Talk FNF

Hurricane Helene Sparks Conspiracy, Support the Long Shoremen, and Jaguar Wright Bashes Jayz - Talk FNF TV

Talk FNF tv Season 1 Episode 61

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What if your favorite celebrity's love life wasn't as picture-perfect as it seemed? Join us as we unravel the intricate web of public relationships, societal biases, and political controversies. From the complex dynamics of JR Smith, Candace Patton, and Smith's wife to the societal perceptions of physical attributes in celebrities, we explore how societal expectations shape personal lives. Our conversation takes an unexpected turn as we critique a political debate, exposing the absurdity of unchallenged statements and analyzing the curious admiration of controversial figures.

A storm is brewing, and it's not just the weather. We discuss the surprising aftermath of Hurricane Helene and its potential connection to local resistance against mining expansions in North Carolina. As we probe into the economic and environmental ramifications, our discussion further highlights the challenges in disaster management, particularly FEMA's budget constraints. We also express skepticism over a recent chemical fire in Atlanta, pondering the political motives behind such incidents and the public's frustration with governmental assurances of safety.

The fight for labor rights takes center stage with the longshoremen's strike, a bold stand against automation at the ports. We celebrate the resilience of these workers, drawing historical parallels between unions and organized crime to showcase the enduring struggle for fair labor practices. As we tackle troubling allegations against Sean "Diddy" Combs, we address the broader implications for the music industry and the challenges of holding public figures accountable for past behaviors. With a critical eye on societal standards for forgiveness, we invite listeners to engage with us in exploring these pressing issues.

Speaker 1:

I feel like y'all do the same thing to tall, dark-skinned men that y'all do to light-skinned women, like he just has to be tall and dark-skinned, and you're like ooh. And y'all like completely disregard the actual facial features that are on the tall, dark-skinned man. The same y'all do to like light-skinned women, like she just light-skinned and you think she attractive and no, like you got to like look at her face like ice spice. If you look at her for too long she start looking weird.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, literally. He says that in the midst of the of the debate. Oh, I thought the rules weren't. You know, fact checking, what the like you are, why would?

Speaker 2:

that. Why would those be the rules, though? But even if it was the rules or wasn't, what does that make sense when? If it was the rules or wasn't, what does that make sense when you're saying oh, don't check my lies Like that's literally what he said. I don't know what was going on with Diddy, but this lawyer is standing in front of the number. He got the number behind him. He got the Diddy number behind him.

Speaker 4:

Going crazy on this nigga yo AKA like the worst thing that could happen and you're not coming back from it right between the lines.

Speaker 1:

people, everything happens for a reason this feels like white katrina this is only interesting if you think that, like they have weather machines so daggett.

Speaker 2:

The ila boss who pledged to cripple the united states owns a 76 foot yacht, a bentley, and gets paid 900 900k a year. He was acquitted in the RICO charges after the main witness against him, mobster Lawrence Ritchie, was found decomposed in a car truck in New Jersey. I feel like I even I like him even more. This is my kind of dude.

Speaker 1:

We didn't have to feel like a biological attack now that's what it an attack by nature, and now it's a bio attack.

Speaker 5:

Your whole life is revolved around talking about other people's lives. What the f*** do you think your f***ing?

Speaker 6:

ass is doing on that podcast now.

Speaker 1:

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

Speaker 2:

First off, I think we should start with congratulations to uh jr smith, not shout out to him him and candace patton just had a baby. So I think everybody I know everybody involved is super excited him candace and his wife like what?

Speaker 1:

when you brought this up, he was like oh, jr smith is having a baby with, uh, the girl from the flash and I was like, oh, that's cute. And he was like, oh, you don't know that he's married, huh. And I was like obviously the fuck.

Speaker 2:

Not because no, it gets worse than this. So there was a story, uh, black sports online had posted where jr was, his. The wife caught him babysitting the dog, her candace's dog. So she walked in.

Speaker 2:

He just holding the dog making sure it's cool like hey, jr shout out to you dog, like there's no way that, like there's not an arrangement going on here, because sometimes, though, like as a lady, you got to kind of know, like sometimes you just outclass and you just kind of gotta accept, like I'm just a wife, but he got a love of his life.

Speaker 1:

That's just bad what does his wife look like? She's straight.

Speaker 2:

She's a nice looking lady but it's just, she ain't candace well you're, you're biased it get different. We can't know. Candace is stunning. We're not not going to do that.

Speaker 1:

She is but like.

Speaker 2:

Like Candace, is probably one of the most beautiful actresses.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but so why is she settling on being a side chick?

Speaker 2:

Well, I mean Even though he got money.

Speaker 1:

but like you have access to other niggas with money, can't you just be the main chick to another NBA player?

Speaker 2:

JR is probably a nice guy. Probably you know what I'm saying. You can't put that out of the question. He might be a really cool guy.

Speaker 1:

We know that he is fucked up because his wife walked in to him babysitting his side chick's dog. So, we already know from that that his moral compass is askew.

Speaker 2:

I mean, we don't necessarily know that.

Speaker 1:

We do.

Speaker 2:

We just know that maybe he just didn't make a calculated decision because him and his wife could have been on and off. We don't know. We don't know the turmoil of their relationship.

Speaker 1:

Now you moving to goalposts Because we don't know, because we don't know, we don't know the factors that's going on in his relationship with. He's a nice guy. From what I'm seeing and what you're telling me right now I'm it's leaning towards not the nicest guy.

Speaker 2:

No, I think he is. I think he's an outstanding gentleman. No, I think he's holding it down.

Speaker 1:

I think he's a nigga with money and people with money are terrible people across the board man, woman, white, black. People with money are not good people.

Speaker 2:

I just I think they just have a good arrangement, she not good people, I just.

Speaker 4:

I think they just have a good arrangement. She probably like his high school like sweetheart.

Speaker 2:

I didn't do too much googles on her. She probably like his high school sweetheart. She knows she, she looked up, got a good guy and he holding down for her in the family and it just so happened that he got an affliction for extremely beautiful actresses. Oh, he's not the first guy with that, so I mean let's not.

Speaker 1:

Is it bad that I'm like at least she's not white? Oh, I mean, yeah, like he all his women that he with is women of color like black women. He's just destroying all women of color. He's not destroying anything.

Speaker 2:

He's out there creating beautiful blended families he is sprinkling trauma nuggets everywhere. No, don't do that. Jr went back to school. He played golf at the school.

Speaker 1:

Don't do that, jr that guy JR, he played golf, yeah, he out there changing the community.

Speaker 2:

He's emotionally mature because he played some goddamn golf 100% and I just want to congratulate them for, you know, bringing in this new life into the world. I hope he got just as good as a jump shot as JR.

Speaker 1:

Candace is better than the wife.

Speaker 2:

Not even, it's not even, it's not even close there's there's few women who are in candace's she.

Speaker 1:

She looked like savannah but like poor savannah grew up poor yeah, but like she looks like poor savannah now I mean that's messed up.

Speaker 2:

Is that even possible? That's disrespectful, though that's that's crazy disrespectful to say.

Speaker 1:

Because they got money.

Speaker 2:

No, All I'm saying is I mean?

Speaker 1:

he wasn't no max max player.

Speaker 2:

He played good, but he wasn't no 100% max player, Okay, so I mean he made good money. He's not even the best, but still he was a six man of the year and he out here, him and Candace been going at it since he was a player, so I've been seeing reports about them for a while.

Speaker 1:

You should be ashamed of yourself, ma'am.

Speaker 2:

Hey, shout out to y'all I'm glad to see this beautiful family that y'all creating. And no, y'all got to keep. You know doing what y'all doing, Because that's the beautiful thing out there, so creating beautiful black love, All right. So before I play the music, Candace was in the game. You know the show that I love watching.

Speaker 4:

I'm a game historian.

Speaker 2:

She was actually Malik's side chick, or like one of his little throw around. Just a historic side chick, and she was his assistant too, I think. But like it was just hilarious just seeing that she was a side chick. And another side note the person who played her stepmom in the Flash was also one of Malik's sidechains on the game. Same season, Same season too. That's crazy. All right, let's get to the music. So this is not the Kurt Cobain right, the one that we had.

Speaker 1:

No.

Speaker 2:

Okay, this is Cash Cobain. This they version of him.

Speaker 1:

This a very talented Young black man.

Speaker 9:

From New York. Ask me if you wanna pull up. Just a gift. Here's the addy girl, that pussy, perfect way. I got progress at papa. Addy pussy tastes like rum punch. While it took us one touch, knock out one punch. Eat enough for lunch plus making her a sunset you ain't make her come once and he produces all his own music.

Speaker 9:

Don't be asking questions like an interview, because you really know what we finna do. I ain't got a touch with every feeling. You yeah'all moves out, but I'm in a new one. I said you go ahead and send me you any catch up in, but I'm a big tool If you got a man with a bit of rules. If I was a man, I'll be telling to. If you really want to bring up, it's all way. Don't matter, cuz I'm a little when it comes to the general.

Speaker 2:

We look like eight bags. For bad Okay.

Speaker 9:

You know who 4BATS is? Is that a fat joke? Yeah, we know he's fat. It's so funny how these young niggas get off.

Speaker 1:

They bars were what we used to do when we used to get high, high and right.

Speaker 2:

This is way better than what you used to know. We used to say stuff just like they say I promise you I was around that time.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, yeah, I haven't seen this video. I feel like this is what his sale looked like. Don't be petty already. You smoke Zesso. You stress boy. That's Reggie Already got cadets in my set. Who up next boy?

Speaker 2:

I feel like this is what his sale looked like when he was locked up on the seas. Probably they're nice. Those are not nice, but they're just For a jail cell.

Speaker 5:

Get your gun shit. Fuck the funk shit. Fuck up the funk shit With the dumb shit. Don't give a fuck shit. Eating lamb chops on the block when we was broke Even I was poor I was out here eating goat. Mary had a little lamb, but my mama need a coat. Yeah, I had a Sherri-Land and a Gucci link at 4 years old. I'm too swift, go tell, tell about this shit. I'm too swift now, go tell, tell about this shit. Don't be surprised when my man's Instagram caption is I'm too swift.

Speaker 1:

Don't tell about this shit. Fly nigga bars is all I need from you.

Speaker 5:

You know, the only thing I gotta say we gon' freak, we gon' freak, we gon' hoe uh, she on me, she on me, she on me. I like seeing.

Speaker 9:

Tyler's influence on things. She on green, she on green, she on gold. Uh, I'm 2G, she a greed, I'm a gold gold. Gotta keep it low, bro. It has visuals. We're always Chokin' on me. No, dope, dope, chokin' on me. You hoes, bro, I'm gonna sit, go tell, tell about this shit.

Speaker 5:

I'm too swift now go tell. Tell about this shit. Go to my teller. Got me dripped like shit. Go to my teller. Got me dripped up in a pit. I'm too swift, don't tell. Tell about this shit. I'm too swift, don't tell. Tell about that shit. Go to my teller. Got me dripped up in a pit. I'm too swift, don't tell. Tell about this shit. I like that outfit. Alrighty, I'm too sweet. Don't tell. Tell about this shit.

Speaker 1:

Alrighty.

Speaker 3:

Are you tired of paying a lot of money for your vacation? My name is Shirley Proctor and I am a partner with Tavonian, a traveling membership group. I can help you save time, money, help you and your loved ones see the world so tell frank, leave the boy alone before you call out your head again.

Speaker 2:

You know what, my god, you know what he said. You know what he said out of your mouth.

Speaker 1:

That's hate every single episode.

Speaker 10:

Yo, that's hate do nothing.

Speaker 1:

I can't enjoy anything without this man being like oh, but drink.

Speaker 2:

Oh. I didn't say nothing. All I said was tell fring ass.

Speaker 1:

Fring should tell you leave the boy alone let's start the show that's all right because you starting the show with glazing, and I don't like that. That's not the type of people we are at all all right, you're now listening to talk fnf tv.

Speaker 2:

I'm your host rhetoric, and I'm, with my lovely and amazing and sometimes a hater co-host, miss reality hi, I'm not a hater.

Speaker 1:

You just started off with the hazing.

Speaker 2:

I didn't hate all I said was just what the line said glazing that's all I want, that's all I had to say, that's all I had to bring up.

Speaker 1:

Bringing it up was glazing I'm just keeping it real. What's on the docket?

Speaker 2:

well, I think we let everybody know we survived the storm. I think that should be important to note, because this thing has been crazy. Uh, so helene right helene, helene.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, okay, so hurricane helene, I think it's helene might be.

Speaker 2:

Uh, you know it's gone now so she's dissipated. I think it was like a tropical storm, really wasn't it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it wasn't really a hurricane. Yeah it was. It was categorized as tropical storm, I think after the fact probably it depends.

Speaker 2:

Like the water is has something to do with what names it, apparently like the temperature of the water, whatever we didn't get it too bad. Yeah, no, we were lucky, we were at we were actually really fortunate like the tree fell down like right in the middle of the road.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but that's because we're not in Atlanta.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Atlanta got it worse, like there was a lot of flooding in Atlanta, but we're not actually in Atlanta, just miscellaneously in Georgia.

Speaker 2:

No, I mean, we're fortunate with a lot of stuff that happened. But I mean, like the storm that just came through, it, just like I said, knocked down trees, upset a lot of things, upset a lot of things, and then, if you look up around the country, places in florida, north carolina, have just been decimated.

