Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:01):
Get Get Boys. It's back and reoaded all in your mind. Yeah,
not deep throating. This is for the streets, the reel,
the railroading, the distant franchise, the truth escape building. And
they ain't knowing 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
(00:21):
ain't no stopping and wants to be drips head by
then the system is so corrupt they throw the rock
out of their hands and then blame it on us.
Don't get it twisted on code and me and danced
for no buttament biscuits. It's Willie d y'all scar faces
in the building collective. Who we are the ghett old Boys? Reloaded,
(00:42):
reloaded with another episode of information and instructions to help
you navigate through this wild, crazy beautiful world in the studio. Ghetto,
ghetto ghett old Boys. Yeah, what's up? What's up? Brad?
Wild crazy week? What is it? Wild crazy beautiful week?
But I guess it is a wild, crazy beautiful week.
(01:04):
We did we did survive. That's beautiful. Man. Um. I'm Willie.
I had a chance to watch the goat turned into
a I don't know where you go, Tom Brady. Man,
(01:25):
Tom Brady got his ass brought to him. Did you
see that? Let's clarify something. Is he to go? In
my opinion, he's probably the best quarterback they ever played
the game. And what makes him the best quarter back? Man,
you gotta look at it, mean, man, his ability to
(01:46):
pull ship off. He'll pull it out at the end,
you know, but he'll pull it out at the end. Man.
He won championships And but should that be an astrict
Thad because of the less contact like they don't he
don't really get no contact love like most of his career.
He hasn't been touched because he had a great not
(02:10):
just because he gets rid of the ball fast. It's
because you can't touch him. Even I'll be watching these
games sometimes, Brad, and I see quarterbacks get hit, and
sometimes the quarterback will get they'll brush the quarterback helmet
and in the player be like okay, you know, they'll
be helping him up and all of this kind of stuff,
like that's afraid to hit the quarterback. So, in my opinion,
(02:34):
if you can sit back in the pocket and ain't
gotta worry about the hit coming, he would be to
have played no football. I have played football. Okay, well
then you know the hit coming. Yeah so he but
he don't know that. He don't have to worry about
the hit coming. Well anyway about Tom Brady, though, you're
bad motherfucker, bad motherfucker. He's very accurate. He he's a
(03:00):
man and he loves he and he got that winning
spirit does spirit? I am ship man. I saw him
get dissected, bro, and I have never That's when you
know it's time to go. You know what I'm saying.
When you start getting dissected like that, like he got man,
I'm sucking cowboys. But was it again? I mean to
your point was did the line hold up? That's just time, Willie.
(03:26):
It's time and it's time and timinga okay like Tom
Rady like our age and ship. Yeah, but the time again,
that's time. The line hold up though, listen, but the
land didn't hold up. What if he had the line
he had listen to What if he had the line
he had five years ago and still would have been
the same thing? Yeah, for sure, listen old man and
(03:52):
timminga right? You know that, like the play is working,
you know he throwing the ball to a spot. He's
not throwing it to a man. He's throwing it to
a spot, right, you know what I mean. So you
know the dude getting there too fast and his mechanics
aren't getting the fast enough. He's throwing that bit short
or he beating the throw. Then you know, dude can
(04:12):
do whatever the fun you want to do. But long
you meet me in the spot. You see what I'm saying.
But I've seen the Dallas Cowboys and not like they asking.
This week they get to go see the San Francisco
forty Niners and they're gonna get their asses. Really I'd
like to see that. Yeah, I'd like to see both
of them teams win because man, it's Bank Bank nine
(04:36):
a game. And and but I'm a cowboy too, you
feel it? You listen, man, you know what. It's the
Texas thing. I'm typically on bulls. Just do not like
the Cowboys. Bro, god damn, and man, that's my puntment.
I just like, I love it. I loved all those dudes.
(04:56):
I love too Tall Jones, like that dude Tom. I
don't like that old dude who was in the picture
stopping black folks from coming into the school. What about
right that Stephen. That's Stephen A. Smith Potning though, so yeah, yeah, yeah,
that's his partner and he loves him. He said, I
love Jerry Jack. I love you. See him eat that
(05:19):
humble pie and they got their ass. Tom Brady's good.
Why are you gotta be so aggressive when you're talking?
Like you see what I mean? You're talking right, Willie?
