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Trump CALLS for White Reparations, The Fall of Skai Jackson, and Bernice Burgos Claims 30k A Night - Talk FNF TV

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From scandalous encounters with childhood mischief to untangling complex political webs, this episode offers a rollercoaster of insights. Remember those awkward teenage moments of getting caught red-handed with explicit content? We weave humor and nostalgia as we recount our own escapades and life lessons in privacy and honesty. This episode isn't just about laughs, though, as we also dive into the world of Skai Jackson and Marsai Martin, examining how young stars transition beyond their Disney beginnings and into broader societal impacts.

As we navigate the stormy waters of public education and political maneuvers, we examine the implications of Donald Trump’s policies' potential effects on Department of Education. Discussions pivot around the divisive dynamics within the political sphere, with a critical eye on figures like Kamala Harris and Joe Biden's strategies, campaign finances, and the broader socio-political landscape. Immigration policies, media narratives, and the coded language of public safety debates make for a thought-provoking exploration of how these themes shape public perception and national discourse.

In the realm of cultural narratives, we dissect the societal standards perpetuated by media, from beauty norms to the transactional nature of relationships. A thrilling dissection of a recent Penguin gives us a mirror to reflect on real-world issues of betrayal and privilege, all while offering a lighter take on taboo professions and the boundaries they navigate. However, the question remains: how do these topics resonate in today's world, and what can we learn from them? Join us as we blend lively discussions with critical analysis, crafting an episode that promises both entertainment and meaningful insight.

Speaker 1:

That's who y'all think Sky Jackson is and that is not who Sky Jackson is at all Like. I think that's why people are equating her with like Marseille and like that type of young woman, and that is not who Sky Jackson gives the organization that comes in and is like, hey, we need to make sure everybody gets educated at least to a decent level.

Speaker 3:

Granted, have they always made the right decisions?

Speaker 4:

No Child Left behind was trash. You should talk no child left behind on a regular basis.

Speaker 1:

I'm gonna sound like a, but I don't think bernice wants her daughter to be like a doctor, something like that. Like I think that she wants her to be put up and not have to do the shit that she had to do, but still like, get a rich. Is there a way to?

Speaker 3:

carry out mass deportation without separating families of course there's families can be deported together yeah we have funny, but I knew that's what he was gonna say, the whole world is telling us bro, y'all got a weird homeboy in here, he. You got a weird homeboy with the yarmulke he over there spazzing on every day.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying there's been a decline in the public's trust with journalists. There's been a decline in people generally just going out to get the information in the first goddamn place this year, this coming year and moving forward.

Speaker 3:

I am calling out all bad ideas, um, as you should. If you're saying things that are stupid and dumb, I'm going to expose it as such. Public safety and national security bs that could be just used for anything. That's just. That's what they did for the patriot it's a dog whistle, that's all it's going to be.

Speaker 3:

They're going to just use that as a dog whistle, I promise you, like we are setting ourselves up to especially the people of color, we are setting ourselves up to be the victim of all of this, your whole life is revolved around talking about other people's lives.

Speaker 5:

What the f*** do you think your f***ing 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. Head to Graffiti Tax Services. They're our new sponsor. Thank you to Graffiti Tax Preparation Services.

Speaker 3:

That's it All right. So yeah, we're back. It's been a long week, had a lot going on. You been all right. Yeah, I'm alive, survived your second week under Trump. Yeah, all right, so I mean we had something to get into. You had an interesting topic that you want us to dive into?

Speaker 1:

When's the first time you got in trouble for porn, like, did you ever get caught watching porn and when's the first time you got in trouble for it?

Speaker 3:

No, I've never got caught. Actually, like I was always kind of pretty thorough, like I knew how to like delete the history. When other kids I used to wonder how other people got calls like oh, I forgot to delete the history, how, after every time you just that's part of the routine is you delete the history, clear the cookies and just get I? Never, had issue with that, honestly. But see, I'm aware too, I'm aware the sample size because I had like sex before I started.

Speaker 1:

Oh, yeah, like that's really not a regular experience.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, so I mean, it wasn't Because people usually masturbate before they have sex. Yeah, it was the other way around for me. I learned it a different way. That's stupid.

Speaker 1:

And you did it wrong.

Speaker 3:

I got on a bike and then I got on training wheels Like that on a bike and then I got on training wheels like that's, that's ridiculous, hey, but uh, when, I think you have probably an interesting story behind this.

Speaker 1:

So I have a couple stories about getting caught watching porn.

Speaker 3:

Honestly, like it happened, it happened way too much I can't just imagine like being the parents of your daughter and then you just like what is wrong with you like why do you keep?

Speaker 1:

no, why do we have?

Speaker 3:

this, this continual issue with.

Speaker 1:

They were like what the fuck is the problem? Like no, the first time I ever saw anything pornographic. My friend brought like printouts of like the, the, like naughty cartoon stuff to school and then people were just like passing it around. I remember that and that's the first time I ever even knew that like porn existed. So I went home and I just looked it up on the computer like too much access? Yeah, too early like and I didn't think about the history or anything like that like.

Speaker 3:

I think I had one instance where, like this guy's school was, when I was like elementary school and you know I had more attention from the girls than he did. So he wanted to like get like tips or whatever, and so I told him you got to go to pimpcom and I wrote it down on a piece of paper for him and he got caught with a teacher and then the teacher ended up looking it up and got us sent to the principal office the next day because he was in like a little aftercare thing. So I was already gone at home when this happened.

Speaker 3:

And so I come to school the next day Tell me what happened. I'm like, oh my goodness, you got us caught up in trouble. But no, that was probably the only other time they didn't tell my parents. I was straight.

Speaker 1:

The second time. I don't think we should disclose the ages of you at this at this different time. No, no, no, the second time I got in trouble I was like all right, like I know I can't use the computer, you know what I did. I ordered it from like movies on demand.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you got them, huh that shit was literally just on the bill spelled out the whole time, whole way, the whole thing spelled out dot at the end or nothing, no 14.99 and then my mom asked me about it.

Speaker 1:

I remember we were in the car and then she was like this showed up on the bill. You know, was it you? And I was like I lied. I was like no, no, it wasn't. She was like okay, well, since it wasn't, you were gonna have to call the cops. And I was like it was me, you thought they was gonna find you out yeah, like they were never gonna call the cops they knew it was me.

Speaker 3:

Like what did you think like the they was gonna come with the evidence, like, oh, here's your fingerprints on the remote, when you, I don't even know what I thought was gonna happen.

Speaker 1:

I want to know what you thought they knew, but I just didn't want them to like fully call the cops and I thought the tv had surveillance on it or something like it, caught you red-handed I'm just trying to figure out like.

Speaker 3:

Because that was when I was younger I kind of had an idea of like when and when not to lie. I was naive. No, I knew I. I knew when and when not to like. I knew when to tell my mom enough truths to when I could throw in a lie every now and again because then, like I knew, I had built up enough equity that I could say something that she wouldn't really go and check because I had finessed it I wasn't that slick with my lies until I got older, I was 48 laws of power with it at like seven.

Speaker 3:

That's I knew all about terrifying. I knew all about that. Like them laws was something I was just already doing, when I was little, that's terrifying how I'm, just was knew what was going on seven, like most kids, are naive.

Speaker 1:

No, they're not manipulating their parents, oh no.

Speaker 3:

I knew exactly what to do. I knew what to ask my mom for what to ask my dad for when, to ask what time of day to ask. Like every time some people like, oh you should, you know, ask you come over. And I was like, no, it's not, not that kind of move right here. I gotta this ain't the temperature, ain't right for that right now. We gonna have to do that.

Speaker 1:

I kids knew that, though, like when you could ask your parents to do things. That's why we would get like our friends to ask our parents instead.

Speaker 3:

Let me come home with a fresh A on a quiz or something. We go to the store. Come on, let me get this dog. You know what it is. Break that off for a young nigga like. And then that's what they did For me.

Speaker 1:

It was just going out out I could, they would buy me whatever I wanted because I got good grades consistently up until college. And then that's when the truth get found out. Literally I had, I didn't have to have good study habits, I just got all a's and I was in honors and like ap classes until I went to college.

Speaker 3:

And then it was like what happened when they teach you for the test yeah, um damn it, I forgot what I was saying before oh, my bad, I was trying to let you pace your story out yeah, it don't matter, I forgot now they know that you're a nasty little freaky girl they've been you that, if they were, if they were listening, for sure, I mean consistently.

Speaker 3:

Usually people think of that like starting at you know, you know puberty age and things like that, not like when you're supposed to be watching the cheetah girls I was watching the cheetah girls and corn.

Speaker 1:

I'm pretty sure you had like the cheetah girl corn. No like link no early where they was just like putting that was never.

Speaker 3:

I don't think that was ever a thing they was putting their faces on bodies that was what she was on.

Speaker 1:

No family guy porn, though why I'm kidding?

Speaker 8:

I'm kidding, they were just that's.

Speaker 1:

That's what she brought to the um, to the class like was it in color? Like she used yeah no, she used her color ink for that whoa and it was like two printouts I don't remember what the other one was.

Speaker 3:

That's a I think it was like the simpsons or something like that had to be like five dollars a page. That's nasty that's crazy right yeah, doing the like you knew you was kind of you, you was out of pocket for that fun fact about her in that same grade she was, she was, she was sucking dick what, what?

Speaker 1:

yeah, she, I. It. Was it that news spread through our class like wild fire?

Speaker 3:

did she grow up like jenny?

Speaker 1:

she. She came in late in the year. She came in like as a transfer that already tells you there's some trouble had the jugs. She was like super. She looked like four grades higher than what she was, but but it was like she was just. That was the setup she just developed early, yeah she was.

Speaker 3:

She was put in a bad situation.

Speaker 1:

She had the knockers. And then there was this other kid in my class who was like super tall, also super developed, and then they were like a thing, and then they both had mad free time, so she was always at his house and then she was actually one of my best friends. She was in my friend group so that was her force.

Speaker 3:

Huh, that was her force, gump what do you?

Speaker 1:

mean because you said, I said she's living that jenny life oh yeah, because jenny had some rough shit going on as a child.

Speaker 3:

There was a lot of shit going on with her. Yeah, I mean you could tell you already said when you already put in transfer middle of the year. Usually that's a red flag for like okay.

Speaker 1:

I was that girl like a couple times.

Speaker 3:

Red flags.

Speaker 1:

Wow, but yeah, so she told me, but like she didn't hide it, like she was like proudly telling everyone that, like she did this, she was a big girl now. Yeah, and it was crazy. And then all the guys were like, oh, and then all the girls were like that's crazy for that to be your big one at a child age minor that's your minor big one that's sick. Yeah, so I can dig before.

Speaker 3:

Middle school is crazy man, scary world out here scary. All right, you got the music yeah, here is the musics.

Speaker 1:

We giving y'all an old school house party vibe today so which one was the most? The dip. This goes out to all the women in the world, especially her. You know, it don't even matter your age, don't even matter your color, don't even matter your color, your fellas, I ain't forget about y'all. This is for everybody to like your dance.

Speaker 5:

Just listen to what I'm saying and do it and take a chance. I put my hand up on your hip when I dip. You dip, we dip.

Speaker 3:

You put your hand up on my hip, I feel like this is black peanut butter and jelly time. Yeah, I wish I could get on the floor right now. I wish I could get on the floor right now.

Speaker 1:

We need to get back to the house parties, but we don't have houses because we can't afford them. Hey, oh my God, isn't it so? Cute, I'm not going to talk to you.

Speaker 5:

Show it again, but maybe later on we can chat over booze. See, I thought you knew. Ain't no delay in what I'm saying. Want me to rewind, select up my track. In one way I said it's a party I gots to run all through. We rollin' 20 plus. You can follow if you choose. See, ain't nothin' changed since the days of the Q, Except the elimination to run a two out my crew.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, it's you, but true, I gots to browse on you. You can catch me at the, we'll be right back. Got my whole team staring you, not bouncing with me, I'm not caring. Licking the lips for real, like you really want it. Is you dealing with a cat? That's blind. Play for real, for real Steady rock. Is you down? Took a haul with the champ a whole round. You see, I had my eyes on you From way across the room. You look so good. From over here I can smell your perfume. I assure If I tried to come and get you you'd think that I was only out to hit you. She use an intelligent chick with an extra type of smile. Held my temptations back for a while, told my brother Charlie, I'll be back here. Asked Minnie Lewis, feel nice to wash my jacket. Lay the dust on my lips, put the drink in my hand, took a sip. Let my maze expand Cause that's how we do Like a phone checker for me and you.

