Talk FNF

Kendrick Lamar's MID SUPER BOWL Performance, Ye VIOLATES Trump, and Is Pinky Doll NEXT UP - Talk FNF TV

Talk FNF tv Episode 78

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What if being "bad black people" during Black History Month is the perfect setup for a humorous exploration of cultural perceptions? Join us as we tackle everything from Kendrick Lamar's enigmatic physique to the polarizing debates surrounding figures like Kevin Samuels. With candid reflections on our own oversights, we wade through a sea of cultural expectations, drawing playful contrasts between the likes of Cardi B and Pinky Doll. Along the way, humor and self-awareness keep the conversation lively and engaging, shedding light on the nuances of culturally significant dialogues.

Ever wondered about the dynamics between Kendrick Lamar and Drake, or what truly goes down at the Super Bowl behind the scenes? We've got you covered! From Patrick Mahomes' potential concussion concerns to Serena Williams' surprise appearance, our spirited discussion captures the drama, triumphs, and controversies in a unique light. We also dissect Kendrick's Super Bowl performance, questioning whether his choice to feature new material was a strategic move or a misstep in such a high-profile setting. Tune in for our humorous takes and insightful critiques on these athletic and musical spectacles.

In a world where Kanye West's antics and political appointments spark both intrigue and ire, we delve into the chaotic world of celebrity and power. Explore how Kanye's actions may blur the line between genuine expression and calculated stunts, and ponder the implications of political figures leveraging buzzwords to sway public opinion. We round out our episode with a look at corporate exploitation and work-life balance, encouraging an examination of the ethical considerations in our professional lives. With humor and candor, we invite you to engage with us in this multifaceted tour of today's most compelling cultural conversations.

Speaker 1:

looking at the TV and I was like I did not realize Kendrick was this thick. Oh my God, the thighs on that man.

Speaker 2:

Most, most bitches are thick. I would like to bring to y'all the attention of a great black man by the name of Kevin Samuels.

Speaker 1:

No, you don't know, I take everything back.

Speaker 3:

I take everything back. No, no.

Speaker 4:

I did the research, absolutely not.

Speaker 2:

Absolutely not, absolutely not, that's not.

Speaker 1:

You didn't do research. You're a horrible black as well.

Speaker 2:

I had a bureaucrat who's funneling money back to their accounts or to their, you know, to the Cayman Islands or anything. You know what they talk about. What PPP loans?

Speaker 1:

They talking about junior s*** and your ppp loans, but like there's, there's, I don't know, I was disappointed. I'm such a huge kendrick fan. I enjoyed the, the performance, I enjoyed the, the entire thing. But I was just like, why did he do that? That set list? We are looking at pinky doll like, haha, look at that, that's a freak. We were looking at cardi b laughing with her. Not at that, that's a freak. We were looking at Cardi B laughing with her, not at her.

Speaker 2:

OK, that's a better example.

Speaker 1:

The difference is we're laughing at Pinky doll and we were laughing with Cardi B. We could see ourselves hanging out with Cardi B. Don't anybody want to hang out with Pinky doll? That's hate. Don't nobody want to hang out with that weird ass bitch Like she's weird as fuck.

Speaker 2:

The revolution will not be televised. This is my biggest problem with kendrick lamar you are not a revolutionary and nothing that you do less whites in hip-hop, less whites even if you have white I don't even want

Speaker 5:

it no more honestly.

Speaker 1:

I'm sorry. Y'all ruined it. The interracials ruined it for the rest of the interracials because y'all doing a little bit too much. 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 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 GraffitiTaxcom. We're going to put the link right here, it should be somewhere. And yeah, you can head to them during tax season. And if you have any financial or tax preparation questions, head to Graffiti Tax Services. They're our new sponsor. Thank you to Graffiti Tax Preparation Services. That's it.

Speaker 2:

All right, so it's official. Uh, I think we're bad black people yeah, we're the the worst blacks that has to be top, top tier, because we did our first episode of the month and in no way, shape or form, did we acknowledge that it was black history not even a little bit.

Speaker 1:

I think that and then that was our first white tea episode. So we decided to forsake the blacks on, yeah, black history.

Speaker 2:

We're starting the year off kind of rough yeah, we're not like that it's not rough man. This is, this is this is crazy. It's not a good look for us but I think, to kind of try to remedy the situation, we did discuss that we were going to bring up like black people that we thought maybe should be highlighted during this time frame.

Speaker 1:

So I wanted to do like a drunk history-esque you know, with black history, but I dropped the ball but so I doubled down on being a terrible black so you're like double super black yeah, like bad black square yeah see unlike you I did. I don't like that laugh. I did my due. I don't like that in one bit well, whose fault is that?

Speaker 2:

you should have did your due diligence like I did so. So I would like to bring to y'all the attention of a great black man by the name of kevin samuels no, you don't know, I take everything back.

Speaker 3:

I take everything back. No, no, I did the research. Not, absolutely not, that's not you didn't do research.

Speaker 1:

You're a horrible black as well.

Speaker 2:

I did do the research a horrible.

Speaker 1:

You might even be a worse black than me no way because, under the guise that you would be teaching these people about black history, you fix your stupid mouth I don't agree with that kevin samuels yeah, 100, I think that's even worse.

Speaker 2:

I think that's worse. I think kevin samuels has been I think the audience would agree that that's worse. Who was a shining example to the black community? Wow and he only spoke to bring us better in regards to understanding our situations and, you know, bringing down our expectations a little bit.

Speaker 1:

He's looking up at you shaking his head right now.

Speaker 2:

No, he's not. He's looking down and he's like my God. So, yeah, kevin Samuels Believe he was born in, excuse me, oklahoma City, oklahoma, 1969. He is. You know, he did pass away in May 2022. He is left by. He's left behind. He's left behind by one daughter. Uh, he was an internet sensation who, you know, shook the internet by storm man.

Speaker 2:

He came with his uh, blunt critiques he was called fat woman, fat ooh revolutionary and he dared to have, and he dared to be a black man with the standard he told women with multiple children that they were undesirable. Oh my god they never heard that. That's not what he said. Oh my god, that's not what he said. He's saying what? New shining example see when this is what I'm talking about here, where you're being disingenuous in regards to what occurred with this man that's what he was doing.

Speaker 1:

No, it wasn't.

Speaker 2:

He was on live telling business that they should aim lower no, because, yeah, because they were shooting at the top tier of men but that's what, what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

He was on live telling women that they should aim lower.

Speaker 2:

That's the gist of his whole shit, yeah when you tell him hey, I got all this going on for me and I expect the top tier man. Yeah, maybe somebody should tell you hey, you probably should bring that down a little bit.

Speaker 1:

I think the woman was stupid for calling into Kevin Samuels. No, they needed a dose of reality and that brother gave it to her. Shout out to that brother. Why would you call a man for advice?

Speaker 2:

You already.

Speaker 1:

You already. What are you talking about? That's always been a thing. You're going the wrong way.

Speaker 2:

They've gone on. There's been plenty of talk shows where they went to men for advice.

Speaker 1:

If it's not your daddy, then there's no man that you should go to for advice.

Speaker 2:

That's asinine that there's no man that you should go to. That's asinine, that's asinine. So again, the late Kevin Samuels, I want to thank you for your contributions to the culture and you know, your creation, your blueprint.

Speaker 1:

Dead as hell.

Speaker 2:

Okay, all right, man, we're just going to play the music, dog. Yeah play that music. It's just disrespectful and that's just one of the things that he did talk about, where it's like y'all just don't respect.

Speaker 1:

And you married me.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, because I'm trying to work those. I'm trying to work those.

Speaker 1:

Kevin Samuels Loki would have loved me.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, on paper, on paper, a hundred percent.

Speaker 1:

That's why I don't understand why you have such animosity to this man because just because a man prefers me doesn't mean that I'm like oh yeah, like no he's rewarding you for your, your actions that's curse early, but he's rewarding you.

Speaker 2:

Hell out of here he's incentivizing you for the behaviors no, I get fat just to spite you literally kevin samuels. What is that gonna do? What hurt?

Speaker 1:

no no, but not kevin samuels despite me, that's that's it.

Speaker 2:

Despite me is crazy I will. I will gain 75 pounds you're still gonna be medium smaller than the women he was talking about.

Speaker 1:

If you do that, that would take so long to play the music. Yes, yes, y'all know how I feel about Rima. I was afraid Sade wouldn't clear the sample.

Speaker 2:

You mean they're sure she's gonna hold out? They cleared the sample. Does she have a history of not clearing the sample? I don't know.

Speaker 1:

I can't move too much, my dress is too tight. Yeah, baby, breathe in. Baby, anytime you need me, I'll be available. Hey, two of us ain't compatible. Yeah, I be bad. But for girls say I'm the man. Ah, baby, I be full. Baby, take it slow, baby, go down low. Nobody else to know. Yeah, I know I'm there, I'm a man, I'll let you go. Baby, baby, zoom on me. You know I'm a G. I can't wait to hear this outside. You gonna go crazy. I'm gonna not even go crazy. This is not a go crazy song. I'm just gonna have my eyes closed. I'm just feeling the music. Don't talk to me right now. Don't talk to me at all.

Speaker 2:

This is one of those songs for me.

Speaker 1:

A lot of Remus songs. Are those songs for me? You feel it on an emotional level A little bit very, even though I barely know what he's saying. I'll give you like 50%. I know what he's saying Because it is English sometimes you don't read the lyrics.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, so how do you feel? Do you feel like you already know what's going on? Sometimes you don't read the lyrics.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but it's not always english, like he's not always speaking english, so now I have to translate. I'm not doing it. He ain't that? He? I cannot wait for this next album to drop. I told my husband we're going to this concert period, point blank. I have a story to tell you.

Speaker 2:

Alright, should I introduce the show first, or you wanna get into?

Speaker 1:

it.

