Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:03):
It's now time for Cannabis Talk one oh one with Blue,
Joe Grande and Mark and Craig Wasserman the Pot Brothers
at Law. We're the world's number one podcast for everything cannabis.
Hello and welcome to Cannabis Talk one oh one, the
world's number one source for everything cannabis. My name is Blue.
Alongside of me is the world famous Joe Grande and
Mark and Craig Wasserman, the Pot Brothers at Law. Joe,
(00:23):
let us know what's going down on the show. Well,
thank you guys for famous at least to be area,
definitely the Bay Area, California. Shots fired. I don't know
what he's attacking me for. I'd never say anything about
that guy. Craig, I love you, by the way, thank
you for being a part of the show today. And
you too, Mark. You look wonderful. Yeah, it's hair product
you're using today, caml Mill I love it, man, and
(00:46):
thank you guys for listening to the show all around
the world. If you want to call us up and
say hello, it's eight and follow us online on the
website and all social media at Cannabis Talk one oh one,
and of course Mark and Craig are at pot Underscore
Brothers Underscore at Underscore. Law Well Mark personally is that
wast law. Craig is that wast law dog. Blue is
(01:08):
that one. Christopher writes, I am at Joe Grande fifty
two and Cannabis Talk one on one. October ninth and
tent will be at the Counterculture Convention otherwise known as
C three in Houston, Texas at the George Brown Convention Center.
Counterculture Convention brings together all the top lifestyle brands and
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connect consumers and customers with their favorite brands, artists, and
(01:32):
so much more with at the same time introducing the
next big thing coming out there and hang out with
us once again October ninth and tenth at C three.
And when you talk about the next big thing, Blue,
I like these gentlemen that we have here today. We
have some great guests, you guys and Mark and Craig.
I'm so glad you're here because I can't wait to
hear some legal questions that you ask these cats. We've
got San Joaquin otherwise personally known as David. Thank you
(01:54):
David for coming here, but otherwise on a San Joaquin
online at San Joaquin Valley Transparency. He's basically a journalist
who loves the film The Police. You can find him
on YouTube at San Joaquin Valley Transparency. And he's out
of the Bay Area. Correct. No, I'm actually out of Bakersfield, California,
bakers Still. Just before the I knew you were in
l A. But that's right, you're out there in Bakersfield
(02:17):
where ship happens off the Five. A lot of people
don't know this, but Karrank County is considered the deadliest
police form police police force in the nation. They have
the most killings for police justify killings. So, I mean,
it's all around here. It's like an armpit of California, Bakersfield.
You know what I mean. Now I've just seen you.
(02:37):
He's heard it. It's that it's Fresno. My parents both
died in Fresno. They lived there. It's all those cities
out there in that area. He knows it. I'm not bashing,
I'm just calling it. Although the Bulldogs are looking good
this year. Fresno State, boy, they just took out U C.
L A. Anyhow, who in organ state. That's some college
football talk. But we also have j from j Surreal
(02:57):
out of Florida. He's actually a camera journalist, says well,
who loves filming the police. You can check out his
YouTube page JA Surreal Camera Jane. Thank you so much
for coming out and you got some full fronts there too.
I see Wolfie Gladly. He's also a YouTuber at Wolfie Gladly.
(03:19):
You could find him on YouTube Wolfee Gladly TV. He's
out of New Jersey. He's the furthest one. Thank you
brother for coming out here, thanks for having me. So
let's start with you, Sam Juakin. It's so funny because
I get a call shout out to O G. Louis
the third TEAMU Louis lou and you were hanging out,
you know, so you're probably picking up some product from him.
Who knows what is uh? I get a call from
(03:42):
him saying, Joe, you gotta meet this guy. You gotta
talk to this guy because he's doing amazing things online.
The funny thing is is Louis lou don't sell wolf tickets.
He doesn't do anything like that remotely. If he says
something's good about something, he's solid, like you know, I
mean off top. I was like, let's connect to give
my number. Do whatever. As I mentioned you in our office,
(04:02):
Blue yells out in the background. Hold on, San Joaquin
Valley transparency what I'm doing. I know what you're doing.
So let's start with you, San Joaquin. How did you
get started and why did you get started doing this? Um? Well, basically, man,
it all A lot of it stems from cannabis as well.
You know when I was a kid, Uh, carrying cannabis
in your pocket is very scary, you know, and and
(04:24):
it carries the bats that carry a bad stigma. Even
as old as I am now, I still feel a
little bit of like some fire in my pocket, Like,
oh ship, can they see it burning? You know what
I mean? There's still a little bit of element of fear.
What are they gonna do if they catch me? It's legal?
I still feel there same thing here. It's in my
car and I'm nervous. I got these cartridges. Oh no,
(04:44):
you're not gonna go to one, and like, oh my god,
I'm nervous. I feel like my points, I understand what
you're saying. And um. When I first of all, I
seen a news segment on my television, I was like, wow, um,
we I live in the deadliest police force in the nation,
and I figured I would go out and start recording myself.
(05:05):
You know. I reached out to a couple of channels, UM,
I started recording, and I started my own channel UM.
And after that, the element of fear just went away.
Now when I see cops, I don't run away from them.
I run towards them. I want to record them. I'm like,
quit drama, graw. You know when it's like my phone
is like my my gun, I'm out right away and
and it takes practice, you know, to actually pull it
(05:27):
out and not even think should I could I get
a shot or nothing like that? Scary scary. You know.
I've been around police officers myself, and I'm like, damn,
I should be filming this, and you know, I'm down
to do it from like back in the cutting, but
to get where you guys get you guys are like
get there, like hey, full shut up. Yeah, you know,
I'm like wow, you know, and it's it's difficult because
(05:49):
you know it's scary, So continue though, right, So, you know,
just recording police, I got rid of that fear, and
I think in reality, that's how people should be living
without the fear of police. You know, if you're not
doing anything, if you're out there screwing up, then you know. Um.
And And in my on my channel, I try not
to be political. I don't lean left, I don't lean right.
(06:10):
I want to keep it simple and preserve the First Amendment.
And that's it. It would amaze you to see that
on my channel, a high percentage in the high nineties
um of the videos that we produced. And I'm out
there asking questions, cops don't know the First Amendment? Um,
how is that a sustainable system where the cops are
not knowing the first law of the land, and our
kids are not being taught the Constitution or even the
(06:32):
First Amendment in school? How is this the sustainable system?
How can we keep going on like this? Mark and Craig,
don't you guys have a push on this? Can't you
guys make people let alone the law enforcement. I mean,
that's what we're trying to that, that's what we're trying
to do with our with our message is two peace
peacefully engage with law enforcement and and uh assert your
(06:53):
rights or search your rights politely. But to search your
rights people, I mean, like you're saying, it's so true
that people are afraid to assert their rights. They think,
oh no, if I tell them about discussing my day,
you know, because you don't want to lie to them.
That's why we have that one line in the script
is you know you don't want to answer their questions.
You don't need to, you're under the obligation to. You're
(07:15):
just gonna screw yourself. So instead of being a smart
asseid just I'm not discussing my day, and people will
if I do that, then they're gonna think I'm hiding something.