Speaker 1:

Ashville, north carolina they had like a levee break or something like that yeah, they even had floods in the mountain towns, yeah, so they were. The appalachians were fucked up, which how is how does that?

Speaker 2:

but there are lower parts, so, yeah, there's water that goes up and down and stuff like that that's why they had those kind of dams up there, so those certain places can't exist the way that they do. So I mean it's just crazy because, like a lot of people are starting to do, you know some research about, you know what's out there in that area and come to find out like lithium is like one of the biggest products in that area. So I found this video that I found really interesting. That kind of broke this down a little bit are we putting our tin hats on?

Speaker 2:

oh for sure.

Speaker 1:

Okay, let's just warn the people that these are tin hats. These are hey, I'm tin hat, I'm a tin hattian, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

I got mine ready, prepared I'm. I. Mine is really invisible. I keep it on at all times, actually, if I'm being dead ass I stay with the tin foil going on, uh, but let me see if I can find this clip, because this was really, really interesting about it. What he was basically talking about was all the reserves that was in the area, the fact that a lot of the mining, uh that they were trying to do, they were trying to open it up more and they were kind of being reluctant.

Speaker 1:

Let me see where is that uh I mean, if they're trying to mine more than would a hurricane and like sediment settling and stuff different places, would that not make it more difficult?

Speaker 2:

Not necessarily because, in regards to what they were doing, they were trying to bring out get. The people were resisting, they didn't want the mining to expand.

Speaker 4:

So here we go, I got it right here, I think something's going on, so I decided to do some digging. So the first thing I find out is North Carolina has the richest deposits of lithium in the entire world. Yeah, lithium for, like cars, batteries, all that. Then I find out they have the world's highest purity quartz deposits, and that quartz just so happens to be the world's supply for ai chips, microchips and all kinds of stuff. We're talking a 530 billion dollar industry. So this is where it gets interesting.

Speaker 4:

So a company by the name of piedmont lithium is awaiting a state mining permit for a site in northern gaston county, and gaston county is completely flooded right now. The project was awaiting zoning approval because they were getting backlash from the residents and also city officials, and this lithium mine they want would be the third largest producer of lithium in the world, and they made a deal with Tesla already. Now remember the quartz. So in Spruce Pine, north Carolina, right next to Ashland, they are wanting to expand their mines even larger, and the residents aren't having it either. Enter the floods People. These are mountain towns. It rarely, if not ever, floods in the mountains. I would know. I grew up in the mountains in Colorado which means none of these people have flood insurance. I mean the media is saying biblical devastation in north carolina, aka like the worst thing that could happen, and you're not coming back from it. Read between the lines, people.

Speaker 1:

Everything happens for a reason this feels like white katrina this is only interesting if you think that, like they have weather machines.

Speaker 2:

No, the thing is like this. It's not about weather machines. You know that storms and stuff are going to come around. What you do is you poorly plant the infrastructure. You make it so that, when something does happen, this bad result is the cause.

Speaker 1:

How long would that take, not?

Speaker 2:

long, all you got to do is disregard regulations, or disregard or change regulations.

Speaker 1:

For how long for this to happen?

Speaker 2:

It just depends on what's going on, what's the conflict in the area, just like what they do overseas. You assess the conflict in the area, what's going on, what's the best way to eliminate it, and then you create that problem and it doesn't necessarily. Like I said, these are essentially probably levees being broken, not necessarily water flooding like normal route, because, like I said, it's a mountain town, so you could easily weaken infrastructure, don't have certain things regulated the right way and just set it up so that when a problem does arise and we get our you know, hurricanes that happen, tropical storms that these

Speaker 9:

things happen.

Speaker 2:

They could have set this, you know. So this could have happened based off of a thunderstorm. All they need to do is the water to come out of that area, and now you flooded out the whole area and now, now these people got to move, you're doing the same thing that they tried to do in hawaii. It's to me it's not a weather controlling thing, more so than it is taking advantage of areas that are prone to disaster. You know, I'm saying you can track these kind of things that you know. Hey, this area has been hit this multiple times. Okay, what's going on now? We just got a plan, so it's not necessarily like they got the weather machines, like I think that that's what people love to do and say, because that just sounds like, oh, the craziest conspiracy yeah but it's not.

Speaker 2:

It's just doing poor infrastructure, not investing in certain things. So then when a disaster does happen, it is so rich to be able to be uh, it's to be taken advantage of, because a lot of these times, if you think about just how things are set up like oil and all that kind of things, like how it takes something to die, decay millions and millions of years and all that other stuff, like you have to think, okay, it has to be in an area that's going to be, um, active in regards to thunderstorms, things dying, decaying, all that kind of stuff. So like our resources are largely in places that have disasters like this yeah, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, just for them. That's what kind of creates it over time, if you kind of think about it. But no, um, I just think this is really crazy. Um, I'm so glad we weren't affected in a real way, because we could have easily been. We got trees around us.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like a lot of trees.

Speaker 2:

Just so, just so many stories of people's houses just being decimated just because the tree just went through it.

Speaker 1:

And we got really lucky because the tree that fell only fell on our lawn and my mom was like pissed off about yeah, it didn't mess up the lawn though.

Speaker 2:

We just put new down new grass. Yeah, I can understand.

Speaker 1:

That's, that's the luckiest problem to have. Oh, for sure, a lot of people yeah.

Speaker 2:

So I'm definitely empathize with anybody who is in kind of struggle. They had to put FEMA out there. It's nasty.

Speaker 1:

And I just hope that people are able to get back to normal and they're not being taken advantage of by these companies and these corporations that are just trying to mine the world for nothing. And then imagine if you're in a, in an emergency that's more dire than ours because, like, we live at a dead end and there's a, there's a tree at the end of our block. So, like I joe's only one day where I was like inconvenienced and I couldn't go anywhere, but they, like my husband and a couple of the neighbors, were the ones that like cleaned up the tree enough for people to drive past. They didn't get that bitch till like a week later yeah, today like that's crazy.

Speaker 1:

Imagine like if you have no power, if there's like or there's a bunch of elderly people on the street yeah like no, I could have been really nasty.

Speaker 2:

That's what I was worried about because, like I had started, when I first seen the tree go down, I started trying to break it up to make an opening, because I'm just thinking about anybody else in the neighborhood that can need to go through there and I was just like I would hate for like somebody to need to go get their medicine, or they ran out, or they in a medical emergency, and now those precious seconds are being lost because this tree is right here.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you gotta order a uber to the end of the block and walk down there to go get your your life-saving.

Speaker 2:

No, somebody did do that medicine somebody did order uber to uber try to drive through our grass. He was like nah, I knew he ain't doing that yeah he's not doing that big dog.

Speaker 2:

But no, the storm just turns you into just like. Just I'm just thinking about like how events like this kind of can turn sane and well, you would think, particularly sane individuals or folks who maybe would be more rational, and then they'll just turn into like the darkest individual because of what's going on, like the lack of power, lack of resources, being scared of what's going to be next, like I could just imagine the families that are just like tearing each other apart right now because of that yeah, it's that's wild man, that's probably a little dramatic, but yeah I'm just saying like I mean, I could tell you some stories, um, but no, uh, anything else we didn't wrap.

Speaker 2:

It was anything that you heard about this. That was kind of in this vein with the conspiracies, because I've been seeing a lot with just no, I didn't see any conspiracies about the hurricane.

Speaker 1:

I saw that there are two more on the way.

Speaker 2:

It just feels like we're never prepared Every time these happen and we feel like we know the whole trajectory of these, where they're going to come at, and then every like we know the whole trajectory of these, where they're going to come at, and then every year we just get no everybody.

Speaker 1:

Everybody is warned, people are told to evacuate, and then I can literally pull up like at least seven people on TikTok who were like, oh, this isn't going to be as serious as they say it's going to be, and then we're like holy shit we're in actual danger. We should have evacuated, but some people don't know.

Speaker 2:

because so many people who like if they are telling you in your area that it is dangerous you need to evacuate immediately, then you need to fucking do so. Well, if you have the means to be able to do so, I completely understand that. But we know that there are tons of people who can't just evacuate yeah, if that's the case, then okay.

Speaker 1:

But like everyone that I saw documents, I'm like, oh, it's not going to be that bad.

Speaker 6:

They're lying to us, I mean.

Speaker 2:

I think that there is some people who do kind of underestimate weather and the impacts that it can really have.

Speaker 1:

Mother Nature is not the bitch that you need to underestimate, but a lot of those people go through so many storms.

Speaker 2:

Especially when you live that close to the water, you go through those storms all the time. Like when I was down by savannah going to school, we used to have storms all the time because that was just kind of part of the environment, because we were like minutes away from a beach, yeah, so you just kind of expect that kind of weather.

Speaker 1:

You don't ever realize it's going to get that bad I went to school at in my dorm was like beachfront and every time they told us to evacuate, the whole school shut down. They was like go home, leave your dorm.

Speaker 2:

But see, that's crazy too, because some people that dorm is they home.

Speaker 2:

You know what I'm saying, so yeah, I just there were situations where like that was it just feels like these proc, these process, that for like evacuating, and just even the response to the disaster just seems so underfunded, so undermanned, Cause I remember I used to, I used to work with this girl who used to work for FEMA and she used to tell me like oh, you should get into it. It's like you know, it's really interesting. You travel a lot. Uh, you're around everywhere.

Speaker 7:

Like you pretty much, drop off a hat and then you've gone here, here, here, but I don't know.

Speaker 2:

She said the money was okay. Situations though, yeah, but I mean it's heavily protected and you got folks that's trained and stuff like that. Yeah, very rarely you're in a hostile situation.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying no, it's just like I mean yeah, it's just more flooding and stuff like that, not hostile, and like yeah, there's like other humans people attacking you yeah but no, uh but no.

Speaker 2:

I just think it's just so undermanned and underfunded and I think it's just sad because it's like it's always the bottom of the people and they don't understand that like these these some rednecks, like these some mountain men rednecks up there yeah, then got affected.

Speaker 2:

Fema's budget gets cut like every year yeah, I mean it keeps getting cut they always take away from it and they, they, like we're just supposed to just accept it, like that's supposed to be for us, but when we in national natural disasters we've seen the impact and then what they don't.

Speaker 2:

What it seems like too, though, when you go back to the katrina shit and even probably with these things that happen in, uh, the mountain towns or whatever, like it's just infrastructure people, but no, I just think that needs to be something that's probably brought into question, because that shit that biden said was kind of nuts. When they caught him like talking at the, uh, at the airport, he was like we've done enough. Yeah, like I don't think he realized what he was saying or the way he was saying it, but that's how what he was like we've done enough like these.

Speaker 1:

This is all I can do for y'all.

Speaker 2:

I mean, and I think, what he means is like we've maxed out what the money will allow for. But you can't say that to americans in a national disaster like, that's just not, especially in these times when we're, when everybody's under the impression that you're giving blank checks to other countries. So all right, no, but no, we also.

Speaker 1:

We got going on too there's a lot going on in atlanta.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it's right at home, besides the storm yeah we didn't have to feel like a biological attack now that's what it feels like by nature, and now it's a bio attack so, essentially, if you're not aware back, uh, it was a few days ago, right, probably three or four days ago yeah, it was like two, three days ago had to be during the weekend had to be saturday, I think, when it happened yeah, I'll look it up while you talk.

Speaker 2:

No, I think it was definitely saturday when it happened, a bio lab, which is? It was basically a place where they held like chlorine and like stuff for pools. Uh, their sprinkler system went off.

Speaker 2:

They had a chemical in there that reacted with water and what it made it do basically is the water like caught fire and it was a chemical fire the fire erupted, the like looks like the almost part of the wing of a building and because it's kind of like more of like not a studio setup but more of a garage setup, where it kind of looks like. I'm just saying, I used to live right by it, so I know where this place is, and it's kind of like a garage-looking setup.

Speaker 2:

But no, you see the smoke coming out and it's like a dark red Like the pictures I saw it was dark red, then it went into kind of a black and then grayish like uh flow to it. But just to imagine all those chemicals just getting burnt up and put into the air. They trying to tell us, oh, we don't got nothing to worry about. But there's tons of counts of people saying they're being lightheaded, they're not feeling good. The air quality has been shown to be real poor yeah, they said, um, stay inside.

Speaker 1:

And then there was a um, uh press conference. I was watching and, um, she said, she said that, uh, it affects your, your mucus membrane, so, like your nose, your throat, your air passage, if you already have, like pre-existing conditions that affect those things, that it's going to exacerbate your those pre-existing conditions and to stay inside. And if you have an hvac system that pulls air from outside, keep it off so basically, be hot as fuck in your house fucking suffer no, they're just.

Speaker 2:

It seems interesting too, because I have somebody that I I used to work with and I seen them talking about it and they took. They said that this same place has had multiple instances of fires or like, um, you know, just different emergencies there in regards to, like, different things going off and different issues, like three times in the last seven years almost, and apparently it was like 2016, 2020 and now this year. What do all those years have in common?

Speaker 2:

election years that is very interesting and telling. I'm not saying that they'd hit us with a bio weapon, that they're trying to get all the people, because I will say, last year georgia was a state that changed a lot of shit yeah georgia. Georgia flipped. Normally it was a blue blue state last year. Uh, a lot of those people are older black people in in atlanta. I'm just saying now putting my tinfoil hat that's always on. Maybe they trying to get rid of old black voters.

Speaker 1:

See you'd be hating on me it's just so crazy because like they're not gonna die before november oh, why, why not? Like this is not like wasn't.