You and me, I gotta do this talk show out
of here, like are you so far? You? Me all
angry because relaxed. But now he eating some humble pie
(05:43):
right now because he talked cash it about the cowboys. Huh,
what don't you like that with this woman? I said,
I don't give I'm ready get over here, taking your
hand us off. Hey, it works for Teddy Petagrass. No, hey,
(06:05):
Teddy pete Grass, bad motherfucking Peters. Take it off. I'm
telling you, what do you think about Tank? Look at
the fight? Take it as exciting to watch? Here is
man Um. I was watching tape when he's a boy
seven years old, right, and it's little dude was getting
off on him a little bit. I guess it was
(06:27):
a little Tank because he was like seven years old
and he didn't win. The left hand some motherfucking harder
walked off. Hey, man, I like Javonte, man, I like Jenante,
but he's got a fight coming up with Garcia, right,
(06:47):
this name is gonna see him. I hadn't really been
on the game and on all right, little luck to fight.
It already happened, It's gonna happen. Uh you, April, They say, Okay,
but you know, um, I hope both of them win. Um,
you got a lot of respect for Tanking his ability
(07:09):
to box. Yeah, both of who your book? Who wins?
Both of the fighters? What fighters? What? Both fighters? That's
a fight on the fifth tape of April Williams. Yeah, well,
I hope they both. I don't want to I don't
want know why. I needed some clarity because I'm like nobody.
(07:32):
Who somebody got to lose? Come on, you know with
that ship man, somebody gotta win. Somebody gotta lose. Man,
you you're sounded like this, damn trophy generation. Everybody get
a trophy generation. You know, somebody got to win. Somebody
gotta lose. Goddamn, somebody gotta feel the agony of defeat.
Somebody got to not be able to get that bag
that they wanted. To use to go purchase that plane
or that that new mansion or whatever. Somebody got to
(07:55):
feel some agony so they can go back to the
drawing board, come back and do better. That's life, man.
It's got to be winners. And I'm so sick of
seeing people losing around me. I can't taking no fucking more.
I just want to see everybody win, like one for
one fucking time. Man, I want to see everybody win.
You know what more? Mark Aaddafi was an individual that
(08:18):
wanted to see people win. Did you know that? I
absolutely knew that. It's a cold dude, man. He was
a friend of ours. He was a friend of ours. Man,
Hi and the hill. Do you kill a man? That's that?
It was that great man. Like free electricity, man, you
you you got free electricity, bro. If you lost your job,
(08:39):
they gave you like money until you got on your feet, man,
And and their loans had no interest. Well, it's it's
very simple, man. The wicked people at the top, and
all we could do is do the best that we
could do, like the wicked people at the top, and
bad and if you and if you try to upset
(09:04):
that line up, if you try to rearrange it if
you try to, if you go too hard against the agenda,
they're gonna come and kill You're gonna find your answer
and the whole and kill you. They will kill you
because that's what happened. That is what happened, ladies, gentlemen. Uh,
that's what happened. You know how they do it? Check
(09:24):
out how they do it, though, Brad, what they're doing.
They'll they'll make you to be a villain here. Well
here they always put the propaganda machine in place first,
so the propaganda machine gets to go on first. And
then so the ideas to make you look like a
villain and find anything anything negative about you, anything that's
(09:46):
that that could be uh perceived that's that's evil or
wicked about you, corrupt about you. And then I mean
they'll run this play for for for a few years
before they actually execute it, you know, like he will
be like okay, like there's plenty seeds of doubt. Let's
put this image out here, and now we got him
looking like the boogeyman. Now once he we create the boogeyman,
(10:10):
now we can go in and do what we want
to do. Man, Because everybody be so afraid they'll accept
anything we tell them it's cold bloody willie because the
man wanted one currency for the continent of Africa. Can
you imagine how one how powerful one currency makes that
(10:32):
continent one currency everybody got the same dollar and push
everybody else out. Well, what's the problem with the what?
What's the problem with the African leaders, all of the
leaders in the various African countries just coming together and saying,
we're gonna let our nuts hanging. Fuck the West. What's
(10:56):
the problem with that? Why they can't do or not
just to funk the West? Fuck Asia? The world? You know,
fun the world? Exactly what exactly the world? You know? Like,
why they why? What's what's the hold up? I don't know.
