All Episodes

March 30, 2025 91 mins

Rod and Karen banter Dippin’ Dots, a mumbling cashier, Lamelo Ball not making the all-star game, nothing to write home about, Karen’s congestion, and The Black Guy Who Tips Premium. Then they discuss people calling the FCC on Kendrick, Sexyy Red dox’s child’s grandmother, Cardi B accuses Offset of abuse, Mo’Nique slams Tyler Perry again, Mark Morrison arrested, Lizzo calls Yung Miami, proposed TX sex toy law, Kanye does an interview in Black KKK robe, Allentown employee charged with faking hate crime, Gabourey Sidibe talks phone sex racism, woman vandalizes wrong man's car, man drives dad's car into the ocean, a couple runs over a repo man and sword ratchetness.

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Transcript

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 Out this podcast. I'm your host, Rod,
joined us always by my co host, and we are
live on a Sunday night. Ready to do some podcasts
and find us everywhere your fine podcasts. The official weapon
of the show is folding chair is a correct answer
and an unofficial sport bullet ball, bullet ball extreme extreme extreme.

(00:28):
Of course, find us everywhere you get podcasts. Leave us
five star reviews on Apple Podcasts. We really do appreciate
those and means a lot to us.

Speaker 3 (00:35):
Renew it if you already left one.

Speaker 2 (00:38):
Yeah, we love that too. We love to see what
you still think about the show. Assume you still think
about us. Karen, how do you want to start today?
You want to do banter or do you want to
get into the show.

Speaker 3 (00:50):
Oh, I got banter, I got stuff I want to
talk about.

Speaker 2 (00:53):
Do you have any do you have any talk to me?
Do you have any banter? Banter?

Speaker 3 (01:06):
Banter?

Speaker 2 (01:07):
Banter, anter? Do you have any band?

Speaker 3 (01:19):
Talk to me?

Speaker 2 (01:21):
Do you have any band? All right, hit me up.

Speaker 4 (01:26):
My first banter is we had at the Honeys game.

Speaker 3 (01:31):
We always passed this dippin dot joint.

Speaker 4 (01:34):
Know we talked about this before, but I've seen something
with them I've never seen before. I didn't know that
dipping dots came in a caraft A dude was walking
in the craft a craft yeah my country accent, y'all
craft a dude like a craft of orange juice.

Speaker 3 (01:51):
A dude was walking with a whole craft or dipping dots.

Speaker 4 (01:54):
I was like, bitch, I know that probably cost you
fifty five dollars of them little nasty ass dots.

Speaker 3 (01:59):
People love it, and I don't get it.

Speaker 2 (02:02):
I didn't know they came that big either. I'm it
was like I said, if I could find a picture
when I can.

Speaker 3 (02:08):
I don't know if it's something special for the coliseum,
but he can. He came. He had a whole big
old thing and it was just full of them dots.
Because I was like, what is it?

Speaker 4 (02:15):
Because it was multiple colors, I was like, what is
in that thing? I was like, oh, them damn dipping dots.
I don't get it, but people love them and chat.
They've been around since I was a kid, and I
was yucked then and I'm yucked now. I'm sorry if
them yo jams but I don't get the craze.

Speaker 2 (02:32):
Okay, let's see. Uh man, the other day, I went
to the grocery store and I had a I have
my headphones on. I was just finishing a while. I
was really just trying to like get a couple of
groceries come back to the house. Uh. You know, I
don't do self check out normally. I normally go to
the people. And uh, this guy was there and uh

(02:56):
he is lying. You know, he called me over whatever
he ain't having by line, and he was one of
these guys that was like a mumbler. And I don't
mind mumblers at grocery store type things because you know,
it's like we're not really we don't really need to
talk anyway. I'll just ignore you. You bring me up,

(03:17):
and I'll just not pay attention. Except this guy wanted
to talk and be a mumbler.

Speaker 3 (03:24):
And you gotta pick.

Speaker 2 (03:25):
You have to pick, yet you gotta pick a lane.
You can't do both. And it led to like a
five minute, very awkward interaction that I still don't know
what was said, what needed to be said. I was
barely making anything out everything he said. He had to
say three times because I couldn't hear him, and I
took my headphones off, so it wasn't like, oh, I

(03:46):
can't hear you because my headphones are off. He's just like,
h hey, I'm like, what's like, you just go the weather?
Are you saying the weather is the weather? Yes, there's
weather outside like that. He's like, yeah, it's weather, some weather.

(04:08):
We're having some weather. It's like yep, yep, having some weather.
And each time I thought he was mumbling and he
was drowning out. So I kept thinking, that's the end
of the conversation because you mumbled, you had no authority
and you finished with a with a like yeah, you
finished on the down. And that's notally how people just

(04:30):
drizzle conversation out, you know. It's like dribbling out the
clock at the end of a college basketball game. And
so I'm like, okay, yeah, just that's over. And then
he's like he'd start up again like that man, man,
uh said, can you say that again? He's not, man,

(04:51):
I'm not sure what you said. You know, the March,
the Madness, March March Madness? Am I watching March Madness?

Speaker 4 (04:59):
No?

Speaker 2 (05:00):
I really know, and I and I said, no, I
have been watching some but I said no because I,
once again I was hoping that he would take it
as I thought I was putting him out of his conversation.

Speaker 4 (05:10):
Misery right like like somebody was like, you need to
be more interactive. Well, I'm gonna kind of force myself,
right and.

Speaker 2 (05:17):
I'm thinking, okay, if I say no, hey, you're tried.
It didn't work. We didn't have small talk. I let
you down. You don't have to feel bad. I said no,
I don't watch March Madness and we can stop. And
then he goes, yeah, you know Carolina, you know that,

(05:38):
you know they are? I said what what he said?
Carolina roofed Carolina there, Carolina out there out. I said, yeah,
I'm a Carolina fan too, and that's probably why I
didn't watch. And he's like, oh, you uh you are

(05:59):
do the football. I'm like, what, like, do I watch football?

Speaker 4 (06:05):
Do it?

Speaker 2 (06:05):
Am I play football? What the fuck?

Speaker 4 (06:07):
Like?

Speaker 2 (06:08):
Oh my god? This shit went on so long. I'm
sure it was really like three minutes, but it felt
like twenty.

Speaker 4 (06:14):
And I know it drug him skinning it because when
they you know, the cash, very few cash just can
talk and skin at the same time. Most can if
they're talking, they normally stopped moving. You have something to
talk and they're just like boom boom boom, and they
can kind of carry the conversation on. But most people
there are like a one track mind when it comes
to talking.

Speaker 3 (06:34):
So it's like, just be quiet if you know, you
can't talk.

Speaker 2 (06:37):
To sa like he was quiet, he was mumbling, and
he was trailing off and he wouldn't shut the fuck up.
At the same time, I was just I've never felt
this combination before in real life. And I really didn't
know they made people like him, but god damn, he
was the worst he was and he meant well, I'm
not he's a bad person, but it was the worst.

(06:57):
It was not a good experience.

Speaker 3 (06:59):
Right, zero stars.

Speaker 2 (07:02):
I will never I will never go to his line again.
If I go back to that same grocery store, I
will avoid it. I'll go to self check out before
I do his thing, because he don't need to be
doing any of the stuff he.

Speaker 3 (07:12):
Was doing, right.

Speaker 2 (07:13):
I feel like he got called up from bagging groceries
on a whim, you know what, Yes, and now they
need to put him back in the ball fan he not.
He need to watch a little bit more, a little
bit more tape, some more game film. It's not good.

Speaker 3 (07:26):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (07:27):
Also, the thing, because I've cast ship before, like at
that at that particular grocery store when I was a teenager.
And the thing is when you're cashiering like that, you
have to kind of particularly if you're gonna talk, you
kind of have to be able to really communicate. Not
that you got to communicate like one hundred percent, but
you have to have to, you know, be able to

(07:47):
speak up.

Speaker 2 (07:49):
Yeah, you have to be able to do that for everything.
I don't know how he gets through life. What is
he doing when he not at work? He got a girlfriend?
What's she like?

Speaker 3 (07:59):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (08:00):
She she she even knows when they get in the argument.

Speaker 3 (08:02):
She probably don't.

Speaker 2 (08:05):
What the judicies dishes? Do the dish? You need me
to do the dishes. This is why why you're not
you're not doing the dishes. No, I didn't do the
dishes and sink.

Speaker 3 (08:26):
And she doesn't walk away because he's like, I give
up the car.

Speaker 2 (08:31):
What does that have to do with the fucking dishes? Now?

Speaker 4 (08:33):
Anyway, Something that I've said this before and I want
to say this again as somebody who enjoys the NBA
and loves the shot the Hornets. I am still I
still feel the type of way about them leaving lemonal
Ball off of the All Star team. And the biggest

(08:56):
reason why I feel that way as somebody who goes see.

Speaker 3 (09:00):
The game and this has happened. I go see the games.
This happened twice.

Speaker 4 (09:03):
They had like a school night one time we went
and it was like a hot when I.

Speaker 3 (09:07):
Tell you, child, they have about fifty five schools.

Speaker 4 (09:09):
Up in that bitch from North Carolina, South Carolina and
surrounding car and he's like everybody. It was Buss's Galore
and LaMelo Ball played that night. And when when when
they sat LaMelo Ball's name, most of the schools was
kind of up in the upper upper section. When I
tell y'all, the two hundred sections erupted. They love that nigga,

(09:32):
And I'm like, yeah, dog, he is very very popular.
I understand we ain't the most winning his ass team,
but it's called.

Speaker 3 (09:41):
That got damn All Star game.

Speaker 4 (09:43):
It's called you know. I understand that y'all got y'all
rules of regulations, but the fans should have a kind
of a say so too and what they want. And
I understand sometimes that means players get in that people
are like, I don't know who the fuck they are. Well, bitch,
you don't watch the games either, and so he's very
very popular. And I think it was like enough. And

(10:04):
we was also sitting one night and there was some
teenagers behind us, and that little girl the whole time
was yelling Lamela Bau, Lamela Bau, Lamela Ball. I love you,
Lamela Ball, shoot the three, Lamlabau. It was like the
whole godamn game. I was like, Oh, I was like, yeah,

(10:25):
I think that they didn't hear wrong regardless of if
your teams are winning team or not, that that should
not be a prerequisence, or if you should be on
the All Star team.

