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Diddy Trial Exposes a Monster, Halle Bailey CLAIMS DDG is an ABUSER, and Inmate ATTACKS Tory Lanez
The landscape of power, fame, and accountability collides in our latest episode as we unpack the shocking testimony in Diddy's trial. Cassie's brave recounting of years of abuse doesn't just tell her story – it potentially exposes an entire system of enablers around one of music's most powerful figures. The details are disturbing, from alleged beatings that left her unable to perform to "freak offs" that she described as more job than creative partnership.
We shift gears to examine DDG's troubling domestic violence allegations from Halle Bailey, including claims he slammed her head into a steering wheel and weaponized his fanbase against her. What happens when influencer power dynamics spill into co-parenting? And why do these patterns seem so familiar in celebrity relationships?
The conversation takes a critical turn as we dissect how "Black fatigue" – originally meaning the exhaustion Black Americans feel from systemic racism – has been twisted by some white Americans to express their own impatience with discussions about race. This linguistic co-opting represents a broader pattern of appropriating and inverting terminology meant to describe marginalized experiences.
From examining Netflix's "Forever" and its portrayal of young Black love to questioning the dubious "refugee" status granted to white South African farmers, we're asking the hard questions about how power, race, and media narratives shape our understanding of the world around us.
We round out the episode with a surprising geopolitical twist: Trump's acceptance of a $400 million plane from Qatar, a nation he previously condemned as "funders of terrorism." What changed? And what does this suggest about potential conflicts of interest?
gotta go be madonna's next boy toy, or something that doesn't.
Speaker 2:No, it looks boy toy you're. You're in a lesser position. Nothing works it doesn't work okay cardi b being out with stefan diggs. I don't know if y'all seen it, but she was at the new york knicks game. All said chess was hurt yeah, 100 and at one point I guess the gentleman didn't uh climax to the way that was sufficient to diddy, where he went in looking for it like where I need that, where that, where that, where that juice at boy like for real.
Speaker 1:I if I think being that freaked out should be illegal, like somebody has to put him in like a straight jacket. Where do we draw the line?
Speaker 2:but women have a superpower that men don't have they can make themselves look almost as ridiculous as possible, and you, as the man, will continue to lose in the entire situation because megan the stallion is now a criminal mastermind, right, and she has prison connections enough that she can get Tory Lanez stabbed allegedly 14 times.
Speaker 1:Are y'all literally?
Speaker 2:We we both have practiced ethical non monogamy, so I know you understand it well.
Speaker 1:She said girl you be. He said girl you be f***ed. I'm so glad that I had a first love that was very pure, very happy, very intense and it didn't end on any like animosity, didn't end on bad terms or whatever. We just like grew apart. He went to college and then I went to college and then yeah, and then with teen pregnancy isn't really the movie.
Speaker 1:What Y'all were way too in love because allegedly that's actually your passion. Music is your actual passion, so I'm sure you would love if people supported your music like brent's but they're not supporting your music, um, and he's supporting your rumors swirling around alleging that hallie is now dating Brent Fires. If my lady was on a beach with my son somewhere with Brent Fires and his afro and that bottom lip, I would crash out too.
Speaker 1:Yeah you gotta send a nuke. For the first couple years of me being in my group of friends I was like I'm not funny enough to be in this group of friends. I wasn't insecure about anything else. I was like I gotta get these. Enough to be in this group of friends. I wasn't insecure about anything else. I was like I got to get these jokes up.
Speaker 2:Well, he was a little rough in high school, so Get off of me right now.
Speaker 4:Get off of me right now because you know I'm insecure about that.
Speaker 1:Snatch a cup of coffee out of her hand and slam it on the floor, and then she'll just get up and be like, well, I guess I got to go get another cup. That's why DDG is like that. Yeah, like you need to knock your sons upside their heads way more often than y'all do. This podcast is sponsored by Graffiti Tax Services. For all your tax preparation needs, you can go to GraffitiTaxcom we're going to put the link right here. It should be somewhere. And yeah, you can head to them during tax season. And if you have any financial or tax preparation questions, head to Graffiti Tax Services. They're our new sponsor. Thank you to Graffiti Tax Preparation Services. That's it.
Speaker 5:Your whole life is revolved around talking about other people's lives. What the f*** do you think your f***ing ass is doing?
Speaker 2:on that podcast now. Alright, ladies and gentlemen, we are bringing you this show not just independently anymore. We are officially a part of the YouTube Partner Program.
Speaker 1:Woo Winner, winner, winner, winner.
Speaker 2:So no, after, like you know, I think we've been doing it a year and some change over here. Almost two years actually in July. So we've been doing it for almost two years and we finally got to the point where we needed to be at Officially monetized with YouTube. Shout out to us. It's been a long road. We deserve it, we deserve some gunshots.
Speaker 1:We're affiliates now let's not do gunshots this early in the show.
Speaker 6:My bad YouTube We'll discuss on where y'all feel like that needs to be at.
Speaker 2:You will see some little differences. We'll try to improve a lot of the stuff that we've been doing. We also want to make sure the editing you know, so it might be some more edits being done so that we can make sure within the guidelines.
Speaker 1:I'm going to try to self-edit a little bit to give him less work on the back end.
Speaker 2:I ain't going to lie. I was looking at the papers of it where they have like that paper, but the dashboard, where it has like the dollar signs and there was a lot of yellows on there, was like a lot of questionable content in there. I'm sure, like the ads not rocking with that, like you're not rocking with the nsa I mean, we did a bbl bracket I think that one was clear, though, oh, I think that one got the green how did the the digs video was?
Speaker 1:was that clear? I think that was too actually, oh well, I don't know what youtube wants at this point. It's confusing.
Speaker 2:I'm just, I don't know what they're, what they're trying to tell us either. So I'm, but we're going to be on that path. I just want to thank everybody who has been a part of that. I want to thank fair, because you have done a lot in this. You've shown just a lot of great character and just wanting to be part of something that's bigger than us, and I thank you for that. And, like you said, everybody else who's helped us out. Danny, we works.
Speaker 2:Nick shout out to y'all everybody who was in the space. Y'all need to check that out. That's on our page too, on our Twitter page. So we did have a space where fair joined us for a little bit, and then we just kind of just dived into a lot of different topics. But man, I'm just super, duper excited.
Speaker 1:Me too. I'm excited about that, and I'm also excited about the Knicks potentially winning the NBA finals. Oh my God, Never in my lifetime did I think that this was going to happen. I just gave up on the Knicks winning anything. I'm going to be outside. I'm booking the first flight to New York possible. I'm calling out. I don't even give a damn. I'm calling out. I'm climbing a light pole. Like nobody is going to stop me from climbing a light pole and then twerking off of it.
Speaker 2:Yeah, definitely going to have to follow you up there. Yeah, because you're going to act a fool pole and then twerking off of it. Yeah, definitely gonna have to follow you up there. Yeah, because you just you're gonna act a fool. You're gonna get on somebody's instagram or tiktok and then you'll be the, the crazy girl on the, on the light pole and then do you know how many subscribers we would get from me being the crazy?
Speaker 2:girl on the light pole how that's gonna work. Come on now. Now the subscribers aren't gonna pile in at least 17 they probably not even gonna you. Just it's just, that's not even a crazy number. 17 is not even a crazy number, it's not even going to get any kind of engagement. It's just going to be them making a mockery of you the whole time.
Speaker 1:But I don't think so. But whatever, we'll see, because my foolery has led to a couple good things.
Speaker 2:Yeah, but it's been contained and I've been, you know, right beside you, so that has to be part of the equation that is fair.
Speaker 1:That is fair, all right let's get into the music.
Speaker 4:I it's my bad, I just want the peen. I've been to the hills. I lived overseas. My brain grows in numbers.
Speaker 1:You'll never believe it's a Billy on the streams? Hop in the booth. I advance on the beat. Bitches so wrapped like lettuce and cheese.
Speaker 8:Why would?
Speaker 4:I fuck a nigga that stands over me. I do what you niggas do with my hands on my knees. This shit too easy. I'm in the club with a G--mm Popped up catching up. Bitch, stop Clocked out. Pull up to the PJ Lang on the dot. On the dot. Now I got a time-share wristwatch, Wristwatch.
Speaker 8:I been that girl since hopscotch. I'm so itchy. I've been itchy. Ever since I was a kid. I've been itchy.
Speaker 3:If I was you, I you might like this week I put my son in some rape. I pull that gun off the hip Pockets on 22K. I'll make her hurt come I go. So Put on a shirt, get pulled on a blip, feel like a stain you barely delete. I had to tell her that early since I was a teen. Know I was a sheep, she singing my songs, she wanna dolly Tryna get heat. I take a break Like what.
Speaker 2:Thought that was a nice touch to it. All right, you are now listening to Talk FNF TV. I'm your host Absurd Rhetoric. I'm with my lovely and amazing and gorgeous co-host, miss Reality or Miss Farrah so many different names. That will be a trend of the show. That is where we are starting the line early. But um no, we gotta get into this diddy case man. So we gotta make sure we we tread lightly with these conversations because, like I said, we are under the new guys of the youtube, uh, monetization. But we gotta get into this because this was monumental like I I would. I don't really like going and just talking about like celebrities and being like proud and saying, but just from these last two days of cassie being on the stand, like you kind of just have to give it up for just yeah the poise that she's been granted.
Speaker 2:This isn't, you know, the defense, hasn't, you know, discussed these things, where we're gonna break all that down but just to go up there pregnant, all the stories that you're having to relive and revisit.
Speaker 1:Her husband's in there with her for part of it.
Speaker 2:Well, they asked him to leave.
Speaker 1:Well, yeah, they said that he could be there for part of her testimony, but not another part, so they actually had to ask him to leave for one part. Because he's testifying as well.
Speaker 2:Well, let's just get into just the kind of, just some of the crazy stuff that just happened before everything started.
Speaker 1:So Diddy's daughters were at the court case, so there was a lot of discussion about whether his daughters should have been in the courtroom or not and, on one hand, like they should be there to know the truth, but on the other hand, like that's disgusting information to have about your own father. What do you think about that? Should they? Should they have been there? I?
Speaker 2:mean, I'm just thinking like, when you put in, put that into consideration, their age and her age, where all this started them being what like a few years apart, like two years at the most yeah is. I can understand why people want to be like well, you know they need to know what's going on with your dad, but I just think there's sometimes. If you have the ability to shield the youth from stuff like this, you probably should.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:Especially when they're young girls. They already going to have this stain on them, no matter what they do. They're about to go to college, like they have a whole future ahead of them that this is going to probably be a specter upon.
Speaker 1:Yes, definitely.
Speaker 2:So just to have their pictures out there showing them with this upon? Yes, so definitely just to have their pictures out there showing them with this and I get it's the support thing, but that's already going to be an additional fuel to the fire, so I just don't think that was just a good idea having them out there like I.
Speaker 1:granted, they're almost adult with like almost 18, right, they're like 17 I'm not sure how old they are, but uh, this is gonna follow them whether they're in the courtroom or not, so I don't think that has too much to do with it. It's just like, should you know in detail what the atrocities that your father is being charged of? I'm not 100% sure. Like if it's, it's fine if they know that like he did bad stuff, but I don't know if I would want to know that, like, like there was, there was um one part that was horrifying. Cassie's testimony was horrifying, but there was one part where like two people were urinating on her to the point that she choked, like because urinating on her face, and I don't, like, I don't want to know the details about that if that's my dad yeah, what I?
Speaker 2:what I heard was they made an appearance early on, but then when the male escort uh was on the stand, they were, they left, so I don't think they even stayed to see cassie okay, good, that's my thing they were just there for the plumeries you know the photo ops and then they took them out of there, so they really didn't get super exposed to it. But granted, they have the internet. So we all saw you can.
Speaker 2:Yeah, the the threads are on twitter of, like, what was being said in the courtrooms and if you want to um, bring those up really quickly, yeah, so shout out so we can read I do want to give a shout out to those people who are doing the good work and are reporting like live from the courtroom, because I I don't think this is surprising, but this the the case isn't being covered with cameras in the actual courtroom.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:Which I mean of course not for something of this scale and magnitude you wouldn't have that. It just wouldn't be something that you can expect. But inner city press has been holding it down. They have had pretty much a lot of detail that they've kind of highlighted with this man. They aren't the only ones that's been doing this this, but this is the one who I kind of been following, so we may have missed some certain things, but just the stuff that he's outlined from, just the fact of her calling the freak offs a job where she was like that was more of what she was doing than anything else creatively yeah, she said that was the only time that she had alone time with him too, which is sad like it's just, it's just wild, just think thing.
