know his itinerary or anything. This is something he chose to do last minute yeah so you either gotta have somebody who's inside that's planning to try to take him out, like inside his own camp, or this individual had the right time, right place and just saw the opportunity like you, just happen to be someone who wants to kill Trump with a gun and saw Trump.

Speaker 1:

And according to some information, I saw that just seems like too perfect of a scenario. According to some information I saw, they said that he did vote for Trump in like 2016. And he had some posts to Trump, but he wasn't like voted.

Speaker 2:

He wasn't a known like republican or democrat people who tried to assassinate trump had voted for him previously did the same did the last guy uh no, the other dude wasn't old enough to vote yet okay, he was like 20, but I heard something crazy about that.

Speaker 1:

I'm still trying to find some more legitimate sources about. They said they cremated that dude's body before somebody within the government got to be able to investigate it and check it so what would they need to check his body for? Just they just investigate, more investigations. You know, just people want to make sure what's going on. The autopsy was did he have any different signs? Was there any thing in his blood? You know, just people want to run tests.

Speaker 2:

They said he ended up cremating his body like 10 days after everything happened well, we don't know what the standard procedure is for that, but they said that there was an autopsy is supposed to happen.

Speaker 1:

They said it was a senator that asked to look over the information and apparently they were saying that they looked over his request and incinerated the body before he could have his request met, because when they have a, somebody does something for the president 613 bro they go literally not kidding. This is b613 they just go over all that, like when it's a president's murder and all that stuff. Like you have access to a lot of stuff for a while, because people want to see what's going on, people want to test certain things.

Speaker 1:

I would think that you wouldn't cremate the body that fast I'm surprised they would even give any kind of credence, you know, any kind of clearance to do that, to get rid of the body in any kind of capacity that person was big fired and then this guy, the ryan roof guy, he got arrested so they end up taking him in and so let me just play this little thing and I want to say I don't know if everything, I wasn't able to verify everything in this video yeah, uh, they did have little articles.

Speaker 2:

Internet be having just random shit on there.

Speaker 1:

She had articles, but anybody can just fake like they have an article in all roads to the trump assassinations but highlight one thing alone so we see some similarities between the shooters both were donors to act blue, a pack for the democrat party.

Speaker 7:

Both managed to get within 500 yards of trump.

Speaker 7:

Both attempts were followed by the mainstream media, kind of oddly downplaying the severity of the situations.

Speaker 7:

And, most importantly, crooks was in a 2023 BlackRock commercial and Routh was in a 2022 commercial for the Ukrainian militia that had been trained by the American CIA for the past decade and is funded by BlackRock.

Speaker 7:

Here's the explanation. So, for context, ryan Routh was a construction worker in North Carolina that moved to Hawaii, has a house and a business there that wasn't making any money so he was listed as unemployed, but he really cared about standing for Ukraine. So this former construction worker with no income, operating entirely alone, ran a website offering Americans $1,200 a month to fight for Ukraine, was illegally moving Afghani soldiers fleeing from the Taliban in Pakistan and Iran to fight for Ukraine, dropped everything for months at a time to fly himself to Ukraine and flew to DC to lobby for Congress to recruit soldiers for Ukraine. He also has about 100 criminal filings, including a 2002 arrest for possessing a weapon of mass destruction, as most construction workers do, and he obviously still has weapons. And not only is he still allowed to vote, but to vote in north carolina as recently as this year, even though he's a resident of hawaii and, like most construction workers, she ends up going on for a little bit more.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, she seemed like she was gonna keep going.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she basically makes this nigga look like he a spy for real but like okay, so we didn't. If we're gonna get into this conspiracy of them being any kind of like agent or you know somebody having you know tapping them on the shoulder, do this. Why do they pick the like most unlike inspiring looking niggas in the world to do this shit? Because these are the worst shots and thank you like, clearly, these niggas not trying to pull the trigger.

Speaker 1:

Maybe they did that on purpose what just that could be the other thing, what they just keep trying to.

Speaker 2:

That's what it feels like supposed to be attempts that are supposed to rile more support for Trump, because he did. He went somewhere saying that oh, only viable candidates try to get assassinated, like people only try to assassinate the good candidates.

Speaker 1:

Well, it just seems like the first one would be too much of a risk to put up for the guy to be able to actually put out shots. To do that just seems like too much of a risk and then there were civilians that died the first time this and this was a public servant, a firefighter too, like that's.

Speaker 2:

Those optics are not good but the second one.

Speaker 1:

This one feels like, oh, we needed y'all to remember this happened, so let's just yeah, because we all thought the first one was a joke.

Speaker 2:

We all turned it into a joke. Freedom fight like the fuck out of here it was hilarious.

Speaker 1:

But the thing is this like he is doing a great job for like the legitimacy of these tucker carlson, the alex jones type, because super conspiracy, because they every time they said something, they've been all right. So now it looks like the other things have legitimacy. The fact thing about biden leaving leading the race, even though that was like being talked about in circles uh, legitimate circles for a minute before it came out because he was literally about to die but they can the campaign he was about to drop the fuck dead.

Speaker 2:

You can't say that like that nigga is old as a motherfucker and he got covid like the lord is trying to call him home or they just made all that up just so they can get him out. Uh no you can tell by looking at him that he is not gonna be with us for that much longer. That's eight. That nigga is old as fuck. Hey, he is almost translucent.

Speaker 1:

Hunter biden gonna put that good pink cocaine in him.

Speaker 2:

He gonna be back in back in the game oh my god, there was a girl that like killed two people in miami because she was off pink cocaine.

Speaker 1:

But let's continue uh, but no, the thing about the trump situation. This second one, like I said, it feels like like they try to remind people that it happened and so now it again. It doesn't feel like it's getting the coverage that it's going to need to get no, I didn't see anything about this.

Speaker 1:

My husband is the one that told me that there was another um assassination attempt and I was like, really oh okay, I don't I didn't even google it I don't want to see, I don't want to see anything bad happen to the man, especially like like that, just because, like I mean, he got kids. Man, baron, come on, baron, just started college he'd be all right. He probably end up being a better person, not being raised by his father, or he might be the worst only his father's money or he might be worse because he can sit there and idealize his dad and then try to be just exactly like him, or worse maybe maybe it's for the best that we we don't wish death on anyone, especially a former president.

Speaker 1:

So did you see the breakfast club? That, uh, who they just recently had on there like a few, like last week it was Jill Steen.

Speaker 2:

They had my girl on there. I did not see that they had my day.

Speaker 1:

It was a little. It was kind of a setup job. I didn't really like it. They could. They tried to play my girl so they had her up there and they had her vice president candidate up there as well.