Speaker 2:

Granny on that ventilator going crazy right now.

Speaker 1:

It wasn't something that was like so widely like that would work that well, like, first of all, you would have to have the pre-existing condition for you to be negatively affected by it.

Speaker 2:

Have you seen Static Shock?

Speaker 1:

That already takes a lot of people out of the ring.

Speaker 2:

This is the bang baby right here. This is the big bang that they did a static shock. This is what that was. They trying to turn the black people into mutants I want to re-watch static a decade. A decade and some change too early remember it was 2012 it's true. Remember it was 2012. We was all supposed to get our powers yeah, what happened to that? Was it 2012 or was it?

Speaker 1:

no, it wasn't 2012, I think it was 2020 it was 2020, it was, it was 2020. We never got the big bang power, so maybe this was supposed to be a bunch of stuff that was supposed to align or some shit like that, and we were supposed to get our powers.

Speaker 2:

but I don't like that. I don't know. I don't like the fact that this smoke was red in the water.

Speaker 1:

That that castle castle eyes um Cal Calcine line, jesus Christ, um the calcicoline. Oh, jesus christ, what is the word? I'm looking for calcimide. Oh shit, see, both of us, the penile gland. Y'all know what I'm talking about. I'm trying to, I'm trying to get in my hotep bag oh shit. That's why we couldn't say it was hotep jargon uh, but no, I know what you're talking about calcify, yeah, our penile gland yes, we know words, guys, I promise no, that's not what they're doing, man.

Speaker 2:

They're trying to turn us into super humans so they can other us again even more. Now you're black super humans can't have that.

Speaker 1:

Super niggas, more divisiveness.

Speaker 2:

Super soldier niggas community they're gonna call us super gangbangers.

Speaker 1:

Remember super predators yeah, we was already super to begin with so now?

Speaker 2:

now, what are we? They're trying to give us extraordinary gifts not, but I mean atlanta just got to be looking out, man. We might need to get a class action lawsuit together. You know what I'm saying. I'm worried because, like you know I'm saying, I grew I used to grow up outside of there. Now it's not too far from where this happened at. You know what I'm saying. I got people that stay close by. I'm concerned.

Speaker 1:

My throat hurt a little bit.

Speaker 2:

You know what I mean. We need to get a class. My throat been hurting. I'm not been able to move at my same speed. I'm starting to feel a little bit slower than I used to be. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

So I need to get a check.

Speaker 2:

I need the damn mayor trying to go on. Oh, we're gonna be okay. No, nigga, fuck you.

Speaker 1:

You bring it in cop city and you bring it in this, this gas literally, it's a hot mess you need to be stopped, sir, because this is unacceptable I thought cop city was gonna be a thing, they opening cop cities in all the black cities and then they trying to try to do some shit where they telling people they can go into the office.

Speaker 2:

Nigga, the office is where it's smugged up. The haze is in the city. Why are we gonna go to the offices in the city?

Speaker 1:

yeah, that's crazy you try.

Speaker 2:

You threw a nuclear bomb. Just seems like a bioweapon. You need to leave atlanta into the black mecca and then you expect us just to go in that motherfucker. Like it's all good, I'm just glad we were, it was conyers right well, it started in conyers but it blew through atlanta up to quinnette okay so we were fortunate because it blew north yeah so we're south, so we were the opposite direction yeah, we're generally we'd be okay no, I mean, it easily could have been our way, just we just got lucky to where the wind was going.

Speaker 2:

The wing of these have been blowing another way and been down this way Because they were still closing off schools and stuff out here. A lot of the schools got no come in Wednesday or that Thursday and that Friday.

Speaker 1:

I know them kids was hype as fuck.

Speaker 2:

Oh, and Monday, Monday too.

Speaker 1:

Because they was out last week because of the hurricane and then they out this week too. They barely going to school for real, yeah.

Speaker 2:

So no, we just got to be mindful of that for sure. Yeah, so no, we just got to be mindful of that for sure. But we're done, keep tabs on what's going on. So we'll get on that. Now we got to get into what I want to get into. You know what I'm excited about. You know what got my blood boiling? We got this longshore shoreman strike and I'm excited. Yeah, he's always excited about strikes. This dude is my kind of hombre too. Yo Like he out here. He ain't taking no mess, he talking big boy shit and he letting these folks know like I didn't even know. They try to use this as a criticism of him. He's been like stopping automation at the ports.

Speaker 1:

What does that mean?

Speaker 2:

Like he's stopping them to be able to go computerize everything and take away people's jobs, like that's one of his biggest fights. It's like, oh no, we're not bringing in. He was like that was the reason. One of his issues was like they were circumventing the contract because they were doing some automation shit where they were having this stuff as soon as they come in, it was already there and it was like already in the system. So he was like nah, y'all circumventing the contract, y'all doing it wrong. Let me get my boy man. Hold on, I got a couple ones I want to play, but I want to make sure I get them right. Okay, here we go.

Speaker 11:

Secretary of Labor, julie Su has been terrific. Shout out to my boy union president. Harold Daggett, I know you got made fun of when you was a young man, it, you was a young man, talk about it. We just caught them in Mobile, alabama, called AutoGate, and that means the trucks are coming in and they're already checked in somewhere else and not using the checkers in the ILA, circumventing the contract. They don't care, they don't care.

Speaker 11:

It's not fair and if we don't put our foot down now, they would like to run over us, and we're not going to allow that. I like how he got in the hype man. Oh, they would like to run over us and we're not going to allow that. I like how he got in the economy to a halt here on the East Coast and the Gulf Coast. Talk about it.

Speaker 7:

Are you worried that this strike is going to hurt the everyday American, the farmers that need to reach the export market? They're telling me that they're going to hurt through all of this.

Speaker 11:

Now you start to realize who the longshoremen are. Right, People never gave a s*** about us until now when they finally realized that the chain is being broke now. Cars won't come in, food won't come in, clothing won't come in. You know how many people depend on our jobs Half the world and it's time for them and time for Washington to put so much pressure on them to take care of us, because we took care of them for 135 years and brought them where they are today and they don't want to share. Fox Business Lydia Hood.

Speaker 2:

Yo shout out to Harold Daggett one more time.

Speaker 1:

It's just so crazy that we generally have been so brainwashed to think that like unions and strikes are a bad thing when they're like the most american thing yo, this is what this country was founded upon it's literally the most beautiful part of being an american, like being a part of a union and being able to strike and stand up for yourself and make sure that you, your livelihood, is not at stake and people aren't like uh just drowning you out yeah, exploiting you completely like it's.

Speaker 2:

It's the most american thing possible and it's funny too, because I had put it in my group chat. Right, you know me, I'm supporting them, I'm telling everybody what's going on and stuff like that. I'm telling everybody they need to expect, like potentially we might have some more. You know prices increase. You know I've been telling people just to be aware, uh, just in case you have certain price increase because you know, just because they don't bring in everything from those ports doesn't mean other companies and people aren't going to use it to increase prices and say, oh well, well, the ports. When it's like yo, you didn't get your your ports from there, you come from the west coast, what are you talking?

Speaker 1:

about. Yeah, there are a lot of things that aren't going to be affected at all because they don't come from the. The east eastern port that's being affected. West side already went through their shit, they settled, they're fine. And then north and south, they're also fine.

Speaker 2:

East Coast yeah, east Coast, and a little bit of the Gulf yeah, that's what they represent.

Speaker 1:

That's being affected right now, which it's significant.

Speaker 2:

No it's going to be a lot going through. There's a lot of things that need to go out there.

Speaker 1:

That go out that direction. It is significant, it's going-standing problem. I think it is a very good opportunity for americans to find local farmers and get your food from from there and, um, maybe consider starting a homestead of some sort and growing a couple things on your own if you have the the space to do so or, and if you don't like, just being able to just find opportunities to be able to extend those things to other people, like getting those little uh, what are the kitchens and stuff like that they have?

Speaker 2:

or what's a little when they collect all the food for the, for the community, what are those called they're?

Speaker 7:

I don't know, I just I forgot what it's, I don't know, food banks, yeah, food banks.

Speaker 2:

So you know just the opportunity for food banks to be able to operate with those kind of company stuff too. That could be really good.

Speaker 1:

And we also have reserves of like a lot of things that'll hold us over for a good amount of time. But if this lasts longer than expected, then we will be affected. But I don't think need to be as freaked out as you think you should, and if you live somewhere like georgia, where you can literally find a farmer's market in 10 minutes in every direction, like I think we'll be fine but also a lot of people just gonna buy out.

Speaker 2:

They said they was clearing out the shelves already because you don't need to do that people react like that all the time.

Speaker 2:

But no, I was saying people, I was telling my friends about this because I wanted them to make sure they knew what was going on, and just telling them to support and stuff. And so my one of my homeboys, who they tried to at least assassinate this man's character to me sends me this post where he says Harold Daggett, the ILA boss who pledged to cripple the United States, owns a 76 foot yacht, a Bentley, and gets paid nine hundred nine hundred K a year. He was acquitted in the R rico charges after the main witness against him, mobster lawrence ritchie, was found decomposed in a car truck in new jersey. I feel like I even I like him even more. This is my kind of dude, like hey the money wise. He represents a large port, a large group of people, so I'm not caring about that. If you're going to do some yachts and all that stuff, you're helping working people get more money, so I'm not upset that you make money off of helping people do that.

Speaker 2:

He's not staying quiet and hoarding money for himself and then you go into here with these rico charges and saying he's associated to mobsters. Hey, I hate to wake it up to you. If you go back to the history of unions in this country, they have all been historically attached to the mob or some type of illicit crime like. That's literally where it kind of all started. That's where they got the capital to do so. It used to be when the uh, your boss pissed you off or was giving you your paycheck. You called the local gangbangers and they went up there and showed them a lesson. That's why I get so mad on this show when we talk about these folks who act like they hard. They act like they gangsters and y'all are nothing like the real gangsters of the past. Y'all don't do nothing for the community. The way the real people in the streets used to go out there used to make for motherfucking trash used to be piled up there until the trash man got their money gangs and mobs like there were in the past, past, past past.

Speaker 2:

There were it's not that far ago though there were definitely yeah, like the 50s and the 40s.

Speaker 1:

Well, I'm just saying 50s and 40s, like but like they, definitely a lot of them started as like community organizing and helping the community. And when you're helping the community, sometimes you're directly going against the government and you're doing shit that is technically illegal, but the laws aren't like in place to help people. So if you actually want to help people, then you got to break some laws sometimes.

Speaker 2:

I mean, that's how, if you look at history and you look at when they implemented these Rico laws and all that stuff was around the same time, uh, union started to fall because the backbone laws were for mobs yeah, but the backbone of a lot of these unions were these mobsters.

Speaker 2:

So to see at least somebody who, uh, espouses not about, espouses some of the old teachings of that and is using that with his men now, that to me is a great thing. We need that because we've lacked it for so long yeah, I didn't know.

Speaker 1:

The unions and the the mobs had like a a connection. Did you know that the sanitation department in new york, specifically, is basically run by the mobs?

Speaker 2:

that's what I'm saying. That was what I was saying about the trash bags that is one of the best jobs to have.

Speaker 1:

Like it's known, if you live in new york, to work in sanitation is one of the best jobs you can have. Like it's very fair wages.

Speaker 2:

Like you get paid, you get paid uh, the dude who danny used to do the show with, uh shammy, he used to be in sanitation in new york and he said when he was doing it they would get paid nine uh hour days. But what they would do was while they was leaving to go to work they would collect all the trash, can trash in their prospective areas and put it on the corner. So they would just wake up early, get all the trash, can trash in their prospective areas and put it on a corner. So they would just wake up early, get all the trash in their areas and then go to work and then they'll come in. All the trash is already in the different little corners for them. They come in, scoop up them little areas. They work three hours and they get paid for nine hours. He got a whole day just to do what he want that's amazing.

Speaker 1:

Did you also know that eric adams did a whole initiative where he gave New Yorkers trash cans, which made the rats situation worse?

Speaker 2:

I can imagine Now you're giving them a place to be warm.

Speaker 1:

Come on my nigga Research please. We need alleys with dumpsters. That's the thing that New York is missing. There are no alleys with dumpsters that all of the trash can go in. There needs to be designated spaces for trash, not just on the motherfucking streets. Trash day in new york, in manhattan, in brooklyn if you live in like places like that because I'm from queens, we could never. It don't smell bad over there, but in manhattan, in new york, trash day, it smells like garbage in the entire city.

Speaker 2:

When I used to live there hey, but no, back to the, just the union talk. They also say amazon. Uh, people are preparing to strike as well y'all should.

Speaker 1:

It's a slave ship over there for 100 it's a slave ship.

Speaker 2:

Y'all cannot even take breaks to pee for real I've been man, the folks that I know they used to work at amazon was always stressed out. They was always saying that they couldn't get they product the production or whatnot, like it was just a situation that you were set up to fail and I've worked in in little factories like that. I used to work for a walmart factory where we was in production dumb shit. They they literally make production in a way so that you can't get. Especially when you do it out here in the south. It's so bad because you don't have no kind of protections. You can't do no fucking, especially in georgia no fucking.

Speaker 1:

Uh, unions can't have any real power because you can't require the whole uh, every time you get hired in georgia they sit you down and they're like unions are bad if anybody talks about unions.

Speaker 2:

Let us know snitch like I'm not, you know what I'm just saying that's, we just tell you what our, our reality is, and they'll, they'll definitely set you up, especially down here in the south, with that but I just I love to see that.