Speaker 6:

I give We'll be right back Now. My party ain't a party till it's spread all through, and even to my crew it's gon' be bigger blues. After three hours we gon' know what we do. My party ain't a party till it's spread all through. Now party ain't a party till I run through it. Pick em, stick em, stick em. That's how I do it. Move it, get down, keepin' y'all movin'. Certified game type. Prove it. Alright. Dealer of the dead floor. Makin' All right, making all y'all. Stop the crap. You feeling me there? Sure, I had the answers for your dancer since way back. We're in it down like that. I came in the door 20, you more. What's the dance floor? We like it wrong. Don't got my head spinning like a set of ribs. No, the brother, like a pair of tips with the deal. Shorty on the rock with me. Take it back to the rock with me. It's been the cast, like me.

Speaker 4:

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Speaker 3:

And see when you, when you doing the show, like how do you? Y'all don't even know what happened. You know what I'm saying, but you're able to do these on the fly kind of operations. You know any type of mishaps that may go on. So avoiding mishaps one, one, one at a time. One at a time but you're now listening to Talk. Fnf TV. I'm your host Absurd Rhetoric. And I'm with my lovely and amazing and gorgeous co-host, miss Reality. Hi guys, the joy has returned.

Speaker 1:

It's just back to regular business at this point, because what else are we going to do you?

Speaker 3:

got to put your dukes up now.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, got to get ready to resist. Uh, we might as well just start with that. So I don't know if you've seen the clip that's been going around and you know everybody on the the democratic, democratic side has been pushing it out and essentially been saying, uh, donald trump is wanting to give reparations to white people. So what I want to do, what I want to do, I want everybody get a chance to listen to it, and then we're just going to do a little deductive reasoning so we can talk objectively you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

We want to give everybody the the benefit of the doubt. Alright, so we're going to get right here. This is an excerpt of his plans for what's going to happen in the near future when he enters the office next year.

Speaker 8:

So furthermore, I will direct the Department of Justice to pursue federal civil rights cases against schools that continue to engage in racial discrimination.

Speaker 8:

And schools that persist in explicit, unlawful discrimination under the guise of equity will not only have their endowments taxed, but, through budget reconciliation, I will advance a measure to have them fined up to the entire amount of their endowment. A portion of the seized funds will then be used as restitution for victims of these illegal and unjust policies, policies that hurt our country so badly. Colleges have gotten hundreds of billions of dollars from hardworking taxpayers. Colleges have gotten hundreds of billions of dollars from hardworking taxpayers, and now we are going to get this anti-American insanity out of our institutions once and for all. We are going to have real education in America, ok.

Speaker 3:

So Talks about racial discrimination under the guise of equity. Talks about racial discrimination Under the guise Of equity. Now One would assume we would have to ask the question.

Speaker 1:

What schools Would be considered Like their foundation?

Speaker 3:

is equity. Well, I would even be before then. Then is just even going to the criteria. What he was talking about with just the school was pushing this identity. Who would be the people that would be in question for this said equity like who would be the people who would be receiving this equity? That is, then, creating this injustice, and why would they?

Speaker 1:

why did they need it in the first place, is my question. But that's not.

Speaker 3:

That's not that's an even better question.

Speaker 3:

Like we have to break that's not what they want to get into because I'm just because what I'm saying here is I understand this is y'all man's, this is who y'all rock with. I can I get it. I understand this is who y'all boy, but I want to understand people's thought process. So please, in the comment section, let us know who are the people that were getting this equity and and who would be those people who were hurt by said equity being passed around. Because, historically speaking, I will say it's not the white people who lost any equity in this country.

Speaker 3:

I'm just gonna say right there, I don't again. I could be wrong, please correct. But who? Who were these? These white people who didn't have equity? It just seems a little odd to me, seems like if, if I were to assume, what he was saying is the idea that we were doing things like affirmative action and making sure that we had at least attempted to look like we wronged I mean right the wrongs of our, our past.

Speaker 3:

Those actions now will be held in question there'll be, they'll be rolled back and they're already being rolled back now, but I'm saying like they're going to be held in question, these colleges, for pushing this it sounds like a direct attack on hbcus. Well, I mean if you go into the fact that he's trying to get rid of the department of education, who their main when they work with HBCUs is Pell Grants and things of that nature that go.

Speaker 1:

Even if it's, even if you don't go to a HBCU. I went to a state university and I still relied heavily on Pell Grants for my tuition. So that doesn't make sense and that affects more than just black people.

Speaker 3:

That just affects young people across the board so I mean we can kind of just dive into this a little bit more in regards to it. Um, the department of education, a lot of people aren't too familiar. They think that's that's something that's been in for around for a long time. It really hasn't. The 80s is when it kind of came around 79, 80, jimmy carter put the institution in. So this isn't the first time that we even had something like that, because I believe andrew jackson also had acts that he put in that was regarding doing some of the similar things that department education does.

Speaker 3:

So this wasn't something that was crazy, thought of, like nothing. No one was ever doing this. What they do for a large part is collect information. That's a large part and they also identify uh areas where are not getting the same kind of uh education, same not getting resources, things that nature. The reason why these things were federally funded was because, if you think about the times before the 80s, 70s, 60s there'd be a lot of folks who would drop out of school, elementary school, like that would be a normal thing, a lot of people have grandparents who they got sixth grade, seventh grade education, because that wasn't a priority then and you didn't have if you were in school.

Speaker 3:

You were in school because you probably had money like you came from money, and that was not an option for everybody. Public public school was not like it is now in regards to people having access to it.

Speaker 3:

So, and then, even then, it may not have been unworthy of the time, because you either worked on a farm, like my dad he was a farm kid uh, you had other things that would maybe take your time up because you wouldn't be able to get money from that. So then you have this federal organization that comes in and it's like, hey, we need to make sure everybody gets educated, at least to a decent level. Granted, have they always made the right decisions?

Speaker 1:

no child left behind was trash you should talk no child left behind on a regular basis.

Speaker 3:

At least it was an attempt to try to do something. Granted, it wasn't their best attempt, but it was an attempt to try to do something. We need to make sure we understand, like, when we get rid of these organizations, the people that hurt are the people at the bottom, people who are poor, disenfranchised, do not have options. Like, even when they're talking about the equity back in the colleges, we're talking about them making sure they have quotas. So I know you heard the stories about, like the Asian kids who got denied because they was Asian with good grades, and that wasn't diverse. Who got denied because they was asian with good grades, and that wasn't diverse.

Speaker 3:

To me, what I think a lot of people feel fail to realize is you're just learning amongst the large pool of people that there are. You're not as special as you really are. Did you really think you are? There's a lot of, you know, white kids who have to learn that they try to go and apply for these different schools and because they maybe didn't didn't do any extracurriculars or they didn't excel to what they really think they are excelling to, they have this oh, they're trying.

Speaker 3:

Look at all the scholarships for the black kids. I remember growing up hearing that when I was going into school, people was always talking about I'm like, do y'all not know history that we just took? We just left the class? Like you know the oppression that we were going through, you know, jim crow, all that stuff where you didn't let us into schools. You know we've just been able to get into your schools, especially in the south. What 40 years ago? Like, what are you talking about? Like you know what I'm saying. Like I have people who knew they couldn't go to no white colleges. Like that was just becoming a new thing for people like we're, like the second or third generation since that stuff has been legalized yeah, so like it hasn't been that long, people think it's been longer than my grandma went through segregation, like my dad had to go through the colored only section.

Speaker 3:

Like that's not far removed from that, just that direct depression. We're not talking about slavery. Then, when we got free and we started voting black people into the center, you, your part, you start putting gumballs in the machine to tell us how many gumballs are in the in this jar how many? How many bubbles are in the soap?

Speaker 3:

you know I'm saying to get the vote to do anything, basically like making all of these different limitations and that's what people don't understand, what a lot of these organizations bred out from of making sure we reinforce not the white people losing out because you're actually adding people of color in, but making sure that the people of color that should be in these positions, or at least be looked at, are given the opportunity it seems like when you don't um, when you don't prioritize education, then there's for sure gonna be a regression in the country like, uh, if you, if you don't prioritize education, then everything goes to shit but even then because elon musk had posted this thing talking about uh we were number one in education before the department of education.

Speaker 3:

Now we're 24 and it's like maybe it's because people who were not being invested in, not uh, being looked at, are now the ones that are added into the group, and that's what's leveling things out regards to education.

Speaker 3:

We all are trying to fix years of not investing in these communities yeah not putting people there, not giving the proper resources there, and we're trying to build that up and now they're trying to act like they've done anything to fix it. That's the crazy part. Like we're just in this post-racial, like people really feel like donald trump is some post-racial president, like we need to be looking.

Speaker 1:

I'm trying bro, it's, he's a regressive president.

Speaker 3:

It's not post anything I've had conversations with people where they told me they're okay with them taking black history out of school, like I'm. I'm literally having conversations with people that say that is so intensely idiotic not white people, black people saying that they're okay with that because of the other things that he'll bring like?

Speaker 1:

what other things? Why? What other things would donald trump bring for you to be okay with black history not being taught in schools? And then are you going to, every single parent individually, take it upon themselves to teach your children this, when y'all motherfuckers don't know your own history in the first goddamn place?

Speaker 3:

That's the crazy part, that, like that was a lot of responses. I was even in the spaces to where it was like oh, we can teach that at home. How, you don't know shit, how, how can y'all teach that at home when y'all barely know it? Y'all barely care to know it at that, and that's where it's like we feel. So I feel lost at some point having conversations with people where it's just like I'm just looking for like-minded individuals to discuss things with, because I can't be.

Speaker 3:

We can no longer keep platforming bad ideas, my friends, not stupid.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to y'all we from new york, we because of the public school system. Because you know, when I moved to georgia I was like, wow, y'all, public school system generally was not good most of. I'm sorry guys, this is not like a high brown negro thing. I, I just say, I just say, bring up random facts. And the niggas would treat me like I'm fucking, like I have a phd, like oh, how did you know that? I never knew that. And that was just like a common thing when I was dating just like a common thing, like it was just absolutely ridiculous. And I was like, wow, you niggas are undereducated and that's not your fault. But like when I have conversations with people in new york, that was not a thing at all. Like people generally like knew what I was talking about. I was not the person who knew the most in the room so often it used.

Speaker 3:

It would be hard to try to make jokes around people that didn't know much, because you would. You would try to say like something clever and funny and then like maybe an adult would laugh in a room and all that.

Speaker 1:

Then now your joke looks corny because the adults like, but it's a good joke it is and then when you go to the lowbrow humor stuff then they everybody knows how to respond.

Speaker 1:

Used to be the worst so, um, I just wanted to bring this up really quickly because it's relevant to what we're talking about. But when, um, when I was in haiti, in haiti, like there's no department of education or anything like that, like you have to have money to go to school they're really where I'm from there really aren't any public schools, and I'm from the city and everything else is a little bit more rural.

Speaker 1:

So, I'm sure there aren't public schools anywhere else. Correct me if I'm wrong, but it's mostly like it's mostly private Catholic schools and I don't know if there are any private like non-religious schools. I didn't find any or I didn't go to any. You have to have money, like you have to be able to pay for uniforms, you have to be able to pay for tuition, all this stuff, and if you aren't able to go to a private school, then you just don't go to school because there are no other options yeah, I mean again that's how it was for a large part of this country if you couldn't go to school or afford to go to school because there are no other options.

Speaker 3:

I mean again, that's how it was for a large part of this country If you couldn't go to school or afford to go to school, you would shit out of luck.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and then the school like the private schools were nice like gigantic, like 20, 30 foot gates in the front. There was a whole process, like I had to apply to a couple. You had to visit, you had to interview, you had to take tests at every school and then they would announce it on the radio. In my mom's time I don't remember if that happened when I was there, but they would announce it on the radio like which school you selected which school selected you?