Speaker 2 (10:35):
Yeah, I think, uh. Just I mean not to get
too much into the All Star Game in basketball on
the regular Show, but I think they just need to
expand the All Star rosters to more spots. I think
it would just solve a shit ton of the problems.
Like if you just if you just made it whereas
like instead of twelve spots per conference, whatever, if you

(11:00):
just made it to like say fifteen seventeen something like that,
just it'd be fine, especially now that they're doing all
the gimmick, like three teams versus like, get these niggas
from the G League. They'll play hard. You know, Like,
now that they're doing all of that shit, they might
as well expand it to some more guys. You know,
I think they should do an all snub team. If
they're gonna do this four teams of all star type thing.

(11:24):
There's a lot of ideas that the main thing I'll
say for LaMelo and this goes for Hornets fans too,
that are like, we should move on from him or
just get rid of him, trade them. I really think
the dumbest thing that Charlotte Hornets could do right now
is move on from LaMelo Ball.

Speaker 3 (11:42):
I agreed.

Speaker 2 (11:43):
Almost every single person that talks like that does not
attend games, doesn't buy tickets, and only consumes the team
from like either like online or streaming or like things
that we're having a star wouldn't matter to them. Like
the biggest one of the biggest problems the NBA has

(12:04):
with his fans is that too many of the fans
have gotten into this moneyball type of environment. Like it's
probably the worst thing about to me, the worst thing
about NBA fans is not just the negativity and shit,
it's that so many of them talk like a GM,

(12:24):
and the way that I love basketball is not like
a GM, Like like I don't remember growing up and
ever being like, what's Glenn Rice's hit on the salary cap?
Like I I just thought he was a cold ass dude.
And like the idea of how the team functions with
the money and contracts, it was so secondary to my

(12:44):
enjoyment of basketball, Like I wouldn't even say secondary.

Speaker 3 (12:47):
It's like last Nigga, don't give a fuck about the Ledger.

Speaker 2 (12:51):
Yeah, but now, because you know, I think with the
advent of the Internet, social media, message boards, gambling, NBA
two K, where guys don't even play as their favorite
team anymore. Like when I was growing up, you would
buy an NBA video game and you would just be like,
I want to beat the Charlotte Hornets. I want to play.

(13:12):
I want to play like Michael Jordan. Now people buy it.
They either do a GM type thing where you're just
making salary cap trades and you're not even watching, you're
simming the games, and so it's completely about money management,
contract salaries, stuff like that, drafting thuff, stuff like that,
and then the other way people play is they play

(13:33):
it like a role playing game where you literally create
your own player, play through some mode where you end
up paying for like clothes, and it's like you're you're
sending an NBA player's life that you made up that's
not real. And then you work your way into the
league and you play, and so you're playing like a
story at that.

Speaker 3 (13:52):
Point, Yes, you are.

Speaker 2 (13:54):
To me, that's that changes how you view basketball. And
the place where that doesn't change is for kids. Right,
kids don't kids are hold back sports really supposed to
be for kids? Like one of the main problems we have.
None of us really grew up, like a lot of

(14:15):
us didn't become adults. Right, A lot of us still
do the things we did when we were kids, and
we enjoy those things. That's fine, yes, but we don't
enjoy them like kids. We enjoy them like adults. So
you got people hating Marvel movies. Motherfucker. You're not supposed
to care that much about Marvel movies. The reason I
still love them all is because I don't. I can't
care but so much. I don't start a sentence with

(14:37):
I'm really worried about Blade. Why would I be worried
about this fictional bullshit.

Speaker 3 (14:42):
It's not my decision.

Speaker 2 (14:43):
Yeah, I'm really worried about immigration, Nigga, I'm worried about
you know what I'm saying, Like, I'm not really worried
about anything that is entertainment, right. And so sports was
supposed to be a place where every team is playing.
But we understand, especially in basketball, not every team is

(15:04):
gonna win, and not every team's goal is to get
a championship, and some teams should just be having fun
and fun is underrated.

Speaker 3 (15:12):
Somebody.

Speaker 2 (15:13):
Some of my favorite memories from my childhood with basketball.
The reason I get to hold on those memories is
because it was before the change in sports culture. It
was before debate, TV shows, it was before the Internet,
and so I get to be like like and I
would I would say this about almost every NBA fan
I know they love the Muzzy Bowl Charlotte Hornets. Yes,

(15:35):
if the Muzzy Bowl Charlotte Hornets happened today, the only
thing we be hearing is they can't win the championship.
I don't know why y'all like that team. They ain't
gonna go, No, they gonna They're gonna get off the
first round. That's the difference between now and when I
was a kid. And so I love going to the
games because the kids are fresh, and the kids don't care,
and the kids just want to see LaMelo ball shoot

(15:55):
those step back, fade away threes. Yes, And honestly, that's
your next generation of customers. That's who drives your internet traffics. Yeah,
like I love that type of ship and so, yeah,
it is interesting to see how many people have missed
out on that by saying stuff like the All Star
Game should be about winning. It never has been and

(16:17):
it shouldn't be. All Star games should be about popularity
and fun and what the fans want to see. It's
an exhibition for fans. It's an exhibition, So why would
I give a fucking Oh he doesn't play winning basketball.
You know who wasn't doesn't play winning basketball? Zero people
during the All Star Game, they just dunk and run
around like throw alleys and ship like it's not a

(16:39):
shoot from half court, Like this is the place for
not winning basketball. This is the fun due to globetrotters,
is what we want to see. So yeah, I'm with
you on that. Uh, this is a quick one. Now
that we have cell phones. I feel like the words
nothing to write home about have lost a lot of
steam because it used to be a time where you'd
be like, she's nothing to write home about out and

(17:00):
it meant something, yes, But now it's like nothing right home?
We right, we text, we do it like it doesn't
have it, don't hit the same, No, we just not.
I feel like you say somebody nothing the right home
about it.

Speaker 3 (17:10):
They might blink their eys said, the fuck you're talking
about it.

Speaker 2 (17:12):
You can switch it to nothing to text, I'm about
nothing to text your family, nothing to text the group
chat about. I don't I don't know what I'm workshopping,
but we might need.

Speaker 3 (17:21):
To change it one hundred degree.

Speaker 2 (17:24):
All right, you want to get into the show. Now,
you want to do more.

Speaker 4 (17:28):
I'm want to do more, actually two more things, one thing.
And I'm still not I'm still stopped up. I'm not
one hundred percent, and it's I'm not kind of that
irritating point where you're like about eighty five ninety percent,
but you still got like that ten percent just kind
of what else you're down and ties you out a

(17:50):
little bit sometimes.

Speaker 1 (17:51):
So I'm I'm still kind of stopped up up and
taking clart and and all that stuff, and it ind
eventually with clip I sound so much better than I
was for And I'm sorry y'all.

Speaker 3 (18:02):
If y'all heard me blow my nose on one.

Speaker 4 (18:03):
Of the shows before, I thought I was far away
from the mic, I don't know, but if he random
blowing at just me because I was stopped up. But
like I said, I'm not one hundred percent. Uh yeah,
I'm kind of in that irritating phase. And it's just
very frustrating to be in that. I'm about eighty five
to ninety percent phase. It's just it's just annoyingness, all okay.

(18:26):
And we talked about this on a pregame and I
didn't know if you won't talked about by the heat,
but we talked about going to the time.

Speaker 2 (18:32):
No, they should pay for it, listen get behind the paywall.
We talked about Tyler the creator at the at the
concert we went to last Wednesday on the pregame. I
just really don't want to waste time talking about it. Twice.
I loved it. We had a great time. We had
a lot of detail. The blackoutips dot Com slash Premium
check out the last episode of the pregame if you

(18:53):
want to hear like a detailed discussion of the concert,
because that would just be another twenty thirty minutes. That's
talking now, And I want to talk about some of
the other stuff that happened within the news. But yeah,
get behind the paywall. We talk about stuff with Justin
behind the paywall a lot. Oh, that's why our sports
show is, That's why our nerd show is who our

(19:13):
cooking show is. That's where our movie reviews are. So yeah,
check that stuff out.

Speaker 4 (19:17):
Man.

Speaker 2 (19:17):
It's a good advertisement and reminder to go to the
Blackguy tips dot com slash premium and if you ever
have any questions or problems or issues or concerns, the
Black Guy who tips at gmail is my email address.
I'll walk you through whatever you need help.

Speaker 3 (19:30):
Okay, that's all else.

Speaker 2 (19:32):
All right, cool, let's get into the shizzy shizzy shizzo.
Let me see here. All right, let's get into the news.

(20:11):
I might as well, do.

Speaker 5 (20:14):
You know.

Speaker 2 (20:15):
I'll just do some general news real quick before we
do politics. New report reveals disturbing number of complaints the
FCC received during Kendrick Lamar's Super Bowl halftime show.

Speaker 3 (20:29):
White folks, mad, what are we talking about here.

Speaker 4 (20:34):
Uh, we've had all black stuff before, We've had it
in the past.

Speaker 3 (20:39):
Like they're just mad because it wasn't for them.

Speaker 2 (20:42):
They got one hundred and twenty five complaints, which I
actually don't think is that many.

Speaker 3 (20:46):
It's not compared to the amount of people to watch
the show.

Speaker 4 (20:49):
Yeah I can, yeah, it's not even the people watch
the show.

Speaker 2 (20:52):
Although what kind of person pick up the phone to
call the FCC. I don't even know the FCC number.
You got to look that up. Or are these people
that call all the time and they just like Kendrick
was why they called that day, But tomorrow they'll call
again to be like I don't like what Whoopy Goldberg
has on. Okay, those glasses do not match that cafkin.

(21:14):
I'd like to place another FCC complaint. You know, are
they like do they have the FCC got these people
in the call?

Speaker 4 (21:20):
I d like, janis, how can we help you? I
bet to some people they do. It's a small percentage
of people that do that. But over around, Yeah, people
were mad. I think I think I've had an article
about and they were saying that, like I guess some
people wrote letters, some people calling.

Speaker 3 (21:34):
They was saying basically some people they messages like niger Nigga,
niga igga, nigg nigg nigga just hung.

Speaker 4 (21:40):
Up, you know, like they just like and and and
I'm kind of overemphasizing, but basically they was calling basically seeing.

Speaker 3 (21:47):
Slurs on the messages to the CC some of the complaints.

Speaker 2 (21:52):
One viewer wrote, so, I guess they have like a
website or something. Kendrick Lamar made false, fake, and scandalous
claims that are unfounded. I think that was Drake. That
was either Drake or academics that wrote that one in Yeah. Uh,
that's that's weird. That's the only one they put in

(22:13):
this article. They wrote a whole article just to be
like one person said this, Oh all right, well that's
kind of weird. I thought it would have more, uh
more of what their complaints.

Speaker 3 (22:25):
Were, more examples, I think.