Speaker 2:

I wish more people could understand the importance of it. I think it's important on us to be able to do that with our platform, just to be able to speak on it, because this is real shit, man like you deserve more. You shouldn't take this as them defying other americans. They're showing other americans how to stand up for themselves, and that's what's important and we all should be doing that. Everybody should be going to their job and doing the same thing these gentlemen are doing if they're not getting what they want out of it that's just a hundred percent, man, I'm just being that, that's just it's also a like being a longshoreman is not the safest fucking job either.

Speaker 1:

It's a dangerous job and pay them the the men. It's mostly men pay the people.

Speaker 2:

And I think he said something really important too about how they looked out for him on covid. I think it was more than just making sure products were still moving and stay flow, because I don't know if y'all remember during covid, but there was a lot of discussion about how stuff was just sitting on boats. Nobody was moving, nothing, nobody was taking anything off. We had the products here, they were, just nobody was taking it off the boat. And do we know that? Maybe he was doing that because he was making sure that it was happening for a certain reason, because he said specifically in this we held y'all down during covid and I think that was more than just a shot at saying that to the american people. I think that was more so of a shot at uh, you know the companies and the corporations on. Maybe they kept a little hush hush for him in exchange for a big payday when the inflation and all that shit picked up for it for it I don't know, because he said man, y'all.

Speaker 2:

We ain't talking about millions, no more. We talking about billions. But I do don't think that's cool that they're still operating with military funds. I didn't think that. I don't like that. They're still moving the military products and stuff like that. I don't think that's cool. I think they shouldn't be doing that. I think y'all should do a full stand on. I know this was built on you know being for america and all that other shit. Fuck that.

Speaker 1:

If they not respecting you, don't respect the military either I feel like uh, they, they seem because if that's more like tyrants, if they're not doing that, because there are a lot of people who view the american, the american military, as the heroes well, I mean, then if you're doing military shit, then you also got to think about medicine.

Speaker 2:

If they do that, anything that priority? Because now why are you gonna say just the?

Speaker 1:

yeah, military is priority in each.

Speaker 2:

That's what I'm saying, so so now that you're making this special exemption for the military, gets priority. What's in each? That's what I'm saying. So, now that you're making this special exemption for the military, what about all the people that's sick, all the people who need it?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, fuck those people.

Speaker 2:

To me that's fucked up. We might as well just say a strong line against everybody, say fuck everybody until we get our money.

Speaker 1:

Even the military. I get where they're coming from too, because they need a leg to stand on.

Speaker 2:

I coming from too, because they need a leg to stand on. I mean, I don't think the military is gonna be the one that's gonna help them, definitely not the military. Don't have nothing but the military. So I watched a debate with uh walls and, and it was jd vance yeah, his name is he's just such like a nerdy looking like.

Speaker 2:

He's like the frat dude who's only there because he's a legacy and he don't fit in at all like he's the one that's always saying the weird shit, always like uh, making the girls like want to leave the party, like he just gives me those vibes all the time he's just around because his dad wrote a big check like his whole vibe.

Speaker 2:

When I watched the debate this morning I rewatched well, I didn't, I rewatched. I watched it this morning because I've been watching last night. But uh, when I watched it it was like he was like the dude who would get pissed off if she woke up off the roofie. Like, oh, you're not gonna wake up off the roofie like like that's just how he gets.

Speaker 1:

He would just been so insulted so he fucked the couch like whoa, I just need to like. Every time we bring jd vance up like I need, I need to let y'all know. He fucked the couch and then wrote about it in a book and then had it redacted from said book. But then he thought it was okay enough to put in a book. Continue.

Speaker 2:

Overall, I don't think Walls did anything too impressive during it, because they did catch him in some little discussions where they said he misspoke or regarding, like the team square or whatever him being there. But like JD misspoke or regarding, like the team square or whatever, him being there, but like jd in china. Yeah, he said he was there, uh, that spring, but actually he was there like later on that summer come on, but he said he was

Speaker 2:

like he did say he viewed some of the like the, the riots and stuff that was still happening out there yeah but it was just a misspoke, according to what he said. But jd just looked way worse, like there was one point where he brought up the haitian thing again and he wasn't about the dogs, it was just about them being in the country and leave us alone.

Speaker 1:

When did this start?

Speaker 2:

and then the the speaker corrected him and was like you know, the haitian people there are legal, like they're legally allowed to be in the country they've been brought here for through certain channels, and he goes oh, I thought you guys weren't supposed to fact check me. Literally he says that in in the midst of the of the debate. Oh, I thought the rules weren't, you know, fact checking. What the fuck?

Speaker 1:

like you are. Why would that? Why would those be the rules, though? But?

Speaker 2:

even if it was the rules or wasn't. What does that make sense when you're saying oh, don't check my lies like that's literally what he said? Yeah, because he was the one who pushed the dog shit. He was the main one pushing that dog shit about and he knew it and even said he found oh, it wasn't that.

Speaker 2:

Uh, you know, wasn't true, it wasn't real, whatever, but still we got these migrants. But like for you to say that, and then your response to is to talk about an app that helps people seek asylum, meaning that they're still here legally, they're not here illegally, they're documented. Like the point that you're trying to make, there's just like, oh, it's so easy to get into this country or whatever, the point of illegal immigration or the reason why it's so problematic because these people are not documented. If we have documentation of these people here, they can be monitored. And then this idea that they're like affecting the economy just far isn't true. Like it, this guy just went up there and it was just so ridiculous. Like everything he went to was like oh, how are we gonna help housing?

Speaker 1:

oh, mass deportation get them all out of here there's not like. Are the illim? Are the illegal immigrants the reason that there are no homes available, or is it people who are citizens who are no, no, the illegal immigrants that can't get a loan from a bank, they're.

Speaker 1:

They're definitely the ones out here buying up all the houses come on, you have to, you have to critically think a little bit more and not just let these trigger words walls angry walls did talk about the corporations being able to buy up, you know, the single family homes and stuff like that.

Speaker 2:

But again, Vance didn't want to address that. He kept that Mums the word on. He was like well, those things do happen. I agree. That was another thing too. They were agreeing on a lot of stuff, so that's why it wasn't really an interesting debate.

Speaker 1:

The thing about Vance is that look at his rhetoric before it was the complete opposite of what the fuck he's spewing now yeah, they taught him out of course, he agrees with walls on a lot of stuff. I feel like this is probably just like a thing that he's doing, because it gets you further to be divisive than to be a rational thinking human being no.

Speaker 2:

On two of the questions they they went at him was like two times that he was like so vegan, meanly against donald trump on policies, and then he just came with like half-assed answers about why he switched up on it, which is really just because donald trump picked you, and now you're gonna stroke his dick like yeah, that's the only reason why you're doing it like it's not even.

Speaker 1:

You're weak, you have no spine and you you let your morals like crumble because now you're in in the spotlight and spotlight and you have an opportunity to make more money.

Speaker 2:

It's kind of just ridiculous. With him too, man, I don't see where he inspires. Pence was way better than him, pence. He had a code. I'm not going to be going around women alone you know what I'm saying Without my wife. No, elevate Pence had a code. He was a man of logic.

Speaker 1:

There's that thing, though I don't know if it applies for vice presidents, but, like you know, there's a thing like can you get a beer with this guy? Like that's an important thing that I think happened specifically when um bill cl Clinton was in office, but you had to be cool, so I think that's why Pence wasn't picked again. Also, trump is fucking crazy.

Speaker 5:

He's stupid.

Speaker 2:

He's irrational.

Speaker 1:

He does things that don't make sense.

Speaker 2:

No, Pence wasn't picked again because he didn't try to help Trump steal the election. That's why he didn't get picked again.

Speaker 1:

We'll get into that next.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, in just a moment we're going to get into that. That's why he didn't get picked again.

Speaker 1:

We'll get into that next.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, in just a moment we're going to get into that. That's why Pence isn't around. Yeah, because.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

so if you talk about a candidate having Pence was too rational If you're talking about a candidate to have a beer with, Vance is the guy that you get a couple bars and you break him up and snort him with, Like that's who Vance is I'm not trying to do I'm just telling you what kind of nigga who he is vance is the one that you like.

Speaker 1:

Tell the wrong location to to the party, yeah and then like be like oh my bad, like miscommunication, but and then just keep avoiding him no, you don't try to party with him at all vance reminds me all the white kids I knew, that knew where the pills were at all the time they anytime. It was time to go out and go crazy vance is the guy that you got to get like all those cool little things that they have now to put over your drink for like roofies, because he's gonna try to roofie you.

Speaker 2:

No, vance is the dude that, like everybody's like talking about the football game or whatever, and he don't really know much about football so he just says like some arbitrary, like oh, you seen taylor swift at the game, why do they have?

Speaker 1:

the camera on her.

Speaker 2:

So much, yeah, he's that guy that has to put that kind of comment out yeah like okay, we're at a bar trying to get actual vagina van. Yo, vance is kind of like the dude where he he sees his boys like talking to, like the pretty girls and stuff. He's not getting no attention. So he like goes check, dick, checks him like oh good bro, what watch your dick check, right in front of the cool girl. That's who vance is yeah, like man.

Speaker 1:

It's so apparent that your dick is little but walls I would. I'm not a beer, but I would smoke a blunt with tim walls yeah walls might do a bowl with you yeah, he would definitely do like a Gravity bong situation I could see that for him and then he would like completely just die.

Speaker 2:

What I was looking at. They were saying that a lot of people Were actually really Impressed with Walls or they liked him a lot better In comparison to Vance.

Speaker 1:

So Because he's a way more likable human being. I mean, it's not hard, he reminds you of your fun uncle. It's not hard he reminds you of your fun uncle yeah or grandpa in advance.

Speaker 2:

Remind you of the creepy uncle creepy uncle oh my god I had one of those.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, no, he never got anywhere near me.

Speaker 2:

Well that's good yeah, I'm glad you said that, because that's what people would assume.

Speaker 1:

No, no, he never I just got creepy vibes from him so I avoided him from the the first creepy vibe I ever got from him and I never interacted with him ever again after that one time all right.

Speaker 2:

Well, let's talk about vance's boss, because we got some unsealed documents.

Speaker 1:

So trump's uh, the judge in trump's trial has unsealed 165 pages yeah, and at this point we, like I, feel like it's too early for everything, because the articles I read didn't yeah nobody's 100 yeah no, nobody's read the whole thing yet, but, um, the notion says that after the election, trump claimed ballot fraud without proof.

Speaker 1:

His private operatives sought to create chaos rather than seeking clarity at polling places where states were continuing to tabulate votes. So the filing says that on November 4th 2020, a campaign, a campaign employee and co-conspirator of Trump tried to sow confusion at the vote count being held at the TCF Center in Detroit, michigan, which looked unfavorable to Trump. Let me skip forward a little bit.

Speaker 2:

But let's just kind of explain what they were trying to say there. They were saying that they were sending people out to voting areas to cause conflict.

Speaker 1:

To literally cause chaos.

Speaker 2:

Wasn't they saying like riot and all that other stuff? I believe I saw that in some of the reports. This is not in the that wasn't in the article I read.

Speaker 1:

And this is from CNBC but the colleague of the wait hold on wait, hold on, okay. The colleague of that unidentified campaign employee told that person that a batch of votes appeared to be heavily in favor of joe biden, and the employee said um, to find a reason, it isn't give me options to file a litigation, even if it's bullshit okay, so here it is right here.

Speaker 2:

That was part of said so when the colleagues suggested that this is what about the detroit thing, when the colleagues suggested that there was about to be unrest and resentment, uh, for the brooks brothers riot a violent effort to stop the huh unless reminiscent of the brooks brothers riot oh yeah, unrest.

Speaker 2:

I thought I said that um a violent effort because like it's so fucking small, a violent effort to stop the vote count in florida after the 2000 presidential election. P5 so that must be a person's name responded make them right and do it yeah like what are we talking about?

Speaker 1:

numerous examples of um president, vice president mike pence, like trying to gently convince trump to accept the election loss and to try to convince him that this is not a complete defeat. This is just like a temporary setback and you can run again. And then trump replies what well, four years is just so long. It's just such a fucking long time. He's such a big bubbling baby like four years is just so long.

Speaker 2:

I'm just going to completely rattle our country's political system I'm just going to start a revolution against our own, my own country. But hold on, they also had your boy, uh, rudy giugnani oh, he was yeah so they said him, they said trump sidelined his campaign legal team on november 13th, putting rudy giuliani in charge because he was willing to lie about the election results they knew that he was slimy, which every new yorker knows, that rudy giuliani is slimy so essentially this is 165 pages of evidence showing that Donald Trump was trying to do a coup on this country.

Speaker 2:

And I don't care about the felonies, I do kind of care about the sexual assault things that we probably shouldn't be a president because of that Kind of yeah, I do, I do care about that.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying you said you kind of care, you definitely care.

Speaker 2:

I'm saying I, I care about in regards to being a president, I feel like a country, if you want, if you want to vote.

Speaker 2:

You putting kind of I'm saying, if you want to vote a felon, or you want to vote somebody who's committed assault as an as a person, that you want to uh vote for your leader, so be it. That's your right to vote. But to do somebody that was a fucking traitor, like, are we serious? That's something that doesn't even make, that doesn't even compute. In my brain. We have somebody who's literally here trying to set up a mini queue, a mini coup. Obviously it was like a short bus coup because he wasn't prepared and arming people what he had to do, but he was trying to arise enough static that he could stay and remain president. He set up, uh electorals. He was sending out, you know, false ballots. He was telling people to lie, like it's literally written down. People have evidence and statements this man telling him to lie how was he allowed to run again?