Speaker 2:Again, we just kind of piece about the timeline, because that's kind of what they did here. Uh, they really just outlined her life with him but then also really went into detail, because there was a lot of people who were discussing this and they were kind of being critical of cassie and saying like, oh, I don't feel like any of this showed any crime. It just showed that he was a nasty man.
Speaker 1:Because I'm gonna read some more of these, this breakdown, but I think that's the main argument that's gonna come out of this case. Like is is being freaked out a crime, but and that's not, that's not exactly. That's not the only thing.
Speaker 2:He's being charged with and I think what people gotta understand, like when it comes to like racketeering, what she actually has been discussing with the prosecution so far. It has outlined racketeering. She has gone into great detail. I'm gonna bring some up here where she actually went into names of individuals about who who who were involved.
Speaker 2:So she, they asked who would keep tabs on you? Uh, we didn't live far apart. He had sent security come find me or a trusted assistant like you, david james, christina covram. Uh, was their relation exclusive, uh, relationship exclusive. And then she went and said no, but, like I said, like that's not the only time where she's identifying, there was also bad boy manager, uh, james cruz, who she acknowledged uh had played a part. Uh, she said he was managing her at the time but he was always checking in with sean, which was p diddy. So she's outlining where they're using the organization, the record label, all of his business acclimate and his business ventures to facilitate these crimes in which he's getting sex workers which, like I said, they had an escort, male escort on the stand who I.
Speaker 2:I feel like his testimony was it didn't do any harm or good to the case, I would say, because he kind of outlined it like he was getting paid for it but he would have did it for free for the most part because he was wanting to be next to them and be around them. So he just kind of outlined who Diddy was going after. If you guys would be a willing participant, if you could, you know, perform on command for the most, you could, you know, perform on command for the most part, you know you were going to get paid and do what you have to do for it. There was one part where the male escort actually talked about a time where he heard Cassie get beat to the point where he couldn't perform afterwards, like he was just so taken out of the situation because of what was going on. He said he didn't see anything but he definitely heard it.
Speaker 1:Yeah, there's um, during this trial cassie talks about multiple times and like multiple different states where diddy was just beating her ass and we had no idea like we knew that like slightly, what she was going through, but we had no idea the horrors that she was going through like I felt so terrible for her reading everything that that she had to endure with him the sores in the mouth, where she said it was from so much oral sex where she had sores in her mouth she was having like painful burning utis expected to perform during her period like it was intense and graphic stuff that she was outlining and she said she got, she was at the um at some point.
Speaker 1:She had. She was so stressed that she was sleepwalking and had ptsd and she was sleeping with a knife like this man.
Speaker 2:Diddy is so disgusting. She even talks about a time where the gentleman climaxed. They get it out of her.
Speaker 1:You know, try to try to find the words.
Speaker 2:Yes they get it out of her private area yeah and then she places the male juice yeah onto his nipples yeah and at one point I guess the gentleman didn't uh climax to the way that was sufficient to diddy, where he went in looking for it like where I need that, where that, where that, where that juice at boy like for real.
Speaker 1:I if I think being that freaked out should be illegal, like somebody has to put him in like a straight jacket. Where do we draw the line?
Speaker 2:like he has to be stopped, like the, the individual that cassie painted in just these two days. Uh, testimony is, diddy is the most vile and disgusting individual on the face of the planet, morally depraved as a mother like he has no soul whatsoever. Yeah, there's nothing in there but a husk of human goonery like that's all he is after. I think we can get away with that. I'm not sure. Yeah, I think we can get away with that. I'm not sure. Yeah, I think we can get away with that that's what I said.
Speaker 1:I thought about it and then I said it.
Speaker 2:We'll see the yellow squiggles if necessary. But man, it's going to be tough because the next thing that we kind of have to expect with the timeline and when y'all seeing this, at least a clip of it she's going to be going through the defense and cross-examination I'm not looking forward to the way they're probably gonna well, they're definitely gonna drill her oh, for sure try to poke holes in her story and make her seem like a willing participant instead of a victim.
Speaker 2:Oh, yeah, they're definitely going to go down, because there were some things that she even said with the prosecution where she discussed why she was doing certain things and talking about you know.
Speaker 2:She did say that she feared for her life and the fact that his anger was something that was very bothersome to her and problematic, but she also said she loved him yeah and there's videos out there showing them around these times with her smiling and things of that nature, and it's just, it's unfortunate how ignorant people are on like the effects of domestic violence, what it happens and how the brain operates from it.
Speaker 2:Like I say this a lot of times when we talk about this, but it breaks people, like a lot of those times when we're watching people who are victims of domestic violence no situations, they are broken individuals and they're talking about a time when they were broken, talking about a time when they were broken like they could not think rationally. Because anybody who's thinking rationally, something that happened, something like that happens to you you're going to want to separate yourself from it. So to go back to it plays a part of like there is a psychologically damaging effect that this had and then you take into account that it happened so young for her yeah, she was super young.
Speaker 2:She was still developing as like a formative years of being a woman.
Speaker 1:So she was also like not only was she in fear for her life because he was dangerous and he was powerful and physically violent, she also didn't have the means to like live her own life the way she wanted to, like he.
Speaker 2:And even if you want to play controlling everything, and if you want to play into the whole, oh, wanted this lifestyle, she wanted all of this that's going you know that comes with it even for that to be part of what she has to do to obtain it shows, like the manipulation that's going on, like why would she want to go back to anything else if she's living in this privilege and all it takes is this secret?
Speaker 1:essentially at the time, and according to the national domestic violence hotline, it takes seven times for a victim to try to leave before actually leaving and staying away. But then that's on average. It might be more, it might be less, but you know what average means.
Speaker 2:Like today she even talked about the whole situation with kid cuddy and the fact that he was that was crazy that everything, all of that, was actually confirmed.
Speaker 1:So it's confirmed that he did. He dangled somebody off a balcony too. We don't know who it was.
Speaker 2:We know who it was, who was it. Allegedly Wale. Oh my goodness, that's why he said it was preposterous in the interview recently this week that that was him, but he just don't want to get subpoenaed. That doesn't exactly know why you.
Speaker 1:Is Kid Cudi going to get subpoenaed?
Speaker 2:I can imagine, I mean if they needed to, but I don't know Well yeah, that could be part of the racketeering.
Speaker 1:But then he blew up that man's car because Cassie was.
Speaker 2:Allegedly. Having a relationship with him allegedly, and then also they talked about Drake and how he thought that she was having a relationship with Drake, where she went up to Torontoonto and he assaulted her there too and she said, beat her up to the fact that she couldn't even perform at the place that she was booked at up there yeah, there were several points where he beat her up to the point where she had to just go into hiding because she couldn't show her face yeah so, um, and then there was another thing I wanted to bring up.
Speaker 2:Damn, I forgot well, I'll just highlight the prosecution hasn't been I will say hasn't been the best. I think there's a lot of areas where they could, you know, tighten up, because what they got to understand is any kind of wording that isn't being solidified, or a paint it hasn't been a picture painted, for that is where the defense is going to go in an attack yeah, and they're going to ask to be specific and they're going to do it in a in a bad faith way.
Speaker 2:So that's why you want to get those kind of conversations happening under your terms, because once they bring it, it's going to bring up be a lot of heat. The only thing that they have for the prosecution that's kind of going to be on their side is the fact that she's a pregnant woman up there on the stand.
Speaker 2:Yeah, and then also from Cassie's testimony we've we learned that the settlement that she got from diddy was 20 million because we didn't know exactly how much money that was yeah, it was talked about it being 30 million she got a hefty, a hefty dollar yeah, I mean she doubled what, apparently what she was asking for, to not release the book.
Speaker 1:So no, she asked for for 30 million to not release the book. She said yeah she said she just threw that number out because she felt like that's, that was a fair amount.
Speaker 2:And then they landed on 20 correct me if I'm wrong, but I thought the rumor was he. It was 10 million for the book, then 30 million for the settlement and then I guess they end up paying. That's what I thought it was. They were paying 20 million from what? Because that was they were saying like she wanted 10 million dollars from him and didn't want to pay her and that's what made her go do the court.
Speaker 1:From what I saw, she wrote the book, brought it to him, said I want $30 million for this not to come out. He was like this is not going to affect me whatsoever. And then she turned around and filed a lawsuit and then got $20 million.
Speaker 2:Yeah, and another reason people too, I want to say, because filed a lawsuit and then got 20 million. Yeah, and another reason people too.
Speaker 1:I want to say, because everybody's been trying to like, poke holes at cassie and try to paint her. What holes are you poking? You saw this man drag her down the hallway and, by the way, she was trying to leave a freak off early and that's what he did. So also the you could fully just paint the picture that like she couldn't just willingly get up and leave because he would beat her up if she tried to.
Speaker 2:She had to stay yeah, but I mean, they're going to find particular ways to try to paint her as being an accomplice too. That's what's going to be what the defense is going to do all tomorrow yeah, I wonder is young miami going to be subpoenaed?
Speaker 1:she's not in this, is she?
Speaker 2:well, she was named in some of the other documents but I believe a lot of those were just civil cases that were thrown out. But what I was going to say about Cassie was where people say, like the timing of why this happened when it did, there was a law in New York that had recently come into effect that allowed people who were victims of assault to then go after their perpetrators. After years and years of what happened to the statute limitations would have normally been passed.
Speaker 1:Yeah and we talked about that when we initially talked about um cassie's civil suit and why she filed it in the first place and why she was able to do that but you know people don't remember all that, so yeah so I'm we're definitely going to stay on to this case.
Speaker 2:Uh, we're going to definitely talk about other victims. Hopefully, victim number three shows themselves, because they said there was a vital piece in their case. And they still have yet to find where they're at and it looks to this point, right now they're not going to be testifying. So that's that's crazy.
Speaker 1:I wonder what's happening with like all of the underage people that the civil suits that he's been accused of essaying and stuff like that, a lot of the ones that haven't been weren of um essaying and stuff like that a lot of the ones that haven't been weren't substantial, like I heard, like the little rod when all them have been thrown out.
Speaker 2:Um, so I think that was. It kind of proves the case of maybe a lot of these were being put into the ecosystem to try to make people think like, oh, this is just crazy. They're trying to throw them under there, where the ones that have been paid are the ones that have been pushed under and they're probably aren't testifying okay, what we talk about next, honey bunny uh, I think there's a lot of.
Speaker 2:There's a lot of stuff we got to teach these brothers. You know that's coming up. I feel I feel really bad, but they gotta learn man. They learn in a hard way, ddg man, it's, it's been going everywhere. Hallie has uh presented the evidence in regards to bruises on her arms chips tooth. She alleges that dg like pushed her head into a steering wheel during an argument the story.
Speaker 1:Let me give you out a tea. So um, they packing up. She's discussing visitation, um, at a visitation, visitation arrangement with DDG. He gets upset. She's buckling Halo in the car Apparently. He pulls her hair, slams her head into the steering wheel and then she has bruises on her arm. She has a chipped tooth and she filed a restraining order against him, a protective order, and she got it. And then she's also going to be filming for two months in Italy and the judge allowed her to take Halo to Italy for two months with her it's understandable.
Speaker 2:You can kind of see like DDG has been playing a really obvious role to me in front of the cameras. I believe you kind of fell for it a little bit too. If we're being honest, you've been one of those people who's oh he's such a good dad, he loves his son I didn't say he was a good I said, he said it was a good dad I you said you love him, seeing him and his son together yeah, of course I love seeing any black man and his son, but I was talking about the the breakfast club interview.
Speaker 1:I said it was well received by a lot of people because they enjoyed the interview and it was like a good like back and forth and it was a funny interview that's what I was, no, I'm talking about before, and we had conversations about this in the past I've been dragging ddg and calling him doodle garbage on here for months. What are you talking about?
Speaker 2:no, you was definitely no, I wasn't.
Speaker 1:We can just roll the tape.
Speaker 2:I'll bring it.
Speaker 1:I'll bring it back out some at some time but I'll literally pull it up and play it right now you can look, I've been shitting on this man for a while I again.
Speaker 2:I've you've been saying how much you loved him and halo's content together, but I do like seeing him in halo. What I'm saying is a lot of those gentlemen who do that. They do that to mask the actual individuals that they are. We talked about this with a lot of other people who bring their kids around to try to soften up their image and stuff like that. This is just a obvious attempt at that and that's what he's been doing. He's had all the people fooled, like I could definitely see.