Speaker 2 (22:29):
I'm Many complained over his exclusive use of black performers,
calling it divisive. Others were not too fond of the
use of his split American flag during the Super Bowl performance. Okay,
all right, well, you know, good luck to y'all. Yeah,
I'll be all right, but yeah, that's calling the FCC
on Kendrick is just such a fucking like and who's

(22:51):
the snowflakes? Now, who's the who's the people that can't
handle a little bit of a little bit of entertainment,
our freedom of speech?

Speaker 4 (23:01):
Right as many all white Super Bowls we've had in
the past.

Speaker 3 (23:03):
Get the fuck out of here.

Speaker 2 (23:05):
Uh yeah, yeah whatever. They didn't even complain about the well,
who knows what they complained about. That article wasn't deep.
Sexy Red suits for allegedly asking followers to go beat
up her child's grandmother. You can't do that, baby, Yeah,
she put herself in a sticky situation, Yes she did. Yeah. So.

(23:31):
Sexy Reds facing legal trouble after being accused of encouraging
her fans to attack her grandmother of one of her children.
The grandmother of one of her children. She is now
being here with a five million dollars lawsuit. According to
court documents. Nicole Barnes, the paternal grandmother of one of
Sexy Reds children, claiming the rappers share both the photo
and the address of her home and a Facebook post

(23:52):
in December twenty twenty four. Barnes says the post went further,
allegedly urging followers to kick in the door and carry
out acts of violence against her to you too. Well,
if it's true, that's gonna be an easy one to prove.
They just pull up her, you know, social media posts.
Barnes fifty one said she was blindsided by the post.
I had no involvement in the personal dispute between Sexy

(24:13):
Red and the child's.

Speaker 3 (24:13):
Father, right, What I got to do with it?

Speaker 2 (24:16):
Yeah, that's crazy, But you know, we know she's a provocative,
weird person. So Sexy Red and her baby dad are
getting into bees for whatever reason. They have nothing to
do with my client, said Barnes attorney Stephen Weaver, attorney
that used the word beefs is that's wild. And to
turn baby daddy.

Speaker 3 (24:38):
What kind of lawyer is he?

Speaker 2 (24:41):
I'm not a lawyer, and I know to say the
child's father and dispute like, come on, bro, what you're doing?

Speaker 3 (24:49):
What is you doing?

Speaker 2 (24:51):
You got a do rag on and a two pick
hang mouth. We tried to resolve it quietly. Her attorneys
thought it was a joke. Now that finding out, it's not,
as I say, funk around to find out when I
get done, her bootyhole is gonna be red because I'm
gonna put my foot so far up. Uh, let's see,

(25:15):
But yeah, I mean I didn't. The thing is, I'm
sure Sexy Red will say she's joking or whatever. I
don't I don't know what her defense will be. But
anytime you dock somebody on the internet and like we're
it's way. We've been on the internet way too long
for us to act like that's not a threat, right,
Anything can happen on these crazy motherfucking fans. Yes, sir,

(25:39):
the lunatics not to mention they now know that maybe
your child might be there at some point, you know, for.

Speaker 3 (25:46):
The safe of your child. What is wrong with you?

Speaker 2 (25:49):
Yeah, that's crazy, man. I don't know nothing about kids
though I didn't have any, so I imagine that shit
can get really intense with people arguing and fighting over
their kids and shit like that. Matter of fact, Carti
b accuses Offset of threatening to kill her and then himself.
He harasses me, she said. Now. She did this on

(26:12):
her Twitter spaces. She aired out her grievances, saying he's
upset because I sent his girlfriend messages of him begging
me saying he was going to take away his life,
saying he was going to take away my life. He
harasses me, leaves me voicemails and tries to lower my
self esteem. The accusation didn't stop there. She said that
he's been sending people to harass her and her friends,

(26:33):
as well as trying to interfere with her new relationships.
He sent a text message to somebody I was dealing
with of us having sex, Carti claimed, adding that he
been leaving explicit voicemails when she traveled. Her frustrations with
his behavior were also highlighted when she revealed her Instagram
live that he ruined her Valentine's Day plans. Additionally, she
claimed he was suicidal. These allegations come shortly after reports

(26:55):
of him seeking joint cussy of their children following her
divorcee filing.

Speaker 3 (27:01):
Chad, I didn't ask to be here, what does happening?

Speaker 4 (27:04):
This sounds like some some some some court things or
things that y'all need to do, not trying to find
it work outside of the line.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
Like yeah, well, this is what I think is so interesting,
right because there's one you never know what the is
happening with. People agreed. There were people that were speculating
that their relationship was abusive the whole time. There were
people that were you know it's on the up and up.
You know, I'm personally on the if I don't if
I don't know, so I just don't assume. I always

(27:34):
feel like it'll have we'll find out sooner or later.
And obviously we don't know who is and isn't telling
the truth. But the main two things I'm looking at
here is one, going to Twitter spaces is such an
interesting thing because Twitter spaces is not your friends. They're

(27:56):
not nine one one, they're not a judge, they're not
a lawyer, they're not your spouse, they're not going to
protect your children. All they are is people in your business.
And it will help get the word out to the media.
But you know what else gets the word out to
the media, fouling a lawsuit because TMZ will have that

(28:16):
shit in print first thing in the morning, like these
are the allegations. So I always wonder about this, so
that this is my second point. When someone goes to
the Internet like this, I can't help but wonder is
it because I imagine she has money resources, So is

(28:38):
it that you don't realize that all you're doing is
trying to manipulate public opinion? Or is it that you
do realize it and that's what you care about, because
I don't know why Twitter spaces would even need to know.
And I'm not saying you keep it quiet. I'm just saying,
these motherfuckers only want to be in your business.

Speaker 3 (28:58):
That's it.

Speaker 2 (28:59):
They're not friends, they're not family, They're not like this
isn't you telling your mom or your dad. You're telling
somebody who's gonna just make a comment on an IG
post later and not. And when I say they're not
your friends, some of them will be sympathetic, but a
lot of them think it's funny. You're gonna have Nicki
Minaj fans in. They're calling you all kinds of names.
They're gonna crash out on them. And I always said

(29:21):
from inceptions, she was on the cutting edge of internet
access and just putting my back.

Speaker 3 (29:28):
Out at the beginning of it.

Speaker 4 (29:29):
And her and Sexy Red and and some of these
other artists they were around when the Internet first started.
Kind of Internet was there, but nobody knew what it
was gonna turn into. And so when you have these
people that were kind of at the beginning of it,

(29:49):
their whole thing was, Hey, this is how I get
to my fans. You know, because I understand you. You
you eliminate the third person, you eliminate that middleman. But
a lot of time funny, sometimes there are consequences to
eliminating a middle man's life.

Speaker 2 (30:05):
Sometimes a middle man serves a very very important purpose.

Speaker 4 (30:10):
So there are some things that the Oriente does that
the fans don't need to know if that needs to
be filtered through somebody else, and they get the words right,
whatever it may be, so that it could go out
to the public every like that's their job. And so
when you eliminate that, you have people with raw emotions.
You have people with raw feelings. You have people where

(30:31):
sometimes things aren't they don't sit down or don't think
about it and don't analyze things, that.

Speaker 2 (30:36):
Just go because they because they're used to.

Speaker 4 (30:39):
Going straight to the straight to the source. So when
people are used to going straight to the source because actually,
like I say, and on top of that, like everybody else,
they're addicted like everybody else.

Speaker 3 (30:49):
So when you have somebody.

Speaker 4 (30:50):
That's addicted to the accolades, to the pats on the back,
to the to the hw that they get from going
regardless of how you feel, you know, if it's good,
bad or and different.

Speaker 3 (31:02):
You need something to.

Speaker 2 (31:03):
Confirm your feelings and to let you know, quote unquote,
everything is gonna be alright, regardless of what the truth
of it is. And when you and the thing that's
interesting there is the Internet isn't really a place that
confirms your feelings to tell you everything's gonna be all right,
Like you selectively pick the feedback that you're gonna pay
attention to. But the vast majority of us, and She's

(31:25):
proven us in the past, are actually more prone to
see and give weight to the negative than the positive. Yes,
so ninety percent of people in that spaces could have
been positive, but I'm sure that ten percent that was
like this bitch lion are the ones that you see.
It's actually not a support group, it's not your friends.

(31:46):
And I think also because she was on the cutting edge,
she bet on herself with the internet access on Instagram
before when people thought that was dumb and people were like,
don't do this. I don't know how you convince somebody
who was right when everyone else was wrong. And now
everybody except like Beyonce and Kendrick are on the internet

(32:07):
sharing shit all the time. It's just a way of
life at this point. I can see it being even
harder to convince her like no, actually you should not
do like in addition to whatever legal quagmire it is
to put some of this stuff out here before you
put it in a lawsuit. But just it just I

(32:27):
don't know, I feel bad for her and like the
way I would feel bad for anyone going through this,
but at the same time, like that struggle of shit
that she was doing the whole time, the you know,
back back and forth. I'm with you with your first comment,
which is like, it's weird that you keep putting everybody
in the group chat. It just seemed like, whatever this is,

(32:50):
if it is as serious as you say, right, it
just don't seem like any positive is gonna come out
of telling us on the internet that this man, if
he is threatening you like that, that he should the
law should be involved. That's that's not a joke, agreed.

Speaker 4 (33:05):
And it's also one of those things where a certain
generation is of the generation of oversharing and sharing everything,
and it's older people that overshare and share everything, and
the internet encourages that, it wants you to do that.
But the thing about over sharing and sharing everything, particularly online,

(33:26):
is that these things are real things. These things actually
impact your life. These are people that you know, places
like like like it's real, and some a lot with
And so when you do this to people that don't
know you, don't care about you, have false pretense and
things like that don't you know, don't like you, whatever

(33:46):
the case may be, they are hitting something that is
real for you and and and not tell me funny
and and it's and I don't and I know people
watch these shows, but this is one thing, my personal opinion,
that turn me off about love and hip hopping.

Speaker 3 (33:58):
All that stuff.

Speaker 4 (33:59):
The big there's reason why is because I started seeing
these people crashing out about real shit that really impacted them,
and they would talk about this shit online people talk
about them and then they were like this is my mother.
I was like, oh no, no, no, baby, I can't do this.
It sounds like these are real things happening in your
real life, and you're being recorded and chopped and screwed
however you want to do, and it's being presented to

(34:21):
us in a certain type of way that you may
or may not agree with. Everybody's adults, you could do
what you want to do, watch the show, love the show,
But for me, personally. This is when I tapped out
because in my mind, I'm like, hey, the law needs
to be involved, like like like what these are things
that we don't need to personally. I don't need to
personally know these things about you.

