Talk FNF

Andrew Shulz DISRESPECTS Kendrick Lamar, Joe Budden VIOLATES GF, and Who's 21st Century Greatest POP Star - Talk FNF TV

Talk FNF tv Episode 70

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 We're diving into the fascinating world of cultural nuances and celebrity dynamics, where we dissect the public personas of superstars like Taylor Swift and Britney Spears. With a touch of humor, we explore how our own family gatherings during the holidays can reveal surprising sides of ourselves. Whether you’re wrangling with sibling rivalries or enjoying the perks of being an only child, our tales of family interactions will strike a chord and leave you reflecting on your own experiences.

On a more serious note, brace yourself for an honest discussion about the harsh realities of substance abuse. We share personal stories of battling addiction, particularly the grip of promethazine, and the challenges of altering the course amidst negative influences. As we address the tension between seeking personal growth and meeting societal expectations, we provide a raw narrative that offers both insight and solidarity for anyone facing similar struggles. Join us for an episode that promises laughter, introspection, and hopefully, a sense of connection no matter where life finds you.

Speaker 1:

the same thing um you could say about prenups. No, I disagree, because a prenup is oh my f**king god, involved in the way kendrick worded that for a white man to be like. Well, technically, that's not grammatic english. That's why you need to shut the f**k up and not say anything regarding our culture and us at all. You were surprised that he was number four on the list. Yeah, because when's the last time the eminem dropped the album this year?

Speaker 2:

yo, he's nominated for a grammy I have another thought it could be a scorned gay lover okay he could have been upset, knew that he was coming out there to see him. He sees him, him.

Speaker 1:

Where does the homosexuality come into the picture?

Speaker 2:

No, I didn't look at Brian. Brian looks a little sweet.

Speaker 1:

OK, let me. Let me look at Brian, because I'm like why are we putting?

Speaker 2:

Brian could potentially be a power bottom, just does fit like the perfect feminine, like individual ideology, aesthetic, whatever you want to put there. She fits that I think that's why a lot of girls don't like her. Like I notice ideology, aesthetic, whatever you want to put there like she fits that I think that's why a lot of girls don't like her.

Speaker 2:

Like I notice a lot of the big back ends be getting upset with tyler taylor, swift beyonce. Okay, this is wrong. It's definitely britney spears. Britney spears is out, so beyonce on every britney spears is a crack now be somebody here who's going to be like oh, we need to feel empathy for this guy because I want to live in a world where CEOs don't feel safe walking around. You shouldn't pay your protection tax to the working class by having the working class protect you from the working class.

Speaker 3:

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

Speaker 1:

podcast now. What the f*** do you think your f***ing ass is doing on that podcast now? 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.

Speaker 2:

That's it Back from Turkey.

Speaker 1:

Day. It was interesting.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, it was a little time apart. We wasn't as active as we normally were that's why we won't call it a vacation, because we was debating that but it was a little step away. We took a step back to enjoy a little bit of the holidays, uh. But I just learned a lot of. I think we learned a lot about each other and I just feel like you don't like who I am when I'm with my family that is correct, you're annoying.

Speaker 1:

He's like a naggy little old little brother, I know how to have a good time.

Speaker 2:

I'm sorry that you don't. I have fun and I make. I bring the joy everybody else wants around in the room you you. That's a specific way of looking at it.

Speaker 1:

You see my, my family like you brought out a scale for everyone to weigh themselves, that's funny.

Speaker 2:

That's good humor. Like that's specific. Everybody. That's good humor, Like that's specific. Everybody had a good time. The kids had a good time. Yeah With that Like, even though they my ops. Now, Like you know, I'm not really rocking with them, like that had to tell them too, to they face.

Speaker 1:

Like I sat down. Did you talk to them about that F***? I didn't about that. Yeah, let's let them.

Speaker 2:

Let's keep talking about thanksgiving we talked about on the show yeah, yeah, but we're we're talking about things, but no, I just feel like you just saw, you see a side of me that I don't normally show here, because I don't want to just sit here and shit talk everybody, I don't, y'all don't? I don't know if y'all respond to it the same way my family does.

Speaker 1:

No, my mom would be like get this annoying ass nigga out of my house please I'm having a good time with my family, and they love me for it we.

Speaker 2:

We value our peace you don't think I value my parents no, I go there.

Speaker 1:

I don't think you value anybody's peace. That's how you behave.

Speaker 2:

I make my parents feel alive again. I'm sure you do. Like I come out there they see me. I start messing with my mom, start making little you know comments and jokes about her. Start doing the same thing with my dad, with the kids. Everybody just enjoys it, man. Everybody has a good time when I'm sitting there busting balls I've seen you make the children cry, so no, yes I have.

Speaker 1:

You don't remember that.

Speaker 2:

I didn't make him cry.

Speaker 1:

Yes, you did. No, you made him cry literally.

Speaker 2:

That's not what happened. I'm not going to go with that narrative Again. I don't see what's the problem how you just hate me being myself around my family. I think I have a lot of just joy that you just don't. You aren't used to because you don't have brothers and sisters. I don't think you just understand that. That I'm definitely. I'm used to just me and my parents. You're used to being the shining star for your parents and everything like there is no competition I'm used to unwanted attention.

Speaker 1:

I'm not used to like giving it out, I'm used to getting it and then like shunning it away see that. That's what I'm saying, that's just like I don't want you in my face right now, see you, you, you can take people for granted in a way that you don't get when you have siblings. Yeah, I'm sure.

Speaker 2:

Like your. Your level of narcissism would have had to been taken down a little bit. You had like a.

Speaker 1:

I don't even think you could have survived with a younger sister, just if you were the same person that you were all right now and you had to.

Speaker 2:

I was just in my bedroom. You don't think she would be bothering you in your room probably, but like there's a lock, on it you.

Speaker 2:

You think that's ever stopped. Oh, my goodness, you should have seen me. It was no stopping me. I was unlocking doors, I was doing whatever I could to get into messing my older brother and sister again. So that's what I'm saying. Like, especially when you're the youngest, that dynamic is just a lot different too, because these are the people who you've seen as a grow up, as adults, and so you kind of formulate you know, either making choices or not making choices based on what you see them do, and then they just see you in a way that is always going to be like younger, even though no matter what you do age-wise, what you do, what you accomplish, they always gonna remember you as a little boy that you know they saw grow up. So that's what I mean, like I guess that's what pulls out of those different sides, that you don't see me in our normal environment.

Speaker 2:

But you, I guess you'll get used to it, you know eventually but she do like to do sit there and do the little stank face sometimes. That is your move. I just Be just making everybody feel uncomfortable. We had like guests come that have never met her before and they just look should I go over and speak? She be scaring them away.

Speaker 1:

Your family does not drink a lot compared to my family.

Speaker 2:

I mean that's one thing. We never really was a family. That at least my immediate family.

Speaker 1:

They also don't play music.

Speaker 2:

We was watching the game.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but like yeah, don't play music generally when we ever do anything at all yeah.

Speaker 2:

I mean, we're not really music people, yeah that's my immediate family is like that If you go to extended versions of my family then you'll see more of that going on. But no, my parents.

Speaker 1:

Like there were, like at your dad's birthday party. There was no drinks, barely like a lot of drinks.

Speaker 2:

Everybody was drunk.

Speaker 1:

I didn't see like everyone brought their own bottles. They brought bottles to the place, yeah, but like when I have things like there's a fully stocked bar at, my aunt's.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, my parents aren't really buying. And then there was no speaker either. We had to bring the little kitchen speaker from inside my mom has a big speaker that we brought out. She has a big just like the one you're talking about it wasn't, she was playing it.

Speaker 1:

It wasn't that.

Speaker 2:

That's hate. I remember the speakers in the tent. No, it's a big speaker. No, there's a big one that she brought out I don't remember it, they're just not as lively. Well, I mean, I can agree with that, but again, you just saw like one version. Even with my dad, that's not them in their natural habitat. We're not back in maryland, where everybody's actually home and like, because a lot of those that came over, like my cousins, is a dj.

Speaker 2:

So if you were to go to a normal party where he got all his whole setup, then, you're gonna see him play a lot more music, but my dad and my mom like they never growing up. I never saw my parents drink.

Speaker 1:

I didn't see my parents drink till I was an adult they never even did it like like I gave your dad two glasses of champagne, and then your mom I gave her alcohol too. I was giving everybody alcohol because, like bitch, make some noise, what the fuck?

Speaker 2:

it's funny that you say that too, because I've seen this clip where a guy was saying that about his family, where the girl was like y'all don't really drink at all. He was like yo, we're around family like we're not supposed to be getting shit faced around family that's exactly what you do, that's the most comfortable place to do it is around family.

Speaker 1:

I don't, I don't, some of my, my. I used to sneak bottles of e and j into thanksgiving because I was the oldest cuz like in that in that sector of cousins. I was the oldest one so I would bring bottles. My dad was like I knew you was bringing alcohol. I was like yep, we was. We was in them rooms fucked up my thanksgivings. The cousins broke apart. We would all be in a bedroom getting fucked up.

Speaker 2:

I mean, we had that too, but it was like my one of my cousin he, the whole basement was his, pretty much his like apartment, yeah, so that's what we used to have. That too. We would all go down there and drink and all that other stuff like that.

Speaker 1:

I didn't that's why you need to take me home. Yeah, we'll go there eventually, like it's been too long no yes, it's been too long. No, it hasn't been that long it hasn't okay, so let's, but I do. There's one more thing about thanksgiving that I want to get into. I know this is the longest cold open ever.

Speaker 2:

I can cut it up.

Speaker 1:

My birthday present.

Speaker 2:

Which one? Oh, for my mom. Yes, oh, man.

Speaker 1:

Oh, my God, um, I love her and it's always the effort. Let's start with that. That's the foundation of this right. She got me two shirts. She says she got me Chanel shirts. I opened the bag I said my Chanel is only spelled with one N. This says channel Two, channel shirts. They're two channel shirts and I'm sure, like I'm 100% sure, that she just got them customized off of like a T-shirt place she may have ironed them on herself, Like I'm 100% sure that she just got them customized off of like a t-shirt place.

Speaker 2:

She may have ironed them on herself. Oh, Like you're keeping it a bean, she may have had to iron herself on them, bad boys.

Speaker 1:

Yo dumb shits are soft and comfortable as fuck, though, so they're like great going to sleep and like walking around the house shirts. Yeah.

Speaker 2:

So I'm going to be dripped out in the channel going crazy.

Speaker 1:

It's not stepping foot outside this house though.

Speaker 2:

But see, that's the thing about my mom. My mom has always been like lacking the sauce. I even showed you the picture, like where she had put, like the S-curl in my hair. The Jerry curl, yeah, and like my nigga didn't give me no fade, no cut, nothing like that Because the light-skinned niggas was getting S-curls.

Speaker 1:

Back then was a regular thing?

Speaker 2:

yeah, but she could have hit it up with a fade or something like some type of like extra sauce on it was, and you already have curly hair like, yeah, she just added a little more jazz to it. It was not necessarily, don't get me wrong it was hitting but if you would have hit it with like a little fade, a temp fade or something, anything, my mom wasn't like, she had us looking corny like. My mom was like, oh, as long as the clothes is clean, you, you kind of fly.

