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July 11, 2022 62 mins

The esteemed Comedian Godfrey stopped by GBR for a very candid and vibrant conversation about his journey as a comedian, dissecting societal constructs, problems of the past and solutions for the future and much more. Tune in next week for Part 2.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Get up, Get boys. It's back and reoded all in
your mind. Yeah, and that deep throating. This is for
the streets, the reel, the railroading, the distant franchise, the
truth escape building. And they ain't know when we speak
the truth, so they ain't quoted because we wrote it.
The North South East coat is the g b my
keeping your head bobbing. It ain't no stopping and wants

(00:22):
to be drips head by then the system is so
corrupt they threw the rock out of their heads and
then blame it on us. Don't get it twisted on
code and me and dancing for no buttament biscuits. It's
Willie d y'all scar faces in the building. Collectively, we
are to get old boys loaded, reloaded with another episode

(00:43):
of information and instructions to help you navigate through this wild, crazy,
beautiful world. In the studio, girlfried Dan Chima, here's it
the whole, Like my fathers that dot Chimmer do Chimmer
junior man. Junior man sounds like you kill a lion.

(01:04):
Man's voices like you know, thank you. Let's tell you
something straight off, bro, like you one of the most
brilliant people I know. I appreciate like you you have
a very very interesting mind. Thank you. You know, uh,
And I see it like most people they don't even

(01:24):
understand even some of the like to me, like, the
best comics are the ones who are abstract, the ones
who think outside of the box, not just the regular
jokes that people like myself, Brad, not that. Y'all got that.
Y'all got that now, y'all got that, y'all got that

(01:46):
sixth sense type thing going on. Yeah. Yeah, there's a
lot of brothers that can be abstract, but they don't
want to. Sometimes you can get lazy in comedy. You
can just be like, I'll just do you know what
I'm gonna do them do fucking in I'm gonna do
you know you know what? I ate women now if

(02:09):
your man, you know, And that's that's sometimes you can
go that route. Was that Steve Hark? Yeah, y'all ever
see y'all got me funked up out here. Yeah, I'm
gonna tell y'all because black folks, you ain't gonna fire Willie.

(02:33):
I mean no, I just listened. I came from the
black circuit in Chicago watching Bernie Mack. He was Yeah,
it was me you know, you know Dian Cole, you know,
even Mike Gaps would come through. Uh, Corey Holcum. Yeah,
I forced Corey. I love to say this because Corey

(02:54):
is so dope. I forced Corey to go to open
mic with me. I brought him to open Mike. I said,
you're coming with me? Yeah, I knew, I do. Corey
s I was as a teenager. He was. He's ballplayer man,
vertical jump out the gym. Yeah. Used to like, I'm

(03:20):
telling you, Corey home play with my brother. What are
you talking about? She got that motherfucker when he jumped,
it was like cartoon And you know a lot of
motherfucker's could jump that a five five Corey dunk standing
there boom. Sure, and he definitely talks. He's like dead

(03:41):
in your face. Yeah, Corey is fantastic athlete. Yeah, um Corey, yeah, man, um.
I played baseball and football. I was more baseball football.
I wasn't really basketball, but I like basketball. I was
more baseball football. But yeah, yeah, yeah, that's ship. Yeah. Yeah.

(04:05):
School he we went to different high schools, man the
same conference, but we were different high school. Chicago is
all about high school. Damn they go. Where'd you go.
Corey went to Send High School. I went to Lane
Tech High School. Nane Tech is the biggest high school
in Chicago, and it always competed against Michelle Obama's high school,
which was Whitney Young when Young was that civil rights

(04:27):
leader that was with Dr King and them. But yeah,
it was a really prominent It's a veriant, prominent black
school in Chicago, number one in athletics and um academics.
And they compete with my school, which is uh college
prep school technical school. Yeah, I graduated well. I transferred
from a Catholic racist a Catholic high school that my

(04:50):
father forced me to go to because my father was like,
you will not go to public school. You have to
go to Catholic school. It's cool. Hell. He was a
cool last African man. When my father passed away man
you know, he was an educator in Chicago for forty
five years Malcolm X College. My dad and he could.

(05:12):
He created a school to help adult learning with some
other teachers. It was called c c A Academy, and
he on the West Side, you know about the West
Side Chicago. My father worked there for forty five years.
George's music you know Gang, I mean Gang bangers respecting
my dad. Man, they knew my my my father passed away. Man,
I'm telling you and my my mother's gone to My

(05:35):
mother's a nurse for thirty something long time in Chicago.
She trained some of my friends that are nurses. She
delivered people's babies, you know what I mean. And my
mother will be like, guess who had they know that baby?
Said your friends, she's only sixteen. Yeah, my mom, Yo,
My parents were blue collar Chicago Nigerian motherfucker. Y'all it up?

(06:00):
You know, King Joffrey Joffer, my son works. You will
go to the world of Storia and you will shower
and take all of this tout off your body. Can
make sure he gets a shower and achieve you've got
one word two words at once at once? Man, do

(06:23):
you believe that Nigerians are more judgmental than the average
black person judge? What I mean is this, like Nigerians
would like pick sit apart, Like they see something and
they say exactly what it is with no filter none,
But they don't but they'll say it with no filter
but with no profanity. They'll go, why would you how

(06:45):
could you be doing this? That's is foolish you have
to use your comman sense. They don't go like this.
The fund is that you know, like you know Americans,
you know what the funk kind of ship would be like,
could you do this? Why would you quit and be
selling drugs? Good? Why? Yeah? I remember when I had
a cousin that was a drug dealer in d C. Right,

(07:08):
one of my favorite cousins. I ain't saying his name,
and and my father and he was smart as ship.
You know, most lot Nigeria academics is serious. But he
was drug dealer. He had two He had a bad
He had two Mercedes Benzins because because Mercedes Benzins was
a big deal. And my father said, how could you

(07:30):
leave school to sell drugs? I see you might say,
these bends you have two of them? Why you could
you could hunt? Y'all? Yeah, they would break They break
that ship down and they get you know, but you
know it's just we we because we judge because we're
trying to be great, you know. So you you're trying
to always strive for academic excellence. You're trying to strive

(07:51):
for a better life. You want to be able to
have a better life here and then go back to
Nigeria and rock over there too. That's why Nigerians go
back and forth, back and forth a lot immigrants in general,
well say, you know, I want to have a home
in Nigeria and also have a home he you know,
it's just striving for excellence, that's what it is. We're
a little arrogant. It's real ship. I got a buddy
that that John Beato, really really got me into the game,

(08:16):
got my foot in the door. No, no, Beto is
his real name. Yeah, so that's one of my best
friends in the world. And he's back in Nigeria right now.
So all of the that that that Nigerian culture, like,
I learned that ship from him. You looking like a
dignitary yourself. You look like one of the African dignitarists.