Speaker 2:

Alright, you're now listening to Talk. Fnf TV, I'm your host absurd rhetoric, and I'm with my lovely and amazing and gorgeous co-host, miss reality.

Speaker 1:

Hi guys, we're still workshopping that name, but right now we're just going with what I thought ferocious might have been the one, but he was like oh, we want your name to be like a juxtaposition to your personality and I'm a little bit loud and aggressive, so he wants my name to be a little daintier. But I think ferocious shout out to malik fits well, we'll see what the the people say.

Speaker 2:

So in the comments, just let us know if you like that.

Speaker 1:

If so, we'll change it like ferocious because my name is farrah and ferocious works and I don't want to just go my by farrah, because I do love my name and I would just go by farrah, I really would. But okay, so today I'm walking from picking up my coffee run and then this old ass man stops me. He's like what hello? Literally this is how he sounds like. He's like oh, what's your name? And I was like Farrah, and the only reason I stopped is because he was about to die.

Speaker 1:

So because you know, I usually pay men dust, but he was about to be dust, so I stopped and I talked to this man and he's like oh, you look like somebody I know, like somebody that I work with in the like athletic department or whatever. And he's like oh, I'm a, I'm a basketball coach. And he was like I'm a basketball coach for the NBA. And you look like somebody that I work with, you're so pretty. And I was like okay, like sure, thank you so much, old ass man what's one of these niggas from the hawks and try to talk so I was like thank you so much.

Speaker 1:

And then, um, he's like oh, like, do you is? Are you the person that I be seeing around in the building? And I'm like no, no, I am not this person. I do not work there, I work here, I am, I'm at work currently.

Speaker 1:

I'm just grabbing my coffee and going back and, um, he's like okay, well, um, let me get your number. And I was like no, no, no, if you. I was like, oh, if you want to come buy something for you, for you. Because he was like, oh, the last time I've been there was when I bought something for my blah, blah, blah. In this time I was like, oh, if you want to come buy something, come see me. My name is farrah. And then he was like oh, let me get take my number.

Speaker 1:

And I was like no, you're good, you know where I'm at and I walked away and I was like, if I was, I'd have bled that man dry, dry. Hey, I'm pulling up, I'd have had him add me onto the wheel.

Speaker 2:

Nah, real shit, I'm pulling up to the Hawks. Yo no lie yo.

Speaker 1:

Is that what he played?

Speaker 2:

for the Hawks. That's what he said to the coach.

Speaker 1:

I didn't ask him what team he played for, Because after I walked away I was like this nigga just lied. You don't think that I look like anybody. You know you use that as an excuse to walk up to me and then you think I'm young and stupid. So you think you could just tell me you're an.

Speaker 2:

NBA coach. Yeah, because Adidas, I think the NBA is with. Nike.

Speaker 7:

I don't even know, so that don't even track right there.

Speaker 2:

He tried to play you it don't matter. He probably like a friend of a friend of a coach.

Speaker 1:

I was like come spend some money or get the fuck out of my face.

Speaker 2:

Nigga probably just a rebounder.

Speaker 1:

What are you talking about? That's?

Speaker 2:

probably what for niggas.

Speaker 1:

When I tell you this is exactly what he sounded like. It took me all my patience to finish listening to his sentences. That nigga's a rebounder.

Speaker 2:

That's how the rebounders talk, all that muscling down there in the paint trying to get to there. Nah, nigga, watch yourself. Don't let me see you, because your old ass gonna get pushed. I don't like that.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, get boxed up speaking of people who got absolutely destroyed. The super bowl was recently, that was horrible.

Speaker 2:

I'm gonna say this because I know we're not really a sports show and she doesn't really care about the actual play that went on. I believe that man got a concussion like in the first quarter, patrick mahomes if you watch that game his head slapped down on that field like early on and one of those like first two drives they had. So I think that's what messed him up during the rest of the game and then led to that blowout.

Speaker 2:

So I saw people saying that like statistically, when he, when you fuck him up earlier than he, usually doesn't do well in the game I mean, it rarely happens, but in this situation, when you're able to get to him and you're only using four guys instead of actually sending like five or six, and then now there's open people in the field, it gets real tough for him. So he has to, he has to learn to adjust to that because, again, that's the main thing, but generally their line is enough for to stop that.

Speaker 1:

So speaking of the super bowl. Let's stay on that. And the the, the people who were playing I did not know the eagles had so many valid face cards on them like the men relax young what did you do I? Said valid face cards. I kept it as respectable as I could possibly keep it young, that's not.

Speaker 2:

I'm talking about any face cards like they got.

Speaker 1:

They got a bunch of like what is going on over there, like there's usually like one or two like okay, looking guys on a football team.

Speaker 2:

They got a team full of like that's why I'm glad they like white models they do they, most of them, like the white women I'm putting that all of the ones I saw are already with black women. Them was red black women too, weren't they? They was light-skinned black women.

Speaker 1:

They always are.

Speaker 5:

Okay then, so let's make sure let's put these men in their proper place. That's not. A win is a win. Let's put these men in their proper place.

Speaker 2:

A win is a win. They over here promoting colorism.

Speaker 1:

The girls on TikTok were going absolutely insane. Them little lives they were posting and them little videos they were posting from the locker room after they won. Real's like, excuse me, slow that down a little bit, see that's.

Speaker 2:

That's what I'm talking about. This is why y'all ruin all the fun, because then y'all gotta start talking about the rich fucking athletes and how attractive they are. That's what. That's what they need and how.

Speaker 1:

We didn't expect their jaw lines to look like that under the helmets oh, my goodness they're.

Speaker 2:

They're rich, play football and they have great jaw lines. Look at that. See, that's why you can't. You know, I'm saying these niggas don't deserve it all like that's the shit, that's the crazy part.

Speaker 1:

It's not fair.

Speaker 2:

You know, I'm saying they don't deserve that kind of treatment. You know, I mean, it used to be a time when, like the athletes was big ugly brutes that's what I was expecting.

Speaker 1:

Under all them helmets. I was expecting gorillas under them helmets.

Speaker 2:

And then you can just have a guy to just have some money. But now that we got to where we are, man, it's unfair. It's unfair, man them shits is alright, nah. Don't be using my shit. Don't be using my shit.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I like turning that back around on you. I enjoyed that very much.

Speaker 2:

I'm so satisfied with around on you. I enjoyed that very much. No, that didn't feel good at all. I'm so satisfied with myself right now.

Speaker 1:

That didn't get hard, he says that about titties most of the time. By the way, if y'all don't get that, he says that all the time about titties.

Speaker 2:

Nah, I didn't like that. That hurt my heart.

Speaker 1:

I'm saying that about biceps.

Speaker 2:

See, look at here. All right, I had to go to Philly and just ended up there. You about to. Just I'm going to do what the nigga did from Kansas City back in the day when he went up there and crashed out at the practice facility. Y'all can Google that if y'all want, all right. So the biggest thing we need to talk about because it was the only thing actually of substance that happened, because that game was trash the Super Bowl performance.

Speaker 1:

Kendrick.

Speaker 2:

Lamar, let's go Period. Thought you had better energy than that.

Speaker 1:

No, what do you mean?

Speaker 2:

Well, you had stopped me like you were about to say something. Oh yeah, no. So Kendrick Lamar performed the set list, so the set list that was released was the performance that he had, which made sense when we talked about it.

Speaker 1:

It made sense when we talked about this prior to the performance. I wanted him to just change it because the set list that came out I wasn't super excited about it. It was a lot of gnx content. I was very confused as to why he was doing so much gnx content.

Speaker 2:

I don't understand that sentiment. Can can you explain to me why you would think that somebody who has just announced the tour for an album he just dropped.

Speaker 1:

I don't think it matters perform those songs at the I don't. I think you're factoring the tour too much into it. I'm just thinking of it like a business yeah, but the the super bowl is somewhere where you showcase your career and why you've been chosen to to perform at the super bowl specifically. So choosing to um perform like 70 to 80, 80, one very new project is unlike what we've seen at the super bowl in general also because those people generally aren't bringing out new albums that they're doing tours on.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, usher brought an album out when he did the super bowl last year, but he was not touring on that album the uh people who came before him they were not touring on those albums and did new music.

Speaker 1:

I think I would have been even more upset when the weekend went up there he did the new album he had just dropped.

Speaker 2:

I wasn't even checking for the weekend I'm just saying like this is, this isn't out the realm. Granted the weekends, then kind of, and then beyon Beyonce did that with um, with uh, with her performance too.

Speaker 1:

She did perform some new tracks. So I just I I still don't think that he should have performed so many GNX songs. I don't care if it was like a a strategic business thing. There are a couple. So the set list he did was GNX, squabble Up, humble DNA, euphoria, man at the Garden, peekaboo, luther, all the Stars Not Like Us, and then TV Off. So GNX, squabble Up, man at the Garden, peekaboo, luther and TV Off are all from gnx. That's more than 50 percent of his set list was from an album that he just dropped, given squabble up, not squabble up, but um, uh, luther and tv off are both like charting and um Peekaboo was on its way up. Eventually I think they will be like his, like bigger hit songs, but I just I don't know. I think there are so many other songs that Kendrick could have did that are like Super Bowl worthy that he has in his catalog so this is going to go into my later point that we're going to have in regards to the conversation about Kendrick.

Speaker 2:

But Kendrick is a traditional act and traditional act Go through the traditional means of how you sell a product and for y'all to even conceptualize that he would not do that, which is generally the traditional way of doing. Like I said, you have a new album, you're touring on album, you promote that album on the biggest stage that you're on, like that's just business 101 in any kind of sector of music industry. So that's what I'm saying. This is going to go to a later point I'm gonna have, so I won't harp on it right now. So let's just give our overall grade of the performance, of what you would give it um, I think I'd give it like a 7.5.