Speaker 1:

Uh, and then you know, when they bring the politicians, they've been doing a thing where they want to make sure they bring someone who's quote-unquote knowledgeable in the in the field so they had angela have the conversation they had angela rye up there and man, like when you want to really paint someone as being purchased by a side, it was just so disgusting, it was so obvious, like she couldn't even really hide the fact that she was literally which side was, was she obviously purchased, you know she's over there for.

Speaker 2:

Kamala.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she's over there.

Speaker 2:

I just wanted to make it clear.

Speaker 1:

I'm not sure if she's an AKA but she was acting like she was in lockstep in order with the, with the code, like literally the talking points that we, that they, tried to have for her were not even.

Speaker 1:

They were kind of like the reverse of what we asked the politicians. So we say the politicians go up there, they don't say what their policies are, they're super vague about everything and they want to talk about everything except what, what needs to get done. Jill goes up there, wants to talk about everything that wants that she needs to get done and how she, how she sees it being able to get done, and instead Angela asked her. So your record is that you haven't been able to win, and all this other stuff trying to focus on the fact that, oh, you've been unsuccessful in your races when you already know the battlefield that she's in, the fact that she's going against all of the, the military contracts, all of the uh corporations that are don't donating the green party.

Speaker 3:

She's in a hispanic sorority. Oh, she is, oh well, she was.

Speaker 1:

I said she was acting like she was aka um apparently omega, omega phi beta okay, well, I mean so it's a.

Speaker 2:

It's a hispanic, sorority.

Speaker 1:

I'm pretty sure she got ties to whatever divine nine. That's how she was acting. She looked like she was a aka. I'm just saying, like the, the fact that she was pouting, she was acting, all this it was supposed to be an interview. She was pouting, yeah you had a face where she was pouting. She accused the brother of defending his candidate that he's running with, because she said that angela was using white supremacist talking points. And she said oh, she called me a white supremacist and literally you were using white supremacist talking points and again.

Speaker 1:

It was disgusting seeing both of them use. It was another woman up there too who she shouldn't have been up there. I guess she's the person who's filling in for Jess. Hilarious Jess, the smartest thing you did was get pregnant during the election year. You got your job and you got knocked up. Smart girl, don't put yourself in a position where you're gonna be up here saying stupid shit. You did a good, she did good.

Speaker 2:

Smartest thing probably just every day definitely would have been staying saying stupid shit.

Speaker 1:

I appreciate politically, I appreciate when women maximize they're smart they're feminine abilities and this was a smart way of doing it. Don't put yourself in the exposed position. Had that company pay for your your pregnancy good job, but no, angela rogers, she's just clearly she's her. She's stuck with the democratic party, like it. It was just disgusting just the kind of conversation she was trying to have. She kept cutting her off, she tried to call her a russian plant and she kind of flipped that on herself.

Speaker 2:

She tried to call Jill Steen, a Russian plant.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because she had some conversations with Putin and things of that nature, and Charlamagne read some points from an article that said that she had promoted Kremlin I think that's how you say it talking points, basically people who work for Russia, and things like that. Kremlin, yeah, kremlin, kremlin, talking points. And she was like, well, reparations is a kremlin talking point. Like she started breaking down what they consider like racial, you know, equality that's a kremlin talking point to them. So she shows like the fact that you're using this logic and there's these rhetoric that's being used by other people to discredit when you know better. I would hope for angela, I would hope she'd know better, but clearly she, she, she bought, she purchased, they have her sent her a nice check in the mail. I think she was just at like some democratic event this weekend. Uh, right afterwards. So I can definitely tell me no good job, you sent that check in.

Speaker 2:

Because what people don't understand is the green party is the party that wants to help the working class yes, and a lot of people don't realize that the green party is technically the party that we should be paying more attention to. But everything is so divisive and the, the electoral party, is set up in a way that, like you feel like you're wasting your vote if you're well, that's what we've been conditioned, that's what people have been conditioned to think it's been.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and that was another thing she had to fight like you're what.

Speaker 2:

You're wasting your vote if you're not voting for a democrat or a republican and, like I said, the important thing is to go.

Speaker 1:

Who is earning your vote? Who are saying the things that you want to hear? One of the things that stuck out to me is the fact that they said they want to make a concerted effort to take money out of the defense budget and put those trillions of dollars into our community that makes sense, um.

Speaker 2:

She also wants to tax the rich more I mean does she like, oh jill all of her talking points like but more people should be behind her. It's just like when people, when politicians, come out and they say stuff like that, it just seems so far fetched. I feel like all of the American people are so like we. We were saying that hope is back with Kamala. But it's not actual hope.

Speaker 1:

It's just like we're back to the regular status quo of like we have a figurehead that's helping rich people stay rich and the thing about kamala that you kind of got to be worried about is being a black person and then being a black woman.

Speaker 1:

In that position, you're going to be more inclined just like obama was, to appease the people around you and maybe even go to the extra mile to make sure they know you're not compromised. In a way, like obama said, oh, I can't do nothing for black people, because it's going to look like I'm just the black, the black guy trying to help other. You know, abusing the position, the position. So in a way, you are kind of actually more dangerous to people in that position, because now you have a face that looks like they mama, but you stabbing in their back just like the white man was yeah, so I mean because there's a lot to be said about the Obamas and well, barack Obama and what, what he did for black people, which is nothing during his presidency, I mean kind of to, to just bring it around to.

Speaker 1:

I don't want to make it seem like they they didn't want to. There's also very limited, limited things that you can do, because the fact that if anything happens, a republican party will go in and sue and say you're discriminating so there's checks and balances and stuff for a reason.

Speaker 2:

So the president can't just do what he wants to do but that's not even a checks and balance. That's an abuse of yeah, I'm just on a completely different side. There's also checks and balances, so the president can't just do what the fuck he wants to do. Well, there are some things of how much he wants to there's executive orders and things of that nature, but like the only thing.

Speaker 1:

the only reason they say that those aren't effective is because the next president can come in and write them out. But they help in the immediate time and that's what she said. A lot of stuff that she would be doing would be executive order, which is becoming in, and just signing into executive order.

Speaker 2:

This needs to get done. Just sign like dozens of executive orders.

Speaker 1:

They brought up tyrant. They brought up another point. I mean, that's what they say trump is going to do. They brought up another point with the, the police and the fact that most of these democratic, um elected people are promoting the police. You know cop cities and stuff around the country. So the fascism, like he said both sides are promoting cop cities.

Speaker 2:

Basically, yeah, the fast, we're already in, the people want we already in a fashion state.

