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October 22, 2024 88 mins

Rod and Karen banter about Karen's excellent checkup, Marvel removing "Blade" from the calendar and Panthers playing in Germany. Then they discuss election news, Diddy news, White People News and sword ratchetness.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
I listened to The Black Guy Who Tips because Rod
and Karen are hot.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
Hey, welcome to the Black Guy to his podcast. I'm
your host Rod, joined as always by my co host,
and we're live on a Tuesday. Ready to do some
podcasts and find us everywhere you get podcasts. The official
weapon of the show is and unofficial sport and bullet

(00:24):
ball Extreme and you know how it is. We're just
gonna get in here and start talking. Karen, do you
have any banter? I do? All right? Do you have any?
Do you have any? Do you have any banter? Anter? Banter? Banter? Anter?

(00:51):
Do you have any banter? Talk to me? Do you
have any? All right? Banter?

Speaker 1 (01:07):
Me up, baby, Yeah, my banter is short.

Speaker 3 (01:09):
But it's something I had I talked to you about
earlier today. I had went to get my annual and
for the first time in a long time, my numbers,
all my numbers are really really good. And the doctor
she she went and she did like, uh, because I've
been going to this doctor since I was in my twenties,

(01:31):
fucker very long time. And so she did this stretch
where she followed my weight like over like the past
ten years, and it fluctuated, but she was saying that
it's going down, which is which is what we want
and stuff like.

Speaker 1 (01:47):
That, and I was I was happy about that.

Speaker 3 (01:50):
I was like, yay, cause you know, I know I've
been slowly, you know, losing weight and things like that.
But she texted me and what is the my chart app?
And you know, for those of you to use my chart.
Once they the test results come in, they just kind
of automatically send them to you. A lot of times
even before your doctor I don't know if they may

(02:10):
have revenue, may have not.

Speaker 2 (02:11):
Send them to you. I think before the doctor even
sees on okay, doctor know me sends you something like
the next airs or later.

Speaker 1 (02:17):
On okay, And that's what happened.

Speaker 3 (02:19):
So, you know, a lot of times I don't even
know what a lot of those numbers mean and stuff
like that. All I know is everything was in the greens.
I was like, I guess I'm doing good. But she
wrote me and she was saying that my numbers are
looking great. Cholesterol, blood pressures. She was like, everything is
looking really really good. And the biggest thing that I'm

(02:41):
very proud of, and it's something I have been struggling
with for a long long time. She was like, you
got your vitamin D to where it needs to be
because most black and brown people, because the pigmentation of
our skin is very hard for us to soak up
the sun and a lot of us don't like to
be in the sun. But we need to get vitamin D.
And vitamin D comes from the sun, and a lot

(03:03):
of times all we need to do is put put
on a little bit of sunscreen and going out there
and we'll be all right.

Speaker 2 (03:08):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (03:09):
And so it's one of those things.

Speaker 3 (03:10):
I was very happy about that one over wrong because
my vitamin D has been low for years. Like every
time I go, she's like, you got to get these
vitamin D p You got to get this, she said,
very very important, particularly as you get older being a woman,
with your bone density and things like that.

Speaker 1 (03:28):
It reduces us your parosas and things like that, you know.
And so I was like, okay.

Speaker 3 (03:33):
So I went in the room after I read that,
and I was telling Rojick. I just told Rojick, thank you,
because you know, I know that, but changes that he
made impacted me because.

Speaker 1 (03:44):
I'm I'm I'm along for the ride.

Speaker 3 (03:46):
So I'm like, okay, you know, I want to make
the transition better for us both.

Speaker 1 (03:52):
And I know these.

Speaker 3 (03:54):
These adjustments are gonna benefit me as well as you
and some over the about year we are close to
a year, about around a year, we've been slowly making changes,
you know, with sugar intake and salt and take and
looking for alternatives and things, you know, and it opened
up my mind all jo decided to eating a lot

(04:15):
of foods, not that I would not have eaten, but
I would not have thought about eating them in the
ways that they've been presented to me, you know, And
so it's kind of opened up my palate to a
lot of different things.

Speaker 1 (04:29):
So I am very excited about that. I'm excited about being.

Speaker 3 (04:35):
Healthier as I get older because as you get older,
things change, your body change, you go through menopause, your
metabolism is in this fast and all these good, good,
great things. And so I am just wanted to say
that I thank you, I love you. And because Roger
does the bulk of the cooking here, and so I

(04:56):
know for me that's made like a big, big difference
with him preparing and cooking the foods and things, and
that even when we go out to eating things, we
actually eat a lot, excuse me, a lot different than.

Speaker 1 (05:07):
We used to. And some those are the things that
actually matter.

Speaker 3 (05:12):
And the thing is, it wasn't this thing everybody thinks
you have to go in and just throw everything out
in the kitchen sink and quote unquote starve yourself to death.

Speaker 1 (05:21):
No, I eat what I want to eat.

Speaker 3 (05:23):
But it's you know, it's just moderation and alternate versions
of like Roger has these popsicle sticks in there, and
they are fucking delicious.

Speaker 1 (05:30):
There's some kind of fruit popsicle sticks and they are delicious.

Speaker 3 (05:34):
And for somebody like me who has a sweet, sweet,
sweet tooth, like I love sweets, it's an excellent substitute.
It's not high in sugar, and it's very good for you,
but it still gives you that.

Speaker 1 (05:46):
Thing that you want.

Speaker 3 (05:47):
And every now and then I'm like, you know what,
I want a cookie, and I eat that cookie and
then I'll be fine.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
Like the thing I've realized and a lot of kind
of nutrition and stuff.

Speaker 3 (05:58):
And they're like, yeah, if you want a cookie, eat
the cook then like, don't wait, don't deny yourself because
for people like me, yeah, when I eat that sugar,
I eat the cake. I meat the whole cake, I meat,
the pie, I'm gonnat the cookies, and I mean everything
else in sight with sugar in it, which defeats the
whole purpose. So you know, that was like we rather
you eat this a little bit of sugar now and
going with your life and then you know, eat the

(06:19):
whole thang. So you know, I'm kind of learning how
to balance you know, those things out and even with
like chips and things like that, reduce salt, reduced sodium,
you know, salt free, you know, and so those small
changes have made the big difference in my numbers are showing,
and I'm very happy and very excited.

Speaker 2 (06:39):
Good, I'm glad. You know it's I was gonna do
this thing, you know, for me really, but you know,
you're never like you know, even when I talk to
my trainer and my nutrition is when I first started,
you know, they were like, get your wife doing it too,
and you know, I was like, no, she's not, but
you know, she's was basical, You're gonna do whatever I do.

(07:01):
So as far as just like if I cook something,
she'll eat it. If I, you know, order something, we'll
we'll order it together or whatever. And so you know,
I think for them, that was basically good enough, because
you know, I think one of the biggest things that
actually sabotages people trying to do what I'm doing is
like you have someone else in your house that's just

(07:22):
like I'm not doing that shit or that's that's your thing,
not my thing. And you know, for discipline and stuff,
it can be hard because you know, if I'm getting
brown rice and salmon and broccoli for dinner and then
somebody walks in and they got you know, uh, Chipotle
or some shit or what you know, what what you

(07:43):
know they got, they got whatever the thing is that
I'm like, I shouldn't be eating this. It's harder to
look in that fridge and make the right choice every day.
So a lot of stuff was just setting myself up
to wind by being like, let me keep food in
here that I know it's good for me and it's
healthier and smarter. And yeah, I haven't felt like I've

(08:06):
been quote unquote denying myself because at least the team
that I have, they haven't been like don't eat, don't
like starve yourself, don't eat or only eat this or
only eat that. You know, it's kind of been like
if you can just kind of adjust your mind to
getting too Like eighty percent of the time, you're very
conscious of eating like healthier, smarter foods, and you know,

(08:29):
when you cook it yourself and stuff. You know, I'm
always trying to look for and explore ways to make
delicious food because I think there's a mindset that comes
as like, oh, if it's healthy, it doesn't taste good. Yeah.
That hasn't been my experience really, but you know, I

(08:51):
appreciate you. You haven't like sabotaged me or you know,
been like, oh, I'm not doing that or that's for you,
and so uh when I do cook something for the
both of us or whatever, it's you know, it's it's
good to know that I'm not having to, you know,
to worry about that stuff. But yeah, it's you know,

(09:14):
it's been a good thing. When I went to the doctor,
you know, my numbers are trending in the right direction.
I still have ways to go on everything, but you know,
it's it's a long term goal. It's a long term
lifestyle change. And so uh uh, I'm glad that it's

(09:35):
it's affecting you as well in a positive way, you know,
cause and it's just really been about discipline and sticking
to it as opposed to you know before when I
would kind of try and then give up and then
try and give up or be like, well I didn't
do it perfect, so I guess I gotta just quit,
you know. Now I don't really worry about that. But yeah,

(09:55):
you know, shout out to the doctor and and my
chart app and all the where they track your numbers
and stuff. I'm glad. I'm glad that's looking good. And
you know, vitamin D is not just going out and
getting sunshine or taking a vitamin deep pill. A lot
of it's just what you eat, you know, mushrooms, greens
like healthy like certain foods have vitamin D and them

(10:18):
egg yolks.

Speaker 1 (10:20):
Of eggs.

Speaker 2 (10:21):
Yeah, so it's like if you keep those things around
the house and make those decisions easier every day, you know,
it just helps. And you know, I would like to
be around. I like you to be around, and so
I'm just trying to make choices that make it easier
to be around.

Speaker 3 (10:38):
Yes, And I know for me, my I don't want
to say biggest fear my thing was I My favorite
food in the whole wild word is pizza. I absolutely
love pizza. I know I said it before and I
probably said it again. I love pizza, and so I
was saying I don't want to give up pizza. And
so we actually got really really good alternatives. When I

(11:00):
go I was like, you know what, I'll try to
recrust and it ain't bad. I'll try to call a
flyer crust it ain't bad. Like like I literally started
doing stuff before. Before I was sat person, I was like, uh, Niko,
do what am I gonna eat that? Phoe give me dope,
you know, because pizza man out of dough. But now
I'm like, oh, and also something that I've realized that

(11:20):
I'm more self conscious of. Once you kind of get
into the habit of changing your mindset.