Speaker 2:

Okay, so we're doing it out of 10. We're not doing letter grades.

Speaker 1:

Oh well, I said a grade.

Speaker 2:

I didn't say a rating.

Speaker 1:

Well, if it's a grade, then maybe like a, b minus, c plus B minus, I'll give it.

Speaker 2:

B minus. Okay, so I was definitely C minus area. For me it was very below average.

Speaker 2:

Well, you don't enjoy kendrick, but I was going off the the actual performance itself like I didn't. It was him, what he was doing, his breath control and all that stuff, but also what the performance was doing, not also just what it was saying, but how big of a production it was, because we just seen beyonce's performance not too long ago at christmas. So now there's a barometer from what I'm seeing, because if she did it that big, I only expect you to have an even bigger performance than she did. And one of the things I think he didn't do a good job of is utilizing the whole field.

Speaker 2:

Like he made the production feel really really small.

Speaker 1:

I think that was intentional.

Speaker 2:

I think that's problematic, because when you're here, that's the point of this, I think that was intentional because of the camera work.

Speaker 1:

The camera work was exceptional. No, it was, it was. It was very captivating. So I don't think that would have been as easy if things were as spread apart as they were like, if as they, as you, wanted them to be I think he tried things needed to be a little bit tighter.

Speaker 2:

I think he tried to do similar to the pop-up show and how those camera angles and really worked.

Speaker 1:

It was the same person. I don't feel like Dave.

Speaker 2:

Dave Free, but I don't feel like this is in any way, shape or form a place that you want to redo any kind of elements of that.

Speaker 2:

This is like you said. It is the Super Bowl, so, but Marty Jones said this, mark Lamar Hill said this, they talked about this being a bigger production. When it comes to Super Bowl, and having a bigger moment like this is the moment when you're a superstar. This is the moment where you kind of show what you give, what you are here to give the world, and even if it is your new art, it can still be performed in such a way that I feel like here, just, it felt very lackluster, very, very low production, very low creativity in my mind, because again, there's so much field that you could be using, so much of a story that you could tell, that I feel like was half-heartedly told with what he did here, even with the uncle sam, the you know everybody wearing a red, white and blue, those you know different symbolisms that he, that it have in America and then also in LA. Again, all that stuff is cool and I appreciate it. The light pole and all that.

Speaker 1:

I think I do like the the um visuals. I like the production. I don't think it was lackluster. I think it was visually captivating.

Speaker 1:

I think there are some parts that, um, the energy dipped off a little bit. I don't know why they were doing so much just like marching in place and like just moving their arms. I didn't like those parts. I felt like it was a little bit lazy and it was just like space fillers. So I do agree with you on a little bit, but I don't think the whole thing was lackluster.

Speaker 1:

I think there were parts that like stood out a lot. I think there were songs that I was super hype about and you saw me like there were parts that I was like very excited about, songs that came up that he performed that I was super excited about. But there are other songs that came up that that he performed that I was super excited about. But, um, there are other songs that I feel like are super bowl worthy, that he could have done that he didn't do before because he did do the the dr dre yeah, he couldn't do all right he couldn't do all right and he couldn't do uh mad city because he did both of those songs already.

Speaker 1:

But those are only two songs, so I feel like the the main song that I feel like he should have did, especially with this whole like couldn't do Mad City, because he did both of those songs already. But those are only two songs, so I feel like the main song that I feel like he should have did, especially with this whole Uncle Sam stuff that he was doing specifically for the Super Bowl why didn't he do King Kunta, black man taking no losses oh yeah, bitch, where you and I was walking Like why did he not do King Kunta?

Speaker 2:

I can think I'm okay. That's going to go into another reason, I'll explain. That's one of the biggest like.

Speaker 1:

And then money trees is is like a very noticeable commercial hit. Why didn't he do money trees? Um backseat freestyle, I think is like very high energy, very like rappy rap, like he could have ate that and then also swimming pools, I think would have visually and um sonically been very interesting at the Super Bowl for him to perform. So I think like he could have taken maybe two G and X songs out and replace them with like a king kunta or a money trees or something from like older project projects, maybe I don't. I don't think he made he should do section 80, but like there's, there's, I don't know. I was disappointed. I'm such a huge kendrick fan. I enjoyed the, the performance, I enjoyed the, the entire, but I was just like fuck, why did he do that set list?

Speaker 1:

I was disappointed that he did that set list and I like G and X.

Speaker 2:

It's a money grab rollout, but I think from a technical standpoint, I think another part that took away from the performance was the audio was horrible. It was trash.

Speaker 1:

They fixed it after.

Speaker 2:

I mean, they always do that. They always change it. But at some point we I mean, they always do that, they always change that but at some point we have to get to a point where we have to realize, like, if we're going to be having these performances, we need to have the technology be up to date, Because right now, what we're using is the cameras that they use for the field. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

So those- fields aren't made to pick up that kind of sound. So then it takes away from the at-home performance that kind of sound. So then it takes away from the at-home performance. But if you listen to some people who were there, they were saying that the crowd was not as into it as they would like you to believe. Especially now, if you listen back to that, you know playback and how they added crowd noise and things of that nature um, I don't know, because duke uh posted a video and you could literally hear everyone screaming a minor.

Speaker 1:

And then, um, there was a uh beauty influencer I follow monet mcmichaels, that was also there and she posted a video and you can hear every. It was the same amount. So I don't know. I feel like we can't get into stuff like that, especially the stuff that we see on our separate timelines because casanasa the complete opposite.

Speaker 2:

He said that there was a lot of silence, there was a lot of yeah, that's, that's what you're referring to.

Speaker 1:

That's what I saw, too, because drake liked it, which I'll get into after, but I didn't want to get into that specifically because right after the super bowl, both of us went on our twitters and my twitter was overwhelmingly like oh, he killed that and yours was. That was garbage, because you don't like him and I like him. So if we're going off of what we were seeing on the internet, you're going to be seeing things that affirm your bias of not liking Kendrick and I'm going to be seeing things that affirm my bias of liking Kendrick. So that's not really like a thing I do want to get into. Drake, I just I like the visual of Drake sitting there on his phone typing in Kendrick Super Bowl 2025 and scrolling and trying to see, like the negative things that people are saying and liking those things like you, so mad well, let's, let's.

Speaker 2:

Before we get there. There's a few more questions we have to ask here. So again, like I said earlier with the Bermondi Jones and like a lot of other people's commentary on it, do you feel like Kendrick Lamar has shown that he was a big enough star for that moment? Because, again, the no.

Speaker 1:

I don't. Okay, let's get into that. I think the Not Like Us, like momentum, propelled him into that position a little bit earlier than it. He should have gotten it. I feel like Not Like Us put him into a like pop culture space that he wasn't in before, because only like hip hop fans and well, I'll say, only hip hop fans really liked Kendrick before this. Now people outside of hip hop absolutely love him. People in like congress are bringing him up and senate and stuff like that. So after this and he dropped gnx and then one more project of like undeniable, like solidifying that like this is where I'm at now. I feel like he should have gotten it in maybe like 2027, 2028. I think right now would have been a little bit too early.

Speaker 2:

So I think there's different people in this world. There's people who you know they rise to the occasion. There's people who you know for the whole game they look like they're trash but when it really gets important clutch time you know they rise to those occasions and make those big baskets. There's guys who are good the whole time. I think there are people who are stars, who are meant to shine, who at any moment can be charismatic and can control the room. I think there's some people who are just dragon slayers. I think everybody isn't david david in the david goliath store. I think some people are just folks who take down the dragon. People who take down are mercenaries, and I think that's what Kendrick Lamar is and I think what we saw on Sunday was somebody who moment wasn't really big, somebody who's not really the artist that can fulfill that kind of moment, and I think that's kind of the real thing. Where the hits aren't there, the connection with the people aren't there.

Speaker 1:

Even though you your mark had already won like 22 grammys.

Speaker 2:

That's cool, we're not, I'm not talking about that industry shit, and again I'll discuss that later on. I'm not talking about the industry shit. I'm talking about the connection with the people. When you put the mic in the air, they can just say your words off the top of their heads.

Speaker 1:

That's what I'm talking about when you say the people, because he already had a connection with the black people, I'm saying that this made him had a connection with the people outside of black people.

Speaker 2:

I disagree. I think they saw that and they were turned off of what they saw. That is not the kind of art that, no, I'm not talking about the super bowl I'm talking about.

Speaker 1:

Not like us, that's what I'm saying. He got into the world of the people who didn't know him and now they know him and now they like him. There are mad people who didn't listen to Kendrick who listen to Kendrick now.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they listen to, Not Like Us. People here are listening to this right here and they saw him.

Speaker 1:

You know how many white people I saw dancing on TikTok to G and X?

Speaker 2:

Of course, course people are going to do that. They're paying people to do all that. That's not out of the realm of possibility. I don't. What I'm discussing here again. What I'm discussing here is him as an artist and what he can bring, and he has limitations and he is not a global star that is going to dominate and bring people to their feet and enjoy a time what they were doing. What that's like, let me finish.

Speaker 2:

It's definitely, it's never going to be like that. That's the part of it that he they put him in a position where he is only a dragon slayer. You are not the king to reign over this hip-hop world, and I think it's going to show, I think it's going to it's going to be detrimental yes pop.

Speaker 2:

No, it's going to be detrimental to hip-hop. Hip-hop is moving into a pop element where there's one of the biggest genres in the world and I don't think if you're going to make him your number one guy, he's not going to be able to hold the crown.

Speaker 1:

I think it was. I don't think hip-hop is doing that anymore because it's been dropping like numbers, wise for a little minute, but all music everyone has been saying that but that's all music, that's not just hip-hop. All music's been dropping I don't know, I don't like when we start doing the like tinfoil hat conspiracy. I didn't do anything tinfoil, I'm talking about him as an artist. No, when I, if you let me finish, I don't like when you start doing the tinfoil hat conspiracy. These random white people in middle America are being paid.