Speaker 1:

That's. That's basically the main point here is we're already in the fashion state. There are two sides of the same coin, and anybody who's trying to tell you they're not are lying to you right in the face.

Speaker 2:

This is really case in point there's, and I didn't sorry, I wasn't aware that cop cities were popping up all over the united states like I thought it was just georgia. I thought georgia was just the first one that they were going to try out for a couple years. But it's it's multiple states happening at the same time and all of them are black cities they're getting ready for civil unrest.

Speaker 1:

They're they're getting a small group of people who they can pay what they would feel is decent amount and they're just getting ready for the civil unrest. That's that's pending. Yeah, they need more soldiers. They need more, uh, traitors. That's just basically what they're getting you for, right now I watched civil war on hbo.

Speaker 2:

Um, that's what it reminds me of. You were asleep.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean, that wasn't. That movie didn't really catch my mind.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it was just something to watch.

Speaker 1:

Did you hear about what happened in the NYPD, where they end up shooting like four people because of the fare evader?

Speaker 2:

Yes, the $2.90.

Speaker 1:

But they said that they're now trying to say the story is that he came at them.

Speaker 2:

With a knife. Yeah, yeah, what did two of them though?

Speaker 1:

It was two police there, right, because most of the police got shot.

Speaker 2:

Yes. So, somebody like hopped a turnstile or something. They chased this nigga down. They're shooting at him in the subway Right. They said that he brandished a knife. There are multiple eyewitnesses that said he did not have a knife. In actuality, he had his hands behind his back, um, and they shot a bystander in the head, killed this person and then um the person officer got hurt too officer got shot also, and then the the person who was running got shot four times that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

It's just. It's just clown behavior fair.

Speaker 2:

Evasion is nothing to be shot at over. And they also attempted to tase him, but the taser didn't work I heard that too, so I mean it's just again.

Speaker 2:

I just wanted to bring that up just to show the point of incompetent police work if you're a cop and you're in the subway and you know that the fare is two dollars and ninety fucking cents less than three dollars, however much it is in new york right now um, and somebody starts literally running for their life, damn it. Just clearly that's all it should be. Is fuck he got away. If you can't catch up, like you, there's no reason that you should be taking out a gun for something that is not life threatening in any manner. Did you? Were you fearing for your life? That's the thing about the fucking cops they always say that they're fearing for their life.

Speaker 1:

Part of the training.

Speaker 2:

And it's like why, in this specific scenario, are you fearing for your life? You are chasing behind somebody who is running away from you.

Speaker 1:

It's what's said to say is what they have to say in a training. Like I said when I was doing correctional training, this is literally what they teach you and how to voice what this is literally specific words to yeah, this is standard practice this is all.

Speaker 1:

It is a standard practice that we're seeing. These guys are like I said we're putting the scum with a badge, we're giving them authority and we're allowing them to do what they want and and if trump has his way, none of them none of them, police officers get any trouble. Nobody's gonna get any kind of issue. They can just sit there, make up stories of what happened and who cares? Because they're the officers. So I'm trying, I'm trying to tell you, man, y'all need to be paying attention to what's going on, understand how things can be manipulated, how things can be turned and changed, understand how that immigrant word will be used and manipulated, because I'm seeing people getting called immigrants now that they not even immigrants.

Speaker 1:

It's just, it's just a term just to use. Hey, you, you are. You look different from me now you're an immigrant. I saw a video. It was a black guy and an asian police officer. He telling her you're an immigrant, she a whole police officer. Like she an illegal. You talk to her like she a legal immigrant. She a whole fucking police officer out here. How you think right? And again, it's just. It's. We're creating a dysfunction that they want to see. That's just really what it is. And and the authorities that they just keep bolstering in, they keep getting these doofuses, they keep putting on these badges for some health care, maybe a little weak-ass signing bonus.

Speaker 2:

Unions definitely are a big part of why people become police officers your pension, the safety you have as a result of said union, which is why all jobs should have unions, but that's a completely different conversation.

Speaker 1:

We need to get rid of police unions. Honestly, they don't deserve one. When you're a public servant, I don't think you should have unions, but that's a completely different we need to get rid of police unions.

Speaker 2:

Honestly, they don't deserve one. When you're a public servant, I don't think you should have a union. Genuinely, that's a. Do you think so?

Speaker 1:

not, that's not in this particular manner. You should maybe something within a company hire them an attorney when the situation happens to help them out, yeah, but like yeah the union does you and you encouraging people to be bad and incompetent at their job. Not because that's what the union does, but it it just allows the fact that, even if the police officers are wrong, they're always going to defend.

Speaker 2:

If there's blanket immunity like this and people generally don't get in trouble even when they're wrong, then that's.

Speaker 1:

That's what it garners is incompetence I mean it's only gonna create more incompetence yeah, because there's gonna be no punishment for being incompetent, you just gotta lie around it. And then it's gonna take even more evidence. And then we gotta see more people die on tv so that we can say oh, you did something wrong, all right, uh, you heard about peewee longway you told me about peewee long.

Speaker 2:

This man was found.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to the niggas, and I don't understand why you niggas do this stupid ass shit. But shout out to the niggas that be rich drug dealers meant to be one to just rap as a hobby like okay, wait, I saw this tweet that was like um, where's he from? He from atlanta.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it was like uh, y'all were mad at uh for not blowing up Pee Wee Longway, but Pee Wee Longway did not want to be blown up?

Speaker 1:

No, he did, that's. The problem was like the fact that he was out being known anyway. You should have never been known.

Speaker 2:

If you were making El Pablo like.

Speaker 3:

I mean this ain't Pablo numbers, but this is like one of his generals drug dealer.

Speaker 1:

But look, this is like one of his generals drug dealer. Hold on, let's just go into what was found, because they did a raid at one of his spots and pretty much found like the boatload of drugs.

Speaker 2:

That is the most insane amount of drugs.

Speaker 1:

The most alarming one that comes out to me. He had 500 pounds of methamphetamine like meth, them's not nigga drugs. That was street.

Speaker 2:

Value was 22 million not nigga drugs like that's crazy like where was that? Going to keep going.

Speaker 1:

North georgia uh, he had 155 firearms that's not crazy for real. Maybe crazy shit I don't know what kind of guns he had.

Speaker 2:

Did it say the street value of that?

Speaker 1:

$270K.

Speaker 2:

Okay, not nowhere near the meth.

Speaker 1:

Quarter a million.

Speaker 2:

Damn.