Speaker 2 (34:40):
Yes, it's content at this point, you know it's it's
and people don't really care about the people behind it
in a lot of cases, right, But it's hard to
move on from beefs sometimes it is, as Monique has
illustrated this week, she slammed Tyler Perry again, at this point,

(35:01):
it would be more newsworthy, and she didn't. Right, It's
like Monique, Tyler Perry breathes Monique silent, We'd be like,
whoa is she? Okay? If Tyler Perry got one hater,
she's Timonique, and if he has none, Monique is passed.
During the live stream with fellow comedian Red Grant, she
went off on the filmmaker once again, accusing him of

(35:21):
hypocrisy and mistreatment. I'm not difficult to work with. I'm
just not going to put up with no foolishness. And
it's not that I'm not going to I'm not going
to let you treat anybody else back that we're playing with.
So I think that the misconception became, and the misconception
came from Tyler Perry. She as long claimed that he
played the Kley browle and the black balling and saying
she was difficult to work with. Yeah, I know. I

(35:46):
wonder if Oprah and Tyler both roll there, if they
called each other. Texted the day that Lee Daniels hugged
her and forgave her or she forgave him. I'm just like,
oh my god, oh here we go, because.

Speaker 6 (36:02):
Gave in.

Speaker 2 (36:02):
Now she's gonna she gonna think she got a chance
to make us give in. During her conversation with Grant,
she doubled down on her criticism of Perry, calling him
a hypocrite and reversing his recent speech at Angie Stone's
funeral where he called for fair treatment of black women
in the entertainment industry. Edge Stone was a fighter baby,
and to watch that man up there be hypocritical over
the top of my sister. No, sir, you cannot do that,

(36:24):
because if it was the other way around, I know
my sister would have done the same thing, the same
damn thing. Yeah, I'll tell you what, dog, Tyler Perry
has treated many, many Black women much more fairly than
Hollywood has treated those women that are stars and should
be treated as such, but weren't. Many of them have
used him as a stepping wrong into white Hollywood to

(36:46):
be stars and then shipped on him on the way back,
not because of how they were treated, but just by saying,
like this movie was beneath me. It's like at the
time when nobody was calling, it wasn't beneath you. And
if now you're doing work that is better than that.
I feel good for you, and I feel like that
was the fucking goal, Like good for you.

Speaker 3 (37:04):
Yes, that was his point. Was that was to help
you get to a certain point.

Speaker 2 (37:07):
So many black women have stories of ya, I was
never paid well, I was never treated well.

Speaker 4 (37:14):
Was the one that thinks she was like, I never
so many what I was worth Like she has public
said that he was one of the first people that
actually paid me what I was worth.

Speaker 2 (37:22):
Right, But I think Monique likes pulling this ship out
of and this is something a lot of people do,
and it's something I noticed now when people do the
slight of hand when it's Monique and she don't like something,
it's all black women so now she stands for I'm

(37:44):
every black woman. It's all in me, But many black
women would be like, that's not my experience with Tyler Perry.
So no, this isn't standing up for me. I had
no issues with him. Okay, that's number one. Number two
when she ships on other black women all of a
sudden and is now this shit is gone. When she
co signs Roseanne because that's her homie, it's different, So

(38:06):
you know, it's I mean, I guess this is the
problem with you know, when you have a beef, legitimate
or not. I'm not even going to argue to like
if she feels as legitimate it is to her.

Speaker 3 (38:16):
But when you have a.

Speaker 2 (38:17):
Beef, I feel like a lot of times it can
kind of blind you to other shit, to where it's
like you're saying stuff and it don't really have to
be consistent because it's like I'm mad at this person.
So whatever I can say to hurt them, I'm gonna
say it. And I don't know that that would align
with reality that Tyler Perry is mistreating all these black
women that work with him on the productions. So but

(38:40):
she says Medea is a far better human than Tyler Perry,
Medea is a far better human being because the principals
and value she stands on. Once he goes back to
Tyler Pairry, he drops it off. So you know she
always makes that same remark. Let's keep it going. We'll
do one more, do we do two more? Uh? Let's

(39:01):
keep it music. Mark Morrison, you know who he is?

Speaker 3 (39:06):
And art with a musical artist because you said it
was music.

Speaker 2 (39:10):
Return of the Mac singer Mark Morrison.

Speaker 3 (39:13):
Oh that's his name.

Speaker 2 (39:14):
Oh yeah. He got busted on a battery charge in
Florida at the allegedly striking the general manager of a
Swinkie restaurant. I know, I know, I can't believe it.
Oh my god. According to police report obtained by TMZ,
Morrison storring into Lebar even in Palm Beach on Saturday

(39:36):
evening and started yelling and cussing at the venues general manager,
not the gym. It seems Morrison was upset over the event.
He started playing with the venue on Friday, so he
started playing on Friday, but then he came in on Saturday.
I guess it was the Return of the Mac, return

(40:01):
return to the Smack. The report says the cops said
a witness told the officer of the situation escalated to
the point Morrison allegedly pushed the manager in his upper
body Nicolo Levaka. The manager did not fight back. What
why not you let Mark Morrison beat you up? He

(40:22):
hasn't had a hit since returning to mac and then
hitting you. The report says a witness jumped in separating
the two and asked Morrison to step outside. Based on
the evidence, cops arrested Morrison on the charge of simple battery.
Simple battery. Well, if he was playing something with the
veny on Friday and he showed up and was upset

(40:44):
on Saturday, I mean that leads me to one conclusion.
He must have told them. They must have lied to him.

Speaker 3 (40:55):
They lied to him someone right, Yes they did, Yes
they did.

Speaker 2 (41:04):
His car got declined. He was like, well I tried, Yes,
I tried.

Speaker 3 (41:14):
That's hilarious.

Speaker 2 (41:16):
I had to read him his rights, like yes, I do, yes,
I do do doude once again, And the photo we've
retained Morrison seen handcuff with his hands behind his backspoarding
a black shirt, tak short khaki shorts and bright yellow shoes.
Now that's not a macing outfit. Come on, now, that's

(41:38):
that's just a regular that's a regular dagger outfit. I
feel like he shopped at the gap. Uh. Here's a
picture of him getting arrested. Well, you know what, them
shoes might be macking. Uh. I feel like that should
be arrest of the outfit that goes with that. But
I'll take it back.

Speaker 3 (41:57):
Man. He put on his seat pudding. He was like,
I'm not gonna messed my suit up for this. Yeah,
he knew he was gonna fight.

Speaker 4 (42:04):
So he because he basically had a suit, the master
them shoes and he was like, you know what, I
can't miss.

Speaker 3 (42:09):
My suit up.

Speaker 2 (42:10):
He he only had time to put the shoes on
for his outfit and then he got mad. He just
put on regular clothes for the rest of the outfit.
But yeah, we hate to see it. Mister mac. The

(42:31):
singer later posted a mug shot in the blue jumpsuit,
and from the looks of it, doesn't seem too happy.
He was at least Sunday morning at the posting a
thousand dollars bond. Oh yeah, they do have his mugshot
in here. I'm sorry I didn't show you all that.
It's at the top. So what's funny is I don't

(42:51):
I this man had the number one hit on the planet.
I could not have picked this man out in the lineup,
And in five minutes I won't be able to do
it again.

Speaker 3 (43:00):
I will not. I'm not even gonna lie.

Speaker 2 (43:03):
Yeah, he tried to tell him, so I got about it,
but I guess they didn't know. I'm sadd the story
goes now he got the flow because they lied to him.

Speaker 3 (43:19):
He is not here for thee.

Speaker 2 (43:20):
All those times you said I booked that room, lie
to me. My car declined, My car decline?

Speaker 3 (43:34):
Is wrong with you?

Speaker 2 (43:36):
Oh my god? Return on the smack in your face?

Speaker 3 (43:41):
Oh my god?

Speaker 2 (43:48):
They called the police? Why whyy why? Oh my god?
Who is the last time you thought about Mark Morrison?

Speaker 3 (43:58):
Ain't that the truth? Oh?

Speaker 2 (44:00):
All right? Last story, keeping music. Lizzo confronts Young Miami
over controversial weight loss comments. So Lizzo has lost some weight.

Speaker 3 (44:11):
Okay, picture she looks good.

Speaker 2 (44:15):
Yeah, it's like, you know, look good the whole time
she looked good. Don't say yeah, I'm not trying to
be walking and you always trying to make it sound
like you was wrong, just saying like I haven't seen
what comments she's made that would make people like be
upset with her or like, you know, like it's her
body whatever she wants it to look like, it's cool. Uh,

(44:38):
you know, she's talking about body positivity for a while,
but I don't know if she's still on the same shit.
But body positivity isn't just you have to be fat, like,
body positivity is supposed to be supporting and loving your
body wherever it's at because people have so many issues
and we don't know what hidden fights people are fighting
in their minds and in their body.

Speaker 4 (45:00):
Yeah, and this is something we mean you. I don't
remember we talked about it on here or offline or whatever.
But body positivity for some people can become a very
negative place, and some people use body positivity as a
way to shame people. Like but it's presented in a

(45:21):
body positivity formatting type of thing. And the thing about
body positivity is like like it's like, hey, it don't
matter how big you are, how small you are with
your shape, whatever, you just love your body as it is.
And people's uh body sizes particularly I can't speak for men,
but for women, it's all over the place. Menopause premenopausal,

(45:43):
you're going through your cycle, you'll know.

Speaker 3 (45:46):
Depression is a type of shit.

Speaker 4 (45:48):
That have your body all over the place, be it sickness, medication.

Speaker 3 (45:52):
Whatever it is, your body changes. You have to live
with it.

Speaker 4 (45:55):
And I think for a lot of people, and I
will say this on the outside, Lookinnion, I avoid a
lot of people.

Speaker 3 (46:04):
With her being heavy.

Speaker 4 (46:05):
A lot of people never liked her being heavy from
the beginning, and they was like, I'm gonna keep quiet
because you know the girl.

Speaker 3 (46:11):
He's love her, even though I don't like her being big.

Speaker 4 (46:14):
And then you know, the stuff came out with her
being sued by those people, and then all these people
came out because it really wasn't about body positivity. Y'all
just didn't like her being big.