Speaker 1:

The clothes are clean and you're fed. No, and this house is big as fuck.

Speaker 2:

But see, that's the thing when it's like, the level of what you've seen house-wise and car-wise is like yo, you would think that this lady had a little more sauce. No, that's a hardworking lady.

Speaker 1:

No sauce at all.

Speaker 2:

For real. That's a lady who's going to work.

Speaker 1:

You could tell we was lady who went to work kids. Meanwhile, my mom, I, grew up financially immigrants, not the best. We was in basements. People used to walk in like what the fuck, what? What it's so nice in here? All of the sauce, all of the drip my mom is a woman of taste, style, elegance, all that Like she aesthetically on point.

Speaker 2:

I mean I think my mom can do some things here and there, like sometimes she can get it right, but I mean a broke clock is right twice a day.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2:

So usually though, like I love you, mama, but your style is like Sub, sub par.

Speaker 5:

Sipping on promethazine. I'm sipping on Promethazine. I can't put down A cup. I can't put down a cup. I can't put down a cup. Can't put down a cup, I can't put down a cup. Can't put down a cup. I can't put down a cup. Sipping on promethazine With lean on fell in love I can't put down a cup. I can't put down a cup. I can't put down a cup.

Speaker 1:

I can't put down a cup I can't put down a cup, I can't put down a he can't, he can't put it down, pick it up, roll it around.

Speaker 5:

He can't nothing, he can't put it down, he can't nothing.

Speaker 3:

Hey, hey Down the cup oh.

Speaker 5:

I can't, I can't, I can't. I can't I can't, I can't, I can't, I can't. I can't Garnica. They sent me to East Locust With all of the drug addicts. That's when I started smoking weed and picking up bad habits and I love all my niggas. But I promise I'm not a faggot.

Speaker 5:

And these bitch niggas go hate me, cause I ran it up and got the panic relief that Jermaine bitch top me and I busted her and now I'm going to sleep. Let a nigga try to run down. 35, I can't put down the cup. Hey, I can't put down the cup. I can't put down the cup. Hey, I can't put down the cup I can't put down the cup.

Speaker 2:

Hey, hey, fair, I can't put down the cup. I can't put down the cup.

Speaker 5:

Promethazine. Hey, I can't put down the cup. I can't put down the cup. I can't put down the cup. I can't put down the cup. I can't put down the cup. I can't put down the cup.

Speaker 2:

I can't put down the cup hey man, my dave once ain't here for a long time.

Speaker 5:

He for a good time I can't put down the cup I can't put down the cup I can't put down the cup. I can't put down the cup. Put down the cup. It's an old romance. I think we laid ourselves in love. I can't put down the cup. I can't put down the cup.

Speaker 2:

I can't put down the cup, shout out to Dave Bluntz. Yo, hey man. When I seen Dave Bluntz man I knew I knew buddy, buddy. Better not get used to buddy, just appreciate the moments.

Speaker 3:

He's here young are you tired of paying a lot of money for your vacation? My name is shirley proctor and I am a partner with Tovodian, a traveling membership group. I can help you save time, money, help you and your loved ones see the world.

Speaker 2:

But you are now listening to Talk FNF TV, I'm your host Absurd Rhetoric. And I'm with my lovely and amazing and beautiful and a woman who never has to put her hand over her stomach when she takes a picture. Miss Reality.

Speaker 3:

Hi guys, All right.

Speaker 1:

We are back with like you be having mad vitriol for the fat woman, but then played the Dave Blunt song like that man is not a bubble bass.

Speaker 2:

Like he's a fat disgusting monster, yeah, but those big bag warriors aren't talented like he is, they just big and disruptive.

Speaker 1:

He's not that talented either.

Speaker 2:

He's more talented than most people. His size Okay, literally top 1% of of 700 pound niggas when it comes to doing anything, yeah, yeah, so and it's and it's, and it's by a long shot.

Speaker 1:

I'm taking it back every time.

Speaker 2:

I see that man. Uh, andrew schultz. Man, I didn't think he was gonna do this. He wasn't. I didn't think he was gonna respond, but he did I didn't think he was going to either so he came out with a little bit.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean, he came out on flagrant today. They dropped episode, started it off early like, oh no, we going straight at bro, we not even running around it. So we'll play the clips of it. But uh, what was your first initial reaction, though, when you, when you saw that, were you surprised that he responded?

Speaker 1:

yeah, I was surprised that he responded and then I wasn't surprised that, like the, the angle he took when he responded Like how is a rapper telling me to respect black women when rappers have never respected women in general? He bodied it Like he bodied it. Kendrick's music generally has not been like bitch, shake that ass, bend over and suck this, suck this dick. Like he hasn't made music like that. So if any, if any rapper could tell you to not disrespect black women and keep their names out your motherfucking white ass mouth, then it's him definitely.

Speaker 2:

I think he had a lot of information, factual information, to show that maybe that's not necessarily the case, but all right, let's see the exact line.

Speaker 3:

Okay, don't let no white comedian talk about no black woman.

Speaker 1:

That's law now, technically speaking, if we're going off of grammatic because he's saying because, obviously, like there's, there's aave and stuff, that's that's involved in the way kendrick worded that for a white man to be like, well, technically, that's not grammatic english bitch. That's why you need to shut the fuck up and not say anything regarding our culture and us at all, because that shit, just I was like, okay, you ate that one little bit about. Oh, rappers usually disrespect black women. You ate that one little bit, and then I feel like you should have shut the fuck up right then and there, and then that would have been it. But then you trying to be like, oh, but um, you grammatically, sir, were incorrect in your delivery of that bar. You, corny little bitch well, go ahead.

Speaker 2:

To be fair, it is called english, so shut the fuck up, don't let, no, you're corny too.

Speaker 3:

No black, so he's basically saying all white comedians are only allowed to talk about black exclusively that's what I'm talking about it's a lot.

Speaker 1:

Finally, he understands it's a lot now I understand why he's doing these little bitches with their dicks tucked, they have, they just have slim tux.

Speaker 2:

We know, anytime Andrew goes on one of his rants or he's dissing somebody, akash is going to put the Vaseline on and ride it like a champ.

Speaker 1:

And then it's that nigga at the end.

Speaker 2:

Not too much on Alex Media.

Speaker 1:

Just that nigga. At the end, coon ass bitch just sitting there barely had anything to say.

Speaker 3:

Black people. There you go and they've done that brilliantly for decades yeah that's true and he would never want to break one of his own laws. Didn't they have a character called Token on the South Park show? Yeah, they do, which I'm sure Kendrick is a big fan of what did.

Speaker 1:

Kendrick do with South Park thing.

Speaker 2:

So during the beef it was announced that he was going to do a comedy with South Park, comedy with South Park Comedy with South Park A comedy special.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, with South Park, kendrick was going to do a comedy special, yeah with the writers from South Park.

Speaker 2:

He announced it during the beef?

Speaker 1:

Was he going to be like producing it or something?

Speaker 2:

Like, how was Kendrick? He was going to be a producer, okay, okay okay.

Speaker 3:

Because I'm like Kendrick is not funny.

Speaker 2:

Like he's a lot of things that I enjoy him, but that nigga has never cracked a joke that I laughed at ever other than a minor the joke that was going around when that was announced was that you know, south Park people hate Canadians, so that's why they teamed up with him to go against Drake oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah that's true, he must be a big fan if he's

Speaker 3:

going to do a comedy with them?

Speaker 2:

I mean, we can look that up apparently there's a comedy coming out.

Speaker 3:

That's fact. Fact, but, but, but, but but Al but Al you're getting groomed.

Speaker 5:

Right now we need to un-groom him yeah, we need to un-groom him right now. Okay.

Speaker 3:

I mean that Blizzard, because he sent people. He says slide on what he said. Slide. Where's the line? Okay, the n-words that coon, the n-words that being groomed, slide on both. Whoa, that seems like a call to violence. It does.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you cool ass bitches get slid on. And then you ones that that groom I.

Speaker 2:

Think it was something your boy, the ones that groom predators slide on them.

Speaker 1:

Niggas, 100% Okay.

Speaker 2:

Does that matter? When it's our Kelly and you're trying to protect? Yeah, no, slide on them niggas, 100% okay. Does that matter when it's R Kelly and you're trying to protect? Yeah, no, slide on R Kelly. Oh well, you should tell Kendrick that no, he did not why would?

Speaker 3:

the cult of violence be towards the black dudes, not the white guy making the joke. Well, you gotta understand cause, I snitch, I cooperate. I tell. Litigation. Okay, you will squabble up in a jail cell. Here's what you got to understand about Kendrick. He is very it's very important. I don't care about you, akash, I'm sorry.

Speaker 2:

So another part here that I felt was very interesting his take on you know what he would it's kind of funny about it.

Speaker 3:

It's like like, first of all kendrick's people and the gang affiliate, you know, everybody, his security. They will kill me, they will destroy me, they'll find me in the street, they'll fucking cut me up, they'll shoot me, they'll do whatever. I'm not a tough guy, y'all do, but just kendrick, I would make love to him there's nothing he can do about it, just kendrick lamar. I would make love to him and the only thing that he could do about it. Just Kendrick.

Speaker 1:

Lamar.

Speaker 3:

I would make love to him and the only thing that he could do is decide if it's consensual or not.

Speaker 5:

That's the only thing he could do If it's me and Kendrick if it's me and Kendrick, You're sitting here next to me giggling about a rape joke.

Speaker 2:

I'm sorry. I'm sorry You're sitting here next to me giggling about a rape joke. I'm sorry, it's not supposed to be funny, that's what you're doing.

Speaker 1:

But when it's two men, a white man just threatened to rape a black man.

Speaker 2:

And when Saucy Santana threatened to rape academics, you were. Those were two blacks. Oh, okay, but you were kiki. Those were two blacks.

Speaker 1:

Okay, it was two men being assaulted.

Speaker 2:

The historical context behind what. Yes, that's exactly why I'm mad about it. But there's historical context of making two black men sleep with each other.

Speaker 1:

You, just, you just.

Speaker 2:

I'm sorry, I know.

Speaker 1:

I'm not supposed to laugh. We turn this camera on and turn these mics on and you just disappoint me on a weekly basis.

Speaker 2:

I'm sorry that I'm sitting here not supposed to laugh at the essay jokes, but when you're thinking about him manhandling Kendrick, that's funny to me, especially when you play this tough guy.

Speaker 1:

He could have been like one-on-one.

Speaker 2:

I could definitely take you in a fight, but he was showing you the degree of which I can take it from you. That's how small you are. You cannot defend yourself.

Speaker 1:

I can take it from you, you sitting here laughing. It's funny when it's two men, I'm sorry At a white man telling a black man that he is going to rape him.

Speaker 2:

If there's two men saying that to each other. Yes, I'm, I'm laughing at that. Okay, it's hilarious.

Speaker 1:

And because, for the sole reason, because it's two men saying it if, if a white man ever threatened to rape you, I'm is that funny?

Speaker 2:

you can laugh at it you want. That'd be kind of like weird because we're married.

Speaker 4:

But you know I have no one like, that's not funny one bit.

Speaker 2:

No, it's just. It's weird that you feel like you have to have an allegiance to these people, because I don't feel like I have an allegiance to them I don't have an allegiance to anybody but black people I have an allegiance I just have to you like.