Speaker 2:

I can't.

Speaker 5:

You said they're being paid.

Speaker 2:

Oh, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Like they're being paid to, like becky in in in nebraska is being paid to dance to not like us in her living room while her daughter for the who's home from college is is recording her and it gets um 250,000 views like come on now, that's not what's happening, it's not becky.

Speaker 2:

But there's somebody that maybe she's watching that scene that is popular, who was paid by them to do that. Now she's just copying what she's seeing is getting traction. That's how these things work. They put money into the song. Like you can't act like they didn't put money to the song.

Speaker 1:

Of course that's what they do, but they didn't put money into random people dancing to his NFL performance on TikTok the night of.

Speaker 2:

I don't like the you just sound so ridiculous to me like I said it's very forced what they're trying to do with him. I think he's a good artist. I think he has his role, his element.

Speaker 1:

I don't think he can be the number one guy and it showed that night, but uh I would love if hip-hop got to the place where Kendrick could be the number one guy, because when this Drake Kendrick thing started, I've had this sentiment for the whole time that Drake is target and Kendrick is like a more niche fashion house. I've been saying that's how I've been comparing them the whole time. Of course, somebody like like Drake would Be a better fit for this, because he's he's.

Speaker 1:

He has a formulaic basic pattern of making music like it's. It's literally, it's accessible to everyone. It's Target.

Speaker 2:

It's Walmart, To use your example. When niche clothing lines or niche businesses like that get an influx of money and then they try to push that to the masses, they generally will fail because there's only a small market.

Speaker 1:

You're not even trying to talk about fashion right now. They don't fail.

Speaker 2:

Yes, they are, If you're talking about niche markets yes, they are.

Speaker 2:

Let's talk about Schiaparelli specifically I'm not talking about just. I'm talking about general business. If you get into a niche market and you try to expand that niche market, if you don't reach out to the people who are going to give commerce to that, we're gonna be like, hey, oh, I want this, I want to consume this. Then it fails and you see that all the time, with a whole bunch of niche markets that'll come out. Oh, what's this and this? And then two years from now you don't even see that company anymore. That happens all the time.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I don't think that's going to happen with Kendrick. I think he has. Like I said before, the man had like 20-something Grammys before this happened with Drake in the first place. He has already solidified his position in hip-hop and as an artist and in our culture.

Speaker 2:

And the part here. This is why I'm saying why it just exactly what you said and we can change, we can go over a little bit more detail exactly what you said proves. My bigger point is the fact that you can you base that on his own success. Drake's success was not just his own success, but the fact that he was creating and building other artists, and we have failed to see that from kendrick lamar at the basis that we, at the rate that we saw that with drake.

Speaker 1:

So who other than the weekend?

Speaker 2:

other than a weekend.

Speaker 1:

We talk about migos, talk about a whole bunch of other people he got on drake.

Speaker 2:

No, he got on that song and made them a national. All right, let's move on. Let's move on, let's move on let's move on, because we can talk about the entire fucking black hippie tde like yeah, and those guys and those guys are selling 11k first week, because those guys are selling 11 and 17k first week. Literally those guys are selling trash the first week, all right, no, let's get into sisa.

Speaker 2:

No, I'm not worried about sisa right now school boy q like come on now again, sisa was tde more than it was kendrick lamar, so, but we don't like so we don't have to get into all that. So there was a part that he started off at the beginning of his performance in which he said the revolution will not be televised. This is my biggest problem with kendrick lamar you are not a revolutionary and nothing that you do like you are, that is, you're like the fakest revolutionary that could ever be. And for fact and I'm gonna say this because, again, just like we saw with the grammys, we had lucian grange high-fiving dr dre after he won his award my man, there is nothing about you, nothing that you can even fathom about him. That is revolutionary, even to the point where we can get into his politics and what he has shown over the year. He has never stood on an opinion that was revolutionary.

Speaker 1:

I don't think he's ever stood on an opinion point blank. Every time you bring out this point, I I say the same thing kendrick does not speak. See, the man don't say shit. You can't, you can't. You can't base an opinion off of, like, what he does and what he says when he don't do shit and he don't say shit.

Speaker 1:

I'm basically exactly what he just said all we have to, um, judge, like what he actually thinks and what he actually. What he actually thinks is his artistry. The only time we ever hear this man express himself and what he actually, what his actual opinions are, are through his music. He never actually says anything. We don't know if Kendrick is doing anything for his community. We don't know how Kendrick is voting. We don't know what Kendrick thinks he takes like a very Beyonce approach to his fame.

Speaker 2:

No, she doesn't. That's a fucking lie. Where was Beyonce at this election?

Speaker 1:

I don't know oh yeah, he okay, thank you, but she's always no, no, no.

Speaker 2:

I want to, I want to stay on the most part I say please, please. I say beyonce, let me finish.

Speaker 1:

I say beyonce, because beyonce doesn't share anything with us and kendrick doesn't share anything?

Speaker 2:

no, and that's not.

Speaker 1:

I'm not talking about political views in general, it's like very calculated, you're not, and it drips, and it drips out at the rate that they that they want us to get it to bigger point.

Speaker 5:

It drips out at the rate that they want us to get it to.

Speaker 1:

It drips out at the rate that they want us to get it. But Kendrick is not going on IG Live. Beyonce is not going on IG Live. We rarely see them. When we do see them, it's very calculated and that's what I'm saying. Again, you're missing the bigger point and I'm glad you let me actually finish before you started replying.

Speaker 2:

Because I'm trying to talk to you and you're missing the point I was. I cut you off in that point to make a bigger point to what you're not going to address. And the fact is, beyonce, regardless of what you want to say about her, her having the number one spot requires her to have an opinion and to land somewhere on the map. She cannot go without doing that. She is that big kendrick lamar. If he is to be this number one, act, that is going to be required of him or he will no longer remain in that number one position.

Speaker 2:

You can't just sit here and discuss all these things and talk about oh, look at all this, I got a black uncle, sam, and oh, it's Steven from Django, and oh, there's so much messaging in my art and in my work, and then you don't have an opinion to stand on about who you are. No name was talking about this years ago because she was not just talking about jay cole. Jay cole just stepped out. Kendrick was somebody else she was addressing and it was very clear. So I want to play this video that I saw earlier.

Speaker 1:

That kind of no name is somebody who specifically stands on all of her business, and she was definitely right about kendrick and j cole, but at the same time, like I'm still gonna stick to what like we don't know what kendrick's opinions are, I feel like beyonce like if I, if I keep sticking to this comparison she shut the fuck up until she got to a certain point.

Speaker 1:

And I feel like kendrick is doing the sheet. He's gonna shut the fuck up until he gets to a certain point and if he's propelled, if not like us, takes him to the point where it might we think it might take him. Then he will have to be more vocal I agree with you and take bigger stances on politics and things of that nature.

Speaker 6:

Right now he doesn't like uh, early beyonce there is a broader critique of kendrick lamar, the artist, and this is something I've maybe talked about a little bit before are you playing me a white man right?

Speaker 6:

now a lot of resources in drawing okay, I'm not gonna apologize because the light was in there in his face because kendrick lamar, the activist, the man, the artist, doesn't seem to have politics that are connected too much outside of himself and his own popularity and these occasional gestures toward the black radical tradition. Tupac Shakur, who died at 25 years of age, was the descendant of an organization that went to war with the US government, like a product of the radical tradition that Kendrick Lamar kind of wears every now and then. You know, kendrick Lamar, at 37 years of age, has yet to hold a meaningfully dissident opinion or advocate a single position in public. That might expose his brand to risk. And I don't think you get to hijack the moral capital of Tupac Shakur's legacy without committing yourself to some of the work and risk. More importantly, Absolutely.

Speaker 6:

You know, like I think, performing in front of the most inflammatory polarizing president in modern American history presented him with an interesting opportunity and, like you know, he did some things that were compelling.

Speaker 1:

but I don't like to really relish that.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, also too, if I could just say like, ultimately, the NFL was comfortable with his gesture towards that radical tradition, whether they saw it as like, harmless or de-radicalized, or whatever they. What they weren't OK with was the dancer that was seen on the field raising a Sudan and Palestine flag. You know, the dancer that was chased down and arrested by security. That's what risk taking and it is being held looks like.

Speaker 5:

That's Tupac Shakur's legacy at work and meaningful dissent looks like that's.

Speaker 6:

Tupac Shakur's legacy at work. Not the artist whose work is sanctioned and approved by NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell, but the unknown artist using Kendrick Lamar's stage and the American game.

Speaker 2:

And that's what I wanted to make the bigger point right here in regards to Kendrick not being a revolutionary, for the fact that that individual who brought up that flag for Sudan and Gaza was a performer with the group he was supposed to be there.

Speaker 1:

And he did nothing wrong.

Speaker 2:

But, the fact is no. Listen to this. Look at the bigger picture. He didn't do anything wrong. He put out a flag and put that out. He's supposed to be there. Didn't do anything wrong. They came out there and saw that immediately and tried to remove him from there.

Speaker 1:

And they censored it too. We didn't even see it on the performance. The camera wasn't there.

Speaker 2:

And to me that even shows where he wasn't even trying to make it even that big of a thing, because I would have ran in front of Kendrick when he ran off he should sue them because they assaulted him. They had no reason. They don't know if that was part of the show. They don't know what was playing here. He was meant to be there and they're trying to ban him from all the nfl uh stadiums. Fuck that. That man was supposed to be there and he did a stance and you didn't had no right to take his freedom of speech in that manner.

Speaker 2:

Because, again, he he wasn't in violation of nothing. That's why they can't charge him with anything. He wasn't trespassing because he was a performer so um were you done? No, you're good okay.