If I don't let him consent, if I don't consent
to a search, you're gonna think I'm hiding something like
these are your right and and you shouldn't have to
be afraid. And I'm telling you, we get so many
d m s from across the country, the Back East,
(07:36):
the Deep South, that the script, the script works for everybody,
and works means now a lot of times the cople
go on to the next guy who's gonna fund themselves
and incriminate themselves and make it easy for him, so
they let you go. But that's not what the script does,
(07:57):
or that's not what the real outcome when it works
is when they ultimately arrest you, you said nothing to
incriminate yourself. And we had one of these d m
s from somebody, real good case of how this is
how it works. He sat in jail for eight hours,
stuck to his guns, didn't incriminate himself, and he was
let go, never charged. Sure, that's where it really works.
(08:18):
It's nice to see that work right there. And Jay
from j Surreal camera. You're out in Florida. I mean,
and let's just call it what it is. As I
look at you, dog, you got tattoos on the face,
the arms, you got the look of, you know, a
little street vibe going on. So it's not like you
don't have facial tattoos and piercings even on your case.
And you've got a grilled out grill. So you filming
(08:40):
the police. I'm gonna roll the dice and say, is
it maybe a little more risque for a cat like
I would say I would looking at you and judging
a book by its cover, going funk? Are they coming
at you? Hey man? What are you doing? Yeah, they've
asked me. They've asked me that, they always asked me,
that they always looked down on me. Um, you can
(09:01):
sense it when somebody's profiling, you're exactly profiling that you
can you can sense it. They do that to me.
I thought you said look down because you're short. I
was like, so, yeah, I started filming in Miami thanks
to my to my friend here, David, And UM, what
(09:22):
do you mean thanks to David. I'm curious about how
that relationship came about. I'm a tattoo artist. And then, um,
one day I was on YouTube and I saw videos
of people talking like, you know, to the police, and
I'm like, oh, this is pretty cool. I didn't know
you could talk to the police like this. I didn't know.
I come from a Laddin background, so I was never
taught my rights. So David was one of the first
(09:43):
channels I saw, and then I reached out to him.
One day, Um, I did. I got pulled over and
basically I filmed everything. So I ended up sending it
to him. He was my first subscriber and he's the
one that gave me, so I thank him, and then
he we spoke on the phone and he started teaching
me my right. You started telling me, look, you have
the right to do this, you could do this, you
could do that, and I found it very interesting because
(10:04):
I really didn't know growing up I had all these rights.
I was always getting harassed. Isn't that funny? As that's minorities.
I felt the same way too, even Craig. With the
script that they did, I kept arguing with them, going, no,
that doesn't work different for you, and it is. But
like they say, which I give them so much credit
for you, is like Joe, even if you get your
(10:26):
ass whooped and blah blah blah, that could happen. But
as long as you shut the funk up and follow
the script and plead the fifth, when you got your
best chance of getting away with everything, and your best
chances of suing them and all this good stuff. So
you're right. I had no idea about those either, dogs,
So I agree, we're not none of that. You could
film the police even I bet today you go down
the street, I bet if we did that in the hood,
(10:47):
what do you think can you feel the police? I
mean in the back of the day. If you try
that ship, they just beat your ass. I mean where
I grew up at like like a lot of people
don't hit it a heartbeat. So when you have this
conversation and now it's the day and age where you know,
there are a lot more cameras, there's a lot more
people with the eye on on you, so you know,
And it never really was flipped on on the workers
(11:08):
that were there to protect us when we thought they
were here to protect us from really they were jamming
us up in neighborhoods, you know what I mean. Like
when we grew up, they jammed us up. There was
no like you know, hey, you know, step out of
the car was like get the funk out of the
car and bam up against the ship and you were
getting the whole the whole program. You know. Now, I
think they're a little more conscious of that, and I
think it's finally rightfully so that they're they're that conscious.
(11:32):
And you guys are doing this work out there, and
you know, I've heard you said, I'm not here to
to to to um. You know, I'm only here to
make give you know, make sure they're doing the right thing.
I'm not here to to to make them bad people.
I'm here to make them do the right thing and
they like us. We're not we're not anti cop, yeah,
anti cop, anti bad copy exactly. Yeah. We need we
(11:54):
need people think that about you guys, Craig. Sometimes those
people label you guys. Yeah, we get you know, police
and it like that, and we really, you know, I'm
we're not about that. You know, you can say what
you want. I don't judge. I mean, there's a lot
of bad police, so you know, I'm sure Jay do
you guys get that as well? And David you're in
Dade County. But our platforms and that's Mimi Dave, then
(12:16):
they're they're known as the most corrupt cops. Yeah, yeah,
that's that's like, you know what, guys, is it time
for a break, But no, go ahead, you can say something,
Let's continue because we gotta still. But it just it
just goes to show you that with with more and
(12:36):
more people like yourselves filming the police, that the people
filming the police for the most part aren't getting beat up.
They're not you know, they're not getting arrested. You know,
it may happen time to time still, but it just
shows you that asserting your rights peacefully and respectfully. You know,
we tell people all the time, I'm gonna get my
(12:57):
ask beat if I say that, ship it doesn't work
for me. Well guess what, whether you say what we
tell you or not you pick that, or you get
unlucky enough to have that bad cop. He's kicking your
ass no matter what you say, no matter what if
you listen to what we say and he still kicks
your ass a defense, you know what, markut Craig, I
(13:17):
still tell this day. That's the one thing that I
give you, guys, that you made clear to me, and
I think you made clear to everybody, because that's the
rebuttal that wins. That rebuttal right there, Craig wins. I'm like, Okay,
you know you got you win right there with that response,
because well, it's about it's about preserving those rights, remedies
and defenses. That's what shutting the funk up does and
sticking to the script. Now, let's get to Wolfee Gladly.
(13:39):
He's a YouTuber as well. Wolfee Gladly TV at a
New Jersey same question, Wolfee, what got you into this?
I mean, I hope now JA called you and um, yeah,
I started about three years ago. Um I saw pretty
(13:59):
much the same story as Jay. I saw people doing
this around the country, and I looked at my area
in the southern New Jersey Philadelphia area, and uh, and
noticed that there wasn't many people doing this around here.
And I and I knew that the cops and especially
in New Jersey, have a real bad rap, So I figured,
why don't I, why don't I test the waters. I
(14:20):
used to remember, I'm I'm nearing forty years old now,
damn you look when when I was a kid, I
used to get messed with all the time, pulled over.
They do it to young people all the time, young
people and poor people, they pick on them. So I
remember this happening to me back when I was when
I was a young adolescent, and I wanted to be
(14:42):
there for the new young adolescence because we're in a
whole new world where it's a it's a different wave,
it's even a stronger wave. You see the police um
are getting more arrogant and more arrogant, and I just
wanted to catch it on camera and let all the
people in my area know that they had somebody according
for them too. I think you guys are doing the
(15:02):
Lord's work, man, I mean seriously, because as you guys
sit there and do that, the more people see it,
it becomes a safer environment for them, Like right, and
if someone's breaking the law and doing something. They ran
a red light or you're fucking drinking and driving. Then
you know what you do the crime to the time
and that no one's saying don't, but you don't gotta
(15:22):
slam them on the fucking grass like dude up, woman
or this and that. Right, So it's like, and I
don't think any of you guys are against that, say no,
don't do your job. Just do your job in the
right way, like it's not to harass, it's to serve
and protect. Yes, they hate, they hate when they see
our cameras, right, so they always say officers safety. So
(15:45):
what I tell them is officers safety. Let me ask
you something. In the past thirty years, how many camera
men have killed officers? They all stay shut like that.
I'd like to say this one, um, officers safety is cowardice.
Public safety Now that's heroism, right, the people's safety. That's heroism.
That's what you took the job for us to protect
(16:05):
the people, not to protect yourselves. Yeah, a good one.