Speaker 1:

So I mean I'm if again I've stood up for you when someone's made some comments that were yes, and I'll stand up for you, and then I'll stand up for other black people too in this situation?

Speaker 2:

black people. I don't know black people I know, in this situation he's challenging him to like your pussy, like. There is a way that he's saying like hey, you're, he's just responding.

Speaker 1:

There's a way that you can, as a comedian, masterfully um, but there is.

Speaker 2:

Cut him down, so is homophobia not a big part of hip-hop community yes, so it's making making, making a joke, threatening to rape somebody.

Speaker 1:

Is not you tackling homophobia in the black community? It's you making fun of it so why don't you just bring it up?

Speaker 2:

it's just like when aaron mcgruder did the anal rape jokes in jail. He's using it as a way to emasculate kendrick that nigga was taking booties like those were not telling you he he's telling you well the first episode was about just taking booty the first like that's the, the, the, the guy.

Speaker 1:

That was like I liked you and I want you?

Speaker 2:

No, that's the second time they made a joke about that.

Speaker 1:

No, oh, aaron Magruder is the writer of Boondocks. Okay, I thought you were talking about like that's the actual guy that was saying that. No, I was like no, that nigga was taking butts.

Speaker 2:

No, aaron Magr hilarious in a black man. It's okay. When it's two guys like, we can take it. We can take this humor. Did you see? Punch responded to that? No, yeah, punch came on twitter was like oh did. Did son say he wanted to make love to Kendrick? That's all he was focused on. He didn't talk about none of the other valid, you know, observations that uh Andrew made regarding his allegiance to nasty men. Also, kodak, black, some man that you hate he needs to.

Speaker 2:

Um, that's a weird thing that kendrick has been but y'all let him get that shit off with my guy.

Speaker 1:

But that's peace drake had mad ammo that he could have taken he said this stuff on the hard part six though, and nobody cared. No, because then you?

Speaker 2:

know y'all felt like the damage was done already, that he was destroyed. The bots had already got everything.

Speaker 2:

So it's not even the bots, it's like in real life andrew, I feel like, andrew, you a bitch, you and us, how I don't mind a lot of your humor, it's not, it doesn't bother me as much as, like a lot of other people do so, and I feel like part of their show is about challenging other men's masculinity with their commentary be funnier, that's, you know, vague. I just feel like what he did was he got the job here at first he has what he has the white humor car.

Speaker 1:

And white humor allows you to joke like that he started with oh, rappers don't aren't respectful to women. And then he went to, and you didn't even say that, right. And then he ended with and then I'm going to rape you. And that was it.

Speaker 2:

Is that not a white man in and of itself?

Speaker 1:

Isn't that the?

Speaker 2:

epitome of a white man in this country. I'm going to call you a barbarian and then say I'm going to put my penis in you, corny, I'm just saying it tracks All.

Speaker 1:

I'm saying is it tracks? It was funny?

Speaker 2:

No, it wasn't. It was funny. No, it wasn't. It was funny. Just like when I watched Snowfall and they called the nigga in To do the big dick, lester shit, that shit was funny. When they did that shit on Godfather of Harlem, when they sent the nigga in to Put dick on a man To emasculate him, shit was funny it's never funny.

Speaker 1:

Let's move on.

Speaker 2:

I'm just saying like it was. It's not funny when it happens to women, it's funny when it happens to men sorry it's not, it can't.

Speaker 2:

Yes, it is, it can be, can be humor in that. All right, let's get into pod wise. So joe budden, on the joe budden podcast released on his patreon, about 25 minutes on his youtube as well of a new series that he's bringing out called pod wives. To begin with, the optics of that already is bad, because why are you calling it pod wives? And the spokesperson, the face of the network, is up there and the woman he's with is not his wife and he's a black man. So you got two white guys married and one black guy not married, talking about pot. Why? That's just a bad image already. You're already making us look bad, joe. And then you kind of go into the episode and what was kind of like something that you just because you only saw the 25 minute clip, right yeah, I didn't watch too much of it and that was kind of edited.

Speaker 2:

You could see it was kind of heavily edited. It cut it around. One of the things that was it didn't seem like it was making a lot of rounds about it was they were talking about joe and maybe some of the oversharing that he made. He does on the show some of the jokes that he may make, and one of the comments was in relation to like an abortion that happened, yeah, where he said I feel like he said two jokes, but one was like you know, we can keep the next one, like. That was like one of the little comments that was said. And another one was like where she trying to you, you, you the one that she don't want to not have the abortion for is like why it got to be me type conversation, so I could see where he was violating.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, because she already got three kids.

Speaker 2:

But my thing is like when they got together, I know they probably known each other for a while, but when they got together he was already on his rise, up his trajectory up. Do you feel as though that's something she kind of just has to accept, Because I think she had a problem with the oversharing because of just the nature of the show and how fans respond and things like that. Do you think that's something like she can't really come in? Because to me that's what I kind of feel, like that's not something you can come in and try to change how he's expressed his life through his podcast I think, um, she seems to be very agreeable and malleable from like the little bit of interview that I did see.

Speaker 1:

So I don't think, I don't think anything is gonna is gonna deter her fully from being in that relationship, regardless of if he does overshare or not I mean it's very clear that she wants to be there like just with some of the stuff that she was saying yeah but I just think she's in a position where you kind of just have to accept what comes with it she's gonna accept a lot

Speaker 2:

yeah, but it seems like. It seems like, though, it's not going to be an easy acceptance if you kind of push back, because, with joe, joe is not going to be somebody who's going to keep it real with you, like he's not going to say, hey, I'm up, I got the money, I create the lifestyle. You have to accept my behaviors. He's going to kind of like, placate you a little bit. He's going to try to be like, oh okay, well, I want to see your point of view and he really doesn't care about it, but he's going to act like he cares about your point of view.

Speaker 1:

It'd be much better if he just straight up just acted like he didn't care about it.

Speaker 2:

If that's the, the, if that's how he actually feels, yeah, I mean, but it's it's kind of tough to do that because you don't get the response that you want when you attack. Oh, yeah, it's a situation like that, like you have to, I mean you would leave at the beginning yeah, but now she's not.

Speaker 1:

You're in too deep now.

Speaker 2:

He's literally control, not control, but he's funding a lot of your lifestyle now.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, that also came up. She doesn't work. And she said she likes being just a mom and a girlfriend.

Speaker 2:

And that kind of comes with. What kind of has to happen with that? Because we were talking about on the space in regards to this and asking a question like does joe really is joe gonna get married to her, even though they talk I don't think so, I don't, I don't think so either, like because I'm asking the question like what leverage does he have, like what leverage does she have to make for him to marry her? The one would be the what happened, the situation that she, that got terminated.

Speaker 2:

That would have been the leverage that she would have needed I don't think joe's gonna get married to anybody.

Speaker 1:

He hasn't been married ever. Right, yeah, that's just not something. And then when he talked about like, he made a comment like oh, if wedding costs and if one were to happen like it doesn't, he doesn't give me somebody who's like, who thinks that that's a goal or an accomplishment.

Speaker 2:

I don't think that once you get to a certain point like financially wise and you've done that as a single man you only come to lose that once you bring another woman in there and then you marry her Like if they just do like a ceremonial.

Speaker 1:

Unless you have a prenup.

Speaker 2:

Even with the prenup, prenups, y'all are good at saying I was under duress, you're a woman, you can say that about anything. Oh, he put me under duress, he stressed me, all of this X, y, Z, and now the prenup is thrown out. So a prenup doesn't matter the point of him giving her that kind of access to him. He loses all his power in the relationship now, because now she can cripple him more so than it is him being able to use his resources to. I guess you could say over her head. Which I mean. The thing is, this man you can't trust dog people like that's really what it comes down to oh no, that's.

Speaker 1:

That's not even what I was thinking about. I genuinely think that, like there's so many fucking convoluted hoops that you had to jump through no to get to this opinion it's not. And then I also think that you just like saying shit, that that is is um salacious. I don't think that's salacious. So you saying that dog people are the worst people, like they are, man they are the worst people to date anytime I've ever dated a girl with a dog.

Speaker 2:

She was probably one of the most selfish women I've ever been around because she wanted to treat me like she treated a dog. She was mad around because she wanted to treat me like she treated a dog. She was mad at something. She wanted to yell. And then come back 20 minutes later. Come here, babe. No, don't get away from me. I'm not the fucking dog. You don't get to just talk to me any kind of way and then I'm back licking on your face.

Speaker 1:

No, you treat me like a person he's just projecting y'all.

Speaker 2:

I'm not projecting, I'm telling you my it's a terrible take filled with projection. Dog. People are the worst people and you see that with Joe, they want to be able to do what they want and to a degree, I'm not upset with him because he's created a lifestyle that can happen in, that can exist in, so I mean, I can't be mad at him in regards to that. Yeah, that was doo-doo. What do you take from it then? What is your take from their relationship then?

Speaker 1:

My take from their relationship is Joe found him somebody who will shape herself to whatever he needs her to fit in, and that's exactly what Joe needs. Are you trying to say that's his jazz?

Speaker 2:

He's fit in, and that's exactly what joe needs. Are you trying to say that's his, his jazz?

Speaker 1:

he's cam newton and that's his jazz, that's sick it was, it was the, it was the comment that was like oh, if I have to work two, three jobs, and I'm gonna do that because this is where I want to be but see, this is why I say like women are.

Speaker 1:

Are you really with joe budden because you like his personality? Like I don't believe you. That might be why I think she's lying, because I just I I don't think that somebody is like willingly with him without any perks, like that seems like fucking hell I think she just said I want to go through.

Speaker 2:

I think she just said it just so she can say but to stay on that point I think that's a good point.

Speaker 2:

I think it really showed, like, how women like are just really narcissistic when it comes to stuff like that, because it's just funny to me when I think about it in context you just take a step back and it's like they're willing to work, how much they have to work for them to not have to have a job. But then if the ability was flipped, would you do that for them? And you see where so much hesitance? Oh, you gotta well, you gotta work too, or you gotta get back on your feet, like it's always. Uh, no, we have to get back to the you being the provider, me being on the other side, but the idea of me being a provider to you, even if it's not even off that is the only reason you put up with a man see, that's the issue.

Speaker 2:

That's the issue, right there.

Speaker 1:

I've said this over and over and over again men deserve less. Men are the fucking worst. I don't like dealing with men in general. If y'all didn't provide protection, like some type of foundation and all of that, like we would be buying houses with our girlfriends and having like communes of women.

Speaker 2:

Y'all cannot do that. Y'all hate that. Every time those communes come up, they always end horribly.

Speaker 1:

Do you know how many old hoes in New York is living together in brownstones, happily?

Speaker 2:

And ask them how many times have they had to do that before? They was just too old to not be able to keep moving around with people, how many groups of people they had to do that with.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, they usually like in their 40s.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they then switched around. It's been happened multiple times.

Speaker 1:

They all be happy as fuck.

Speaker 2:

No, I just think it's just telling where one sex is OK, with the other person not having to contribute in a financial way, and it's very telling when the other sex is put in that position, even if it's no sweat. Like, just think about it, if it was no sweat off your brow, you do something even easier that you do right now. But you could supply everything in the house, no problem. Everything you want, everything I want why are you here?