Speaker 1:

As far as people saying that there were so many like hidden messages in this and all that, I was, um, I was a little bit. Every time you say that, like he's not a revolutionary, I agree with you and I'm like. This man is a rapper. Like I've said that over and over and over again. He talks about, um, he has specific content that he raps about which is unlike a lot of rappers, but he's not a revolutionary himself. We haven't seen him step out, we haven't seen him do any of these things. And then, um, I thought the the whole performance was really safe. I don't think it was revolutionary at all. I think y'all are grasping for straws if you're trying to say that this was a revolutionary performance. I think it was really safe. I think Sam Jackson, being Uncle Sam, was super safe. I don't know. I feel like we are trying to project deeper meaning onto this performance than it has and, like I said before, I enjoyed it very much. I love Kendrick, I, I love Kendrick down, okay, but this wasn't a revolutionary performance.

Speaker 1:

There are so many things that he could have done, like performing Kenkutsu 2, that would have made it hit a little bit harder. I wish that he would have shed light on what's happening in Sudan. Because you're black, this is happening in Africa. This would have been a perfect opportunity to sneak something in and just pay the fine regardless of, and just deal with the consequences. I was really disappointed in in the fact that he didn't really do shit for real. Like he said the revolution will be. He teased Ken Kunta, Like the in the like and there's like a woman that's like cursing, and he, he like teased it. I didn't, it was just, I was like a like I was like 20 disappointed. But I agree with you, like the, the performance wasn't nowhere near revolutionary. He didn't do anything I just want to.

Speaker 2:

I just want to say that when I, when I listen to tde folk and stuff talk about you know x, y and z it's, it's so funny how similar it sounds to maga folk where they can have this criticism of this one individual and it'd be so deep and so like introspective and you're going into history and things of that nature. But then when the person who's supposed to be the juxtaposition of your you know original criticism is engaging in similar actions, you just simply ignore it and act like it's a praise to your own society what do you mean specifically?

Speaker 1:

just tell me what you mean what do you mean specifically?

Speaker 2:

we're talking about, talking about the actions that they do.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Being organized to win five Grammys in one night, getting the money behind you to push a song. That's criticizing an artist to a degree where you even go on there and you're not brave enough to call him that on Fox, but then you do the A minor line or whatever, so you're incriminating him Brave enough to call him a pedophile? Yeah, I don't think he could have that says to your again who you are and what you're allowed to be. And then I.

Speaker 1:

I heard that I don't know how true this is that he wasn't supposed to say hey, drake at all, but then he he had to pay for that I've doubt so I guess he, I don't know, but I guess he chose to say hey drake, instead of the pdf line.

Speaker 2:

But I I don't know, but the pdf line was cut out originally from the from junk. Remember when I when we played back the the release, but I told you in the release they showed it had it on there where it said certified lover boy and then certified. He does a little screen thing that was already playing.

Speaker 1:

He was never going to say it yeah, no, I like that's what I'm saying. I never thought the nfl was going to let him say that on that stage.

Speaker 2:

Point blank period they didn't let mia say what she said. She still said it what did?

Speaker 1:

what did? What did she say? What was the mia thing?

Speaker 2:

she just said something crazy, and well, I think she knows she put her middle fingers up and said something during her performance, like something about her home I wish I know what it was about her home country, or something that she said.

Speaker 1:

Where's she?

Speaker 2:

from sri lanka, I think, or something okay, that's the.

Speaker 1:

That's the celebrity lookalike that I've gotten the most out of my entire lifetime.

Speaker 2:

As people think I look like mia somebody put that in our twitter one time. They called union j cole and they called you haitian mia.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah all right, so last part about this we have to talk about serena williams.

Speaker 2:

She came at the end of the performance. You see her doing the crip walk and you know she did a quick crip walk at wimbledon.

Speaker 1:

Got in trouble for it. Now she's doing a crip walk at the super bowl. Didn't get in trouble for it well, this is this. She's there because she used to fuck drake yeah, that's the part that's kind of I don't know. I was like, oh petty love it, but other than that I didn't think you up there with both two of my old work trying to flex on me, oh SZA.

Speaker 2:

You up there with two of my old work trying to flex on me. Like what did you do? Like to me. This is why it's funny. You should have had Georgia Smith up there too, that's her name right?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I think it's something like that.

Speaker 2:

She lost all that weight. You Remember when we talked about the interview that he did with Ebro and them?

Speaker 1:

It's hilarious oh.

Speaker 5:

Kendrick yeah.

Speaker 2:

He does the interview with Ebro and then he tries to distance himself from Drake and try to act like it's not about him and the beef and all that other stuff. And then you do this performance where it is clearly three songs about the disc.

Speaker 2:

You do Euphoria, not Like Us, and then People Don't Know but that Stars in the Sky song or whatever he did euphoria yeah, it was like a part of it was part was in there, but the stars in the sky song, whatever that is with him and sZA. That's also a Drake disc it's mad Drake.

Speaker 1:

This is in his discography so that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

Kendrick, this is he's obsessed with this nigga. He's obsessed with this nigga. They're both.

Speaker 1:

They've both been taking shots at each other for like half a decade now.

Speaker 2:

He started it. It don't matter, but it does it literally matters.

Speaker 1:

If you started with me, Kendrick was going to shoot at the top nigga Like that's just his energy. He has short nigga energy.

Speaker 2:

Oh, my God Let me this is the thing.

Speaker 2:

See, this is what I don't like about this shit that you be doing, because you go back to Kend, like the kendrick's talking about oh, I'm gonna shoot the top nigga, but you listen, the first three years of his career he out there glazing drink. So no damn nigga, he ain't. No, I'm just gonna go for the top nigga, he's. No, i'ma wait for my opportunity. I'm an opportunist and then I'm gonna take advantage of the top and I'm gonna shoot at the top nigga, that's what I said.

Speaker 1:

So the my favorite thing I cannot even realize. I can't believe I forgot to talk about this kendrick's outfit during the super bowl. I was looking at the tv and I was like I did not realize kendrick was this thick. Oh my god, the thighs on that man most, most bitches are are thick the thighs on that man are crazy.

Speaker 1:

He had the thunder thighs, I was like kendrick and then he had the little celine bell-bottom jeans on. I've seen so many guys on tiktok with bell-bottom jeans on now trying on their wife's bell-bottom jeans jokingly but still like oh my god, how did I not? He's mad short, so of course he's like thick, because short niggas are always thick. Most midgets are Most short people are usually like thicker, so that makes sense. Proportionally, his shape makes sense.

Speaker 2:

When you're a dwarf, that usually happens to you. You have those kind of weird proportions.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but that's what I just said Short people usually have weird proportions, but we could have finished that.

Speaker 2:

You could have got to that point where we finished talking about serena. So have you seen the discussion? That's been going on steven a smith and everybody who's been going off on her saying that yo you, my wife, was never gonna be allowed to do that. To go diss her ex of 10 years ago yeah, that was corny everything serena does is corny though. Yeah, I agree she's been corny for probably like 15 years she's been corny her entire.

Speaker 1:

The whole time we've known her, but that's because, um, she was not allowed to be around people and she was just on the tennis court, so I'm gonna just let her rock no, she was corny when she was dating LeVar Arrington.

Speaker 1:

Like she's been that bad no, I think that her corniness started from like middle school, elementary school, probably because of the amount of training that she's done, like not having regular social interactions and just training all the time. Like probably a little bit awkward Going to end up a little bit reading, a little bit corny.

Speaker 2:

She feels like she learned all her blackness from watching movies.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

And then, like we got to put another thing in context because you kind of glossed over the crip walking thing, she lost her sister to gang violence. Like gang violence was a a direct result to her sister, so for her to in any way shape was that after the wimbledon crip walk? Yeah, that happened before.

Speaker 1:

Actually that okay so she crip walked.

Speaker 2:

So, sister dies crip walk this.

Speaker 1:

Why did she crip walk at the wimbledon then?

Speaker 2:

because she is not. She is not associating that, she doesn't think what a lot of black people like to do is they or disassociate parts of our culture that have violence to them and only glorify it as a symbol of oh, this is us bettering ourself or organizing in a particular way, and that's what she did in that moment and then she did it again. That's why people look at it like bro. That to me. I understand that sentiment.

Speaker 2:

That is disgusting if your sister was involved in that for you to then, in any way, shape or form I didn't even know there was another sister.

Speaker 1:

I don't even need another sister. You didn't watch king richard, I did.

Speaker 2:

You didn't see that he had a whole bunch of family. He even had a whole nother family that he was avoiding.

Speaker 1:

I do remember that Y'all. You only needed the Venus and Serena.

Speaker 2:

That's not how that worked. He had another family already.

Speaker 1:

I'm saying that things worked out the way they were supposed to, and he got the Olympic sisters. He had kids after that too. He had the Olympic sisters, and he ain't need nothing else after that. So if he lost a couple, then I don't know.

Speaker 2:

That's God's plan, yo see, that's why I'm so glad I don't believe in that shit, because you can just say the craziest thing about somebody you can.

Speaker 1:

You can say that anything is. God's plan.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, god's plan. Oh, now you're trying to call Drake out.

Speaker 1:

I don't even know how that song goes for real.

Speaker 2:

I'm so glad I don't believe in that crap.

Speaker 1:

Girls Love Beyonce was where it started and ended, for me, let's just gods plan it up.

Speaker 2:

No responsibility or accountability, because it's God's plan. Yeah See, that's sickness. So I spoke about Ebro a little bit earlier and he went on a pretty weird rant.

Speaker 1:

I couldn't even finish it. It was really weird.

Speaker 2:

It was odd. I didn't like it From what we actually talked about with Ebro on our show.

Speaker 1:

I want white people to stop having opinions on hip hop. He's not white.

Speaker 2:

He's black and Jewish, like Drake.

Speaker 1:

He's white, just like Drake.