Speaker 2:This is exactly this was going when I was talking about this beforehand and people were in our comments saying, oh, you just don't want to see a black man be a father. You just want to push stereotypes and have single family home. No, I understand a very hard truth and reality as a man. When you are dealing with women and they have children by you, they are in the control seat, like they are the ones who dictate what's going on, especially when you're not married to these women. Yeah, of course, and the also another truth is is you can't go lower than a woman, because the lower that you go to generally is going to end in violence and you have your ass in situations like this, or you're just going to look lame like if it doesn't end in violence, like it doesn't have to always end in violence.
Speaker 2:But you, you're definitely going to look lame, but see, that's the problem is that these gorilla brain negroes that they keep giving all this money to because they got clout. That is how their brain operates.
Speaker 2:They feel like they're in the position because they're awesome, because they're great and because of the things that they've done and then they see that anybody who says no to them, who tells them the things that they believe are theirs uh they, someone else has control of that is an ego attack to him. That makes you react and respond like a petty child, and then you resort to anger because when you tell her to jump, she don't say how high and actually she say no, nigga, like that's what. That's the response you're getting and you can imagine, since they've had their success, nobody's telling them that.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:Nobody's telling them no for anything.
Speaker 1:Um, I want to bring up something that I saw. Ddg's brother, dub, was like none of us talk to our baby moms. Like our mothers are the only reason that we see our kids. Because she's such a nice person like when we were kids, you could literally like um, take uh, snatch a cup of coffee out of her hand and slam it on the floor and then she'll just get up and be like well, I guess I gotta go get another cup. That's why ddg is like that yeah, like you need to knock your sons upside their heads way more often than y'all do you. Boy moms, be weird as hell sometimes. Smack that boy in the face.
Speaker 2:Where's his daddy at? You see a lot of issues with the enabling. That definitely comes into play too 100%. That's 100% enabling what you just described. Yeah.
Speaker 1:If you have a passive individual and that's exactly what Dub said If you have a mom, that's that passive. You're going to be a piece of shit.
Speaker 2:Yeah, you're going to think you can walk over anybody.
Speaker 1:Yeah, and Dub is a weird old ass man himself. I don't know too much about him, but everything I see about him I'm like you're mad old and you're doing streaming young nigga shit.
Speaker 2:Like you. So DDG then goes into, I think, trying to get into defensive mode. He teams up with his boy, aiden, and they have this surprise stream. So when this hits the timeline, they acting like oh, he's just so blindsided yeah they're all reacting to it. Aiden tries to do a little solo cam thing to big up DDG.
Speaker 1:It's really clown stuff, because if you know anything about a restraining order, they don't go into effect without you going to court yeah or at least you, missing court and then having multiple dates that give you an opportunity to defend yourself and say why x, y and z so he knew what was going on um, a stipulation of the restraining order is that he can't mention hayley on social media and stuff like that or have halo on. And then when he surprising, when he um surprised saw the, um, the um, the the news of the restraining order on the stream, he wasn't saying her name, because you already knew the stipulations of the thing, because you were a part of the process, and now you're trying to go on this like um, what is it? This incel stream and to get all all of this, all of these niggas, to back you up, because you know they're gonna back you up, because this is a platform of men who are, of course, not gonna believe women.
Speaker 2:I mean his whole time, since we've discussed, you know, their breakup and stuff, he has weaponized his audience essentially to go at her to, you know, discredit her they've been.
Speaker 1:That was part of the motion that she.
Speaker 2:She said that he weaponizes his audience yeah, he's been doing it almost the entire time and it was to me it's just an obvious play, because these guys will do this whole oh she's not letting me see my kid and all this other stuff, because they know that y'all will eat that shit up but then there's evidence of like her trying to set up schedules for him to see his kid and him being like I'm fine for now.
Speaker 1:Yeah, like I'm okay, you're good, that's generally what it looks like like.
Speaker 2:I promise you, if you have a kid, the person is not going to want to be around a kid 24 7. They're going to want to give you opportunities so that they can, you know, let their hair down and relax yeah like, because you're already on 24, on 24, 7, when you have a one around you.
Speaker 1:So there's another um, creepy ass instance that I want to bring up. So, um, in March he showed up to her house and then entered without permission, went into their bedroom and took a picture of Hallie's empty bed and then sent her a picture of it and said now I know what you've been on LOL. Her a picture of it and said now I know what you've been on lol.
Speaker 2:and then she can't literally just like be in the studio. Hold on then. The worst part was like he left the kid with george who is george? I don't know that's what it said. Who is george? Get him from there. He said he had to go to work this nigga's street like what.
Speaker 1:And then four days later he exploded when he came back to her house. She told him that her and the baby were sick, and this is around the time where he goes online and he tells everybody that oh, she's not letting me see my son and stuff. And she claims that he got super verbally abusive and smashed her ring camera and then ran away with Hallie's phone and then threw it out the window after when he was in his car. And then Hallie allegedly submitted that ring camera footage to the police also for as part of the investigation, which is probably why she got the protective order immediately a lot of y'all been posting that and they've been doing this for a while.
Speaker 2:But the ddg and blue face where blue face is like kind of being a fortune teller when you're saying how this is going to happen with him and uh hallie, what y'all got to understand is the reason why ddg is following a similar path to blue face, because they similar kind of niggas I hate to break it to you like the reason why y'all having similar outcomes has less to do about what the women in this situation are doing and more to do with y'all.
Speaker 2:Two individuals are more alike. You just uh, ddg is just a blue face who didn't have gang ties, like that's really all it is now let's talk about the Brent fires of it all.
Speaker 1:Yeah, that's, that's. That's the part.
Speaker 2:I know where it gets your chest hurting it do so allegedly.
Speaker 1:Um, they went to Barbados or Turks or something with it, was they. They were posting it as like a sister trip. Hallie and Chloe were there with Halo, but um, the t-pages are gonna, they're gonna be messy and they're gonna connect things. So brent fires was on the island at the same time and there's been a rumor swirling around alleging that hallie is now dating brent fires. If my lady was on a beach with my son somewhere with Brent Fires and his afro and that bottom lip, I would crash out too.
Speaker 2:And you got to send a nuke. He's got to turn to Hiroshima.
Speaker 1:I too would crash out. So I'm going to read these couple texts. This is like just so weird to me. So he's sending her and we don't even know if Brent was actually there with Hallie.
Speaker 2:Well, what they saw was there was a picture of him where he looked like he's out on the island, and then she posted a picture and it looked like similar areas.
Speaker 1:Yeah, but like all islands, have sand and palm trees.
Speaker 2:You could have been at any kind of island.
Speaker 1:He could have been in Jamaica, she could have been in Turks. It could have been two jamaica, she could have been in turks. It could have been two completely different islands.
Speaker 2:We have no idea, but he's probably knocking it down though, listen, I hope he is, I do um.
Speaker 1:So uh, she. He sends her a twitter post of him, her and the the alleged evidence and he goes this is foul period. Bet. That means the crash out is loading, like when a nigga end the sentence with bet.
Speaker 2:That means he's about to start the end Is this the part where he was telling her you're going to play dirty now too.
Speaker 1:Yeah. So then he sends her Well, no, this is yeah. He sends her another post and it's just a picture of Brent on the island and he says you think you hurting my feelings when you really just ruining your own image? And when a nigga says you think you hurting my feelings, that's because his feelings are hurt, like he's in his feelings. That's why he's mentioning them.
Speaker 2:Like Brent has never sold 1,000 records anytime. So I mean I'm pretty sure, no records anytime. So I mean I'm pretty sure no. When brent dropped, we are streaming it. Like I'm pretty sure you'd rather have people streaming your music than they were streaming your streams. Honestly, if you had, if you had to pick, but because allegedly that's actually your passion.
Speaker 1:Music is your actual passion, so I'm sure you would love if people supported your music like brent's. But they're not supporting your music, um, and he's supporting your bitch, um, he says. He goes on to say this is a terrible look, makes you look disgusting and evil, which is so ironic, because you're the one that looks disgusting and evil like she literally just looks like a young lady getting her shit off.
Speaker 2:Well, as she should but I mean, that's what, that's the play, that you have to go there, you have to make her feel like she's the bad person in this, because, again, there's nothing else that you can do, because I'm gonna talk about this in a few other instances. But women have a superpower that men don't have. They can make themselves look almost as ridiculous as possible and you, as the man, will continue to lose in the entire situation. Save that, because, it's gonna, it's gonna be, it's gonna be relevant it's gonna be just remember that let me finish this text.
Speaker 1:He sends another text and he says enjoy your vacation, happy mother's day, but just have the same energy. When it's my turn to have him, I'm on the same shit. It's just like if she's in a relationship with this man and then she's on vacation with him. That's different from you just having a random hose around your son on the stream, which is what it sounds like he was about to be on, like I'm about to just have random bitches holding holding halo on the stream.
Speaker 2:Yeah, and it don't hit the same way, it don't it don't like her being upset that there's girls hold him. There's a, there's an understanding that a girl is going to be gentle with the kid, so it's not the same threatening idea that you're going to get when this man is holding your child and then her reply was just so like hallie, um.
Speaker 1:She said not with any man out here, I wouldn't do that. I, I have halo. Please let me enjoy mother's day in peace. Hope you are okay and feel better. Feel better soon. And that was her reply. That was it.
Speaker 2:Yeah, man, she making him look crazy like honestly, ddg, you got one or two options, bro, you. You either get in line and be the do boy or you just just do another one. Make another one with somebody else.
Speaker 1:Big dog, there's only two options you got man I knew ddg was a little off and a little evil during that breakfast club interview when they asked him about ruby rose and her feeling like she's stuck in only fans because he's the one that told her to do it. Granted, don't ever take a man's advice, but they were young made a lucrative for yeah it was lucrative, but she feels like she's stuck and she can't like. Eventually you want to stop popping your pussy on the internet, can?
Speaker 1:I say that do they? Yeah, like a lot of girls do be wanting to stop I couldn't tell yeah. So she wants to stop, but she feels like she's stuck in it, and then he feel he was like just stop. And in my, in my head, it's like I'm. It's like when you get the bottom bitch like the whore addicted to crack, and then you can't just tell her to just stop. It's not the same way, though. You can't. Just Money is just as addicting as crack. That's what I'm saying.
Speaker 2:She's made enough money where she can put that away and live off of that.
Speaker 1:That stigma is always going to be attached to her. That's what she's saying be attached to her but she don't have to be famous anymore.
Speaker 2:That's the thing. That's the thing where you gotta put that into what is she gonna do? She don't she can take the money she's earned and just live a normal life what? No, you can't live a normal life with a waist to ass ratio, like ruby roses well then, because y'all put this, uh need that.
Speaker 1:if y'all look good, y'all got to be sex dolls, I mean hey, not sex dolls, but she got to live a life of luxury. Again, that requires you to be a sex doll, I feel like all East African women deserve a life of luxury, because y'all are beautiful.
Speaker 2:See, that's the problem. Y'all think those two coincide, but they don't. There's a lot of pretty girls that's homeless. They don't. There's a lot of pretty girls that's homeless. They just dirty Alright. So I think we should might as well just stay in this, since it is a similar topic, but I want to navigate this through a different lens. So you know, damaris, right From New Rory and Maul.
Speaker 1:Yeah, of course.
Speaker 2:She is a big Bardi gang, big time Bardi gang. So, she tweeted this the other day. She said Cardi is having that revenge moment. All the heartbroken girls dream of New fine man on the MSG screen with me, we smiling. You know them screenshots hitting the phone like fireworks in the hood on July 3rd. I have secondhand pleasure. So she's clearly advocating Cardi B being out with Stefan Diggs. I don't know if y'all seen it, but she was at the New York Knicks game Offset chest was hurt.
Speaker 1:Yeah, 100%. Because after that picture came out, offset posted pictures of him with just like a bunch of hoes around him, like his chest isn't hurting, like you don't want your family back. Nigga, you know you want your family back no he was sad like you. You got titties, but is your heart fulfilled?
Speaker 2:mandy also said you think so. She's doing it with the athlete version of all set presently depicted with multiple women online right now. Just had a boat of strippers in miami. I disagree. Wish she would steer away from the same type and she got here.
Speaker 2:He got like two kids on the way like and one that's like fresh the mayor's then responded to that one and she said I truly don't care, honestly, because I think she's just having fun. Not every man needs to be the one. She's been locked in since she's got famous, damn near she needs to enjoy her life.
Speaker 2:She's cute and looks happy. So mandy comes back and says oh, I'd like to discuss this one. Whether you looking for to settle down or not, how do you cry over a man because you're sharing him to go to a man that you have to share? So she's basically waking up the point of if you're out here with a dude who's doing the same thing to you that the man that you left is doing, why are you acting like that's a flex? So then the mayor tries to save face and goes I don't know them folks business or their dynamic. What I do know is there's a difference between thinking you're in a committed marriage and dating openly slash ethically. The choice is the choice is the difference. We we both have practiced ethical non monmonogamy, so I know you understand it well she said girl, you be fucking.