Speaker 3:

like out of all the ones that you applied to yeah, and then the.

Speaker 1:

The school that I ended up going to was a private all girls Catholic school and it was like Base, like a basement level. There was like four different floors. It was nuns. I had computer classes, I had English classes, like we had max, like the the back in the 90s ones, but like it was absolutely insane the amount of like access that I had. But it's because I, my parents, had money.

Speaker 3:

My dad was here working so I mean, that's where the difference kind of just applies to and, as again, people don't understand that these politics that Trump is going to be pushing is only going to help a small amount of people and those people are going to continue pushing is only going to help a small amount of people and those people are going to continue to do the things that are already messing up the communities of the disenfranchised. That's where the parts of the people don't understand, like even with this new cabinet that he signed or that he's announcing day by day, he's already said that Vivek and Elon is going to be part of his government efficiency, team Government efficiency. These guys, Efficiency.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, what did I say?

Speaker 1:

Efficiency.

Speaker 3:

Oh, let me get something to drink. Government efficiency. There you go. But no, I'm just thinking to myself. So the dude who gets the most grants for his space program? Again, I'm not saying space program is a bad thing or it's not good for the country. I'm just saying when normal people think about these things, because we we got to go to y'all people perspective your way. Y'all look at everything. The nigga who play with space toys, who get government money to play with space toys that's cool. Who you want for the government efficiency?

Speaker 3:

that there's going to be zero efficiency the nigga who want to take us to mars so that we can terraform it, when, if we could terraform mars, why wouldn't we terraform earth to?

Speaker 1:

fix it. Why wouldn't we just fix the motherfucker that we're on right now?

Speaker 3:

so I mean that. But that's the dude you want to get like y'all don't think he's scamming y'all because he's talking about going more. All this big space shit. Y'all don't think he's. He's scamming y'all. Stock been going through the roof since trump's been elected. He's even told me we should put some money in that he told tucker carson that if he, if trump didn't win, he was scared he might go to jail. Why are you scared? You're going to go to jail, like.

Speaker 3:

These are the people he's electing into his like inner circle why, would you go to jail and we think that he has, like, our best interests in mind, like I, just it's just it. Just it's crazy. To me it doesn't make any sense, but this is what the people wanted. It was funny. I was watching another video today and they were talking about he asked a bunch of republicans like what country who leads like trump is is doing good right now, like it's doing better than united states? They was talking about all sorts of crazy stuff. These folks that said argentina. People said argentina argentina.

Speaker 1:

They their like. Economy collapsed and everything is yeah, um ridiculously expensive.

Speaker 3:

People can't buy groceries and everyone is starving so then they go into the countries that other countries that they did ask, and then they put like poland and woman-led, no poland no, I'm saying is poland no is. Does poland not have like?

Speaker 1:

a woman-led government. Well, I'm just, I'm just telling you what the is. Does poland not have like a woman-led government?

Speaker 3:

well, I'm just, I'm just telling you what the guy said, that the countries that they brought up okay so they was like australia, all these other countries around the world. They were trying to say are you know, have a trump like you know person in office and is doing good again. They was all wrong. Actually, a lot of those places were socialist places that y'all would call like.

Speaker 1:

That's the thing where it's, like a lot of places, very socialist. If I'm not mistaken, they even said like norway and all that stuff? No all of those, all of those slavic countries are liberal as a motherfucker. They leave their babies outside because there's so little crime.

Speaker 3:

Look it up I don't think that's slavic. Slavic is like western europe.

Speaker 1:

I think I don't know, I think they're more.

Speaker 3:

I'm just saying words, just just white, as a motherfucker it's just funny whereas, like folks don't understand what they're setting up this guy, like the borders are that they have. Let me, let's, let's, let me introduce y'all to this guy. So I believe his name is like tom hallman unruly individual all around. Just I feel like the racism, just when he speaks, like it's, it's no other flagrant, it feels like what was the dude who was, uh, in OJ's trial?

Speaker 3:

uh, foreman, I think it was the police officer they said that was a racist, the racist cop, like that's how he feels to me. Like when I hear this guy talk, I'm like, okay, we're in some problems here.

Speaker 8:

We have seen one estimate that says it would cost $88 billion to deport a million people a year.

Speaker 2:

I don't know if that's accurate or not. Is that what American taxpayers should expect? What price do you put on national security? Is that worth it?

Speaker 4:

Is there a way to carry out mass deportation without separating families?

Speaker 2:

of course there's families can be deported together yeah we have funny.

Speaker 1:

It's a sick nigga, but I knew that's what he was gonna say, because there was nothing else he could say I'm gonna deport the families a whole just whole households deported together.

Speaker 3:

I was watching so many videos about this guy. Like he had one where he was like going back and forth with a government official regarding like there was in like I think it was on capitol hill. He was like you, you work for me, you're a public servant, I'm a taxpayer, you work for me. Like he said that to the lady in the midst of the back and forth, like she had to like hit the gravel and it was that's gravel gavel, I'm getting any words today he had to go crazy.

Speaker 3:

I was gonna love this episode. It happens man had to hit the gavel. It was going crazy like. I don't think we understand what kind of folks y'all have unleashed upon us. This is bad. These are going like. My question is this when is it going to be immigrant? It's just a broad term for you, not white.

Speaker 1:

That's what it feels like we're going to that's eventually what it's going to lead to if they do start doing this, because I think he was even on.

Speaker 3:

Let me see if I can.

Speaker 1:

I think it's kind of like it's logistic wise is unrealistic, because trump in his first presidency like his big thing was build the wall and that didn't happen, not um to the grandeur that he uh told everyone that it was going to happen. And then this time it's the whole mass deportation thing, that's, I don't think that's going to happen either.

Speaker 3:

Okay, this is him on fox news are you planning on deporting american citizens?

Speaker 2:

no, exactly not. Look the view. That's like the island of misfit toys they don't know what the hell they're talking about. President trump has made it clear we will prioritize public safety threats and national security threats first, and that's's what the focus will be. And there's over 1.5 convicted criminal aliens in this country, with final orders removal that we're going to be looking for. There's thousands of gang members, illegal gang members we're going to be looking for. Now I'm going to say if you're in the country illegally, you shouldn't feel comfortable, absolutely not. I won't feel comfortable if I'm in a country illegally. If I'm in some other country illegally, I'm not going to be comfortable. You shouldn't be comfortable either, because when you enter this country illegally, you have committed a crime, you are a criminal and you're not off the table.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I don't believe y'all worth a damn that public and national security. I believe that can be used for anything.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

That public safety and national security bs that could be just used for anything. That's just. That's what they did for the patriot it's a dog whistle that's all it's going to be. They're going to just use that as a dog whistle. I promise you, like we are setting ourselves up to especially the people of color. We are setting ourselves up to be the victim of all of this because, again, when they start doing all this stuff, we are always negatively affected because generally we are in the areas that we can't defend ourselves.

Speaker 1:

Have you seen all of the interviews with Hispanic people who voted for Trump saying that, like they don't think he's going to deport hardworking people? And yes, I have people in my family who are illegal and they're upset at me for voting for Trump, like I don't know what type of warped bullshit makes you an immigrant. Think that, like you're a special immigrant. It's want for proximity to whiteness. That's all it is.

Speaker 3:

It's just wanting to be one of them and feeling like he's going to make you one of them, because he gives you that story, he tells you the BS that you want to hear and that's the problem with the other people of color.

Speaker 1:

I'm not pointing to him.

Speaker 8:

That was exactly what you were doing.

Speaker 1:

I'm not pointing. That's why I said it's not him. It's in the middle here. But that's the problem with with the other people of color, because the y'all have more closer proximity to whiteness than black.

Speaker 1:

We are irrefutably not fucking white y'all get to use the same barber so y'all think that y'all can, y'all can hop in that bucket with them, but they don't want you in that bucket with them. They tell you that like y'all are not white, period. And they will tell you to your fucking face, every single time remember what happened with myron yeah we talked about that clip with myron and they told him.

Speaker 3:

he said this is why we don't want to really work with y'all, because the truth is, we want to get rid of y'all. Like, even if you're working with us in conjunction to a similar mission, once that mission is not complete, until you are also out of the country too, these folks tell you this time and time again and y'all fall for it. I don't understand it, but this is what I want to ask, because I didn't talking about this and they put a tweet out where they said how can y'all blame people for not reading and trying to get information when newspapers are all behind a paywall, like all of the reputable?

Speaker 1:

news every single one because there's been a decline in the public's trust with journalists. There's been a decline in people generally just going out to get the information in the first goddamn place. People don't want print newspapers anymore. Newspapers have been struggling for a very long time to keep the fucking lights on, so they have to in some way be able to pay the journalists that are working there. And the journalists are getting paid shit. All of my journalism professors were full-time journalists at the same time and they could barely make ends meet that was mine.

Speaker 3:

The same too my journalism professor.

Speaker 1:

there was one. She said I'm a full-time journalist and I work here, and if I was not married to a man in tech, I would not live the life that I am able to live. That's why everything is behind the paywall, like I understand, like there is. You have access to information. There are ways that you can access information. There are other news sources that you can access Al Jazeera, like BBC. There are other news sources that you can go that are outside of the US, that are reputable news sources that you can use. There's so much information out there. These journals in the US, though, they're getting paid shit and they're not trusted and they need to get paid, so it's behind the paywall for a reason.

Speaker 3:

No, I agree, because at some point we had to ask ourselves what do you value? Because if you value enough to pay $10, $12, $15, $20 monthly for your entertainment, for an app, you have to also ask the question are you going to be willing to pay for that, for your information?

Speaker 1:

And it's not just $12, $15. People are paying generally like $70, $80.

Speaker 3:

You're subscribed to more than one streaming service, because, if the thing is, you can either pay for, like, a multiple of sites that will allow you to have different viewpoints on a similar topic, or you could do the work and read multiple articles, because there's a lot to be, a lot of articles that copy those articles, or copy the, the talking points of it, the main highlight, and you're just going to have to do your research on things. You're going to have to find multiple sources on it. I think that, at the end of the day, if we're going to call y'all ourselves the free nation that we are, there has to be some responsibility from one another that, no, you need to be educated on these things, and if not, it's going to be shown in our conversation. That's why this year, this coming year and moving forward, I am calling out all bad ideas. Um, as you should. If you're saying things that are stupid and dumb, I'm going to expose it as such. We used to be an educated nation, but that's but.

Speaker 1:

People weren't allowed. A lot of people weren't allowed to get educations but, like the citizens of the United States used to take voting very seriously, you had to be informed about stuff, like people used to.

Speaker 3:

They took it so seriously, stopped the groups of people from doing it. They did, but that aside right.

Speaker 1:

Because I address that, that aside, like it was a very serious thing and I feel like we need to get back to that that's gonna be tough. I mean there used to be like salons people just sitting around talking, having educated conversations. We're just we're. So now we live in echo chambers. Like the internet has changed a lot.

Speaker 3:

Like you might be sitting there thinking that you are completely right in your full nonsense it's funny, though, because you can actually go back and see like other people being critical of different, like the different times, and one of the ones is like it was critical because everybody, if you read a newspaper, and everybody's head was in in the newspaper, so nobody was looking at each other when they were at like events and things like that it's the same now, except we're on our phones it's just at least there there was some type of line of credibility that had to be hacked, don't get me wrong.

Speaker 3:

There was people doing yellow journalism and, you know, going over the top. But to me that was necessary because the people on other side had way more power. So you had to finesse the, to take out these billionaires and things of that nature. You don't have to lie, but you just maybe, you know, sauced up. Maybe if a guy didn't, he didn't break his arm, but he, you know, something fell on him.

Speaker 1:

It hurt whole Spanish war. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

I'm just talking about. When they were talking about the, the industrial revolution, they were talking about the working conditions because they would add sauce onto that. But that's always been historically like again, that's always been historically what you needed to do to fight against these people, because they will pacify you to a point where you don't feel like it's really oppression, it's just normal. So that's why this shit is to me, is why I go so hard for just making sure people have information, making sure that you can at least articulate your point, and if you can't exposing that showing, hey, just say that you want to do dumb shit because you're a dumb nigga, and then that's peace to me like just living that or living your hate.