Speaker 2 (46:23):
Also, she's another person, kind of like Cardi. A lot
of her success came because she was on the internet
a lot, posting on social media a lot in the comments,
talking to people a lot. And what everybody always forgets
with that is when you send that signal out, some
of it's positive, some of it a lot of it's positive.
A lot of people will love you. But what also
happens is you when you let people know you're reading

(46:45):
the comments, you let your haters know how to where
to find you, so they be in the comments talking
bad about your body. And then like once every three months,
she used to crash out based off of people saying
bad shit to her, and then it would not make
it stop. People, You just have a media cycle of
everybody talking about you know, Lizzo was crying and then
people being like, you know, she fat and ugly and

(47:07):
all this other shit, as opposed to just you know,
not giving those people the air or whatever. Because like
I'm not saying everyone has to sit back and take it.
It's just you need to understand what fighting back looks
like and what it means, and that it does take
a toll on you. Is you can act like you're
some stone, cold hearted, you know, unbothered person, but at
the end of the day, being in a state where

(47:29):
you're letting people bother you and then reading that shit
and then reacting to it, it is doing something to you.

Speaker 4 (47:35):
So it is and I think that also, and it's
just me and answer looking into my personal opinion, I
think that a lot of people only liked her because
she was big, and when she started losing weight, it
bothered them.

Speaker 3 (47:50):
But that has nothing to do with Lizzo.

Speaker 2 (47:52):
Yeah, I mean we've seen it every way with her, right.
We saw when she did a juice cleanse before she
even lost weight. It was just like two three years ago.
She just did ad you a cleanse, and people came
out like, I just bitch, she better not be trying
to lose weight. Oh you said all that stuff about
body positivity. Now look at you. It's like you become
a hub for people to argue Avatar. That really doesn't

(48:15):
mean like it's really not about you. It's about their
own issues with way yeah, health and fat people and
all this other shit, and so at any rate, my
Young Miami went on Club Shasha, the Home of the Mess,
and she mentioned Lizzo while discussing societal pressure on women
to alter their appearance through cosmetic procedures. She said, everybody

(48:37):
was like, oh my gosh, she's so fat. She looks
so good. Now now it's like, oh my god, Eh,
pick a side, what do you want. Lizzo clearly was
bothered by the ooh remark and decided to call Miami
directly during the Twitch live stream over the weekend to
clarify what she meant see she's on Twitch on the
live stream doing this. Lizo questioned Miami about the intention

(48:57):
behind her comments, specifically the reaction to being mentioned. Responding
to Lizzo's concerns, John Miami clarified her intentions. Everybody says
you look good, but then you have the little five percent.
That's like she looked better when she was fat, she explained.
The former City Girls rapper than emphasized that her comments
were not meant to criticize Lizo personally, but rather highlight
the impossible standards women face regarding their bodies. That's how

(49:19):
I took it to me too. I was referencing, you
just can't make everybody happy. Meanwhile, Lizzo is trans from
body positivity to body neutrality, embracing a more personal and
involving perspective on self image. In March twenty twenty four
interview with The New York Times, she explained that body
positivity is state straight from its original intent and is
now involved in the body evolved in the body neutrality,

(49:40):
Prioritizing health over aesthetics, Lizzo focuses on maintaining a balanced
lifestyle rather than fixating no wait. She champions embracing one's
body at any size or nurturing it for overall well
being in longevity. She also argued the body positivity movement
has to come a cod word for fat rather than
a message of empowerment. Yeah, I can see all of that,
you know, Like I said, I maybe she's gonna come

(50:02):
out and say something that's gonna be really horrible, and
when we can all go to that moment and be like, oh, okay, Yeah,
Liz is a terrible person and she uh, you know,
turned her back on everybody, and she's a hypocrite. But
I don't so far from what I've seen, I don't
see any reason anybody should be upset about her. And
I thought Young Miami was actually highlighting that, Like, hey,

(50:23):
in a lot of these situations, it's impossible for women
to win. When Lizzo was fat, everybody was talking mad
shit about her. And when she loses weight, y'all still
have a bunch of bad You still have people that
have bad shit to say. But now it's the other way,
which is still fucked up, Like, you know, like, how
how is anybody so was gonna make people happy with

(50:44):
this bullshit? So all right, all right, we'll ended. Oh wait, no,
there's one more story. We'll do one more story. It's
not music though. Okay, how about this, Texas? You might
soon have to show a photo to buy a deal
dough online. A newly introduced bill in Texas would require

(51:08):
online sellers to show a photo ID before buying the
deal though, Why so you.

Speaker 4 (51:14):
Could see how many hatachis I got at my house?
And how many rabbits got at my house? How many
book plugs I got? The why do you need to notice? Information?

Speaker 2 (51:22):
SB three thousand and three, introduced by Senator Angela Paxton,
wife of Texas Attorney General Can Paxton, would criminally charge
online retailers for selling obsceen device without verifying the buyer's age.
Sellers would have to require customers submit that government issue
photogenic photographic identification or use third party age verification services

(51:42):
that use public records or other reliable sources to verify
the purchases identity and age.

Speaker 3 (51:48):
Why so somebody could steal my shit on the.

Speaker 2 (51:50):
Credit card, which already requires the holder to be over eighteen?
Would not be enough?

Speaker 3 (51:54):
Right?

Speaker 2 (51:55):
Right?

Speaker 3 (51:55):
Right? To have a credit card. I gotta be over
age anyway.

Speaker 2 (51:59):
Yeah, it's so ridiculous, man, They really be obsessed with
people fucking and apparently jacking off and every like anything
with sex here. They come like, oh, some sex. I
heard some sex is having it over here? What's going on?

Speaker 3 (52:14):
If you was getting fucked, you wouldn't care about what
we were.

Speaker 2 (52:16):
Doing, right, Like, why are you worried about this? Why
you need to know somebody? Because of what they'll say
is like cause kids are mind. It's like that that's
not even a problem that's happening. Right, but oh my god,
but yeah, that they just want people to like all
have missionary sex to procreate.

Speaker 4 (52:33):
Right, you have more regulations over what you put inside
of you versus somebody shooting a bullet through you.

Speaker 2 (52:39):
Right, Yes, that doesn't make sense. It was a gun.
They're like, why would you need ID? Why would you
need an ID? Open carry? Bitch, wild wild west wrapping
around your waist. You should be able to walk in
Walmart and just say two guns.

Speaker 3 (52:50):
Please, right, take them to your faux head. We don't
give a fuck.

Speaker 2 (52:53):
They shouldn't care that there's three kids in the trench coat.
They just give it to you.

Speaker 3 (52:56):
Right, that don't make sense?

Speaker 2 (52:58):
Oh my god? All right, well I guess that was politics.
Till we get mad.

Speaker 3 (53:02):
That was a short one, Yes, that was I'm sorry, Yes,
all right.

Speaker 2 (53:06):
Well let's get into some other stuff. How about a
little bit of uh, we're did some fucking with black people.
How about that pull up mother, Fucking with black people
means whoo whoo.

Speaker 7 (53:27):
With just fucking with them people because they ain't black,
with us fucking with them people because they ain't black.
With just fucking with them black people, were just fucking
with them blacks.

Speaker 2 (53:41):
We just go fucking fucking black people.

Speaker 3 (53:54):
You know.

Speaker 2 (53:54):
The funniest thing is that I guarantee you we would
find out that, like some Republican is sucking the Kim
Carton in Torso, Like that's just how all these scandals
end up working.

Speaker 3 (54:03):
It's just.

Speaker 2 (54:05):
It's like them being like, what about our emails? We
used Snapchat to play military operations? Right? Anyway, fucking with
black people. Kanye shows up to interview in Black KKK
Guard claims he this Virgil Ablow because he's evil. I
guess he did DJ Academics podcast twitch. I don't know,

(54:28):
and they haven't put the video out yet, but they
been putting out clips and he showed up with a
swastika chain on and then said I can't wear the
what I want to wear outside because they'll put me
in the mental hospital. So he changed to do the

(54:48):
interview and put on an all black KKK style robe.
Academics asked him why he chose to post fuck Virgil
during meltdown he had online. He that I'm evil, Yes, yeah, okay,

(55:09):
zero two hundred.

Speaker 4 (55:10):
Yeah, there you go. This gets two scores. Okay, academics
get a hundred. He just annoys me and Kanye get
to zero.

Speaker 3 (55:18):
I hate to be like this.

Speaker 4 (55:22):
Kanye may ain't made no good music in years, y'all.
I don't I give zero fucks. I really hate to
be that girl. I don't give a fuck about what
Kanye been doing. We all don't know that there's something
mentally wrong. Why am I wasting my energy getting upset
about somebody when I know that there's something wrong.

Speaker 2 (55:39):
Yeah, I do have to say I this. He he
has somehow surpassed the permanent your cards list for me
to this place where he can't make me feel anything.
I like, I have friends that were like very involved
in his like crash out online for obvious reasons. Reasons.
I used to like really feel myself, you know, because

(56:04):
I would be like, I don't want to use this
podcast just constantly shit on him because I felt like
he's having mental health breaks. He's not taking care of
his mania. He actually throws off his medicine so he
can get in a state of mania, and that's when
he makes these comments and does his wild shit. Anyway,
I stop even bringing that part of it up, Like

(56:25):
if he's not gonna take care of his mental health,
he's not gonna take care of it. And I don't
know what is real and what's not with his opinions,
because even if someone were to believe the things that
he's claiming to believe, they'd be smart enough to know
not the fucking sound. So like it's hard, Like it's
hard for me to think this has nothing doing his

(56:45):
mental health. But also I don't think. I don't see
it as an excuse. I just see it more like
he don't want to take care of it. There's nothing
to see, here's anything new, agreed. So yeah, it's weird
because I it's it's a drakars obviously if you feel
fucked with it, I just I don't know. I can't
take him to a place where I can't he can't

(57:08):
fuck with me. I just and I know a lot
of black people that still are like in the I'm
upset with him. I expect him to do better, and
I'm like, I don't.

Speaker 3 (57:15):
I can't take him seriously until he takes hisself seriously.

Speaker 2 (57:18):
And I don't even look at him like a grifter
like I would look at like Jason Wilot, who I
would give it your cars like it's not even calculated,
it's just fucking stupid. It's like, what's the worst thing
I can get people to think? And I'm like, I guess, okay,
you know, tell this analogy to my friend and it

(57:38):
might be a little too deep for you know, most
people to pick up, but it's fine. This is this
is what it's like in the head of an impath.
As an impath, so I had to erect boundaries around
the Kanye shit because the EmPATH in me feels bad
for him not taking care of his mental health and
what it's costing his friends, his family, is loving of

(57:59):
himself because I'm a human being and in the same
way I would feel I feel bad that someone's a murderer,
and I'm like, what are the things that happen to
make them be a murderer, you know that kind of way. Now,
obviously I limit that because you can't walk around with
life like that. It's like having twenty dollars bills taped
to the outside of Jackie're gonna get fucked up. So
I don't I know how to rain that in. But

(58:23):
I was talking to a friend and she was, you know,
bringing up like the reason she still talks about Kanye
in this way is because of all the mental health
people that all the people that are dealing with mental
health disorders and stuff who deal with thoughts of suicideal ideation,
which is something he was tweeting about, and that voice
inside is like, you're a piece of shit. Kill yourself.