Speaker 1 (11:27):
Of how you look at food whenever you go into restaurants.

Speaker 3 (11:32):
I know this might sound stupid, I've been in the
restaurants now and now the menu looks completely different to
me because now I'm seeing things on the menu you
did before I would have completely glossed my ass across
and flipped the page. Now I'm like, oh, they got
biggen options up. Oh they got saddled options up.

Speaker 1 (11:49):
Oh you can get it, you know this way that way,
you know.

Speaker 2 (11:52):
So it's funny though, because you still order the same shit.
I don't like, I'm not going into restaurants and really
ordering much different if I'm just going out less and
then I try to go to a couple of places
where I know it's like food that is always feeling
and good and not you know, gonna gonna go too

(12:14):
crazy out of my like, you know what I want
to eat, but you order the same stuff. It's not
like you're going in the ordering salads and vegan stuff.
So I don't know how you but it started to
tell the audience that lie.

Speaker 1 (12:25):
But I can see it on the menu.

Speaker 2 (12:26):
Oh okay, see it on the mean before you pick
your thing that you always get.

Speaker 1 (12:31):
Yep. Oh, I didn't even know this was an option.

Speaker 2 (12:38):
The Blade movie with myherschel Ali. It looks like it's
getting it's gotten taken off of the slate of movies
that they're announcing, uh for Marvel next year. They So
I don't know if that means it's not getting made
or if they just don't think it'll be out that
time next year, what or what? But the one thing

(13:01):
I will say, if Tyler Perry would have did it
it would have been on. We would have been on
Tyler Perry Presents Medea's Blade and medea Blood Hunt Part three.
By now already the script would have been written, the
movie would have been out. We were been wondering how
bad it is and why you won't let nobody else write,

(13:23):
But it would have been done. And that's a damn
shame that all them people at Marvel and they still
can't finish this movie. And then the last thing, on
the football sports note, I was looking up the Panther
schedule and apparently we played the Giants in Munich, Germany,
Afia's country land. We play the Giants in Munich, Germany.

(13:50):
And both of those teams are abysmally bad, very bad.
And before this they've been playing the games in like
You're up or something, but now or some other part
of Europe. But now this is the one we're exporting
to Germany. And honestly, I want to apologize the Apia
and all the Germans because this is the worst thing

(14:12):
America has ever done to the country of Germany.

Speaker 1 (14:15):
Right, sorry ass teams.

Speaker 2 (14:18):
All these teams know these two specific sorry ass teams,
the Carolina Panthers and the New York Giants are the
worst football to watch. And no, and America has never
done anything to Germany that's as bad as what you'll
about to have happened, terrible as football. I'm sorry that

(14:38):
we do it to you. You know, this is why
we vote, right y'all. You know, hopefully Kamala Harris will
outlaw this when it's her time.

Speaker 1 (14:47):
When is it gonna Sunday night daytime?

Speaker 2 (14:50):
Hopefully her foreign policy will will get well, get this
out of here. It'll probably be in the morning our time,
but yeah, probably be nighttime that time, because you know,
Opia will be ahead in the future.

Speaker 1 (14:59):
For don't be like nine am, Like, who the fuck
is up watching? For foul?

Speaker 2 (15:04):
Yeah? That was that that that they say they're trying
to go to game overseas? But why you keep sending
them this ship? You know that's terrible?

Speaker 3 (15:13):
Yeah, you know, and maybe it's just my Americanism thing.
I'm like, why y'all. I'm like you, hey, why y'all
send over there with this with this terrible quality?

Speaker 1 (15:23):
You don't be sending the best.

Speaker 2 (15:24):
Teams or what else? What else can we send over
the Herpes?

Speaker 3 (15:29):
Like?

Speaker 2 (15:29):
What? What? What were the other considerations of things to
send over there and ship. It just don't make sense
that you would do this to export your game, like
this is what we want to We want people to
celebrate the NFL. Okay, cool, what we're gonna do saying
Patrick Mahomes and motherfucker's that's good? No, no, no, no,
not that, that's crazy. Let's send uh, let's send some

(15:51):
bed bugs and Charlotte the Carolina Panthers. All right, let's
get into uh the show. Uh, go ahead and start
with the election.

Speaker 3 (16:04):
Running against Kamala has this.

Speaker 1 (16:11):
We're not going that. This president. We're not going that.
This president. We're not going that. So let's be clear
about that.

Speaker 2 (16:20):
Get me running against running against me? All right, we
got election news because stuff is still happening. It's fast
and furious. There's only a couple of weeks left in
the election cycle, so let's get into it. New evidence
is unsealed on Trump's January sixth rally and how it

(16:44):
was funded. Uh, it's probably not very surprising news to
the rest of us, but because Judge Tanya Chuckin said, look,
I'm I'm not going to seal this evidence, right, trumpingness
lawyers are like, it's this basically election interference. Because you

(17:06):
you letting you not stopping this, and she's like, well,
stopping it the public from knowing what happened is also
election in afferance of a type.

Speaker 1 (17:14):
Yes they need to know.

Speaker 2 (17:16):
Yeah, but yeah, she ruled that she had to do that.
She put it out there and basically they said. The
document show an unnamed organization budgeted as much as three
million dollars on January six for the rally and related events,
including bringing VIP guests and protests to Washington and advise

(17:39):
for a show of force. Several versions of the confidential
to not be disclosed document are included, with some redacted,
and appear to have been prepared for the House January
sixth Committee UH Select Committee investigating the tax, which disclosed
some of the information. Shout out to the January sixth
Select Committee.

Speaker 3 (17:56):
Right because they had this information, but you know they
was for them, so they literally couldn't put it out.
But that Jodge was like, you know what, no, we
gonna put this information. And some of them was steroid active.
So we still don't know everything.

Speaker 2 (18:08):
But the document released Friday shows that one million dollars
was budgeted for Turning Point Action, a grassroot nonprofit group
founded in twenty nineteen by Charlie Kirk to mbode in
young Conservatives through grassroots activism. The money was earmarked for
having TPA Turning Point Active Action deployed social media influencers
and students from around the country to Washington to attend

(18:31):
a rally, to produce all the video content at that event,
and to run nationwide ads educating millions about the significance
of January sixth for President Trump. And it's interesting too,
because part of the reason they have all this evidence
of what happened on January sixth is because all these
people went there acting like influencers, filming the whole damn thing,

(18:52):
giving all the evidence for Merrit Garland.

Speaker 3 (18:54):
And the gpsing and tiktoking and Instagram and the you
Isshitboy of.

Speaker 2 (19:00):
Five hundred thousand was budgeted for a group funded founded
by Donald Trump Junior Call Saved the US Senate to
stop alleged voter fraud in Georgia and help re elect
republic Republican Senate candidates Kelly Loffler and David Purdue, who
I think both lost. The document said the investment would
help support attendance at the January at a January fourth

(19:21):
rally with Trump and Georgia, and to make additional ad
byes featuring Trump's eldest son to encourage Senators Loffler and
Purdue to vote to stop to steal in Georgia. On
January sixth, The budget documents show another four hundred thousand
dollars budgeted by for the Tea Party express what happened
to them?

Speaker 1 (19:41):
They still around, right?

Speaker 2 (19:43):
I mean, if you think about it, the Tea Party
was a precursor to everything that happened with the Republican
Party and MAGA.

Speaker 3 (19:50):
They just morphed into MAGA, but it's still the foundation
of it. That time fundy is the Tea Party. As
far as the Nigga didn't disappeal.

Speaker 2 (19:57):
Yeah, Donald Trump is essentially like the prince that was
promised for them. Yes, but yeah. So they created a
centralized website to promote the rally events on January fifth
and sixth, including targeted ads and a television and radio
and digital campaign to promote the January sixth rally and
encourage attendance. Another two hundred thousand dollars is budgeted to

(20:20):
a person whose name and company were redacted to assist
with his organization efforts. And a separate group whose name
was also redacted, was budgeted to receive one hundred thousand
dollars to estimate the costs of their hotels, private flights,
car services, and private security for about ten to fifteen
of its members. The Republican Attorney General's Rule of Law
Defense was budgeted to receive two hundred thousand dollars to

(20:42):
fund their legal efforts to fight the election fraud nationwide
and foul lawsuits, and about three hundred thousand dollars is
budgeted for speaker fees and travel for VP speakers and
a bussing program to bring in rally goers within one
hundred and eighty mile radius. Basically, this is a huge
undertaking that was extremely coordinatenated. The idea that this was
spontaneously just turned into something the.

Speaker 1 (21:04):
Way he keeps talking.

Speaker 3 (21:05):
I was like, no, many people don't show up like
that unless this shit was planned.

Speaker 2 (21:09):
Yeah. So I just you know, I appreciate them going
into this. I appreciate them continue to do the work.
I'm glad they unsealed this. Shout out to Jack Smith
and shout Tanya chuck In. But once again, none of
this information is information that I feel I would be like,
oh my god, I did not. I couldn't see that.

(21:30):
I didn't think it was. It all feels like shit
that we knew.

Speaker 1 (21:34):
Right or should or no right.

Speaker 3 (21:35):
And and you know, over my third eye, I believe
it's probably some most shit that they was like we
either don't have it or we rejected it or whatever
it is, it's most shit.

Speaker 2 (21:45):
Well, yeah, this isn't the trial, you know what I'm saying,
Like there's evidence that will only be allowed in court.
There's a bunch of redacted stuff, is I said when
I started reading it. So yeah, it can't be the
whole thing. It's it's literally impossible. Right, Let's see Olivia
Nuzzy and the New York Magazine, Olivia Newsy. I think
it's how you been out, said n u z Z.

(22:06):
I've been saying. Nuzzy, Olivia Newsy and the New York
Magazine parted ways after the rf K JR Side chick ship. Yeah,
so she couldn't get that job back, which I mean
makes sense. What the focus supposed to happen?