Speaker 3:

Drake is not that important. The reason Drake's in this is because he is a sickness in the game. It could have been any artist. Drake fucked his bitch too. It's what Drake represents. We've been saying this for months. People love Drake, they love his music, we love his music. He's beloved. He's not willing to go rip his soul from the bottom and do ayahuasca and look himself in the mirror, as Kendrick had prescribed to him.

Speaker 1:

What are you talking?

Speaker 3:

about? Seems like it's about drake, but continue.

Speaker 2:

No, but it's about what the game does to someone who's trying to dominate it okay so my thing is this how can a man who used his position of power and offered up women and offered up women positions for sex call anybody in the industry a sickness? How, how do you have the audacity?

Speaker 1:

the gall. You are literally a sexual predator yourself and you're calling other people a sickness. Ebro, please shut the fuck up like that.

Speaker 2:

that's insane. We have heard women who have spoken out against this. You have called yourself a creep on the radio regarding your past and then you have the audacity to fix your lips, to call someone this, when you have so much smut and dirt around your name. That's crazy to me.

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

That's insane to me.

Speaker 1:

I agree with you. Like when I saw this clip, I was like this is so pretentious and weird that I can't even continue to listen to this, even though I don't like drake and I prefer kendrick. You sound wild like.

Speaker 2:

Please just stop talking like the people who I'm tired of men talking like the people who offer ayahuasca and tell people oh, you need to clear yourself, like y'all are generally the most toxic, the worst people to be around. The ego death niggas, yes Y'all. The most manipulative people, y'all be the most egocentric.

Speaker 1:

Every time, like your ego did not die. It rebirthed into another like colossal problem, and that's all it did.

Speaker 2:

there was no ego death it was only more rebirth of your evil it was ego multiply, I just can't.

Speaker 2:

That shit was insane to me and just ero just out of all people. Again, I'm not against folks being critical when they have done wrong themselves, but I believe that critical should be corrective in regards to not just bashing somebody to bring them down, but to teach somebody and to learn. And I feel like when you do what he did there, referring to somebody as a sickness, you are not trying to correct or teach, you are just trying to shame from a position that you feel like you're above now, from a moral high ground, and that's what I mean. Like guys like you, bro man, they're just the worst, because there is really no constructive change with them, it's just pointing fingers and grandstanding I was gonna say something.

Speaker 1:

It was gonna be a joke, but it's definitely gonna be received as anti-semitic, so I'm just gonna not that probably for the best yeah, yeah, I'm just gonna not, we don't need the tiny hats on us no, um, I, I.

Speaker 1:

I am gonna say this though less whites in hip-hop, less whites. Even if you have white, I don't even want it. No more. Honestly, I'm sorry. Y'all ruined it. The interracials ruined it for the rest of the interracials, because y'all doing a little bit too much for me specifically so we got to talk about mona scott man.

Speaker 2:

This, this woman sees talent. She has eyed the next, I believe the next, jocelyn hernandez. We have talked about this young lady on the show before we have, we've highlighted some of her talents, so I just want to play this little trailer that they have promoting her yes, it does ice cream, so good I was getting two million followers on t.

Speaker 4:

I was making 100K a month. I didn't expect that, but my views started to go down, so I had to do something new. Hey yo, I'm about to eat all this love, so like a savage, in 30 seconds, let's get it baby. And yo, I'm about to eat all this love, so like a savage, in 30 seconds, let's get it baby. For the past few months, I've been doing mukbangs To get my fans entertained and get my views up and high.

Speaker 2:

Yo, a chick who's gonna eat more than like 20 hot dogs.

Speaker 1:

They don't, they just cut it up.

Speaker 2:

Yo, you wanna be famous when you do shit like that. Yo shout out to Pinky Doll. I wanna congratulate that, but do we feel like this is moving in a direction that is only going downhill?

Speaker 1:

Yes, in regards to this reality, 100% Reality TV has been going downhill, I mean, but we gotta put things in the perspective.

Speaker 2:

We've had montoya last week I'm saying we've had a cardi b that's come under the mona scott umbrella that's it we've had success and jocelyn has been. Regardless of what you want to say, she has been a success in the field to the fact that a whole company is behind her in regards to zeus zeus being called the company is a choice that you just made.

Speaker 1:

I had to make that.

Speaker 2:

But I'm just saying like, the fact is the fact, they're giving this lady unfiltered unfiltered, uh checkbook, uh, you know, a blank check to do what she needs to do so that they get the engagement she pulling up to the club with her titties out. She's gonna do that regardless, going going wild 30 to 40 some years old, still with her titties out. That's crazy to me.

Speaker 1:

And then pinky doll just seems like she's just cut from the same claw well, yeah, because she did only fans and everything like that too, she took all her only fans content down yeah, yeah, I mean I, I know where to still get it at, though just keeping it a bean I know where. Hey, you need to just hit me wasn't even that good in the first place.

Speaker 2:

Yeah she had some moments she could perform in particular ways. She had some good car scenes because the the she was, it was the same man yeah, it was the same yeah, that man, that man wasn't she had a nice little christmas special that she had going on that man wasn't doing it for the girls. Little christmas episode, she, she was doing her thing. I'm not mad at her, she was putting, she was putting in work. That man was not doing it for the girls.

Speaker 1:

It's just wild to see like that's all I would say about that.

Speaker 2:

No, but it's just crazy to think about. Five years ago a pinky dog wouldn't even be impossible. Like to have actual pornography on the internet that people could watch. And then you transition into a mainstream not transition.

Speaker 1:

The pornography was still being filmed while she was holding the popcorn but I'm talking about right now.

Speaker 2:

She's in the flat but I'm saying right now she's in the process of turning into what would potentially be a mainstream person.

Speaker 1:

She's gonna be on vh1 now yeah, who has anybody else done that before?

Speaker 2:

in regards. I mean there's people who's done the.

Speaker 1:

Other than like a TS Madison.

Speaker 2:

I mean, like TS Madison had a sex tape.

Speaker 1:

TS. Yeah, no, she was doing. I don't know. You said it yeah.

Speaker 2:

She had a sex tape.

Speaker 1:

Not a sex tape, but like she was a sex worker. I didn't know that.

Speaker 2:

That's what I'm asking. She's mainstream, you would say she is madison ts. Madison, she is on vh1 regularly on drag race.

Speaker 1:

Yes, I mean, drag race is a show, but when you talk about mainstream people, you talk about love and hip-hop I'm talking about in regards to because we're talking about love and hip-hop what we've seen these reality shows potentially turn people into I'm talking about the reality show. We're talking about right now is love and hip-hop yes, but we've seen them turn people into household names.

Speaker 2:

Do we think pinky doll can be the next one to turn? No, is it because of the adult film stuff?

Speaker 1:

no, I think it's because her content is not is lackluster. And then she, she's just not that interesting I disagree.

Speaker 2:

I feel like she is actually very captivating if we get more into her, I think has like.

Speaker 1:

What is captivating about?

Speaker 2:

her personality and the way that she communicates is the way that's I think the way she communicates. I think that is very akin to what cardi b was doing when she was on.

Speaker 1:

Love is just like it's more closer to jocelyn the way she communicates but I think it's going to catch the way cardi b speak english.

Speaker 2:

I don't think you don't ever listen to the words that I say. I said I think it's going to catch the way Cardi B did. Cardi B had stuff that she was like the oh, when we beef, we gonna be forever like things like that. I think Pinky Doll can connect with people the same way. Why like? Why do you feel like?

Speaker 1:

because I don't think Pinky Doll Pinky Doll's personality is interesting enough for her to come up with things that we want to say in our regular like. She has the, the catchphrase like ice cream so good and stuff like but we're not going to say that yeah.

Speaker 1:

Like she has things that are um, that we uh, we we only um damn it Connect with her. What I don't know what word I'm looking for. We have things in phrases that we connect with her specifically, but we don't save them in our regular everyday lives. Like Cardi is actually interesting, like she was a social media um personality before love and hip hop, and so we it was pinky doll. We are looking at pinky doll like, haha, look at that, that's a freak. We were looking at cardi b laughing with her, not at her, okay that's a better example the difference is we're laughing at pinky doll and we were laughing with cardi b.

Speaker 1:

We could see ourselves hanging out with cardi b. Don't nobody want to hang out with pinky doll. That's hate. Don't nobody want to hang out with Pinky Doll. That's hate. Don't nobody want to hang out with that weird-ass bitch Like she's weird as fuck.

Speaker 2:

I think she would be cool to hang out with. No.

Speaker 1:

I don't think she's weird. I think that she, and then she. I wanted to say that in Creole for some reason, but she speaks with a heavy tongue, like I don't like it, like I don't like it. I think that's the part of her charm.

Speaker 2:

Honestly, I think a lot of that is part of her charm. I don't like it. I think that's what is catchy. I think that's it gives that like traditional stereotypical island person and I think that's what's really going to catch on with her. So we'll see more.

Speaker 1:

I think I'm gonna win this, this discussion, in the long run I genuinely don't think you will I feel like that's one of the horrible takes that I couldn't list in the list of horrible takes that you've had no shout out to the big pinky did y'all notice I changed you always gotta make it about you that just was tight as fuck. I could not breathe.

Speaker 2:

So you was talking about drake earlier and I wanted to highlight some things that's been going on. So have you seen what's been played from his burner, his Finsta, what he's been doing?

Speaker 1:

All I saw was him like that Kyson out tweet.

Speaker 2:

So from his Finsta he posted earlier, like it was probably a few days ago, joe Budden and it was Joe walking into the Knicks game, you know, putting a cigarette out in his pocket. You know the weird shit Joe like to do. He was just kind of making a mockery of him. I think it was to say like, look at you getting happy and excited that you get to come out do shit I was doing 20 years ago and I think that's what he's kind of just making fun of what do you mean Going to Knicks games?

Speaker 1:

Has Joe not been going to Knicks games? Is this nigga not from Jersey?