(58:45):
That they might not be as bad as Kanye, but
that voice isn't a rational voice. It doesn't really hear you,
and so it is same, kill yourself. And she's like,
don't listen to that voice. Don't listen to what people
say about Kanye. And I'm like, you know what, You're right,
People don't give Kanye's mental health Like even people with

(59:07):
mental health issues will be like, well, my bipolar doesn't
do this, which is like saying my eating disorder isn't
bolimia like I don't like, it's different degrees for everybody.
There's some bipolar people that deal with stuff that is different.
Some people have schizophren it's just different. There's grades of bipolar.
It's it's just fucking different for a lot of people. Anyway,

(59:29):
my point being this, and this is a wild analogy
for a lot of people. But whatever. Remember the guy
on the subway Jordan's something and he got choked out
by a white man on the subway. He killed him
in New York, New York. He choked him out on
the subway, and he said he was doing it to

(59:50):
protect everybody on the subway train because this man was
so dangerous and that he was threatening people. And meanwhile,
there was a video of it, and you saw people saying,
you can let him go. You saw people saying, like,
you're killing him. And he did it anyway, and he
ended up getting off. He did not go to jail
for that. But if you look at the sentiment about that,

(01:00:12):
most people online that we know are like, you didn't
need to kill him, Like you didn't like you, like
he wasn't gonna do anything, or you know what, like
at some point you had him subdued enough that you
could let him go and you killed that man anyway, right,
And that's the general consensus online. I would say I

(01:00:35):
treat Kanye like the crazy person yelling in the train.
That's how I treat him in my like theoretically, and
most people think that. They're the people who are like,
don't kill him. You don't got to kill him, he's crazy,
just leave him alone. They're not. Most people are the

(01:00:56):
kind of people that want to choke them out. They
would kill him if they could. That's why they keep
telling us how dangerous he is when he's he's not
dangerous anymore. He's only dangerous if you respect him. Respect
he's dangerous if you think he can win presidency. He's
not dangerous because he's deluded into being president. But you
have to say he's dangerous so you can justify the
amount of disdain you have for him. And you have

(01:01:18):
to up the ante to make it like no. The
reason I'm constantly obsessed and shitting on him is because
he's so dangerous as opposed to like no. So what
I say is the reason I feel so removed from
this this time, I'm not on the train like I
changed cars. He started talking crazy, and I went to
a different car and was like, I don't want to

(01:01:39):
hear what that man's yelling about, right, and everyone else
is like staying in the car to choke him out
at this point, And that's the analogy I made to
my friend, and I was like, I think that's why
I think I can't be bothered by him, because I've
just accepted that he's gonna be in that car talking
crazy for the rest of his life. And it's just

(01:02:00):
it's everyone's fault who takes them seriously if they take
him seriously. But he ain't a serious guy, all right.
So let's see Allentown employee facing charges at the planting
news on her own desk. Police say it was so
much racism happening in the world, why would you invent any?

(01:02:26):
Latarsha Brown, aged forty two, City of Allentown employees facing
charges of FOSSi reports tapping with fabricating physical evidence for
it too, You're too old on January tenth, twenty twenty five.
The Allentown Police Department says it was called by City
of Allentown employee Latasha Brown, who claimed that an item
resembling the news was found on her work desk. Is

(01:02:46):
this some justic small that shit? According to Affidavid, Brown
stated at around seven am January ten, she began checking
the emails. She found a small item on her desk
she didn't recognize. They said. She picked up the items,
sent pictures to Cowork sharing what she fouled. At seven
point thirty, Police say Brown then send a six paragraph
email to several people, including their bosson human resources. Out

(01:03:08):
of town police crime scene unit officers didn't responded to
our office and collected the item as evidence. According to
the lawsuit, now they do have a picture of the
of the last news here. On January fourteenth, police say
they asked her to come down to the station for questioning.
During questioning, she stated she had picked up the news

(01:03:29):
and flipped it in her hand, but not much more
than that. Search order was later search Warner was later
up tape for her DNA. Her DNA samples were turned
over to the Pennsylvania State Police Bethlehem Crime Lab unit
to be analyzed against evidence. According to an Affidavid, the
DNA analysis appoint indicated that the profile of her match

(01:03:49):
the samples taken from news. Police say through January thirteenth,
January twenty nine. Nine employees who worked on the same
floor were interviewed and had their DNA testing tested. None
of their is matched only hers. Allentown Police Department is
holding the press briebents on the news details baked the

(01:04:11):
blah blah blah. So I ain't caring Latasha Browns or
the hundred.

Speaker 3 (01:04:17):
This gives me.

Speaker 2 (01:04:18):
She gets such your carras And the biggest reason why
she gets said uh when.

Speaker 3 (01:04:24):
Jacaris is because she's stupid. She didn't really.

Speaker 4 (01:04:28):
Think that they was going to go through with through
with like all the forensic investigation. She thought they was
gonna take her word for it. You trying to basically make.

Speaker 5 (01:04:38):
False you know, ship, and there are real people in
real life that really do get nooses on their desk
and ship doll in they lockers and shiit dog like,
you don't got to make racism up, dog, just you existing,
and that ship will hunt your black ass down.

Speaker 2 (01:04:55):
And just wondering if she needed like off four a
concert or something.

Speaker 3 (01:05:00):
Just don't come in. What are we talking about? Just
just take the penalty? What are we doing here?

Speaker 2 (01:05:05):
She was out of PTO and it was January tenth,
Dollard and she was like, damn Tyler Crator coming to night.
I gotta figure it out. Yeah, having the rubber bands, yeah,
you know, because racism is real, and so that's why
gets to the car.

Speaker 3 (01:05:18):
Don't fake the shit. Don't fake it.

Speaker 2 (01:05:22):
Yeah, I give it one hundred. Yeah. Everything you said, Karen,
everything you said. Last one, actress Gabaret Sideby said she
wasn't allowed to be black during her time as a
phone sex operator. We are trained to hate ourselves. It's
from the documentary on Apple TV plus number one on
the Call Sheet talking about the challenges black women facing

(01:05:45):
Hollywood and episode two, Black Leading Women in Hollywood. She
recounts her early life and struggles of navigating predominantly white industry.
She worked as a phone sex operator before she got Precious.
I got through all the pressures when I was twenty four.
Before that, I was acting in between whatever it was
the rest of my life and the rest of my life.
At that point, I was working at a call center

(01:06:06):
as a phone sex operator.

Speaker 1 (01:06:08):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:06:08):
She said, the company was mostly black women at the
work at the call center. But you are not at
all allowed to be black on the phone.

Speaker 3 (01:06:16):
I can believe that just white basic ass names.

Speaker 2 (01:06:20):
Yeah, that's so interesting because because that's so interested on
a multiple levels. Of the first being, this is why
I don't listen to black people that say stuff like
there's no such thing as sounding black, nigga, you know
there is, Yes, it is, Yes, the fuck you do
sound black? You know what it is. You know when
you're talking on the phone, you're like black person, I'm sorry,

(01:06:42):
but it's fucking true, and you be shocked when it's not.
And now I'm not letting y'all use the three outliers.

Speaker 3 (01:06:48):
To justify like and you be shocked when it's not.

Speaker 2 (01:06:50):
No such thing as sounding black, Like no, you that's
why we all be like damn Paul Wall for real, Like,
that's come on, and I'm sorry if you don't sound
black and that's your natural speaking was I'm sorry that
you are outlier, but you fucking know what the fuck
people be talking about anyway. So that's the number one thing.
The number two thing is it's weird how sex and

(01:07:12):
fetishism works, right because obviously when it comes to like
romance and relationships, there's a huge like taboo and also
a huge negativity towards black women online. Right, we see
it in every statistics for dating surveys and shit. But
fetish wise, sex wise, huge demand for the taboo nature

(01:07:37):
of the ebony. So it's kind of interesting that you
have to talk own sex would work in a way
where they still would want to talk to a white person,
even though the fetish for a lot of people is
often black women. It's not out of respect, but it's
out of just taboo. You think you could almost charge
a premium for like the black women, but apparent no,

(01:08:00):
it's not like that.

Speaker 4 (01:08:02):
Mm and I don't know if the demographic of people
that are actually willing to pay, I mean, it's the
demographics cross over. But I think when you go online,
people quote unquote can be their real selves, not that
they're not being real through the phone sex, but I
could see people calling and just being scared. You're not

(01:08:24):
trying to be funny because you're actually talking to that
person versus.

Speaker 2 (01:08:28):
With the videos. There's a wall, there's.

Speaker 4 (01:08:30):
A barrier, there's an interaction with the screen, which is
completely different, and it gives you a form of com
You have a form of safety, comfortability of being quote
unquote freer than you would actually physically talking to somebody.

Speaker 2 (01:08:43):
The chatroom regular Jay said, did you ask that man
about his dick? Is asked about the dick? We're sending
you home earlier.

Speaker 3 (01:08:53):
You got the rest of the night off. You know
calls I recorded?

Speaker 2 (01:08:57):
Right? How many times did you come melody? I don't
know about fifty elem times? You got to go, get
off your phone, give me your headset. You're done, buddy
number three?

Speaker 3 (01:09:08):
You off for the night. What do you What are
you doing here? So?

Speaker 2 (01:09:12):
What do you so? What do you have on you?
About to get dressed? I'm fixing to put on these.

Speaker 3 (01:09:19):
Somebody said, cock a dick, dick a cock.

Speaker 2 (01:09:22):
There is a difference, give me that big cock. Don't
you sound right coming out of your mouth?

Speaker 3 (01:09:27):
You black?

Speaker 2 (01:09:28):
Ain't you? You're black? Get off the phone. I'm racist
with my jack offs. Yeah, how a melody? How you doing?
Are you good? Say her impersonation of a high pitched
girly valley girl voice. Uh but yeah, all right, she said.
We are trained to hate ourselves, but refuses to conform
whatever it is that you don't like about me, I'll

(01:09:49):
do it hard. I'll smile on your face. And that's
what I felt. Precious need to be all n't care.

Speaker 3 (01:09:56):
M I get this.