Speaker 1 (22:22):
Right, they were not gonna let you keep the job.

Speaker 2 (22:25):
Unrelated but could be related. I don't know, uh, e
Coli outbreak link to McDonald's has chained pulling ingredients from
menus in some states. I don't know, y'all. Did let
Donald Trump hand out the hand out them burgers and
stuff and next thing you know, people died from E coli.

Speaker 3 (23:06):
That. And this is a result of your fucking defunding
federal government agencies. We've had boy's head, We've had like
a bunch of fucking recalls all over the place. And
this is what happened when this ship isn't regulated with
the oversight that could come in and tell them to
get your shit together.

Speaker 2 (23:27):
And we left Republicans in charge of the House, and
the House controls the budgets. So a lot of times
I think, what and this is how I think it's
a good question to ask. But also it is they
rely on the on the unsophistication of the American voter,
meaning this question is valid to be like, well, why

(23:48):
is this why are you talking about Trump? Biden has
been in office for four years. Why so if the
FDA isn't regulating, then it isn't his fault. No, we
literally left Republicans in charge in the pers in the House.
The House does the budgets.

Speaker 1 (24:08):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (24:09):
So when you see stuff still being stripped or not
being funded, or the government being shut down or whatever
it is. That is because Republicans right now have the
rains and are the ones who decide what the fuck
happens when it comes to federal agencies and stuff. So
when you have these things happen under Trump, they don't
just immediately get fixed because Biden comes into office. It's

(24:32):
why you need to pay attention. You need to stay engaged,
you need to vote in your off cycle elections, you
need to vote down ballot. It can't just be about president.
This shit really fucking matters. That being said, I don't
know what exactly happened in the details of why the
fuck this is. I was just really making a joke
about Trump, but yeah, we have had a lot of
recalls and stuff. Charlemagne has filed a cease and desist

(24:56):
order against Donald Trump over that campaign. At what that
uses the Breakfast club as useful idiots who are talking
down against Kamala Harris's funding of transgender prisoners surgical procedures
DA DA, DA DA, and where it's like I don't
want my tax dollars use for that, So she is

(25:18):
doing this with transgender like that in.

Speaker 3 (25:21):
A swing state. That shit is on fucking loop here.
Oh I'm tired of that commercial.

Speaker 2 (25:25):
Right, But he is announcing a ceasing decist. I guess
he announced it on his I guess on it maybe
on this show or something. Ceasing desists being sent, he
announced in response to the backlash of the misleading remarks
in the ad, Since when does Trump care about what's legal? Well,

(25:47):
that's that's just very funny to me, because, like I said,
it's a platform that is engaged and dabbled in transphobia
many a time. They think it's funny. I don't think
that it's that incongruent that Trump didn't twist your arm
or take you so out of context for you to
line up with his point of view. He could have
just played when y'all had little devall on there cracking up,

(26:10):
you know, about beating up trans women and doing hate crimes,
Like it ain't really that hard of a stretch to find,
you know, somebody like this saying shit, it's why you
really shouldn't dabble in those things in the first place.
But yeah, earlier you called that shit effective, you said
it was a good ad, you know, So I guess
he's now trying to.

Speaker 1 (26:32):
Base must have got upset.

Speaker 2 (26:34):
Yeah, because I think the entire thing he's done of
now trying to like align himself closer to Kamala Harrison,
not try to do all that like gotcha shit. I
think a big party has just been that. Motherfuckers aren't
playing about it anymore. I don't think it's like he
grew harder, became like super sensitive, like this is educated
or smart or informed. I truly think he just looked

(26:56):
at the way the crowd was blowing, realized that the
black men ain't gonna vote and these damn Democrats. Shit
was getting kind of played out. Nobody wants to hear
it at this moment, and so it's like, let me
just chill the fuck out because it's it's just it's
not fruitful, and people aren't putting up with it anymore.
They're looking at me and saying, I'm a fucking opt.

(27:16):
They're not saying like, yeah, man, you know that's what
I'm talking about the kind of people saying that shit. Now,
are you know your lord Jamars and and you know
and kuna as dudes that are just blatantly, like blatantly
anti black that make their money that way right, And
I don't think it helps his brand to be aligned
with you know, your Jason Whitlocks and shit like that.

(27:37):
So but yes, it's very interesting to see him sending
that cease and desist because I doubt his heart grew
through sizes, you know.

Speaker 3 (27:47):
And we would see if Donald Trump even honest it right, right,
because that ship is still gonna repeat here.

Speaker 2 (27:52):
I saw it today, right. I mean that's but that's
the problem. You can never unread. You can't put that
two paste back into two because we saw it. So
for whatever it is with you being like, oh no,
I don't want to, well, they used it many times.
It's been viewed. It looks like you aligned with Trump
on this ship, and people are putting you in the

(28:13):
same category when they look up and they see, you know,
your ice cubes or your you know, Walker Flockers and
all this shit that that align with Trump. The fact
that you have a platform and you don't admonish this, dude,
you spend more time banging on Democrats. This is the
this is the setup, this is the grip. This is
how you get got. This is why you have to

(28:34):
be very fucking pointed and concise with what you have
to say about shit on your show. But I mean,
it doesn't behoove them to do that because they go
more viral doing the opposite. So I get I get
why they wouldn't want to do it, right. This is
the this is the downside of yes.

Speaker 3 (28:50):
This is the downside yes for them in their platform.
The other way, it's actually a lot more bit official.

Speaker 1 (28:54):
I get it.

Speaker 2 (28:55):
Yeah, So all right, Uh, let's get into another segment.
He did anything wanting a body and you got it.
Tell him it's been apparently a long time since we

(29:34):
did this, or just that's this many articles every day
because goddamn, I didn't know. It's just as many articles
over here. I'm gonna go through them fast as ship. Sorry, everybody,
you know I ain't been keeping up. I don't like
going in too much detail with this motherfucker, but we're
gonna try to go through as fast as we can.
Here we go. Russell Simmons fails to pay three million
dollars in a greed settlement to three women, including sexual

(29:55):
assault accuser. Okay, that's how it goes. That's what happened
with Trump, That's what happened to Diddy, That's what happened
with all these.

Speaker 3 (30:03):
Fucking around they don't pay, and guess what they ended
up paying anyway, or either they don't pay, and now
you're in trout and they talk about the decise of
your dick.

Speaker 4 (30:11):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (30:11):
So he reportedly owes three million dollars to three women,
including one who accuse him of sexual assault. He has
not paid them that previously agreed upon settlements. So that's
how shit ends up in court. So yeah, and of
course he's in bally, so I'm guessing this is just
another reason he'll never come back state side.

Speaker 1 (30:33):
People never step a foot on this soul again.

Speaker 3 (30:36):
And this is the plan that I have one hundred
percent agree and did not w W E man, Yes,
end up not paying somebody, and the ship came out
to you know what, the rule is, pay bitches, pay bitches.

Speaker 1 (30:50):
They money pay pay bitches.

Speaker 2 (30:51):
There you go, guys, if you're sexual assault, somebody pay
the bitches. Okay. Karen said herself that I wouldn't have
said that that way, But all right, Nick Cannon says
people scared to talk about partying with Diddy probably got
something to hide. I'm gonna actually disagree with Nick Cannon
on this, and I know that you know this is

(31:12):
the maybe the funny joke to say or the popular
thing to say, because everybody's looking at these celebrities and
being like you must have did it too. Honestly, dog,
why the fuck would you be talking about it at
this point?

Speaker 1 (31:26):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (31:26):
What the fuck is there to say? If I Roderick
Morrow went to the Game Theory wrap party and then
two years, five years, ten, twenty years later came out
somebody got assaulted at that party that I was. I
was not aware they got assaulted. I wasn't there for
those purposes. Nobody told me. I just went there because

(31:47):
I thought it was a good time. And you asked me, like,
remember how you used to go to all them parties.
I don't want to talk about it. That's not a
crazy fucking thing to say. If anything, it's weird now
to be like, man shit, me and Diddy used to
get it in. I don't know about all that rape shit,
but we used to stay up till four.

Speaker 1 (32:06):
No, it's right, it's the time is time is gone.
And he hadn't done them parties in years. Like, the
fuck we're gonna be talking about that? Don't make sense?

Speaker 2 (32:13):
Yeah, So I don't know, and I don't don't know
if people are doing this to like exonerate themselves, to
distance themselves, Like, hey, man, I wouldn't let them parties.
But if you don't want to talk about it, you
did something, you know, I don't know.

Speaker 3 (32:27):
It's the thing we talked about before, how a lot
of times the what they're looking for is not actually
what happened. It's more speculation. And this is that speculation
ship you were talking about. How it's more intriguing, it's
more gossipy, it's more you got my attention when you

(32:48):
say shit like that, versus be like, hey, just because somebody,
that don't mean they knew what happened.

Speaker 2 (32:53):
Right, So yeah, it's just yeah, but he was on
the breakfast club, So everybody get scared at the talk
because they probably got something. I ain't got nothing to hide.
I was in there harlem shaking, doing all that stuff,
but it wasn't come on whatever. So yeah, I think
a lot of a lot of these celebrities are feeling
pressure to distance themselves. But also a lot of these

(33:14):
celebrities are I think we're just used as window dressing.
I don't think. I don't think because you see a
celebrity at a ditty party that it really means anything.
I think a lot of times these type of people
off you skate shit by being like, look, I'm the
life of the party. Everyone's always around me. I must
be a good person, and then they can do dvus shit.

(33:36):
You know, I don't think it's it's a reason that
your Harvey Weinstein wanted to be like a taste maker
and throw all these shindigs and invites and after parties.
They don't want they they want the appearance of legitimacy
by being having all these people around. And that's why
they don't show everybody the underbelly of the shit that
doesn't even make fucking sense, right. People don't keep that.

(33:57):
Not enough people keep those kind of secrets where everybody's
participating in it and nobody's talking about it like somebody,
you know, somebody will let some slip, somebody will say something.
And even with Diddy over the years, has been slips.
It just hasn't been you know, the stuff that the
juicy shit that people want to hear. But anyway, let's see.