Speaker 1:

Start cooking meth in the attic. That's the worst place to do it. You want to be in a basement? You want to be in a basement? Okay, that's why we did that in Breaking Bad huh 57 kilos, so 57 kilos of cocaine.

Speaker 2:

Seven, 57 kilos. So 57 kilos of cocaine, seven kilos of fentanyl that's almost a million dollars.

Speaker 1:

Seven, seven kilos of how much? A million for seven? No, it's like uh, 700k or seven kilos.

Speaker 2:

I just feel like, why y'all even getting fentanyl? People do fentanyl and you safely?

Speaker 1:

people do they. They survive it, yeah, but they also use it to stretch the other drugs out. Uh, he had 55 55 000 pounds of marijuana okay, light work and they said that was 200 and I say 250 million dollars worth of weed there's no way that don't say 250 million dollars under the marijuana oh, that is million that's crazy right for 555k. It says well, it says includes large amounts of illegally grown in buck county california.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, okay, so they didn't have to pay taxes and then but you know the thing about these prices too, the police just add on there just to make their fine, so they go oh we had the biggest bust of all time okay they just add shit on there too yeah, because weed isn't worth.

Speaker 1:

I kind of know that from a situation that happened with a friend, so, like a friend, was uh selling narcotics back in the day and they got arrested and so when they showed them the discovery, they show where the police were given the informant like five hundred dollars and he would come and that was supposed to be for him to buy the weed or whatever from the narcotic from my partner and our partner was only charging him like a hundred dollars.

Speaker 1:

So this nigga was pocketing the four $400 from the police and buying his weed and all he had to do. I think he ended up showing him like part of the weed because then he was still like that's how they knew the numbers was crazy because they were saying, like it was $500 a weed, but it was like half a zip, but it was like you gave him a zip right there, so he was taking half the zip. It's like I gave him a zip right there, like so he was taking half the zip, putting it on him, taking 400, you know part of the money, pocketing the money and then giving the police oh, this is what he, I bought for this half a zip for 200 or whatever oh so this nigga was capping, he was capping nigga was making money off the police money and weed shit was crazy.

Speaker 1:

That's hilarious, but that's why they have these crazy values for, uh, drugs, because they getting scammed on the back end, so they gotta account for it. Yeah, so they gotta say this is the street value and this ain't the street value yeah uh, then they had one point damn three killer. Good um, segue into rebel ridge if you watch that shit with me oh, oh well, man them Netflix movies, don't be getting me like that, like they used to. I don't know what this is, though he had GHB. Okay, do you know what that is?

Speaker 2:

No, but I wish you would have told me to look that up.

Speaker 1:

I didn't realize what that was, and it was like he had almost six pounds of that A GHB.

Speaker 2:

So GHB Okay, that, almost six pounds of that a ghb.

Speaker 1:

so ghb okay, that's not all right, and then he also had well, you look it up, he also had uh close to 800 pounds worth of mushrooms and that's only 15k street value, that's. I mean. When I say pounds, excuse me, he almost had uh 800 grams of mushrooms for 15k. So I mean that's a lot different. But no, that's. That's crazy to get caught with all that at one time. That nigga gonna be sitting for a minute. Liquid ecstasy, that's what it is.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, oh, that's okay, or blue nitro, swallowed or injected or inserted anally oh shit, what does GHB mean?

Speaker 1:

what does the GHB mean? Oh that's the ecstasy dang. They got liquid ecstasy now.

Speaker 2:

I remember when it was just a blue pill because I said I typed into google y'all what is GHB and the street name popped up, so I I clicked on that and it said what did they the? The results right up here what are they called? The most common name for ghb are georgia, homeboy g, goop, grievous bodily harm and liquid ecstasy grievously, bodily harm is funny georgia. Homeboy is what? But it's. It's just liquid ecstasy which sounds, y'all niggas on liquid ecstasy.

Speaker 2:

Y'all niggas on some different shit I wish our parents didn't watch this show they're gonna call you a druggie yeah, they definitely are hey, I just want to say shout out to the ladies out there, that's.

Speaker 1:

That's trying to change their life. You know they had this past that was muddled with filth and degeneracy, and now they're trying to change their way.

Speaker 2:

Shout out to britney renner, I know it's you should have kept being a hoe, because now you broke we don't need to hurt you. You aren't? No, she's not getting the fuck out of here. She's trying to change her life.

Speaker 1:

Shut, your fucking nigger mouth I just want to support fuck now.

Speaker 2:

I just want to support women who are trying to make the right choices in life I'm, I made the right choice by getting married and you're supporting the correct woman, okay, but I'm saying, can we help her together? I knocked that drink out of your hand.

Speaker 2:

Right the fuck now why, britney renner can literally start her only fans and buy a mansion in two months if she wanted to but she decided she got to disrespect herself she decided to give her life up to allah, which you can do, bitch, but now you're broke and you don't know when your next meal is gonna be on you and your son's plate, and then that's what I want to help.

Speaker 2:

And then you decided to have that son in a state that don't even give you the best baby, the the best child support benefits. You just a dumb bitch all around, like you were never. You were never strategic. You were always a dumb bitch. And now, now I know this, now I know this. He's known this for a long time. I was just holding out hope. I don't know. But you're, you're fucking stupid. You're stupid. You done had a baby buying nigga in a state that you can't get no money for. The fucking baby fail l. And then she gets half.

Speaker 2:

And then you done, turned your life over to god, and it's not even the american god that's hate we don't have an american god yes, we do no, we don't, that's not true we don't. We're not supposed to have an american god, but the god here is jesus okay, greed is jesus we are a christ on paper. We are literally on the paper money. We are in god, we trust, and that god is christian god. Who, whose son is jesus of nazareth? Okay, they believe in jesus of nazareth.

Speaker 1:

Okay, they believe in Jesus of Nazareth, but they just don't think he was the son of God.

Speaker 2:

As an American. If you was going to do the baddie to religious thing, you should have did what all the other girls did and became a Christian. You should have did what Blac Chyna did you should like. Come on, girl, why would you turn your life to Allah? They're way more critical. Way more critical If you take that hijab off once you're done.

Speaker 1:

You're fucking done bitch Brittany, you can just send me.

Speaker 2:

You're stupid.

Speaker 1:

Brittany, just send me the cash app and I'm going to donate to your cause.

Speaker 2:

He's not going to donate shit to you.

Speaker 1:

I want to help out because I like, like I said, I know it's tough, especially it to you. I want to help out because I, like, like I said, I know it's tough. Especially when you have walked the the line of a harlot for so long, I can understand that it's gonna be really difficult tripled and doubled that you should have doubled and no, you shouldn't have. You did the right thing. A whore. No, you did the right thing.