Speaker 4 (01:09:59):
A seventy five is if it fucked with with the
fact that we all know the reality that ebony is
its own category because you put in black, you might
get black cock, black dick, you're gonna get everything, but
a black person sometimes like you specifically have to put
in ebony, so it is like its own category. So
it's one of these things where we know what the
reality is, but it gets a seventy five because it's

(01:10:21):
just the racism. It's like, you know, people call in
and probably even some black people they like like not
like across the board, like when whoever uses these phone,
I'm sure RG three calls you have to do that
fake Valley girl boys, yes, and like like like that's
their jam, Like they kind of specifically for that, regardless of.

Speaker 3 (01:10:41):
They don't know who you are what you are, and
they actually don't care.

Speaker 2 (01:10:45):
Yeah, my fetish is black women acting like white women
who act like black women. So I called it, and
I'm like, can you pretend to be that girl from
Doctor Phil and say, you know cap me outside? How
about like I need I need that level of acting performance,

(01:11:05):
that reception I can't get off any other way. It's
got to be metal. I'm past this regular. Just act
white ship. I'm on some new I need like to
break the fourth wall. That's what can you act white?
Oh my god, my credit scores eight hundred. My parents

(01:11:25):
pay for me my first year of rent in New
York City. I want to take a year off from
high school and just go backpacking across Europe. Oh my god,
just jacking off that. It's just that far, just the privilege.
You don't want to know what I'm wearing. No, no,

(01:11:45):
don't tell me what you're wearing. Right, I'm wearing my
grandmother's necklace. It was been handed down for heirlooms ever
since the Civil War. Oh god, I'm coming.

Speaker 3 (01:11:59):
How many carrots? Is it? Alright? Other shit happening here?

Speaker 2 (01:12:04):
What student loans? I was a legacy admission. My grandfather
pay for everything. I owed five cars.

Speaker 3 (01:12:12):
I didn't pay for none of them.

Speaker 2 (01:12:14):
All right, I'm gonna go antiquing after we get off
the phone. Oh god, I'm getting horny again. Yes, I'll
pay for ten more minutes at nine nine to five
a minute. Yes, please tell me charge it. Tell me
about kissing your dog in the mouth. No, it's not sexy.
I just need to know I just need even know

(01:12:36):
that you do it.

Speaker 3 (01:12:40):
All right?

Speaker 2 (01:12:40):
All right, let's let's bring this thing to some Guess
the race and then we'll we'll wrap it up.

Speaker 3 (01:12:54):
It's time to catch the race.

Speaker 2 (01:12:57):
It's time to catch the race.

Speaker 3 (01:13:02):
It's time to catch the race.

Speaker 2 (01:13:04):
All right, Guess the race. Time go around the girl
find it her articles. Guess the races of people evolved?
Karen plays wrong, So it's the tap room play along
and they're all racest woman eighteen vandalizes ex boyfriend's car
with yellow paint, or so she thought. Oh shit, When
planning to vandalize your former boyfriend's car with eggs and
yellow paint, it's always a good idea to make sure

(01:13:26):
you know the exact making model of the target vehicle.
How close were you and your boyfriend? You ain't knowing
his car from sight?

Speaker 3 (01:13:33):
You ain't know the tag. What's happening here?

Speaker 2 (01:13:35):
It must have been one of them long dist is relationships.
I think it was black. I don't know close enough.
Cops charged that of the Evelina Fabianski eighteen mistakenly damaged
the wrong iddo last night on the del Tona, Florida
street with her ex resides by the time officers responded
to the nine one call about a young woman's spray

(01:13:55):
painting a vehicle she had already caused five thousand dollars
in damage to it, innocent Infinity Sadan along with the
words Jason and devil. She allegedly covered the car with
various other scribbles.

Speaker 3 (01:14:08):
Oh shit, you go, who is Jason? What?

Speaker 2 (01:14:12):
Right? And now when you drive to work like everybody
think you cheat yesterday, dude, I'm like this, No, it
was you got to ride to work with the windows down,
just looking at other cars. No, man, I know what
you think. It's not. It was a mistake. It was
that person. I'm going to get it fixed, right, Not
the affair was a mistake. I didn't have an affair.
I don't even notice. Lady right whatever whatever Jason, your

(01:14:36):
cheating motherfucker right constrains.

Speaker 3 (01:14:39):
Don't know your name.

Speaker 2 (01:14:40):
Fabianski, who was assisted by a sixteen year old female sidekick.

Speaker 3 (01:14:44):
Oh damn, you bring the kids in this right well?

Speaker 2 (01:14:47):
You batman?

Speaker 4 (01:14:48):
Right? You baby sitting you like we're doing something specially
the night kids.

Speaker 2 (01:14:52):
Right, Holy vandalism, She told Coylesa. She was angry over
her ex over a seven hundred dollars debt that she
was old cast allege that Fabianski decided to spray paint
what she thought was his vehicle, in fact, that the
face out of was owned by man with this across
the street. She was charged of criminal mischief contributing to

(01:15:13):
the delinquency of a child and a legal possession of alcohol.
She's also hit with a duy wrap. Her underage cohort
was found covered in yellow paint. Come on, come on,
the baby was in yellow paint.

Speaker 3 (01:15:29):
You can't even high from that.

Speaker 2 (01:15:31):
You know that kid was having about right? Well, they
spraying it the backwards. How do you get it? It's
spray paint. How do you even get it on you?

Speaker 3 (01:15:41):
They had the tests that the testing it on. They said,
let's be strut right.

Speaker 2 (01:15:45):
She didn't pick the sharpest sixteen year old.

Speaker 3 (01:15:48):
No, that's sixteen for a reason.

Speaker 2 (01:15:50):
And you guys spray painted the wrong damn car.

Speaker 4 (01:15:53):
Uh and you said seven hundred and cost five thousand dollars.

Speaker 3 (01:15:56):
Onth of damage. Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:15:58):
Your underage cohort well cited with marijuana possession. Maybe that's
why they were spraying the ship everywhere, but yeah, she
was drinking. Fabiansky was freed on bond late this afternoon
from the county jail where three of the four country
faced our misdemeanors. Criminal mischief is a feeling you since
damage to the car exceeded a thousand dollars. Care and
guess the race?

Speaker 3 (01:16:19):
White?

Speaker 2 (01:16:20):
All right, Karen says, Evelina Fabianski is white. Let's check
the chat room see what they believe. Uh, she got
ski in her name, white, Thelma and Luise babysitter club white, white,
Eastern European white, white, devil white. The correct answer is
she was white. Yeah, that was her problem. Maybe she's

(01:16:49):
not racist, so she don't see color, so she didn't
see the color of the right car to stray paint.
She's like, all the car is equal to me. But yes,
she she does look hammered in this picture.

Speaker 4 (01:17:02):
And she looked gusty and just as like I'm not
gonna got out tonight.

Speaker 2 (01:17:06):
She definitely is not the one you need to be
owing seven hundred dollars. He know, he knew, he didn't
know how the kind of X you can owe seven
hundred dollars. Right, all right, let's do another one. This
is also from Florida, Oh, Florida, Florida man twenty one
drove dad's car into ocean? What a twenty one year

(01:17:28):
old Floridian who was angry at his father drove the
older man's vehicle into the ocean earlier today?

Speaker 3 (01:17:35):
Know, now, ain't nobody going nowhere?

Speaker 2 (01:17:38):
Maybe that was his point. I man, I know, I
know it's hard for the kids these days. Man, because
my general gen X privilege growing up. I'm like, twenty one,
why are you even driving your dad's car?

Speaker 3 (01:17:53):
Ain't that the truck?

Speaker 2 (01:17:55):
But it's real. It's like the kids now, like someone
have to live home. They are twenty five and because
of those student loans and the job marketing shit. Right,
So maybe that's what happened. But this is also a
reason why you got to get be out of the
house by a certain age, because twenty one too old
to be fighting with you old dad and driving his car. Like,
damn it, Dad, give me the keys? Like what do

(01:18:16):
you mean? Investigators say Joshua Cuss had barred his father's
car but failed to return the vehicle to his parents'
residence in Jacksonville Beach.

Speaker 3 (01:18:26):
What name.

Speaker 2 (01:18:27):
Yeah. Around two am COS received a report of an
auto in the ocean. They spotted a great super roue
floating in the water. They identified it as a twenty
eleven Volvo, so it wasn't super ruoe XC seventy. Police
soon located Cuss since his father had been pinging the

(01:18:49):
location of his son's phone. It's probably still the family plan.

Speaker 3 (01:18:54):
You know. He was everything getting his dad's name right.

Speaker 2 (01:18:59):
I wonder when he kicks him out the house, he's
gonna be like Cuss out.

Speaker 4 (01:19:04):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:19:04):
Cuss copped to the ocean litter and saying it was
a stupid move, and said that he had recently argued
with his father and his aunt. He had sent his
two relatives at one am text one of them, I'm
going to drive the car to the Atlantic Ocean. However,
he advised that they did not take his threat seriously. Uh.
He sat the use of a cinder block to send
the car into the ocean. When that fell, he got

(01:19:26):
into the car, drove it into the water, and he
reported turning on all the lights and making sure no
one was nearby before accelerating the vehicle to the ocean.
While driving, he grinned and wished he could point his
middle finger at his father, and Cus for portly told
what officer. Hopefully they will listen to me now.

Speaker 3 (01:19:45):
Mm hmm, We're gonna listen to you.

Speaker 4 (01:19:48):
Uh huh yep, because you know what, I'm getting ready
to change all the motherfucking locks, take your ads off,
all everything with my fucking name on it. You will
never get in his house a goddamn gin.

Speaker 2 (01:20:00):
To the part of the beach. He walked to his
mother's house, which is nearby. His parents divorced in twenty
twenty three.

Speaker 3 (01:20:06):
After you got to do it, and she's like, nigga,
why you shut up in my house?

Speaker 2 (01:20:10):
After the party, after his father decided to press charges,
he was arrested on fellony criminal mischief. John Cuss sixty
reportedly lost a reporter lost with sixty five hundred dollars
on the submerged Wills. Cuss is being held in the
county jail and little twenty five hundred dollars bomb.

Speaker 4 (01:20:26):
He'd been like, daddy, why you press strategist because bitch,
you drove my car on the ocean.

Speaker 2 (01:20:29):
In twenty twenty two, he cleaned not He pleaded no
contest to a dui charge. He was sentenced to twelve
months probation. He was eighteen at the time. He was
driving his father's Volvo then, and a letter to his
son sentencing, Cuss wrote, Joshua has a lot of work
ahead of him. I can only hope that he learns
in this mistake and turns into a good life lessons.

Speaker 4 (01:20:49):
The job already paying triple the rates because you got
a duy at eighteen because you know you won't mind insurance.

Speaker 3 (01:20:54):
And then you drive the motherfucking car in the ocean. Yes,
I'm pressing all of the charges. White right, Let's check the.