(34:17):
Stephen A. Smith predicts Diddy's defense could score a major
victory if Cassie assault tape is omitted from the twenty
twenty five trial. Uh, man, Stephen ain't just be what
do he even do now? He just be talking?

Speaker 1 (34:31):
Yeah, he's talking here.

Speaker 3 (34:32):
When they said talking ahead, that's what he does. He's
talking here. He getting pays a lot of money to talk.

Speaker 2 (34:37):
I know. But this was on his own separate podcast.
It's just interesting, like, Uh, anyway, I guess he's just
trying to be more like you know, the podcast space.
But yeah, he I guess we do. We know that
that won't be allowed in court. Like it's every reason
for us to know. I don't know, right. Kanye West
ex assistant claims drugging and sexual assault during studio session

(35:00):
with West and Diddy. All right, guess we'll see if
that's true.

Speaker 1 (35:05):
We will see, and I feel about this shit, We
will see.

Speaker 2 (35:09):
He's now did He's now been sued by six new accusers,
including a teen who claims he was assorted at a
white party. They just keep coming forward more and more.
It's two Jane Does and four John Does. They claim
they were sexually asided by cons between nineteen ninety five
and twenty twenty one. One is from a lawsuits from

(35:31):
a man who claims he was sixteen years old when
the mogus sexually sexually assaulted him after being invited to
a white party. Just it's not gonna stop. I mean,
I don't even mean that as a joke. I know
that sounds like I'm saying can't stop, won't stop. I
just I literally mean, it's just more and more people
gonna come forward as other people come forward. Bow Wow

(35:53):
got dragged for complaining about the lack of parties since
Diddy's arrest. Oh they're still Paul Oh all that care.

Speaker 3 (36:02):
Yeah, somebody somebody got a party somewhere, but not as
big as he is.

Speaker 2 (36:05):
No BT Award Weekend like the past to it didn't
feel right. There was no motion, no parties. There was
nowhere to go. He further explained that without Diddy's influence,
there was a hole in the music scene. He even
admitted to telling Jermaine Duprix there's no parties and felt
like something was missing. He was everything hip hop. So
for that to doubt, you just would have never thought.

(36:26):
I disagree with you. Care. I feel like there weren't
whatever the Diddy party scene was. I don't think there
was that during BT Weekend and okay, and I don't
think it would have been smart for anyone to try
to feel that vacuum. I agree, right now seemed like
a kind of like it's kind of hot out here
on the streets. So being like his downfall is my

(36:48):
come up come to the Ludacris parties seemed like the
wrong move to be making right now. So I would
imagine people just went the fuck home or or chilled out,
and they like with they few people they can trust.

Speaker 1 (37:01):
Okay, I'm with you, Okay.

Speaker 3 (37:02):
So basically he was like, there wasn't like a spot
like there wasn't like this is where everybody.

Speaker 2 (37:07):
Did he used to throw the party? Yeah, like and
just they don't have v party anymore because that would
be fucking stupid.

Speaker 3 (37:16):
Yes, and I wouldn't want to take this body either.

Speaker 1 (37:18):
Nope.

Speaker 2 (37:18):
Yeah good. I mean anyway, maybe it's just bow Wow.
I wasn't getting invited. But even if you say that,
that means Diddy was throwing the kind of party that
even bow Wow could come through, Meaning everybody was there.
Bow Wow was there?

Speaker 1 (37:31):
Yes.

Speaker 2 (37:32):
Uh, let's see, did he accuse her claims? Ex attorneys
were cloud chasing and sexual assault and trafficking lawsuit Adria
English the woman who has accused Sean Diddy comes a
sexual assault and trafficking that is notorious Labor Day White
Parties has publically called out her former attorneys, accusing him
of clout chasing. English's statements, shared with USA Today on Saturday,
follows October second withdrawal of her lawyers, Aerel Mitchell Kid

(37:55):
and Steven A. Metcalf, who have now left her to
secure a new representation. So it sounds like her and
ther lawyers fell out. I don't know who withdrew first,
but she's expressed relief at her lawyer's departure statium, I'm
happy with the decision to withdraw, and a legend that
Mitchell Kid had tried to portray her as non credible
in the process. English further criticized a former legal team,

(38:19):
saying their withdrawal made it easier for me to secure
a new professional, non cloud chasing counsel. First of all,
I'm not going front. That doesn't sound good that you
put this statement out with not cloud chasing, and yo,
if your new counsel allowed you to put this on
the ground, it don't I wonder about the new counsel now.

(38:42):
That feels like some courtroom business and cloud chasing is
non professional term. So I don't, man, but this shit
is gonna get messy, And I just want to point
out because this is what happens with people, you know,
with Harvey want Einstein, Bill Cosey, whatever. These men have

(39:06):
been accused of assaulting so many people. If if some
of these people turned out to either be lying, looking
for cloud looking for money, being just unreliable witnesses, not
having evidence, whatever, people will act like that then absolves
them of the other seventy people or whatever. I'm just saying,

(39:27):
I don't know who's telling the truth who's not with
some of this shit. Yes, it does seem sketchy. Your
lawyers fucking said no, and then you put out a
fucking instagram like y'all cloud chasing that does seem sketchy
as fuck. We'll find out in court if this person
has a real case or not, but don't let something
like this distract from all these other people too. Let's

(39:50):
see Diddy's first underage accuser shares proof he was molested
by Start at a nineteen ninety eight Hampton's party. I
think the proof is like a picture of this them
being at the party, so I don't you know, feel
how you feel about that?

Speaker 1 (40:06):
And like I said, we will see with a lot
of this stuff.

Speaker 2 (40:09):
Yeah, I guess if you know, for for people like
Diddy who a lot of their time they're defending their defense,
attorneys are just like he was never there. He doesn't
even know these people. I guess it knocks that down.
It's like here you are in a picture with the
person at the time that they said you knew him.
So uh man, there's so many the fucking accusations and

(40:30):
articles Sean Diddy Combs choked an in turn and put
a UCLA staffer in the headlocked during the brawl. Documental
ledges damn uh, well, we knew he had through like
a kettlebell or something that a UCLA football coach because
they wouldn't play his son.

Speaker 3 (40:47):
Yes, I remember that a few years ago and it
was like a big thing.

Speaker 2 (40:51):
Yes, So I guess it's come back up somehow. Uh.
He was so upset about the way his son was
being disciplined by UCLA football coach and fifteen that he
went to the coach's office and fought with him, briefly
choked then intern, and put another member of the coaching
staff in a headlock, according to a document newly obtained
by the Los Angeles County Prosecutors. But while he was

(41:13):
arrested on suspicion of assault with a daily weapon, making
criminal threats, and battery in the incident, he was not
ultimately charged with any crime. So I guess this is
just old shit coming back up. So much shit. This
is important, I think, because there's so many rumors going
around and not things that aren't confirmed. The fedes did

(41:35):
not find any date rape drug in Diddy's baby or stash,
so people had those rumors going, but the FEDS came
out and said that's we didn't find any It was
just a thousand bottles of baby oil and loub but
nothing was in them.

Speaker 3 (41:50):
Rights we tested it, it was like.

Speaker 1 (41:52):
And it was lou.

Speaker 2 (41:53):
And this is the thing, right, you have the word
of mouth, the rumors, the streets talking or whatever you
call it, and you end up with these type of
conversations happening where people have to embellish the truth. What
we know is what's in the report, what's in the like,
they put out enough public information without us having to
make shit up. I agreed, But also, I mean, you

(42:15):
did have people going he rubbed me down with baby
all and then I lost consciousness or something and people
are like, oh, it must be pink cocaine or whatever.
I don't know what the fuck happened. He faces a
new claim, including he drugged and raped the thirteen year
old Good Grief, a thirteen year old girl with an

(42:38):
unnamed male and female celebrity. This is from Tony Buzzby.
I don't I do wonder. I don't know enough about
lawyer and to know why. But what is it gain
Tony Buzzby when he has the accusations of like it
was another celebrity involved too. Are they just negotiating with

(42:58):
the other celebrities to keep their names out of it?
Or is it just this sounds more solatious than did
I do want? And I'm genuinely asking. This doesn't mean
speculating or trying to be like because I just don't know.
But it's like, why wouldn't they come out and say
just it was this person in that person because it's
like you are saying Diddy. I don't know. Maybe it

(43:22):
messes up leverage for the settlement if you say the
names like then they don't have as much leverage to
be like, keep my name out of it. Here's some money.
But with these settlements, the shit only come out anyway.
But yeah, I don't anyway. That's what Pony Buzzy said.
DJ Envy says, it's nothing wrong with Diddy having a
thousand bottles of baby or he just liked to get

(43:44):
shit popping. I'm gonna tell you something right now. A
scammer is gonna always defend a scammera period, like they
gonna always defend a camera dog. It don't. I don't
know if they think it'd be looking innocent or what,
but they always be like, you know, nah, I mean

(44:04):
look guilty innocent to proven guilty. It's like, well, we
have him on camera beating Cassie.

Speaker 1 (44:08):
Right, what are we talking about it here?

Speaker 2 (44:10):
I'm surprised at how many people do that. But yeah,
he he said, he a freaky nigga. He like freaky, freaky, freaky.
The fact that he has one thousand miles of baby
or the loop just me he just liked to get
ship popping. There's nothing wrong, there's nothing illegal about that.
He also drug compairanson between Diddy, Harvey Winstein, Bill kazy
O J Simpson, knowing that they were all granted Bell

(44:32):
despite the hatings crimes, yet Diddy was denied. Yo, hustlers
got a way about them the same. They will find
an angle to be like, oh, but see they doing
this one wrong. It's like all of them did that,
including OJ I don't know why, like like being like,

(44:55):
hey man, look, I'm just saying they.

Speaker 1 (45:00):
All seeing what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (45:01):
Look, I'm just gonna compare him to three people that
definitely did that shit, and I'm just saying they treating
him different. It's it's like, why couldn't you bring up
somebody that actually was exonerated. He's a bad example.