Speaker 2:

Don't listen to her because that's what you were put on this earth to be. I don't even know why you had a child in the first you was a real good hoe.

Speaker 1:

That's crazy.

Speaker 2:

You was a really good hoe and you.

Speaker 1:

Could you imagine, though, if I said that you were so good at hoeing. Just imagine if I would have said that about anything. Y'all you get mad at the fucking shits and gigs guy for making a joke about the fucking slapping on the beer, but you just told a woman that she was meant to be a hoe.

Speaker 2:

Yes, because I don't think being a hoe is something that's negative. That's the difference between us.

Speaker 1:

Oh see, look how she tries to hide behind something that's negative.

Speaker 2:

That's the difference between us. Me saying that, I thought you were, would you be a hoe? I thought, if I wasn't a married woman I'm about to get up, he didn't get the answer.

Speaker 1:

I did. I didn't. I might have to cut that out.

Speaker 2:

That's disgusting you would have made so much more money gallivanting being a whore.

Speaker 1:

Nobody's saying that it's easy to make that decision. I'm saying I'm proud of her for making the tough decision.

Speaker 2:

Multiple sisters and a mother drop that baby off and go suck some dick. What are you doing? What are you doing? You're struggling in a hijab.

Speaker 1:

I rather do not listen to this nonsense.

Speaker 2:

Would you rather cry in a Bentley or be happy in a Toyota? She was. She was being a hoe and not getting none of that either. What are you?

Speaker 1:

talking about she was being a hoe and not getting none of that either. What are you talking?

Speaker 2:

about. She was a terrible hoe.

Speaker 1:

She was being a hoe and not getting none of that anyway.

Speaker 2:

I was wrong. Maybe I was wrong.

Speaker 1:

She's making the right path.

Speaker 2:

You was a bad hoe. Maybe you wasn't a good hoe.

Speaker 1:

You are making the right path. Please send me the cash app so that I can donate.

Speaker 2:

You should have went into like the smut realm. You ever thought of that?

Speaker 1:

no, you're doing the right thing. Don't listen to her.

Speaker 2:

You're doing the right thing, the right thing, I'll let you, I'll let you talk, let me, let me talk to her now baby.

Speaker 1:

She's on the internet crying for money okay, I'm gonna give her some, but I just want to at least talk to her before I do it. So I just want to tell you you're doing the right thing. I know that it's hard when you walk the right path. In life it's not supposed to be easy, and especially when it's like somebody that you've made the wrong decision for a few years now it's gonna be okay roughly, and so I'm saying she did the right thing a little bit in college.

Speaker 1:

She was a soccer player. She just didn't follow through. But I just want you to stay with it. Allah is going to bless you with something right. I truly believe it in my heart of hearts. I feel like Allah is going to bless you, brittany.

Speaker 2:

You need to get rich.

Speaker 1:

What a nice, rich Muslim man.

Speaker 2:

I was going to say Dr Umar.

Speaker 1:

He's going to tell you that the kid got to go back with PJ, though.

Speaker 2:

The best you can do at this point is Dr Umar.

Speaker 1:

Umar, that's not the best. She can still pull something.

Speaker 2:

The best you can do.

Speaker 1:

She was just with Shaq a few months ago. She can pull something Shaq was just denying a woman who has multiple video evidence of her being with him. I'm just saying she she's in a realm of being able to pull a particular type of gentleman obviously she wrote a whole book about it.

Speaker 2:

You should have just kept pulling them no, she, no, she got.

Speaker 1:

She wouldn't have an opinion.

Speaker 2:

That's her problem she's been had an opinion that's the problem.

Speaker 1:

It's cute when you're a little 21 year old with an opinion that nobody really cares about, but once you turn 30 with that same opinion, nobody wants to hear that.

Speaker 2:

Be quiet, look cute you already fulfilled yourself with a child.

Speaker 1:

Just keep being a hoe I mean if she wasn't even with a nigga who was a max dollar player.

Speaker 2:

So I mean just not a good hoe.

Speaker 1:

That's the problem you wasn't good at hoeing and then she did the shit with charleston white. She was grinding on him ew you see he beefing with Woody. Now you saw that.

Speaker 2:

Let's stay on her grinding on Charleston White.

Speaker 1:

I got one more woman I need to bring up too.

Speaker 2:

Ew.

Speaker 1:

Bitch, she got busy with Charleston.

Speaker 2:

I forgot about that.

Speaker 1:

She got busy with Charleston I literally disgusted. I wasn't mad.

Speaker 2:

Bottom of the barrel dick.

Speaker 1:

I wasn't mad about that. She had to get crazy with Charleston. I was Charleston. That nigga hold on too. Before we get in, there's one more woman we need to bring up that I'm proud of, because I'm I'm sure that she got the uh, the old one, two from from a gentleman. She like ruby rose. She expired. I said this was gonna happen. We knew that this was like, but I said this exactly was going to happen. I said she was going to expose him after the situation was done and she directly did that. She told everybody that it was a pr relationship.

Speaker 1:

She said she never fucked him. She said that he was nice, but that was all it was was a pr situation.

Speaker 2:

I really need you guys to know that I did not fuck and before that before that she said she was two months.

Speaker 1:

Uh, sober and celibate. She said both sober and celibate.

Speaker 1:

So clearly what's happening is a nigga that oh my god, she was fucking somebody else while she was dating druski no, we need to wake this other part up, the fact that there's another nigga out here that told her mama, I can't be with you because you was with druski and you out here moving crazy. And now she's trying to clean her name on internet because that's the only reason she would respond like this there's a nigga in her, in her ear, that she really want to be with.

Speaker 2:

Oh, that don't want to be with her. That don't want to be with her because of the Drewski shit.

Speaker 1:

So now she's trying to clean her name up.

Speaker 2:

Do you think that being with Drewski is something that a nigga would be like?

Speaker 1:

Yeah. If you if, if you a nigga who got respect for yourself? Who?

Speaker 2:

got motion. Yeah, not even respect for yourself.

Speaker 1:

You gotta respect yourself and be like nah nigga, I'm not Fuck that. Yeah, fuck a nigga with respect for himself.

Speaker 2:

No, but for a girl like Ruby Rose, just respect for yourself, yeah if you okay, you need to have motion for her too. That's all I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

Nobody say what she want. We talking about what? In his situation? A nigga in his situation, ruby, wants you and you saying why wouldn't you want ruby is? Yeah, because the way he was with that. I'm just saying like he was tongue kissing this fat ass nigga on the camera what my thought is she only wants niggas with niggas with motion.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but I'm saying that I'm not even speaking to, I'm not speaking to her what she wants.