(08:38):
We have to find a political situation because we are
losing money in Africa. You got the glasses from Nigeria
though not not? What's that? Oh are you kidding? Did
you get your tests? Wait a minute, time, man, bro?

(08:58):
What so? I'm especially was a ranking all he needed
a suit and they take a picture of like that.
The African society has to change. If we can't found it,
what are we going to do to this country. The
Europeans are trying to call a nice Africa. I will

(09:20):
not stop from it. Man, where did you get You
grew up in Lincoln, Nebraska. My parents jed north north
side of Chicago in the most immigrant heavy area in Chicago,
because you know, Chicago's the most segregated city in the

(09:41):
country still along with Milwaukee, and they're not that far apart. Yeah,
the most segregated. They hit Dr King with a brick
in Chicago. They threw a brick at his ass because
he was doing something for the the sanitation workers and
they hit him with a brick and Dr King said,
that's the worst ship I've ever been through coming from Alabama.
Chicago still segregated because but where I lived in Chicago

(10:04):
was called Uptown. That's you know, Corey was west Side,
but he came to Uptown because we would go to
the Boys Club of America. Ship like that, but it
was the most immigrants because we It's like, I think
it has a Guinness Book of World Record for immigrants
over there. Because all my friends were like from my
next door neighbors were Cambodian, I had Vietnamese. They all
just got off the boat Vietnamese, Uh, Filipino, Nigerian, African, American, American, Jewish, White,

(10:31):
European Jewish. My I had baby, I had Russian babysitters,
had Haitian babysitters, Haitian, Uh, Ethiopian. Uh. Yugoslavia when it
was Yugoslavia. Uh, what you say, I think it's just
it's the Czech Republic. I think I haven't heard Yugoslavian. Yeah,

(10:52):
it was back in the day. It was had Yugoslavian friends. Yeah,
so we had all my friends. It was in Korean, Chinese, Ease, Uh,
some Japanese, Uh, India, India. We had everybody. It was.
It was called uptown and it's still like that. It's
still like that. And you had like blue collar and

(11:12):
you know, he had poor blue collar. So I was
always around, you know. And even in grade school, man,
I learned how to do sign language because my teacher
was one of these She was this white woman, you
know that, you know, we she protested nuclear award ship
we had to me and my brothers, sister. We learned
how to sign language and seventh and eighth grade talking
to death be oh yeah yeah, man, let's go, let's

(11:34):
go back to Nebraska. What the how were you when
you left one? I think I was barely one years Okay, Chicago,
I don't know. They have no experience about the animal
encounters and the train lily ponds that they're known for.
They're known for corn Huskers, right, and Malcolm X was
born in Omaha, Nebraska. Yeah, Gabrielle Unions from Nebraska. The

(12:02):
Unions are big family in Nebraska where he was, right.
And then you got Warren Buffett from Nebraska. He runs
Nebraska pretty much. Johnny Carson grew up well, have spent
a lot of his time in Nebraska. And then I
finally went to Nebraska about three years ago because my
father went to a college called Dana College in Nebraska.

(12:25):
And you know, my father had been talking about it, Dana.
I went to Dana College. Dana College. I said, what
the hell's at Dana College. It was a teacher's college
because my father studied education there. And I was like,
I finally did the I think the funny Bone in
Omaha finally got invited to Nebraska. I've never been there.
It's like eighteen and I was like, and I asked

(12:46):
the dude, man, I want to find my father's college
where he went. And this white dudes like a little white.
He's like, yo, man, I'll take you to the place.
I know where it is. I said, okay. So he
took me. Was outside of Lincoln. It was like a
good hour drive and there's nothing there, nothing just corny.
It's nothing. And I'm picturing my dad in the late

(13:10):
sixties going, yeah, I'm like this, my father went through
this ship. I was like, what the fuck my pops
going through this ship with my mom's like and to
go to school. This is bumble fuck Like, I'm like,
and we're not talking. Remember I'm twenty eighteen going there.

(13:32):
Imagine out on nineteen sixty nine going to fucking and
my friend. Then I saw it. I went on the
campus and it's it's it's done. It's defunct, you know.
Then they changed it to Midwestern University. But now if
they don't use the campus, but the buildings are still there.
I said, this is where my fucking father went. God
damn ninth Can you imagine Nebraska? The mother's black, You

(13:56):
goddamn niggers, get the hell out of here, fucking there
and he's probably excuse me, So it's Nigeria and you're
pronouncing it incorrectly, probably, you know, my pops went through
it and then they went to Chicago. We moved after that,
moved to Chicago because I don't remember No Nebraska. I
don't remember Chicago. And where did you pick up comedy? College?

(14:20):
When did you college? When I saw Tommy Davidson Shude,
I saw Eddie Murphy, Rob bro I saw freshman college,
I sawe h before college. There has to be some
some trail there. You know what I could say my mother,
my mother, it was the was like peripherally got me

(14:42):
into comedy, not stand up, but just loving movies and
you know, like watching from the you know, we all
did watched Honeymooners, Good Times for the side. But we
were a TV family, you know, and watching comedies. I
love watching comedies. I could do voices. I was doing
voices when I was four or five years old. I
doing oli because my father would watch the Alive Fight,

(15:02):
you know, when Alive was in just you know, Larry
Holmes and Ken Norton and my father be watching and
I used to be going, I'm fast, I'm pretty, I
shook up the world. I'm the greatest. I told you
how cod Sale you too, ugly. Joe George Feman is
a bell. He's uglier. I'm gonna get the gorilla in Manila.
I used to do that ship and I was like,
this is how it, Coach Sell, I am with Mohammed

(15:24):
late and right there, Joe Frasier almost had you down.
See that's your problem, Howard, Coach Sale, you and Joe
Fraser ugly. Tell your wife to take you to pay
off your I used to do that ship for my
uncle's that would come from Nigeria. They would give me money.
If I say, they say, do Mohammed Ali, we do
it for I give you one dollar. I'll be like

(15:45):
I asked, don't pretty shook up the world? I told
you I'm the greatest. I'm knocking out in seven of
taking him to Heaven? Yeah was I was, I lead
the single greatest sports figure in African history. And of
course yes, yes he was fucking right. He was being
made him so endeared to the African people because he