Speaker 1 (45:14):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (45:15):
Just how they did Hitler Man, that was wrong. But
I don't like the fact that they didn't give him
a bond. He has three kids without a mom, right
He has two twins that are seventeen years old that
don't have their dad right now and probably won't have
their dad for the next two years till the trial
is over. I feel like he should have got a
bond and been able to fight this outside so he

(45:35):
could lead a country like Russell Russell Russell Simmons. Why
didn't he bring up Russell Simmons as a comparison. Yeah,
because he he had a he had a he had
he became a flight risk and flew the coup.

Speaker 1 (45:50):
Yes, he did.

Speaker 2 (45:51):
Maybe maybe they didn't want to deal with that.

Speaker 1 (45:53):
They not.

Speaker 2 (45:56):
So, Yeah, he said Harvey Wanston had a bomb, Bill
Casey had a bond. Oh, j had a bond, and
people could say, oh, Jay ran, he took off and
they chased him and he still had a bond. Now,
in this society, it feels like you're guilty. You have
to prove yourself to be innocent. But it should be
the other way. If he did do those things that
those women said he did and those men say he did,
he should go to jail. They always do that in

(46:17):
the end. Let me defend this man for twenty minutes.
But if he did it. Attorney Lisa Bloom hints that
Don Richard is the anonymous accuser in Diddy's sex trafficking case.
Attorney Lisa Bloom has dropped some hints that suggests Don
Richard might be one of the anonymous victims in Diddy's
sex trafficking case. T Talk TV shared a clip that's

(46:40):
been making waves on Twitter, where Bloom spoke about representing
Richard in a civil lawsuit and highlighted just striking similarities
to the federal criminal case against Diddy. The federal criminal
case came after hours, but it was strikingly similar many
of the same allegations that women were victimized, that they
were terrorizedn't even paid properly, that they were work for

(47:02):
they work when they worked for him and made music
with him. She didn't hold back on calling out people
surrounding did he either In our case and in the
federal criminal case, we're not just against Sean coins, but
against a large number of people who are accused of
being his enablers. These guys don't just do this by themselves.
They have to have a large number of people who
are complicit in order to have an operation this big.

(47:25):
So all right, guess we'll find out if that's who
their client is. Did his children stand together? They put
out a statement on Instagram defending him against the allegations.
His kids, Yeah, Twitter was up and all up in
arms about it. I don't even know what to tell y'all.
Family is just fucked up. And if y'all been that

(47:49):
that that it doesn't basically put blinders on people. I
don't know what to say.

Speaker 3 (47:53):
It happens all the time. It's a lot of people
listening under underneath the voice, hearing my voice right now,
y'all ain't shit people.

Speaker 1 (48:01):
A lot of people do like like you just do
you just love them? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (48:04):
I mean, and I get it too, because I personally
don't know that I would or could ever do this shit.
Like if y'all had my family member on tape beaten
some woman, I can't see myself going on anywhere to
defend it. I think the best thing I could offer

(48:25):
that person is to not talk about it, right, That's
the most I could do. But I ain't everybody. I know.
I'm built a lot different from a lot of people,
but I don't. I have not really judged as kids
if they didn't participate in this shit, right, they're fucked
with They're fucked up now this because it's so funny

(48:47):
because people will admit that them, a stranger who just
liked this guy's music or whatever, will be like, man,
it really bothers me that he did this. And you know,
I had a hard time dealing with this. Didn't raise
you though, If the motherfucker raised you and wasn't showing
you this kind of shit was just showing you love

(49:08):
and support or whatever the fuck it was, or in
whatever flawidways that he displays that it's gonna fuck your
head up. Yes, you're not gonna be able to just
hit a switch and be like, yep, dad's evil now, right.
And even though I can because I don't know this motherfucker.
I've seen that tape. I mean it was I didn't
even need to see the tape, so but I can
understand that the kids will be all fucked up and

(49:29):
shit and they think this is solidarity and standing for
them for him. You know, we see this and he's
denying it too, so then they have the extra mile
of like, well if I come out and say he
did it, but I still love him, I'm still going
against them. So yeah, like I said, I'm not disgusted
by this as much as just kind of like, I'll

(49:50):
tell you what, it makes me more sad that these
kids are word slash art in his thrall and they're
there and now about what the fuck this man did?
You know, I don't know what the percentage chance that
he didn't do this ship, but it ain't high. It
was not just a vast conspiracy, collaborated with dates and

(50:14):
photo evidence and proof and video evidence just to get
this one man for no reason. I just don't know
if I buy that. But yeah, it's kids. Like I said,
it's more unfortunate that they are, you know, caught up
in it too.

Speaker 3 (50:30):
Right, And it's also one of those things where they're
impacted by this ship too, a lot more than the
fucking Internet is.

Speaker 1 (50:37):
And you know, the Internet think that.

Speaker 3 (50:39):
They say so on how they feel Trump's the family,
you know, yeah, what the Internet is impact with him,
people on social media performing right, So it's just easy
to like, I would never, you know, and I'm sure
you wouldn never.

Speaker 2 (50:52):
I hope you wouldn't never. That's the right thing to do.
But it's also just hella easy to say because it
really ain't you right, you know, And these people typically
are younger than us, and so it's just it's just
easy to bang on them. And people are mad at Diddy,
so it's like I want to bang on everybody in
this proximity. That's why people are trying to come up
with celebrities to be mad at. I don't need all that,

(51:14):
but yeah, I hear, I hear everybody, and it's very unfortunate.
That his family is still like in this thrall or whatever.
But it's also it's exactly what the fun happens.

Speaker 3 (51:26):
You know.

Speaker 2 (51:28):
Let's see what else we got here. Oh, this should
have been an election news. Let me move this all right? Uh,
let's go to another segment. What's a segment I want
to do? Oh? You know, I haven't done white people
news in a while. Here we go. Why oh yeah,

(52:09):
white people knew. See if we can brighten this up,
stop talking about all this, uh, sexual assault and you know,
conspiracy and jails. Right, don't y'all want something lighter? Harvey
Weinstein battling leukemia while serving prison centers. Oh my bad,
it's the white.

Speaker 1 (52:28):
Diddy from one did it to the other, didn't we.

Speaker 2 (52:32):
Yeah the film did he?

Speaker 3 (52:35):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (52:36):
He's been convicted of multiple sex crimes. He's now facing
a personal health battle on top of his legal struggles.
He got diagnosed with chronic mayoloid leukemia, a type of
bone marrow cancer, while serving his sentence at Rikers Allen
in New York. He's seventy one. He's reportedly been receiving
treatment for the cancer while incarcerated. So we'll see what

(52:59):
happens with him. Obviously prayers down, so you know, get
well never uh. Top German neo Nazi plummets two hundred
feet to his death while hiking on Hitler's favorite mountain. Wow, good,
bad things are happening to some bad people this time.
I mean it's kind of good news if you think

(53:19):
about it.

Speaker 1 (53:20):
Who is long foul?

Speaker 2 (53:21):
Yeah? I guess he? Uh, I guess he fell off.
I can't help myself. I'm sorry. A top German neo
Nazi plummeted nearly two hundred feet to his death while
hiking on what is believed to be Adolf Hitler's favorite mountain.
Oh shit, Oh, someone make a mood horror movie about that.

(53:43):
Andres Mons Huber, thirty seven, senior member of the Bararia
faction of Neo Nazi group the Third Way, was climbing
the Huntersburg Mountain on a thirty person tour when he
tripped on an exposed.

Speaker 1 (53:57):
Wet route and oh damn roots down.

Speaker 2 (54:01):
Yeah, Alex Haley's roots and fell one hundred and ninety
six feet down the rocky terrain to his death. Rescue
teams rushed to the scene after the fall, but the
far right radical was killed instantly. Yeah, I'm not gonna lie.

(54:21):
There must have been an all white rescue team, because
I would have taken my break. I would have stopped
to get breakfast, you know, like that's a long gas
fall too minutes. He would have been down there. I
would have been slow as hell to get there. He
would have been down there for a minute. I'd be like, yeah,

(54:42):
as soon as I finished my coffee. Huntersburg and nearly
sixty five hundred foot high summon in Germany was considered
Hitler's favorite view, with the Nazi dictator constructing his infamous
Eagles Nest retreat in the same area. The site has
since coming to traction for tyrants to visit. Tyrents they

(55:04):
put the Trump go. He probably you want to. It's
on his bucket list, you know what it is. He's like,
if I win this next election, I'm going Various right
wing extreamist groups on Telegram and Facebook are now collecting
donations to erect the memorial statue at the scene of
the fall and financially support that comrade's wife and children. Yeah, okay,

(55:28):
his death hit us all hard. The donations page, Okay,
all right, he hit that mountain hard. Okay. As a
Friday afternoon, the group raised more than seven thousand dollars
for a memorial, and separate uppeal for donations raised more
than thirteen thousand dollars. Y'all got twenty thousand dollars to
give to neo Nazi. That's crazy, right, ya ain't got

(55:51):
nothing better to do with y'all time and money but
to help out hate. That's wild. White People News definitely,
let's keep it up, keep it kind of dark, Okay,
I'm sorry this addition to White people News is not
upbeat yet, We're gonna get to it. Keep it dark.
It don't get no whiter than this. Former amber Kanbe

(56:13):
and Fitch chief Mike Jeffries arrested on federal sex trafficking charges.

Speaker 1 (56:17):
Damn.

Speaker 2 (56:18):
Now, I know that store that's now that's white people elite.

Speaker 1 (56:22):
Child, that's a store. I don't think I ever put
my foot in, like Chad, I can't win nothing.

Speaker 4 (56:26):
Now.

Speaker 2 (56:27):
I watched the documentary about that on Netflix, about like
the white fashion stuff, and amber Combe and Fitch was
heavily featured and heavily racist, like and they like when
they introduced this guy, Mike Jeffries into it, You're just like,
oh my god, this dude is fucked up, so I

(56:48):
can't even be shot right.