Speaker 3:

If you hate niggas and he help you with your hater, niggas say that, gay niggas uh, trans niggas, all that yeah, you just, you just hate others.

Speaker 3:

If you just hate others, then you go ahead and just be that I just wish people would be honest to it, because they try to act like they stand on this moral high ground with it and it's just no like that's. He makes you comfortable because he puts the hierarchy and we're talking about Trump again he makes the hierarchy where you feel like you are above this particular person for this particular identity that they may have.

Speaker 1:

And in reality he thinks y'all are all little pieces of shit. Yeah, I mean. I just every, everyone, everyone, y'all are all poor, work, we're all poor and we're not who he's trying to help at all not even looking your way but then like that's, that's always the thing with american politics. Like you use the divisive bullshit to make, uh, people generally feel like they're, they don't have a common interest. And if everyone came together and realized that, like what, what issues actually mattered, all of them would be the fuck out of here.

Speaker 3:

Like we would get them the fuck out of here. A lot of y'all hating on the immigrants and all that stuff is like that's the people we need to be coming together with, not working to be like their enemy. That's more bodies for the, for the resistance that we need, but everyone is just scared. They think that like they talk about the democrats wanting to hand out or giving out handouts to people, but y'all going to this rich man like he about to do anything like that. That's all I hear from people is that he gonna give out money, he gonna pass out the money, but it's like bro, you don't even have nothing to start the game with.

Speaker 1:

Those are like the most bottom of the barrel people who think that trump is about to start giving out checks, like there wasn't a whole ass pandemic when he was not. He, when the government was giving out checks that he delayed to put his name on so y'all could think that he was giving them out. Dumb motherfuckers like sometimes, I just hate you niggas it's a rough man.

Speaker 3:

It's just rough when there's so much information out there about people and you warn them on these things. They talked about project 2025. Oh, that's not me, that's not my people. He's hiring people. Who was on on the?

Speaker 1:

foundation. He's gonna start like this is his plan and I'm still worried about that policing. Uh, immunity, yeah, that's just the one that's concerning but on a bright note, he's delaying the tiktok ban gotta get the wins where we can get them right like that's the only win all right?

Speaker 3:

well, let's let's switch it up. Uh, bernice burgos? Well, hold on, let's stay in this. Before we get into that, we do got to talk about Kamala and her campaign.

Speaker 1:

Being $20 million in debt. How? You raise a billion dollars. I think it's because Kamala had to join the race late, so she had to do a lot to catch up. I understand she had to spend a lot. It was just but how you blowing money quickly, how you do a billion and 20 like that's insane. Do we know how much trump spent on his? No, she, she had way more.

Speaker 3:

Uh, she spent more. She has spent way more money, but he didn't get a lot of his money until close to the end of the election, with a lot of the tech billionaires, with elon and all that. So that's why you saw them picking up steam together, because that's when they started really donating and getting their promises from them and things like that. But no, I just think that I think they I saw this was really nasty they were asking still for people to donate to the campaign so that they could pay for, like recap, so talking about for, basically, recounts for other positions and elections and things that were really close. So that's what they were saying they asking the money for. But in the light of this article coming out, or this information it's to cover them, it's because they in the red.

Speaker 3:

How much y'all give megan? That's what I want. I heard they said they gave megan five, five m's what, what?

Speaker 1:

that's what I heard, because that pisses me off because meg the stallion I don't know how true, her, her, like. If this is true, like, what impact does she have politically for you to invest five million dollars for her to endorse you?

Speaker 3:

I heard they paid for the uh ad on the spear in vegas. That was like super duper expensive, they like they racked it up with them for that one well, good for the spear, because them motherfuckers are in debt yeah and they will be for a very long periodically time, periodically time like for a while.

Speaker 1:

So I don't know. This is just a mess. All of the information that keeps coming out about kamala's um campaign and just the democrats in general just keep pissing me off yeah, it was clearly a setup it was like she was not gonna win and then they said they haven't been paying some of the people that was working on the staff.

Speaker 3:

Like that's what they're saying, like a lot of that money isn't being shown at where the people on staff. It's just nasty, this. Like a lot of y'all, oh man, this is nasty and I just can't believe that. 20 million after having a billion dollars raising all of this money.

Speaker 1:

So then it's taking private jets are expensive, man well, it's not even that she was a flying commercial.

Speaker 3:

these folks was just gassing the price because, I mean, just think about, the closer you get to the election, the higher the number you can grab, I would assume. I think that's why Cardi and them jumped on when they did, because they were able to get the higher bag.

Speaker 1:

Because I swear to God, whoever was running Kamala's campaign, if you paid Cardi B for her endorsement, I'm like so over it. I'm so over it. Like why pay Meg Thee Stallion and Cardi B when you knew black women was gonna vote for you? They're not gonna make anybody else vote for you. What was that for? I'm gonna stop yelling, it's just like I don't understand.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, it just seemed overall just the funding and the spending it pisses me off which is done horribly, because I think it could have been better served with more glorilla I'm just saying, even with just more individual act, I'd rather her been traveling more, being seen more, than trying to pay for the celebrity you should you should have, instead of paying cardi b, to get there, instead of to speak, instead of paying Meg Thee Stallion, instead of paying Glorilla, you should have hopped your ass on whatever flight and however much it was to go. Do that? Joe Rogan interview.

Speaker 1:

I mean, that would have been a better idea, like to get some white men on your side because, obviously, like that's who you should have been focusing on. To convert the white men, the Hispanic men, the Hispanic women. Like, like that's who you should have been focusing on to convert the white men, the hispanic men, the hispanic women, like that's who you should have been focusing on, and then you focusing on black women, when you knew we was gonna vote for you anyways.

Speaker 3:

92 percent no, I just wanted to touch on that. It'll make sure we touch on the fact that fucking stupid ass campaign spending and a lot of folks. It's funny just seeing like a lot of the uh kamala avengers come out because they they really mad at biden, because they, exposing the fact that he was supposed to ben uh, say he wasn't going to run for the election again and that him holding on for as long as he did was a large part of why she lost and there was no primary.

Speaker 3:

They said they were supposed to have a primary. That was part of the plan. It was they have like everything.

Speaker 1:

That's just part of the the democratic process why was there no? Why was there no?

Speaker 3:

primary. I told y'all that. I told y'all biden was the one who was. This is the reason why he did not want to give up on that until he was almost forced to. So y'all forced his hand and then he endorsed kamala because he knew that was going to make them have to follow suit and just went. Everything went down the drain. Like I say, he, I believe in a way we do have to you old bitch. We have to blame biden for this in a way.

Speaker 1:

No, that's what.

Speaker 3:

That's exactly who we're gonna blame, that's who we're gonna scapegoat, because they're trying to say if he would have ran it would have been a bigger landslide, just because everybody, you know his health because he's about to die.

Speaker 1:

He's about to literally fall over and die. So yeah, oh, never mind that's, that's that's. I think that's why people didn't vote bernie well, but that and he's way too left-leaning. They cheated bernie though they did? They cheated bernie big. Do you think, if they put well I, I. Do you think, if they put bernie against trump, that bernie would have won?

Speaker 3:

no, not now no like when he went yeah versus hillary.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he could have won against hillary, but now he wouldn't want against oh, imagine, imagine if we got a bernie versus trump and then bernie won, oh my god, and then we just never had to deal with trump in the first place.

Speaker 3:

Bernie as president nah trump wouldn't have gave up, he would have been a life. He's jewish right, bernie yeah, might be, I'm not too sure. I never looked into his ethnicity I saw this little tiktok clip.

Speaker 1:

They were doing this um ancestry. Little show that they do with the um celebrities bernie sanders and larry david are like distant, distant, distant cousins with him they probably are.

Speaker 3:

That makes sense, doesn't it? They probably are six startup then oh my god what you can't say that, oh, hold on. This is why, too. Last political comment y'all know he's leading a coalition to remove the un from I mean the united states from the un that's a terrible idea.

Speaker 3:

The un is trying to get rid of israel because of their actions and they're trying to basically like sanction not sanction, but kind of remove them from general assembly in the un. He and like 10 other senators I think most of those people probably have been re-elected as well. They've been in working in conjunction to basically threaten to remove. I don't think people understand. They are trying to get us in a 20 v2 like we're trying to get everybody on us because we want to protect these folks in the middle east.

Speaker 1:

That's still in lane bro, we're like we I said this before we've been privileged to not have war here, but that shit is gonna happen eventually. You do a 20 v2.

Speaker 3:

Like this, everybody telling us like bro, y'all they pulling up on us this is what's happening, though. The whole world is telling us bro, y'all got a weird homeboy in here. He, you got a weird homeboy with the yarmulke. He over there spazzing on niggas every day.

Speaker 8:

You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

Straight clapping these niggas up every day.

Speaker 1:

You got a weird case.

Speaker 3:

Why is he around? Y'all keep bringing him to the party. Bro Slee, that nigga over there. He keep coming spinning blocks on everybody. And then trying to tell us oh, you see what they did to us, you see what he did over there. He came over. Look how he looked at me. He stepped on my sneakers.

Speaker 1:

I had to, I had to pull it out and shoot him seven times in the face. That is who our, and they pull up to his mama's house and then shoot his mama too and the kids in the house then burn the house. That's what they're doing that's literally what they're doing. That is what it is. They're literally dropping bombs on refugee camps and be like oops, thought it was hamas, you knew it was a refugee camp. I seen a little moss over there. That's not funny. I'm just telling you what that's like we're, we're.

Speaker 1:

We're framing it in a comedic manner, and it is not a comedic thing, because people are actively dying while we speak.

Speaker 3:

My thing is, we got to explain it for our people. That was a little funny, though the way you like.

Speaker 1:

I just don't want it to be funny.

Speaker 3:

I'm just explaining what's going on, like I'm reading this article about one of them wanting to remove us, as like we threatening to remove ourselves but if they do, sanctions on israel, and I'm like, bro, what, what are y'all doing? This is not a good idea, not for the nigga. That's really messed like. I couldn't imagine us jumping on a bullet for anybody. My question is.

Speaker 1:

Since when was we in israel man's like this, you know, since it's been created? Oh my god, I'm okay, I'm just unaware. I thought us in france was the like man's man's you know not just that, it's literally you.

Speaker 3:

The un. One of its first big actions was creating the state of israel, so that's why it's funny, so it's the un's fucking fault.

Speaker 3:

No, it's just like it's not even. That's just. But yeah, they are. But it's crazy because you, you have all this stuff and I don't mean to bore y'all with a history lesson, but you go into, like the geneva, you go into, like the geneva convention and all that other stuff that was created out of the wake of what happened in world war ii in regards to the holocaust. Only to now, decades later, the people who this stuff was created to defend are now the aggressors in a their own colonizing actions, ones that, you could be argued, we started. It's just kind of insane just to see that full circle where it's like, because you've given one group of people a position of power in this area because you, we backed you. Now you've become the people who people a position of power in this area because we backed you. Now you've become the people who we created this land for you to get away from.

Speaker 3:

We literally created this monster, not we, I mean.

Speaker 1:

America did, because we is niggas.

Speaker 3:

I mean, I pay taxes, we do pay taxes, so I mean by proxy of that we are a part of this as well.

Speaker 1:

Definitely me paying taxes.

Speaker 3:

But I'm just saying, saying that's why it's just crazy. Please y'all should just look up into that some more, like I thought it was nuts when I was reading them articles about what mark ted cruz is actually the one leading it I'm sorry if you see me like keep rubbing my arm.

Speaker 1:

I don't know what's happening. I think I'm having a stroke that's not good. That's not good at all no, it's really like I'm in pain right now, randomly like what is the? What's the next topic? Baby, we've been doing the we've been on the politics for a little bit yeah no, we can get into bernice burgo.

Speaker 3:

She was on joe button show uh recently yes, she was on patreon right. There's a patreon episode where they did an interview with her. It was a lot of shade between her and mel.

Speaker 3:

That was one of the biggest was there a lot of shade, it feel like, because she like at the beginning of it she talked about how Mel and them used to work out at her gym and Mel didn't show up anymore. She was like what was going on? Was it too hard for you? And I felt like, oh, that's, that's girl code for shade, right there maybe that was my maybe.