Speaker 2:

again, look at that. But if I was to say the opposite, if I was to say every I'm controlling everything.

Speaker 1:

I say everything that you do Well, no, it would have to flip to something that makes sense for me.

Speaker 2:

I mean, I'm just saying well, you're more domesticated than most women of your age group, but most women would have an issue with you being like having to be the main person cleaning up and cooking around the house. Like even Park's wife said, that was that was the main reason why they work so well is because she doesn't have to be domesticated, and that's another reason why she wanted to work was because of that as well, to validate her not being as domesticated.

Speaker 2:

I think that's another thing to speak about too, and she said she actually like loves her job so I mean that's, that's understandable why she loved that job especially if she's working around a lot of kids that she's like girl, you're bringing in pennies it's compared to probably what you're bringing in like pennies but I think that's also interesting because she brought up a point that I feel like a lot of women don't address, and they wonder why you get part of a man when you're when you're also only giving part to him.

Speaker 2:

So, like most of the time when you hear women talk about their careers and ambitions, they're not because they have, they get pleasure from it, not because they get like status or anything from it. It's because it's a layer of protection from whatever the man might do to them.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, so but you don't because we there was a whole generation that we watch get fucked because they couldn't have their own. They told you all that they couldn't have their own bank accounts and stuff like that.

Speaker 2:

And then after you got divorced, like if you did get divorced like, that was it like you were. Can you see, though, outcast? You can see, though, why it would be tough if you're not giving all of you in a situation that you're going to get all of somebody else where you, you're operating what do you?

Speaker 2:

mean you're operating with this barrier, that I'm doing this work. I'm putting my effort and energy into this work, not because I care about the work being done, because I want a protection from my partner. You don't see how problematic that is. That doesn't come up problematic in your head at all.

Speaker 1:

That's the same thing you could say about prenups.

Speaker 2:

No, I disagree, Because a prenup is oh my fucking god, can we, can we talk?

Speaker 1:

we just have a conversation, we cannot, because you're saying garbage nonsense out of your mouth me having a job just to make sure that I'm not homeless. If you decide to leave me, is it the same layer of protection as having a prenup, so I don't leave you with nothing if I decide to leave you? No, a prenup is I'm about to get the fuck up and walk away right now.

Speaker 2:

No, you're going to sit here and listen. A prenup is a plan on how to deviate the funds once the business, which is the marriage, dissolves. You having funds is saying I'm conducting this relationship as if something can go wrong or something will go wrong, and so then I become a self-fulfilling prophecy in the downfall of my relationship. That's what a prenup is. No, it's not, because a prenup doesn't only come into effect once we've decided we're going to do a divorce and it just shows how we're going to uh, you know disseminate our resources it falls under the same category of things.

Speaker 1:

If you only have a job so that you have some type of protection, then it's the same. It falls within the same umbrella of things.

Speaker 1:

So you don't think that's a level of mistrust in a relationship yes, both of them are yeah, but if that's the case, that's what my thing, that's what I'm saying if, if that's the only reason you have a job, if you have a job just because people work and that's a normal thing and you you have to pay bills, or you have a job because you're passionate about it, that's a different thing.

Speaker 1:

But if you don't have to work and, like, your husband, can provide everything for you and you're working only because you don't trust that he would take care of you if y'all were decide to split, of course that's a that's a huge, but that's what I was saying Mistrust and that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

that she said that in the conversation, but I'm just saying that prenups are the same level they fall under the same umbrella of like um mistrust in relationships.

Speaker 1:

Maybe I don't. I disagree I think they fall with under the same umbrella of potential mistrust.

Speaker 2:

That's what I'll say now I don't necessarily think because I don't think us getting divorced is inherent from mistrust like there could be a lot of things the prenup in general, not planning what we'll do if there is a divorce? Yes, but the divorce is an inherent means that there's mistrust. We can have a divorce because you get having a job.

Speaker 1:

Listen is an inherent that there's gonna we're gonna split up but it's just in case, just like the prenup no, it's not just in case you're doing it.

Speaker 2:

You're creating a layer of protection for if this relationship falls, this one is not creating a layer of protection. It's saying how we're going to disseminate assets if the company which is our marriage disseminates we'll agree to disagree.

Speaker 2:

I just feel like we're not, you're missing the the point of it. That's all. I think that it's when one one is you're actively doing something in the relationship day to day that is putting up a wall in your relationship. One of them is just, if we walk through this door, this is how it where it's going to take us. I think there's just a total difference from that, and I think that it doesn't get spoken about enough when we have conversations about that, because you wonder why I don't think a lot of women that I don't think it's, I don't think it gets spoken about because it's not something that's happening that often.

Speaker 1:

It's not a lot of women whose husbands can 100 take care of them and they decide to work because they're not comfortable, uh, with what'll happen after if their husbands decide to stop taking care of them I that's probably like the tiniest amount of marriages, as somebody who's lived amongst those people.

Speaker 2:

you see that a lot of times those women work because they want to have a layer of protection for if their husband chooses to quote-unquote do something.

Speaker 1:

In this economy.

Speaker 2:

I'm just talking about what I've seen in women of that economics. It's very rare that they're doing it because they have a passion for it. They're doing it because they want a level of protection.

Speaker 1:

I feel like women of that economic status be having jobs because they be bored and they need something to do.

Speaker 2:

Even then those jobs don't really make the funds that could protect them. Those just be like nail money, stuff like that, just stuff they don't have to immediately ask their husband for. But again, a lot of that time it's just them saving up a checks over and over. That's what even ian said on there, where he said his wife was saving checks up from her job that she would then use for whatever she may need or something happens yeah, and she was like that's, that's money for us for no, she said that money was for her she didn't.

Speaker 1:

She didn't. She said that money was for them.

Speaker 2:

No, the money that was for them was the wedding money they put together. Okay, because you remember, even then park's wife, park's wife said the craziest thing where he says it's our money and she says I don't look at it like that, I look at it as my money and your money. To me that's also a that's a crazy red flag to me, because if you're not looking at ourselves as together, in one like again, it just feels like we're at odds in a way that if I don't adhere to, or one of us doesn't adhere to, how the other wants, the relationship to go is going to be problematic because we don't. We aren't aligned. That's what it felt like to me. I just I thought that was odd that none of them except Ian had the joint bank account at any point in their relationship.

Speaker 1:

And they still have separate bank accounts.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, that's what I'm saying, like to me it just seems like I get it, especially if Ian's wife comes from like an affluent family which I don't think she said she did.

Speaker 1:

I think she said money was really tight for them, so I guess that could also be another reason too why there may be a lot of guards. She did say she has like trauma over like finances and how to manage money and stuff like that.

Speaker 2:

So no, I think that when you get to that y'all aren't able to fall into the money together like that. I think for at least normal people, when you don't have as much money as they're making, I think it's it should be a real pitfall, because y'all gotta understand y'all in it together like they can do that because their partner is one of those making exorbitant amount more money than the other one. So but I think it was a good episode. I think they should keep doing it. What do you think? You think other cast members should come on?

Speaker 2:

um no you don't think? You don't think melissa ford, with a dude up there, would be cool probably, but is she not single? No, she's well, she was that. She was talking to the dude who was on chicago pd I have no idea who you're talking about.

Speaker 1:

He a younger dude like 35, okay yeah, but, um, I don't think they should continue this, that it's too messy, I don't think it's interesting enough. Okay, like I think general, like the whole, maybe have this be like a miniseries, like three episodes max, but I don't think I don't see this like growing legs and like becoming a thing.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I could to me if you're going to be waking up stuff like how joe and it was waking up talking about like their dynamics with the strippers and that was interesting talking about them and the. You know what was going on with their.

Speaker 1:

You know the abortion the way joe dances around. Stuff is interesting too, like seeing him do that.

Speaker 2:

I don't like it one thing I will say too when it comes to that the abortion comment that was made. I think she's kind of I know how she feels, where you're making light of a situation like that. But she got to understand that as the consumer, when he says something like that we can throw it away and put it as just a joke, but when you come and actually confirm it, you kind of change a lot of the.

Speaker 1:

It's like looking at something with a different perspective now and I think she kind of has nobody really thought he was being serious for real right.

Speaker 2:

I don't think nobody took it that serious. But, like, even though you know it's real, you got to understand that the audience don't know it's real and when you do that you kind of aren't being fair to the relationship Because she really made him look an asshole, like, even though we all agree that he is.

Speaker 1:

No, but like you don't need to make Joe Budden look like an asshole.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but I mean she made him look bad. And then you got to put it into context Like y'all aren't a young couple, y'all aren't in y'all 20s having you know an abortion.

Speaker 1:

Who? Who knows if she'll be able to get pregnant again.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I mean I don't want to put that on, I'm just saying how old is she? She's 38. They've been together for like five years. So I mean like yeah, that's why it just looks weird when it's like you telling people at your big age you didn't doing this for this man who's a multimillionaire. Like what are you doing?

Speaker 1:

Baby girl that was the money maker.

Speaker 1:

You can't get rid of the money maker, but again she values, being next to him over, like a lot of making smart decisions. I mean I think that like she, like she prioritizes not over like I'm being a mother and stuff like that. I'm not saying that, but I think like generally, like she's gonna do what he asks, because if I don't get this abortion, then maybe I'll, I'll get the child support, but then like I'll just have four kids and still now I'm a single mother again I think like she has this thing where maybe she has this fear that, like joe, would leave her high and dry.

Speaker 2:

I don't see him leave doing that. I can see like if he found somebody and he just knew he wanted to be with somebody else, he wouldn't leave her high. He was like, hey, I'm going to break you off for the rest of the year, but make sure your rent paid off for the next. You know, if it happened right now, the next six months.

Speaker 1:

Six months is ridiculous if that's the mother of your child.

Speaker 2:

You. She's not his mother's child. Well, that's if she was no.

Speaker 1:

I'm talking about right now. Okay, I thought you were saying leave her high and dry if she kept the baby and didn't get the abortion Right now she feels as though if he was to leave her high and dry. Oh yeah, Baby girl, you fucked.

Speaker 3:

I don't think Joe would be like that, though. I don't think Joe would be like that.

Speaker 2:

I think Joe would break her off enough money to be like you're going to be straight for six, seven months.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, and then you get back on your feet. You use a trick so.

Speaker 1:

And then that's what I was. To me that would be fly. I was a little bit uncomfortable with the strip club conversation, just a little bit, because, like she's obviously right in her concerns and everything, she's like nigga, at your big age you're going to the strip club three days a week in a row. She was like that's not good for you to be going to the same one three days a week in a row, because nobody should know where you are that consistently.

Speaker 2:

Like you shouldn't have that consistent of a schedule for niggas to run up on you and then everyone was like yeah, but, like again, that comes with the idea and then we can just wrap it up here for that. But it just comes with the idea of you understand, joe is going to show you patterns. He's not going to tell you with his words, he's going to show you patterns. Once you identify the patterns, it's on you to make that decision. Like you can't sit here and be like, oh joe, joe has shown you who he is and you either accept it and get to enjoy the lifestyle or you go home that's why I call back to what I said earlier.