Speaker 1:

I'm speaking to the nigga that wants that, she wants in that regard, but she's he don't want her back, she's going out to try to mend things so that she could get him, which means she wants him. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

He has to be a nigga with motion. Even if that, even if that be the case, For you to move shit around to accommodate a nigga like she wants him, for a reason. That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

I mean he don't got to have motion because we've seen the niggas she been with.

Speaker 2:

He doesn't want her for a reason.

Speaker 1:

But we've seen the niggas she been with who she really was into. They didn't have motion. There's been plenty of these little nasty little rapper niggas she been seen with. The only nigga that she's been linked with that I know of is ddg mad, long ago, yeah, but I'm talking about.

Speaker 2:

There's other niggas who've been in between that? Pictures come up all the time. Yeah, who are the niggas?

Speaker 1:

they nobodies that's the thing they nobody niggas.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so nobody nigga rapper entourage nigga shit like that would probably be the most notable nigga that she's been with since ddg and they're not necessarily like A-listers. That was a prize pick deal between them two.

Speaker 1:

But like when it comes to like chicks, like that that's what I'm saying you can't really trust a Ruby to hold it down in any kind of capacity. Luckily, the fact that he is a funny nigga, he can do the whole joking off that shit and being like oh yeah, he did the whole love don't cost a thing, yeah he can pull that off.

Speaker 1:

He's fortunate in it gonna be hurt by because he had a chance to bust her out. Remember when he was on that radio show and they was asking about her and he just kept it cool oh, it's all you know. Just gotta expend that money and all that other shit he was making her look good in that moment but you already see that again, they're never.

Speaker 1:

They're never gonna look at you and do you the way they want you to do them, because if he would have did this shit, oh he would have been the worst nigga in the world. Oh, this nigga suck.

Speaker 2:

Look at him, look how he treats just pr look how he treat black women.

Speaker 1:

Oh he he. He turned her into an item. He just purchased her.

Speaker 2:

All this other shit if um if drewski would have just exposed her like it was just a pr relationship and blah blah, yeah, probably it's, it's, it's, it's crazy, it's insane but no, no man has ever come out and said that this relationship was just pr, but I think that's be trying to think who it was.

Speaker 1:

A couple guys. It was a guy that I was give me a couple I'm trying to remember who it was a I need you to specifically remember it was a white. It was part of some white thing.

Speaker 2:

But they was doing a fake.

Speaker 1:

They was doing a fake little Because he was gay. He was trying to hide the gay. That's what it was. Well, that's not, I think, who it was, but yeah, he was using her to find Beards, don't count.

Speaker 2:

Beards don't for the homosexuals, because of our society I'm talking about like straight up pr, straight straight relationships where the man justin and britney, where the man comes out and he's like this was just pr didn't he say that, though didn't justin say that I don't know.

Speaker 2:

I don't know the I thought justin said it was just because all I now britney's book came out and shat all over him and that was like the the start of the the downroads downward spiral for Justin Timberlake. So I don't think that would be a good example either. I don't think there are any good examples of men coming out, but that's because I think that men's brands are more fortified when they're like, maybe in a relationship, except if you're specifically a sex symbol like Trey Songz used to be or like a Ricky Martin.

Speaker 1:

How about Lizzo boyfriend? He paid to be there.

Speaker 2:

Who the fuck is Lizzo's boyfriend? Who the fuck is Lizzo's boyfriend?

Speaker 1:

I thought he was like a songwriter you don't give a fuck who this man is. I thought he was a songwriter Come on.

Speaker 2:

Not a good idea, not a good. Who the fuck is Lizzo's boyfriend? You don't think that nigga paid to be there? No, because I don't know who the fuck Lizzo's boyfriend is what about Gabby from Precious?

Speaker 1:

What about her man? I don't know her nigga either, that white man you, you just think that I'm just bringing up that black women cannot be loved how do you feel like it was fat black? Because you are fat phobic. You think those fat yes, she's losing weight.

Speaker 2:

She's losing weight, but she's fat. There's nothing wrong with being fat bitch. Look at me in my eyes right now. Ain't nothing wrong with being fat. Be a fat bitch. If you want to be a fat bitch, be that fair, so lying so be that.

Speaker 2:

Be that fair is lying, I would literally cry my eyes out if I was fat, but that's because I've been skinny my whole life and I know that I would be on a different side of the social acceptable standard. Y'all are already there, accepted. I'm not, I don't know what to tell you. But if you're fat, be fat, be happy about being fat. But you already that, I'm not, I don't know what to tell you. I cut this out. Nah, I'm kidding, don't cut it. That kind of funny hold on.

Speaker 1:

I want you to listen to something that happened to myron the other day, so y'all know we are not fans of the fresh and fit podcast so my headphones out.

Speaker 2:

You're gonna like this. I'm taking my headphones out in, okay, I was gonna say, because we cannot give them streams there's no stream.

Speaker 1:

This is from a spaces he was in okay, I can't believe how quick that was.

Speaker 6:

I can't believe how fast that was can I make this interesting?

Speaker 4:

can I make this interesting real quick, myron, you're in my space the other day and I said you know you're doing a great job calling these jews, but you know, if we take this country back, we want it for white folks and would you go home? And you said I was born here and I'm not going anywhere. And this is where I think the problem is with working with non-whites. Is that once you think you help us that you're just going to stay in our country. Do you still stand with that answer, bro? You look, man. I know you're trying to get a clippable moment here for your fucking no, it's the truth, man, this is. This is the issue with whites working with non-whites.

Speaker 6:

We're over here talking about a problem, then you bring it right back into. You know this whole white thing like dude, shut the fuck this whole white thing is what built this country.

Speaker 4:

Myron, shut the fuck up, dude. Hey, you fucking sand nigger you sand nigger. Hey, I am in. Florida. I'm in Florida and I will come. I will knock you out on camera.

Speaker 6:

All right, we're not going to. I'm not going to have violence in the space. It's not even my space.

Speaker 1:

Hey, Myron, you a bitch, that nigga called you a sand nigger twice and you over there stuttering.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you should have had all of the vitriol for this thing. Both of y'all are bitches, though.

Speaker 5:

I mean.

Speaker 2:

The guy that was calling him a sand nigga with the hard R, I will. We come find you in Florida, bitch. And then Myron, you're also a bitch. Y'all can literally like find double-ended dildos and just butt fuck together Because y'all are both bitches.

Speaker 1:

Myron, you're a little hoe-ass nigga dog Like you, letting these white folks talk to you, crazy. You supposed to be tough fbi nigga. Supposed to be all the little fit nigga like.