Speaker 2:

Joe just got money a few years ago, so he hasn't been going to Knicks games. No, and that's what I was. That's what I've been to multiple Knicks games and it was in middle in high school that I went to these Knicks games.

Speaker 1:

I was sitting courtside.

Speaker 2:

There's a difference between going. He was not no courtside, I literally was. I literally was touching wood.

Speaker 1:

I was literally like like you was touching. Spike Lee took pictures with us. Yes, Spike Lee took pictures with us and I was also courtside during warm-up. I was watching fucking carmelo anthony when he was with the knicks for that little short period of time that was during that time. He was there for a while. I don't even. I don't give a fuck, but yes, I sat courtside for that game.

Speaker 2:

Okay, fuck out of here. We're gonna have to know who I am. We're gonna have to have a conversation off the cameras about how this was possible. This was high.

Speaker 1:

This was high school. This was through my African-American.

Speaker 2:

That doesn't mean anything.

Speaker 1:

This was through my African-American studies professor, she was amazing. Not professor high school, she was amazing. Shout out, ms Franco.

Speaker 2:

One of the best teachers I've ever had in my entire life. Tiana Trump told us she was messing with Pacers at 16.

Speaker 1:

So high school.

Speaker 2:

No, I'm Haitian girl. I was in the house, they didn't let me outside, but so then, but it didn't stop there in regards and I think it was actually far more interesting than his beef with Joe Budden, because even Joe responded on his podcast, you know, oh.

Speaker 1:

I'm not just be so long, I can never get through.

Speaker 2:

I'll shorten it up for you. He said I'm never going, I'm not going back and forth with a corpse. It was fun when you was alive, but now you did all the other, when the whole time you've been going back and forth with him, calling him out his name drake can never die.

Speaker 2:

Come on, that's that's not here nor there. I said, the more interesting thing that drake posted was a picture of a caucasian woman. This caucasian woman is the daughter of lionel richie. And not only is he the daughter, she's the daughter of lion Richie, she is the daughter-in-law of Lucian Grange.

Speaker 1:

Okay, what? What did you say?

Speaker 2:

So he posted Sophie, Sophie Grange. She's the daughter-in-law of Lucian Grange, Lionel Richie's I believe it's Lionel Richie Daughter-in-law. Let me make sure. But, he posted her on his Finsta page, yeah, and she had a little owl on her face and on her face, on her um, her you know shirt, because she was doing an ad for him or whatever. I think that's kind of more telling to what he's trying to imply there, that he's had access to her well, yeah, probably that's so.

Speaker 2:

You don't understand why that's wildly insane and disrespectful because that's his daughter not only that is what it's communicating. If he's saying that he had relations with her or they have some type of connection, that's they're they're close or intimate in any way, he's saying not only am I disrespecting you, I'm disrespecting your punk son and I'm literally attacking your family yeah, that seems like that that's going. That's. That's the declaration of war have?

Speaker 1:

has this not? Has this whole thing not been a declaration of war, this entire time?

Speaker 5:

I'm confused.

Speaker 1:

Has lucian brain like from from the outside, looking in, does it not like? Does it not look like they have declared war on drake?

Speaker 2:

so all of this, because he wants all of the money all of this stuff has been playing out normal regular all the stuff has been playing normal, regular. Hey, I'm just suing you, I'm upset, yada, yada, yada. We haven't seen drake pull out the trump card, that he pulls out with everyone who he's beef with and that is. I'm going to sleep with your woman. So if he's communicating, that.

Speaker 1:

That's what got him in this.

Speaker 2:

But I'm saying first but you gotta, you gotta understand too, if you think about my theory, what I said how universal has always protected him from those actions he he done. Now he is now the wrong lady, or he feels as though I have piped the right one and I'm showing y'all my dominance well, no, I don't think even seeps into your own house I don't think um the.

Speaker 1:

He has access to any type of power through penetrating, regardless of who he's penetrating no, it does through penetration no, it does I don't know, you might be right. We'll see how it works out. That's very interesting. It's an interesting take. I like that take.

Speaker 2:

We'll see how that take works out it's a power play yeah because, even if it, even if there isn't intimacy going on the fact that he's saying I'm I'm that close that's messy like it could. It could have happened if I wanted it.

Speaker 1:

You know I'm a messy bitch that lives for drama I'm just trying to tell you how I like that take I'm not mad at that, but I think also too.

Speaker 2:

I think he may also stole it from somebody else who did his play. So Kanye West has been was going on a crazy, you know stream of consciousness with his tweets.

Speaker 1:

Kanye West is done.

Speaker 2:

He discussed his he discussed his disgust of white, of fat women.

Speaker 1:

He said fight. He said fat bitches are sexual assault, like I think that's what he said like verbatim he said like their their existence is assault sexually oh yeah, just look at them.

Speaker 2:

He did say that yeah so he was going on this crazy. So he did everything that he normally does and you know the whole.

Speaker 1:

I love hitler, I'm a nazi, the jews he also um said that he sides with diddy, and then he also said that he was gonna start selling hoodies that were like identical to the hoodie that cassie was wearing when she got dragged down and beat in that hallway.

Speaker 2:

So he also was gonna sell sean john it always. It's funny how, when he was going through his last manic, diddy was a fed and he was discussing Diddy as such. Now that Diddy is a pariah, he wants to align himself with Diddy so that he feels like he's the opposite of what the culture is doing.

Speaker 1:

That's because Kanye West does not stand on anything but being a contrarian, and he is a piece of shit.

Speaker 2:

I do want to say there was.

Speaker 1:

Regardless of the mental health issues.

Speaker 2:

I do want to also put out here, though. There was one interesting tweet. This is what kind of lines with the topic we were just talking about. He was talking to a George Farmer and he said George Farmer, I didn't fuck your wife, but Jared Kushner. On the other hand, do you know who Jared Kushner's wife is? Ivanka Trump, the daughter of the president of the United States.

Speaker 1:

OK if he put dick in the first daughter, so we have kanye west love that heavily implying that he had sex with the president's daughter because I'm a messy bitch.

Speaker 2:

I really love that I do again a lot of this shit that he was doing was stale and it's just played out and I'm kind of really sick and tired of the same old spiel from him like there's nothing of substance. That when you do these rants, so that's where it kind of gets boring to me. But for you to say that you slept with the president's daughter, that that's insane no, yeah, no.

Speaker 1:

Out of out of all the tweets that he tweeted, that was one of the ones that I got the biggest giggles out of now let's talk about. Oh yeah, giggles out of Now let's talk about.

Speaker 1:

Oh, if you stay on, Kanye yeah let's talk about the tweets that were the most disturbing to me, other than the Cassie one, where he said that he was gonna be selling that the swastika shirt. That was right above that. Above that was him saying fuck Virgil, because what is that about? And then, above that, no, it was no. No, that was the ditty thing. The the whole like because you, you have children. So I think that's really fucking weird.

Speaker 1:

And then now, like Kanye has done this so many times that now I don't think it's a mental health thing. I think that this is really like a rollout. He thinks that he can say these like ridiculous, blasphemous, inflammatory things and just keep getting away with it. And then I've been done with Kanye for a couple years now. You dumbasses have continued to call him Jesus and all this dumb shit and supported his bullshit for years now, when I feel like you shouldn't have. I was done with him before the anti-Semitic bullshit. I'm sorry, I don't care about this, I mean, but I was done with him before that. I just now I feel like he. I think he might have put not the final nail in the coffin.

Speaker 2:

I think this is probably the first nail in the coffin for kanye west no, I, I think he's gonna have his people and I think it's honestly organized to me. A lot of the stuff that I feel like he's done of recent has been a sham and it's a scam and a way for him to manipulate the system and that's cool with that. I think the problem with me and I and it's more so less to do with him and more to do with myself I for some reason still believe that that kanye at the beginning, who was saying george bush didn't care about black people and oh no, that nigga been gone, he had those messages, but for me he died with his mother.

Speaker 2:

But that's that's. That's not even what I believe. I don't even believe that those actions because a lot of that stuff happened after his mom died already a lot of those things as actions, I don't even think they were genuine then either and I think those were like publicity stunts?

Speaker 2:

I think that they are, but unfortunately and I think that's what makes me feel bad about myself, and this is what I'm talking about what it makes me feel about me is I still want to believe that it wasn't that like. I still want to believe there was genuine altruism in his heart when he said those things yeah, because I feel like you're part of the problem no, it's not about that, because I don't feel like that allows me to enable.

Speaker 2:

I'm really talking about something about me and how I need that, just because of how I framed a lot of my life growing up and what that music and what he was saying and his actions meant to me at the time, because it defined a lot of things that I grew to care about largely. And for me to just realize that and how I framed it at one point in my life to now see it here being this farce, this antic, this rollout, it's just, it's troubling, because that was inspiration for me and who?

Speaker 1:

I am. It's something you based. No, just to see your beliefs off of.

Speaker 2:

No, not that basis to see that act of revolution, to say the thing that is true and evident, even when everybody is scared to say that you respected it.

Speaker 2:

I thought it was genuine yeah and now to see that it potentially may be that and I think I should feel like that, I feel upset with myself that I can't bring myself to say, no, those actions were fake, just like the rest of them, but I believe they were, but I just I can't truly in myself, accept it yeah, I understand, and that must be something hard to come to grips with especially yeah being a Kanye fan and everything like that, like I feel for you, you feel for me, what's up?

Speaker 2:

I feel for you.

Speaker 1:

Like I always thought that Kanye was a show, I never perceived him to be genuine, but see when you came here. When he did the. I came here in 2003.

Speaker 2:

But that's part of when the wave was really catching for real.

Speaker 1:

So when he did the George Bush hates, hates black people thing, I've I had been here, I've. I had already understood hip-hop culture. I had already loosely started understanding like racism and um inequality and everything in the united states. Like I, I understood where he was coming from and I understood why he said that, but from the character kanye west, even as the immigrant little girl I was, I still didn't fully buy it.