Speaker 1 (56:49):
And the thing is.

Speaker 3 (56:52):
That they when you go by, is like they don't
say it, but you feel like no niggas are go
in there.

Speaker 1 (56:59):
So I'm like, nah, I'm good. I get the vibe.

Speaker 2 (57:01):
Yeah, the documentary goes into all this. It's very I mean,
it was definitely on purpose that the vibe was black people,
don't come in here, don't work here. When they had
black employees, which they did higher, they would make them
work in the stock room or put them in the
back or get them bad hours. It was like a
purpose for like this is for a white certain type
of white person, not even all white people. It was

(57:23):
like don't be fat, you know, like it was a
very particular type of aesthetic that they were going for.

Speaker 3 (57:29):
Well I'm glad that I cause you know, it kind
of makes you think, am I tripping? But then I
was like, no, these big ass like postal balls and
like skinny white people, and everybody in there was smaller
just from the glass. When we used to go to
South Park Malling, you would pass by and I was like, oh,
I ain't got nobody, and everything is like a zero

(57:50):
to a to a triple X negative smile was like
bitch you could wear at They.

Speaker 2 (57:55):
Also used to have like models, mostly white, stand outside
of their mall store sometimes like paid people to stand
in the windows shirtless and stuff like that. It was
a very weird vibe in there that had like it
was very sexually charged and stuff. And so, uh, yeah,

(58:17):
if you picked that up going by there, it's on purpose.
The music everything, yes, was chosen to make you feel
like as you walked by.

Speaker 1 (58:25):
It was just like, yeah, like, whoa, I don't what.

Speaker 2 (58:31):
Was that nigger? Get out?

Speaker 1 (58:34):
What that was?

Speaker 2 (58:37):
The whole vibe of ever Chromeian fixed. So I never
go to the back. Yeah, I know you ain't from
around here. Boy, I never went in because I just
knew what it was. But yeah, that that documentary made
a lot of sense. And no, I don't remember the
name of it. I'm sorry, Google it aver coromean Fish
documentary Netflix. It might have been called White Fashion or something.

(58:57):
I'm sure you watched it a while ago.

Speaker 3 (58:59):
Then.

Speaker 2 (58:59):
Yeah, but yeah they said that him, his romantic partner,
and the third man were arrested Tuesday on charges of
louring men and the drug laced outlandish and coercive sex
parties by dangling the promise of modeling for the retailers.
Once definding beefcake ads for almost twenty years, Jefferies, his
partner Matthew Smith, and their employee James Jacobson used Jeffrey

(59:23):
status wealth in a web of household staffords to fulfill
a couple of sexual desires and keep it a secret.
According to a federal indictment, sexual exploiting vulnerable humans beings
is a crime, and doing so by dangling dreams of
a future in fashion and modeling is no different. A
Brooklyn based US attorney, Brion Pea said at a news conference.
He called the case of warning to anyone who thinks

(59:45):
they can exploit and coerce others by using so called
casting couch system. Get them. There's a whole genre of
Portner's about to go away. Just a joke, guys. I
know those are fake. I know that's a fake. Uh Charger.
The chargers echoes actual misconduct accusations made in civil case
and the media in recent years. Lawyers representing Jefferies in

(01:00:06):
the federal sex trafficking lawsuit have said he vehemently denies
those allegations. Don't they always? Of course, I mean one
if they have been like that's fair.

Speaker 1 (01:00:18):
I mean, I mean I may have did.

Speaker 2 (01:00:22):
What did they say I did? Sex trafficking?

Speaker 3 (01:00:25):
All right, possibility, Okay, I've done a lot of shipt.

Speaker 2 (01:00:29):
I mean, I'll be into some things, right, uh, keeping
it dark. Liam Payne who is a former member of
the boy band One Direction mm hmm. He jumped out
of a hotel. Uh. And and I mean died. He
died after he did that. But because of like how

(01:00:54):
wow that was, you know, obviously looked into it, and
police say, like, first of all, fuck police, pop ARIZI
daily new Mail whatever. They had so much of this
man's business on the streets. I don't know if it's
like someone that he know was snitching. I think he

(01:01:17):
was dating like an influencer type chick because I on
the daily nude mail. On the daily Mail, they literally
had pictures of the inside of his place. Danc had
a picture of his body they put on Twitter. I
didn't want to see it, but I saw people being
upset by it, right, Like I've never seen a death
treated like this before, where it's just all the rules

(01:01:41):
of like polite society that we've kind of been going
by just went out the window.

Speaker 1 (01:01:47):
Right, you know, and everybody want to be in it.

Speaker 3 (01:01:49):
But I tell you right now, I be motherfucking lived
as something happened to my family member, and it's posted everything.

Speaker 1 (01:01:53):
They know before I do.

Speaker 2 (01:01:55):
I still remember, like the Sheriff's office, and maybe like
some first responders in LA, he being sued over singing,
like sending TMZ pictures of Kobe Bryant and the people
in the helicopter that died. Yes, and it's obviously yes,
it's obviously terrible, but even if you didn't notify the family,

(01:02:15):
it just it's a it's a terrible thing to do,
right right, Like I'm sending this to TMZ to hopefully
get a check out of this or something. But and
TMZ and all these places are typically like, we won't
even publish that because we did da day. They didn't
give a fuck about this guy. It was just out
there on the streets anyway. So what I think is
interesting is there's stuff coming out where he had basically

(01:02:38):
a meltdown in the hotel where he was like yelling
at hotel employees and arguing with people. I think one
of the things he even said was I was in
a boy band that's why I'm so fucked up.

Speaker 1 (01:02:55):
And I had some bops too.

Speaker 2 (01:02:58):
He had a bunch of drugs in this system, crack
cocaine which I did not know it, benzo dazepines, and
toussy t us I more commonly known as pink cocaine,
A pink cocaine. Yeah, I heard he had something called crystal,
which is spelled with an eye instead of a white
A drug I definitely don't know nothing about.

Speaker 1 (01:03:20):
Yeah, I know nothing about the drugs now, I like
did not know them.

Speaker 2 (01:03:24):
Yeah, but you like not knowing about anything so that
it doesn't really carry the same weight as me not knowing.

Speaker 1 (01:03:30):
Yeah right, you normally know I'm the one going.

Speaker 2 (01:03:34):
Yeah, so I like it's look when they said crystal
it was one of the drugs in this system. Why,
Like I definitely don't know no shit about that. Like
that is definitely some like white people only stuff, but

(01:03:54):
white nosense is this? Yeah, your boy, Your boy is
not versed in because anybody got a problem with telling
good old fashioned regular drugs, you should tell me that
selling what you want to sell a boss anyway, as
was I constantly see that, man, I'm sure it happens
also for non famous people, but it definitely happens for

(01:04:16):
famous people. They are actually looking into the hotel employee
that possibly procured them from drugs. So now this person
could go to jail. Imagine you just work at this
hotel for famous, rich celebrities and shit. You probably get
asked to do all kinds of weird go for shit

(01:04:38):
all the time, and your job is probably dependent upon it.
This guy is literally in the throes of something. He's
throwing a tantrum or some shit. Later on, but yeah,
I'm sure they're like, hey, man, you scored me some
something and he's like, yeah, I got you or whatever.
Now you might be going to jail for this man's death.
You know that's a lot.

Speaker 3 (01:04:57):
Yeah, it might be you know one of those things
where yeah, somebody might go no one day and they
have it. Well you just have to have a break
down their here because I'm not going to jail.

Speaker 1 (01:05:06):
They're not charging me with you, dell.

Speaker 2 (01:05:07):
I mean, it sounds good until you're fired for like
not like, hey we got some complaints about you. You know
what kind of clientele we have. I feel like all
this shit is hushed us. I feel the same way
about that. The dude from friends who died, and one
of the people they want to, you know, charge, was
his assistant. I get while you charge the doctor.

Speaker 1 (01:05:26):
I get why you charged the doctor.

Speaker 2 (01:05:28):
Doctors are mass supplying drugs with no prescription that are
just getting people high. That motherfucker should go to jail.
But my the personal assistance. I don't have a job
if this dude don't get his drugs, right. I can't
take a stand because Rent is doing on the field, right,
So I don't feel the same about like like they
make it sound like the motherfuckers was pushing the drugs

(01:05:50):
to him, right, you know anyway, I know not to
get too caught up in that, but yeah, buddy, uh
you know that's a big yes too. Like a lot
of celebrities and other members of his band and all
kinds of people knew him. They've been publishing like heartfelt
goodbyes and stuff. I was talking to Bossie, she says
on she because she be on TikTok and I'm not.

(01:06:13):
She was saying, there was like a before all this happened,
there was like a hate campaign against him on TikTok
that was about him being an asshole and people not
liking him and stuff, and people looking for proof that
other people in the industry didn't like him. But then
he died, and then all these people came forward, you know,
talking about how much they loved him and stuff. So

(01:06:34):
it's a weird, such a weird thing. And so who knows,
like how much that shit was affecting them, you know,
because I think his girlfriend was even an influencer. And
part of the thing about this was also they went
on a trip, him and his girlfriend to see one
of his ex bandmates perform, and they ended up staying

(01:07:00):
there longer than they were like like instead of like
two days, and stayed ten days. And she wanted to
come back and see her dog, And for some fucking reason,
one of the news articles had to like like basically
made it sound like if she wouldn't have came back
to go see that dog, he wouldn't have jumped off
the fucking balcony. And I'm just like that feels a

(01:07:20):
little irresponsible.

Speaker 1 (01:07:21):
Yes it does.

Speaker 3 (01:07:22):
It feels people probably didn't attack her for no reason.

Speaker 2 (01:07:25):
Yeah, it feels like a bad thing to say. And
like I said, she's famous in her own right in
a different ways. So white people they going, they got
they got it tough this week, guy, Yeah, they do apparently.
You know what, let's keep it going with the tough
white people news. Francesca Eastwood or Francesca Eastwood, Clint Eastwood's daughter.