I hope you got a good punch line right now
to you. Did you come up with a good one too? Well? Well,
I just wanted to point out the other night we
had an officer on the Hollywood Boulevard. Uh we they
had all these kids pulled out of the car. They
had to. They had the back seat pulled out and
on the on the sidewalk where the stars are. Uh.
(16:28):
These kids, they had them in a zip ties along
along the sidewalk, and we tried to get in there
to to get a good angle and to hear and
see because we want to hear what's going on to
and the cops pushed us back, taped off the sidewalk,
pushed us back thirty five ft. But the point I'm
trying to explain here is what I told the cop
(16:48):
is the Derek Chauvin video was way closer than this,
and she got a Pulitzer Prize for journalism. That's what
you guys are journalisms. Let's take a break real quick.
It's Anabis Talk one on one here with san Jaquin, Valley, Transparency, Jay,
Surreal Camera and Wolfie Gladly TV, all YouTubers, all cannabis
(17:10):
friendly and all serving and protecting the community near you.
It's Cannabis Talk one on one. Will be right back
after this. Welcome back to Cannabis Talk one on one. Man.
(17:31):
You know this show is dear to my heart, because
what you gentlemen are doing again, it's like Joe said,
it's like God's work man, and you know, it's very
it's it's balsy. You know, it's like I could just
imagine like you almost feel because I've seen you, you you know,
out there, um David with you know where you're filming
police and then some random dude runs up like, what's up, man,
(17:53):
why are you guys working with the cop? And he's like, bro,
we're not working with the cop. We're just recording. And
and he's all up in your face and he's like
and You're like, and now you're there, so you know
what I mean. And it ended up like watching this
do it. And I mean I've been saying, well, I'm
keeped out, I've kicked out, I've seen, I've seen, I've
seen both of them. I think I've seen all three
of the stuff just from his page and then linking
over and trapping over to this one just because you know,
(18:14):
I've been around it. And uh, but I've said many
hours dude watching you know, I think all of your
guys and stuff, and and you know it's a one
of it's a difficult job. You know, because it's a
job first of all, you know, and and one of
my first thoughts and questions I guess would be, do
you guys carry like, uh, you know, a police scanner
so you know where they're at so you could follow
(18:34):
the thing? Are you just driving around looking for cops?
And me, yeah, don't given. In reality though, it's because
a lot of the police officers, a lot of departments
now they're trying to be hip to what we're doing.
So they're trying to scramble the radios and stuff like that.
They're trying to go offline or trying to do different
things so that we don't actually hear the calls. Everyone
(18:56):
has a scanner in their phone on the act. Really,
what is that hip everybody to? If you just search
up please scanner, you'll you'll find uh the top rated
mind that you want to find encrypt them. They try
to encrypt them. So I know you guys have some
questions too for the lawyers, but I want each of
you to answer this question. First, craziest video you've ever video?
(19:17):
What happened or whether it be it was you know
that they got the ship kicked out of him. You
almost went to jail, you went to jail, you got handcuffed.
What's one of those videos you can describe because, like
Blue said, and he's witnessed what you guys are doing.
And I don't care wif he gladly how young you look,
you know, and and maybe you may think you get
a pass because he looks Caucasian, this and that. Right,
(19:38):
but you're out there with the camera. I'm sure they're
piste off at you in New Jersey and then Philly.
So let's start with you, Sam Joaquin. The craziest video
that you can go to, like, oh man, this one
was just you guys are gonna trip out on this. Okay.
This is here in Los Angeles at the l A.
P D training facility. It was behind Dodger Stadium, and
we went there and we didn't know like exactly how
(19:59):
far are and we could go. We just started walking
in there. There's absolutely no no trespassing signs throughout the
whole thing. It felt like we were in a grand
theft auto game, just roaming the compound. We were actually
went in there to the shooting range, all the way
through the back. We walked everything and walked through everything
in the right. Yeah, I think it's the record history
(20:21):
for uh, for most cops called on the First Amendment audit.
They set up like if we were protesting, they had
the helicopters. It was their facility. Yes, yeah, yeah, So
what happened and what happened was the training. It was
the training facility. Like I said, there's no no trespassing signs,
so we didn't get in. There's nothing wrong that we did, right.
(20:43):
Thet all they all had, they all many were you with?
It was me ja surreal camera. It was my son
and I also got to tell you three of my
sons do this as well with me. My youngest son
Nate Skates two channel. Um, he's been recording cops with
me since he was fourteen, so he's pretty brave as
while he was just that day. My other son Nikki
(21:03):
his channel san Joaquine Audits. It was another channel from
East l A East Lost Audits. He's a really good channel.
I really love that guy. He's awesome. And so a
lot of us were there, and uh, that's that's my
craziest video story. Did they come out with guns? So
what I'm saying, describe more. I just want to hear
more details. It was they were like set up for
a riot, almost like a protest and stuff they were
(21:25):
setting up and what they say to you and what
was your response and how did they just clear up? Well,
we ended up talking to several officers. Uh, I think
like the sergeants came in and they just let everybody
know there's nothing we can do, just go. And so
I was like, you guys are all dismissed. You guys
are all did they kick you off the property? We
don't have? They were saying, hey, guys, we'll have a
(21:45):
right to be there. Wasn't that People in the hallways
like you can't film in here? And You're like where
where where does it say we can't film? You know?
Like I was watching it, dude, I've seen I watched
these guys bro Like I I san Ua Keene Valley Transparency.
That's a good story. I can't wait to watch What
about you, ja surreal camera? What is your good? Alright
(22:05):
about two weeks ago, I was visiting in Virginia and um,
I pull up on this stop. They had a guy
pulled over. Um it was a d y stop. You
had no idea, you just were driving. Yeah, we just
we just ran into the car. So we pull over,
we get out of the car, we start filming. They
see that we're filming. The guy fails his d Y test.
We think that he passed, but they said he failed whatever.
So they call a toll truck on him. Right, So
(22:27):
when they call a toll truck, his sister shows up
because I guess he had called his sister. Hey, I'm
getting pulled over. His sister shows up to the scene.
She's like, listen, we live two blocks away. Is there
any way that we could please take the car. No,
we already called the toll truck. So that's it. There's
there's nothing you can do about it. So I got
piste off, so I went, I said, I started to
speak to the sergeant. I spoke to the other two officers.
(22:49):
I said, hey, listen, if this was your family member,
would you guys want them, you know, to lose their
pages and lose their car. He's already having a bad night. Okay,
he got a d uy, he made a mistake. We're human,
you know what I'm saying. But you're gonna make him
now pay his wife? You literally sister his sister was there,
and I started I started talking to each and every
one of them. And when as soon as I did that,
(23:11):
I guess they thought about it. And guess what they did.
They called off the toe truck. I swear to God,
they called the to truck. So I got it, I
got it. I got a lot of you know, I
was expecting you to something story. Let me tell you something,
but everybody was saying it. You know, they always say
that the cops have like this side deal with the
toe trucks, and usually when they call a toll truck,
(23:32):
there's no right, there's no way that they're gonna stop it.
So that was that was weird that they did stop it,
and I feel like it was a good thing. It
was a good Yeah, that is a great story. People
said they've never seen that before. So I was expecting
that you're gonna get your ass kicked or something, you
know what I mean. Happened out of this That is unbelievable.
Wolfy Gladly TV, what is something? Maybe you got a
(23:55):
new jersey. Maybe it happened somewhere else like Jay's did.
What is your great crazy story? Well, here's your ass
kicking video right here. This is what I want to hear.