Speaker 2:

because now, what the supreme court is doing, they did that. The supreme court that he put in, put in that the thing. If you are in president, this is the reason why they won't be able to charge him with some of this stuff on here uh, because that when you're president and you're doing things, uh those actions are presidential duties and they can't be used to, you know, charge yeah, and if he's elected again, he can just dismiss these charges.

Speaker 1:

He can just force the department of justice to dismiss these charges.

Speaker 2:

This was he's gonna try to get rid of the department of Justice too.

Speaker 1:

Like what. This is literally that movie, you didn't watch it. Civil War.

Speaker 2:

I mean, he's definitely trying to spark up a certain group of Americans. I don't think he's the leader they even really want or think that they want, but he's just, he has. He's stupid. What he allows to do, and a lot of people who support trump are able to do, is to put him to be a figure. He's like a blank canvas for them to put whatever they believe will make america better, better, and he doesn't have to live up to any of those things. He doesn't have to espouse any of the rhetoric that needs to be aligned with it. He can just say whatever, because you just automatically associate him with something better than the, the old guard, even though he, when you look and do the digging and I hate saying this because again, it was even part of debate you could just see with how much they agree.

Speaker 2:

These are two sides of the same coin. Trump just is not trying to pay a certain group of people in the middle of it, in the middle, like that's really all it is. That's the only really difference. They're gonna bomb everybody half the hell. The same way, they're gonna put money into the police pockets until they can fucking they're gonna put money into the rich people's pockets yeah that's what I hate about american politics for real.

Speaker 1:

It's just so stupid and the the majority of the people like we're gonna get fucked, but that's why I feel like in office.

Speaker 2:

But that's why I feel like the january 6th shit is just so important to make a distinction when it comes to him, Because this right here is just an egregious act of just trying to take away democracy. And again, you can make that argument for Kamala too, because she probably shouldn't be where she's at right now because we didn't vote for her to be in her position either. She just took over for Biden.

Speaker 1:

No, but we have you. We don't vote for who is running no we vote when we don't vote.

Speaker 2:

When it's a, the president that was already in office does it, but when there's a new president, people post like a new person running for office in that party. It's supposed to be primaries that we have supposed to vote for the person that's going to run for that DNC. Not, that didn't happen here. He just they just elected her into. They didn't elect her, they just pushed her into, they just nominated her for without any kind of vote. Nobody got an option of choosing it, just they just pushed her into it see, I'm not 100 clear on that.

Speaker 1:

So during the process we're supposed to vote for who gets the nomination.

Speaker 2:

So just like when, when uh trump was doing it, trump was going against rfk and all them other people for the republican nomination but it's like what? But they it wasn't as many this time like a like a voting process.

Speaker 1:

That's popular because when do you like you don't? There's no voting day for that. What ballot do you fill out for the? The primaries?

Speaker 2:

yeah, they have primaries that you come out to wait, your primaries for georgia, for all your state, oh my god you're right 100.

Speaker 1:

I'm not a citizen, I don't be voting. It's not something that, like I'm 100, like so we didn't I focus on.

Speaker 2:

So my point is we didn't get that with commonly either. So we can all say both of them at some point have gone against democracy. But I think his is a little more egregious when you send a horde of crackers to the Capitol.

Speaker 1:

I think it's not as egregious in the foundation of it, because Kamala didn't make that decision herself to push herself up Like that was the Democratic yeah the DNC yeah. So that wasn't it's not. It wasn't her decision. She couldn't say no, oh for sure, I'm not saying that she's.

Speaker 2:

So I don't think you can put it on Kamala, Like that's what I'm saying. I'm not saying this is necessarily a coup, like he was doing because he was trying to resist an election. She just got promoted without having to go through the correct channels yeah, she, but those are still right place at the right time again, two sides of the same coin, those are still obstructing democracy?

Speaker 1:

I think they're. I think they're different, because one was just happened to be there and she just went along with it, and then one planned it and made something happen. So I think trump is much, much, much worse.

Speaker 2:

No, I say yeah, when you're sending people to go at the capitol and telling them to ride and go crazy, yeah, 100. You got these people who were in court saying like I'm upset that trump, you know, tricked me, like I feel like a fool that I listened to trump like in court. So I mean I'm not saying that what he didn't do was a horrible act of treason, like it was he.

Speaker 1:

there were calls to action. No, he did a horrible act of treason.

Speaker 2:

I'm not saying that he didn't do that at all. I'm just saying what she's doing to get into power is superseding our general practice and that can't be not spoken either. That's all. But I know, anytime you go against one, they think you support the other. So it's just what? It is all right, man, it's that time of the show man.

Speaker 1:

Did he talk again? I mean the? The allegations just keep coming out like a fucking floodgate. Yeah, no, the. This man's crimes are egregious.

Speaker 2:

I mean after the last show we had the woman go up there with the other lady who talked about who kind of like reported and detailed the assault she you know had had with Diddy. You remember the light skin lady, she's like, she's like Hispanic.

Speaker 9:

She was with a white lady on stage.

Speaker 2:

She was on a white lady who was a lawyer. Then you have another lawyer who's like hey, we got a Diddy line. So you know, if you want to call up and tell us who you know, diddy assaulted you, hunnid calls the diddler hotline, they'd end up getting 120 people. Accordingly, like 50, 50 men and women, so 60 60 for 120 people who they have so far on a team, like they are setting buddy up for the super lineup it's up and these crimes go back like 25 years like this is decades of being nasty so apparently right now they haven't filed anything.

Speaker 2:

This is kind of like a tactic. I guess he even gave him 30 days, uh, to settle with them before they put everything into like public record how much would he have to come off to settle for this many people? It depends I mean this is the same dude who was suing with deshaun watson, with the, with the freak boy allegations, with him in the um massage therapist. So this is the same uh attorney who lined up like those 20 women that went at him.

Speaker 1:

So he is familiar with what he, what this kind of operation entails I just want to say this in case it's true the blind item said that young miami about to be indicted oh, wake it up.

Speaker 2:

They said. People know that the dude hold on, let me see if. See if I got the clip right here. The dude said it's up for niggas. He said it's up.

Speaker 10:

The feckless and cowardly keyboard warriors love to attack. We know what we're up against.

Speaker 2:

I think this Diddy lawyer right here. No, no, no, this is the lawyer who's going at Diddy.

Speaker 1:

The prosecution. Just said keyboard warriors.

Speaker 2:

No, not the prosecutor.

Speaker 10:

Prosecutor, this is the guy who's rounding up to 120 as I said, our law firms have been retained by 120 individuals at this point to pursue cases in civil court against sean diddy combs. You should know, in this group it is evenly divided between males and females. There are 60 males and 60 females who have joined us to pursue these claims as plaintiffs. In this group, 62% identify as African American, 30% are white and the remainder are Hispanic or Asian. The victims are from more than 25 states. The majority are from California, New York, Georgia and Florida. I don't want to focus on the ages of these victims.

Speaker 2:

This is when it gets nasty, right here.

Speaker 10:

You talk about the ages of the victims when the conduct occurred. It's shocking. Our youngest victim at the time of the occurrence was nine years old. Oh my God. We have an individual who was 14 years old. We have one who was 15. Twenty-five of the 120 individuals who are plaintiffs in these cases were minors at the time of the acts complained of. The timeframe of the acts complained of. The time frame of the acts complained of is very wide. The conduct at issue spans from the years 1991 all the way till this year, 2024. If you wonder why there are so many alleged victims, that's your answer. We're talking about more than 25 years of this type of conduct Now, although most of the victims who have stepped forward were victimized after 2015,. This has been going on for a very long time Now. What happened in 2015?

Speaker 1:

that made Diddy mad, flagrant and ramping up his crimes.

Speaker 2:

I don't know what was going on with Diddy, but this lawyer is standing in front of the number. He got the number behind him. He got the Diddy number behind him, going crazy on this nigga. But I feel so bad for that nine year old story Because I heard some people talking about what he said with that and the nine year old Story kind of goes up and this is all legend or whatever. But they Took them to a party like he was doing an event with uh, with p diddy. They ended up taking away because this is somebody who was like coming up in industry or whatever.

Speaker 2:

He's trying to come up in industry a child star like a little something like a child star or something yeah and they took him to a party where he was into like they claimed he was like passed around by different people and all this other stuff, like horrible stuff to be like. You're how old? You were what like it's insane, like the gruesome discussion like that. Well, when this, they better pay this. Pay these folks up, because if these are, if the cassie shit got shit sparked up, you telling me there was a nine-year-old being passed around yeah, oh nah, y'all niggas got it Go.

Speaker 1:

There were other teenagers that people were alleging were like Usher when he was younger and. Justin Bieber around that time when he was hanging around Diddy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah.

Speaker 1:

So we'll see.

Speaker 2:

And Kim and Aaron Carter, yeah, we talked about that, and Kim Porter with the book, the dude who wrote the Kim Porter book who said he has her memoirs and archives and this thing say he got video that he's returned. He's turning into the federal uh government. He was on art of dialogue. He did an interview with him and he was breaking it all down, saying like yeah, I'm going with this.

Speaker 1:

I still think he capping a little bit but yeah, I still think he got, because he's doing interviews, yeah, I think he's.

Speaker 2:

He's being a little flagrant with all this, but he's saying he got videos and stuff he didn't see. He said, oh he, but he said he's done this before or whatever, and so he's not going to just release everything all at once because it would destroy our understanding of the music industry and the people that we know and care about and all this other stuff yo, I feel like we've been slowly, since r kelly, learning that these niggas is nasty, and the music industry is definitely not what we think it is at all.

Speaker 2:

And then our girl went on, piers Morgan.

Speaker 6:

Why there's no vindication for me, because for four years I've been screaming. Not just Diddy, but Diddy and Jay-Z are monsters and the victim making machine kept going on.

Speaker 8:

Jay-Z has been notable by his silence since these charges were brought against Diddy. Why do you think that is?

Speaker 6:

Because that's what he does. He starts little fires everywhere, forces everyone involved to go and carry water, while he sneaks away without a response. That changes. Now, sean, you must respond. You have no choice, harvey.

Speaker 9:

Weinstein.

Speaker 6:

Jeffrey Epstein, robert Kelly, sean Combs have one person in common, professionally and privately Sean Carter. This has been a fist of tyranny that has been punching through our culture and our society for decades. It must stop.

Speaker 8:

There's been obviously a lot of Cruelty-free artistry. Right. There's been a lot of rumour mill about what has happened in the rap world, a lot of allegations that the misogyny in the lyrics clearly was based on a general misogyny towards women away from the music, and that clearly seems to be borne out by these charges against Diddy, which, if he's found guilty of all this, he's never coming out of prison. How dangerous do you think, thank God. How dangerous do you think he is as a person?

Speaker 6:

I think he's one of the most dangerous people I've ever met. A lot of people have been questioning. Well, she doesn't really know him. She has no knowledge of him. She doesn't have a picture with him. I'm smarter than Claudia Jordan. I would never take a picture with the devil. Everyone knew he was the devil. He's been the devil for 30 years. He's been the devil for 30 years. He's been covered and protected by not only Clive Davis but Lucian Grange.

Speaker 6:

Oh, shit Don't bring Drake into this. He was selected to be the demon that he is to keep the culture in line, so the industry could continue to rape it for all of its precious jewels. We have too many lost. The list of lost is ridiculous and everyone knows diddy was selected for this job. Wake it up.

Speaker 2:

Hey man, I love it. Jaguar, right when she start talking, she do that little slow pause. Talk that shit, get me going. I feel like I need to believe everything she says when she do that. When she do that, what we're going to do is we're going to stop the black evilness coming from these men. I'm with it, I'm sold. She could sell me anything when she talk like that. I'm excited. She can sell me anything when she talk like that. I'm excited. I know I shouldn't be happy, because a lot of these guys are associated with atrocities. And they even said oh, this nigga Jay-Z about to go down because Wack 100. Was it Wack 100 or Suge Knight? Somebody said, basically confirming he was messing with Foxy Brown when she was 15. So I mean, it just feels like this empire that they have built off of uh being vile, uh being just degenerates. It's just coming to an end and I'm excited, I love to see deviance I just love to see this happen.

Speaker 2:

I love to see this burn.

Speaker 1:

It's time there have been rumors about like how old beyonce was when she started, started dating Jay-Z too, and was she groomed and things of that nature. They both lost a couple million followers between the two of them since Diddy's been indicted. Uh, there's been a lot of Beyonce hate on the internet, but I feel like people were just waiting on something to hate her about, so what are you saying he's heard about Jay-Z.

Speaker 2:

You said you heard something about Jay-Z. That's what I heard about Jay-Z.

Speaker 1:

So um what's the the, the messy Hollywood unlocked, nigga, I don't know, oh, jason. So Jason said something that's a little confirmed yeah he, he didn't say any names yeah, but he was.

Speaker 1:

He insinuated that like it was. It was confirmed information that he was messing with foxy brown when she was 15 years old and he was like 20 something, so and there's always been stuff about him and beyonce when she uh, alleging that she was like 17 when they he first started, but that was way worse, though, because he was almost a 30 year old man yeah like it's different.