Speaker 1:

There's no way she's just there for his fucking personality. That nigga is horrible, like from from all of the reality tv and everything that we've seen. Like he's manipulative, he dances around shit. He changed, he moves the goal post. He did it when they were having the conversation about um, about the, the stripper who took a picture of his coffee or whatever, and then he was like she said that, like she found it weird that he, she, she posted the picture. And then joe was like and she said that you should have like said something to her, like just like this is some weird shit. And joe was like I don't see it that way. And then everyone went in a circle and basically agreed to her. And then he was like, by the way, I do agree with y'all, and like that's not how you made it seem in the beginning At all we talked about this.

Speaker 2:

He was saying he agrees with a stripper shouldn't be exposing your location. He wasn't not saying he agrees with having the type of relationship he has with the strippers and bartenders.

Speaker 1:

No, but everyone was talking about the picture.

Speaker 2:

No.

Speaker 1:

I don't think he has with the strippers and bartenders no, but everyone was talking about the picture.

Speaker 2:

No, at the, when he was saying the context that you were getting out of it was the correct context. What he was saying was they. When he said he didn't agree with them was was saying he with them, saying he's not cool with going out with the strippers taking him out to dinner and stuff. He was like I think that's fly, I don't agree with that.

Speaker 1:

But he's saying I agree with the strippers, shouldn't be exposing my location he literally was combative when she first started talking about it and was like no, I don't agree with you. And then everyone else agreed with her. And then he was like I agree with y'all that's exactly what happened, but you're missing and joe, joe, does that all the time.

Speaker 2:

You know that. I know he's the gas like so like this situation he wasn't doing that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

Like he does that so much that like I can't imagine that like a smart woman would just want to be with that man on purpose if he if he didn't have all the sauce and all the money and all the clout yeah, he definitely couldn't be with abby k williams.

Speaker 2:

She would, she would.

Speaker 1:

That's not who I was talking about whatsoever but she couldn't be with a girl she would eat him the fuck up joe couldn't be with a girl. Joe wants to be with a girl that he feels as though you call malleable and then when they were talking about the strip club stuff, was that when joe had, he had his hand like on her thigh and then he had her his thumb like on the inside of her knee?

Speaker 1:

yeah so that, like it looked like if he needed to like grab her and tell her to shut the fuck up.

Speaker 2:

Really like subtly he did have the claw sitting there like he had like his hand in the claw formation.

Speaker 1:

I saw, yeah, it was there for a couple minutes and then, when they stopped talking about it, he like relaxed a little bit and took his arm off. Also, when joe is gaslighting women, he sits crisscross applesauce that's.

Speaker 2:

That's the move, though that's the best way to do it.

Speaker 1:

Like you come off hip hop in the like park when he was sitting on that little thingy. And he's doing it in this um, in this special like I see you, I see you and I'm, I'm reading you, hey man I can't hey any.

Speaker 2:

It used to be back back in my days, man getting ready, and that's crisscross applesauce the talk that used to be back in my days, man Getting ready in that crisscross applesauce to talk, that used to be the move I used to get it done In kindergarten. No College, like a little bit after college, I used to get it done, you being this non-defensive. You know what I'm saying. I'm not being aggressive in any kind of stance and they just hate you the entire time.

Speaker 1:

Listen, I would always be sitting crisscross applesauce on my bed with the niggas sitting on the table. Don't tell me about what you was doing on the table, uh, in front of the computer, like that work area. And then my bed was always on the high thing, so I always had the high ground see, that's what you look up at me.

Speaker 2:

You was. He was dealing with suckers back then you got a real one listen, I was a menace all right. So we got to get into tyla, our girl. She's taking over. I think we we got our superstar.

Speaker 1:

We might need to make this like a tyla podcast we don't need to do that, but um we both enjoy her so shout out to tyla for surpassing beyonce this year for the most streams of spotify.

Speaker 2:

That's a big deal. Like I don't think people are like evaluating this like the way it should be like she is a relatively new act.

Speaker 1:

She is and she dropped her first like debut album this year, and not only, and it was a really good album.

Speaker 2:

It was good and her visuals were dope like. Not only did she surpass beyonce, she did about like 100 million, like 100 million more.

Speaker 1:

I do want to add the caveat that beyonce fucking released a country album this year and even a beyonce fan like me, I didn't even think about hitting play on that shit, honestly, like I didn't listen to a whole minute of that album and I don't plan to till this day that's crazy.

Speaker 1:

Hate, that's crazy I don't like country. I just I didn't, I didn't. It's not for me. That album was not for me whatsoever. So I'm sure there are a lot of beyonce fans that felt the same way and just didn't fucking listen to it.

Speaker 2:

Very casual fans like I am yeah, they said that she got 1.565 billion streams. Tyla and beyonce had 1.64 billion streams, so it was literally that close. But for her to be like considered the most streamed uh album by a black female artist in spotify in 2004.

Speaker 1:

Like that's 2024, yeah, 2024 yeah, that's that's lit for tyla and she has. First of all, she makes african music. Africa is big as fuck, like there. There's people here listening to her. There's people in different countries all over the world listening to her too. She has a very like I'm. A piano is is uh, music that's popular all over the world now, so that doesn't surprise me not one bit. And she's cute and tiny. She's on her rihanna run. That's what I was gonna say. I think she's we're seeing our next like rihanna, ish figure come about.

Speaker 2:

I think we. I don't think she's ever going to be as close to the people reception wise the way that superstars have been in the past. But when it comes to production, I think, because of how these numbers operate and the fact that, like she just does fit, like the perfect feminine, like individual ideology, aesthetic, whatever you want to put there- like she that I think that's why a lot of girls don't like her.

Speaker 2:

Like I noticed a lot of the big back ends be getting upset with Tyler, and I think it's because she does something similar to Nara Smith in regards to being in a physical embodiment of femininity that they cannot reach, and I think that's why they hate on Tyler so much.

Speaker 1:

I think they be hating on her cause her waist is mad tiny. You realize you just said the same thing, right? Yeah, but you sound like a fucking dick bag how is that a? Dick bag like a feminine ideology that they can't touch. No, it sounds a little bit better aesthetic whatever you know, you sound like a pretentious dickbag and I just sound like a regular asshole.

Speaker 2:

I think I said it way, flyer.

Speaker 1:

You said it more pretentiously Y'all mad because she got a tiny little waist and y'all could never be like that.

Speaker 2:

But it's not even just the waist, it's the eyes. She got big eyes. Like you got big eyes, like that's a very cute attracting thing, like having attracting thing, like having the eyes like that. Uh, the way that her waist is shaped and formed, like she's, she's so tiny, the pinnacle, and then she has like little abs.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, she's the pinnacle of female physical. You know, physical beauty at this point right now and I don't see where any of her falling off at any point. They did play her with the grammys. We didn't talk about that, you know. She didn't get no nods for the grammys well, she, she got like a r&b nomination right, no, she got.

Speaker 1:

No, her and tommy richmond, so was her album too late to be nominated for a grammy talked about.

Speaker 1:

Remember we had a whole clip where we talked about they were trying to get her into r&b and we said she's trying to okay, okay, okay yeah, and she didn't get into any of it, yeah, and I think tommy um is not good enough yet, so no, but that song should have been nominated. I like Million Dollar Baby, but like Million Dollar Baby should have been nominated it's, I think maybe on your next album you got it, and then I think you probably rubbed people the wrong way and people in the Academy, the Grammy Academy too when you were like I'm not a hip hop artist.

Speaker 2:

I don't think they cared about that. I just think that there wasn't enough money behind it at the end of the day.

Speaker 1:

That's really what all of this, so there was also more lists that came out because, yes, doja cat.

Speaker 2:

Well, spotify, I was gonna get into the billboard list first okay, so I just want to talk about doja we can get into that. Just the billboard list that came out was the greatest pop stars of the 21st century, so I'll do the top. I'll just do top 25. No, it's their names.

Speaker 1:

It's not like I'm reading a fucking paragraph we don't care about the top 25, do the top 10?

Speaker 2:

nobody cares about what's after the well I'll say this katie perry was number 25 nobody gives a fuck. I do, I'm a katie Katy Perry stan account. What are you talking about?

Speaker 1:

Like top ten, Come on.

Speaker 2:

Adele, Ariana Grande, Justin Bieber, Kanye West, Britney Spears, Lady Gaga, Drake, Rihanna, Taylor Swift, Beyonce.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

This is wrong. It's definitely Britney Spears. Britney Spears is outsold Beyonce on everything. Britney Spears is our sole Beyonce on everything.

Speaker 1:

Britney Spears is a crack whore now and the pinnacle of her, her pop run is cemented.

Speaker 2:

Every girl that's doing a pop run right now is emulating Britney's.

Speaker 1:

If okay, so you're right, but like it's done now.

Speaker 2:

What's done now?

Speaker 1:

Britney's career's career, yeah, but when she's talking about her being in 21st century, we're not talking about, like what she's doing right now, I don't think she dominated enough of the 21st century. What? I mean of course none of they have.

Speaker 2:

We're only 25. We're not even 50 years into the 21st century, so that's why we're only gonna go by well I don't think we're only a quarter in britney.

Speaker 1:

Unfortunately had too much shit going around, going on around her, but her highs were really high like they were, yeah, they were high was like quadruple.

Speaker 2:

Some of beyonce's highs like don't get me wrong, beyonce did was very consistent and she did make a lot of marks and numbers, but britney spears like come on when it comes to being a pop girly. She said she wrote the book on it I think janet jackson did that I'm not saying that she didn't janet's not even on this list.

Speaker 1:

Janet, yeah, and of course she's not. Janet's not on this list at all and jan Janet still be making music and performing and stuff too. If Britney's going to be in the top 10, then I think, is Janet. Is Janet's not even in the top 25,? Is she? Yeah, no. Yeah, if this was a list made by the blacks, she would be in the top 10.

Speaker 2:

Yeah. I mean don't I'm not hating on Janet she probably should definitely be top 30 for sure, top 30. Probably should definitely be top 30 for sure. Yeah, top 34. I don't.

Speaker 1:

Some of these acts have had way bigger runs because janet had moments, but the run that a lot of these had, I don't think I'm glad lady gaga was on there, because lady gaga has been serving cut for a decade but she's over britain for like over decades, like y'all disrespecting britain.

Speaker 2:

I know she crazy and she talking about. I read somewhere they said that she's trying to be a five-year-old and all that. She said she's in kindergarten. I don't. I. I told y'all nick jamie was right, but the motherfucker should be number one. I don't think she should be number. Two things can be true. Jamie was right britney number one.

Speaker 1:

Nobody in 2024 is having a conversation that britney spears is the like is number one, but that's because we not, because we not remember history Other than like shaking them little chicken cutlets on the Internet.

Speaker 2:

But see, that's because of plies that we remember that now. She was out there. She told us oops, I did it again and she did.

Speaker 1:

I was in Haiti singing that song. Come on now.

Speaker 2:

Going crazy in the land that murdered white people. You were singing that blonde hair, blue eyed devil's music. Wake it up.

Speaker 1:

I had no idea what she looked like. You thought she was Haitian too. No, I knew she wasn't. First of all, I wasn't even speaking English words. I used to just make up gibberish that sounded like the words. Whenever I sang along to American songs songs I thought I knew the full lyrics oh, he was getting getting busy.