I think that Western civilization and and and as well
as Asia probably has brainwashed uh some people and got
(11:18):
them believing that this is the way that life is
supposed to go when it all actuality, you know, the
creator of time, the inventor of time, the inventor of
the of of hieroglyphics, the inventor of you know everything,
you feel me like you you're gonna let somebody from
outside of you tell you what to do with what
(11:41):
you already know. I'm not in agreement with that, ye
or you already know it. You know, how do you?
How do you gonna educating me? And I taught you
first trying type of thing, even me. But it's all good.
I just think that, um, and that's a figure speech
to young ladies and gentlemen. What's doing when you see this?
(12:03):
All good? Some of them gonna take that literally. I'm
gonna take that ship literally. They got kind of understand
what's happening though. But to take one currency, man, and
put a value on your own money, and you trade
within your own country. See this is what this is
what get you killed? You? You you you put a
value on your own dollar. Excuse me? And you only
(12:24):
spend money with you and you spend your currency. So
if I want to come to you and I want
to buy beef, I want to buy a hundred head
of cows, I have to bring something to value you.
See what I'm saying. When when when you know I
want some oil, I want to use our currency to
buy our oil. You can't just write a number on
a piece of paper, You Western Westerners. Can't just write
a number on a piece of paper and bring it
(12:45):
over here and dig my all out the fucking ground.
That's what the fight was. You know. You can't have
my goal with this piece of paper with a number
wrote on it, and he wanted to make that to
wear a hell no v aw you in there. That's
why Africa needs is on. African need me, man, it
(13:10):
needs me because out man, bro, I'm a gangster and
I ain't talking about no gangster win, no gun and
no no, no going to kill somebody. I'm talking about
a gangster with the mentality of of of making it
all one currency. Co cour Holakum did say you look
like an African dictator? Willie? You do got that? Look?
(13:35):
I don't want to be no dick. Yeah, I tell
you what we must do. You got it? You got it?
What you got Willie? Man? I got this. Have you
ever seen starving Marvin from South Park? No? Can we
(13:56):
get a picture of starving Marvin from South Park on
the ondividual so I can show, Really, what do he
looked like when he takes us? When you do what
you do? So what's what's going on with t V
Jack's Man? Did you hear about that? No? Man, I don't. Man. Dudes,
come stop when we stop. You didn't hear about what
TV Jake said, Stop William, Yeah, all right, man, T D.
(14:31):
Jack said. T Jack said, we are raising women to
be men, and they are on his neck. I mean,
obviously that's a lot of people that agree with that,
but they are. You know, some people have taken offense
to it because they feel like he's trying to punish
(14:52):
women for being successful. And he also said that don't
tell me how much you need me, I mean how
much you don't need me? And then wonder why I
shot away? Oh man, they own him, they own him
your thoughts. Man, come on, you even get me and
(15:15):
that sheep with TV Jake sleeping the But I mean
you already in so so okay, let's let's let's let
let's look at it like this. Excuse it. When you
when you're a woman, and when you meet a woman
(15:37):
and that woman I meet a woman. Let me that's
best real poor a woman that's doing very well for herself.
You know, um, the black woman is doing very well
for herself. For her to come out and say does
she makes her own money, she got her own stuff,
(15:59):
she doesn't need no man, is a slap in the
face to all men. You know what I mean to
all black men, uh uh, and boys as well, and
girls as well. I don't need no man, and a
and and a black man, I say, I don't need
(16:20):
no woman, But that's not the way that the play
is designed. You feel me like God created us for
each other. And there's no way that I can go
on in life without a woman. I can't do that,
(16:44):
you know me, and you cool, Willie, But that's as
cool as we get, bro. I'm gonna need some woman, man. Now.
For a woman to say that she don't need no
man is a slap in the face to me, because
I need her. I need her, I mean ship. I
don't know no other way to say it. I need her.
(17:07):
She the mother of civilization. Man. And for her to
tell me that she don't need me man, break my
fucking heart. You need me, but I need to. I
ain't shipped without you. So so what do you say
that to the women who say that, Hey man, you
know y'all put us in this position. You know, because
(17:28):
I think about it, think about it now. We we inadvertently,
we inadvertently assisted the man haters out there who who
told women that they don't need man. We we assisted
the feminist we how do we do that? The reason
(17:49):
how we did it was we abandoned our women. And
we have many of us, not all of us, of course,
not all, but many of us abandoned our women, and
we abandoned our families, and and and and we did this. Uh,
we had help, you know, we had to help from
the government. You know, we had the government propaganda machine
at work. We had welfare, you know. Uh, they explained them,
(18:11):
explained to our audience what welfare did to the black
family first and foremost, So it was very simple. With welfare,
black men could not get jobs during the time that
welfare was implemented. So what they what the government did,
This diabolical government did as told black women, well, we'll
help you, but you can't have him in the house.