Speaker 2:

Like you 20 and 15, that's five years, like, but you fucking 30 and she's 19? That's, and then I've been connected before she was 19. Like that's where it gets weird.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

But no, it just seems like there's gonna be more and more information. We're probably gonna be having like a slight ditty update, probably probably every episode for a while now, Because I just don't think there's no way he can win. I think it's going to be any day. Now we're going to get the news that he didn't did something to himself. Honestly, I think we're on Diddy countdown right now.

Speaker 2:

honestly, Definitely I don't think we're going to get the trial. According to his lawyers and stuff, they're ready, they want to go to trial. He talking that's already cold. Yeah, like like coat. I'm talking about this for the criminal. He told me he ready to talk for the criminal trial. Oh so I'm telling you when they start saying that that's those are cold words to oh you about to get off. When they start saying I can't wait to testify and all okay, we got you, it's over with.

Speaker 1:

Yeah because they were saying that, um, there's a bunch of footage that they like did he had a bunch of blackmail on people? Or allegedly did he probably had a bunch of blackmail on people? The prosecutor yeah.

Speaker 2:

The prosecutor said they people know, like you said with the young miami thing. Prosecutor said the people know and we're going to get you when it's our time to get you, like this, just you're just waiting to get the call now I don't know.

Speaker 1:

I feel like it'll be so interesting to see all these people like put away, because if like, you need to be put away if you're sexually trafficking people against their will and drugging them like that's crazy.

Speaker 2:

So this kind of is interesting too, to kind of bring this up because we had some interesting to happen in spaces and it wasn't really interesting, it's just it's more disheartening than anything else. But, um, so there was information regarding somebody I won't bring up any names, anything, just to you know, keep everybody relatively safe, even though most of this shit is recorded but uh, there was just an individual where, like, some of his past had got revealed because he got into a conflict with another space member and it came out to like there was some domestic violence history and uh, there was a lot of things just reveal old information space member that he got into in the conflict with bitch you, a cold bitch.

Speaker 1:

I don't want to get on your bad side at all. I was like she did.

Speaker 2:

What well see the thing was it was a coordinated attack in the greatest order, because this individual is known to be kind of very uh respectful at least uh on the spaces of black women. So the first thing she did was she released a picture of him with a white woman, like an old picture with a white woman.

Speaker 2:

So already already bunny hopper allegations arise his image then she goes out and she puts out more information about potentially him, like being in you, you know domestic violence situation, makes allegations about being able to do a police report and like bringing all this stuff out, and now you're showing him as being a violent individual. And I'm sitting here like, oh my God, like this is crazy, because he's telling us this. You know, this is from years ago. Like this is old, old stuff, but in the same token, it's like we're all content creators. This is old, old stuff, but in the same token, it's like we're all content creators and if our brands get bigger, does this moment?

Speaker 2:

That's what I kept thinking about as a content creators, and I was talking to this even with Danny too, because he was in the space with me and I'm just like, do we have to worry about now? Looking like we're enabling something, even though we're not, like we're just all here to have conversations about the things we like to have conversations about. And now your history, even though it's older, and that's what a lot of people are trying to use like, oh, this is so old, like you shouldn't be doing this, and I just felt like it was a lot of capping how old was it?

Speaker 2:

like he said. He said 20 years, but I think this is just a lot of capping, with some of the people trying to say like, oh, we shouldn't be using personal information to defame someone, because if that's the best way to defame somebody, 100%. And then also, if this was a different action and I'm not putting this on this gentleman at all, I'm just saying, if this was a different action involving children and this happened 20 years ago, do we have that same empathy? I don't think so, so why wouldn't we have that for women?

Speaker 1:

that were victims.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, because we hate women, y'all hate women and it did my bad no, well, and I think what really made it difficult was even though, again, this is your past, 20 years ago, you feel, whatever you weigh about it when he was on the conversation and it was being like a spotlight put on it, he didn't sound really empathetic in the moment or anything and again maybe you shouldn't have, because you at what age do you learn that putting your hands on a woman is not okay?

Speaker 2:

well, I don't think that was a bitch ass nigga like.

Speaker 1:

Regardless of how long ago it was, you should have known that you don't do that shit.

Speaker 2:

And I'm not saying that that's he should get a pass for that, pass for what he did in the past. But what I'm saying is are are we enabling something or is he a different individual? Are we? Do we still get affected by that as associating with him? Because we know the story, and this is kind of what I'm leaning to. We know the whole adage of every woman, or everybody knows a woman who's been assaulted, but no guy knows a man who is the offender. You know what I'm saying. So it's like how, as men, would you think it's appropriate to see them operate in a situation where that arises?

Speaker 1:

An individual that long ago. You forgive what you don't forget. You're still going to be worried. You're still going to keep your eye on that nigga.

Speaker 2:

You're still going to be but I mean, this is internet stuff, so it's not like he next to us. That's what I'm saying, like it seems to me.

Speaker 1:

But you're still going to be wary of his character when he brings shit up like when he spews specific rhetoric or when he takes a specific point. You're gonna know that in the back of your head and you're gonna process it differently from him, because you know that, like this, is not a solid nigga at all and it makes it just has a lot of things was weird, because it's like you don't want to exile somebody, because it's like we're not doing.

Speaker 2:

This is not a cult, it's not I would exile you well, that's what seemed like a lot of the women were okay with that kind of action that were against him, but they also had certain reasons to be against him. They were at odds with that individual. There were other women who were going to bat for him, which I thought was crazy, seeing as the subject of conversation was that and then.

Speaker 2:

But again, to me, what made it hard for me to kind of be able to pick a side with it was just how there was lack of empathy in the conversation. Like there was statements made that he may have been trying to make in jest, but when you're talking about the conversation at hand it just seemed a little inappropriate. Because this is new information to everybody on the space. This isn't something we all know like. This is new information and we're all learning this in real time, so you can't expect people to now assimilate to that idea of you who you were when before we knew this information.

Speaker 1:

Like you've added a new ingredient into the, to the, to the recipe yeah, so now you see him I mean it's just, there's more information I'm just saying like I would see him through a different lens, moving forward I mean, I mean, I see that colored glasses white colored glasses oh man, so do you think we, we should like excommunicate and that's what you feel like we should do?

Speaker 1:

well, I'm not ever in these spaces. I don't claim to know the nuance of what's going on, so I don't want to tell you what the the group should do when I'm not in the group at all. But, um, I feel like y'all should definitely keep an eye on him and and not like keep an eye on him to make sure he doesn't do it again, but like listen to him and see like where he leans on specific stuff I mean, but the funny thing about it is and why I think it even hits more what the person was trying to do is he's more of a panderer, like he panders to things.

Speaker 1:

He's more like a shits and gigs kind of guy, so like that's where it's just kind of those niggas be the worst but it was just, it was just interesting niggas who actually hate black women, as we've seen, as we saw from shits and gigs, and this nigga who actually put his hands on a black woman that's seeing how.

Speaker 2:

How you put shits and gigs with this is insane.

Speaker 1:

Those are not the same thing you're the one that brought them up but I'm saying I described the type of individual he was the only reason they were in my. The only reason they were in my brain and in my mouth is because you brought them up. I wouldn't have brought them up at all, I wasn't even thinking about them yeah, but you shitted on them for no reason like you compare, them deserve to be shadowed in different ways you compared them to dv they both deserve to be shadowed in different ways.

Speaker 1:

I'm not equating what they did to dv, but you brought them up, so I'm I'm continuing to bring them both up.

Speaker 2:

Don't do that so I should stop talking to him.

Speaker 1:

I shouldn't talk to him on spaces, is what you're saying you should treat him like a nigga who put his hands on a woman. Treat him like a bitch every time he talks. Bitch him. That's what I would do. I don't know, I don't know that nigga. He's a little bitch. I just pussy.

Speaker 2:

I just feel like what does that accomplish for something that happened 20 years ago, like it was not, like it happened last week, like who, what am I to do with? To to treat someone?

Speaker 1:

like that or something your same point. If he did that to a child 20 years ago, you you would continue to hold that against him, because that is something that you know you don't do. Did the woman whoop his ass first? Was it self-defense?

Speaker 2:

we didn't get that much information. That was another thing, like when he did come back into the space and we all tried to have like a conversation about it, it wasn't really like we got a lot of information and then, like him being so short and then discussing it and jess kind of made it sound even worse because it was just like essentially you could equate them to one-liners of abuse, and so that's I'm like oh, this doesn't sound good on a playback I know somebody.

Speaker 1:

First of all, I know both parties in an abusive relationship. I met the nigga first and then I met the woman after so the woman was being abused, or the man was? The woman was being abused. Okay, I'm just trying to figure it out. Yeah, and he literally downplayed it, od like so how'd he downplay it?

Speaker 2:

like what do you mean? Like he was just like we wrestling and then, but he was really no he.

Speaker 1:

He did say that, like he put his hands on her, but he had. He tried to make it seem like she had a part in like verbally aggressing the situation so she basically said like she was like talking shit, and then he just swung which, like niggas from new york, like, if you, if you can't handle a bitch talking a little shit to you, you need to not date women, because we gonna talk shit regardless.

Speaker 2:

So well, I just, I guess it was just food for thought, you know, because, like I said, y'all have these, all these rules for us, but then y'all don't explain what y'all feel like the proper execution, uh, of these rules are.

Speaker 1:

So it's just like it's hard to forgive a nigga who hit a woman 20 years ago when, like my nigga has never put his hands on a woman and he would never think to do that and he's just a better nigga than you are in general. So I just feel like you're a bottom of the barrel, nigga to begin with, because you did that and there's no coming back from it like shame, shame for the rest of your life. Carry that like that's. That's what you have to do.

Speaker 2:

You should have made better choices well, I I feel like there needs to be some correction to that. I was defending myself when she came at me with a bottle, and then I extended my arms forward.

Speaker 1:

Like you can push a bitch that's about to crack you over the head with a bottle. I just felt like I should.

Speaker 2:

You said I never did it, so I'm just like well.

Speaker 1:

You've never done that and I will stick to that, to my statement. A bitch was trying to crack him over the head with a bottle and he didn't let her.

Speaker 2:

That's not domestic abuse. That's you not trying to die? Well, I mean, I, to be fair, I grabbed the bottle. After, like when she kind of went, I grabbed it and I had the bottle, then I extended my arm, so I feel like she like that's still regardless, that's still self-defense. Yes, okay, I don't know I I felt a little aggressive when I did it.

Speaker 1:

I felt like whatever situation, whatever you do in response to somebody trying to crack a bottle over your head is self-defense okay, I didn't know I I was just.

Speaker 2:

She came at me with it. It was a snapple bottle glass it was she had it upside down, you know, with the handle, and she went at you see melissa ford.

Speaker 1:

There was a okay, so there's a interview that popped up. There was a reality show that melissa ford was on mad long ago oh no, you bring it up.

Speaker 2:

She doesn't like it the way people bring that up but okay, oh, it's going viral on tiktok yeah, because she's in the wishbone collar right now yeah, because she did an interview about it.

Speaker 1:

I don't know how long she did an interview about it, but it's going viral. Bitch, we know that you got cracked over the head. You said the dent is still in your skull from when the bitch cracked you over the head with a bottle and that was the reason that the whole show got canceled. Yeah that was and she said it was a diamond shaped bottle.

Speaker 2:

That's crazy yeah, I mean you should have rocked that bitch's shit. She ran away like a scared she couldn't I mean, you probably was concussed a little bit honestly, that was before her accident, her car accident, right, yeah, I think that was before, I don't know, but like, and then I watched, so they they there's a crazy picture of melissa ford after that, like in a wheelchair, like after she got hit with the bottle.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she had to go to the hospital and everything. I saw the clip that led up to her cracking her over the head with a bottle. It did not warrant that energy whatsoever. Like nothing, nothing about that. Back and forth gave bitch. I'm going to crack you over the head Like nothing about it whatsoever. It was crazy.

Speaker 2:

Somebody probably told her to do that on the show the girl was just clearly so.

Speaker 1:

Melissa in the interview was like I was telling production and the showrunners over and, over and over again that I do not want to do scenes with this woman because she's aggressive as fuck towards me every time we film together and they just didn't listen to her.

Speaker 2:

Oh no, you just told them we have gold. Yeah, there's oil between. No, but I'm not listening to her.

Speaker 1:

Oh God them not listening to her.

Speaker 2:

Oh god, yes, what happened, the whole project was wiped away.

Speaker 1:

So, like y'all, should have fucking listened to her like well, I mean, it gave me like melissa was the prettiest girl in the cast and she was just hating but to to those producers and again it's not to their credit because I'm pretty sure they were just being sleazeballs.

Speaker 2:

But if you could get someone to green light melissa for getting hit with a bottle on camera, my nigga, you try to get that green light because that's going to make some money like, that's just an unfortunate reality, uh, but we gotta talk about, uh, a content creator, dennis duke. He has been exposed.

Speaker 1:

It seems like yeah, his name is duke dennis what I say.

Speaker 2:

I keep calling him dennis duke. I have it right here as duke dennis too. Yeah, I don't know why I keep calling him Dennis Duke.

Speaker 1:

I have it right here as Duke Dennis too.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I don't know why I keep calling him Dennis Duke.

Speaker 1:

I swear to God, I think that's hate a little bit, like maybe I'm hating on him a little bit.

Speaker 2:

He knows how to read like, but he just sometimes it just don't come out right, but I think it's hate because when it's like, I just really don't want to say this nigga name, right.

Speaker 1:

It's just like a natural beef, I guess.

Speaker 2:

Between the light skin and I'm glad the hoes turned on you Honestly.