Speaker 1:

Then she made a little thing I was like.

Speaker 3:

well, I, you know, I just love, love. Now that my skin color, I've been able to embrace that Because you know the light skin girls was y'all was in back in the day, but you know.

Speaker 1:

Is Bernice not.

Speaker 3:

She's more considered brown skin, dark skin, she is yeah she's very, yeah, she's very like warm toned, she would be in the brown bunny category.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, definitely she go ahead, it just was a lot of that going on, but the big thing that kind of everybody, uh, was reacting to was the fact that she was trying to talk about. What was she got to ask the question, what was the most romantic thing that happened to you? And you know what would be the most romantic thing a man could do for you? And of course, it all revolved around her receiving money in some type of fashion.

Speaker 1:

She said it was him thinking about her and doing little gestures like sending her five hundred dollars when she says she's going to the grocery store, or him looking in her drawer and saying, knowing that she needs panties and have give him giving her five hundred dollars the minimum was like just to start the day off, I need at least you to give me five before noon because what else am I?

Speaker 1:

because in this day and age, I can't step foot outside without spending at least three hundred dollars. And you gonna give me as as much as I need.

Speaker 3:

No, give me 200 more than that I think it's just kind of interesting, and it's kind of sad, though, when you really kind of just take a step back literally a couple weeks ago, I was like, babe, I need six hundred dollars. But I'm just saying, but as a 40 year old woman for you to be. That's the way that you look at your romance. That's kind of got to be an issue, it's because you could have said something without not having to bring in an exact number like that was literally like oh if you want to text me five hundred dollars and we can get that started.

Speaker 1:

The funny thing was is that, like none of the none of the examples that she gave were of like them spending time together or anything like that. It was just like him funding her needs. Yeah, I mean that's and that's her love language.

Speaker 3:

Imperial bitch that could be your love language, but let's discuss the implications of that. Like we got to get into that. Like what's going on in your mind mind when you're acting with these people Is everything a transaction? Like, is everything in your life that you deal with other people a transaction? Are you just something to be purchased? Then you have to get into the logical conclusion of where that leads you to, especially when you're in the sad part about it is you can think of the way you want to think, but there are young girls who are framing where they want to grow up as an adult, to be where she is. We can't act like that's not true um and, and my question is what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

My question is is like where, where does the role of okay, she can say that that's cool, but we also have to be the antithesis of it.

Speaker 1:

I'm um, it's, it's. I'm having a hard time wrapping my mind around. What do you mean? Young girls, like young girls, just watching a Bernice okay, high school year old girl Cause they, they definitely are watching these types of interviews so if clips, yeah, if yeah because they're not no 18 year old girls are subscribed to joe.

Speaker 3:

But I would argue that's worse too, because now you're not even getting the full content. You're not getting not at all no.

Speaker 1:

Um, there are definitely girls who are looking up to what she's doing, but that's because they probably don't have a good parental unit solid enough to.

Speaker 3:

I would argue that's not no, because if you, I the money is when you, okay. She went on there and said she was making, on a light day, thirty thousand dollars that's what I wanted to talk about next then talk about she make it.

Speaker 3:

But I'm saying all that has to come into play when you have this conversation, because I'm not trying to be like the old man on the yard shaking his fist, but it's like when you talk about your love, language is is a cash app. You talk about the life that you was living, you making 30 to 70 000 in a night which there was breakfast club. Uh, notes that were coming out, breakfast club video clips that came out that said you were only making 8 000. But we won't gotta wake that up well, it might have been saying that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, no, I saw that clip also that she said that she was only working on sundays and she would make like eight thousand dollars on the sundays.

Speaker 1:

But that might have been like when she slowed down even then, because if she was only working on sundays I would imagine that in her heyday there was like a couple girls who worked at, I think, starlets and they were like the star tenders. It was her, the Asian girl, with like the half shaved head, the other like all of them body crazy. And then people were like flying in from all over the country to see these girls specifically, country to see these girls specifically.

Speaker 1:

So I wouldn't, it wouldn't be like super crazy to me that like in the beginning couple months or when she like really got popping and people really knew her, that she was making this amount of money maybe not for the entire time that she was, it's probably, was probably like a six month span, a summer maybe you know, maybe it was like one summer that she was really hot, maybe like somebody mentioned her in a song and then she was like super popping, and then that like she took it and ran with it because she said she was only a bartender for like three years, right I mean, those numbers are everything.

Speaker 3:

All that changes. That's the thing where it's like when when she said a different number before I haven't confirmed in regards to that okay, I just it's again.

Speaker 3:

Every time I appear it's it's four, five, six, you know, it's just different things so and again, those could also just be as the time progresses in regards, because, like she, she doesn't do a lot of interviews, but when she does do them they kind of do do numbers, because I remember the breakfast club one did numbers when she jumped on there. My question here is this so they talked about dre oh, they did yeah, they talked about dread.

Speaker 3:

Joe asked her about dre. He tried to be coy about it. That was probably his best question of the night. She and this is why these kind of women get on my nerves, because she- was so she was so disingenuous with the conversation, oh, I don't see a problem with it.

Speaker 3:

And then when they switched it around and brought it to her daughter, now she was questioning but she knew she had to say what she knows she. She knew what side she had to be on to say face with it okay, so what were these questions? So they were just asking her um, you know these women saying that they're being predatory. Do you think it's predatory what they're doing? Going after these young men? How is it predatory? Is he you don't think he's doing where he want to be at? And all those bird talk?

Speaker 1:

yeah, and then what did they ask her about her daughter?

Speaker 3:

said so you know your daughter what? How would you feel if your daughter was bringing home a 50 year old man? She says for one thing. She says my daughter wouldn't just bring anybody around me for one thing. So now you're saying you kind of not looking, you're not thinking it's real because you're not seeing it. And then she tried to say face with it, where it was like, well, he went through all the rigors she wants to introduce you to she. Well, I would you know, I would have to be cool with it. She's a grown woman, all this other stuff. You know you would not be cool with a nigga who is your peer nigga, who's to spend money on you in the club, now hitting on your daughter um loki.

Speaker 1:

I think she would be cool with it you think so you think that loki? I feel like I feel like no, I, I, if you've been doing this for as long as you've been doing this, and now your baby daddy is mad, young and like I think I don't think her morals are the tightest, most upright thing, and then I feel like she probably Are we talking? About Dre or Bernice. She said her baby daddy was young, so oh, isn't her baby, daddy, young also.

Speaker 3:

No, she was just dating Jameis.

Speaker 1:

Okay, okay.

Speaker 3:

She didn't have a baby with him.

Speaker 1:

Okay, but she was still engaging in the same predatory activity and if she got pregnant she would have kept that little motherfucker. So same boat, she's in the same boat, but, um damn it, I've lost my train of thought again what were we just talking about?

Speaker 3:

how she was with drea?

Speaker 1:

uh, you say that so, yeah, I'm sure that she gave her daughter the game so that she could exceed what she's done. I'm I don't I'm gonna sound like a dick, but I don't think bernice wants her daughter to be like a doctor or something like that. Like I think that she wants her to be put up and not have to do the shit that she had to do but still like get a rich nigga. So if a 50 year old man wants to put her daughter up, then I think bernice might be okay with that.

Speaker 1:

That's I just think that, I think she might be okay with that, because she comes from that cloth yeah, I mean, at least there's a level of consistency there. I'm again, I'm not because there are a lot of women who do that I'm not gonna stick my nose up at her, in particular because not at all.

Speaker 3:

Do what you gotta put up get it how you live or whatever, but you know you flawed because that shit is predatory.

Speaker 1:

Keep it a bean it is.

Speaker 3:

That's the thing I'm saying. Just keep it a bean, even if the nigga with your daughter is still going to be predatory in nature, because she only going to be there, honestly, because he got capital. So it's not like she's going to be there and just like you wouldn't be there for altruistic reasons. So let's not act like that. And then I want to ask you this question do you think she got a nda where she can't bring up jaylen brown in any of these conversations.

Speaker 1:

That might be the case, but I don't know, because they only dated and they're not even together anymore. She's probably still on payroll, though she might be.

Speaker 3:

I'm just saying like we kind of got to wake it up in the bernice is the type of bitch you keep on payroll a lot of these, a lot of these women are on payroll where it's like I know I got exclusive rights to the pussy from january to may, like that. A lot of these are that where that life is being kept like this, where you got they renewing contracts with these guys so that they could get this money. Because if you got to keep it real, if you look at how these women be living and what they actually bring to the market, this shit's not adding up. They not in the club enough, they not making enough appearances.

Speaker 1:

Baby girl, you, it's not like you can do anything else, but it's not like it's not like we keeping up with bernice, like do you follow her and be like watching her story on a regular basis and see what hostings she be at I mean on a nightly basis, because they're not all gonna go viral don't all add up.

Speaker 3:

I think there was another girl. They was talking about miss glizzy or miss gizzy or gizzy doll. You don't know her. I think her name is jizzy doll or something like that.

Speaker 1:

No idea who that is.

Speaker 3:

She's another girl where, look it up it was funny because I heard people talking about her and I'm just saying like there's nothing here that y'all can show to add up to the lifestyle that they claim that they're living. It just isn't. There's nothing that they're selling that could turn that around. No matter what, if you go to I think we went to bernice's website where you can see where she had like some pretty affordable like panties and drawers and laundry that you're not making that kind of money unless you victoria's secret like I promise you you just not like. The game is good, it ain't that good. Yeah, you might get million dollars in sales, but sales is cut up into what you're paying for for your product.

Speaker 3:

If you have advertising everything like yeah models, taxes, crazy things that you got to add into place, people working into just filing paperwork for it, sending out, sending it out to mail. It is a cost, even if you add that on to it. That's still all things that you kind of have to do and be part of. So people just like it's a, it's a game, what, what she does is very akin to the rappers. Do the rappers act like they have it? They want to show you that you live in a certain lifestyle.

Speaker 1:

Everybody on the internet is acting like they have it. They want to show that you live in a certain lifestyle. Everybody on the Internet is acting like they got something they don't got.

Speaker 3:

I mean it's the same thing too For some rich white man more than likely to come in. The rappers wanted to a rich white man to come and save him with a contract, just like the women want some some rich man, regardless of what he look like, to save them with some money. Yeah, so I mean I'm not mad at the interview. I just think the behavior needs to be discussed in a more like critical way because, cool, you can again. We.

Speaker 3:

I'm all down for women individually doing what they want, but that needs to come at the same criticism that anybody who's living a particular lifestyle has, especially when it's so akin to like immoral behavior. Even if you're not in it like you're still a bartender in a strip club you know what's going on in that strip club yeah like you're part of that, so it's by proxy. So I mean I'm just saying like I'm not mad at it, but we do have to call it out because she just feels it to a degree.

Speaker 1:

I think what there was no way she could have been genuine about that answer, though yeah, I what there was no way she could have been genuine about that answer though.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I mean, I don't think she could have been genuine talking about Jalen either, because I believe he's still funding her lifestyle to a degree. You don't get 300 M's and not keep some pussy on the side like that. You still want to come to New York and you know, get fly with her who cares. You may got a girl who cares. Got to get fly with my little piece with me. That's my old thing, grandma. You know that's what he called her.

Speaker 1:

Grandma? Yeah, she is a grandmother.

Speaker 3:

That's why he called her that. He called her G-ma. So did you hear about Benny Blanco being the sexiest man alive? I think we take an L as a group as men, we are not a proper country anymore. We're not.

Speaker 1:

We've lost we've lost the plot. We definitely have, because that nigga looks like mr potato head he looked like a normal, just dirty white boy.

Speaker 3:

I was sitting there like I'm not gay, but there ain't nothing here.

Speaker 1:

No, like you know what an attractive person looks like, regardless of your sexuality.

Speaker 3:

Wasn't they mad at him too, Because, like, isn't he with Selena Gomez or anything? And I guess he wanted to have kids with her, but not get married? I?

Speaker 1:

remember, Like you're not allowed to just impregnate.

Speaker 3:

Selena Gomez. She says yes, he is.

Speaker 1:

Even if she says yes, not when you look like that. You about to water down those beautiful jeans into your nonsense and then have oh shit, have her pop out a little fucking gremlin I was thinking the same thing he do.