Speaker 2:

I never fully bought kanye, I mean I can see, I can feel that never I'm like.

Speaker 1:

looking back at it now I can confidently say that I I never fully bought that man Like. He always seemed like a performance piece to me, If that makes sense.

Speaker 2:

I was always bought in until I wasn't. I mean, I think that's the best way I could put it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, he seems like a performance piece. He seems like a curated character that a art student put together.

Speaker 2:

I can see that I just always felt like it was just at that time. The image that he was projecting allowed for individuals like myself to not have to either fall into this blackness that was anti-black in regards to trying to assimilate and move up the ladder, or this black that was a detriment to society because that was what was being promoted. He gave a healthy middle where I could be on both sides but not hate myself or hate my people for the choice that I'm making, and that's what felt good about it largely, but it is what it is.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, what else do we have on the list? Because so an hour and a half in now yeah, so I watched that.

Speaker 2:

That doge subcommittee meeting I didn't.

Speaker 1:

This is, this is always gonna be. It's like the whole doge thing.

Speaker 2:

I'm it was like a two-hour video. It was like two a little bit over two hours. In regards to the meeting, I watched a live on it man, the democrat party. Granted, there were a few voices in there who were loud and vocal and were trying to, you know, I would say, fight back in the way that they're supposed to. The overall people in there lackluster. They didn't have their stuff in order, they're not convincing in regards to what they're doing, and a lot of them were just it seemed like they was making things into a joke and that's what kind of was a little disparate it was. It was disparaging a little bit to kind of see.

Speaker 2:

Let me show you one of these guys. Right, so he is a democrat. I believe this man name. I want to make sure I say it correctly he is a democrat with my brother. I understand what you was trying to do, but I don't see this as the win that he thought this was. So I'm going to just play a little bit from the committee hearing, just so you're welcome. I now recognize the gentleman from California, mr Garcia.

Speaker 5:

Well, thank you. Thank you to all of our witnesses for being here, and I want to just start off by making something clear. I think we're all here to fight against the lies of corruptions and the attacks on our social safety net. Now we should in no way be cooperating with House Republicans who want to shut down the Department of Education and destroy Medicare and Medicaid, and we should not stand by as the richest man on the planet gives himself and his companies huge tax cuts while the American people get absolutely nothing. Now. I find it ironic, of course, that our chairwoman, congresswoman Greene, is in charge of running this committee. Now, in the last Congress, chairwoman Greene literally showed a dick pic in our oversight congressional hearing, so I thought I'd bring one as well.

Speaker 2:

So what he now shows to the committee.

Speaker 5:

Now this, of course we know is President Elon Musk. He's also the world's richest man. He was the biggest political donor in the last election.

Speaker 2:

So he shows Elon Musk's picture, saying I'm showing y'all a dick pic, so I feel like that's a good win right there, right like I think he's doing exactly what he needs to do to pull that off did.

Speaker 1:

Did the the lady actually show a dick pic or did she also? No, she did.

Speaker 2:

This is you know that's, that's uh bleach, blonde, bad built butch body.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, she showed a dick.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, first she was trying to show it as evidence, but yeah, it was a dick pic that she showed on the committee floor. Could have blurred it that she was doing. So I want to show now. This is Mr Garcia, his final point, and this is where I feel like when you do stuff like this, this gives the other side the ammunition that they need to call all y'all doofuses and idiots, because they don't hold that same consistency for themselves.

Speaker 5:

But when you do this, committee wants to empower the richest person in the world to hurt people so they can take all of this money that they so-called want to save and then give it to themselves, their companies and their billionaire friends. That is the attack that is happening in this committee and across this country, and it's important that we call it out. We also know, of course, that Elon Musk is sending his unqualified Doge staff to carry out this agenda across all these agencies and, in some cases, actually teenage staffers no accountability, no experience and problematic records. They're trying to rob you and they're probably a minor. Thank you and I yield back that's.

Speaker 2:

That's the american congressman right there why, that's, that's what we get. That's the best we can get right there like that shit was awful he was like oh, I listen to hip-hop.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you're fucking pathetic. Just do your job, you don't have to be cool. This is the problem no, they're trying to connect and they do it the wrong way like what do you don't need to connect to me in any other way other than telling me how the fuck you're going to help my life be easier on a daily basis and how you're not going to continue taking away my rights. I don't need you to know songs what the fuck is happening.

Speaker 2:

And then the fact that they have. Oh my God, I cannot fuck is happening.

Speaker 2:

And then the fact that they have oh my god, I cannot, no. But then the fact that you have all of these guys up there, these democrats, I mean these republicans who keep using these same buzzwords about waste, abuse and fraud. And then the examples that they use. Check this out. The examples that they keep using granted, this was about medicare for the large part of their conversation, but the granted they kept using in regards to, you know, big time scandals and fraud and usage. It wasn't a political person that they identified or a bureaucrat who's funneling money, uh, back to their accounts or to their, you know, to the cayman islands or anything. You know what they talk about ppp loans. They talking about you niggas and your PPP loans. And again, they tried. They had little stories about oh, there was some Romanians who were, you know, trying to bring Fentanyl in and so they got tax money. And no, they talking about Jew Niggas buying cars and jewelry, doing fraud and waste with the money. They talking about y'all niggas. So, again, all of these. That's what's funny about this shit, because the niggas who are the scamming niggas be the trump niggas too. And, as you can see, it was all of them talking about what? Oh, trump giving us money trump about to give us the bag and who the first people they throw under the bus? You stupid niggas. You pp p-loan fraud niggas. First person he throws under the bus.

Speaker 2:

So I thought that was pretty funny. They have four people up there, all right. Most of them were doge like clowns. They were just going to say whatever elon musk told him to. But there was one dude on there who I should respect. His name was like uh, hetlith or something, a hetler, and he had sunglasses on. So at first I didn't really know where he stood at and I'm just like yo, how bruh gonna find you know any fraud with some sunglasses on? Apparently he was blind. So you know, I didn't mean to Be disrespectful in my thought process In regard to that.

Speaker 2:

I didn't know I didn't know who the nigga was, that he was blind, that didn't come to my head that he was blind, so he was actually the only person out there.

Speaker 1:

That is very ableist of you that you didn't assume that he was the actually the only person out there. Very ableist of you that you didn't assume that he was blind I feel like it would be able to assume he was blind I thought maybe the light or something wow, ableist yeah, I thought maybe the light or something in the room was, you know, hurting him and that's why he had his sunglasses on.

Speaker 2:

That's neither here nor there. He was the only person telling the truth. When they say justice is blind, they wasn't lying. He was the only person out there giving it up. They asked him real questions. He gave them real answers. They asked him about, you know, trumpifying all of the attorney generals.

Speaker 2:

He goes up there again. He's supposed to be on the doge side. He says any operation that's talking about getting with a waste, fraud and abuse to get rid of those people, when that is their job to do that is counterproductive. So they have people on the doge side being critical of what they were doing. Literally everybody up there was saying legitimate shit, talking about how we need congressional reform, that anything that change is done under trump can't stack. If a new president comes in and writes it all the way that we need to go through congress, which everybody in a who know any kind of civics, any kind of like how you would go about congressional law, would know that's what you're supposed to do.

Speaker 2:

And when they're trying to highlight the issue that they have with doge, which is, oh, y'all coming in and have this unelected billionaire go through all of this private information and he has no clearance and nobody gets to to checks or balance what y'all are doing. Y'all get to cut off all of this shit and they keep trying to say, oh, it's fraud, it's waste, it's all this other stuff, when every time when they go back and look at it, it's just them attacking people at the bottom. So there was another some Democrats who who stood on business and I appreciate that. So again, marjorie Taylor, the beach, the bleach bond, bad built butch body, her arch nemesis, jasmine Crockett, she, she got her shit off.

Speaker 4:

Fraud and abuse is. I don't know why you would go to some tech guy. In fact, it was only techies that were sitting there at inauguration. We didn't have auditors. I would welcome auditors to come in and do forensic audits. In fact, he sat there in the Oval Office yesterday and he admitted that he was lying and he was using his propaganda machine to do it when he said that we sent millions of dollars to Gaza for condoms. That was a lie. So let me tell you something the gentle lady's time has expired.

Speaker 7:

The gentle lady's time has expired in this rogue actor. No, gentle lady's time has expired.

Speaker 2:

I now recognize the gentleman from missouri, mr burleson so, like I said, that's taylor, that's marjorie taylor, green. Now this is what she said later on about that that little interaction that she had, and this is what I mean where this lady is she. She said later on about that that little interaction that she had, and this is what I mean where this lady is she. She shouldn't even have her position. She is a racist.

Speaker 3:

Listen to what she says here people that elon musk has hired to do these audits literally wrote an ai program to decode the scrolls of pompeii that no one else was able to do.

Speaker 7:

I'd say he's qualified to do an audit well, that's a little bit above miss crockett's intelligence level, so she doesn't really understand that.

Speaker 2:

The reality is is democrats like miss cong, miss crockett, mr garcia pitching their temper, tantrums like the stuff that she's able to get away with and that she has gotten away with. It's disgusting they should she, like it was.

Speaker 2:

They were talking about, like, having decorum and stuff during the the committee hearing. For her to be anyone's director, any chairman of any committee, to dictate decorum. She has no right to even say that. It's just, it's. It's a sad. It was a sad thing in there, because when you listen to them, they keep just repeating the same talking points, the same idea. Oh, how are you not against abusing a waste and fraud? But again, why are we not looking at the military, I wonder? Because Elon Musk has contracts there, all right. So life is a labor of love. So let's keep building these moments together and remember your job is not your family, and the only thing you should be exploiting is these corporations.

Speaker 1:

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