Speaker 2 (01:21:00):
Chat room and see what they believe. Uh Volvo equal
white black people don't volvos. I don't know, uh white
people white? Because if a nigga drive his dad car
in the oshi, you better not come back.

Speaker 3 (01:21:12):
I better not see your face again.

Speaker 2 (01:21:15):
Better be down there? What was spunge, Bob? You living
a pineapp under the sea? Now for what you do?
You and mister crabs and squid Worth and sandy, because
if I see you again, we're gonna tables are.

Speaker 3 (01:21:24):
Gonna be moving.

Speaker 2 (01:21:25):
Did you say squid worth?

Speaker 3 (01:21:26):
Yeah, squid work, It's squid work.

Speaker 2 (01:21:29):
Okay. Called his parents by their first name. White is
not a phased dad, White Volvo, white coffin in his
swimming ability white, Oh dad took his kid out of
the wheel, White problems, trust funding, wild and white White
audacy calls their parents by their first name White. The
correct answer is everybody said the same thing. White. You
got it? Yeah, that's him man. He don't look sorry

(01:21:58):
or nothing. No, And I bet you that's part about
the daddy press charges because you know.

Speaker 4 (01:22:04):
And on top of that, your dad's sixty, which means
they had you when they was and they got their forties.

Speaker 3 (01:22:09):
And then if you don't get out of here, this
is my ass.

Speaker 2 (01:22:13):
Why did this make you? This made you mad? Like
it's your kids?

Speaker 3 (01:22:16):
Yes, I'm sorry, it's not disrespectful.

Speaker 2 (01:22:21):
Care's gonna give them? Are then all right? Next last
round was why I am racist?

Speaker 4 (01:22:30):
How can I be racist about.

Speaker 3 (01:22:32):
Anybody or anything in my life?

Speaker 2 (01:22:37):
How can I call them niggas? Just call them niggas?

Speaker 6 (01:22:42):
Tar?

Speaker 2 (01:22:42):
Did you go go?

Speaker 8 (01:22:44):
Change?

Speaker 9 (01:22:45):
And fried chicken and biskitis lunky my boon, big fast,
high jumping, speed chucking three hundred and sixty degree basketball.

Speaker 2 (01:22:58):
Man. Woman charged with running over repo man. I guess
this one didn't stand in the truck because the videos
I be seeing I don't seen Repo Man's get caused
out of impossible situations. Honey, they're whipped that shit around

(01:23:19):
and and.

Speaker 3 (01:23:21):
Hollering up with people in him. Damn get fuck.

Speaker 2 (01:23:24):
A man and a woman were arrested this week at
the allegedly running over REPO man when he tried to
tow their car. Both twenty seven year old Brandy Rebels
and thirty four year old Nicholas Ray have been charged
with aggravated assault. In the March twenty sixth incident, at
seven fifty five am, officers responded to an aggravated assault,
a male victorm was located and taken to Region one

(01:23:44):
Regional one and non critical condition. Officers have told the
victim was a tow truck driver was attempting to repossess
at twenty eleven for a fusion. I will tell you
if somebody drives an old car, if you're repossessing a
twenty eleven, they dash.

Speaker 3 (01:24:00):
Shit, Yeah, they do twenty eleven because.

Speaker 2 (01:24:06):
What that means is not paid off, because why would
you be repossessing it unless it was used as collateral
either for a loan or they were still paying for it.
I agree they need They They might kill you to
get that car.

Speaker 3 (01:24:19):
Ain't that the truth? That's they owning motive transportation, and
they son ain't.

Speaker 2 (01:24:23):
They're like, put it in the without the car. I'm
dead anyway, so I might as well.

Speaker 3 (01:24:28):
That's like fourteen years.

Speaker 2 (01:24:30):
I might as well just go ahead and commit to
the whole bit. According to the victim, he was hooking
up his truck to the vehicle, a woman yelled to
a man to hurry up.

Speaker 3 (01:24:38):
Man.

Speaker 2 (01:24:39):
The man then alleged got into the ford and back
the car, running the victim over as he was under
the vehicle. Oh gotta be faster than that. Get your
head on the swore under there. Once you hear hurry up,
I think that's the sign the jig's up.

Speaker 3 (01:24:52):
Yeah, that's a lot of them carry guns on the
mach on marshall.

Speaker 2 (01:24:55):
Yeah, get your ass up out of here.

Speaker 3 (01:24:58):
Will put a bullet in your ass.

Speaker 2 (01:25:00):
Judge Jerry, and he'll repossess your life. They also found
and also okay, so then they found Brandy Revels took
her into custody on March twenty eight. They also found
a man identical fired as Nicholas Ray as the man
responsible for the assault. He was taking to the custody.
She must have snitched. Both Rebels and Ray have been

(01:25:21):
charged to activated as salt. Rebels was held on fifteen
thousand dollars bond. She was held on sixty thousand dollars bond.
Now why was she held on a higher bond? If
he drove the car over the guy?

Speaker 3 (01:25:32):
Something happened, was it? I don't know what? Was it
their car? What did they find out?

Speaker 2 (01:25:36):
I don't know, don't say why, but it's just weird
that he drove over the man. She's getting charged sixty
thousand dollars bond. He getting fifteen thousand for the fore
fusion was located on Archmont Place and was told to
the city lot.

Speaker 3 (01:25:50):
So they still got it anyway.

Speaker 2 (01:25:52):
Yeah, yep. I wonder if the dude that was in
the hospital, if the other told driver that told it
came to us the hospital was like, don't worry, I
got him, and you know they did. It was like
we don't get revenge for you. One tiar came out
of his eye, real sad and like over his broken foot,
like don't worry, brother, told man, we all we.

Speaker 3 (01:26:15):
Got ain't it? That tear got motor oil in it.
They come to get you.

Speaker 2 (01:26:21):
What guess the race?

Speaker 3 (01:26:23):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (01:26:23):
White, Karen says white, Let's check.

Speaker 3 (01:26:26):
You no, no black, because then there was some different
then with some that don't make no sense.

Speaker 2 (01:26:33):
Okay, let's check the chat room. Uh, let's see black
and they would do it again. Bernie from South Beach
told white black. Nise from Southeast told black last name
rebels really white. That well's revels r E V E
ls Uh their Internet rate on that car with seventy
three percent. I'm sorry, miss Jackson, who black broke murder

(01:26:55):
fantasies white? Bonnie and Clyde rebels white. The correct answer
is Karen said black. A lot of y'all said white black,
and some you said white. You missed it. Yeah, when

(01:27:21):
you were saying the difference in that bond, I was like,
they know the bond with that difference.

Speaker 3 (01:27:26):
I was like, no, it's more to this.

Speaker 2 (01:27:27):
Just looking at the picture, I feel like his bond
should be higher than hers. Yeah, because he got the yes,
I'll run over any like I'm surprised I run over
people to get out the parking lot. Like that's just what.

Speaker 3 (01:27:39):
I did at the grocery store.

Speaker 2 (01:27:41):
Like they called me missed the runover people. That that
man that's the face he made in the rearview mirror.
When he was where he was when he was running
over that truck driver. Oh my god, it's written all
over his face.

Speaker 3 (01:27:56):
Yes, it is all right.

Speaker 2 (01:27:58):
Last thing swords and we'll get out of here. Guys.

Speaker 3 (01:28:06):
That face was like, and I'll do it again.

Speaker 2 (01:28:10):
I told you hurry up. He left a lot of
people behind and it was too slow. All right, So
ratchet this time, time to check us. What's going on
with these swords? Got news I think from the UK

(01:28:31):
on this one.

Speaker 10 (01:28:34):
It was a horrific case of mistaken identity. Sixteen year
old Ronan Candor was stabbed to death with a ninja
sword and a machete, which had been bought online by
his attackers. Ninja swords can be up to twenty four
inches in length. The law to ban them is named
in Ronan's memory.

Speaker 8 (01:28:54):
It's quite sickening to say these things are still available.
They are still children carrying this type of weapons. It's
painful to see that our world is surrounded by these things.

Speaker 10 (01:29:06):
There were more than fifty five thousand incidents of knife
crime recorded between twenty twenty three and twenty four. Ronan's
law is part of the government's plan to tackle the problem.
Last year, they banned zombie style knives and machetes.

Speaker 3 (01:29:21):
God damn.

Speaker 10 (01:29:22):
Now the sty has made it illegal to manufacture, import,
sell or possess a ninja sword.

Speaker 6 (01:29:30):
In the case of Ronan, Canada.

Speaker 3 (01:29:32):
He was killed.

Speaker 2 (01:29:32):
Those swords are like what's in Conan's closet?

Speaker 3 (01:29:37):
Dim looked like anime swords.

Speaker 2 (01:29:38):
Right, there's like some solo level and shit.

Speaker 3 (01:29:42):
Right.

Speaker 4 (01:29:42):
They was like, you know what, just drop your swords
off here and they found it after.

Speaker 3 (01:29:48):
Did the foot clan turning out the weapons? What is happening?

Speaker 2 (01:29:52):
Right? Look at these shits now, go bet they just
just did just see the one that they was doing before. Yeah,
that one, Yeah, I saw it on the ground too,
Like yeah, these I mean these shits, these.

Speaker 3 (01:30:04):
Likes some shits you this is zombies sorts.

Speaker 2 (01:30:08):
Yeah. Like all of these ships as esidic as fuck.

Speaker 3 (01:30:11):
Damn lot of them look like something piece.

Speaker 2 (01:30:14):
Body saws right, Like you go to the sword store,
like you gotta go to comic con and sharping to blaze.
I don't know where you get this shit from. Look
walking around like cloud Strife Canda.

Speaker 6 (01:30:26):
He was killed by teenagers who had managed to buy
more than twenty weapons online, dangerous weapons that frankly should
have been illegal, and we have since now banned. We
are banning those weapons. But also he should not have
been able to buy those sorts of things online without
proper checks in place.

Speaker 2 (01:30:47):
I do for this and dildos, not the dear dog,
but for this. Yes, I know I was joking here.

Speaker 10 (01:30:54):
The new law comes into effect from August. Police are
urging people to surrender them n swords with the hope
of preventing the needless loss of yet another young life
in America.

Speaker 2 (01:31:09):
We want band swords, but we'll band playing with itally whacker,
Ain't that some bullshit?

Speaker 3 (01:31:16):
That could be a dangerous sword too, apparently?

Speaker 2 (01:31:19):
All right, y'all, that's it, Thanks for listening. We'll be
back throughout the week. Until next time. I love you.

Speaker 3 (01:31:25):
I love you too,
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