(01:07:48):
She got arrested on domestic abuse for getting into a
tussle with her boyfriend over the weekend. Damn. She's thirty
one year old, former star the E documentary series Missus
Eastwood and company never heard of it. Yeah, oh that's
white people news. How would you have heard of you know,
that's right, that makes sense. But yeah, she uh basically

(01:08:11):
got in trouble. Uh if the police got called to
uh to I guess to her home the Beverly Hills
Police for a possible domestic violence incident and a safety zone.
Oh so they got called to like the I guess
a car on the road nelth Rexford drives. So she

(01:08:33):
did this in a car the passenger She was a
passenger as her boyfriend was behind the wheel when the
two were driving around Beverly Hills. That got into a
verbal fight that escalated when she allegedly got physical At
the calling police, her boyfriend was told he should drive
to the safety zone at bhpd's headquarters. Eastwood, who resides
in Los Angeles, was ultimately arrested domestic violence, which is

(01:08:55):
a felony charge, is what she got a charge with.
So yeah, that's just rough times over what.

Speaker 1 (01:09:07):
Their fathers where the dad is at all.

Speaker 2 (01:09:12):
Right, let's do some some nice ones. Okay, I got
a couple of nice ones. I don't want to leave
you guys too sad with white people. Know this is
a sad one, but this is a nice one. Jerry
Seinfeld said he regrets saying that the extreme left killed comedy.
He says, not true. You can't say certain words about groups.
So what, So it's good to see came back had
some accountabilities because like a baby.

Speaker 3 (01:09:34):
That don't make no sense. And he would complain about
the comedy about going to college. Came I say, sir,
you're old enough to be part of the Great Grandpa,
like these are like twenty year olds. Like no, unless
you just keep in connection with their scene and once
you get through a certain age, you're gonna just age

(01:09:55):
out of college anyway, like you just that y'all not
gonna have shit in common.

Speaker 2 (01:09:59):
M hm m hmm. I just think he was trying
to promote that movie and try to be edgy. It
was just dumb. Honestly, it was just dumb. I don't
know if someone God told me he just had time
to think about it, or maybe he even wanted to
go viral to help promote that the Pop Tart movie,
which was a fun movie. But it's just like, bro,
what you're doing right? Jennifer Lawrence is pregnant set to

(01:10:20):
welcome second baby with Cook Maroney. Cook Maroney sounds like
Cook Maroney sounds like a Star Wars pilot or like
a person that was in uh, one of the people
that helped Captain America in the Captain America movie.

Speaker 1 (01:10:39):
Somebody said that Batman villain Cook Maroney.

Speaker 2 (01:10:42):
Yeah, the chef Cook Maroney. That sounds so made up,
don't it, though, Cook Maroney does. It sounds like a
It sounds like a snitch in Gotham, you know what.

Speaker 1 (01:10:56):
He sounded like.

Speaker 3 (01:10:57):
Somebody was going against Cheff bar D and lost. He's like,
damn it, no, we got to go with schipperd D
on the side of the can doll.

Speaker 1 (01:11:07):
Your name just don't have that appeal.

Speaker 2 (01:11:10):
Cook Maroney sounds like what they tried to make shep
boy r D And it was like, look, we had
an arsenic outbreak. The Cans killed a lot of people.
We gotta rebrand this ship. Okay, Cook Maroney is dead.
The name is dead on these streets.

Speaker 1 (01:11:28):
We can't use that name no more.

Speaker 2 (01:11:30):
Cook Maroney. That's crazy. Cook Marooney sounds like if they
restarted the and one basketball Tour. Yes, yes, it'd be
an Italian baller named Cook Moroon or out there busting
your ass, Cook Marony. Get out of here.

Speaker 1 (01:11:46):
That name Larne not real.

Speaker 2 (01:11:50):
Real person. Next time he's doing.

Speaker 1 (01:11:55):
Drunk as well, married Apple Orange or greape.

Speaker 2 (01:11:58):
Right, Cook Maroney, you name your kid that you're You're
a brown ass adult being, like, my, what's the name
of your baby? Cook Marony? Come on man, Cook Maroney
sounds like what a toddler says. If you like what
you want for dinner, babies, Cook Maroney, you want, oh
you want me to cook some macaroni and cheese? That

(01:12:20):
is adorable.

Speaker 1 (01:12:21):
Yes, that's exactly what all that sounds.

Speaker 2 (01:12:23):
Get out of here. Coming up next, the Big Bopper
is gonna place Cook Maroney's new hit. Oh man, all right,
but yeah, so good for them, No, good for them?
All right? We love to see if she's thirty four.

(01:12:45):
She's already the mother of to your SI. When she
welcomed in twenty twenty two with her husband Cook Marony.
This will be their second child. We the ain't gonna
name this one. I think that'suld name it. Cheese. Keep
the thing going.

Speaker 3 (01:13:03):
Whoever Cook MAROONI is, he is somebody important, because why
else do you marry a Cook Maroony?

Speaker 2 (01:13:07):
Yeah, Cook Maroney, I don't know what he does for
a living. You're probably a nice guy.

Speaker 3 (01:13:13):
I find somebody super duper famous that you did. Nobody
knows unless you in the industry.

Speaker 2 (01:13:17):
That would make them not super duper famous at all.
That's the opposite of super duper famous. Uh, nobody knows
what is he famous for. He's a gallery art gallery
dealer in New York, so another nobody know who he is,
which is kind of, you know, it's kind of what
you want, you know, shout out to them. Cook Marooney
came up. Let's see what else.

Speaker 1 (01:13:41):
As long as he ain't cooking the books, y'all be
all right.

Speaker 2 (01:13:46):
A Washington State woman called nine one one after being
hounded by up to one hundred raccoons.

Speaker 1 (01:13:52):
Oh yeah, the whole game showed up.

Speaker 2 (01:13:55):
Le'Veon Bello Brown? Oh Page still was there? It was
It was insane. She was like, how did I get
them off of here? Over there in my alam trying
to make America great again? Uh the video of them?
Oh no, that's a lot of raccoons, dog, that's a lot.

Speaker 1 (01:14:19):
They come from. You can't even go outside.

Speaker 2 (01:14:22):
I have not seen that many coons in one place
since Blacks for Trump.

Speaker 3 (01:14:28):
Oh no, yeah, bitch, Yes, somebody got to come and
get him because I'm not going out there.

Speaker 2 (01:14:36):
Uh well, she was, so she had to flee her
property after fifty to one hundred raccoons descended upon it
and were acting acting aggressively. She told Debby she started
feeding a family of raccoons decades ago, and it was
fine until about six weeks earlier, when the numbers showing
up went from a handful to around one hundred. That's

(01:14:57):
because raccoons be talking.

Speaker 1 (01:15:00):
Knowing they are very smart.

Speaker 2 (01:15:02):
Yes, the same thing happened with Trump. You fed a
couple of coons dominant silk in twenty sixteen. Next thing
you know, you're looking around half the NFL's at this
rally and you're like, what happened? You go home, you
tell the rest of the raccoon family. They're feeding us
over here. Come get these checks.

Speaker 3 (01:15:21):
Yeah, what's the one thing they tell white people, don't
feed the animals. They don't have that shit up there.

Speaker 2 (01:15:25):
For no reason. She said those raccoons were coming increasingly
more aggressive, demanding food, and that they would hound her
day and night. Now, you know you fucked up when
the raccoons out during.

Speaker 1 (01:15:35):
The day, because raccoon's doant to come out at night.

Speaker 2 (01:15:38):
Right, Yeah, they getting up like setting their alarm to
be on your eyes.

Speaker 1 (01:15:42):
In the schedule that she could have best something, buddy, Yeah,
I think she does. Let's be there fifteen minutes earlier.

Speaker 2 (01:15:49):
You've been wild and kind of hard. If the raccoons
is like time to get time to get.

Speaker 1 (01:15:56):
Brunch, time to go harass Sarah, where's my mama?

Speaker 2 (01:16:01):
Scratching at the outside of her home at the door.
If she pulled up her car, they would surround the car,
scratching the car, surround her if she went from her
door to her car and went out, or went outside
at all. They saw this as a food source. Now,
so they kept coming back and kept expecting food. You know,
they say you feed them or nothing. Start to look
like you. Yeah, Hey, it's not clear what caused their

(01:16:25):
numbers to balloon sudden.

Speaker 1 (01:16:26):
Yeah, then she fucking fed them.

Speaker 2 (01:16:28):
They went viral. She went viral, they started telling people.
Both the sheriff's officer and the Washington Department of Fish
and Wildlife determined no laws were broken. So you can
feed raccoons, apparently, and up there this is a nuisance
problem kind of the of her own making that she
has to deal with, he said. Video from the Sheriff's
office shows raccoons milling around trees and deputies who responded

(01:16:50):
to the cars her fifty to one hundred of them.
You added, I do appreciate those police, though, you know
why because those police said you did this, like I
don't know why you called us with nine one one
like we I know you want us to come up here,
round them up, kill them or some shit.

Speaker 3 (01:17:06):
But you know what, stop feeding them then yes, and
they would go away eventually.

Speaker 2 (01:17:11):
Yeah, And I bet you one thing it is illegal
is the fucking like poison them or some shit. So
she ain't gonna be able to do nothing dastardly to them.

Speaker 3 (01:17:21):
Yeah, because because they fucking find them, then in on
yard they're gonna charge.

Speaker 1 (01:17:24):
You with killing them.

Speaker 2 (01:17:25):
It's illegal to feed large carnivores like bears or cougars,
but you can feed the little ones. Oh shit, so
it ain't nothing legal about this.

Speaker 1 (01:17:35):
They was like, you ain't westing our time on this bullshit.

Speaker 2 (01:17:38):
They said, don't feed the raccoons, you know, but it's
not illegal. They said. Raccoons can carry diseases. Yes, food
can also attract predators such as coyotes and bears, right
because they like, Oh, the raccoon's over here, uh Mars said.
An agency wildlife conflict specialists has met with the woman
who has stopped feeding the critters. A conflict specialist. I

(01:17:59):
could do that job. Hey, put the fucking snacks away
right way. Is there anything else you could do?