Speaker 3:

Look gremlin like he's definitely when she's gorgeous. He's definitely a troll man. Oh my god, selena please well she if her genes are strong, she should that kid be all right. Can she have? Kids I don't mean she's got all the stuff. No, she just got lupus, lupus. Don't make you not be able to have kids.

Speaker 1:

I don't know. She do got some stuff going on with her though, but yeah hopefully.

Speaker 3:

I wish her the best, but I just think we in a bad place, man, when, when benny benny winning sexiest man alive, like what does that say?

Speaker 1:

he does not even have a jawline. But what does that say?

Speaker 3:

the he does not even have a jawline. But what does that say? The reflection of what modern media is. See, that's why Trump wins.

Speaker 1:

There are so many men that could have like yeah, just do not.

Speaker 3:

But this is what they look at, one of the things that they look at and have this overcorrection with Trump, because they see that these magazines say the sexiest man alive looks like a fucking gremlin and nowadays like what that? These magazines say the sexiest man alive looks like a fucking gremlin and now they's like what? So everything that I'm trying to strive for what I've seen to be told I was told this growing up. You're telling me it's this, this guy, and he pulling like what?

Speaker 1:

who are you trying to embolden? Who are you trying to give confidence to? Because niggas who look like that don't need to have confidence because they're ugly.

Speaker 3:

oh, I think that would probably be the reason why you would want to give them confidence because of whatever you just said, but I'm just saying the way.

Speaker 1:

No, they're ugly. I don't know, I don't know what you're saying, but they shouldn't have confidence because they're ugly.

Speaker 3:

What I'm saying is just the way that norms have changed in a way not even just norms, just the powers that what we would look at to be the powers that be the media and things of that nature have transitioned. What we've commonly been told was the best. It's being like altered. So that's why people have this resistance where they feel like everybody's fake and everybody is like pushing the the bs news, because they have their reality being challenged in a way that they aren't comfortable. That's what it feels like to me, because even with like the benny shit like we can get into all these folks who talk about their boyfriends because we've been talking about ddg a lot sky jackson back in the news. I think the problem goes here is y'all have these high expectations of sky jackson and I just don't know where they come from. I think y'all overrate. Being a disney child, that's the highest order.

Speaker 1:

I think it's because she was on disney y'all did this with hayley.

Speaker 3:

Y'all do this with hallie y'all did this with raven simone hallie wasn't on.

Speaker 1:

Well, she was. She was in a disney.

Speaker 3:

I'm talking about. Y'all rate, y'all overrate that branding and labeling when it comes to disney, not knowing that disney, if you can read a good sentence with a little bit of enthusiasm when you're six, they will give you a six-year run, like they'll let you be on tv for to your 12, 13 years old at the bare minimum, sky jackson can't act for shit she, she don't really have no other talent except just being a social media girl now that little tiktok.

Speaker 1:

She posted reading lines of whatever character and I was like, oh my god, I was cringing the whole time yes, that was I, she's not prepared for any of the kind of roles that you can't bring that.

Speaker 3:

Disney acting anywhere else.

Speaker 1:

It doesn't transition anywhere else well, some people transition it, but she can't Zendaya literally was a Disney kid and she literally got the euphoria role. Those people have talent yes, that's what I'm saying you have to have.

Speaker 3:

If you look at her role, like Zendaya played on multiple shows, she wasn't just on one show. She started on one show, then got her own show doing something else yeah, so that didn't happen for sky sky was always both of those shows. Sky was always a side character on the show that she was coming up on. Yeah, and she was a child too, and that white girl was the main girl on that show yeah, there were mad other.

Speaker 1:

There were like probably other two, three more main characters who passed away um so yeah I just don't.

Speaker 3:

I think that y'all put her in a position and on a pedestal that she doesn't deserve to be in. I I just read so many comments thinking like people like, oh, why is she with this guy? Or yo, you go to the people that you feel common with. She feels common ground with this person because she is aligned with that. She is not. She don't think as high as herself.

Speaker 1:

I think as people do it's just so crazy because because of how, how crazy he looks and then like he's allegedly a drug dealer, he's in jail right now, like he has two children already by one baby mother. I think Like you just wouldn't expect her to end up with a nigga like that, because y'all expect too much of her Again.

Speaker 3:

What has she done outside of these kid shows that make y'all think she's somebody, to even look at her like a celebrity? Now I don't see it. I'm talking about people saying like she dropped the ball, she fumbling the bag. What bag, what bag did?

Speaker 1:

she. There was no bag, allegedly. Y'all from the blind items right there has been like things coming out about her for like a couple years now and her mother has been sending cease and desist to all of the blind item pages. They said that she was pregnant with this man's baby six months ago. They were right, she's pregnant. They also said mad long ago that she was pregnant with this man's baby six months ago. They were right, she's pregnant. They also said mad long ago that she's been yachting. Do you know what yachting is you?

Speaker 3:

told me this. You said this on the show.

Speaker 1:

Yes, so they sent out a cease and desist for that too. So she's been outside, I guess, and there is no money. That's what I'm trying to say.

Speaker 3:

There is no bag, because that's what I'm trying to say there is no bag because that's allegedly what she's been doing was yachting.

Speaker 3:

She did a raffle for her laptop yeah, like a used laptop and then tried to act like she oh, I wasn't doing it for the money, come on. So that's why I think a lot of these girls that y'all put on these particular pedestals, y'all just over, overrate them. Because let's ask the question if they were as good that y'all say they were and the type of individuals y'all claim for them to be, the men of, y'all would think they deserve to be with, would be with them you know?

Speaker 1:

guess what his his? I think he might be a rapper can you speak to that, though?

Speaker 3:

what that, if that she was the type of girl that a lot of these girls claim her to be, she would be in the eyes of, or with, a type of these girls claim her to be. She would be in the eyes of, or with a type of man that would y'all would see suitable with yeah, if she was with anybody, because she's 22 years old.

Speaker 1:

But I'm just saying we gotta put things in perspective. You know who? Who? I feel like people are putting her on the same level as um storm. No, I'm forgetting her name, but the talented young lady from blackish, the, the young, young girl yari no her the dark skin the young girl what's the start?

Speaker 3:

her name start with an m marsai martin.

Speaker 1:

That's who y'all think sky jackson is, and that is not who sky jackson is at all. Like I've that's. I think that's why people are equating her with like marci and like that type of young woman, and that is not who sky jackson gives and that's not who she's been giving. But has sky?

Speaker 3:

had a while close to that. No, in any capacity. No, she didn't have a big role on blackish, but she at least did the movie with uh, what's her, what's shawty name? Isa ray.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she did the movie and she produced that movie also and she has been doing amazing things and she's she's gorgeous and she's talented and she keeps herself together.

Speaker 3:

That's who they think sky jackson is I don't even think that jackson is gorgeous, though I don't even think they're in the same league when it comes to character no, but that's, that's who people are yeah they're not in the they're not in the same ballpark whatsoever.

Speaker 1:

They're not playing the same game, okay, but guess what this nigga's rap name is? Otf red no, you're not gonna be able to guess. It's yurky yurky red. No, you're not gonna be able to guess. It's yurky yurky sky jackson is pregnant by a nigga named yurky yurky. Did you see the?

Speaker 3:

post they said. The post that they said was hacked was crazy because he said this disney channel bitch. But he spelled it like chanel was like disney chanel bitch. So I thought he, I thought he was trying to be like fly and be like she, a disney channel girl that thinks she is chanel. Like I thought he was trying, he just couldn't spell he probably can't spell.

Speaker 1:

That's what I.

Speaker 3:

That's what I gathered after other people were talking about it also this young man.

Speaker 1:

I don't know if this is, if he has recently gone to jail. Hold on, let me. Before I start talking, let me just look it up also to to speak on her character.

Speaker 3:

Do y'all forget because we reported on this she beat the nigga up and went to like did y'all forget about that? She put hands on that nigga and had to go to jail for it. They had it on video and she was pregnant when she did it, like endangering the life of the child bro, this nigga's so irrelevant.

Speaker 1:

I'm trying to look up what he's in jail for and I can't find it, because google doesn't even know what the fuck his name is I saw a picture, so allegedly, this man is in jail right now, like he got yeah, he got locked up recently and in the video of the, the feds or the police or whoever taking him away, he is there with his baby mama, who I assume is the mother of both his children, because both of the children were also there. So he hugs her, kiss, kiss, kiss, kiss, kiss, not on the, not on the, the lips, but like kiss kisses all over her face. Right, he hugs the two kids and then he hugs her one more time and then he goes.

Speaker 3:

That is not somebody you are just co-parenting with I'm just saying like that is your bitch as a as a light-skinned woman, my bad as a light-skinned guy, I could tell you some easy red flags to to kind of point out with this guy. All right, so the fact that it looked like he gotta put his hair wave down to get a lineup like it's not, like you just kind of cut it down, you can tell that is a problem. So you already look like he has a white parent oh my god.

Speaker 1:

And I mean, he has red hair. Not a lot of black people have red hair he got otf on his arm.

Speaker 3:

This nigga's not from chicago. I don't even think you know, dirk. So like incriminating yourself, like that is is a red flag. Also, money, dollar signs on your forearm no future that's usually trying to tell you like I'm not going anywhere when that happens uh, just trying to keep it a bean with you. Like he looked, like he tried to like the Chris Brown model. He looked at Chris Brown and was like, okay, that's the light-skinned guy I'm going to be.

Speaker 3:

And then he failed at it. Nigga looked like a Smurf in this picture, like a red-headed Smurf, papa Smurf this is definitely an SBF 80, nigga, why?

Speaker 1:

is Sky Jackson impregnated by a YN? Stop trying.

Speaker 3:

Okay, that's another thing I wanted to ask why did we start using this topic? Why did that become?

Speaker 1:

a term, a phrase. Now, YN. I love young niggas. And then have you seen that they started calling the women young bitches?

Speaker 3:

YB. Yeah, young boy.

Speaker 1:

Young bitches Young bitches.

Speaker 3:

Why are y'all making this a thing? I don't understand that like young, young bitches. Yb yeah, young boy, but uh, young bitches, young bitches. It's like why are y'all making this a thing? Like I don't know, because because I've been hearing this everywhere now they.

Speaker 1:

They need to be categorized differently than, like, just niggas on the streets. You know what I think? Because they have a different temperament and then they look completely different too, and then some of them don't be about shit for real, they just be having ski masks on, but I think what it is is.

Speaker 3:

What we're kind of being victim to is the algorithm and the fact that if it has nigga on something, it's gonna be less likely to push it out. So instead of putting young, young nigga or spelling it, out. You gotta say yn, you just say we're just falling victim to the algorithm, like the algorithm is going to actually create or do you not think that it's just, yeah, it's that, but also like aave on the internet?

Speaker 1:

true, there's, there's gonna be like internet slang. Now there's a whole tiktok vocabulary that, if you didn't know, but ours wasn't know what, what you were like listening to when we were communicating particular things. It wasn't, we didn't. You were like listening to when we were communicating particular things.

Speaker 3:

It wasn't. We didn't have as many stuff for just nouns. A lot of our stuff was like a sentence that we would like age, sex, location, like we had stuff like that that we would pass out to kind of shorten our speech or we would shorten the words that we were using these niggas are shortening phrases, yeah, like where are we young, nigga we do ys I think, I think it's hilarious it is hilarious, but it's also sick.

Speaker 1:

It's like there's dark implications to this well, you can't, just, especially now that we're in like a tiktok age and you can't just say nigga, unless you're being racist, um, but if you're a nigga and you say a nigga, tick knock, tick tock does not like that, um, so you gotta, you gotta find different ways to go around it and say shit michael porter jr recently said oh, I don't like this.

Speaker 8:

That if the niggas, the nuggets, don't try to get me on that uh, then I'll have to break up the team. Lou, are you buying that this is the last?

Speaker 1:

Did he just say?

Speaker 8:

that was a good one. Nuggets. Yeah, I'm buying it Nuggets, I'm buying it BD. You're going to be in trouble today, that's not.

Speaker 1:

Yep, he was like ooh, bitch you in trouble.