(16:06):
really the fact that he fought in Africa, the you
know ansire, the fact you know, ah, his arrival in
his arrival, yeah he yeah, when he fought it was
forman insire and then beat him. Yeah, it was like,

(16:27):
I mean, I would have hated to be George Foreman.
It's like, well what about me, I'm black? To Menean
was like, he brought the German shepherd. Remember he in
the in the we and when we were kings. He
brought that German shepherd, which reminded them of like the
brutality that the French people used on them. He brought
the German shepherd and he was like, oh hey, I

(16:49):
mean like I don't like this day still mean and
the Georgia's defense. He still has heard of German shepherd's
trained dogs and yeah, it's that they're amazing dogs though
for that ship, but the Africans didn't like that ship.
And Alive was about black people. He was about the

(17:11):
African people connecting to his people and the fact that
he Muslimed too. He's Muhammad Ali. There's about a lot
of Muslims went out to He was very He hung out. Yeah,
he always kept yeah he was driving with the kids
and he but he always kept his training camps open
to everybody, white, black, everybody. Everybody watched him train. He

(17:32):
entertained everybody, remember he entertained. And George Foreman was like,
I want to talk to none of you, motherfucker. I'm
a knock motherfucker. And don listen to the don Kings like, oh,
it's gonna be a good one. Oh yeah, it's gonna
be the pontification of simulation man. And then James Brown
was like, remember it was him and it was it

(17:55):
was it was him and Don King not making sense.
He's like, hit do one the other and they doing
to you becutting, Well, it's here, man, ain't Brown. Let
me tell you something, boy, this is one of the
greatest pontifications that I've ever seen in my life. It's
gonna be it's gonna be the greatest pication the philosophical talk.
And then he'd be like, man, I hear the middle

(18:18):
Don when does that got his hand? He got the
under then that meddle hood, we got no hunt and
we got money. Don't make it that on a good foot,
on the good foot. And everyone's like, what the fun
is going on inside? Because you remember James Brown performed

(18:39):
the spinners, the spinners performed everybody performed on that. Man. Yeah,
that was that was true Black, that was true. Black
King put it together when we were Kings, the actual
I had it on sucking whatever the thing the big disc. Yeah,
I saw it in the movie theater, and you know
who saw it was not and and it was not

(19:02):
a lot of people in the in the theater when
I was there, and guests who came out of the
theater with me at the same time. Sting no ship. Yeah,
he was like that was a good movie, wasn't It
was like, yeah that it was. God's like, what's up Sting?
Because you listen. I was like, damn, what's up? Man?
We just talked in the hallway for a little bit
and then he left. Yeah. I like Sting. I like
the police Sting. Remember that him a little thing she

(19:25):
does Since Master get a Boys reloged podcast will be
right back after the street Man. You've worked with a
lot of giants in comedy. I have, you know, we're
talking we're talking Scanfield with Seinfeld, Cosby, Cosby. I worked

(19:48):
for Cosby, Yeah, how about for Cosby, Robert Williams. I
did a lot of shows you contemporary, you know you
got Tiffany had his Mike Gabs, Corey got just Dad
right David. Yeah, I um worked for Cosby. I was
an audience coordinating for the Cosby Show. The one, not
the first one, the second one. It was cool man.

(20:10):
You ever been to sit come word is somebody warming
up the show? You ever come to one of them shows?
It like, Hey, how y'all go, I'm gonna show you
the like that I had to do all that ship?
How long did you do? What you mean? Did he
gabe different different flavors? Pudding? Is that what you're saying? Face,

(20:46):
is that you're trying to say that I had different types?
Wasn't because you got your vanilla? You got, you got
all the different flavors. Put it in his code word
you and let you just got the replace the letters.
Where he was doing when he was working with Bio Cosby?

(21:09):
Did you remember this ship? Like nobody's business? I remember
I was doing him because the whole, the whole, it's
the Queen's It's called um Kaufman the story and studios
in Queens, New York. It's where Sasame Street has been. Yeah,
remember me too? Can production? Yeah it's on HBO now,

(21:31):
yeah you know HBO bought that ship. I'm like, why
can't the Puppets curse? Now it's on HBO? Would that be? Dope?
Grover goes what the funds going on here. I want
my fucking cookies and now I want them. No, it's
for cookie for mother fucking media, alright, right, or fucking Elma.

(21:55):
This is bad. You sound crack like PC's too on
the street. No, that's a prick. That's not a better course.
You love? Elmo was my favorite. Elmo is the funniest thing,
almost funniest ship. Dude. Yeah, I used to like I
like cookie Cookie. I don't know. I'm not gonna talk

(22:15):
about man. I love I love street man. Come on,
we all grew up on Sesame Street. D. Listen, Kermie
the Kermi d. Did you ever figure out how to
get the Seseme Street? Um? When we all said, can
you tell me how to get I'm not gonna lie.

(22:36):
This is how I discovered Sesame Street was next door.
So I'm going in the elevator going to work because
I could walk down. I used to live in Long
Island City, Queens, and I would walk to the studio.
And you've seen no, no, no, not that. I saw
Gordon the ball here black dude. You know, uh Willie
Dynamite Roscoe Orman. I saw him in the elevator. I'm

(22:58):
like this the fun he was just like go now,
even ahead. Just he's like, hey, you doing. I'm like,
that's I was like, what the fund is going on here?
I didn't know. So then I'm out doing my warm
I start the show, you know, because I'm telling I
bring out Dr Cosby and police was shot. And that's
what I do, audience coordinating. So then I'm warming up

(23:20):
the show and it's two hundred some people and the
black lady from Sesame Streets in the corner waving at
me like you're so funny. I go, yo, they're going
to lady from Sessamey Sure, I said, yo, yo, what what?
Why am I seeing people from Sesame Streak? They go,
you know where right next door? You should come after?
I go, oh my god, yeah, And so I went
to Sesame Street and I almost cried like a motherfucker,

(23:43):
I ain't go front. Yes I did, because you grew
up on it. And I was like, I meant to dude,
the Elmo guy before the before the accusations, I met
the count you know that Kevin Kevin sexual sault, No
not him, almost his guy. Yeah, he was accused. He

(24:05):
was accused of like sexual assault. But I think he's
good to go. Because he was direct. He was the
director of Sesame Street. You don't see his he didn
see his documentary. I saw his documentary. It's called Being Elmo.
It's really good. Um so um I met him. I
met the Count. I met and I the count bro.
He was dope. I met the Count and then I
saw snuffle up because the elephant. But he was they

(24:28):
haven't like raised up in the thing. I go, there's
go snuffle up because Yo, that ship sucked me up, dud,
I ain't gonna lie. I was like, oh boy, I
was like this. I was like this this, I love
this ship. And the music was going in my head sad.
We all know it, even too art dudes like, yes,

(24:50):
remember the guy that was sending the Christmas trees to
used Christmas trees And somebody came up and saying like,
you're trying to send me used Christmas tree And he
said not used previously on? Who was that that? He
was the own on on the previously not Mr Whooper?
There's Mr Whooper. He passed away. Um, it's a puppet.