Speaker 1:That's what she said. That's hilarious. That was a very respectful way to call her a whore. I think that's what cardi's doing. I don't don't think Cardi is trying to make Stefan the next husband and father of her children. I think she is enjoying that young, agile peen she's doing. That drug-free peen? We don't know what he's doing, that nigga got stamina Way more stamina than Offset has, I assume.
Speaker 2:Do you not know what football players be putting in their body so that they can perform?
Speaker 1:I don't know Listen.
Speaker 2:So let's not act like he may have some deficiencies in that area as well. Women have the power that men don't have, because the more ridiculous they make themselves look, the more. It only affects you as the man, so she can go out here and sleep with every football player. Affects you as the man, so she can go out here and sleep with every football player. There's really a large number she would have to reach to to make offset. Not be the one that looks crazy. Y'all just have that power. Y'all can do whatever y'all. Y'all can bring y'all social standing down so that the man that y'all were previously associated with looks like a fool that you think she's bringing her social standing down no, she, but she's running around putting herself in public in this way with another man to make him look dumb.
Speaker 2:The thing that stefan brings that makes him so valuable to her is that he makes offset chest hurt. Like that's the most valuable thing to a woman that she has a baby daddy is the ability to make her baby daddy react so who could offset?
Speaker 1:pop out with? That's gonna make cardi's chest hurt because I got one in the in the in the chamber.
Speaker 2:It don't work that way. The only way I think it might, no, the only one. But what if it would have to be like bia or nikki minaj, like somebody like that?
Speaker 1:no, I feel like he pop out with like sanaa lathan, no, like um, a woman that every man has wanted but nobody has really gotten no, no other than like her husband none of that works.
Speaker 2:Her ex-husband none of that works, I think, because now she's gonna like that's your mama, like you're trying to find some girl that's your mom I think that with nikki that's like the same shit. Yeah, that's what I'm saying, but at least that's her op, so now that I think that's corny if you link up with her direct op and, but she's married, so that's why you can't even do that anyway yeah, but if, even if she was single, and they linked up.
Speaker 1:I don't know. I feel like there's no win man?
Speaker 2:there's no. That's why these guys do the ddg link because there's no win, y'all can do whatever y'all want y'all can disrespect and it only makes us look like the idiot for loving y'all, giving y'all kids and marrying you. It's an evil superpower.
Speaker 1:You gotta go be Madonna's next boy toy, or something.
Speaker 2:That doesn't no look boy toy. You're in a lesser position. Nothing works it doesn't work okay. That's nothing you can do, the only power that you can do, the only power that you can do, but it's still.
Speaker 1:Make the next cardi b, pluck another bitch out of the bronx and make her the next cardi b might as well just play the monopoly.
Speaker 2:I mean, I'm not. You might as well pay the the power ball you're going to play with them odds. This the only thing you can do is ignore her, like you can't post in response that she does.
Speaker 2:That's what I'm saying yeah he's not doing, you can't do the little post and response with the blurred out faces of the girls he said, um, something about him being a thot, yeah, like then, none of that works a lame. The only thing you can do is ignore her. You have to okay, this is what I'm gonna tell y'all secret okay, you have to make her feel like she was never important in the first place, that everything that y'all did, all the time that was spent, was truly meaningless to you.
Speaker 1:That's the only way you're gonna hurt this running around trying to make his chest hurt is not like if. If you have a, a manipulative man, just block him on everything and move on with your life. My nigga, enjoy your life. Block blocking on everything, move on and just try not to think about it I'm gonna keep it being with you.
Speaker 2:That'd be my move. All that's going to do is entice that individual to continue to do more so entice what individual the person that you're blocking to do what? What's going to find another way to reach you, like they're going to find your email, they're going to find any kind of means that you still have to communicate, and then you block them on everything. Then they're just going to locate you physically. So just do what Hallie did Call the authorities. Call the authorities. Or what Iman Shumpert is doing.
Speaker 1:Iman is a lame. So y'all remember when all of those like blog posts were coming out about how Tiana Taylor has bled Iman Shumpert dry in their divorce settlement, and then she came on her IG live and she explained to everyone that all of those reports were false and I did not bleed this man dry and these were the stipulations to our divorce. Allegedly that Ahmaud filed a motion seeking a fine and 20 days of jail time for Tiana Taylor because they're both prohibited from speaking about the terms of their divorce. So that's what he did. He filed a motion and the motion says that Tiana willfully and contentiously exposed and broadcasted specific provisions of the final judgment decree of divorce and related provisions, recklessly disregarding the financial circumstances, privacy, safety and security of the parties and their minor children. Mind you, and their minor children, Mind you said. Blog posts were being allegedly leaked by Iman himself and Tiana was sure of that.
Speaker 2:This is what I'm telling y'all there's nothing that you can do. The law is not going to help you, because the moment that you call them now, you get looked like you're corny.
Speaker 1:Why would you try to get the mother of your children placed in jail for IG Live?
Speaker 2:There's reasons though I completely ig live. There's reasons though I I completely understand. There's reasons you should lock her up like you should want to get her are you taking care of the fucking kids for 20 days by yourself?
Speaker 1:no, you're not.
Speaker 2:You're not he could pay somebody to do that. He got it. He got that he could hold that down, but again, the law never helps because all it does is now you look like you're taking a woman and you are putting her in confinement. It's essentially like women are children, and this is like you, as a basketball player, being a varsity star playing against the middle school.
Speaker 2:Well, I'm just saying, I'm just doing an example Him being a basketball player, being on varsity and playing against the elementary school team, the sixth grade team, that's what it's always going to be perceived as. So again, the best thing that you could just do is stay out of the light because anytime you you say anything about that old work, it's going to be looked at like you're mad, you're upset, you're in your feelings. They're going to play like this, all the stereotypes of a man who have wronged his partner. One thing is that because y'all do that, it will, because they do the cheating stuff, it gives the like, the public, ammo to just paint you as the do, as the bad individual. Because you could have got pushed like into that cheating for a reason Like you could have been pushed into that for a reason Like so into that cheating for a reason like you could have been pushed in that to that for a reason like so what?
Speaker 1:what are the top three reasons that you think a man gets pushed into cheating?
Speaker 2:not being feeling like that person at home. So I mean she just she's not showing him who he is, and so now he just has to have that effect why does somebody else need to show you who you are?
Speaker 2:it's called self-esteem, not another nigga esteem yeah, but when you get involved with another partner, you want that to come from that person and if that's not coming from there, because of maybe he's not shining in ways that he once was, now he feels like, yeah, I gotta go, I gotta feel like iman shumpert with someone else because I don't feel like iman shumpert.
Speaker 1:Number two another two reasons yeah, I just give me the top three.
Speaker 2:Top three, yeah, I mean that the first one was really the best one. That's kind of the fly. Anything else after that is like you just ego, you know she bad, it's nothing else like it's just. It's just like, yeah, you want to make sure you still got it, you know that's all, yeah. But the first one is that one like, and that's why I can understand where that could be, especially when you're dealing with a professional athlete and he's past his prime and then like much past, and then even when he was playing, it wasn't like he was like that dude, he was a role player best nigga so he was a role player.
Speaker 2:so I just again I understand where he kind of comes from from that. But, bro, are you? It's no point man, let Let her talk her trash. She getting smashed in the movie with Leo Like it's a wrap dog. She won.
Speaker 1:She definitely won. We named our episodes she having Leonardo DiCaprio baby on screen and that baby is going to save the world.
Speaker 2:If this was like if we just did normal titles out for our episodes, this episode would be she won.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:That's all it would be. Should we start doing titles now? So I discussed this with you, but prior you can put the title in the thumbnail.
Speaker 1:No one's stopping you from putting a title in the thumbnail. I don't think the title works that well in the thumbnail because I think the thumbnail is what people see more than the title so yeah, if you have something funny in the thumbnail at the bottom, you can put that there there, but the titling itself has to get through the track. You don't think it's better for me to have relevant titling? You can do that though.
Speaker 2:You can put the pictures of other people and then have the title of the show.
Speaker 1:No, I said relevant titling. You can do that too, but I mean for the title of the show you don't necessarily have to do the single word like at the big show.
Speaker 2:Okay, I'm gonna see what the people do and then I'll follow that.
Speaker 1:Just listen to your husband too. That works. Yeah, I want to see what the industry standard is we're the industry standard.
Speaker 2:Now we're in the partner program we are. Let's not let our egos get the best of us, okay I mean, I feel like, for something like this, that's more than fair play.
Speaker 1:Let's talk about something so fun next tori's lab, tori lanes, tori stabs so, uh, recently tori lanes has been stabbed. It's been alleged what 14 times I don't think he was stabbed 14 times. I think the stabber tried to stab him around 14 times and he stabbed around Tory Lanez about 14 times and then maybe the fragments of the knife potentially got into Tory.
Speaker 2:He was cutting around him like he was the crust of the bread.
Speaker 1:Yeah, he was like dance Tory and was stabbing around Tory but didn't actually stab Tory. I don't believe he got stabbed 14 times.
Speaker 2:Show me the x-rays so, according to whack 100, I believe he was saying that he was the mexicans in the prison.
Speaker 1:So let me just break down so you got the, you got the within the jail information from the prisoners well, whack 100 isn't a prisoner.
Speaker 2:He's the guy that be in the streets, though he's from no jumper and all that yeah so let me break down kind of this. Reputable news from no Jumper. Well, I mean, we're talking about prison stuff. Yeah, that's like the most reputable you could be at. But as a former correction officer I'm going to give you a little bit of idea how politics kind of operate within the prison. It's very race and segregated within the prison. So you operate within your people. So tori lanes operates with the black people because that's who he will fall in line with.
Speaker 2:Now, sometimes the black and the hispanics may do business together, they may interact with each other. The hispanics usually also encompass, like the asians, and all the other stuff too, and then you have the whites. So you have kind of have that little major breakup and then, like I said, the people who sprinkle in between usually fall in with a uh, with the uh hispanics. That's interesting. So there's been clips of tory lane's been talking around saying he's been squabbling and doing all this other stuff, presenting a lot of bravado when you get stabbed as a little nigga does yeah, I mean, that's when you're someone who's relevant.
Speaker 2:In prison, you kind of feel like you have a lot of power, people who are offering to do X, Y and Z for you. Usually in prison you get stabbed for potentially a lot of different ways you can. One of the major ones is money. So if you owe somebody a large sum, you owe somebody food, commissary, that is really where most of the stabbings happen. Prison politics then you kind of have lover quarrels. That can happen to.
Speaker 1:Uh, you can have gang that's what I would like to think it is.
Speaker 2:You can think tory lane's male lover stabbed him well, what uh around him, what whack 100 was alleging that there's kind of a gang tension that's actually going on in the prison and that's probably what's more in line with. But those other two aspects can play a part, so it's not like that, can't be you know him being getting squirrely to protect the hole and then he could have.
Speaker 2:He could have been trying to protect the hole or he could have been trying to get some and he couldn't get no more of it and he had to pay for. You know, some missed some sessions he didn't pay for. But you know what they're saying is.
Speaker 1:They're saying that they believe rock nation and, uh, megan the stallion had something to do with this because megan the stallion is now a criminal mastermind right, and she has prison connections enough that she can get tori lane stabbed allegedly 14 times. Are y'all literally retarded?
Speaker 4:innocent until proven guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. The timing of these events raised disturbing questions to me, and I think they all should to you as well. Over after over two years in prison. After over two years in prison without incident, Tori was stabbed 14 times. Allegedly Days after a major national news outlet reached out to Megan Peete's team, kelsey Harris and former DA George Gascon, about a story on new evidence in this case.
Speaker 4:There is no evidence, you don't have to believe in conspiracies to see the pattern. When evidence was about to come to light, Tory was nearly killed. So let's stop pretending this is complicated. Let's stop treating this like some cultural war flashpoint. This is about a man, a father, a son, Daystar Peterson.
Speaker 1:A piece of shit.
Speaker 4:Who has sat in prison, who has sat in a prison cell for over a year based on a case that wouldn't pass the smell test in any honest courtroom? The prison system can no longer guarantee his safety, and that alone should be grounds for immediate action. But combine that with the overwhelming evidence of a botched investigation, and this becomes not just a legal issue but a morale emergency. Tory Lanez deserves a new trial. He deserves due process, he deserves a pardon.
Speaker 1:He got due process.
Speaker 2:So this has been getting the timeline riled up like y'all, warriors of daystar y'all need to be stopped.