The craziest video I was ever a part of was video.
We were filming at the Philadelphia Gas Works. It's owned
by the city. It's huge. They sponsored the sports teams
(24:18):
around there, the professional sports teams and everything and um.
And we went and we filmed the perimeter of it
and security guard came hustling out, big tall guy, six
ft six, steel toe boots, hard, hard hat on his
head and uh. And he comes up to shake my
hand and he gave me the handshake chicken smack my
(24:39):
phone out of the other hand, and then started pushing
us around. A group of people came out that worked there.
We were like, yo, did you see what happened? But
this isn't it yet, This isn't it yet, right, So
a woman pulls up in her car uh, and we're like,
who is this security or something like that. So we
(25:00):
go to film her and she's doing you uise in
the street to try to avoid her plate being read
by our cameras. So she gets mad, gets out of
her car starts attacking one of the guys that was
filming with us. When she starts doing that, it triggers
the six ft six guy again to come out, so
he comes out and he shoves my friend. Uh. Southeastern PA.
(25:21):
To Yeah, southeaster p a community. Uh, watch was slammed
to the ground. Um. Meanwhile, the girl that's attacking the
other guy, she's starting bricks and rocks and sticks at them.
Um and and there, and there's a lawsuit pending, which
you know I can't really talk about, but that the
comments in there, they're like, this is the craziest thing
(25:42):
that I've ever saying all my years. And did the
rough you up even more? After that? To or they
let you guys go? Uh they fled the scene. The
cops came. They uh, they they just took a report.
You know, they did nothing. They just basically everything. Because
you're one moment away from it going crazy yourself, right,
(26:05):
I mean you're literally one second. You don't know the
impulse of the police officer. And once again, I love
police officers, right, I got a lot of friends that
have been cops. But I hate fucking bad cops. And
it's not like I don't support the police. I know,
I love the police. I'm not about the police. I'm
about cops are serving and protecting and there's a million
good ones. It's been a few bad apples that have
(26:26):
given this whole police overall of bad. A few, unfortunately
exactly agree with that and got change the whole you know,
the whole thing's got to change. It's not gonna change
for the people that are there. It's gonna change from
the new people that we get in as police officers
and teach them from the get go to protect and serve.
Not your first six months you're learning how to do
(26:49):
all the fucking shady ship and tricky ship and trick
you into ship and when they talk to you, and
down right, you're looking for it. You're looking for a reason,
looking for and we've gotta change that. It's the culture
of the ones that are in there now. Just they're
gonna have to all get old and die and retire.
You know, I'll doing what they're doing illegally. I'll tell you.
(27:10):
One of the things that guys like this we get.
We get we were getting closer and closer to cops
getting in trouble because they're being held accountable by way video.
And it's funny, as you say, guys like this, and
it's guys like this too, judging a book by its cover.
I mean, let's just face it, you guys, as we
all look, I mean we cleaned the bar looking with
the ball that back in the day. And I'm sure
you guys are even looking earlier on too. But it's
(27:32):
guys like us up here, even you, you know, I mean,
and then the young crazy. But now you guys are
out there, like you said, trying to serve these young
broker kids. That was a great example of why you're
doing it. I love getting because it's so true these kids.
And I don't care what neighborhood you're in. Some kids
think you know the rich areas, they think they know
the Oh I could do this, motherfucker. You can't, actually
(27:53):
or you can. We got to know the difference. But
for all you guys out there feeling them and putting
your lives at risk, think he had. And that actually
sets up exactly what I wanted to talk about. So
I think about our brainstorm all the time, right, I
brainstorm what are the solutions to the problems? You know?
And I always bring up three three things, right, And
(28:14):
it's it's a policy, police policy. What could we change
or at least put on the table and readjust and
figure out what the issues are? You know, what can
we do? And these three things? And I always like
to put that on there is one of them is uh,
qualified immunity. Nobody was talking about qualified immunity. I had
never seen it on my in my comment section, nobody
(28:35):
was talking about it. And then a couple of what
do you mean qualified immunity. It's a thing where police
officers say that they did their job in good faith
and there's no well established law saying that the officer
could not have done that or something like that, that
he didn't violate it right. And it also brings other issues.
I feel like sometimes lawyers will know that officers will
(28:55):
get off on qualified immunity, they will take the money.
But this the three policies that I believe that could
be put on the table is qualified immunity, internal investigations,
and police unions. If we could figure out a way
to readjust this, we might be able to fix policing
in America. Um. First of all, like especially going into
(29:16):
these training facilities. We also got a really good video
that same day at the from the l A p
D at the l Shaff's training facility as well. That
one was really good as well, almost just as good
as the other one. But um, it brings that those
topics qualified immunity, internal investigations, Yeah, qualified immunities should be
just done. All those that, Yeah, that just needs to
(29:38):
be overturned. And I think with what's going on and
with video, I think even though it's still there, you know,
these cops that are being prosecuted and being charged and
found guilty of is because you can't tell me that
after this point in time, the fucking force against force stops,
(29:59):
you know. And and before the era of videos, there
was their word, and then there was that's it. And
now you got their word, and now you got the
fucking truth that's right in front of your goddamn eyes.
And that's eating away a little bit. But you still
have these guys that don't care. They're still gonna get videoed.
It's it's got to start from the bottom up, man.
(30:20):
They got to root out all the old guys who
are under that old you know, it's us against them
and changing the name. Remember when we heard that flag. Yeah,
Well the one thing I was I was saying that
not to cut you off is you know, changing first
of all starts with training. Their training is to to
be very forceful and very assertive and and take control
(30:41):
of the situation. Right for safety purposes is what they've said.
But that becomes a very catalyst into abuse and and
and now you know, having to hide their abuse, and
so now there comes corruption. Right, So that's one thing
I would say to help change. The second thing I
would say is stop calling them lieutenants. Stop calling him sergeants,
(31:01):
stop calling him because these are lieutenants and sergeants and
these things are military uh names, you know, so you
got them, you know, call him uh uh manager, manager, supervisor,
you know, you start taking that name away because that
name you didn't you didn't. The reason I say that
(31:22):
is because that name that they're using, that lieutenant this
and supervisor, that that implies that you're in war, you know,
because that's what military based flag nine flag. We take
it as it's us against them. Yeah, right right, you're
are you able to it's the gang arrested. When you're arrested,
(31:44):
you're a prisoner of war. I always tell people that,
don't say anything until you're out of there, because the
whole time you're a prisoner of war. Yeah, you are
a prisoner of war, you know. And that's that's what
Those are the two things that apply to that as well. Yeah,
and We'll let you guys get to the script after
this break. But I do to say that the one
the two things that I would highly you know, think
that you guys should be preaching out there is again,
(32:05):
is to change the training. Because the training, if you
go back and look at their training, their training has
been the same for the last fifty years, you know,
you're not longer, right, and so their training needs to
be yeah, changed changed. You know, they implement new things,
but they're just more new violent time. And then what
are you talking about? And then and then again the
(32:27):
names you they don't need to be lieutenants and sergeants,
you know what I mean. We should be like, hey,
I want to talk to your manager, you know, because
you're a manager, Bro, you're not a lieutenant. You're not
at military, we're not at war, you know what I mean.
So those are the two things I would throughout that. Yeah,
and not only that, when we come back, I got
a few more questions, and I also mark get ready
and locked and loaded with the slam poem because I
want these boys to hear it as it goes hand
(32:49):
in hand and what they're doing, and maybe they can
see something and do something with it. I want you
to teach them that, as well as the script and
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(33:11):
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Life is the website. And we come back Cannabis Talk
one oh one. We got the High five with San
Joaquin Valley, Transparency, j Surreal Camera and Wolfie glad By TV.