Speaker 3:

See that's nasty. So I want I brought this up because this is that was michelle biel. She's a sports journalist and I actually had a little slip up here. This is what I didn't like. So josia anderson, she's another black female sports uh analyst. She did what you just did, which I don't like that y'all do this and that's y'all first instinct in situations like this. She goes why is luwil luwil laughing? That's the black man I didn't say that.

Speaker 3:

I said turn it around so I can see who was around her yeah, the first thing, and then you could tell a black tone, you know yeah, and then he.

Speaker 1:

What I said was he's laughing because who bit you in trouble? Because I think it's hilarious too. I would have laughed like ah bitch, let me tell you what she says, right, she?

Speaker 3:

says. I'm looking at him in particular. Moreover, it's not his responsibility, nor should it feel uh, should it feel like his instinctual duty is to feel the awkward moment with a disinfecting giggle as the resident african-american former baller on set. Regardless if it was a slip or not, the slur it sounded like it's not funny, or of any of itself. The next time, stay quiet and let it be what it is some people react differently when they're in awkward moments.

Speaker 1:

Some people laugh but?

Speaker 3:

But see, my problem is as a black woman.

Speaker 1:

your first thing you want to do is shoot at the black man Instead of the white woman that just slipped up and said nigga did she tweet anything? About her before that she.

Speaker 3:

Just that was the first thing she said. She said I'm in particular.

Speaker 1:

That was the only thing that that was the first thing she wanted to address was the black man. The first thing she said was his name.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, the first thing, the first thing she says right, I'm looking at him in particular yeah, the first thing you probably should have addressed is the white woman who slipped up and said nigga first right, I just think that's crazy, like because that's not the first time I've seen that happen and we talked about that too with the shits and gags guy, where again the white person is the person who did any kind of infraction in this situation but the first thing we go to is shooting at a fellow black person, especially in this climate, after everything that just happened, like that's the first thing you want to do in a situation like this, where again, she didn't call niggas, niggas on purpose. She said she slipped up. I didn't said nuggets and said niggas too.

Speaker 1:

Okay, hold on stay right, the fuck there. Okay, I feel like she'd be saying niggas. Oh, she definitely get a nigga like. There's no way that you slip up and say niggas instead of nuggets when you are a sports journalist. Nuggets should be like like engraved into your that's. You should say nuggets as a sports journalist, a white sports journalist, more than you say niggas. So I don't think your muscle memory from your brain, the, to the synapses, to whatever the fuck happens to get it out of your vocal cords I don't think niggas should have came out at all if you didn't consistently on your own, say niggas. So that is. Look at her, she's taking black dick. So that is literally. I'm not. I'm not saying I'm not giving her that was an accident, this or that or anything like that. But I'm also not mad at this guy because of what he said.

Speaker 1:

He was like oh, you in trouble, like he just acknowledged and it was just a funny slip up he was like you you just fucked up like him saying you know you fucked up right yeah, him saying you're in trouble was him saying you know you just fucked up and I'm acknowledging you just fucked up I just think so I don't know it's just nasty for her to try to point that

Speaker 1:

out it was a little bit nasty. Like you should have addressed the, the lily white woman who just said nigga on national television first and don't describe me laughing as a disinfecting giggle.

Speaker 3:

Like don't ever respond to any time I ever talk like a dis. That's some disrespect right there. Don't say I had a disinfecting giggle. You niggas be giggling. What kind of shit is a disinfecting? What nigga this? Ain't no clorox pad, what?

Speaker 8:

are you?

Speaker 3:

talking about like that's see, but I don't again. I just I hate when women take that approach, when they're trying to be critical or something like you really just want to shit on another black. That's really what you wanted to do at the end of the day. And, michelle, you definitely be taking black dick respectfully. Can you say that respectfully? Can you tell a girl that you do that respectfully? Can you say that respectfully? Can you tell a girl that you do that respectfully? Um, you need to stand on something. You might.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, I feel like you get that off respectfully okay, I'm saying you need to stand on something with me. All right, I can't get you to say nothing about the black women, but shit, at least there's a white woman here, yeah, no, you can get that off respectfully. All right, let's get into penguin. So, uh, we watched it. You know we don't try to do the.

Speaker 1:

We are going to bring the tv and talk, to talk, no, we we, we've been leaving the tv out of talk fnf tv for a long time. We just, we should just change it to talk fnf like media at this point. But, um, we watched all of penguin penguin. The season finale was like two days ago, sunday last. Sunday, sunday so.

Speaker 3:

We've been enjoying the show the whole time.

Speaker 1:

It's so good. So let me look up the actors so we can talk about the performances by each of the actors.

Speaker 3:

So Well, first off, colin Farrellrell, probably your best performance of your life colin, I had no idea that was you nobody, nobody knew. I knew because you know me, I'm big on who's gonna be in these movies and I'm always watching it. When they said colin farrell was gonna be penguin for the first batman, and then I actually saw the trailer with him in it look, nothing like colin farrell.

Speaker 1:

I was stunned. Whoever in the? Is it the emmys? You know, they call it fat face wow is it the emmys that the tv people get awards for? Whoever did the prosthetics and the makeup for colin farrell for penguin like I hope you win. You're gonna sweep yeah, because that was really good, unless some crazy shit comes out that like throws you out of the water completely so I'll just give a brief synopsis of the story.

Speaker 3:

They they take place after the last batman movie gotham is in disarray. Uh, the gangs are also in disarray because their leaders have either been killed or arrested. And it's a perfect time, perfect powder keg for penguin to take advantage. And that's what he does. He grounds up a lot of the people who've been disenfranchised and puts to the side uh, is able to bring in and introduce a new drug to the to the city and takes out this, the, the structure yeah that was there.

Speaker 3:

In regards to the mob boss, snitches on everybody and it ends with.

Speaker 1:

He's a snake. He's a slimy snake. He doesn't even snitch on everybody, he just manipulates all, every single situation, and some of those situations include snitching on people.

Speaker 3:

So again spoiler alert here. But the two biggest things that kind of came out of it was you learn he killed his two brothers and you see the way that he did it, where he locked them up and they drowned. His mom finds out they have a big. He never wanted to be admit to that at all.

Speaker 1:

He was willing to let his mama die, okay, so this is the the season finale now. So, um, his mom, we we find out that his mother knew the entire time that penguin had killed both his brothers. And then there was a mob boss that came to her and he was like either you embrace the fact that your son is a monster or I can kill him. And then she decided to kill him. That night he gives her this grand speech about how he's gonna take care of her and she deserves all this, and I guess she changes her mind and she decides that let me ride this out and let me, um, encourage my son to be this monster that he is so that he can move up in the the ranks of the gangs they had her trapped with a cigarette cutter like a cigar cutter.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, her finger in the cigar cutter and he could not.

Speaker 1:

Sofia, sofia had her trapped, yeah, and then it was somebody else who had the thing on her and for the life of him.

Speaker 3:

He couldn't admit to that. He was gonna let his mama, dr julian a, finger.

Speaker 1:

He's such a selfish fucking bastard that he couldn't like sofia was like. Your mother already knows that this happened he didn't believe her he didn't believe her, that his mother had already knew. But, um, she was like your mother has known this whole time. Just admit it, and her finger won't get cut off. And he wouldn't admit it and she, uh, his mother, um, what's her name?

Speaker 3:

and uh, I just remember he kept calling her ma yeah, francis, his mother, francis, was like I.

Speaker 1:

She finally admitted that she knew the whole time and she's hated him the whole time. And that's how her finger was saved, because she finally admitted it to him. So then Sophia was like okay that's enough.

Speaker 1:

It got too intense, and then it ends with probably one of the most heartbreaking endings that you can get away from, like that initial thing which I was so mad that Sophia I was so mad that Sophia didn't just shoot this motherfucker in the head Like she wanted her whole grand theatric like this, and that you should have shot him. First of all, you should have shot his mother in the head, you should have made him cry, and while he was crying you should have shot him in his shit too, and then you should have left Gotham Like that would have been the perfect, because I was rooting for Sophia.

Speaker 3:

I was your girl the whole time, uh, kristen.

Speaker 1:

Milioti, yeah, that was who played her. Let me see how I met your mother. Chef's kiss. Beautiful five stars for you. Like literally I love the mullet who styled her Beautiful. She was giving cunt the whole time. Like I am in love with Sophia's character, like you love them.

Speaker 3:

little frilly looks that she had with the furs, oh my, God, and she had like like so much like plunging cleavage.

Speaker 1:

She wore like lots of red, lots of vibrant colors, but then she wore like really dark colors too. Her eyes are like so fucking gigantic and she looks like she should be playing like an innocent little baby doll, but she's a fucking insane woman. Well, she's not insane but she's a boss ass bitch.

Speaker 3:

Well, she got pushed to being insane because of everything that happened she's not fully insane. Let's get to the part that everybody's hated on, which I think was, unfortunately, probably the best part that because it really showed that we weren't dealing with a redeemable character so the individual.

Speaker 1:

We knew that after he killed his brothers.

Speaker 3:

But I mean, even then, that was decades ago, so you don't know if that's how he's after we learned, we knew that, no, he wasn't a redeemable character. No, no, there was still room to redeem and they literally emptied the clip out once they did the last scene. So the last scene you see Vic, who is the guy who oh my God, victor has been supporting him the whole time. He had opportunities to leave him behind.

Speaker 1:

He had one good opportunity to leave him behind yeah, multiple opportunities to leave him behind Every time he told him to go on a mission. Oh, yeah, he could have left yeah he could have, because victor was gone for a while before, while he was um, like when they trapped him, but while he was um banning everybody together. Yes, all of the gangs and stuff, so I thought he had just left and I was happy about that.

Speaker 3:

You see the scene where victor tells him hey, man, we in this, together, we're going to the top yeah, we're family.

Speaker 1:

I have nobody else. You're the only person that I have, like we only have each other now and that just set him off and then penguin was like yeah, and having family and people you care about is a weakness. And then he chokes him, and then I was hoping that victor would like flail or do something enough to like get out of his grip and like run away or do something, but then he literally just dies.

Speaker 3:

I was devastated yeah, but I think it's just an important lesson, because it is when you really take a step back and that's really what life is. It's generally people who can go passing forth through privilege, taking advantage of people like him, folks who don't have family, folks who are, uh, you know, in bad conditions. And that's the part. If you really look back at it, what he did was he ground. He grounded up the poor, he rounded up the color disenfranchised, he brought them all together. He used language of the revolution.

Speaker 3:

He does he talked about. You know them being up next and it was their turn and they deserve to have their spot, only to then turn it all around on the person who was. He was the closest to kind of showing you in a way where none of these people mean nothing to him, and that's how it's always been.

Speaker 1:

If it wasn't for victor, sofia would have had him always been. If it wasn't for victor, sofia would have had him, because when victor, like, drove up with the car, yeah, so I don't know, it just the whole time I was watching that show when he decided not to leave with the girl that, like, was from his neighborhood, I was like fuck, like I don't feel good about this at all, like he should have done that he should have left and but they had.

Speaker 1:

I was right, because if you don't do it in the next batman movie, he feels like a hero to people yeah, but I was gonna say this even though I'm extremely upset about victor dying, I think that this show was beautifully written. I love when I have like this very visceral reaction to something happening in a show, even though I feel like it's wrong as a motherfucker. But, um, I think it's very well written when I feel very strongly in one way or another, regardless of how I feel it was, it was an enjoyable show and it brought out emotions and I like that, I think, to piggyback on.

Speaker 3:

You're saying with the well-written part. I think they did and took opportunities that explain why batman wouldn't shown up either, because that was also a looming thing where, if you know that this is a batman movie, you're like hold on, there's stuff going on. To me, if you're being honest, the only thing that would have got on batman's radar is the last two episodes yeah because you had the explosion in the in the yeah the subway area and then the basically every she got captured the next day yeah so I there, there's a it to me as a superhero person to know in this kind of world.

Speaker 3:

It's a lot of reasons. Everything was either done really quick or done in in hiding, in secret. It wasn't like there was stuff outside being done, people stealing from other people, it was a internal civil war, essentially between the mob bosses and again the just the picture that they took, where you have this guy who is, he's inside the circle but he's hated, he's like the outsider again. Again, I don't want to bring it up, but trump like he, he's a trump like figure in that regard, because trump is looked at like the lower part of the pathetic yeah like people looked at trump like he was trash garbage guy too.