Speaker 2:

So I think it's so interesting to around this time when, like, everybody starts posting, like all they spotify wrap-ups, because I don't.

Speaker 1:

I posted mine today.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you, that's why all of you don't listen to spotify.

Speaker 1:

You listen to apple, yes, apple has a replay.

Speaker 2:

I didn't say they didn't have a rap.

Speaker 1:

I'm just saying I was talking about spotify and you brought up apple yeah, you said you don't have one, and I was agreeing because you're not a connoisseur of music whatsoever you are a weird ass, big dick nigga, who don't have any music subscription services. You barely you barely listen to music. This nigga listen to people on twitter yelling at each other more than he listens to music. You weirdo them, niggas be. You're fucking weird, these niggas be funny. So let's talk about my um top artists. Do you want to guess who was number one?

Speaker 2:

I saw you posted today, so I know what everything is you did.

Speaker 1:

Do you remember who number one was?

Speaker 2:

smita.

Speaker 1:

Smita was no right, smita was not even on the list. It was. It was nowhere on that list was smino smino didn't even drop an album this month.

Speaker 2:

It's fucking noise. I don't. It's like remy or something like that. Start with an r. Who's rema rema okay, I knew he's an african artist some who is two clickers?

Speaker 1:

two is k trinada. Three is schoolboy q. Four is kajuk lamar. Five is sexy red. Where did that come from? Like? But that's very indicative of my personality. The songs were red potion by remma was number one, and then immediately after is get it sexy by sexy red, and then three is another sexy red song. Looking for the house, I'm looking for the house. I did play the shit out of that song I. I used to take everything showers, candle lit with the lights off and instead of playing Erykah Badu, I was playing Sexy Red.

Speaker 2:

Y'all be so obsessed about what y'all little music y'all spend every year.

Speaker 1:

I just think my list is like a very accurate representation of my personality. Is it, yeah, yeah, accurate representation of my personality. Is it, yeah? Rema? African music, kate shanada, house music, um schoolboy q and kendrick none of them is haitian tde and then sexy red shaking ass home music.

Speaker 2:

Love it so well, let's get into the actual bigger picture numbers. So spotify also dropped their top. It's like well, I have a top 11 their most streamed rappers. So it's number 11 was tyler the creator. Number 10 you won't even guess who this is.

Speaker 1:

Xxx tentacion still oh, wow in 2024 he would have really like, he would have been the voice of that generation right now him or juice world playboy cardi 21 savage okay, metro booming yes future yes kindred mm-hmm.

Speaker 2:

Eminem oh kanye west, oh travis scott and the sixth god well, yeah, drizzy Eminem oh Kanye West, oh Travis Scott. Mm-hmm, and the sixth god.

Speaker 1:

Well, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Drizzy, put some respect on it. Do you have to say?

Speaker 4:

his name that loud you always glazing that nigga you always glazing, kendrick, I'm not always glazing.

Speaker 2:

Kendrick, that's all you're doing, kendrick.

Speaker 1:

When you do the wop w glazed in my life you did that that.

Speaker 2:

I just keep it. I just keep. That was a great sound effect. I just keep it real to niggas all right. Uh, we had a crazy murder in midtown ceo murder, everyone thinks so. Apparently this guy his name was, uh, brian thomas I think that's his name or thompson or something like that let me make sure I get this name right, because he is dead and he was shot in New York this morning. It's like 7 am this morning.

Speaker 1:

It was like 630, like mad early.

Speaker 2:

CEO of United Healthcare. So I just want to be clear too, because everybody kept trying to say like he was like the big CEO. He's not the big CEO, he's a CEO within the umbrella of a bigger company. So what happened was he got shot out front during an investor meeting that was going on in the hotel. He was shot in front of the investor meeting was going on during it. Right, they didn't know it happened.

Speaker 2:

So the way it gets reported, he gets shot and they continue on with the investor meeting. He gets shot and they continue on with the investor meeting. In the investor meeting, andy uh, andrew witty, the uh chairman, ceo of everything, says when times get tough, the tough keep going. So it's being reported like they're just cool with everything that's going on. The investor meeting's going on like normal, when in all actuality, they probably weren't aware that he had got shot and when they were uh brought to their attention, they did in the investor meeting. But a lot of people, man, it's interesting to see where the human brain is at this time in our like society because, like I'm listening to people like talk about this, and even ian dunlap.

Speaker 2:

He came into our space this morning. We were talking about this and Ian comes in and says oh, I just want y'all to know this is an inside job. It's going to come out in like three or four weeks. Y'all going to hear about this. Things are getting crazy. The shooter had a silencer. I mean well, I don't know, I didn't yeah.

Speaker 1:

In the had a silencer on the gun I'll get into that, though.

Speaker 2:

I want to say this though but while ian done that, so ian says that right. So I think to myself, he sounded like he capping, like he sounded like he just saying whatever. So I go to you remember when what happened in last year in april, when that ceo got stabbed in san francisco. So I went in and I found his tweets from that day and when it happened and he was like oh, the cash app founders passed away.

Speaker 3:

Things are about to get scary I'm like all right, this nigga just be saying shit.

Speaker 2:

This nigga just be trying to say shit to try to scare niggas. I act like he in in the loop, but uh no, I just think it's just so funny to where our brains go with this because, like I don't know, if that was a silence on there, you might have heard somebody there was a picture that there's a.

Speaker 1:

They have video surveillance of the gunman and there's a full silencer on the gun again to get a silencer.

Speaker 2:

You don't really have to be a hitman to do that, you don't.

Speaker 1:

But like I will say, that's not a thing that people generally have, especially in new york, because the gun laws are so strict I will say well, he doesn't have to come from new york.

Speaker 2:

This was the best of me they knew was gonna beat it yeah so you don't have to be in, you just travel to from another state. This is what I'm gonna say, this I know it sounds cool to think of the logistics of being another ceo or somebody internally wanting to take this man out, but y'all got to understand he was a ceo of a health insurance company, one of the health insurance companies that had some of the most denial.

Speaker 1:

It had like one of the highest percentages of denials for coverage yeah, all of the comments were like um, like their, their coverage doesn't cost them giving a fuck about him dying.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so like people don't understand is it's very likely that this was someone whose coverage was denied or family like a disgruntled yeah, a person who was disgruntled about coverage being denied or being treated a particular way by this company and knew that they were going to be here and I'm going to take an opportunity to take out one of their ceos if that's the case, I hope he gets away I think most that's more likely.

Speaker 2:

Or I have another thought it could be a scorned gay lover okay he could have been upset, knew that he was coming out there to see him.

Speaker 1:

He sees him how, where, where does the homosexuality come into?

Speaker 2:

the picture no, I didn't look at brian. Brian looks a little sweet okay, let me.

Speaker 1:

Let me look at brian, because I'm like why?

Speaker 2:

are we putting?

Speaker 1:

brian could potentially be a power bottom y'all know I like putting homosexuality on niggas jackets, but like I'm but like to me.

Speaker 2:

people were talking to me about this and, like they were saying, oh, you need to respect the dead and no, I don't. I don't have to respect the dead. This nigga was a CEO in America. That means more than likely he's promoting a status quo that keeps you, me and everyone else in this planet or in this country, oppressed. You know what? Sometimes I'd be like is he gay or is he just a white man? We've already had that discussion before, already too on this show like you know, like high threshold he could be.

Speaker 1:

He could be gay, but he could also just be a white man no, brian looked like he was bending over.

Speaker 2:

Brian was definitely doing the bending. You can tell b Brian was bending it up. But no, that was my thought To me. I just thought we just live in such a hyper fantasized world when we just want to assume when, like, everything is going on. It's like an episode of scandal. Now, granted, when you watch the video, the nigga was catching the fucking shells, like if you see him when he's shooting the gun. He shot like six times, but he's catching the shells when he's doing it. Oh, he's catching the fucking shells, like if you see him when he's shooting the gun, like six times, but he's catching the shells when he's doing. Oh, he's catching the shells. It looks like he's doing like he's shooting the gun and then moving. But can you?

Speaker 1:

can you control like depending on I don't know nothing?

Speaker 2:

they don't necessarily pop out.

Speaker 1:

I mean it depends on the type of gun, like when I went to the shoot they was popping out.

Speaker 2:

It depends on the type of gun one of them almost hit my arm it depends on the type of gun you have and how you shoot. Like you can't potentially do that. That's what it looked like he was doing, where, like he would shoot and then put the go, pull it back and then shoot again so that he kept the shells. That's crazy. That's where it does look like.

Speaker 1:

Okay, this nigga planned this out yeah, like the silencer and that, if both of those are, uh.

Speaker 2:

And then he had the bike. He got on the bike and just was off.

Speaker 1:

Like he did it at the right time. And then his face wasn't in the At all, no, it was just the back of the hood, but it was still sloppy, though it was still a sloppy. That's why I don't think it was a professional hitman because it was sloppy as fuck.

Speaker 2:

If you look at it, it was a woman who saw him. She looked right, he had I think he had a mask at the bottom of his face, though.

Speaker 1:

Nobody's come out. All of the New Yorkers said murder, what murder.

Speaker 2:

I'm not going to be somebody here who's going to be like oh, we need to feel empathy for this guy because I want to live in a world where CEOs don't feel safe walking around. You don't feel safe walking around. You. Shouldn't pay your protection tax to the working class by having the working class protect you from the working class, especially if you out here doing bullshit.

Speaker 1:

I'm sorry, I don't feel sorry for you. Eat the rich on y'all. I hope somebody's uncle murdered you, because y'all didn't let somebody I was, I was gonna say y'all didn't give his grandma chemo or something like. If that's the case, then I hope he gets away with it and I hope he isn't found and the way these insurance companies acting.

Speaker 2:

Did you hear about what happened to Blue Cross Blue Shield announced today? No, so Blue Cross Blue Shield, they announced that they will no longer be. I'll read this right here they will no longer cover anesthesia for the full length of certain surgeries in Connecticut, New York and Missouri. Longer cover anesthesia for the full length of certain surgeries in Connecticut, New York and Missouri.

Speaker 1:

So essentially, there's a certain amount of time they'll cover and then any time after that you have to pay for the anesthesia that's crazy y'all just got to get rid of blue, blue cross, blue shield if you live in New York, new Jersey, wherever the fuck else, so I mean this just to me.

Speaker 2:

I'm surprised and I read a tweet that said this and it made me really think. It says in a country where guns are so prevalent, where where we have violent it goes around so common and so often, why don't we have more people in the oligarch, like the elite class? This happened to more often? We're so ready to just shoot and kill each other at the work, but you rarely know. I just I think that's very interesting. I think we may be getting to a point after this trump situation, after this trump situation, where we might begin to seeing this happen more and more. No, I think we're gonna pretty much find some more. I don't know if we're ever gonna find this person. Honestly, they said that he left the bike at like a bus stop area are there no prints on the bike?

Speaker 2:

no, and the bike got picked up by somebody else. So I mean, somebody else already touched and compromised it. Oh, because, for some reason, they had this nasty video right of these young boys and they were using like 2001 era cameras to like encourage you to like support the police state. It was really nasty because they were showing how they could look up the bike and where the bike went to, where it was dropped off, and all that, and they were like trying to encourage people to be surveillance agents, which is nasty. I also saw another tweet that was going around, with these women were saying they're okay if, like, say, they order food, and it says there's a woman supposed to be dropping the food off and a man comes, they're okay with reporting them, even if the man doesn't do anything to him yeah, 100 that is so problematic, because why?