(25:10):
Wasn't run of the Puppets, man, It's been so long,
it's just a fake memory. I just remember that. I
remember the conversation sandwiches God Smiley, Remember remember check this out.
I just saw there's a documentary you all must see.
It's called The Gang of Sesame Street on how it
was created. It's so damn good. What is it on?

(25:34):
It's it's I think it might be Hulu or Netflix
or one of those. You know, they're all the same ship. Yo,
good one. I got a good one for y'all while
you're on the subject ship that we need to be watching.
Um stay sweet, praying, obey, who's that the poligamus guy? Oh,
I want to see I love you to see good

(25:56):
to get jail for life? But uh he was when
his dad died, he married all his dad's wives, right,
and then he started marrying the underage key But no,
it's it's it's cult is always the weird ship. The
reason I'm bringing this ship up is because the way

(26:18):
they used the Bible to manipulate the motherfucker's unbelieving. That's
how we got the slavery. That's the same way that
they used the Constitution to manipulate. Yeah, they always used God,
the Constitution don't apply to us. So anybody that's relying
on the Constitution to get you anything or any type
of relief. He probably, but the Bible, the bib it

(26:39):
either see it's all of his man. But more people
gonna read the Bible. Excuse me, more people don't know
about the Bible, then they're gonna know about the Constitution,
you know, right that pull out Corinthians and that's true,
and won't know what the fun is going on? That
old ass talk true and won't live it either, No
at all. Um, I was gonna say this Sesame Street

(27:01):
ship is gonna blow your mind. You know why because
there was a white lady and she was the one
that said, you know, we need to find a show
that's gonna reach black children. There's there. They're ignored too much.
We got and all these these TV shows Howdy do to?
His ship's too white and it's too corny and it's
whack and kids are just watching commercials. We gotta find

(27:23):
something that kids are gonna learn with music. Dad. So
she with her goal was to make sure black children
are educated. Her goal was responsible for the PS Public
Broadcasting System. Uh no, she wasn't. She was just responsible
for the Sesame Street thing. No, not the electric company,
just that one. And she goes what are we gonna do.

(27:46):
We gotta reach black children, especially intercity kids. So she
she got psychologists and teachers and and and then she
hired He got Jim Henson, was this little Hippi hippie
puppeteer dude. She got all these cats. Yeah, she got
black psychology, she got everybody. We gotta find a way
to reach black children. So they had like samples samples

(28:09):
of the show before they put it on. They showed
the puppets, and they showed the people, and they would
separate them and the kids would watch and they would
have a thing distracting the child. So when they saw
the puppets, the thing that was distracting children wouldn't affect
the kids. They love the puppets. When they show the
people the distraction with the kids would pay attention. So
they were like, we don't like the people, we like

(28:29):
the puppets. So they said, let's put them both together.
I'm telling this is fantastic. Then they said, well, what
are we how are we gonna what do we want
Sesame Street to look like? And they were watching one
of the one of the producers, this other white dude,
who was producing like white shows. He wanted to get
out of that ship. She calls him up. He goes, yeah,
I want to do something different, something meaningful, And so

(28:50):
he goes, well, he's watching a commercial and it's in
Harlem in New York and his dude talking in Harlem.
He goes, that's how that's how the show should look.
It should look like the streets of Harlem. Like it
should look like a stoop. We need to we need
a stoop. We wanted to be like Hard. It was
all based on black kids. Sesame Street. You would't even
know the documentaries fired and you know Holly Robinson. It's

(29:13):
called the Gang of the Gang from Sesame Street and
you know how hard you know, Holly Robinson. Holly Robinson Pete,
her daddy was the first Gordon. Remember Roosevelt Franklin Rosel
Franko was a little puppet and it got canceled because
it was too stereotypical and black people said, funk that,

(29:36):
we don't want that. You got to see the doc
Roosevelt Franklin was a puppet character that Holly Robinson's dad
created because he goes, where we need a black character,
we don't have any, and so they had it and
it was too like stereotypical and and like double a C.
They were like, no, no, that we had that ship.

(29:57):
But Holly Robinson, Pete's dad was the main. Ain't with Gordon.
Funny thing about the Roosevelt Franklin. I had an uncle.
My grandmother had a brother named Roosevelt Franklin, Roosevelt dellenor Franklin.
But wait a minute, whoa crazy shit? Um? I found
out at my grandmother's funeral. My aunt told the story

(30:18):
that um, that they were getting ready to lose their house.
She literally rostration and fifth and they were getting ready
to lose their house. And the mama wrote the president,
and the President said the houses in the all kinds
of ship, right, And her mother was so proud of that,
And because she named her son Roosevelt jellenor Franklin damn everything,

(30:43):
Franklin Delano, Roosevelt Roosevelt delanof Wow, Yeah, who came up
with that? I'm just that's that's all. That's all. That
was Schoolhouse Rock. I'm just the bill. Yeah, I'm only
Bill hand on little hitting Hill on Capitol Hill. Well

(31:06):
now I'm off Turtle White House and I ain't feeling right. Yeah,
that's his name is um Bob d row I think
it's Bob, it's a it's a couple of cats that
were the main singers, because you know they had history, science, mathematics.
Remember three is a magic number, Yes it is. Every

(31:28):
triangle has three corners, every triangle has three sides, no more,
no less. You don't have to guess when it's three.
You can see. No, it was a guy, Bob d Rowe.
A man and a woman had a little baby. Yes
they did. They had three in a family. Three six, nine, twelve, twelve, fifteen,

(31:49):
eighteen thirty. Yo, remember that. I remember. I remember a
lot of this stuff vaguely, but man, you got it down,
pat Man. Yeah, I went back. Yeah, I still watched
him over. I watched him again. I watched the Schoolhouse Rock.
I'll go in YouTube and I do. I always bring