Speaker 1:I don't know why y'all named him that literally, like it reminds me of lucifer morningstar.
Speaker 2:Continue, which is what you are again what's been coming out, the new evidence that they're presenting. This has been a gentleman by the name of bradley james. There is no evidence. Well, it's not evidence.
Speaker 1:You're right, it's just a gentleman by the name of bradley james. There is no evidence. Well, it's not evidence. You're right, it's just a statement that's coming out it's like I feel like I'm losing my mind because I thought it was one thing, but it is a completely different thing. Everyone's been reporting that. First of all, when I heard kelsey'sguard regardless of the rest of the sentence I was like why would Kelsey have a bodyguard?
Speaker 2:What does what does Kelsey?
Speaker 1:what does Kelsey need a bodyguard for?
Speaker 2:So let me let's just play the clip, just so people know what exactly. What was said, uh, regarding this.
Speaker 9:So not long ago, unite the people was approached by a gentleman named Bradley James. Mr James informed us he was working as a Just a nigga Trial.
Speaker 9:Conversations. Senator Peterson, I'm sorry. Mr James informed us he was not under a non-disclosure agreement or a confidentiality agreement and was free to speak with Unite the People, and that he was doing it because his conscience would not let him not speak and leave a man in prison for something he did not do. Mr James informed Unite the People that he was witness to the conversation miss Harris had, where she stated she had the gun. She fired it three times, mr.
Speaker 9:Poole grabbed her arm and knocked it down and the gun fired two more times. In essence, mr Peterson never shot anybody, never even touched that gun, never fired gun. This statement aligns with the statement of the only non-party witness to the case, mr Sean Kelly? No, it doesn't. Who at trial testified he saw two women fighting, two men break up the fight. One man grabbed the other one's arm. Gunshots came from the passenger side. Passenger side is where mr miss harris was sitting allegedly okay.
Speaker 2:So according to rolling stones, sean kelly said under oath that he saw a shot go what he believed from one woman, and then he saw the smaller gentleman that he described shoot the gun.
Speaker 1:He was there because in.
Speaker 2:He was looking at it from his house. He's seen it from his house, okay. So he said on the stand under oath that he saw four to five subsequent shots that all came from the smaller gentleman. So that is what he said on the stand under oath. So this idea that he's saying anything else was what he said either beforehand or afterwards. It's not what he said when the trial proceeded. The thing is this what you Daystar fans If the stupid boy and I said this before if the dumbass can't go on the stand and tell his own story, why should you support?
Speaker 1:him at all. He did not take the stand because he could not be cross-examined, because that motherfucker shot Meg. I hate y'all. Y'all literally hate black women so much. And then this story came out and everyone's making it seem like this bodyguard was at the scene. No, this bodyguard has first person account of what happened.
Speaker 1:He does not. Mr James informed Unite the people that he was witness to conversations that Miss Harris had where she stated that she had the gun, fired it three times, this and that blah, blah, blah. You motherfuckers are so stupid that y'all can't even read past the headline to figure out the fact that this man was not there.
Speaker 2:At all.
Speaker 1:This man was not employed during the shooting. This man was employed there at all. This man was not employed during the shooting. This man was employed during the trial and he has no pertinent information whatsoever. Literally, he could have been bought.
Speaker 2:There's literally just him making a claim Like there's no substantial evidence. They didn't say we have a recording.
Speaker 1:There's no recordings of said conversation, just vibes Kelsey. Kelsey and her husband, or whoever it is, are not about to come out and be like, yeah, that's what we were saying, no.
Speaker 2:You got us. Nobody's saying that.
Speaker 1:I think the stabbing is very conveniently timed with this story, which is why I don't think Tory Lanez probably was shaven and decided to cut himself up a little bit and then went to the infirmary or whatever the fuck it's called. What is it called?
Speaker 2:Infirmary.
Speaker 1:Infirmary yeah, I said infirmary and went to the infirmary and was like, oh, I got stabbed. No, you didn't get stabbed. Nobody believes you got stabbed. I don't believe you got stabbed. Bitch, Stay in jail.
Speaker 2:It's tough, man, it's tough. Uh, hopefully your hispanic lover will apologize and y'all be able to, you know, rekindle that, uh, that negro flame that y'all had going you haven't raced booty wars in the jail.
Speaker 1:That's what this is about. Just bend bend over. He's a small man.
Speaker 2:You're just going to have to bend over, tori. I'm sorry. You're just going to have to just take it, or?
Speaker 1:you're going to have to be like R Kelly and start recording happy birthday songs for every single prisoner in that bitch.
Speaker 2:R Kelly taking it, though he in there taking it. He in there taking it.
Speaker 1:He's in there. He's in there taking it. He's in there. He's in there literally reliving trauma from his childhood.
Speaker 2:No, he taking it, he going in there taking it from them boys. And then they probably giving it to him willingly, honestly, oh I thought you meant taking it by like the D, I mean he taking the booty.
Speaker 1:Oh okay, we were on two different pages.
Speaker 2:Well, you see him differently than I do.
Speaker 1:Yeah, I thought he was bending it up Doing the bending?
Speaker 2:No, no so you doing the bending, you can't bend the kills.
Speaker 1:That's crazy and I think you can definitely bend the kills, especially in jail. That's not sincere.
Speaker 1:That nigga can't even read. What do you mean? All right, bleep that out. That was a lot, all right. Uh, did you want to talk about your movie that you were so in love with? It's not a movie, all right.
Speaker 1:Forever came out on netflix. So forever is based on the 1975 novel by judy bloom Bloom and it was Brock Ali's first project on her Netflix deal. So Brock Ali, um Regina King, and then it's executive, produced by Judy Bloom herself, susie Fitzgerald, erica Harrison, sarah White, regina no, raina King, shana C Waterman and Anthony Hemingway. So Forever is like a coming of age love story. It's two teenagers who reconnect in their um in their teenage years they used to be friends in like elementary school or whatever, and they fall in love and they go through like these ups and downs and blocking, unblocking, blocking, unblocking, blocking, unblock. It was literally like a roller coaster and um, I enjoyed it so much. Like it's rare that we get content that's like not trauma-borne for real, like there was a little bit of trauma in the show. So Keisha, um, so let me, let me, just let me rewind really quickly.
Speaker 1:The main characters of the show are um, okay, so the main characters are Justin and Keisha, played by Michael Cooper Jr and Lovey Simone. Um, I enjoyed this so much like, um, the family was one of the things that I enjoyed the most, because Justin's family he comes from like a two parent household. The mom is successful, the dad is a chef, he has a little brother, they have a giant home, he goes to a private school with like white kids and stuff like that. And then um Keisha, her, her mother, uh, is a single mom but her dad plays baseball in DR and she says that he's not a deadbeat dad, he's an absent dad.
Speaker 2:There's a difference.
Speaker 1:Yeah.
Speaker 2:There's definitely a difference.
Speaker 1:Yeah. So the little bit of trauma that happened, just a little bit, was that she gets a sex tape leak. Was that she gets a sex tape leak? So, um, in the first episode, justin and Keisha have their first date and, um, they run into Justin's friends and he gives her like a look and she's like kind of looking and I'm like, oh, is she like did she like mess with his homeboy? But whole time like it's because she, he knows that she has a sex tape out and the first episode on their first date she tries to like give him that. I said, girl, did you learn nothing? What is happening here? After I I realized that this the tape was of her doing that same thing, giving a man fellatio. I was like, girl, why would you try to give this man head on the first date? So how did they?
Speaker 1:get leaked out um, he sent the video to his um, this white boy. So they were um in the group chat talking about how, oh, white girls give head better than black girls, and he was like, no, they don't my bitch be. So, yeah, my. So he sent the video and then the white boy sent it out around and then it got out.
Speaker 2:So so was this from the guy that she was with the whole time, or was this somebody previous?
Speaker 1:Previous. So he was like the next Kobe they kept calling him. He was a very good basketball player.
Speaker 2:Okay, so she got caught up with the athlete, so she was a little bit of a bop. Is what you're trying to tell me.
Speaker 1:I'm not saying that, but I just feel like I don't want to slut shame her or anything. I just don't know why she would immediately, like pop it in her mouth first date, like after what happened to you. She's a bop, bop behavior Boppy I don't want to call her that because she really she's a sweet girl. I loved her so much.
Speaker 2:The bops are always sweet girls. In my time when I was in school. No, bop was ever not a sweet girl.
Speaker 1:There was school. No, bop was ever not a sweet girl. There was no mean bops who was. Who was the main bop in your school? First of all, I don't like saying bop. I feel like that's like too young for us. We gotta say ho or thot. Well see I, we in our 30s when I was in high school.
Speaker 2:I didn't. I wasn't the one trying to jump on the bops. I could identify bops. You know I'm saying I knew the bops that was going around, but if I stood I went the opposite direction.
Speaker 1:If you was bopping, I went the opposite direction there was this girl in my high school I don't know if I've told this story before on this show. He she had a couple nicknames shrimp, because she was really short, and then top top because she did bring up top top.
Speaker 2:Oh yeah, okay, let me move on then she gave a lot of head.
Speaker 1:Even the teachers knew. So, um, this, this movie, I mean this show, reminded me it because it's a coming of age love story. Right, it's their. Both of them are experiencing their first loves. It made me think about my first love, and then I wanted to ask you about your first love well, I mean was your, was your first love, your baby mama technically.
Speaker 2:Yeah, that falls. That's what it would track.
Speaker 1:Yeah, at least from this situation comparably which, which baby mama you like better baby mama bracket, baby mama number one versus baby mama number two. Pick quick one, one or two. I'm not having this conversation.
Speaker 2:The fact that it can even happen is just. I don't even want to have that.
Speaker 1:If you think it's embarrassing.
Speaker 2:Why you got to shame me, why you got to do that.
Speaker 1:Maybe my number one or number two? Which baby mama did you like more? Okay, no, you didn't want to answer that. Remember what I said earlier.
Speaker 2:Don't cut that out either. You remember what I said earlier. There's no winning with women. There's no point of doing it. There's no winning with them.
Speaker 1:Don't cut that out either. I'm going to be mad.
Speaker 2:Either one that I say I'm going to be in the wrong.
Speaker 1:So it's just no point no point, you're my favorite.
Speaker 2:I'm not your baby mama, I'm your wife, yeah well, I mean eventually, that was the wrongest answer out of future. Future fair is my favorite baby mama I'm oh god, we got your children, not your baby mother same baby mothers don't have rings.
Speaker 1:Mother of children have rings. Okay, so you're the favorite mother of my children I'm gonna be the only mother of your children. Okay, that conversation didn't make no sense, did it? There was no winning in that one.
Speaker 2:I will move the cold post Was Damon, your first love.
Speaker 1:That sounds like your first love name. No, my first love was actually very pure, very happy, very.
Speaker 2:Was he.
Speaker 1:Haitian. No, he was African American and from Georgia.
Speaker 2:So you have a type. Is what you're saying?
Speaker 1:No, he was literally like my best friend's cousin and he was visiting New York from Georgia.
Speaker 2:Yeah, come around here, let me find you.
Speaker 1:It's up for you, big dog, the man is in is in love we're gonna send the talk team at the man is in love and in a relationship he would a man.
Speaker 2:No, then there's a chance.
Speaker 1:So you gotta make sure you take him out I would hope not you gotta take it out but yeah, it was um because it reminded me of my first love, because my first love was very intense, it was very quick. I feel like that's how you fall in love in high school, like it feels fast.
Speaker 1:After two weeks, you're like I love you, I want to spend the rest of my life with you. I can't even imagine a time without you. And then, like now, I'm thinking about it and I'm like, bro, I'm barely thinking about that, nigga he was gassing that shit, like at time he was really gassing it. No. And then because he was visiting for the summer. After he left, we literally both spent a week without eating because we were literally in emotional turmoil. Oh, you fell for that on his part oh, he was good.
Speaker 2:I wasn't eating, I'm saying, but he told you he wasn't eating, I'm saying, but he told you, he literally would call me crying.
Speaker 1:Listen, don't even try to downplay he was giving it to you, don't even try to downplay, because he visited for two summers after that and he like that was his first time visiting new york for the summer.
Speaker 2:Listen it was very intense I'm just saying I didn't.
Speaker 1:I played the game too I'm so glad that I had a first love that was very pure, very happy, very intense and it didn't end on any like animosity, didn't end on bad terms or whatever. We just like grew apart. He went to college, and then I went to college, and then yeah, and then with teen pregnancy isn't really the move.
Speaker 2:What?
Speaker 1:Y'all were way too in love.
Speaker 2:That's not to move.