(18:31):
But the man had to leave the house. And that
and therefore then came the whole, the whole uh push
with women uh being the head of the house. And
that's when you start hearing women saying things like I'm
your mom and your dad and so you have this whole,
this whole movement of single mothers. And this was created
(18:53):
purposely by the government. So when you hear them talk
about family value, it's funny to me. It's just it's funny.
But at the same time, it really pissed me off
every time I hear them talk about family values, especially
when they're running for office, when they start talking that
family value talk, and when they purposely had a hand
and breaking up the families. They purposely broke up the family,
(19:16):
just like they did it with crack, cocaine, mass and concerration,
red lining, denying us loans. They purposely did this, and
now they have this result of all these single families
and kids running wild and and all this crazy madness
and stuff is going on. And now they they so
they threw the rock and they're hiding their hands, acting
like they had nothing to do with it, and got
(19:37):
the nerve to criticize us. Now here's not now here's
the play. Though, Now that we understand what's going on,
it's on us to correct the behavior and make sure
that we don't it's not you know why, it's not
too late because it wasn't too late for you and me.
You see, because I was raising the same type of environment.
(19:57):
I was raising that same type of environment, but I
decided that it's it's not gonna be me that's not
gonna be my faith. I figured it out, said, this
is what they're doing. Okay, So my my goal is, like,
you know, nobody likes to be made of a fool of, right,
especially in relationships. Right, So I'll take it a step further.
I'm talking about platonic relationships. I'm at you know, romantic relationships,
(20:19):
but in in life period, nobody likes to be made
a fool of. So I know what they're doing. So
I don't want to be made a fool of where
they can get over on me and and have me
locked up or have me trick off my life, abandoning
my family. I'm not gonna fall for the oaky dough.
That's why you've never seen me bashing women on You'll
(20:41):
never see me online bashing women because it don't benefit
me to do that. I got sisters, I got nieces,
I got cousins who are females. And if I bashed women,
if I get online bashing women, getting all into my
feelings and stuff, it will make their life It's harder
when they go out into the world. It's gonna make
(21:02):
it harder for them to move around. The same thing
when women get on Lyne bashing men it They say
that they love their sons, they love their father or
their brother or whatever, but their online bashing men making
it harder for the men that they so called love
to move around in the world. So so so to me,
that's counterproductive. If you've been wronged in life, it's okay
(21:25):
to complain, but after you complain, do something about it.
Real men do something about it, you man. Or if
I got an issue with a woman, I I talk
about the issue, I I deal with that issue, or
I move on. I deal with the issue, or I
move on and I correct my behavior so I don't
(21:48):
repeat my behavior. So why are they on um like that? Well,
some people don't like to hear the truth, you know.
It's just it's just as simple as that. Some people
don't some people just because the thing about it. I
listened to that sermon, and I'm gonna tell you, bro,
I've never listened to a T. D. Jake sermon before,
(22:08):
but I listened to it because I wanted to context.
I wanted I wanted context. I listened to it, Brad,
perhaps perhaps the most powerful sermon I've ever heard, really,
because you seriously and what people did. People have cognitive dissonance.
(22:31):
They pick and choose what they want to hear that.
So they heard that part, they heard that part. Everything
else he said, it didn't even matters. Man. He held
men's feet to the fire also, But nobody's talking about that.
I mean, he told men, don't, don't. Don't. Don't be
expecting all of this stuff from women when you're not
(22:52):
pouring into them. If you're not pouring into them, don't
expect them to pour into your children because you're not
pulling anything in. You got to get up off your
ass him, go get and come back with it. He
spoke on that, but they conveniently omitted that part. Nobody's
talking about that because and it's probably just all it's
(23:14):
it's it's it's black people talking about it, right, it's
all talking about primarily but this this is this is
how but it's it's it's part of this whole gender
neutrality thing that's going on. Right. Men and women have
distinct aptitudes for days, skills and strengths, and assigning genderos
(23:41):
help to stabilize a society. If you have women doing
things that men should be doing, or you have men
doing things that women should be doing, you know, wise
get kind of crossed and we have issues and we
get to the point to where we are now. Because
(24:03):
think about this. Y T. D. Jake said that we're
raising women to be men, but we're also raising men
to be women, and so the lines across and so
this is why you have all of this anarchy in relationships.