(32:12):
up this ship. I watched old Ship all the time
because with comedy, man, it's like no dipping in hip hop.
You guys gotta be up on your ship with your
similes and your references and ship like that. Do you
ever forget your stuff stage? Oh yeah, sometimes you'll be
like you get a brain fart and ship like you're like, yeah, man,

(32:33):
when you see someone crazy shit out there. But that's
why you're like, damn, I got would I would forget
like immediately, like I would be out there stage like yeah, yeah, yeah,
we're on the stage. Will d yeah yeah yeah. I
come out and should be doping the first two Oh,
ye're doing a little dance. Will come out with music,

(32:55):
dance come out though, that should be fine, And I
have to be like like, yeah, man, so I got
the first joke down. I knocked the first joke. It's
easy after that. Listening man. Obviously, obviously you're one of
the best guys when they come to doing impressions. That's
that's a gimme. How often do you get upset when

(33:20):
people say do this impression when you're trying to do jokes?
You know what? What's really good too. What I love
about the audience that they don't really do that that much.
Sometimes they go, hey, man, gotta get there st and
then I get it, But they don't do it too often.
Because I got joke jokes. I'm known for having material.
I made sure my old manager, David Rescues, Dave Klingman,

(33:42):
he team made sure. He said, whatever you do, you
know you can do your voices you can transition into accents.
Make sure you get strong material first and then bring
it in because you don't want to be depending on
that ship. A lot of times when comics have depend
on they depend on the in person nations there, their
acts are really weak unless they're doing a voice, and

(34:03):
I don't. I don't have to do voices. I don't.
There's times I don't do any voices. I'll do like
some access that you know, if I'm talking about Africans
or I'm doing Indian people. Everybody, I told you, what
do you doing of it? I do that? You know, Chinese?
Chinese very difficult? Why you trying to speak Chinese a lot?
Don't told you? You know I could do that. You
got Vietnamese here? You know you have a lot of

(34:24):
Vietnamese here. I grew up with them. You're like me,
dang dang mean Vietnam. You know you asked me to
me very good, you know, praying like you're drinking a
lot of water and you're Vietnamese. But and you know,
and you know me dang me dang means black person

(34:45):
in in Vietnamese. It means like a derogatory word, me
dang me dang. You me, dang that that's yeah, that's
give me a derogatory Chinese. Oh, it's it's it's fun.
I forgot what the word because they go, there's a
guy that's teaching those people, those black children in Africa
bad words. You know you've seen that, right, what happened

(35:07):
the video of a Chinese man teaching black children Chinese?
Because you know Chinese are in Nigeria and Africa, so
they're teaching these black children to say they're black monsters
and niggas and but they don't know you haven't seen it. Yeah,
so and the kids are like some chip and it
means black monster. We were poor where this and they

(35:28):
don't even know what they're teaching that ship not all
Chinese people. What change people? What are the bad Chinese
people doing in Africa? What did the bad they they
take trying to take all the resources. Uh, they gave
Nigeria about sixty I don't know, a couple of a
bunch of hundred millions of dollars to read um to

(35:49):
fix the infrastructure. So they're trying to take over Nigeria,
colonized Nigeria. But hopefully black a lot of black leaders
won't do that. Let them have let it happen. But
they're trying to do some fun over there. I don't know.
I don't know every Chinese person, but I know they're
doing some fun over there. You know what I mean.
There's gonna be some Nigerian Chinese people they're coming. You know.

(36:11):
That's that's really sad man. It's like, yeah, goddamn, can
we have some can we maintain something? Can we hold
up some type of integrity? Can somebody have some balls?
Can you put can somebody put people over profits? We
And it's sad because you got your old people doing
that ship sometimes too. And Africa. The reason why, like

(36:36):
you see, like the Chinese or the Asians get their
little they get their law passed, you know, anti Asian
law passed. You know Dr Claude um Anderson, he said
it perfectly. Go let me tell you why you don't
see no Chinese man, Chinese man kill shot by police
because they got an economic front. They put their money together,
they got an front. You know why Niggas are getting

(36:57):
killed all the time because we don't got no money together.
We don't put our money together. We vote for this,
vote for that. We should be independent. Oh you know
what when you know how strong we'd be if we
all came independently voted, we would have these politicians in
our pocket. We all put our money together. The reason
why they treat us like ship is we don't have
an economic front. We're not buying the police, we're not
buying the politicians. That's why they look at us and

(37:19):
don't give a funk about us. That's why we're always
getting shot because if we don't get it, why don't
we get it? Because we spend our money and everybody
else's ship. Because what they say that they Arabs Asians.
We go to their stores after even being treated like ship,
we still go back to their ship, still buy their ship.
Women got to get their hair weaves after being called
fucking nigger left and right, and they'll go back to

(37:41):
that same motherfucker. And then all they get is we're
sorry because they're losing business if we and you know,
we're trying no to open our own hair care. I mean,
we got other people from other races selling us our
own hair care ship. The fund is going on here.
And and the problem is is if we add our
own economic front, it's all about money, you know what

(38:04):
I mean? Why did the Asians get the anti Asian
hate thing because they're China. They're connecting America China, China.
Don't play that ship. They're like, you better handle that ship.
Asian countries, they're they love their Asian people, Asian people.
Asia likes they're Asian people here. I would you know,
I don't know if they like them all, but they

(38:26):
have a connection. Africa and African Americans ain't connected. They're
not connected. Like there's a lot of division, and that's
what's fucked imagining that Africa backed up African Americans and
they were like, Nah, you need to sign an anti
hate and the anti lynching bill. They got an anti
lynching bill still on the fucking table. They gotta think
about hanging niggas. They still gotta think about hanging us.