Speaker 1:Nigga wanted to make a person. Y'all were so in love.
Speaker 2:Just trying to keep it real with y'all. It's not to move. Don't do it. I would not recommend.
Speaker 1:But Forever has been renewed for season two.
Speaker 2:How do you feel about that?
Speaker 1:I was. Actually I was kind of okay with there not being a second season, because when I was watching it it felt like a limited series. It feels like this couple is going to have to go through more dramatic shit for there to be a second season, and I don't want that, unless the second season is like them in their respective places. So the show ends with spoiler alert. Yeah, the show ends with justin um, because he's battling with what his parents want him to do go to northwestern versus what he wants to do make music and um, at the end he finally sits down with his parents after keisha begs him to talk to his parents after they decide to break up.
Speaker 1:I was sobbing every episode. But he sits down with him and he tells them that he's going to make music and take a gap year and then she gets a full ride to Howard because she's a track star. So, um, they break up and then, um he he takes the the route of like doing his music instead and she's in howard. So I wonder if the second season is gonna be like not them together at all. We're not gonna get justin and keisha together. We're gonna get justin trying to find himself and become a man.
Speaker 2:And then keisha, trying to navigate her new life and being like the great hope for her family, because she's like the winner so, so essentially, what you're saying is that, uh, every uh show about a black boy in the suburbs has to end with him trying to do music. Huh, that's where they got to be at I mean like he just got to waste away all the talent and opportunity by trying to trying to make noise the in this show specifically.
Speaker 1:He's been making music since he was a child and it was just a passion and a hobby and he also has adhd and stuff like that. So it's like a an escape for him. He gets into Northwestern, which is like the Ivy and kind of Ivy adjacent that his mother went to, that he wanted that, they wanted him to get into, but he defers for a year. So I assume either they're going to show him like in his gap year making music or they're going to show him after the gap year back at Northwestern in his music major, because that's what he's taking the gap year for is to build his portfolio.
Speaker 2:As a black man who so he's not just like wasting his shit away. Yeah, as a black man who was born in the suburbs. I have seen many of other suburban black men waste away their life with their aspirations.
Speaker 1:And he's not just in the.
Speaker 2:They were like in a mansion, like his parents are very well to do so I'm just telling you again, as somebody who's who's been in a very similar experience I have seen plenty of black men waste away they their, their, their potential and opportunity trying to make noise with tools well before he, before the show finishes, he makes money off of the music he sells a song again. I've seen that happen too, and then the rest of that career goes downhill.
Speaker 2:So I, I just I understand what you're saying, but I don't think that's where they're gonna take the the story honestly, if they're doing a season two and if what you're saying is whether what you think they're gonna pull, they're gonna make him go through a whole bunch of bull and then he'll try to figure it out at the end and they're gonna have her get smutted out through college and then try to go back again and then they'll come back at the end of the season together at the end of the show.
Speaker 1:They break up before the summer and then at the end of the summer, like right before she leaves, they like meet somewhere accidentally and he takes her on a date and then he's like let's meet up again in 10 years. I think they're both in the the state of mind that, like this is something that we need to save for later. Like we, this happened much too early. I just love the story. I was emotional the entire time watching it. It was so pure and heartfelt and well writtenwritten. And um I think her name is rama um judy bloom, you did an amazing job. Rama brock. Ali, you did an amazing job. Regina king, you did an amazing job. I didn't necessarily want a second season, but I'm gonna watch the heck out of that second season for sure.
Speaker 2:So I can't wait until I I I see what, what happens next season if you like this story what it sounds like to me is there's one on hbo max called love story you should watch season two of love story. You're not gonna like season one because it's got a lot of pale people in it, but if you watch season two you'll. You'll like that.
Speaker 1:It's about a black guy and his love adventures you know, what else I loved about forever is that the object of desire was a black woman who doesn't pass the paper bag test, and justin himself, I, I. He has an interesting skin tone. It's like those, those black people who have like a, like tranny people, who have like a just a different undertone to them, but he's, he's also like a dark-skinned ish black man. It's just so good to see. She had braids, she had natural hair, it was so refreshing, and then it's number one on netflix netflix has been really good at having a lot of black content.
Speaker 1:That doesn't have to surface around ce. The fucking CEO's wife is black.
Speaker 2:Oh, that's why.
Speaker 1:Yeah, well, yeah.
Speaker 2:We got to get our wins where we can right.
Speaker 1:That's what I like for if you are dating a white man with power, infiltrate the system and change it. If you're just sitting there getting fucked by a white man, girl, do better. You gotta have a better plan, you, you in the enemy's territory. That's my forever um review.
Speaker 2:Uh, so I do have somebody I want to talk about, so we played her on the podcast not too long ago and her name is Lexi Kennedy and she has made a claim amongst the comedian world, so I want you to listen to her. She's gonna have some jokes in here too, so me, lexi Kennedy, the world's sexiest comic.
Speaker 8:Because of the way I talk, people think that I don't date black men at all, which is so untrue. I do all the time. I just leave them when their innate instinct to become a rapper kicks in. So I'm back on Instagram. Got a DM that said when he went to the islands. I looked at his profile and he was in jail, not Rikers, so I guess he met Rikers, the Crips and the Brains.
Speaker 8:But, don't judge me, guys. I've been talking to him because men on the inside are way better than men on the outside Men on the inside, you know where they're at. Men on the outside, no clue. My man in his cell every night by 8pm Like ow. My mom is a really nice lady, though she has five kids by five different men. She is so nice she wanted each of us to have her own dad so thankful.
Speaker 1:Ooh, trauma, thank you. Trauma.
Speaker 8:I went to Jesus camp for nine years. Yeah, whenever I tell people that, they always give me this weird look and they're like, oh, she must be like really freaky, right, and honestly I am, but I don't want to be judged for that. I feel like, if anything, me and Jesus have more in common. We both don't mind getting nailed. Yeah, oh shit, it's tough.
Speaker 1:I don't love when women do the the sex jokes anymore but honestly it's just so many female comedians have been doing it for so long.
Speaker 2:I feel like you have to have like a little bit of a nuanced one of the things that we kind of have to kind of get a grip around too is, like, what comedians joke about is a collective experience amongst their, their people, that they share, uh, phenotypes with. So like, if you're a tall guy, you're gonna make jokes about being tall. You, if you're a short guy or ugly guy, you're gonna make jokes around that. It just seems weird that all women have in their pretty much the main rolodex of their jokes. Is it about being a sexual object or being something to do with sex in general?
Speaker 1:I think it's because it's a little bit taboo for women to talk about sex. So it's along with. I think it's funnier because it's it has more of a shock factor to it because this little lady is talking about dicks.
Speaker 2:But you don't think it has nothing to do with a relating factor that most women have that similar sentiment in an experience with men? I'm sorry I lost, I'm lost you don't think that the reason why it's so common is because a lot of women have this similar sentiment when it comes to dealing with men With regards to sex is essentially the primary reason that anything else engages in Like. The reason why there's a relationship between men and women is because sex is their oh, no, no no, you don't think it has anything to do with.
Speaker 2:that's how women navigate and think about.
Speaker 1:Well, no, I think that is how women Some women navigate and think about like relationships with men. But, um, does that play into why that's mostly what female comics talk about?
Speaker 2:yeah, I think largely what makes that's only if your, your comedy is male centered, but it doesn't have to be, I think, even when they, when y'all have discussions on women, centered comedians and their discussion generally has about sex and the relatability that a lot of women share in regards to their sexual experiences almost highlighted in like even we talk about shows, sex in the city, stuff like that. Like a lot of these shows, they stem from a group of friends who are being freaky in a major city sexually open, which is not it's not like there's a bunch of girls doing a pottery class or working.
Speaker 1:I don't think it's about the sex. I think it's about the shock factor that a woman is sexually open and she's not supposed to be.
Speaker 2:That's what my my main thing was I think those two things are two sides of the same coin maybe you may, might be um.
Speaker 1:When I think about a female comic that doesn't base their their content and comedy in sex, I think about Zaynab. She's someone that I maybe have mentioned on this um platform before, on our pot, on our show before, but she's from brooklyn, she's muslim. Most of her um comedy is about being skinny, being from brooklyn, being muslim, her siblings like, I don't know. I just feel like there's so much that you can pull from as a as a comic other than sex like it's like monique was always really good at that yeah, it's just so boring.
Speaker 1:If that's like, your main shtick is dick, that's boring bitch. The most exciting thing about you is penises.
Speaker 2:I mean for a lot of women. Yeah, no, like being funny isn't something women have to do to attract friends or to be cool or be in the in crowd. To attract friends or to be cool or be in the in crowd, so like having a likable personality, isn't required from women by and large, especially when you're attractive.
Speaker 1:That's crazy. I felt the complete opposite. I felt like to be in my group of friends. I had to be funny, I had to be entertaining. I had to be because these things are funny. I think they're funny. For the first couple years of me being in my group of friends, I was like I'm not funny enough to be in this group of friends. I wasn't insecure about anything else. I was like I got to get these jokes up nigga. Well, he was a little rough in high school, so Get off of me right now.
Speaker 4:Get off of me right now, because you know I'm insecure about that.
Speaker 1:And you know no, don't fucking touch me, because he knows that. Don't touch me, I swear to God, because he knows that I actually think that. So for you to actually say that don't, I will knock you out. There are so many things Don't touch me after you use. Listen, bitches, niggas, y'all be saying oh, the women use your, your vulnerability against you. Imagine if your partner used your vulnerability against you on a public platform that is now monetized.
Speaker 1:I was the only reason I said, and then this nigga when I said that I was ugly in high school. No, baby, where you were, I would. I would have paid attention to you. No, you wouldn't have, I would have. You was fucking light-skinned bitches in high school, getting them pregnant. You was not looking at me. I didn't pass the brown paper back test that's crazy.
Speaker 2:If you would have seen the girl that I dated afterwards, she was in light skin, so yeah, after your stock dropped because you were a father in high school that actually brings it up actually in high school no, it does yes it does it's so many girls like oh, my goodness, I want to come over and hang out with you guys. And then, after he went to sleep, the baby, yeah, maybe after he went to sleep and they were like oh, what's going on, friend?
Speaker 1:why were your parents letting women into your home after you had a child in the first place?
Speaker 2:once. You already did it once. What was it going?
Speaker 1:pops ma like you shouldn't. You should have tightened it up like what's the point now?
Speaker 2:what? Like? I was in ninth grade when this happened, I mean, it was almost a few years left of school. What?
Speaker 2:year were you junior yeah, yeah, it was tough, all right uh, let's move on so there's been like this odd phrasing that I've been seeing being used and honestly, it's being used misinterpreted, but because of, like, the state that we are, where like words kind of just take on their own new meaning, it's basically the replacement for DEI, basically, basically, the replacement for dei, basically. So it's this phenomenon that white people have been talking about on social media and it's referred to as black fatigue. So I'm gonna play this clip real quick to start off black fatigue is real.
Speaker 7:I think society as a whole is there. We are just so unbelievably fed up with the ghetto, ratchet behavior, entitlement, the victimhood. Thanks for coming to my ted talk. She'll be watching her back for the rest of her life. Yeah, because that's not thuggery, head rattery, animalistic this. This is why people have black fatigue when you act like this. It's not normal behavior.
Speaker 2:So I had not initially so, uh, like I said, this is kind of disheartening just seeing where this conversation has been going, because the term actually has real validity, like there's actually been a coin term and I think you had a little bit of information for it yeah, so it was coined by mary frances winters.
Speaker 1:Um, I just think it's so ironic because, before I get into like what it actually means, the fact that black fatigue is a term that we already use for ourselves and y'all are co-opting it just like y'all did woke, just like y'all do everything in the black community, is just extremely ironic to me is a term in a book coined by Mary Frances Winters and it explains the chronic exhaustion and strain experienced by black people due to, like, the impact of systemic racism, racial stresses, and it includes the daily microaggressions and the constant need to prove yourself and the exposure to injustices and violence. So, just like your daily goings-ons as a black person in America, it has mental and physical effects. And then also it just describes just like the lasting impact of racism on black people physically, mentally, emotionally, everything like that. So her co-opting that and then switching it to mean like, basically racism You're just using a more eloquent term for just saying you hate black people.
Speaker 2:I mean it also speaks to the double side of that coin, because the erosion does work both ways.