It don't work. So I know women who are million
(24:23):
ares who are unhappy in their personal relationships. Wow, the
million ares because they got to the bag like Oprah
told him to do. But when they got to the
bag and they looked around, they didn't have their men
to stand there with them and deal with them and
sharing that legacy and that happiness. And I can I
bet you a dollar to a doughnut. There's a woman
(24:45):
right now listening to what I'm saying and she's shaking
her head, going like, you're right. But there's men. There's
men who have accepted the role of falling back and
allowing the woman to go out and get all the work,
do the work. And they're unhappy because you know what,
that woman is exercising her masculine side and she's saying, Yo,
(25:13):
yeah you do this, you do that, you do this,
and yeah, you're the man of the house until you
do something I don't like and then it's four o'clock
in the morning, give me my key back. And so
he's feeling less than a man. And that's why you
hear all these men saying, she won't letting me be
a woman. You're letting me be let me be a man.
(25:33):
You have all these women, some of the I'm saying,
let me be a woman, But you have all these
men out here that saying, she won't let me be
a man? How do how does anybody let you be
a man? They ain't a woman, a man born of
woman that can let me be a man. I'm a
man by nature. And they don't get that because they're
(25:56):
out here playing this game that these this social construct
that they put together and told you, look, you can
be whatever you want to be and and we don't
have to you don't have to do this and do
this and do this and do that. Look, man, there's
always exceptions to the rule. So I get it. Follow
you people out there saying, well, well with me and
my hus ca, do this when we're happy, And that's
(26:17):
always exceptions to the rule. I'm talking about them. The
Boys Reloaded podcast will be right back after the spreet
speaking of man and rules. Did you see the little
girl that I mean not the little girl, but the
(26:39):
lady that was in the woman's bathroom taking a shower
at the wine and the man walks in. I heard
about it and she freaked out. He's got his fucking
bird out and ship. Yeah, yeah, it's not cool. How
are you feeling about that? Yeah? Bad idea. That was
a bad idea, bad idea to even for them, for
them to push that narrative, even try to push laws
(26:59):
to make that acceptable. That's unacceptable. Correct. All they have
to do is for a guy who's a predator, all
he has to do is act like he's he's confused.
All he has to do that he and that with.
All he has to do is act like he's a
trans and go in and do whatever he want to do.
So fuck, this is so fucking bad. I'm not gonna
(27:31):
say that. Don't say it. Don't say it. So break
this down to me, Willie. It's this is bad because
it's it's from what I understand. This is what you
feel like, what's what you identify as? Right? I think
(27:56):
I'm still learning me too, man, But man, from what
I stands like you. If I identify as a fucking dog,
I can just go out and ship in the yard
and and bark at the fucking loons. No, yeah, that's coming.
You're gonna be sooner later you're gonna be able to
(28:17):
just take a dump anywhere on the street because you're
you're a dog. You identify as a dog. Remember, with
all due respect, you know, for everyone's um, religious belief, sexuality,
whatever you want to call it, man, that's all fine,
Like do you but man, don't don't make it to
(28:40):
where is um uncomfortable for the children? Man? You know,
like I know, if I know, if if one of
my daughters walking in her restroom and it's a guy
in there standing up, you know, with his bird out
and look, you know what, I mean to see that ship,
(29:00):
But I think that grown women are smart enough to
not even go in that motherfucker. But I'm just thinking
about the child, you know, she got She seemed like
to me she was in but she was caught off guard.
No ship, that's spooky as fucked man, Like, this is
seventeen year old girl. That's not I don't know, but
that's not cool, bro. I think that man, that's cold
(29:23):
power corrupts, absolute power corrupts. Absolutely. I'm done, Like, I
don't get that. But maybe maybe it wasn't for me
to get with it, you know at all, honestly, But man,
I just can't imagine a little kid in the bathroom
(29:44):
and walk out and see a little girl in the bathroom,
walk I see a grown naked man. That's somebody's gotta
explain that to me. Yeah, you know what I mean?