Speaker 1:

They said they saw your little flat ass face. So he did a. He did an interview with Another nigga. I don't like people who constantly interrupt when people are getting their shit off, like nori. I hate drink champs because nori be in the middle of the most interesting conversation. Hold on, let me tell you, let me ask you a question about some shit that don't matter at all. All right, let me get back to it so they Tupac a biggie, yeah, like.

Speaker 1:

So. Duke Dennis went on um did a interview with Speedy and he was talking about how like he gets way more attention from women like his. His, his um audience used to be like 90% men and now it's like 50 50 and he's getting less troll comments and he's getting more comments of, like, how fine he is and shit like that. And all of the comments, all of the comments in that video on tiktok are hilarious. Um, they said. Based off this, these comments, it's going back to 90 percent male. They said because why he catfish us like that? This is my favorite. They said he looked like zell swag. Do you know who zell swag is? They said this man looked like zell swag. They said he don't got no eyebrows. They said he needs a lash fill.

Speaker 2:

No one of the girls was like I. I never seen a dude do man makeup because he always wear the shades and he got the grill and the hat on yeah, they was like I never really had to look at him in his face before he dead ass, use filters like y'all think.

Speaker 1:

I think it's. I'm about to say something not a little controversial. I feel like y'all do the same thing to tall, dark-skinned men that y'all do to um light-skinned women, like he just has to be tall and dark-skinned. You're like oh, and y'all like completely disregard the actual facial features that are on the tall, dark-skinned man. The same y'all like completely disregard the actual facial features that are on the tall, dark skin man. The same y'all do to like light skin women Like she, she just light skin and you think she attractive and no, like you got to like look at her face like ice spice. If you look at her for too long she start looking weird, just like Duke Dennis when you look at him for too long it's like the chromosome disappears.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah. So I think it's the same thing and I think it's so hilarious. But like this happens to women all the time, like this happened with the baby, we thought the baby was fine. Did that nigga look like a boxer? Like he looked like?

Speaker 3:

like, like the dog, the boxer. Yes, I wasn't sure if you meant like a fighter or like a dog.

Speaker 1:

He looked like a micro bully Like that's what he looked like. His head shape is mad, like you probably can't Like. This nigga cannot be concussed.

Speaker 2:

He's got an extra pattern around his skull His skull is mad thick, like it's thick as fuck.

Speaker 1:

This happens to us all the time. We be getting tricked by dark-skinned niggas and they don't be fine for real at all, they just be dark-skinned see, I'm like that too with a shape up I'll be having to call out what you said too.

Speaker 2:

We're like you, just the girl. Just be red y'all. She ain't really cute. She just read yeah or she got a little ass, and she really got a little ass, because her waist is not even small, it's just as big as waist, as big as her ass, you know. But she read and now y'all like her.

Speaker 1:

So no, I, I've seen that before yeah, it makes a lot of sense with this one.

Speaker 2:

There's, it's, it's colorism on the other it's the other side of colorism at a time hey, my brother, this is bound to happen and it goes back to what I was saying for a couple shows ago when black women are your, your base man, they'll turn on you. They will. When they get the opportunity to turn on you, they're gonna take your little glasses off. Don't have your grill on one time.

Speaker 1:

Then put your little makeup filler that he probably put on yeah, I don't know what's going on with, but I've never like but nobody really sees him with his, with just his eyes, though, like he always has shade. No he doesn't like. He doesn't always have his shades on like he got a hat on. He always has a hat on or a hood definitely he always has a hat or a hood on.

Speaker 1:

um, he does have sunglasses on a lot, but, like if you go through his TikTok, like he mostly, that was one video I done scrolled and refreshed. One time there was only one video with him in sunglasses. On Every single video he got a hat and a hood on he using filters. He's definitely using filters.

Speaker 2:

That's sick and you know how old he is.

Speaker 1:

But on TikTok. Oh so apparently. Apparently the girl saying duke dennis got seven kids I can believe that he got they saying allegedly that this nigga got seven kids. And then there was a video that popped up. He was like he was talking about on his stream. He was like there are certain parts of my life that I will not share with you guys. I don't share my mother with you guys, I don't share my sister with you guys, and if there were kids, I wouldn't share them with you guys oh, I could well.

Speaker 2:

He's like 30 years old. He's like not too far from my age. He's probably older. He's probably my age, he's just, oh, this duke dennis because right now he goes by 30, 29, 30, right now oh, wow I thought he was like kai's age no, that's the thing. He was the old, old head out of them. It was a stream. He was 30, he's probably 32. He's probably my age okay, the.

Speaker 1:

I know he says he's industry age.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's his industry age. But uh, I was gonna say he was on a stream and everybody was calling him uncle on the stream, like okay.

Speaker 1:

So these niggas, the all of the, the like streaming niggas. Ages popped up. So kai is 22, phantom is 27, speed is 19, speed is the youngest one, but he acts like it. That nigga is cracked out for real.

Speaker 2:

He got crackhead energy if we being honest, duke is on the old side of this shit druski is also 30 well, we know, but he's doing what?

Speaker 1:

aiden ross is 23. Yeah, so Speed is the youngest. Nigga Speed and Kai are the youngest.

Speaker 2:

But no, I mean the thing with Drewski. Drewski don't count in this. Drewski ain't no streamer.

Speaker 1:

He's not a streamer, no, he just popped up.

Speaker 2:

I'm just saying for Duke Dennis to be what he's doing right now and to be as popular as he's doing at his age is impressive.

Speaker 1:

No, because we all assume he's younger than what he is.

Speaker 2:

I don't know why I could tell he was older than all of them.

Speaker 1:

Well, you can tell by the way he talk and how he move and stuff that he's older than them. But because he was hanging out with all these young niggas and I thought that all of them were around the same age. But Phantom is 27.

Speaker 2:

They're all. Agent is around my age too. Yeah, kai is really the the young young one, but he's just the most popping out of autumn.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, phantom is popping too, though now he is yeah, he was popping for a minute even before that well, I I've been seeing kai way before I was seeing phantom.

Speaker 2:

I like phantom a lot, though in the streaming world phantom was already bigger before kai, but it can't, but kai just exceeded him that he's a prototype that I'm very used to, being from New York, we don't even need to be talking about. Kai, because of what you said this week anyway, so we don't even need to be bringing that up. So that was. I can't believe you said that in front of me. I was hurt.

Speaker 1:

You're too easily hurt. I am.

Speaker 2:

My masculinity is fragile. I'm not worried about to say that at all. That's concerning and unattractive. I'm not worried about to say that at all. That's concerning and unattractive. Oh well, too late.

Speaker 1:

Got you already.

Speaker 2:

You said yes, so Let me see. What is this Ramonte thing, this gay influencer?

Speaker 1:

Oh, my god y'all. So, ramonte, there's been a bunch of. I think Ramonte did this on purpose. Let me start out with that. So, ramonte, there's a video Of him on Twitter. I think Ray Monte did this on purpose. Let me start out with that. So, ray Monte, there's a video of him on Twitter going viral and he's in a strip club and he's sitting down, the stripper is on his lap and he's like-.

Speaker 2:

What kind of gay is he? First, he's gay Like-. Gay Like it broken Like-.

Speaker 1:

Like he's not wearing like dresses.

Speaker 2:

Okay, that's what I'm trying to understand. What kind of gay Paint the picture for me?

Speaker 1:

He dresses fully like a hood nigga Pants sag Ass fat.

Speaker 2:

Is he like makeup and a beard, type of nigga? No, okay, I hate those kind of guys. No, no, no. Those are my least favorite gays.

Speaker 1:

He's not that at all. He like, fully like.

Speaker 2:

If you saw a picture of him not moving and just standing straight. You might think he's a straight man, okay, oh, does he does he be beefing with? Uh, no, nas x.

Speaker 1:

No, okay, that's who I'm thinking about yeah, you're thinking about alton mason, okay, um so, ray monte, there was a video of him on twitter. You want to play it? I was about to. Just we can't play it on here because you got music it's full.

Speaker 2:

No, it's full breasts I mean I'm gonna show it on the screen but if it's.

Speaker 1:

But I think it might have music if he in the club it's, there's music in it, but there's no like, there's no um, there's nothing okay so he's, he's in the strip club with the stripper. She's giving him a lap dance and she, like, pulls a titty out and he sucks on a titty and then sucks on another titty, and then a lot of the comments.

Speaker 2:

Got a little breast milk.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, there's so many comments that are like, oh, these niggas be pretending to be gay and y'all be falling for it, and blah, blah, blah. And so my best friend is a gay man and I have come across in my past in my dating life niggas who would be weary of the fact that my best friend is a gay man because they think that he's faking the gay for, like, the long game so he could get some pussy from me.

Speaker 2:

I could see that though from I mean, I could just see why you would assume that like.

Speaker 1:

I just think it's so interesting that there are so many straight men that think that a nigga would fake being gay to get into women's presence, to get more, to get pussy well, he has a convincing barbershop voice, so that's why it's like you don't.

Speaker 2:

You don't his voice, his barbershop voice.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, your friend okay, he has a convincing barbershop voice. Joseph, I don't think he gives a fuck about us saying his name I'm just saying he has a convincing barbershop voice no, you, he's not I heard him use it when he was talking to you one time yeah, he's not like like you have to like in passing, and he's in new york and in new york, that's you know. Yeah like he's not.

Speaker 2:

He's not flamboyant by any means, like by maybe a little bit, but like not really by atlanta gay terms, like he's not flamboyant at all, so yeah I mean, I could just understand where that could be the move, where it's not necessarily that oh you trying to take the girl, but you may like to fuck on a girl every once in a while, or you may like to add a girl in your male.

Speaker 2:

You know adventures so you just I could just see where it's like OK, you could be working a long game. That's not necessarily a relationship, but like making you cool with certain interactions because you think this is a gay man. Yeah, we see it all the time, like this dude to do the pranks all the time who come up to a girl at gay, she all into it and all that stuff. And then he let me get your number. And now they turned off because that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

Now they turned off because that's what I'm saying, like if a, if a woman, if you do all that and you're mad feminine and you're seen as gay in the beginning, like you can't turn around and fuck her. Not in a when has that ever worked Like I feel like that doesn't work, that it depends on the friend, that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

It depends on the person.

Speaker 1:

What type of bitch does that work on?

Speaker 2:

I've seen it. I've seen some girls who I seen a gay dude bring a girl in because he knew the dude he liked was bi, so he got a girl that he was cool with and sauce that up into that kind of situation.

Speaker 1:

What I'm talking about, though no, she was.

Speaker 2:

That was his friend, and he sauced her up.

Speaker 1:

Let the situation what I'm talking about specifically, because you're adding other things when has a man acting gay? Oh, got him some, ever got him some pussy.

Speaker 2:

I think that. I think that's happened for mostly with white women, though it's not gonna be black I was gonna say with ugly women I was gonna say white women. I've seen again the person I'm explaining. That was a white woman. He did, he was a white woman, he was a white woman he got that off with White women do that.

Speaker 1:

So then on the other side, I saw some people being like well, he never told us he was gay. And pardon me for showing you this video. But this is.

Speaker 2:

Hey, yo don't show me nothing, crazy dog.

Speaker 1:

But this is him in the same club, same night.

Speaker 2:

This nigga out here, twerking dog twerking dog.

Speaker 1:

No, he was throwing it crazy like nigga was twerking in some timbs. Yo, no, nigga was twerking in denim shorts and he was throwing that shit crazy like how do you do that?

Speaker 2:

raymontay, I love you, come to the pod leave that twerking at the door, my friend no twerk on the pod, don't point at me and tell a nigga to twerk my nigga, like what is wrong with you? I with you, I would probably be in the middle.

Speaker 1:

So twerk on the pod. I was just twerking to where he might be sitting.

Speaker 2:

Don't ever point and then tell a nigga to twerk at me.

Speaker 1:

Okay, Don't ever do that. You are going to make him not come on the show.

Speaker 2:

No, he can come on the show. He can be a guest. Just don't tell a me fair.

Speaker 4:

Jesus christ, all right we got to get into something crazy. That's happened, all right, so are you familiar?

Speaker 1:

with john amos good times coming to america.

Speaker 2:

Of course, rip has been announced on october 1st that he passed away rest in peace.

Speaker 1:

I saw some crazy shit on facebook about you, my nigga, we'll get into that after so we got this.

Speaker 2:

Is we get into the crazy shit right here?

Speaker 1:

no, this is some other crazy shit.

Speaker 2:

OK, I think this is. It was tough when I watched that he died. So I was actually just thinking about him the other day and thinking about like kind of the stuff that you know he was doing around his time. Because remember we did that video about the Good Times animated series, but remember we was talking about the animated good time show, right, and remember in our conversation we talked about a gentleman's name who we didn't know really familiar with, and then we had that comment that said that. So I saw another video that talked about him and his conflict with that guy. So apparently not only did he want to make jj the star, the producer, he also wanted to like turn around the family narratives and things like that. He wanted to play into more stereotypes with the jokes and john amos wasn't with that and that's why they wrote him off and killed him in the show oh because he wanted to stand up and not, you know, make tomfoolery content with the black family.

Speaker 2:

Like when they first started this show Florida didn't do it unless they had a dad in the house Like that was all stuff they fought for because they wanted to make this a single mama with kids acting crazy type of show. Yeah. And so just to think that he had to see in his last years the show that he fought to keep the integrity for be animated into that trash by Steph Curry and and seth mcfarland oh my god, steph curry, you should even be more ashamed of yourself now.