We'll be right back. Take a hit, get lit, and
(33:40):
sit back and enjoy Cannabis Talk one oh one, Mark
Freaky Pop, Brothers, That Lab Blue and Big Joe Grande Joe.
What's going on this last segment? Well, you know what,
I still want to continue talking before we get to
the High five, because when we went to break, I mean,
we're just having some great conversations off air, and I
look at you, Ja, and I think from Jay Surreal Camera,
(34:02):
you definitely have a look that I'm catching on even
more and more as I'm staring at you, I didn't
realize the whole head was tattooed and your face. And
the funny thing is why I sit here and laugh
and I help my comments, is like, you're one of
the coolest fucking dudes, right, You're just But I would
think that stereotype that people have to get by, especially
(34:26):
when you come out with the cops. I mean, and
each of you guys carry that look too. Of the
most because I mean, David, no disrespect, that samual keen
hard look of you know, Bakersfield on your face before
you smile. You don't know if you're gonna put up there.
What it's like, You got this straight, straight look and
then you gotta smile on this and that. And you know,
Wolfy Gladly you too, You look like, you know, you
(34:46):
could be the psycho dude in the corner that's ready
to go fucking nuts. Yeah, behind that is all three
of you guys have this look that could be judged
by a book. Right that I'm sitting here there we
could all amongst each other, have fun with and talk about.
And does that ever make you more even nervous knowing
when you're walking up to an event where cops are
(35:06):
out there with their guns and with everything going, holy
sh it, Do I say who I am? Do I
say it's a YouTube channel? How do I break that ice?
Because looking at especially you J. From the first look,
you just see all three of you guys walk up
JA surreal, camera's gonna get the hardest look because he's
just dropped this fucking looked like, oh my god, what
(35:28):
prison did you just get out of? Yeah, they just
that's what they do. They try to always push me
back and everything. And you know what, it's funny. I
tell them, I said, if you ain't doing anything wrong,
what's the issue with the cameras? You know what I'm saying.
I tell them, I say, listen, I'm a tattoo artist,
and sometimes when I tattooed people, I got twenty I've
had up to thirty people behind me, family members, friends
watching their friends. Gets added, I'm not doing anything wrong,
(35:51):
So what do I care if they're filming? So why
do the cops care were filming? What are they trying
to hide? Why are they actually was back? Why don't
they want us to hear what's going on? It's our
first mem and right to know. Yeah, I can answer
that though, it's because they expect. They expect people not
to know the rights they they're trained to go out
there and run everybody through the system, make sure they
don't have warrants, you know, and and they do a
(36:13):
lot of the like them their bullying tactics. They do
it under they make it seem like they're gonna arrest you. Oh,
we were only asking for a D. We weren't really
demanding it. But they're really doing they're doing it exactly.
Just all boils down to still not enough people know
their rights. Well, let's talk about that real quick. If
(36:33):
you're someone's listening, they're like, I want to do the
Lord's work like these guys are doing. And they start
pulling out their cameras around the world. I'm sure you
guys market Craig can't talk on laws and other states
besides California, But what is the law and rule at
least here in California. If I Joe Grande pulls out
my camera on Beach Boulevard and it comes up, pushes
(36:55):
me off and says, give me your I D. As
long as you're not well, first of all, as long
as you're not interfering that that's a big one there.
So You've got to really draw that line on you know,
that's one of the excuses that they can use to
funk with you. Um is not interfering. So but nine
point nine percent of the time where you're ultimately standing
is not interfering with them. But that's gonna be one
(37:18):
one of the things they try to use when you're filming,
other than that, it's your right to film fucking place, period.
Don't get in their way. And what if? What if?
You're gonna say, it's important to know that interference or
hindering or obstruction and those type of terms that the
police use require some kind of physical elements that would
that would prevent that officer from point A to point
(37:41):
being back doing his job. So sing on the sideline,
You're like, I'm on the sun, and what are you
talking about? Like the way the people that they're interviewing,
that's a different pushed hit or anything like that. Like, oh,
I've been arrested two times in the past five months,
And what about you? When you asked about our most
craziest video, I was going to mention one video, but
(38:03):
this video in l A is really important to me.
But there's a video that I did a long time
ago in Baker's Field, California, at the Jury Services the
lobbies up the lobby is open to the public, and
they twisted they held my arm and they twisted my
arm and they held it for a long time. And
he was actually he was actually trying to he was
trying to he's trying to get me the jerk, and
he was also trying to hurt my arm, and he
wouldn't let go, and then he would he would like
(38:25):
when he was pulling my arm, he was pointing at
the guy I was with. He was like, are you
going to get off the property too? He was waiting
for the other guy to answer to let go of
me like that ship didn't make no sense, um. And
that's one of my most vis when you're in the
front and you're and there's people walking in and the
guys they're standing at the door and there they won't
let you guys in or whatever. And guy like like, well,
(38:45):
I don't get how they can, just they've been doing
it for so long. And I'm glad you asked that,
because look, um, I try. I paid some money to
a lawyer and he ended up doxing me to all
the police. They started coming to my house. He burned me. Um,
so I walked her trust any of them. I walked
away from now, right, I walked away from from the
from the lawsuit and all that. I just walked away
from me. I didn't. I didn't. I didn't know stuff
(39:07):
like that, like how to fill lawsuits and who to
trust or what the hell? What's going on right now?
I'm gonna call these guys, right, there's some bad um
So yeah, man, that's like, so they sweat you at
your homes. I mean, you guys got them driving by house.
I got guns pulled on me the other day. What happened? Right? Yeah?
Oh yeah, this was a crazy story too. I should
have said this one. Well, Um, I was cop watching.
(39:29):
It's a county called Lee County in Florida. Number one.
They don't have body cams, they don't have dash cams.
They say they don't have money for it. Okay, so
check this out. So we're following this car. This cop
flies right by. So we're like, wait a second, that's following.
Let's see what's going on. He's not using turning signals,
he's just speeding. So he ends up turning into this park.
So we pull up alongside of him, you know what
(39:50):
I'm saying. So as soon as he rose down the
window and we rolled down the window, rather say hey,
why were you speeding? What's going on? Oh? What's your name?
Don't worry about her name? Why are you speeding? What
is there in the emergencyhy aren't you using your turning signals?
Right there? He pulls out his gun on us. If
you have your camera? Yeah, I have it, I have
it in my page. Yeah, so I ended up going live.
I ended up going life. But that's to tell you
(40:11):
that you can't even speak to police in days. Yeah,
I could have gotten if I didn't have my camera rolling,
they could have shot me. They could have done whatever
they wanted to the gun they have. Nobody comes, no
dash cams. So thank god for a camera, my right.
So that's why we all got a film. And all
I did was asking him a question. All we did
was ask him why was he filming? And why, I mean,
why were speeding and why wasn't he using his turning signals?
(40:34):
And he wasn't and he wasn't even on his way
to a crime, and did not he was nothing, you know,
he was just being a guy driver. He was speeding
like anybody else. Nothing, And then when he called for backup,
they were calling him back on the radio. He turned
off his radio on purpose, so when his backup showed up,
they all showed up with their guns drawn to make
it look like if something happened to him. Wow, come
on now, Jesus, we're gonna say no. Just ridiculous. I
(41:00):
mean it is ridiculous. And not only that. When I
think about that, you just said you were arrested two
times in the last five months. What were those two times? For? Um?