You know who Darius Miles is? Darius Miles, Darius My
What have I heard this name? He's a kid I
didn't Alabama, played for Alabama. He junior forward. He gotta
(30:06):
he gotta a case. Yeah, he was charged with killing
the girl who didn't want to talk to him. Now,
the way they broke it down, this this is what
this is. This is still a developing story. So the
way it was broken down is that they were out
(30:26):
on the strip out in Tuscaloosa, and you know, that
was an altercation between him, the girl and the guy.
The guy she was with. I think they're identified as
a boyfriend. But he's trying to holler at the girl
and she didn't. She rejected him, She rejected his advances.
(30:47):
So next thing you know, he and the other guy, uh,
it's charged with shooting her. Now they said initially they
said he thought he shot her, but he admitted that
he gave the gun to the other guy. That's guy
named Michael Davis, and he shot. He did the shooting.
(31:07):
But both of them, both of them were charged and
they both get that murder. Check out what's crazy about
this stuff? His name is Darius Miles. The other guy
name is Michael Davis. Does that click? Does anything click?
(31:30):
Darius Miles, Michael Davis, Miles Davis. That's crazy, is crazy,
That's the reality of it. Man. You know, this is
this is something I want to put in the air,
(31:51):
and I think that the mothers and fathers of these
young children, are young teenagers, should make sure that they
let them hear this death. It's permanent, Okay, it ain't
no coming back from that. If you want to ruin
your life, vibe playing the game. You know, murder, Uh,
(32:18):
murders is forever, you know, and they're not you get
forever and they're never coming back. So you you you you, you,
you are crippling too. Families, Okay, the family that's lost
a loved one and your family that that's not that's
not gonna ever see you outside of the gates no more.
(32:39):
Why then would you do that? And he blew the bag?
You blew the bag. You couldn't blood. He could have
changed his famili's fortune. He could have created generational wealth
forever with the kind of bread that they make in
the NBA. Assuming that he could have made it to
(32:59):
that level, He's gone, Willie, He out of here one day. Man,
let me tell you something. Teenagers, boys, girls, young men,
young women. Choices. Man, choices, man, because you gotta live
with those choices for the rest of your life. That choice. Man,
make sure you take time out to think about what
(33:20):
it is you're doing before you do it. Because that choice,
that decision, it's gonna come with a consequence. You know.
I talked to my son Blake when he was about man.
I don't know. I guess this kid could have been seven,
eight nine or something when I first started talking to
(33:42):
him about rejection. Like, I actually had these conversations with
my son and throughout the years and I still have
these conversations. Uh. It's important for men to talk to
their sons about rejection because a lot of these dudes,
they're emotionally immature, and they're going into relationships and and
(34:03):
they're going out into society trying to interact with women,
and they're not mentally well. They don't know, they don't
understand how to how to deal with rejection. So it's
important Nobody taught me how to deal with it either.
I had to learn baptism by five, but and I
and luckily I got it because I wasn't guaranteed to
(34:24):
be here, even even though it hurts to be rejected
or to be even even in some cases to not
have a kind gesture to be acknowledged. How many times
have you opened the door for a woman and she
didn't say thanking, Yeah, she just don't say thank you.
It makes you want to say, well, fucking amitch, you
(34:45):
know what I'm saying. Whatever. But here's the thing. People
don't ask you to speak to them, and people don't
ask you to do nice things for them, what some
people do, but strangers, strangers typically don't ask you to
open the door for them. You do it because us.
You know, you do it out of the goodness of
your heart. You know the kindness of your heart, and
you do it right, you know, especially we from the
(35:05):
south Man. So you know, we believe in that southern
southern hospitality. So, but people don't ask you to speak
to them. People don't ask you to ask for their
phone number, to open a door for you. So when
you do what you do it out the goodness of
your heart and and and and if if it's not reciprocated,
then you just keep it moving. Like you know, if
if you don't get a thank you or you don't
(35:27):
get a oh how, you don't just keep it moving.
But what happens is that we we we we become
emotionally injured, and we take it personally and instead of saying,
you know what, it ain't got nothing to do with me,
I'm still me. It's her, you know, she's the one
that don't have and have manners that she won't even
speak to a person who just said hello or whatever.