Speaker 1 (01:18:07):
Maybe just talk to them.

Speaker 2 (01:18:08):
They're animals, ma'am.

Speaker 1 (01:18:10):
They don't understand, and they were fine.

Speaker 3 (01:18:12):
Guess what they were gathering food before you fed them.
They were not starving.

Speaker 4 (01:18:16):
Well, can you ask them how did all the other
raccoon five ofm k nots? They probably smelled the fucking
snacks on them, ma'am. Just go in the house and
stop fucking feeding, right, Is that simple?

Speaker 2 (01:18:27):
They'll go away in a few months or whenever. They
realize the food is never coming back. Right, It's that simple.
You can fucking be the raccoon whispering shit, I don't
speak raccoon. The raccoon's appear to have started this person out.
They're no longer being fed or or glass for positive
outcoming the case they rode so.

Speaker 3 (01:18:47):
Right, you stopped feeding them there, they're finding the foods
for somewhere else.

Speaker 2 (01:18:50):
What a dummy. Why do you think they keep coming
because you're feeding on?

Speaker 1 (01:18:54):
You're feeding themn ma.

Speaker 2 (01:18:56):
Why do you think children keep coming back to the
house because you feed them? Okay, damn uh. Last white
people news. One of my white people phase is back,
blessing us with mold hot mess. I would have never
known this woman was so fucking messy if not for

(01:19:20):
the last five to ten years. Martha Stewart, Yes, Martha,
what is she doing telling us some shit we don't
need to know?

Speaker 3 (01:19:29):
Yes, she already already said to a girlfriend, y'all better
watch out, I take your band.

Speaker 2 (01:19:36):
She always telling us some shit we don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:19:38):
Yes, posting thirst, traps and shit.

Speaker 2 (01:19:42):
This is why she had that inside of inside of trading,
because she'd be telling shit she's not supposed to be telling,
so she admits that she cheated on her ex husband
and doubts he ever knew about that.

Speaker 1 (01:19:56):
She gangster.

Speaker 2 (01:19:59):
Her ex husband, Andrew Andy Stewart. She said that their
marriage ended thirty years ago. On Thursday, Netflix debuted the
trailer for Stewart's upcoming documentary Martha, where at one point
she reveals having cheated on Andy during their marriage. The

(01:20:20):
couple who welcomed the daughter of Alexis in nineteen sixty
five were married from nineteen sixty one to nineteen ninety.
It's a good that's a good run.

Speaker 1 (01:20:28):
Ain't that a good run?

Speaker 2 (01:20:29):
That's twenty nine years of marriage. While the author in
television personality would go on today actor Anthony Hopkins, whom
she broke things off with after seeing Silence of the Lambs,
Andy was her only husband. Young women listening to my
advice and you're marrying your husband starts to cheat on you.
He's a piece of shit. She wants female viewers around
the thirty second market of the trailer get out that marriage.

(01:20:52):
Didn't you have an affair? Early on? The producer asked,
She confesses, yeah, but I don't think Andy ever knew
about that, So I guess he was basically like, She's like, don't.

Speaker 1 (01:21:02):
Waste your fucking time, that cheat. She's like no.

Speaker 2 (01:21:05):
It's sounded like she was saying I cheated on him first,
but he didn't know. So him cheating on me, that's
fucked up.

Speaker 1 (01:21:17):
That's minked up.

Speaker 2 (01:21:20):
That's wild. Damn Martha a wild girl. She I'm telling you, man,
Snoop Dog Bell, watch his back. That's a Snooper's American sweetheart.

Speaker 1 (01:21:30):
Ain't the America sweetheart.

Speaker 2 (01:21:32):
I don't know about the company he's been keeping lately.
I liked him better when he was hanging out with
the gang members. Shit he doing, Martha Stewart, I'm like,
butted felling, you're gonna be on that with murder is
the case part too. Stewart met her ex her future
ex husband on a blind day when he was twenty
three years old at lost to the Yale University. Stewart,
now eighty three, was nineteen at the time. Following a

(01:21:53):
couple separation in nineteen eighty seven and divorced three years later,
Andy would go on to Mary Stewart's former assistant, Robin Fairclaw.
Although the two are ultimate, we ultimately divorced, and his
current wife Shilah Nelson Stewart, Andy and Shyla are publisher
Emeritus and Presidency, respectfully, of field Stone Publishing. So he's
still alive. And twenty twenty, Stewart called a divorce divorce

(01:22:15):
a terrible thing, but for her a terrible thing for
her during an interview with people, getting divorce is a
terrible thing for me because we were the first to
divorce in my family, and that we haven't spoken since
the voice is even more painful. But I'm very strong
and very motivated to get on with life. All right. Well,
good luck to Martha. Okay, she really is out here

(01:22:35):
putting it all out here for us in our entertainment,
and we thank you.

Speaker 1 (01:22:39):
We're gonna get it.

Speaker 2 (01:22:41):
You could have took this to your grave, and you
should not have. You said, nah, do people need to know?
I'll be out here fucking basically, and I take your band, right,
I'm off the Steward O will thirst trap At take
your van? Okay, don't none of y'all better not die
because I don't none of y'all die. I'm gonna be

(01:23:02):
on them right, Okay, ask about me.

Speaker 1 (01:23:08):
In these three you better keep in good health.

Speaker 2 (01:23:10):
Them homes ain't gonna make themselves. You better make sure
all your curtains is clean. Yo, you better learn how
to photo fit it bed. She fuck with me.

Speaker 1 (01:23:20):
You better you better learn how to cook, bitch, because
I know how to cook.

Speaker 2 (01:23:24):
I'll take them. Okay, I.

Speaker 1 (01:23:30):
On the hell out of him, and you do.

Speaker 2 (01:23:32):
I plant some deafidials right outside this window every day,
every day, bitch. Okay, you be looking outside, miss Martha,
Miss Martha. All right? Oh man, like a dry person
a wet puts it on match, don't match. All right,
let's go to sorry ratchetess. So we wrap this up.

(01:24:15):
You know what, let's double it up. I'll give you
a little guest the race on this too, guys.

Speaker 1 (01:24:19):
Okay.

Speaker 2 (01:24:21):
Rashad edwin Wright thirty three. It's charged with aggravated robbery
after used a gun to threaten a store clerk. Officers
were dispatched around twelve ten am to a Texan mark
where officers arrived at the store. The clerk told men
told men a man I just told them. A man

(01:24:41):
now identified as right grabbed an item from the coolers
and placed it on the counter. The suspect grid and
grabbed the items, proceeding towards the exit without paying for it.
The clerk remotely locked the door, preventing Right from leaving.
Right then walked back to the counter, pulled a handgun
out of his backpack and pointed at the clerk. The
clerk had a change of heart and or shit, I
would too, and unlocked the door slowly backed up. Later

(01:25:03):
that day, officers dispatched to another place in reference to
an armed individual. The suspect was involved in a verbal
altercation with another man when the suspect pulled out a
katana sword and threatened a victim. Oh damn, it's motherfucker
snake eye. You got a gun and a sword right.
Officers located the suspect, took him into custody and transported

(01:25:25):
him to the Colleen City Jail. Detectives police said determined
the suspect with the katana Right was the same person
from the robbery at Texas Mark. He is being held
on fifty five thousand dollars bond, but dj Envy says
let him go free. Karen guess the race Black? All right?

(01:25:47):
You know what, I'm not even gonna let the chat
room guess. Karen said, Black, You're right.

Speaker 3 (01:26:00):
Yeah, anybody going to a Texan Mark, whatever that place
is called.

Speaker 2 (01:26:04):
I was like, yeah, you black, Yeah. I mean he
looked like he carried a sword, like one of them
curvy Egyptian swords. He looked hotepish to me a little bit.

Speaker 1 (01:26:15):
He got them old school breaks. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:26:17):
Yeah, shout out to that clerk trying to be brave
and die for moe fucking texting marks money.

Speaker 1 (01:26:22):
Child you could have. I'm not locking you in there
with me right.

Speaker 2 (01:26:25):
Now, we have you know what that's That is the
security plan of a rich person that owns the store.

Speaker 1 (01:26:34):
Yes, because it is not the.

Speaker 2 (01:26:36):
Security plan of anyone who's ever worked in that store.

Speaker 1 (01:26:39):
Yes.

Speaker 3 (01:26:39):
Because if I'm able to lock you in here, bitch,
you need to be something separating you from me.

Speaker 1 (01:26:44):
Because it's not. The plan is pointless. Why would I.

Speaker 2 (01:26:47):
Lock you in here with myself? Yes, you don't want me,
You want the stuff?

Speaker 3 (01:26:54):
Have it, bitch, it's all insured anyway. Take what the
fuck you want to.

Speaker 2 (01:26:59):
Whoever the rich guy is who came up with that shit. Boy,
I know as soon as he pressed that button, you
realized this was dumb, This was a bad choice.

Speaker 3 (01:27:06):
Yes, when you've seen him coming back and a gun
pointed in your face.

Speaker 2 (01:27:10):
I made the wrong decision. I change your heart. You
got damn right, and then I'll help you carry the
fucking twenty four pack out.

Speaker 1 (01:27:17):
Play and you know, and that's probably part of the policy.
Was you hit the button. Yeah, yeah, get your ass
whooped in there.

Speaker 2 (01:27:24):
You get one end, I get the other end. I
will only use that button to lock people out, yes, bitch,
to lock you out. Somebody be like, I'm coming back
in there. I want my change. I'm like, oh you don't,
mm hmm. But as far as locking you in with me,
can't imagine the scenario where I would for who for what?
Forly right, so some rich motherfucking oil tacoon could get

(01:27:45):
more money. I'm good they have another fucking work on
my shift by the time the ambulance show up. Right,
All right, y'all, that's it, Thanks for listening. We'll be back. Well,
it depends on what Justin says. We may do a
show tomorrow, just really depends on I Justin can do
Balls Deep tomorrow or Friday. Okay, So until then, I
love you.

Speaker 1 (01:28:05):
I love you too. Yeah,
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