Speaker 2:Their humanity also decreases yeah like their empathy, the way that they're able to see other people and, uh, understand what emotions are going on and seeing another person who they is a human, but they no longer see that like. That is dehumanizing in itself and it does create a lot of animosity. And the crazy part about this is was like I hate saying it like this, but I predicted like a lot of this in our conversations I used to have, because if, like, I'm a kid from the 2010s in regards to that's when I graduated high school, but I was there when the internet started having that conversation about these things, and every time we would have these conversations, white people would say, well, why do we have to care and why do we have to acquiesce to you? And then that's when the history lesson would become. But my problem I used to always ask myself is what if these white folks don't care anymore about the history? What if that doesn't mean anything to them anymore?
Speaker 2:which is now what's happening and that's exactly what's happening, where the argument is still the argument nothing's changed. White people haven't done anything different to right their wrongs in the past. It's just now.
Speaker 1:This modern day caucasian is just tired of the idea of it just like extremely exhausted and even trying to be apologetic for the the past atrocities that they've done. Well, they feel as though the lasting impact of of the, the results of the past atrocities. It doesn't even matter if you were a participant in that, it's just acknowledging the fact that it happened and acknowledging the fact that there are going to be consequences and everything after the fact.
Speaker 2:Well, they don't even do that Because, remember, now they're trying to get that all out of the history. Anytime you tell history like that, you're trying to weaponize and demonize white people for just being white, even though we're just telling history.
Speaker 1:White people are demons.
Speaker 2:Well, according to the Akua, they said that. Like I don't know what the fuck else to tell you like they behave like demons so I'm gonna play a little bit of aaron mcgruder's speech that he told or he talked about the. Basically he predicted black fatigue as well.
Speaker 5:So I'm gonna play those who have come after in terms of our leadership have been able to maintain a presence is that black people have always had a certain amount of moral currency that we have been using, and let me be the first to tell you that's used up. White America has been watching us act like fools for a long enough time where any sympathy they may have had to our plight is completely gone. You're approaching a country that forget hating black people or not hating black people, they just don't care. You're going to be talking about affirmative action.
Speaker 6:They're going to be like I don't care it literally, is of no importance to me.
Speaker 5:I don't care about slavery, I don't care about segregation, I don't care about you, I don't care how many of you all go to jail. I care. I don't care at all, because I'm broke.
Speaker 1:That's what we're getting now in Trump's America.
Speaker 2:That's exactly what has been going moving forward. It's just when the Internet became what it did and white people had to have that light shine on them again. They did kind of curl up. Have that light shine on them again.
Speaker 2:They did kind of curl up, but there were people I remember I can now remember his name off the top of my head, but he was probably one of the first white supremacists that I remember seeing coming out on the internet and just being like oh no, we don't care, we conquered you guys. Like it don't matter what happened in the past, you it happened to you because you were lesser than and like. That to me was like that's, that's the future. I always saw that as that is what we're gonna always have to be fighting against. And it's just coming true, like even when we talked about last week with the shiloh, uh, hendrix, the. You see the rise of just even more conservative content coming out, and this is what.
Speaker 1:This is what it creates fascism it generally feels like we're backtracking instead of making progress. At one point it did feel like we were making progress as a black woman, but now it's just I don't know it was all superficial if we're being honest.
Speaker 1:Yeah, obviously, because if it was genuine, then we wouldn't be where we are now. So I do agree with you that it was superficial. It's because obama didn't go to haiti. The haitians have never forgotten that obama did not visit haiti like we're. We're never gonna forget that you were the first black president and didn't visit the first independent black republic. That's fucking crazy. After the biden's and the no, not the biden's the um hillary the clinton's fucked us, bent us over and fucked us, but whatever tough tough all right, uh not tough tough what said it's tough, it's an atrocity yeah, it's a tough atrocity.
Speaker 1:It's, it's a horrible don't chalk up my people's.
Speaker 2:Uh, my people had like tough too my high plight I had double ends I had on a native american and the black I got barely native.
Speaker 1:You just started jacking. We've been together. Our two-year anniversary is coming up. We've been together for almost three years. You just started jacking that you were native american no, I did not just jack it. I've always known that like two months ago you started jacking that you were native no, it wasn't. I've always known that you just started claiming that no, that's always this nigga just put native american on his jacket like that's not true for real, that's not. That was not something I've always that's always been.
Speaker 2:I was I live as a black man, but I do have native american european and black heritage. It's just what it is, man. That's what. That's why they made a slur for us. I'm a true son of american european. I'm a true son of america we might not be.
Speaker 2:I don't think you understand. I'm a true son of america. I'm the of everyone who the people who were here, people who were brought the Of everyone who, the people who were here, people who were brought here In slavery and the people who came here To colonize. I'm a son of.
Speaker 1:I feel like I'm watering down my Haitian bloodline With his European blood.
Speaker 2:It's not that much.
Speaker 1:It's more than I have. That's hate. You can go back. Multiple generations To my group Black Black. Multiple generations in my group black, black, black, black, black, black black black, black, black.
Speaker 2:When that yellow baby come out, she gonna be sitting there upset like she gonna like. You see, the white women when, like they already had one girl and then they have a second girl and they be upset. That's gonna be I'm lying.
Speaker 1:When you get to my great-grandfather, that's when you start getting a little light skin, so maybe the compromised, that your bloodline is compromised. Not as much as yours, that's hate, it's not compromised. Yours is compromised, it's a blend.
Speaker 2:Like by four. That's hate.
Speaker 1:So I watched the movie this week. It's a 10th power compromise.
Speaker 2:Hey yo man, nobody, it's not 10th power compromise.
Speaker 1:I'm an embodiment, compromise, chromosomally, I am assimilation.
Speaker 2:Like I don't think you understand that I am the epitome of assimilation. You are compromised America is going to look like me in 2099. Chromosomally? No, I'm not.
Speaker 1:You're mitochondria. I'm pure blood. That's what that is. You're mitochondria is compromised I'm a pure blood. That's what you don't understand the powerhouse of your cell is compromised, that's not true, because that that doesn't exist. That is the main thing I fucking remember from um biology is the mitochondria is the powerhouse of the cell period that's the only thing that stuck that's one.
Speaker 1:No, I, it stuck a little bit more than that. I enjoyed biology very much. Shout out to God, geez, I forgot his name. He had a handlebar mustache though, and it was red, did you see? Oh, apparently on TikTok, gingers are black. There was this one black girl. She said gingers are black. She had no evidence whatsoever. All of the gingers started hopping around doing the doing the little blackity, blackities, black, blackest dance. But I never forgot that when Hallie was the little mermaid and she had that red hair, you were like this nigger bitch, she can't have red hair because. And then, if, and then one black girl called y'all black on tick tock and y'all doing yellow best jive, fuck y'all, y'all not black gingers.
Speaker 2:Let's move on all right, um, so I just had to bring that up really quickly so I do want to just kind of just touch on this before we wrap up here. I did watch and this is movie hasn't been that popular, uh, for probably obvious reasons, but I did watch the apprentice, uh, the donald trump movie starring sebastian stan the winter soldier.
Speaker 2:It was 2.99 to rent it. That was cheap. More than I would have paid for it. That was. That was for the cheap. If you ask me, I I'm watching it and it's just hilarious watching the winter soldier be donald trump like yeah, especially like when he's getting fat throughout the movie. Uh, but the movie is uh getting fat and balding throughout the movie so the movie is essentially about donald trump's rise from where he's just kind of like. It's funny to say he's like a lowly businessman, because he really isn't like.
Speaker 1:He's still super rich yeah, he just has a pathetic personality yeah, well, she essentially.
Speaker 2:You kind of actually learned that he was always this kind of character. He just needed somebody who was had like real connections to kind of make it validate him, because even at the beginning of the movie he was still bsing people it just once he found uh roy conan. And roy conan was a dl uh man who uh was a lawyer for donald trump.
Speaker 1:He kind of handled a lot of his cases dl men, ruining the fabric of our society over and over again and he was the one who basically put the.
Speaker 2:You gave donald trump the language he needed to become the individual that is now he made him the man that he is now. Again, I wouldn't say that he gave him the language to execute what he's doing now.
Speaker 1:Donald trump is stupid. He gave them a link.
Speaker 2:He made them the man he is now I mean, mean the thing about it is is Trump was a rich white guy in the 80s. He was going to be a moderate, successful person.
Speaker 2:Yeah, he was going to fail it regardless. He just was able to allow him to get the ball running and he essentially helped him get no taxes that he had to pay on all his buildings, and that was what pushed him going on to be able. I'm gonna do this and I'm gonna do. I'm gonna put my name on this. And he created the monster and and it ends with trump essentially portraying him, putting him out on the street when he's sick and uh, becoming the powerhouse that you know he made people believe him to be the sickest part about it is right.
Speaker 2:There's just one scene in the movie right, it's the sickest, besides the the grape scene that happens with his wife which I thought was completely unnecessary.
Speaker 1:I always think that the grape scenes are unnecessary. It didn't do anything to move the plot. Um, like you could have insinuated it without showing us that. I never think. Like directors and producers, whoever you are like, it's never fucking necessary for you to include a graphic or visual grape scene at all.
Speaker 2:I feel like the the audio is is enough, but continue yeah and I hate that no, I mean you're right, and the scene kind of started off like I'm I don't want to say it started off kind of fly, though, because he was just talking trash to the girl they were just arguing normally she came in. She was trying to get some work from Donald. She brought him a little G-spot box. He was like I'm not really attracted to you anymore. They're too fake. I don't really like them anymore.
Speaker 2:You should go and then it turns into a fight then ends up him doing what he's doing, but the the to me one of those was him exacting his power over her.
Speaker 1:It wasn't anything other than that. Yeah, she was trying to like call him out did she talk to?
Speaker 2:he sent the ball spot and that sent him off into a rage and then uh, but to me the the powerful scene that really showed was his father, who has been a like very staunch specter in his life throughout the whole movie, saying, oh, what you're doing is wrong, you're going to mess up, you're going to fail. You know, he had his brother, who was like drinking himself into a stupor, and his father, who now you see him, he's not as sharp as he was, he's forgetting particular things, and he's talking to donald and he essentially tells donald you know he's proud of his success. And you see, like that change from oh, I'm the big dog now. And it was just so, like the way that sebastian stan pulled that off, it was some of the best acting. I hate that because of him getting blackballed because of this or whatever people being upset about him doing this role, but the way that he did this performance.
Speaker 1:I don't like the way. I don't like that he was blackballed, because this movie isn't necessarily like begging up donald trump, it's just like showing, yeah, like it's a coming of age donald trump story. Somebody was supposed to play it I mean again I.
Speaker 2:That's just part of hollywood. You know you start doing that's a little fucked up, even though even though trump and them said they didn't want this to come out like they tried to stop the movie and if trump wanted it to come out, then it shouldn't have.
Speaker 1:But if trump didn't want it to come out, then that's the movie that should have came out like okay, and then he had this other part too.
Speaker 2:Right, this is right when he met his first wife, ivana, or whatever, and he's trying to no ivana, ivana.
Speaker 1:Yeah, so they the the daughter is ivanka.
Speaker 2:Right, ivanka, that's the daughter, okay, um, and so it's. When he's trying to swoo his first wife and he meets her in the aspens unexpectedly and he gets a date with her and as he's walking away he falls on the ground and the physical acting by sebastian, uh stan, is just phenomenal, like the way he gets up and then he does the, the trump, little one wave and he does the finger and I was like yo he got that, he got the little, the little like he got the, the hand gestures, like the, the body movements.
Speaker 1:What am I? Body language.
Speaker 2:Hand gestures yeah the body language.
Speaker 1:He got that really. I think he was on point with that with the couple times that I tapped in and actually paid attention to the movie.
Speaker 2:And then it goes into explain what's going on in real life. So, if you're not familiar, if you haven't heard I'm pretty sure you have we just got a 400 million. Trump just got a 400 million dollar plane from qatar. So if you're not familiar with qatar, I have a clip from 2017 where donald trump was telling us his thoughts about qatar and how they should be handled and and things of that nature, and I want y'all to, after you listen to trump in 2017, talk about Qatar.
Speaker 2:I want you to ask would this be somebody that you would take a gift from Especially one of such high sophistication in regards to, like a $400 million Boeing plane.
Speaker 6:The nation of Qatar, unfortunately, has historically been a funder of terrorism at a very high level and in the wake of that, conference nations came together and spoke to me about confronting Qatar over its behavior. So we had a decision to make Do we take the easy road or do we finally take a hard but necessary action? We have to stop the funding of terrorism. I decided, along with Secretary of State Rex Tillerson, our great generals and military people, the time had come to call on Qatar to end its funding. They have to end that funding.
Speaker 2:So I wanted to paint this picture for y'all, okay, just to get an understanding. Like just some of the politics in Qatar. So Qatar is run by a royal family? Yeah, there is no uh, yeah, there is no government where people are elected democracy the prime minister is appointed by the royal family. Yeah, so there's nothing's changed. And what guitar's business has been since 2017 to now?