Speaker 2:

because maybe I can't get here because my license is not, uh, renewed. Something could be going on. I could be helping a woman that I'm using to make money?

Speaker 1:

no, that's not. Don't send no random man to my house, but they're not sending a random man to the house.

Speaker 2:

They're sending food to the house. If they don't do anything to you, why are you shitting on them like that's what I don't understand. Why are you okay?

Speaker 1:

I've had a girl pull up to uh as a like uber driver, with her nigga in the passenger seat, and I fully reported that bitch. For what, though? Because why is your nigga in the? But what did he? Do, he do? To you though, who is this nigga? Somebody in her car, it's her Uber no absolutely not as a woman.

Speaker 1:

we're not playing no type of games. And then there's also been a bunch of reports of door dashers and food delivery people. But they're doing something Like they're supposed to be doing, like a drop off or something, and then they like try to be, um, doing like a drop off or something. And then they like try to break into the house or like, but somebody who isn't, who isn't who, uh, the person on the icon icon shows up and they try to do something okay, and I and I understand that hold on.

Speaker 2:

Can we stop right there if?

Speaker 1:

if people are doing that, then I'm gonna report you so that that doesn't happen to the next woman potentially so if they didn't do it to you, yes, you're going to say, yes, you're going to automatically get them uh yes, an impression yes, you see the problematic with that.

Speaker 2:

Like that, I don't think y'all.

Speaker 1:

If we didn't live in a constant state of danger, then maybe I would live in a constant state of danger.

Speaker 2:

You live in a perceived state of danger where people are telling you you're about, are you?

Speaker 1:

literally telling me that women don't or don't have to be consistently like overly protective of themselves and overly vigilant because of random violence that can happen to us on a regular basis I'm not saying that, okay, so I'm saying that we live in a constant state of danger, of potential danger.

Speaker 1:

And uh, if the person whose icon it is does not show up and he doesn't do anything here, I don't feel comfortable just letting that rock because he there might have been a situation where, like he didn't want to do something here. But what if he does something with the next person?

Speaker 3:

and what if I? What if I, what if I?

Speaker 1:

see what if I see? See his fucking image on the news in a couple weeks and this person attacked blah, blah blah and I could have stopped it before because I felt something weird.

Speaker 2:

You do know that's the same logic and racism they use to justify white racism against black people.

Speaker 1:

Yo, if, if your icon, if it says that, like ashley is showing up and hunter shows up and hunter, just gives you the food and don't do nothing to you.

Speaker 2:

He won't report hunter he getting that's lame as fuck and y'all just being so easily victimized and being people, uh, being used by the police state, y'all? Y'all don't understand how y'all are being used by the surveillance state to affect your own fellow man. Nigga ain't do shit to you, but trying to make a dollar didn't make you uncomfortable, didn't do anything except exist as a man and you're okay with just throwing them under the bus. Yep, that's sick, like that's. The problem right there is that they take that fear that you you're perceiving is happening, which is at a small clip. If we want to be honest, if we want to actually look at the larger number of people who are being caught or reported for these things, it's a small minute.

Speaker 1:

You live this way too. You constantly do dumb little shit in case something dangerous might happen.

Speaker 2:

I protect myself. I don't sit here and put other things onto people when they haven't hurt me. When have I done that?

Speaker 1:

No, you haven't.

Speaker 2:

I don't do that.

Speaker 1:

If you haven't done wrong to me, I just think you do little dumb shit that protects yourself all the time? Yes, but it's not.

Speaker 2:

And people could perceive the shit that you do as unnecessary, just like what you think this is, but context matters, and the context is I control my own actions. I don't dictate other people's actions so that they can be around me, and I think that's one thing y'all you're ignoring. In that point, I say, oh, I'm not going to go here because I don't. I don't say, oh, if I'm gonna go here, all y'all niggas need to wear white t-shirts. So I know who y'all. No, I don't say that.

Speaker 2:

So that's where, to me, y'all are, and again it happens with, you know, vulnerable communities and things like that that get used to help the bigger state Surveil and control and create a police state. But you know the what if? We get so manipulated by the what ifs.

Speaker 1:

We'll agree to disagree, like we do on most topics.

Speaker 2:

It is what it is, man. Because you don't want to see the truth, man, you don't? Atlanta is going to be in disarray. I just want y'all to be prepared. These fucking clowns, they fucked up this case and now every Atlanta nigga born after 1990 is going to think they're invincible. Just want y'all to be understanding. Get ready, it's going to be bad.

Speaker 1:

When I saw that these guys like beat the the case, a part of me was like yay, because like y'all are, y'all are, y'all beat the system, and just there's just like a very niggerly part of my heart. That's like regardless, like I like when black people beat the system, because white people beat the system and they do egregious shit and don't go to jail all the time. The only thing is that these people were, were, um, what's the word I'm looking for?

Speaker 1:

they were, they were monsters no, they were um savages, they were terrorizing black communities. So like, yeah, they probably that I, they should belong in jail. But like the, the case was super fucked up and it wasn't concise and it was dragged out. And this should just teach the prosecutors from now on to like get your shit together like you should have, you should have a case that you can like fully.

Speaker 2:

No, it wasn't just that they did. They did stupid mistake after stupid mistake. Yes, give that fucking asshole, woody fucking, any kind of immunity.

Speaker 1:

What do you think he fucking played y'all and then he got up there and was like I lied about everything.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you gave him immunity that he's not gonna get in trouble for anything he say on the stand. And then what he do? Recant everything. Everything was. Oh, I lied here, I lied.

Speaker 1:

Do you think that he would have said anything if they didn't give him immunity?

Speaker 2:

If he didn't comply, then guess what I get to use? I get to throw you in jail for not reporting to court when you're supposed to subpoena, and then I have documents of you making statements that I need to be used. Now you can't recant these statements because you didn't come to court, so again, it would have been smarter for them to say no, nigga, you answer your question, and if you don't, it's cool, because we got you on videotape already making these statements. But for some reason these niggas wanted to show like oh, we, we switched up, we got your boys to switch up on you and all this other shit. They wanted to rub it in their face and had these motherfuckers go on the stand to start telling shit and all they gotta do say I don't remember do you think that thug should not have taken that plea, since the other guy got uh, I don't know his name um, he's not guilty I don't know.

Speaker 2:

I think that could have been a little different with adding him into the equation with brian still did not want him to take that plea he wanted him to take it all the way he said it yeah, he did say that. I again brian probably believed in it. I think that there would have been some underhandedness going on to be like let's we gotta throw something at him since we we got him this close? Yeah, so I think that was a big he probably would have but time served.

Speaker 1:

Like he's been in there for a long time, he probably would have got like much less probation. But seeing how the case worked out for everyone everybody else I feel like now that that might have been a mistake on Doug's part. Like 11 years of probation and then like he can't do shit, you'd make one mistake. Your ass is in jail.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I think he just kind of got to the point where he just wanted to. Whatever happened just happened.

Speaker 1:

I think he was mentally fed up with being there, and it could have also been a financial thing too.

Speaker 2:

We don't know that it could have been a point where it's like we're leveraging too much money maybe keep this going. So let's just, let's just take it where it goes again, you know fanny, fanny lewis and all her name's lewis right, yeah, fanny lewis and everybody who's had y'all did a horrible job.

Speaker 1:

Y'all should be a terrible fucking job, but she got re-elected right, yeah, so but she's.

Speaker 2:

She's tooken down other groups and stuff in there and the trump thing helped her out too the fact that she was looked at as an enemy of Trump. But she's actually getting subpoenaed now because she wasn't releasing information during the Trump case. So now that this conservative watch group is forcing her to now release that information but again, y'all should be ashamed of yourselves. I just want y'all to know. Y'all have only done so much to destroy the city even more. Y'all are horrible politicians. You're dumbasses. I hate all y'all. That should be fair. That covers it. Y'all clowns is bringing Cop City just so that y'all have now this rejuvenated base of delinquents who think they can do whatever they want. They gonna think we can get over on anything. We got it, we good.

Speaker 1:

I'd be trying to forget about Cop City. Oh, we can get over on anything. We got it, we good. I'd be trying to forget about Cop City?

Speaker 2:

No, we can't do that. Baby cakes it's already happening, yeah. We got to keep fighting, though Got to keep resisting. I keep speaking out the word Can't give up, can we?

Speaker 1:

still stop it.

Speaker 2:

We can resist it. We can continue to resist. Did you see what happened with dion and his wife?

Speaker 2:

oh yeah, ex -wife yeah, I saw him run away from her see, I don't like that because one thing, nigga dion, you was the one allegedly hitting on her, choking her, so she should be the one that's running okay for her life. And then you know another thing too I don't like if that would have been the other way around and she would have ran off from him. Y'all would have been like oh she wrong. Making it about her taking away because it was the kids senior day, so there was like the kids moment, but I didn't hear no one say oh, dion should be ashamed of himself taking a moment away from his kids. Making it about like. I didn't see nobody say that. And it's just so funny to me how I always be right about this accountability. Shit like the accountability is always cool when it's the hoes and the queers, but when it's telling your fellow nigga to have some accountability or to act a certain way, now we can't do that. That's a fucking problem yeah, men deserve less I wouldn't say that.

Speaker 2:

I just feel like we need to hold people accountable. I would say that yeah, but I'm saying, but you also want men to build your, you know, walk your your homes and your your yard and you want to do all sorts of other shit.

Speaker 1:

You want to change your oil if I fucking drive into the valvoline and it's all niggas there, then what the fuck am I gonna do? Do you think it's gonna be women? Start, start a riot.

Speaker 2:

You think, is any women signing up to that? No, you think there's any women who don't have big backs like okay, you, you, you made your point.

Speaker 1:

And then I made mine that's hate.

Speaker 2:

You need to, you need to be better like you can't tell me to stop saying things. I can't me saying things got us to millions what do you think what me saying things I've done less than that.

Speaker 1:

That's hate. That's hate. Who edited those clips? Well, yeah, you doing things definitely gets us places so speak to me. As such, all right, but speak to me, as, as me saying things gets getting us millions of views. No one said I didn't speak to you okay, don't tell me to not say things I want. If I want to say some shit, I'm gonna say it.

Speaker 2:

Don't say things, don't be, don't be a mouth, and then and then people are gonna like us.

Speaker 2:

As a result of me saying said shit, people like me people like me, nigga, all right, uh, damn, it was something I was about to bring up, I can't remember. Oh, eminem, mom passed away. Should we do condolences? Because I feel like if your son, who's famous, made like half of his career about like hating you, I don't think we have to feel sorry that about anything when you die generally I'm sad if somebody loses their mom, but like specifically, I don't give a fuck like kim we know so much about kim and that was her name was debbie.

Speaker 2:

We know so much about debbie and's that wasn't her name was debbie. We know so much about debbie. And like marshall's relationship, like he talks to the fact like his drug addiction came from, like getting going into her.

Speaker 1:

I didn't know that I didn't listen to eminem. Yeah, he talks about his music. That's why I like the hits. You know I was listening to b-side I was listening to.