I was in Miami and I was just filming outside
of a Manipiade Manipulo Manipulo Center and then, um, hold on,
I want you to say that municipal Municipal center to
menipalip J You're and the guy this is gonna It
(41:24):
was gonna make me sensitive because it reminded me of
my mother. My mother couldn't say Michaelo manip manip and
you took me right there. And I'm almost like cried
to his head because you took me to my mother. Dog.
So thank you a kid like we joke with my
momcaloip So I just wanted to all right, I was
outside of a manipulate municipal center. I as a municipal center,
(41:50):
so we were I was just filming and basically saw
a cop cars in the parking lot. It was an
open parking lot. I saw regular cars. I was filming.
Officers walked up to me, asked me what I was doing.
I said, listen, I'm just working on a story, just filming.
They ended up asking me for my I D. I
said for I'm not doing anything wrong. I ended up
walking away. They followed me two blocks down, and then
(42:11):
as I got two blocks down, they ended up calling
their sergeant. And then they ended up telling me that
that day was a special day, that that day they
were getting bomb threats. So I said, so, what you're
trying to tell me is that on this day, just
because you get bomb threats, my right stopped right right.
What they ended up they ended up asking me for
my I D my idea. I didn't give up my
I D. I didn't fold, and they ended up arresting me.
(42:32):
They charged me with loitering, and probably a number one
what they don't understand that loitering, how are you loitering? Exactly? Loitering.
Loitering is when you're standing around without a purpose. If
I have a camera in my hand and I'm filming something,
that's not loitering anymore. Right, that's not about bird watching?
Is that loitering? If I'm sitting there watching the bird,
what's my purpose? I just want to look at the birds.
(42:54):
I can't do that. We don't know if you're really
doing that. That's how they act. Yeah, we don't know
if you're really doing that. They started saying, I was
what you thought? I was being suspicious? I don't I
know you're not a criminal. How do I know? Who
are you to know? Who are you for me? They
said it was being suspicious walking around their building. I said,
it's suspicious? Is that ad or a misdemeanor? Yeah? Neither?
(43:19):
Or I'm just here thinking what are you thinking? What
are you thinking? Sometimes? And how we're just so taught
to just deal with it. That brings up another thing
is if, if, and when we the people actually and
I don't like to really consider myself as being special,
and I'm only one of the people bro doing this,
and I try to encourage everybody to do this, But
(43:41):
when we record cops and they actually get in trouble,
you know, because of the whatever, when the cops get
in trouble, first and foremost, we pay for their attorneys.
The people do, okay, we have to pay for our
own attorneys. How is how does that work? Anyways? And
if and when the cops actually gets in trouble, and
when the cop actually gets sued, right that that money
(44:03):
doesn't come from don't that money stuffing it comes from us?
We still forked that, the constituents still fork out that money.
So how is that? How is even that is sustainable system?
It makes absolutely no sense. Those are great points, man saying,
that's why more people have to run for city council,
younger generation. We need to get you guys in office,
have to run. Stay back a little bit. Yeah, you know, Craig,
(44:28):
even as you say that we need to vote, I mean,
is it voting or is voting or no, it's new
people management, not sergeant city council level and actually changing
things shout out they would like, because who on who's recruited.
My point is, I come in, I come into the
job with the city. Right now, I work with the city.
(44:49):
Guess who works in the city officer blue here, So
now now, but I'm just saying this in general, right
and I hope for the city, and we both work
of the city, and I'm just my point is, I'm
supposed to go, hey, man, you're gonna have to pay
for your own fucking ship if you guys get busted,
you know, sorry, And I'm a city worker. Your city
(45:09):
should have insurance and insurance company, your own company insurance.
They should have their own insurance that that represents them,
just like all of us have to. You know what
I mean. I mean nothing they paid into it. We
have we we have prepaid legal. You know what I'm saying.
You could you could pay in the prepaid legal right now,
as you can retain the police. I mean, you could
(45:30):
retain some attorneys. So why not have them get some
kind of illegal service that they pay into every year
out of their pocket that that allows them to That's
a good point, you know what I'm saying. That solution.
It's a solution right there. Pay into it every year
and bro, and after you retire. Basically the ten people
are the fifty people or the hundred fifty people that
put into it. If you guys didn't lose it all
(45:52):
from being assholes, then you might get it back. How
about that. It's anybody's gonna hear me say for president,
you guys, I want to give you guys a treat
because I don't know sand Waquin Valley Transparency or J's
(46:12):
Surreal Camera or Wolfie Gladly TV has really ever heard
the slam poem. Because this slam poem, as it relates
to cannabis heavily, it could also relate to anything. And
I think your audience and your people and you guys
should really know this as well as the script. And
once we do the slam poem, we'll go back over
the script because the slam home is the elaborate version
(46:35):
of the script. Mark, I want to give you a
platform right now to really go over that slam home
without yelling so loud into the mic because for some
reason we're having a little technical difficulties. Well you could know,
you could come closer to it, just don't don't put
your lips on it so loudly, So just talk normally
in the right there. Right, there's fine. So Mark, please
(46:57):
give these gentlemen the slam poem. Okay, let me, am
I being detained or am I free to go? This
is what to say, my lawyer tells me. So the
cops are out there doing a job. Sometimes they must
contain a mob, a thankless job that saves many lives
(47:19):
at their home or worried children, husbands and wives. But
does that give them the right to stomp on my rights.
So we are here for you, the cannabis community, to
fight to let you know it's okay to just shut
the funk up. When cops ask questions, you start with
I'm not discussing my day, and with I invoked the fifties.
Ain't suggestions. These are words to live by, to memorize. See,
it's not about the size of that cops gun because
(47:41):
they want you to run, so they could pull that
macho gun and shoot you for fleeing the scene. Some
cops are just playing me. We must shut it off,
shut it down, those feelings of anger that instantly come
around when that cop has to show his power and
his might without cause, without reason, and we know they're
not right. We must remain calm at the devil's sleeping
on the left shoulder. We must be cold, even colder.
(48:04):
Ice must flow through your veins to shut that heat,
the blood that rusts your brain straight from your feet.
When that cop disrespected you because you wouldn't tell him
what that smell was, and he accuses you of a
pot the u I because he absolutely knows that your buzz.
But see, they can't tell and they don't know only
if you tell them. So o, officer, I join a
(48:24):
few hours ago. Officer, here's my medical record. Officer, I'm
a marijuana patient. We live in America. Prohibition still exists.
That cops gonna do whatever he's gonna do he arrests. You.
Give us a chance to represent you with the defense
that's blazing. Let us show you in court. We're amazing.
But we could only do that if you listen to
(48:45):
our tips. They'll let me see you move your lips.
You know the drill. When the cops asked questions, we say,
I'm not discussing my day. Am I being detained? Or
am I free to go? I invoked the fifth and
then you shot up. What you do? We have given
(49:06):
you the script. We're telling you what to say, you're
telling you what to do. We put your hands up
in protection mode. But should you take a shot to
the jaw, we will be here fighting for the cannabis
community and all citizens because we are the pot brothers
at law. Yeah, Greg, Craig, Mark, Yeah, tell him, Craig,
(49:32):
tell him, and that right there in my opinion, I mean,
I love it. We see it and hear it all
the time. But I really do love that poem because
everything's in there, and it's kind of everything that you
guys as you heard, I see you and feel you
that you're listening, going damn. I wish everybody would do that.