Speaker 2:it's the same family and if you want to believe that they're supporting terrorism in regards to supporting her mom, they still do that. That hasn't changed. And we can do the countless other, uh, potential threats that have been in the in the middle east, where they, again, they've been associated with like and all sorts of other people. So hopefully, we don't get Probably don't need to say any more of these people's names, so we don't get demonetized, but this has been a normal thing in regards to what Qatar has operated with. I don't understand how he could be so trusting as to receive a plane from these people. And again, I don't mean it in something like that, I just mean like, like, have you not heard of the trojan horse? Like, like.
Speaker 2:This is like the oldest story in the book, because, again, the worst thing that they can have on there is a uh, armed explosive, the, the. That's the one of the worst things that you say immediately for Trump. Or they have a tracking device, they have honing objects. We just see what Israel did with them pagers, where they got pagers inside, yeah, of the uh and then blew up the pagers. So what do you think they can get inside of this plane? What do you think, when you put this in a holding deck with other technologies, what they could try to acquire?
Speaker 1:okay, I'm not too, um, worried about his safety, um. So I'm just worried about, like, what it's going to cost the american, the average american. So I just I did a quick little google research on how much it costs to operate Air Force One. So, if you don't know, air Force One is the secure plane that the president is supposed to take. It's extremely luxurious. There's different bedrooms, there's like a gym in there. It's a little ridiculous for a plane, right? So the annual cost to operate Air Force One is significant. So the cost of the flight per hour is around $177,000. And it translates to about $2,964 per minute thousand nine hundred sixty four dollars per minute. So that's that's what he's already like forsaking and saying that he's not going to use that. He's going to use an unsecure plane.
Speaker 2:That is probably like because of the fact that it's not government mandated, funded whatever legal like it's, it's probably also going to cost more money, I can imagine, because they're gonna have to go through there and make sure that that is a hundred percent.
Speaker 1:Secret service is gonna have to do their whole thing. It's not the actual like mandated plane, so it's probably a longer process.
Speaker 2:We have no idea what goes on with that, but why are you inconveniencing these people and that's more like more taxpayer money to go to, and it's disgusting because we know you just put a golf course out there like you just put. I think it was the united amirates they just gave them 1.5.
Speaker 2:He's literally right now traveling the middle east, uh, giving out money to the highest bidder. So if you come in with money for trump, he's going to let you leave with something. And the mask is coming off because the conservative, one of his biggest soldiers and supporter, laura loomer, is calling him out on this. Because if it's one thing that they'll respect, they respect you, donald, through and through, but once they start seeing you doing deals with brown people, that ain't.
Speaker 1:That's not gonna fly and that's what he's gonna start doing. What he what you broke stupid white middle americans thought he was going to do, is the opposite of what he's going to do, because he doesn't give a fuck about y'all, just like he don't give a fuck about black people. But y'all are even stupider because y'all think y'all are like top of the cream of the crop, and you're not. You're poor and you're desolate and you're at the bottom of the barrel and you think, just because you're white, you're not at the bottom of the barrel with the the rest of the poor blacks. You fucking are. You're in the same group and you're voting differently because your brain doesn't work as well. You're fucking stupid.
Speaker 1:Y'all are idiots and I hope y'all get everything that comes to y'all. And the only thing about hoping that y'all get everything that comes to y'all is that, like there are people who didn't vote for him, who are just going to feel the effects of Trump being president even though they didn't vote for him, but all you motherfuckers that voted for him, all the farmers who can't sell soy to china. Now I hope you, I hope your family fucking starves. I swear to god, I'm not even missing my words.
Speaker 2:I hope your family starves well, usually that's not good, because then that's probably gonna mean a lot of americans might starve too. But no, the ones that are selling.
Speaker 1:No, because I'm. I'm talking about the specific farmers who were selling soy to China and because of terrorists, because of Trump, their livelihoods are at stake. I'm talking about that specific faction of farmers, not the ones who are like growing strawberries and potatoes for us.
Speaker 2:And then there's also there's another story going out that they're saying that Trump and Benjamin Yahoo are at odds and that this him going around the Middle East, accepting these favors and giving these potential opposition money and resources is going to come into the detriment of Israel. I'm going to explain to you all what exactly is going on right now. This is going to be my conspiracy, so you can say what you want to say with it. Is going on right now. This is gonna be my conspiracy, so you can say what you want to say with it. Trump is holding off on the bigger conflict with iran until close to his election just really quickly.
Speaker 1:Trump has already spent over 26 million as of late march 2025, playing fucking golf.
Speaker 2:We talked about that last week remember yeah, I just wanted to fucking tell you, let's try it all again.
Speaker 2:So no, I'm saying what the plan is is essentially. It's. It's kind of obvious to me and I think it's going to become more so. Benjamin Yahoo, the prime minister of Israel, has a election coming up next year. He has been looked at not in the highest regard. His approval ratings haven't been where people wanted to be at and it's not sure if he will win another election, but you know it would help him win another election and is not sure if he will win another election, but you know what would help him win another election Filling in those promises and giving the blood to the community that they want, which is Iran. He has been discussing an attack on Iran, saying that Iran needs to be stopped.
Speaker 2:The conflict between Israel and Iran has only been growing, and that will be something to do so that you can remain in power, because during war times, more likely your constituents will stay with the party that's already in power. The thing about it, too, is prime ministers in Israel don't have a term limit, so he can be the prime minister for as long as people voted me. People don't really, you know, may not notice, but benjamin yahoo was actually the prime minister years ago and then other people won and then he came back into being the prime minister about, I think, 2022 I believe may have been before that, but I believe trump wants to hold off on the iran conflict until his election. And so what do you? Do you make israel have to really come to you if you empower all their opposition, everybody who's giving them money to stop the rebels who are negatively affecting israel, who are doing things that are not in their country's interest, and now they'll come back home. They'll make sure they give you exactly what you want so that when you need this war to happen, the conflict can go down.
Speaker 2:I honestly feel like when 2028, he's going to want a war to be very close, something very similar to what happened with world war ii, with the economy being in disarray due to tariffs and the great depression and all that and then having this war be something that he can use to manipulate us so that we go into third term trump. That's the. That's that's what I think is going to happen. I maybe sound crazy right now, but that's honestly.
Speaker 2:It truly third term is just scary it's scary, but if you like, add that in there.
Speaker 1:With a global conflict we would have to destroy the constitution completely, like regardless of global conflict, like the constitution has been upheld through world war one, two, like but state of emergencies can allow for things to get overturned, so I don't think state of emergency should ever overturn the constitution.
Speaker 2:I mean the state of emergency is why he was able to do tears, because he just said this is a national emergency it's not, though. That's all he got to say, though he's just fucking not, he, he, he abuses that like no other.
Speaker 2:I will definitely say that yeah, he abuses that like no other, I mean other presidents have done so, like even with biden and guitar and all that, like he has had relations with them too, but it's always been, at least from a sign of strength and not a sign of, oh, you can pay me and then I'll bend over for you. So yeah and then he's letting in these yarpees what is that?
Speaker 1:a yarpee yeah, I don't know what that is so south african, white, south africans the term oh no, just just fucking caucasian people, just caucasian people.
Speaker 2:No yarpees is better, because that's the term that the black south africans call the whites oh, is that a slur?
Speaker 1:yeah, okay, it's like yeah, yarpees, that's the term that the black South Africans call the whites. Oh, is that a slur.
Speaker 2:Yeah. Okay, yeah, yarpies, that's what I was called Elon at.
Speaker 2:So Elon then got Trump to bring in about 60 Yarpies into the country. They're going to be like in Idaho and North Carolina. These are farmers from South Africa, the apartheid capital of the world, literally. I was born shortly after apartheid ended, so that's not that long ago. They were one of the racist, the racist capital of the world. And now what's been going on in this country? Now we can wrap up here and finish up, but I just want people to know, like, what's going on in their country, because they're. If you let them listen to you, they'll tell you a lot of things that's going on regarding racial oppression, and so in a recent White House pressing, they discussed this, and this is what Carolyn Leavitt had to say about the new South Africans that we're bringing into the country.
Speaker 9:Showed support for South African refugees that are coming to the United States next week. Can you talk about what these refugees are fleeing and why this is a priority for the administration?
Speaker 10:Ms Well, the President has actually signed an executive order on that matter. My office can get it back to you, michael, but this group in South Africa has faced racial persecution. In fact, the government there has vowed to take away their farmland that they own, and so the president has talked significantly about this. As for further details on refugee claims and asylum claims, I would defer you to the State Department.
Speaker 2:So the racial discrimination that she is referring to in that clip is the fact that the government, who is now being controlled by the majority, the black people in south africa, are changing laws that were done in 1913 the land act that took land away from them so that these white farmers could own, uh, almost all the land. They're like seven percent of the population owning 80 of the land. And now what they're doing is they're righting racial wrongs and it goes back to the black fatigue conversation that we had but they don't feel as though they need to be done correctly, reparations done in this regard. They feel like, oh no, this is just how the world should be and why are we fixing it? Like I literally see folks getting upset that they referred to the people who were coming into the country as descendants of white supremacists, as if nelson mandela wasn't out here trying to fight apartheid, and many of these people who are like gen xers lifetime.
Speaker 1:Yeah, so like you like nothing.
Speaker 2:Mandela just passed away I mean, it was probably like 10 years ago now it feels like just well, I mean, you know, go back to the mandela affecting people, though he died years ago.
Speaker 2:So it feels like just Well, I mean, you know, go back to the Mandela effect. People thought he died years ago, so. But no, it's just, it's ludicrous to try to paint these people. So Charlie Kirk trying to say oh look, the Dems don't like white people because everybody's being critical of these South Africans. They are not refugees. Refugees don't look as fat as these guys look.
Speaker 1:Look as fat as these guys look. Do you remember when this first started happening and there was a bunch of propaganda going around that africans were?
Speaker 2:killing white farm workers, the dutch or whatever?
Speaker 1:just, I don't know, just to get them out of here like it doesn't even matter, we're just murdering them yeah, and there's literally no reports of that.
Speaker 2:The only farmers that have died have been crime. It's not been any racially motivated incidences, and what they'll try to highlight is like they're killed the bower, which is like basically killed the Dutch farmer, and they're talking about the white people who came and stole their land. They sing a song, yes, about it, but again no one's dying. Y'all come over here, y'all have y'all racist tunes and y'all actually killing and murdering white black people. So again I saw somebody that did that said something really funny. They said we getting the most racist white people and we bringing them around the most racist black people and we think nothing's gonna happen hey all y'all boys in north carolina can't be racist watch out for them yarpees, because they gonna come with that prejudice of no other.
Speaker 2:They got words for us that we ain't heard before, so that's why I'm introducing the Yarpie to y'all. Don't let these South Africans win. Okay, they not good people. They not If you white and you claim that you actually from Africa, I'm gonna laugh in your face If you white and you in Africa and you claim to be a refugee.
Speaker 1:Like shut the fuck up With your stupid ass bullshit. Like y'all just. Elon's little second and third cousins FUG. Like shut the fuck up With your stupid ass bullshit. Like y'all just.
Speaker 2:Elon's little second and third cousins. They just be saying shit. It's disgusting. Like I didn't talk about this last week. We were talking about the Mark Lamont Hill thing. But the fact that that white girl that was on there was using the language of black scholars and black thought leaders when they've talked about real racism in this country, it's disgusting. Yo yeah, like that stuff is gross. And the fact that y'all are trying to co-op our language that we have created and gets y'all oppression to act like y'all are oppressed in any kind of capacity is petty disgusting and just, I think the white man's dream is to be oppressed for real, so that he can complain about it it's what to be expected from you, peckerwood, so salute but I think we can wrap it up here life is a labor of love.
Speaker 2:I don't remember the rest, though, but and let's make this thing laugh and remember these corporations are not sure like I feel like I remember it a little bit more than you do you know, and you used to say it because I used to read it, so all right uh, we'll be wrapping up here. I want to thank y'all for listening to talk fnf tv. We hope we gave y'all a very interesting show. Uh, tell them what to do.
Speaker 1:Tell them what to do. Critically, think before you fucking just regurgitate what you saw. Also follow us on talkfnftv. On Instagram, twitter, facebook. If you're currently listening on any of the streaming services, please give us like, hit that download button and if you're listening on YouTube, a like, comment, subscribe. If you don't agree with anything we said, please comment. We love. We love a good, educated debate where people aren't throwing slurs and insults, and we will happily have discourse with y'all.
Speaker 2:Love you, bye all the engagement is money now, baby.