Speaker 2:

I was just, you know, listening to some old songs and just thinking about like how does he feel like right now?

Speaker 1:

and I'm thinking like he's got to be super conflict, conflicted we don't know if he, like uh, made amends with his mom eventually in his later life.

Speaker 2:

No, they didn't no no, no reports have been made that they ever made amends well, reports aren't really made about eminem that much.

Speaker 1:

Yes, there is about him about his private life now.

Speaker 2:

Did you not just realize they talk about his daughter, hayley, all the time?

Speaker 1:

okay, my bad, I just don't give a fuck yeah, you don't, you're not even you were surprised that he was number four on the list. Yeah, because when's the last time that eminem dropped the album this year?

Speaker 3:

yo, he's nominated for a grammy what?

Speaker 1:

yeah, yeah, no, I can't get with the white rappers like like mac miller is the only one that that I was like I could really get jiggy with for real I thought you was playing when you just no I thought you were just setting up for a joke no, I think I um eminem sets up really complicated rhyme schemes but I don't like his flow so I never really got into him that much other than a couple songs and his this is really random, but his featuring first on smack that, featuring akon oh, looks like another club banger, smack that like the pull out the eminem akon the way he drops up and down them bars looking like one of them.

Speaker 2:

Pudding cat dolls like see like shit like that, when hobby realizing like oh yeah, you definitely immigrant, because like immigrants would love a song like that all on the floor, smack that. Oh yeah, see, all that that's some shit like where you in america? This is like bringing in that vibe right now, like this is an american song and then he was.

Speaker 1:

He was you, um, when he was harmonizing hall on the floor?

Speaker 2:

give me some more, that's my shit that shit was crazy that's my shit all right, uh, before we wrap up and head out, man, we gotta, we gotta shame biden a little bit. Man nigga was lying to us for almost a year and some change about what his fucking son saying. He wasn't gonna pardon his son and as soon as he get on the chance he does.

Speaker 1:

Oh yeah, period period, because uh, trump got all his charges dropped. He was like oh, that's what we're doing, I'm going to drop some charges too. Well, I mean Trump has. I'm going to throw out some pardons too.

Speaker 2:

Trump has pardoned people too, especially family members, even though they did do jail time. When he pardoned them already, he just kind of got it off of their name.

Speaker 1:

But what has Hunter Biden been accused of other than like doing drugs and like sending out? That's not what he got.

Speaker 2:

What he got arrested for was on his gun paperwork. He didn't tell them that he was a drug addict okay, that's a crime right there. And then he had like tax thing, okay, like the stuff about russia and all that other stuff. They were saying that he wasn't being charged with none of that listen tax crime isn't crime for real, but but biden pardoned him from 2014 to 2024, so whatever potential things he may have gotten caught up, in.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, if my daddy the president, you better do some shit to me again, I don't have a problem with it per se, because I know all of them are scumbags, but this is a scumbag move like it is yeah, it's definitely the reason why he's did it.

Speaker 2:

We gotta go back to this whole com, com, com shit, because everybody keeps forgetting this. Nigga did not want to get out of the race. I said that before. I said that when he announced it. I said that when she lost. I'm saying it now. He did not want to get out of the race. He was saying he was willing to throw his son to the wolves in exchange for still trying to be president. So he, that is the reason why he was doing all of this, but he's definitely not going to be president no more that nigga is about to die.

Speaker 1:

So he was like let me just save my son you lost.

Speaker 2:

So now, my son, it could be attacked more. Yeah, the niggas. A drug he can't protect himself I gotta protect him.

Speaker 1:

There's videos of him tweaking out like oh no, he doesn't. He that guy.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, no when it, when it comes to getting that bugger sugar he get right, but no, I again I feel like he should be shamed. I think it was really nasty. What charlamagne well, not charlamagne, but uh, whoopi goldberg. She was talking with charlamagne about it on the view, and it was really nasty because charlamagne on.

Speaker 2:

The view is crazy she did this thing where, like I noticed, a lot of our women do when we're having a discussion because he said, um, that was ridiculous in regards to her statement and she called him ridiculous and then she got upset. Oh, he's like do I need to come give you a kiss, mama? He went over there and I gave her like a hug or whatever. But it's like you, a grown ass woman, you can't listen to when somebody says your statement was ridiculous and not respond with calling them a name no what is that?

Speaker 2:

that's crazy, it's cool, that's crazy that's insane.

Speaker 1:

No see, that's what I'm saying, though don't don't criticize anything I say all, all, they all the same, at every age.

Speaker 2:

They all the same. There's no age and no truth, just children, children, children, children, young. That is ridiculous. You, you being dead ass or you just being your character I'm being dead ass that's ridiculous, that's insane don't critique anything, I say don't worry, I am all in my head yeah, no, keep it there no, I'm gonna announce it in just a moment, because that is ridiculous, that you just can't just hold it to account and say why are you being like this? You shit on Whoopi before, yeah, so why could you do it here?

Speaker 1:

I don't certainly feel like it right now. I'm not. I'm not she defending a white man. I'm not riled up and fired up like I was before when she was shitting on our whole like Generation. Age group. Yeah, like whole generations of people that she was shitting on, our whole like generation group. Yeah, like whole generations of people that she was shitting on versus like one person.

Speaker 2:

I'm sorry, I'm just I I hate and then like tap dancing calling charlamagne ridiculous is never like fully out of bounds see, that's the thing where you you feel like it's okay to take shots at people when it's unwarranted.

Speaker 1:

When it's specific people.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but you feel no, I feel like you.

Speaker 1:

No, when it's specific people, because if it was just a random journalist that she said this to, then I'd be like that's crazy. Okay, but Charlamagne, I literally watched him sniff seats as women got up on the Breakfast Club for like a decade.

Speaker 2:

And then he told us black privilege, yeah, changed for like a decade. And then he told us black privilege, yeah so I mean let's grow, we gotta be somewhere.

Speaker 1:

I haven't grown I just hate that, I just hate it.

Speaker 2:

just that just triggered me a lot because I've had a lot of those kind of like lowbrow communication people around me and it just that bothers me so much when I'm like what you said was stupid, I didn't call you stupid. And that just triggers me a lot Because I just think about past experiences. But before we wrap up the show, I have to say something. We listen but we don't judge right. That's how it goes.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Your new box makes me insecure. Just going to put that out there, your little trinket box. I don't like that. The history of it. I don't like that. It took over our tray, that you Looks like you threw away our tray. I can't even find it. It's in the drawer.

Speaker 2:

I feel like it is indicative of All my insecurities. Just to be honest with you. I feel like that's ridiculous I'm just trying to be honest here. I don't mind keeping it light. I'm being serious, but I don't mind keeping it light with it. I just think that I gotta.

Speaker 1:

I got a gift, like something that was completely out of my control. I didn't seek this out, I didn't buy this myself, I didn't even tell them that I specifically wanted this. I was like, oh, I wish I could get something like this, but the tray that we have has sentimental value. And then she got me the same thing that I said that I liked and then gave me an idea on how to preserve the thing that has sentimental value. So I don't know.

Speaker 2:

I'm sorry that I thought we had something together that we put our own love and passions and thoughts into. That was us. And then you just quote, unquote, upgrade it just on a whim of what a friend just did, instead of just thinking about the, the beauty and the growth that was our tree, and I just feel like it's just indicative of my, my insecurities and fears that you're just going to just find it better.

Speaker 1:

I understand and I accept that.

Speaker 2:

I don't think you, I don't think you empathize with me at all. I don't think you want to give, make me feel better. I don't think you want to assure me of any confidence. It's a gift. Let's see how you're being dismissive, like I don't, I don't know what to tell you. Or you could be like, hey, I care about you and I don't.

Speaker 1:

Confidence, it's a gift, look see, look how you're being dismissive, like I don't know what to tell you.

Speaker 2:

Or you could be like hey, I care about you and I don't want you to feel like this is happening, so, hey, maybe even give me the option we can go back to it Like there's nothing there.

Speaker 1:

You can use it in the other room.

Speaker 2:

I don't want to go back to it.

Speaker 1:

See Look at that I don't no sacrifice or nothing, it's better looking. Nothing Look what you care about and it's more efficient, and then it takes up less space.

Speaker 2:

See, look at that, that's crazy yo. That's wild History. Just who cares about it? Yo. And then it comes with so many compartments I was literally going to.

Speaker 1:

First of all we were supposed to completely cover that tray, and then we did it once and then never did it again and then I wanted to do it again, and then you fucking fell asleep that night. So then, I didn't even try to do it again. So that's number one, we can still do it. It's not? That's number one, we can still finish it, and then we can use the fucking tray for something else that's crazy, yo.

Speaker 2:

I just feel like that's just disheartening. I just feel like you don't have any level. I think that goes back to the sibling thing. You don't have any kind of view of tradition.

Speaker 1:

Do you want me to give the gift back? You just don't have to use it. I like it, so I'm going to use it. I don't know what to tell you.

Speaker 2:

This is what happens in the movies Little gifts from their friends inspires desires that X you out, and that's what's going to happen to me. Look how you don't even want to give me no reassurance or nothing, Because you're being absolutely fucking ridiculous.

Speaker 1:

I got a gift from somebody else. And then you think that it's going to reassure me to leave you in our marriage because I got a gift. That's how it starts. A gift.

Speaker 2:

That's how it starts a gift that's how it starts.

Speaker 5:

That's 50. I watched tyler perry.

Speaker 1:

You're being so fucking dramatic that I don't even want to acknowledge these, these feelings. How can we, how can we grow?

Speaker 2:

because they're absolutely ridiculous. How can we grow? How can we grow? This is stupid. How can we grow? How can we grow? Well, I want to thank y'all for listening, as you can just see that we just it shows on the last leg here. I don't know if we're going to make it till next week with this one oh man that's crazy.

Speaker 2:

But see, if it was me, I would be expected to be the bigger person. I would have to like, show, like some example of like why this isn't important, why I don't need to show that I'm, you know, attached to this at all, but it's. It's why, men, when you're in a relationship, you're just the better person. Honestly, it's the only way it works. It can't work if, if the woman thinks she's the better person, she knows it. One more opportunity to say something are you gonna do the? Sign out.

Speaker 1:

I'm giving you an opportunity to I'm not taking it to do any something to fight for me fighting for a man is crazy, and that's not my brand at all see, that's I've, I've I've, I've had like about there's a lot of about about 70 episodes of me establishing my brand of not being the type of bitch who fights for a nigga who's being dramatic over a gift that her friend got her.

Speaker 2:

See now, this is what I'm telling y'all Sign out. There's going to be a lot of women who watch this and they're going to think that you being for real and they're going to follow this example. It's a bad example. Life is a labor of love, so let's keep building these moments together, not this kind of moment.

Speaker 1:

It's a labor.

Speaker 2:

This is a shitty moment.

Speaker 1:

It's a labor.

Speaker 2:

And remember your job is not your family, but your family might betray you for their friends, so that could happen too. But the only thing that you should exploit is these corporations and potentially your significant other.

Speaker 1:

Follow us on all of the social media at talkfnftv on facebook, twitter, instagram. If you're on youtube right now, leave us a comment, a like.

Speaker 2:

Love you, bye I'm not safe guys.