I wish the cops would understand that. And Mark wrote
that so elegantly, and Craig, thank you for stamping that
(49:53):
and letting him say it today. And then do you
guys know the script? Do you guys know the pot
Brothers at Law script. I've seen them say it several times.
You just do it, Just do it, just do it.
Don't testimony, just do the script. So they know the script.
Because the script I think goes hand in hand with
you know a lot of the message to the people
that you guys got because you know a lot of
(50:13):
people need to get them a whole box of cards
that they can hand out to people. Yeah, I have
a box here. Actually I'll get my box in to them,
all right, I will, awesome. Yeah, And I just think
it's important, you know, it's uh, you know, why did
you pull me over? I'm not discussing my day. Am
I being detained or am I free to go? And
if detained, you say what you have to say. I
invoked the fifth and then you shut the funk up,
(50:36):
you know what I mean. So yeah, it's super, It's super,
you know, tight and simple and that you know, I mean,
everybody should have in their vehicles. Everybody should always be
utilizing the script. And you know, I really when I
look at what you guys are doing, man, it's a
it's a job that you know, it's difficult, you know
what I mean. You guys put your own risk at
(50:57):
lives to to help others. You know what I'm saying.
You put your own lives at risk to help others.
And I think that's that's fantastic. And you know, you
made a uh you know, you're obviously a minority. You
also come from you know, uh poor or maybe a
um you know, a background where that you were you
were messed with cops because you were saying, you know,
some of these younger kids that don't have it, you know, um,
(51:18):
and you come from a city where they have the
biggest you know, a crime or murder by police officers.
So when I start looking into you know why, it's
not because a funk the cops. It's because, hey, there's
people that don't know the rights. There are people that
are getting taken advantage of, and we're trying to make
that stop. And that's that's sucking awesome to you guys,
you know what I mean. Like I said, I don't
(51:39):
hate cops. I love cops, you know, but I don't.
I do hate you know, bad cops that are working
with people for no reason, and they turn and twist,
you know, the thoughts of you know, what's going really on?
You know, like you might have something going on. I've
I've seen them plant things. I've I've personally, you know,
as a as a youngster, you know, been completely cuffed
up and and lined up and and sprayed everybody with
(52:02):
mace and told everybody who's the biggest gang right here?
You know what I mean. And we're like crying and
ship you are you know what I'm saying. We're sixteen,
we're fifteen, sixteen, you know you're talking about you know, um,
you know it. Don't get wrong. They get shot at,
they got they got a job. That is very difficult
to horrible horrible. They do things and some of them
lose their lives to them and left field wrong and
(52:22):
people lose their lives trying and they lose their lives
trying to help people to concentrate on that ship is
what has to happen. But but but again it's just
the small change that I think they can help and
and you know is maybe changing the name of what
they are, not sergeants and and you know, to two managers,
and and maybe getting these small little changes and then
some new training in there. You need to get new people.
(52:43):
Those name changing well, there's some there's some old there's
some old old time hands that you know, you know,
it needs to change attitudes. Attitudes need to be changed.
What we need change them. You're not going to change that.
We need to have a little fun right now and
doing to high five with these three, you know what
I mean, that's go in that direction. And when we
(53:04):
do this, let's just start from the far end of
the table. So we'll start with you j you could
answer the question first. Then we'll head to Wolfee and
then of course San Jacane Valley Transparency will wrap up.
The question will be the same question for all three
of you guys. Okay, so we'll just go down the road.
Lady by lady looking real cute. Here we go right here,
we got shots. I like you guys. The question number
(53:28):
one of the high five. How old are you the
first time you smoke cannabis? And where'd you get it from?
I was thirteen and it was with my older brother,
he's three years older than Nice. He had it. He
had in Florida. Yeah, it was in Mammi, Florida. He
had it. All right, what about you, Wolfie? I was
fifteen years old? Um? And what was that second part? Um?
(53:49):
My friend who ended up becoming my dealer? Yeah, started
started in left it. I'm still get the old game
never changes. Try where can I get more? Let me know?
What about you did? I was fourteen years old and
my cousin Tony came to live in town and he
introduced me, and since then my life has been great. Yeah, yeah, moment, great,
(54:18):
go ahead? What is your favorite way to use cannabis? Um?
I like to smoke blunts? Nice, I got some raps,
real Twister? What is it? Whichever? Got some good raps?
We got? What about you? I like bowls because they're fresh. Yeah,
just a straight ball. Nice, A nice clean glass bowl, right,
(54:40):
I'm sure I use I use a food grade teflon bowl.
Oh no, nice? Different? Why is that easier to clean? Nice?
Keeps it nice and fresh and clean? I love love
What about you, Samwaukee Bons? I love bonds. I got
a bond collection. Yeah, ever since I was a kid,
I've had bonds. What's your most expensive? Thousand dollars? It's crazy,
(55:06):
that's what I know expensive. There's some some real ones
out there, all right, guys. Question number three of the
high five. Craziest place you've ever used or smoked cannabis?
Craziest place in jail? Yes? Nice, Yeah, that's serious. Where
were you at It was in a holding so no. Yeah,
(55:26):
years ago when he had in the hoop. Yeah, we
smoked it up in there. Yeah, same thing. He was
on the toilet for about fifteen minutes and then bang
came out and it was bow. He kept flushing the toilet,
the toilet, Lucky you Wolfe. On top of a water tower,
(55:49):
Oh no, New Jersey, New Jersey. Um on my apartment
complex that I used to live in when I was
a teenager had this water tower and we knew how
to rig our way into the pumps station room. So
we got the little extension ladder access. We knew how
to do it. We put it back when we were done.
We used to go up there for fourth and crazy
dumb right, I know you could die, but yeah it was.
(56:13):
You had the best of you in town fourth of July.
It was really cool. Yeah for sure, Yeah, sand Wauquin man.
You know as much as I'd like to say jail,
because I have smoked in jail. Um basically just at
home in my room. Man. I used to try to
hide it from my mom and put the towel on
the bottom of the window, and one day she popped
her head up right when I was blowing out. I
got you going on, closed the window. I was. That
(56:43):
was scary, scarier down scarier than jail, that prison garden
at home, Mama, were very different. Go ahead, mark alright.
Question number four the stock on one high five guy,
what is your go to mun cheese after you get Oh,
(57:04):
I like Oreo cookies and milk. I eat it like cereal,
nice and eating like put milking in everything. Never tried that,
just chopping it up and you know it like cereal.
Little live stream maybe too. Maybe I've tried all of that.
(57:26):
Maybe I've tried all of it. I like a barbecued
bacon cheeseburger nice from any particular spot. Uh not really,
just as long as it's blackened. Yeah, a little charred,
a little charred. Yes, well, I like it to taste
taste like fourth or July. Nice. Let's go. You just
really took me to a place right now in my mouth.
(57:48):
I know that burger. What about you, San Joaquin? Man,
to be honest, everything, whatever's in the country, whatever's in
the fridge, whatever I can put together. Man, I'm just
maybe you got any more whatever it takes right there.
Cannabis Talk one on one High five with san Joaquin
Valley Transparency and Ja Surreal Camera, as well as Wolfie
(58:12):
Gladly TV Question number five with the High Five. If
you could smoke cannabis with anyone dead or alive, who
would it be? In y j It would be with
Jim Carey because I feel like he would make me
laugh until I die. He's one of the Marshall Bills.