(38:47):
Like what do we do, John, I don't. I don't know.
It's gonna be a it's a toughie, you know, I don't.
I don't see what the problem it's. It's hatred of
black people. They everyone hates. That's the problem. We just
we're because of you know how, because of our history,
how we were brought here and change. We're the only

(39:09):
group of people here who did not come voluntarily. So uh,
we're the only group of people here that um, we're
the only group of people here that our own. Uh.
We don't have a government like like everybody else. That's
why I like, if you know, you don't see police
gunning down Australians and when they did, they paid up

(39:32):
real quick, gave gave a copper life sentence. You don't
see them gunning down Asian people because they know it's
gonna be some ship with China. They know it's gonna
be some ship. They don't careful, you don't, you don't,
you don't see them. You don't see them gunning gunning
down Arabs and ship like because they know it's gonna
be some ship you see, because they got a country

(39:53):
that it's going to create an international crisis. So when
they kill us, it's no international crisis. Which like you say, uh,
we're we're we're we're descendants of Africa. But in America,
if you're born, wherever you're born, that's what you are.
That's wherever you're born. You know, that's your nationality. I

(40:16):
got you what I'm saying, wherever you're born, that's your nationality. Right,
we we are Americans and but the thing is that
we're not treated like Americans when we're not treat like
in fact, other people that come here that we paved
the way for treated more like Americans. And that is
because of systematic oppression. That is because of the people

(40:39):
that's in that are empower Your politicians. You're you're the
people who write the laws, the people enforced the laws.
Those motherfucker's all these senators been sitting around, ain't been
doing ship. Your your state reps who ain't been doing ship,
you know, your your your your congressman and women who
ain't been doing ship but getting paid and going alone

(41:00):
to get along. Yeah, And it's them. And it's easy
to divide us because we'll sell each other out in
a fucking heart because there are black people that do
not want to see the progress of other black people.
Black panthers are a perfect example. There were, you know,
the informants that that killed Fred Hampton. You know in Chicago.
Fred Hampton died at years old in bed with his

(41:22):
wife like sleeping when they killed him in his sleep.
But they had a black dude go in and fun
things up. That's how the gang ship started in Chicago.
A lot of the gang ship was like a lot
of the gangs were trying to help out, have breakfast programs,
are trying to help the youth. And then the FBI
was like na, na na, what's his name? Jaredo Whu
was like, nah, funk all that. We gotta find get

(41:43):
some of these brothers to come in and start our
arguments with these motherfucker's. They'll get us. We'll do anything
that's ruined, eat ruin each other. Look at how divided
Caribbeans Africans after there, everybody fighting thinking they better than
each other. We looked the same right back. The reason

(42:08):
why it's so difficult though, it's not it's not like
it's not like you don't have just millions of black
people out there that's not trying. The problem is is
like even when you do get it together and you're
on the right track, they come in with their nasty,
evil asses and they derail it. And they can do
that and get away with it again because the government

(42:30):
creates the laws, the government enforces the laws, and so
we're the only group of people in this country that
uh targeted by own government for failure. Like like no government.
You can't name a group of people in the entire civilization,
who has ever been able to reach their full potential
when they've been targeted by their own government. These motherfucker's

(42:53):
run it. They got and so they can always even
when they come to education, y'all want to teach that. Okay,
well we're gonna defund you. We're gonna get you the money,
so now you got to teach this bullshit. But they
want you to teach you because they're not gonna fund it.
So we're we're we're we're fighting, we're fighting so so
many battles. But but and it does, so it so

(43:17):
we can do as much as we can. We can
do but it but it doesn't matter at the end
of the day. Why it matters. But again, we're still
not gonna get there all the way because our government,
the government, because they pay taxes, We play taxes to
these these motherfucker's got take tanks to keep us down,
and they come up with something, and they come up

(43:38):
with something every ten to fifteen years to to to
deliver another death blow. Always like we're gonna look look
at Slavery. We got Jim Crow, Jim you got red lining, reconstruction,
got reconstruction, we got vacation food. We got the crack epidemic.
We got some fun the groceries, so so kids black

(44:02):
kids don't eat. They always got some new snaps and
then they'll send the police to kill, you know, the
police brutality. Also also JAREDO. Hoover said, the biggest threat
to this country is Negro improvement empowerment. The biggest threat
is Negro empowerment. We that's the biggest threat to our

(44:24):
country is black people getting shipped. It's a threat because
a threat because they think that if we get into
a certain position, we're gonna do the same thing that
they did to us. But that's not in our nature.
Because we're people of the earth. We're we are a
hundred percent human. We're a hundred percent human. They just

(44:44):
they I think it might be and I'm not trying
to say this, but this scientists said their part Neanderthals,
there's ninety seven or three percent in the hand of throw.
We're a hundred percent. We're looking out forgiving. We are
black folks. We forgive a lot. We do. People do
ship to us. But it can be like, oh, these
white people did something to us. But these white people
are cool, man, They're cool. We judge people by character.

(45:07):
We always judge people by content of character. But the
fund the problem is will forgive, you know, white people
for doing so much fun ship to us, But we'll
be ready to smoke another black man or black woman
for stepping on our shoe or fucking some dumb ship.
We'll have so much anger because they beat it into
us to hate each other. Yeah. They they did that

(45:28):
ship to us, the Willie Lynch ship and all that.
They made us hate each other, like when we get
mad at each other, we're so fucking mad, Like, Yo,
I'm gonna kill this motherfucker, no funk that. But a
white dude would be like, Yo, I didn't like what
he said. But yo, we have to forgive and be
able to move on. But that nigga right now, I'm
gonna kill it. An. Do you know it's like we

(45:48):
it's like they really did a good job on us
as far as fucking us mentally, they fucked us. Yo.
They have turned us, like Minister Aferican said, turning a
race inside out, you know, with no knowledge of self,
no knowledge of who they are, no connection to God.
And here you come with your white Jesus and you

(46:11):
bring all this European ideology to black people, and then
you send them out with no education, no knowledge of self.
What do you want us to do? You know how?
It's knowledge and it sounds corny, knowledge of self the
way knowledge of self man. Because I saw the minister's

(46:35):
last speech in February. It was me to change rock him.
Um Corey Colcham is there. We was all there and
I got Riza Islam he and I was in Dayton, Ohio.
I drove over there. My plane was late, but I
rent in a car. So it's I think it's a swansung.
You know. Ministers eighty nine years old. And I used
to see him in college. I us see him when

(46:57):
I was eighteen. I used to go live to Savior's Day.
I've been to about four or five of them. No,
I didn't go to that one. I couldn't do it.
I had something, did you go? Yeah? You see what
I'm saying. So I we've been to like events live,
I've seen them, you know. And and knowledge of self. Man,
I'm telling you it has to be. But we have

(47:17):
to take it upon ourselves, not waiting on them too,
because they're they don't want this. First of all, critical
race theory is a fucking bullshit ass branding. It's just
American history, it's just American history. To American history, it's like, oh,
we don't want to because most of African American history
is white oppression. It's black people trying to fight white oppression,

(47:40):
and they don't want that in there because they don't
want to feel guilty. But the problem is you still
you're still behaving the same way, but they're still behaving
the same way, still call us niggas, it will still
treating us like niggas. Now, if they stop that behavior,
then we don't have to teach that because you've learned
your lesson, but they still treat us like shit. So