Speaker 2:

I hope that show does not get a second season that was the first thing I thought about this year, like when I went to ship, that's when I saw that he passed was that was the first thing I thought, because that happened this year. Then we go into some more information.

Speaker 1:

So apparently he's been dead for 45 days and usually once when a celebrity dies, we don't get notified more than a month later. It's usually maybe a week later.

Speaker 2:

A couple days more information is coming out. His daughter, shannon, found out when we did on october 1st that's really fucked up so apparently I was doing some.

Speaker 1:

Uh, I was reading some articles about like what their relationship was and everything.

Speaker 2:

Well, I was gonna say, go into that what was going to say was you're fortunate because you're an only child, that you don't have to go through some of the stuff they have to go through.

Speaker 2:

So she has a brother who's been pretty much handling their father's affairs. That came out and apparently he kind of been the main one in charge of things. He's had some other people. They were doing kind of like the windy thing with him because he's had dementia and he's been kind of doing the whole windy situation. You got people, publicists, all around him trying to, you know, keep him away from family and all that stuff. And I believe the son has also been a part of it too. So the daughter a few years back accused a caregiver they had of elderly abuse and that they were abusing her father. A few months later the father comes out and says that he's been good but the daughter has been doing elderly abuse to him, even to the point where he said they had an acrimonious relationship, like he was basically saying that they were at odds and from what I was saying had a large part to do with her and her brother being at odds.

Speaker 1:

So I don't know, but he wasn't in right mind to say that.

Speaker 2:

Right because the dementia thing was before he. Well, I don't know when the dementia time came in, but he did say this after she said it was he was going through some elderly abuse. So this was a few years back. It was like probably about maybe I think it was 2018, 19. I think the article was that I saw, uh, but we were saying that he was going through that so and he responded and said that she was the one doing it to him.

Speaker 2:

Uh, so they've had a really like stride relationship. So she comes out with a group of the family and friends and say, like no one has informed us of his death, we didn't know anything that was going. Apparently he had heart issues, that's what killed him. Um, but they didn't know anything that was going on. So it's been looking really nasty. I think they've even cremated his body and everything already. Like she didn't get to see her father off at all, none of her friends or anything. None of the friends or anything got to see the father off. John, pretty much according to her.

Speaker 2:

According to her, she said, basically her father died alone oh, that's, so sad especially for somebody who's been so instrumental in like black art in and of itself, yeah, and then just think about everybody we lost with the other james image of the black family in general.

Speaker 1:

And then his. He didn't get his family. He didn't get to have his family around at his demise.

Speaker 2:

That's really fucking and it's kind of similar to how james died in the show.

Speaker 1:

James died at work oh, I didn't know that.

Speaker 2:

I have never watched good times, so no it is definitely sad and it's crazy crazy because they've been putting out so much different things. Again, it looks like her and her brother are the ones that are really at odds, and he's been part of the group of people keeping everybody away. That's what it seems like from all the information that I've been reading. But no, it's really terrible man because, like I said, we just lost James Earl Jones.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we Because, like I said, we just lost James Earl Jones. Yeah, we've been losing a lot of like old black pillars of the community.

Speaker 2:

And they were both in Coming to America together. Remember they were the father of Eddie Murphy and the daughter. Oh, so I saw that scene All the black dads are dying now.

Speaker 1:

Well, I mean, these gentlemen are older too. Now, that's what I was going to say.

Speaker 2:

They are old, he was in his 80s. Yeah, old, he was in his 80s. Yeah, you know what I'm saying, but it's just, it hurt for me it's like he died young for real.

Speaker 2:

But no, it hurt for me because, like I was big on good times, like that was one of my favorite shows. I love the episodes with james in it, uh, and just what he just meant, like it didn't, it didn't seem to me. Watching it when I was younger, I never really understood the importance of like what he was saying and doing. But like, when you go back and look at the show and look at what he was trying to push, it was something super dope and positive. And then the last year of your life, you know, the show that you tried to fight the integrity of just gets lambasted and turned into a fucking joke in front of your eyes.

Speaker 1:

That's sad. Yeah, I hated that for a while. That's really fucked up.

Speaker 2:

No, it really was. But RIP to John Amos. We appreciate your talent and everything, all your gifts that you gave to us.

Speaker 1:

Oh, really quick.

Speaker 2:

Hold on Side note. This is why it's important that you get a trust, so that your families can, you know, have all that set up. That's what my mom did, so we don't have to arguments about what's going on with our parents when they get older. We have instructions that they want when they're in sound mind.

Speaker 1:

please, if you have the ability and the capital do so. Do so, but what are you about to say? The thing I saw on facebook because facebook is really like a lawless land and I will never delete that app, regardless of how old y'all think I am for regularly being on facebook there was a young lady that posted a picture of her like in a bikini next to john amos, and she was like oh, I saw that she was like rip, I just put this pussy down on you. You could barely walk after my nigga. Like what?

Speaker 1:

that's not like something his son would have purchased yo yeah, like he was, he was having a blast, I guess he was still. He was still, you know, like to it I'm gonna be honest.

Speaker 2:

My head theory, my head canon theory, with this is like his son was probably because the daughter was a used to be a doctor or something. From what I read, the son was probably somebody who was living off his dad's fame. He probably couldn't do or create anything successful on his own. He probably was just circumventing, like all of his dad's real wishes, and doing what he wanted with the time and the money that he had control of. And that's probably what that picture came from was a byproduct of him probably tricking off his dad money with some bitches and he was like, oh go, sit next to my dad shawty, and they took a picture yeah, she probably, or she was on vacation or she was just on vacation and she just said something stupid.

Speaker 1:

Nah, they was in the United States.

Speaker 2:

They wasn't overseas.

Speaker 1:

They was like in a driveway. It looked like they was on the beach. She had a bikini on. Okay, I have to look up a picture. What the fuck is she in a driveway for?

Speaker 2:

in a bikini. She at the fucking community pool.

Speaker 1:

This looks like the United States.

Speaker 2:

No, she looks like she had a beach. Okay, uh, but nah, that was. That was crazy y'all. Women are sick too. Y'all. Don't have no fucking shame. You know you did. He gave you a picture being nice and now you're trying to sully his good name and in death talking about you gave your little raggedy ass pussy to him.

Speaker 1:

No, you didn't okay that shit was hilarious that nigga is a man of class and honor.

Speaker 2:

What else do we have to?

Speaker 1:

talk about fashion news really quickly. Lvmh sold off white. I'm not surprised about that whatsoever because, um, virgin abloh passed, so the the whole like off white in general and its vision and its brand. It wasn't established for long enough for it to continue to be a long-standing thing to for especially like a conglomerate like LVMH to continue to invest in, and I assume that sales haven't been amazing and LVMH is really just like it's. It's a conglomerate that comes in when you need help with distribution specifically, so I'm not surprised that that's happening.

Speaker 1:

Chanel still does not have a creative director. Virginia Villard stepped down. They still have not announced who was going to be creative director. Um, there was a show that debuted a couple days ago. Who came out at the end? Nobody. Nobody came out of the end. It's very fucking weird. Who is going to be the next creative director for Chanel? There have been rumblings that it's going to be the creative director from Jacques Mousse, which I guess I want it to be, john Galeano, even though he's problematic as a motherfucker. But are you creative without being slightly problematic? I don't know. Karl Lagerfeld was problematic as fuck. He hated black people and fat people, but what you could not take away from him is that he served cut period so.

Speaker 1:

I'm not super against like a problematic man being, um, the creative director of the house of Chanel, but also Chanel has always been. When you think of Chanel now you think of like very classic, very, uh, boring. But Gabrielle Chanel was a very forward-thinking woman and she was a hot girl. She put straps on bags before anybody had straps on bags. She was using men's fabric to make women's clothes. It had never been done before.

Speaker 1:

So chanel as a brand has always been innovative and we need somebody who can come in and be innovative, period. So it can't be someone boring and I feel like jacques mousse, creative director, is going to be a little bit boring. So I don't know, bring somebody in. This new fresh black. Lupidio Nyong'o has just been announced as a brand new brand ambassador for Chanel. There's never been anybody who didn't pass the paper, um, the brown paper bag test as an ambassador for Chanel. So we fucking love that. Can't wait to see what boring piece of shit garments they send her out in, because you know, I don't know. We'll see who the new creative director is. Hopefully it's less boring and brings back a little cunt and innovation to chanel, because that's what it's about, period, and that's our fashion use I don't think we need to go to the buzz cut conversation at all.

Speaker 2:

I think you way better than what I have for fashion. Congratulations to Carl Anthony Towns. You got traded to the New York Knicks, so I know that that's exciting. You also got your girlfriend, Jordan Woods, who I'm pretty sure she's happy to leave the Timberwolves.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, it's crazy because after all that they took off the corpse and put him even closer to the locker Bro. They asked me immediately about you what they really did?

Speaker 5:

Damn it's total chaos, that's what he sounds like? No for sure.

Speaker 1:

I've never heard him speak.

Speaker 5:

That's a squirrely ass, nigga yo nigga sounds canadian.

Speaker 2:

Hold on, hold on, hold on this. Nigga's from new jersey, hold on. I got so today, right, elliot? Uh, elliot wilson liked one of my posts, right, because I had talked about shannon sharp and cat, because he did a. He was on shannon sharp today. Right, and it's funny, I know know Shannon's pissed off because this interview happened before he got traded.

Speaker 2:

I know he's pissed off oh damn, yeah, I know he's pissed off because he took the same clip and cut it up three times because they mentioned the Knicks. So he cut up a long little clip that he already had, then took another part of that clip and cut that part out because it all was Knick-related, because he couldn't talk to him about being traded, because he wasn't traded yet. So Shannon's team is thirsty. But listen to this. This is how the interview started. I had to turn it off. These young niggas was out of pocket. That's my own cognac For real.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, we're going to send you home with a bottle Shaved by LaPorte.

Speaker 2:

Hey come on when the camera. Yo yeah, five, five. To all the six. He sounds different. Hold on, it gets worse. I thought he was going to ask Shannon, can he drive the boat? That's what I thought his next question was going to be the way he picked up that bottle and tried to model with it. Yeah, I thought he was going to say Shannon, could you drive the boat for me? I thought he was going to say that first, but this is what he says and will continue to accomplish.

Speaker 6:

Thank you for coming to my club I appreciate you that thing smooth, ain't it?

Speaker 5:

That's good.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's what. I'm talking about Okay, I see what you're talking about. Huh yeah, that didn't sound like Shardy from college who drinking with the old nigga. That didn't sound like that. I'm tripping. Is that what you're trying to say?

Speaker 1:

No, it didn't sound that crazy to me, but I will say, yeah, I'm sorry to my friends, but I had a lot of male friends in my friend group and every time that I would like talk to guys outside of my friend group they'd be like them niggas, not gay. And I'd be like dumb niggas, not gay. And I'd be like, no, what makes you think they gay like niggas outside?

Speaker 1:

thought they was gay and then I didn't, so like I don't have the best point of reference so that shit just sounded normal to you it just sounded normal to me, like a nigga be like oh, like my friends, like my male friends do oh not to another man, though to each other yes, all the time like it's not, I'm about to start calling him cat when I see him next time nah, but that was a regular thing, like after, like the third time it happened to me, where a nigga was like your friend, them niggas not gay and I'll be like, no, not at all, just joseph, like yo, it's, it's gonna be.

Speaker 2:

People are gonna look back at that clip and everybody's gonna understand my joke of what I'm saying here and they're gonna be looking at you crazy. How do you not hear? Yeah, I don't know.

Speaker 1:

All the, all the femme a, a nigga being like, ooh, like that's not gay to me, but then the okay, okay, unk, Come on. All them niggas call him unk on the show.

Speaker 2:

But you don't tell a nigga, okay, unk off his alcohol.

Speaker 1:

Nah, every like. I've never heard Carl talk before. That is crazy.

Speaker 2:

I'm like Jordan is from calabasas, so she's used to a little sizzle somebody said, somebody commented when I posted this and said this is how old heads be when they come on campus for homecoming, like how shannon is with the look oh no, that's terrible all right. Well, I think that was pretty much everything we gotta get to yeah I think that was a good way to end it too. I'm. I'm going to have to cut up that clip with Karl-Anthony Towns a little bit, because that music is on there, but man.

Speaker 1:

I can't believe I never saw that clip before. No, I've never heard that man talk ever. I've just heard him standing next to Jordan Woods. I've just seen him standing next to Jordan Woods, but I've never heard him. I feel him I feel, I feel bad making fun of him, though he's had a tough little run colvin did some stuff to his family, so condolences for that.

Speaker 2:

But oh, we had to make funny big guy. All right, we definitely did. Hey, yo, this one. This one means a lot today, when I say this when I say that the the outro, here this one, means a lot shout out to the long uh shorman the longshoremen on the ports resist.

Speaker 2:

Life is a labor of love, so let's keep building these moments together and remember these. The longshoremen on the ports Resist. Life is a labor of love, so let's keep building these moments together and remember these jobs are not your family and the only thing you should be exploiting is these corporations. Period. You have been listening to Talk FNF TV and we greatly appreciate it. Fair, tell them what they need to do.

Speaker 1:

Follow us on all of the social media, at talkfnftv, instagram, twitter, facebook, all of the things. Give us a like, comment, subscribe on YouTube. Let us know if you agree with us or if you disagree with us, you know, leave us your thoughts. Love you, bye.