I got a huge sense of humor. What's your favorite
(58:35):
movie or scared or is there something that just stands
out of one of like, oh my god, no, my
favorite movie is one that's just classic. I mean I
always shout out my boy, no l G. When the
monkey came out of his ass, that's okay, is still
good with and he is one of the funniest ones.
(58:56):
The mask is good to The mask was great. Yeah, No,
that was liar, liar with monkey coming out of Oh
yeah it was. I'm sorry, Yeah it was. Look at
Mr fucking social Media over there, the old guy in
the group, thank you. It was Bruso mighty crag. But
that just shows you how many hits that dude. I
(59:18):
went from thank you even even click was good. Who
I was thinking about when he came out of the rhino,
That's what I was thinking about, Yes, of the rhino,
Hey was it? Yes? Or what was it? When he
was like yes, yes man, yes, yes, Hector, he's great.
(59:41):
He would be great. He was in a great series
of drama series called Doing Time on Maple Drive. That
was what was that on Mark? I don't know this show.
That's an old dude. I think it was like a
Fox TV series. Well I can't even remember him back
and Living Color, Oh yeah, shout out that just something. Yeah,
(01:00:05):
I just met referenced Fire Marshall builders past weekend. I mean,
it was just such a great thing. So Wolfie, what
about you dead or alive? Who would it be? Uh?
Adam Sandler? Nice? He was not? Was it Adam Sadler?
I mean and Adam Sadler? Why Adam Sandler? I just
like his little funny voices. I used to really love
(01:00:27):
the CDs used to come out. Mom, They're they're all
gonna laugh at Mama, you cackam balls. Yeah, I mean
that the song the Jewish Holiday Song is still one
of the most classic songs that on Saturday Night Live
when he was a cast member there till this day.
That's one of the holiday songs that turkey for you.
(01:00:48):
For me, I didn't think, dude, it is just a classic.
I mean his movies are funny that those are two
good random actors that you guys out of your asses
like that. Which direction are you going? Oh? Man, well,
I got it marked it off my bucket list. I
(01:01:09):
actually got to smoke with O. G. Louis, so I
got to take that off my buckets Is he one
of the cats that you're thinking of? I mean, of course,
but um, but in reality, Bob Dylan Um, he's been
my uh changed my life. I grew up without a pops,
so I always looked for father figures and other people,
you know, And Bob Dylan is a is an activist,
(01:01:29):
not just the musician. He's the one that got rubin
Hurricane Carter at a prison with the song remember that movie.
So um, I've always adapted to men doing good things.
And Bob Dylan, like I said, he changed my life
and I still listened to his music to this very day.
If I ever get a chance to smoke with Bob Dylan,
if you guys get anybody could hook that up? Did you?
(01:01:50):
And for you to be vulnerable to say that without
a pop scrowing up, did you really look at Bob
Dylan in a way of uh learning from his music
and learning from his direction in life that he was doing.
I think that. Yeah. I think I always just looked
for guidance, you know, besides of what my mom left me,
But look for guidance and good role models, good good men,
you know. So I Bob dealing to Me definitely is
(01:02:12):
one of those. Uh you know that that movie the
Hurricane right that was based on it? Right that? I
mean that movie. If you haven't seen that movie. Man,
that is one of the best movies out I mean
that that that is so deep, dude, And you know
it just shows like how many I mean, there's still
people in prison to this day. You guys that are
that are wrongly accused, um that were convicted for crimes
(01:02:35):
they haven't done. And and you know, and there was
there was the all the there was all the kids.
There was another one with all the kids that uh
they got arrested too, and and all of them were
getting charged with h you know, I think rape or
murder or something like that. And and you know they
found out that all those kids weren't you know either,
you know. I mean, there's so many people in there.
So you know, again, what you guys are doing is
(01:02:56):
it's something dear to my heart because it needs to
be on and thank you, it's not easy man, doing
that should be safe out there, you know what I'm saying? Sincerely?
Is there anything else that we missed while we're here? Man?
I just want to give a shot out. When I
got my guns pulled, when they pulled the guns out
on me, I was with my friend open government investigation,
So I wanted to give a shot out to him
(01:03:17):
because he was the one driving and he's one of
my partners, so I just want to give him a
shout out. So it's scary when you're trying to do
something the cops come at you with guns. I did
four to nine days in jail and the cops pull
the guns out on me for doing a prank. One time,
brame at me all over the way and I was like,
get the prank. It's a joke, and do these guns
your head was a joke. Burling get our Burling game
(01:03:37):
area in the Bay Area. I don't know if you
knew Craig I did radio in the Bay Area. I
know you don't know my history. It's a joke because
people always mention him. That's what he's doing. He's being
an asshole again to me and nobody else gets to
realize what he's doing in him, which is fun and
all four of us actually we get to get exactly exactly.
But thank you guys, would be anything else before we
(01:03:59):
let you out here. Yeah, I just wanted to give
like a quick plug UM to Sativa cross their Uh,
a group of jovial medical marijuana patients in New Jersey.
UM Once a month, they go to the State House
and the Capitol in Trenton, and I had to smoke
out on the front lawn. Um. If you if you
(01:04:20):
look them up on YouTube and then you're searching, uhh,
ignorance is no excuse, you'll find all the videos of
them smoking weed out front of police stations. They go in,
they roll their read up on the table. It's because
in New Jersey is the only state where if you're
a medical marijuana patient with a card, you can smoke
wherever you can smoke cigarettes. So if there's a cigarette
(01:04:43):
butt can in front of the police station, you can
smoke there. Some of the cops are like, whoa, what
do you do when you can't do that? And they're like, oh, yeah,
I got a car, I got a card, and they
explain it to him. It's it's quite interesting. It's quite yeah,
Sativa cross, Ignorance is no excuse. Yeah, Snathan else before
(01:05:03):
let you get on out of here, man. I want
to give a shout out to my three sons who
also do what I do. I appreciate them tremendously. I
love you, guys. I also want to give a shout
out to Jersey Watcher and Jersey who's also running for mayor.
He does what we do. And there's James mcclinics who
ran for sheriff. He lost. But we have people on
Florida right. Yeah, we had him on the show. Yeah,
he's from whatever. He's the one that said, so, yeah,
(01:05:27):
we constitutional sheriff. Yeah. So we have people that believe
in what we do who are actually starting to run
for office. Now, this is amazing what I said, it's
got to change once you start changing that and everything
else can change until you get new people on board. Unfortunately, No,
you're right, shut the funk up and always filmed the police. Yeah.
Shout out to many other channels, especially writes Crispy out
(01:05:49):
in Florida. It was a good friend of mine. Um.
Shout out to many, many, many channels that are out
there that are picking up cameras. UM. I always tell
you guys, record police. If you guys record police, send
me your videos at record police is now at gmail
dot com. Will take a look at him. I want
to see new channels, new people picking up cameras every
single day. Shout out to all you guys out there
who have PICKEDIP cameras and recorded police held them accountable.
(01:06:11):
You're doing it for your communities. Thank you, guys. I
want you, guys really quick say shout out to Wolfe
Lally and san Juagin because they got me into this
and I just wanted to give a shout out to
all the auditors that pick up the cameras and film. Yeah,
thank you guys for coming on man, and you know,
thank you for sharing your stories with us and doing
what you do and if anything we could do for you, guys,
(01:06:31):
let us know, thank you. Thank thank you very much. Well,
there it is guys, it's Cannabis Talk one on one.
We want to thank you for joining the show and
remember this, if no one else loves you, we do.
Thank you for listening to Cannabis Talk one on one
on the I Heart Radio app, Apple podcast or wherever
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