(48:01):
we need to know what the fucking reason is. And
African and American history truthfully told would be like, oh,
that's why they're like that, because how do we not
teach black history? And you keep calling my son and
daughters niggas? Where is this coming from? Funk that your
behavior isn't changing. So we need to know what the
symptom is is so we can come to a solution.
And I'm telling we have to self educate ourselves. There

(48:24):
are plenty of books. We just gotta get diligent to go.
Let me read about the ship on my own. I'm
not gonna wait for these motherfucker's to give it to me,
because I learned most of my ship outside of the curriculum.
I just picked up books. Black bookstores are opening up
left and right. You can order Ship. You can get
um how to Um, how to Eat, The Message to
the Black Man, how to Eat to Livelijah Mohammed, Auto Biophy,

(48:46):
and Malcomnec. You can get Stolen Legacy. You can get
Black Athena. You can get um Um the Iss Papers
by Francis Chris Welson. You can get Destruction of Black
Civilization by Chancellor Williams. You can get behold of Pale Horse.
You can get What the Funk. You can get all
of James Baldwin's readings Blues for Mr Charlie. If Beal
Street can talk, you can get all of the Fire

(49:08):
next Time. You can get um Alice Walker. You can
read um Sula by Tony Morrison. You can read The
bluest I by to Tony Morrison. You can read Nikki
Giovarni Sonya Sanchez. You can read Sucking the writings of
Dr Martin Luke and you read the speeches of funk
are you talking about there? Right there? You got video
games that you can get. You'll get the latest video
Go get a book too. With that. I'm not saying

(49:29):
you can't play video game, but go get that ship self. Knowledge.
Fuck waiting on them. Waiting on them means critical race
theory means nothing. It's not a fucking theory. It's a fact.
Critical race theory. A theory is something that you guys,
It's sort of like, uh, an assumption, I think, almost

(49:52):
like a guess a theory like you go, like the
theory of relativity. Einstein's like, you know what, I believe
that light, you know, the light moves at this speed
six thousand miles per second squared. I believe that, And
and other people battle that like, well, I don't know
if your theory is right. It's like it's almost like
an assumption you make that can be argued. It can

(50:14):
be argued unless until proven. The theory black race theory,
it's a crime in Florida to make white people feel uncomfortable,
uncomfortable about what they did to black people. Go ahead,
but you know what the biggest problem is that Okay,
first and foremost, the history of slavery needs to be taught.

(50:37):
The history of Jim Crow needs to be to All
black history need to be taught like all other history
is taught in America. American history is what it is.
But if you don't like it, if you don't like
it that much, if it pains you that much, why
are you still doing the ship that you did in
the past. And the problem the thing is that we

(50:58):
wouldn't even be talking about this as much, we wouldn't
be as passionate about it if they still was not behaving.
It's like the ain't no change behavior, behavior, it's the same.
It's just like people say. I hate when people go, man,
how could this be happening? Man? It's two? Man, what
what are we doing? First of all, enough with that

(51:20):
dumb ship. All you gotta do if you want to
know where we're at as far as society subtract by
a hundred, it's nineteen twenty two. That'll keep you in
fucking focus. It's nineteen two. White folks are still acting
like it's nineteen twenty two, okay, because you know this,
it's two. The needle isn't moving. And even with like

(51:42):
when you know people get mad when you bring up
in a racial dating and all this other ship. We've
been sucking each other for a long time, and the
racism needle hasn't moved. We've been fucking the ship out
of each other, banging, banging, ah, sweating, fucking, fucking, and
they're still racist. So fucking some body out of a
different race does not change the racism quotient. My friends,

(52:04):
a lot of people think that, Well, you know, people
will come up like, well, I understand because my wife's Asian.
Shut the funk up. You have a fetish, dude. A
lot of times people got fetishes. Nobody wants to talk
about a fetish. A lot of times it's just a fetish.
It's just you have a fetish. Then there's people who actually,
I say, there's a small percentage people who actually love
somebody because you just love them, not because I'm mad

(52:26):
at black men, saw I'm a data white man, or
I'm mad at black women. I'm a data white girl.
I think it's fucked up. You should date love somebody
because you love them, not because you hate your whole
race or you and and fetishy ship. A lot of
times people approached it in a fetishy way. Nobody wants
to admit it, but they do, and they think that
they're solving the race problem because I went to school

(52:47):
with motherfucker's who had black girlfriends, calling us niggers maybe
like you fucking nigga, and they're like, no, I'm not
talking about but your girlfriend's black. That's that's different. I
was around that ship man. Motherfucker's would be fucking chasing
you out of their neighborhoods. Wearing Michael Jordan's jersey. Italians
be like, Hey, you fucking niggas, but you got Jordan's on.

(53:09):
You ain't wearing de Neros in rocket out compee. Yes
it's fucking niggas, but you're And I knew girls from
other races, you know, you'd be like out, you know,
hanging party in and they'd be like, yeah, I don't
understand it. My my brother, he's always talking about niggat nigga,
but he's always listening to like, you know, he listened
to Public Enemy. He looks Jimmy Hendrien and they would

(53:31):
tell you this ship. That's what I'm saying. What it
has to be is a change in you. That's why
I was a big George Carlin fan George Colin, legendary comedian.
You know, Irish dude, grew up in Halem. He has
a great documentary on HBO. But what I liked about
him he spoke to power. He's a white man that
spoke to power and his wife was white. I like that.

(53:55):
I I cup of times. I trust that because when
a guy is like my wife's act, let me be
a fucking civil rights guy. I go, it's like compromising.
It's like you're making up for your I don't like.
I don't always trust that, not saying that they're not trying.
But are you doing that because your wife's black? Or
would you do it if you're white, was white? Would
you still fight? You understand that. That's that's why I

(54:16):
love Carlin so much because he spoke to power. He
spoke about the mistreatment of blacks and Latino. He went
in and his wife was a white lady, And I go,
that's true blue. Jane Elliott, you know Jane Elliott, tim wise,
tim wise, they have white spouses, but they're speaking to power,
like if oh my white, my husband's black. But yeah,

(54:39):
you've called you've called black women black bitches though, and
your husbands black because sometimes you could be with somebody
of another race because you're trying to get back at somebody.
There are situations like that. I'm not saying everybody does that,
but a lot of times people in interracial relationships get
mad at this conversation because I'm hitting the fucking nerve.
Is that what happened with Patrick Patterson, the NBA player