Speaker 3:

Like yeah even though you had money, you don't have the class for your bottom of the barrel rich and it's. You see now, exactly he did the exact same thing galvanized those people to fight against a white class that was keeping him out, only to, once he got into that position, kick them to the curb too. That's exactly what it is, and to me, I love that story.

Speaker 1:

I like the way you brought that around, you know it's what I do.

Speaker 3:

It's what I do you ate. That that's what I do, but I like how that's a a good story, just kind of going into this new year understanding like that's how they operate see, that's why I love him, because all the niggas I was dating were stupid as fuck. And look at his brain, uh oh, I do that, one plus seven all right love you so much. Oh, you should, you should. Uh, I love you too, I love you thank you.

Speaker 1:

What the?

Speaker 3:

fuck, I think that was fly, though like no, that's's what, not for me. That's what Han Solo said to uh Princess. Leia she was like I love you. He was like I know, like that's fly.

Speaker 1:

No, just tell me, you love me back, that's fly though.

Speaker 3:

Uh, do you wanna finish with this be nasty, this be nasty tweet. You wanna talk about that, or do you wanna just finish up? No, we can talk about her tweet my thing is this I don't like to go in here and act like I'm the enemy of sex workers, but there are consequences for your actions when you get into this line of work and you've been as notable as miss be nasty, because since I've been on twitter, I feel like miss be nasty has been on twitter- there's.

Speaker 1:

You can't really even scroll on twitter without seeing miss. Be nasty pussy, regardless of what your algorithms are.

Speaker 3:

You can't go a decade putting plastic in your pussy on camera and think that you're going to be able to live a normal life with your family.

Speaker 1:

You've been projectile squirting on Twitter for 17 years.

Speaker 3:

It's kind of been insane. At this point I don't know if you saw the tweet where she talked about she got enough money to pay for her son's psychiatric care that he'll need for anything because of her career path. That's fucked like. I just don't understand her obsession with, like talking about the effects of her career on her family. So she has this tweet I low-key.

Speaker 1:

I think that if you have enough money for his psychiatric care, you should probably just never show up in his school, just have a nanny who dropped, like who specifically drops him off and goes to the school, shit, and you should never post him so that his peers never know that you're his mother and your fans never know who your son is. That is the only way to do it and if I was a very popular sex worker, that is probably what I would do.

Speaker 3:

So she says my brother is a firefighter and she says he won't a firefighter and she says he won't take me to his station to see it and the fire truck because people know who I am. Laugh my ass off. I think it's funny, lol, because I tagged him while I was out with him and his wife and people kept asking is that who I think it is and was sick. He was sick. Laugh my ass off.

Speaker 1:

But why would you?

Speaker 3:

tag him, but he's my baby brother, so it's just funny as hell like that's.

Speaker 1:

I wonder how he feels about that like. Does he not care about people knowing who his sister is? Obviously a little bit, because he doesn't want to take her on the tours of the, the firehouse or whatever. Why would you tag him in anything, knowing that, like people would know that you're his sister, that he doesn't want to know, that, like you made the decision to be a sex worker. Your family doesn't have to be involved and people don't have to be like harassing him about who his sister is and the fact that you, your whole pussy, be on on the internet all the time, which we like it.

Speaker 3:

We love your content I just don't like the fact that, like sex workers, try to act like they don't understand what they do is taboo, and the fact that it is taboo is a large reason why you make so much money doing it. Yes, I hate that. Like y'all playing dumb, you're not at the mcdonald's, like it doesn't make any sense, like they try to play dumb and coy when it comes to that. But you know, you're just like, in a sense, with drug dealers. Drug dealers don't want drugs to be legal because then that takes the price of the drugs down.

Speaker 1:

Yes, that's what happened in new york when they legalized weed.

Speaker 3:

So that's what I'm saying where it's like. You, as a sex worker, know a part of the reason why you make the funds and that you can do what you do is a large part is because you're doing something that's taboo, but then you get upset when you get affected by the taboo action that makes you money it's just like kind of I don't know.

Speaker 1:

I just I really wish like I knew how her brother actually felt about this, because it feels so disingenuous to just drag your like I. There's no way that y'all would be able to know who my family is if I was a sex worker.

Speaker 1:

But we see, I feel like you have to keep those things completely separate and you have to do so much work to do so. Like before I even because of like how well versed I am in the internet before, if this was something I was thinking about doing or wanted to get into before I even started doing sex work, I would delete every single social media account I ever had. You would not be able to access it. It would be gone. Like people would have to like screenshot things from my social media pages to prove that they existed and then I would start doing stuff and then nobody that I actually know in real life. I would not follow any of those people. You might find me, but like there's no way that anybody would be able to go and find my family member, find my brother, know who my brother is, know who my son is.

Speaker 3:

I remember when? Uh, because I come from the era where the strippers used to put pictures of them at the locker rooms at the strip club. And then the next day they put a picture of them and they child, Like I'm from that era when you be sitting there. Like why are you doing that? Like why do I have to see you? I'm scrolling through your page, I'm looking at your ass shake.

Speaker 1:

And then page I'm looking at your ass shake and then your next page is your baby playing at the pool. If the page was like come see me at this place, and then the next post was my, my, my world, my baby.

Speaker 3:

Like you need to have two different pages for that like y'all need to be smarter about the, the shit that y'all do you used to be able to tell by their stories everything like oh, when they woke up and had breakfast or whatever, they post their breakfast then they'll know oh, I'm gonna be here tonight at at 10. And then, because they feel bad that they ought to be showing pussy, then they gotta show the kid my world who I do it for.

Speaker 1:

And then then they show their first 10 minutes at the club.

Speaker 3:

We don't need to know who you do it for they. That's what they do. They show us who they do it for this, this, who we do it for this for the. This is my, I do my. I do my big one for my little one I'm on it.

Speaker 1:

I'm on it tonight. Yeah, no, you ate that too but, man just again, do what you want, but we're gonna have, I feel like somebody's used that, but like if nobody has used that before, that would be crazy. Because that's really. You really ate that. I do my big one for my little one. I'm gonna use that. When I have a little one, I'm gonna get that teddy like no, it's gonna be a us thing.

Speaker 1:

I'm gonna be like I do my big one for my little one and then their date, and then we both go no but it's gonna be. It's gonna be like a tiny little quote in quotation marks.

Speaker 3:

It's gonna be like right here. So your big one is the, the birth. Is that what you're saying?

Speaker 1:

you better do your big one, yeah, giving birth in general is gonna be my big one. That's your big one yeah, that's, peace, that's gonna be my biggest one.

Speaker 3:

Hold on we do have one more thing to talk about. We didn't before we wrap up. Yeah uh, black pantherzel Washington just announced that. Ryan. Coogler is writing a cat, well, casting him in he has a role in Black Panther.

Speaker 1:

That's all we know right now.

Speaker 3:

They're writing him a role for Black Panther and everybody's trying to say that it's full circle, because Chadwick, before he passed, has said that there would be no Black Panther without Denzel. To me, I think I kind of feel like once he's, once he signs on to do this, this might be like kind of like the end of the mcu in a way, because I just feel like he's not gonna he's gonna be doing the whole mcu.

Speaker 3:

I just feel like that the it's gonna be one of those things where it's kind of like it's gonna feel like a last gasp effort, kind of like what they're doing with robert downey jr, but at least he's part of the universe, like the denzel thing I just to me I feel like the type of work that he's done. Do you think he's?

Speaker 1:

so old hollywood that marvel hiring him is like a hail mary, so that they're because they hired him. There's something happening that we don't know about and they're on their way out to not necessarily that they're on their way out because of it.

Speaker 3:

It just feels like, from an artistic perspective, using him is like jumping the shark, in a way but you said end of the mcu.

Speaker 1:

Why would it be the end of the?

Speaker 3:

mcu. Just how people's excitement with it. I just feel like it'll be like a last gasp effort that's just gonna pull people away from it in the long run. Now it's not gonna have people sit with it the way that they wanted to. I know I sound crazy.

Speaker 1:

Right now I feel like a little bit, because it's a black ass movie in denzel and that is always a good combination black denzel, fire, yeah, but he's always been one of those people who kind of was critical of this kind of market.

Speaker 3:

Remember he just started doing sequels. That was part of his thing. He was part of the people.

Speaker 3:

I don't do sequels yeah, it's a new day and age now I'm not against the new dnh, but again it says something when you change in that regarding what you'll do artistically and the type of performances that you'll give, things like that. I'm not gonna say he's gonna give half-assed performances, I just think, uh, maybe the commitment may have changed. I just feel like when people see the movie unless it's he's giving him his all, he's actually able to write the story he wants. Because I know what happened in the last movie chadwick passed away. You weren't able to tell the story that you wanted to tell.

Speaker 3:

They should have replaced black panther I mean of course they should have, but that won't have to get.

Speaker 1:

You should have replaced black panther 100 and the eye should replace blade 2 I just feel like he's he told us those are gonna be part of.

Speaker 3:

He told us his last five movies, denzel. So that's what I'm saying where it just this feels like for me a sign off in a way on it to be on a big screen, but in the same token I think that takes away from the product. Because the one thing that made the mcu mcu a big time thing was the fact it took folks who weren't that well known and brought them up. And the fact that now they keep doing this thing, especially with villains, putting them, making them these big time historical actors, to me it just feels like who else did they do that with?

Speaker 3:

Kate Blanchoff. Who else did they do that with you could well, yeah, they did. With Kate Blanchoff, you could kind of say they did a little bit. She wasn't a villain though, but with angela bassett they had put her as a little side character in today's movie that's what they've been.

Speaker 1:

I just, I just feel like kurt russell was a villain I don't know them I feel like black panther is a little bit different because, like, how do you not put Angela Bassett in Black Panther? I feel you.

Speaker 1:

I feel, you on that, like we want to see a Denzel and we want to see Angela Bassett in a Black Panther, because this is like as far as like cinematic punch, this is huge. And these are actors who, well, we're not not gonna say like denzel deserves to be in this because he hasn't gotten, but like angela bassett, like they deserve to be on like a world stage and loved by more than just black people oh no, I'm not saying that they shouldn't.

Speaker 3:

I just feel like when we get into these kind of positions and this kind of art, when you write a movie generally, especially where denzel is now and the type of role that he's taking, you write the role with denzel in mind already. I just feel like this franchise has already been cultivated in a way where somebody of his magnitude it will take away from the original art that you were trying to tell, the original story that you were trying to tell so that's why I just feel like it could be a bigger albatross than something that's going to really help the product itself at the end.

Speaker 3:

But we'll see. We'll definitely see. I definitely want to do see him in a that michael b jordan movie with him yeah that comes out yeah, center movie, so we'll check that out we'll definitely watch that. We'll probably review it too anything else we need to.

Speaker 1:

We need to review more shows and movies it hasn't been too much.

Speaker 3:

I mean, when we started we had some, but then some of them fell off. Some we really didn't feel like it was that popular to talk about.

Speaker 1:

So yeah, all right well wrap it up yeah, let's wrap it up.

Speaker 3:

All right, we want to thank y'all for listening to talk fnf tv. It's been a good, good, good episode for for us. Baby, let them know what they need to do you're not gonna. Oh, did you gotta do my? Oh, damn my sign off I felt like I was forgetting something, didn't I?

Speaker 3:

I thought you like memorized it and you were just about to like oh no, never that, never that, never that eventually that one day, one day I was actually I was reading something on my notes, because they were talking about alex jones infowars auction. They selling off all his shit, and I just was thinking about that man shout out to alex jones man no shout out to alex no life is a labor of love. So let's keep these moments. Let's keep building these moments together and remember your job is not your family. The only thing you should be exploiting is these corporations. Let them know, baby.

Speaker 1:

Follow us on all of the social media at talkfnftv on Facebook, twitter, instagram, tiktok. If you're on YouTube listening to us now, hit that subscribe button like. Leave us a comment. If you agree, disagree, it doesn't matter. Engage with us and love you. Bye.

Speaker 3:

Watch out for the globalists.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.