Speaker 2:

Come on bro put where your balls at man. The white boys got you like that he has. Usually he had you in a vice grip that shit was so disgusting. And then the fact that he was in multiple spaces with this lame ass being made to look stupid by a white man who's constantly in the twitter spaces nigga called you a sand nigger twice you're less than and it felt like.

Speaker 2:

It felt like that wasn't the first time he said that to you no, he had that shit loaded up in the clip about seven rounds of them shits I think this also is a message for all y'all who want to team up with these conservatives.

Speaker 1:

Understand that this is that is their agenda yeah it is not to help you in any capacity. It is to identify you as the other and eliminate you as quickly as possible. So I think that just goes without saying. I just wanted to make sure I brought that out there I thought it was so funny. I added them when I saw that and I was like yo, you a bitch, my Myron, just so you know Myron been a bitch for mad long though. No, he needs to be reminded sometimes.

Speaker 2:

That whole podcast is bitch made. It should be called the bitch made podcast. I need one of you niggas to actually be truthful and name your podcast the bitch made nigga podcast or the bitch nigga podcast. Bitch made podcast. Bitch nigga podcast. Bitch made podcast podcast. Bitch nigga podcast. That's not good for so shits and gigs, bitch nigga podcast, and then whatever. Um, what are the names? Who the myron and fresh and fit fresh and fit. Yeah, that's the bitch made podcast.

Speaker 1:

That's what you need to rename yourselves too I don't know if that'll do well in the algorithm, all right, so I wanted to tell you this story about what happened in lebanon a couple days ago, right?

Speaker 1:

so I just think everybody should just keep this in mind because this shit was kind of insane. So there's a group, militant group named hezbollah uh, you probably can look them up and see what they're about. Essentially, they were trying to transfer a lot of their communications from cell phones to pagers because they didn't want people to be able to track and do all that other stuff to their information. So they get these pagers in and the other day they have close to 3 000 injuries, eight deaths, because all of the pagers exploded. So essentially, right now people are assuming, I think the iranian government is accusing israel of this and when I heard about this, I don't think people realize how scary this could potentially be, because we got to take into effect the account.

Speaker 1:

How did this happen? So this one of two things we got an interception of these beepers, which I believe they said that it was kind of a quick turnaround in which they requested. So it would have been kind of tough to do this, but they intercepted the beepers, plant the detonators in them, get them to the people and, like I said, there was kids who got hurt. It was I think there was a video, somebody who had it on the fanny pack and it like exploded on the nigga waist in front of everybody. Or these motherfuckers got a weapon that can tap into your electronic and turn your standard cell phone standard pager into an explosive that seems less likely.

Speaker 2:

Um, I was watching well, yeah, I was watching the news this morning and, uh, they, general, they, they said that the shipment was intercepted, so that the who was it again hezbollah hezbollah.

Speaker 2:

They um thought that their electronics were compromised so that um they sent for the beepers and the israeli government, or whatever they haven't allegedly because they haven't claimed responsibility for this as of yet, but they intercepted the shipment and put the bombs in the things and then sent them off. The CIA has said that this is something that they've been aware of, that they could do, but this is something that the US government specifically has never done because of the risk factors having to do with, um uh, civilians and stuff like there are random people that can get hurt, so this is never a move that we've pulled or anybody who actually sticks to the rules of the fucking geneva conference, um, would do.

Speaker 2:

But yeah, I'm gonna stop talking now.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying, man, I'm I'm just glad it's not the latter, because just imagine having that kind of technology to turn your phone. Just you, we sleep with our phones near us yeah, and they would be dead.

Speaker 2:

You could turn that into a bomb, like we're not supposed to. But sometimes we sleep with our phones, like underneath our pillows, literally like we would both die just imagine how easy that could then.

Speaker 1:

That doesn't just mean cell phones, like if it's electronic based your tv we would die like anything now, just the cameras, anything could just become a weapon at that point that is a motherfucker.

Speaker 2:

But I feel like, because I'm not like I don't put things together, but I feel like maybe only well, yeah, only maybe things that can can connect to wi-fi you might be able to do that with, but or any, kind of wave because, like I said, it'd be a microwave, all that kind of stuff.

Speaker 2:

If you can activate whatever it is to overheat it oh yeah, that's what essentially turns into a bomb like that would how long it would take to overheat would also go into consideration? Yeah, because you can put a microwave on high and then you can. You can leave it on for an hour yeah, it would have to override.

Speaker 1:

It would have to override, it would have to be something something, but I mean that's.

Speaker 2:

That's why I think that's what make it even scarier that's why I think that it was definitely a interest interception um. The israeli government, obviously filled with evil geniuses like this, was a meticulously well thought out plan, regardless of and it had to be done quick either of the options that he gave, whether it's something that they can tap into their phones and stuff.

Speaker 2:

The fact that they were able to target the correct people is impressive. Not impressive, but like fuck, what's the word I'm looking for, because I don't want to say impressive I mean, it would be kind of impressive for them to do that sinister yeah, sinister, um, yeah fuck.

Speaker 2:

Impressive is the word, though it is impressive and the the fact that, if it's if it's them targeting the wi-fi targeted phones, or if it's them, um, catching the shipment in the middle, putting all the bombs in there and getting the shipment back where it gets there to in a timely manner yeah, that's that's suspected.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that's the feet right there too that maybe all of the.

Speaker 2:

They knew which pagers they were getting and put the bombs in there beforehand. I don't know what happened, but this was espionage at its finest I would want to too.

Speaker 1:

Like why would you get those pages and then not check them yourself, like?

Speaker 3:

that's what I'm saying. Like they had to be so comfortable, open, yeah just to, just to look just to make sure yeah just to even to show that it's not wired, like, it's not transmitting to somebody else.

Speaker 1:

That's just to me, it's just like yo. What are what do these niggas have capable? What, what, what? What are we really fighting against?

Speaker 2:

yeah, it's really scary that shit's nuts and then the things that they're willing to do, too, and all of the rules that they're willing to break.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I mean, all they gotta do is send a rogue agent and as long as he don't get caught, nobody's gonna take responsibility for it yeah, absolutely insane at all at all. Uh, was there anything else you wanted to get into? So are you familiar with adrian wardrenowski?

Speaker 1:

no, I have no idea who that is he's a sports writer who's like real well known for uh, basically getting like sports information out really quick and like he's like one of the first people to report on trades and stuff like that. So I just want to give him a shout out. He just retired today after like seven years with espn. He's like one of the first people to report on trades and stuff like that. So I just want to give him a shout out. He just retired today after like seven years with ESPN. He's like leaving the business and he's been like pretty much been a legend throughout the kind of the industry. So just want to say shout out to him. Man, it's been dope experiencing you know all the draft.