(55:00):
that you came from, the one who talked to me,
who called black women bulled off? He was married to
a white woman. That's fun. Yeah, that's a that's another
example of hating yourself. Your mama is black man. I
don't know his business, but your mama. You came for
your mom's. When you say black women ain't ship, you
are insulting your grandmother. See when we say when we

(55:23):
insult black women, we're thinking women on Instagram with the
ass out, the ones we wanted to funk and all
this other bullshit. No, you're insulting black women, old black women,
aunties and grandmothers and little girls. You're insulting all of them,
not just the ones you like and trying to talk to.
Not that I'm talking about on a level of just

(55:43):
there's a black old lady that's been that. That's the
reason why you're here is because of her presence. You're
insulting all of that ship. He actually said that he
came back and clean it up. He was just talking
about the one guy who attacked him because he had
a white wife, And he wasn't talking about all black women.
He was just calming that guy's wife, don't be careful

(56:05):
when you're talking. That's you're saying about her, but be
very clear when you're saying that, you gotta be clear.
Go And he probably got caught because black let's be honest,
But there are guys like him though that Like, man,
black girls fuck that. They they look like I said,
that's not true. Black women are the finest motherfucker's on

(56:27):
the planet. They aged the best, best bodies, the whole nine,
you know. I mean, I'm not saying that there are
no beautiful women in other races. Of course there's beauty
and every race. But we really gotta get in the
start getting the habit of like complimenting each other in public. Man, Like,
black women get it the worst though. That's real ship though.
They always getting nappy headed this and everybody praises all

(56:48):
the other women, all the time. They're always getting the
praise if and the Asian girl ain't getting the praise.
Black black women save the fucking save every group on
the planet. They save every as on the plane, every
every group, nurturing other people's children. There, they're they're they're
they're the cradle of civilization, the black women. So so

(57:14):
it's like, you know, to attack a black woman, to drag,
to disparage a black woman is to disparage yourself, because
ain't it ain't a motherfucker on this planet who haven't
benefited from the existence of black women, period. Pre don't
fun what somebody told you. I'm telling you. I'm telling
what God love and he loved the truth. Foul you, Micha,
because that be pushing that. I have a lot of

(57:36):
black and there's some black women that got mad at
me because I made a video about I don't know
if you saw that one. I was in Brooklyn and
it was a advertisement of a black woman and a
white man in a in an ad and I said,
why they got this ad in this black ass neighborhood?
What is subliminally breaking down the black family? And I
guess some women that were dating white man came at me,

(57:57):
getting all angry, and I'm saying, every black woman, there's
a lot of black women that come at me and
come at me and say fucked up, ship to me,
get online, been fucking trolling me for since since last
since pandemic. But it's all good. But I know there's
a lot of black women that backed me up though,
that backed me to funk up. But there's something that
come at me. So why the funk would you say that?

(58:18):
I go, why are you getting mad at what I said?
I'm talking about subliminal messaging and advertisement and you're talking
about your little personal relationship. You mean he was Subliminal
messages mean something because just like they mean something when
you see the black doll and the white dog, you
know it means something that you always seeing the white
dogs and all of the magazines white dogs. All you

(58:40):
see is white dogs everywhere you look, white dogs, white dogs,
white dogs. If you see a little good even on
television advertising white dogs, white dogs, white dogs, what do
you think the little black kid is gonna want, gonna
want white dog? Because that's all they see. It's like
in their brain and it's all psychology tricks. It's all
psychological tricks that they got. Images are important, not always

(59:02):
reading words. Images. When you see an image, it sticks
in your head. It's sticks, it stays embedded in your ship.
That's why they know what they're doing. Advertising. They put
the big posters up in certain neighborhoods, like in black
neighbors that have smoking and drinking and all kinds of ship.
Just like in your head, those images you know they'll
but you go to a gentrified neighborhood, it's healthy posters

(59:23):
and posters of this that you know, progress and ship
like that. They know what the funk they're doing. What
is it? What is it? Picture is worth more than
a thousand words express in It's facts. It's fact. Do
you ever being that you are a comedian, you're a
funny guy, but obviously you have a serious side to you.

(59:45):
Do you ever get conflicted about speaking about real ship
because people sometimes do get uncomfortable about that. Yeah. So,
I mean it's so funny because I love I love
going hard to paint. Man. I like I like challenges.
I like when they kind of get I can I
kinda get off of them being uncomfortable. I go, ah, yeah,

(01:00:07):
I'm going there. I don't like taking the easy route.
But sometimes I I do think about like, because my
audiences are pretty like diversively diversified. There's white, Black, Latin Asian.
I go, well, now, how can I do this to
make it palatable for everybody? Because that's important because I
if I'm just gonna say direct ship with no funny,

(01:00:29):
that's not fair to them, because if they're paying money
to come see me, I gotta make it. They know
my style, but I can't make it where I'm pounding
them as if I hate I hate you in particular,
it's not fair to them. How can I make this
clan joke go and make everybody laugh at the same time.
Because you're an artist. Now, if I'm gonna be a preacher,
that's different. But if I'm a comedian, you gotta be

(01:00:51):
a comic. You have to tell jokes and be funny.
You don't have to preach them. They know there's racing
and they know a lot of that. We ain't ship.
We get it. But I'm here because you're a funny guy.
I don't mind you saying that. I'll be uncomfortable, but
that mother to come with a punchline, and that's fair
and let that be a lesson to all the new
comedians out that a young up and coming comedians. Yes,

(01:01:14):
be funny first. I don't care what you do. Thank you,
though I watched. I've watched so many of these guys
come up. I know some of these guys who are
legends right now. I remember when they were teenagers. And
I can tell you I understand comment. I may not.
I don't know how to tell the jokes ship, but
I know a funny joke when here you're not a
funny guy? Funny, Hi, funny he hit amuse me funny?

(01:01:38):
How I love how? It just deferently regular voice, Willy,
don't even try to take nobody. Hold on, hold on,
hold on, Willie? What do I make you laugh? Clown
him here to amuse you and make you laugh? What
makes me so fucking funny? No, he's a big boy.
Tell me he's the way I talk? What the fuck

(01:02:01):
makes me so funny? I got you your motherfucker you're
almost fucking's crushed, you almost crumbled under questioning STA tuned
for part two, Get the Boys We're Gonna Be Podcast.
This episode was produced by a King and brought to
you by The Black Effect Podcast Network and I Heart

(01:02:22):
radio
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