Speaker 1:

He used to like have the draft picks announced before the draft would even start, almost It'd almost like right before the picks would come out, so he always used to do that, so I thought it was dope. I think there's some more people coming in. I think this has something to do with steven a, but we don't got to get into that now.

Speaker 2:

We can talk about that another time I did want to like really quickly you did bring that up and we don't have to spend a long time on it is. Do you think 25 million is is a fair amount for Stephen A for but cause for someone like me who does not consume sports or anything of that nature at all? This is someone who I've been seeing consistently, even though it's not regularly in my algorithms, to get sports things, so I feel like he's probably worth the amount that he's requesting 25 million for. I don't know what the situation is, but I feel, like he, he should get that amount.

Speaker 2:

I feel like he's worth that amount. He penetrates past a sports lover's algorithm yeah, I mean it's.

Speaker 1:

It depends. He's a easy person to sell to stockholders, yeah, and so that's why white men love him, black men love him, that's why there's a reason to have him. I think when you say worth, what I usually equate that to is if he went out on his own and developed a con would he not even just from like another organization or another company.

Speaker 1:

More so, would he garner that if he was to grow his own company and be able to do that, I don't think he could do that on his own. Within the next like three or four years, probably like in year five, I could see him probably garnering something like that something like that.

Speaker 1:

But I think, regardless with him, he's in a tough position because if he, if they choose, choose not to go with him and he, you know, goes on his threat, then you have that kind of point where you lose a lot of leverage because there's a lot of people who just watch steven because he's on espn there are people who love Stephen A and watches his podcast and stuff like that.

Speaker 1:

I think he still hasn't generated that to a place where it can stand on its own, so jumping the shark too early with them could potentially uh how long has Stephen A been? A off and on for a minute, like a radio, like how long has yeah, uh, how long has he consistently been a tv personality, like a sports commentator I want to say consistently, uh, because I know he was off and on in like the late 2000s, so I want to say at least 2012 for sure so more than a decade?

Speaker 2:

yeah, for sure. I I do feel like I don't know.

Speaker 1:

As far as I think 2012 was when he did first take with Skip.

Speaker 2:

Experience-wise, then let's take away all of his notability Like experience as a journalist in this specific field for 10 years, why not?

Speaker 1:

Well, I mean, you need all everything that you took away to validate the price, because well, yeah, a regular journalist wouldn't make this much journalism in itself is not going to garner this kind of money it's I just he needs it for both it's they both need each other. I think he probably needs them a little bit more right now than they need him because they can make another person. It's about are they willing to put in the work, time and money to do that?

Speaker 2:

and usually they don't want to do that it's just easier to pay you 25 million than it would be to spend invest in trying to make another 30 million to make another one of you, if we can even find another one of you like it we probably could.

Speaker 1:

It could be split up amongst three or four people.

Speaker 2:

That's just harder to manage yeah, they probably could, but it's just like, how long is it going to take you to find it's?

Speaker 1:

easier to find. It's just like why your company gets a manager you get someone to be the face of this small group. They now take accountability of everyone's actions and their job is to micromanage or manage you in a particular way, and that's what he does in a in a larger scale. It's just, if I pay you more money, I'm going to make you do more work when really he probably should be getting paid type of money he's getting paid.

Speaker 2:

What platform is shannon on right now? He's on espn too.

Speaker 1:

Oh, so they're both espn and he has his own platforms with club shea, shea and nightcap okay all right, uh, you sure you don't have any girl stuff you want to get into um, there is no girl stuff other than there's this comedian.

Speaker 2:

I don't know her name, I have to look up her name but she, um, there's a plus-sized girl okay, I'm already out, there's a plus-sized girl who posted a tiktok basically saying that the stores need to um carry her sizes.

Speaker 2:

And then this, this comedian crashed out and made four, three or four videos about this girl's tiktok. The girl literally just stitched it to her, saying absolutely nothing. And then the comedian keeps making tiktok, after tiktok, after tiktok, crashing out, and then this bitch is also a 1x but she said at least she's not trying to say that yeah. So she was like if you, um, if the clothes don't fit you, you need to fit the clothes. She was like you need to lose weight, basically she was eating her up young.

Speaker 1:

But the other girl, it was funny how she tried to play it. I mean, there's nothing else you could really the other girl did not say a single fucking word.

Speaker 2:

And then this girl made like four tiktoks. I saw, and they were over a minute I wasn't.

Speaker 1:

I mean she was getting her shit off. I mean big girl couldn't do nothing but but dude, but do that everybody I just, I just want to like big girl one.

Speaker 2:

I felt like big girl couldn't do nothing. But do that, I just want to. You felt like big girl won. I felt like big girl won just because she did not say a word and you got this bitch crashing out, that's big girl privilege. Over absolute.

Speaker 1:

There is no such thing as big girl privilege.

Speaker 2:

This nigga is literally been the worst man and husband on this pod on this specific episode. Because there is no such thing as big girl privilege. Y'all get zero privilege. It's like it's like there is big girl misfortune and that is all y'all get for real, like I, I know, no, it's, but it's like the con. I don't Like. I know no, but it's like the consequences. I don't know because I've never been there, it's like the consequences of low expectations.

Speaker 1:

It's like because you're not really expecting her to do that, you kind of give her that grace in that area, that's all.

Speaker 2:

That shit has been crazy, though she's lost a good deal of followers and stuff like that.

Speaker 1:

The comedian did. Yeah. That's all right, they'll be back.

Speaker 2:

She was never super popular like super super popular. She was never there.

Speaker 1:

They'll be back. They'll be back.

Speaker 2:

Now she's just known as a fat phobic fat bitch.

Speaker 1:

Nah, you just gotta just lean into the white people and they'll rock with you.

Speaker 2:

The white people have never rocked with her. She has extremely black comedy.

Speaker 1:

That's what I'm saying, just you got to kind of lean into it, just be she has to change her entire character for herself. Call tiffany haddish, she'll help you, she'll help her out yes, sell your soul all right. Life is a labor of love, so let's keep building these moments together and remember your job is not your family the only thing that you should be exploiting is your, is these corporations.

Speaker 2:

Let them know what they need to do follow us on all of the social media at talkfnftv on Facebook, twitter, instagram and YouTube. Like subscribe. Leave a comment If there's anything you want to say to us, even if you don't like us, and we appreciate the um engagement. Love you, bye.