(35:48):
She's the one that has the problem because she wouldn't
say thank you when a man opened the door for her.
She is the one. She's the problem, not me. So
to to say something disrespectful to her would be to
to her level. So to me, I've learned to rise,
I've learned to rise above her level. And so uh,
(36:09):
you know, most women are going to speak to you
if you speak to them, or even if you try
to talk there at least you know, let you down
or whatever politely or whatever. And most women will say
thank you if you open the door for them. But
there are some out there that have that type of mentality.
And what you have to do is understand that that
you're bigger than than than their response. And so for me,
(36:33):
that's what I learned in time, I learned and we
have to teach our boys that same thing. We have
to have these conversations. We can't automatically think because we
raise them right that they're gonna do the right thing.
We have to cover these bases. People told me, you
remember in school when we were young, younger, and and
people would would tell you you could be anything in
(36:54):
the world you want to be. All you gotta do
is you can even be the president of United States.
All you gotta do is, you know, just study hard,
work hard, and you could be even be the president
of United States. But they didn't tell me that didn't
add But you can't be stealing out the store. You
can't beat up your classmates and the people in the
(37:15):
neighborhood because they're gonna be your constituents. You're gonna have
to go to them for votes and donations. You know
what I'm saying. They didn't tell me that part. You really,
you really do have to break it down at an
early age and not just make people not just automatically
assumed that people are gonna get it. You can't. You
(37:35):
got you can't assume. You have to break it all
the way down. And that's what I learned to do.
That's dope. You know it comes. We're growing up, man, absolutely,
absolutely so, fellas man. Let's do it. Man, Let's get
on it. Man. You know, I know some of you
guys are already on that time, but you know, for
the rest of us, man, we got work to do. Man,
(37:56):
Let's get it. Let's get to our boys. Let's teach
your litten. Let's let's teach you boys how to be
how to be dignified, you know, how to be more respectful,
you know, and dealing and dealing with women, because we
also got a lot of men, you know, who are
out there that think that that rape is cool. They
think that taking it is cool. If we if we
are in a certain position, and and and you don't
(38:19):
want to do something, you know, like they think that
it's cool to take and you'd be surprised how many
dudes who who condone that type of behavior. So we
as men men, it takes men listen to men. Boys
listen to men. Girls listen to women, women listen to women.
And the reason is because the opposite sex thinks that
(38:41):
if if you tell them something, if the they'll think
that you have an agenda. But if someone that's from
their same sex tells them something, they'll usually listen without reservation.
So you know, we got work to do, man, We've
got a lot of work to do. Yeah, where the
(39:04):
voice reloaded podcast will be right back after the point.
Did you um the this little kid um? I don't
know where town he's from, but he's at the front
(39:25):
door somebody's apartment, on the stairs in front of his
apartment or whatever. He's got a fucking loaded hand. Oh yeah,
that was why? What? What? What do you had done
in that situation? If you were a neighbor. Let's say
you were the neighbor looking at the at the peep
(39:45):
hole and you saw him out that with that gun,
what would you have done? Ship? I went back and
they ain't gotten the bed. You can't do that, man,
I'm gonna do go and stop trying to grab that. No, no, no, no,
not me. You know what I would do? You know
what is that? And then late time I willie, did
you see his dad? So I wish I had. Can
(40:06):
we get a picture of that kid's dad right on
the screen so people can see? So what happened? I
don't know, man, Just look for toddler, gun toting toddler.
So what happened? I mean, I'm just looking at this guy, man,
and you know you gotta pick up downstairs with a
fucking Confederate flag in the window. You know, he got
(40:29):
on some fucking tight ass jeans, no shirts, stomach big
as his fucking table, with a with a with a
short haircut. So if you if you gotta. I don't
even think his kid was three years old, four years old.
I don't even think he was that old. You know,
maximum won the six I'm gonna give him that. You know,
when I saw the kid waving the gun, it looked
damn be like what you would see on cartoons when
(40:51):
somebody was playing with a gun. It wasn't wanted the
chamber for when I hear I heard it wasn't racked,
you know, But suppose that motherfucker was racked, man, and
the little kid popped himself and knocked his head off
on you know, on up there in front of the
people's house man. You know, yeah, like I think it's
I think it's old man should be punished for that. Ship.
Them kids are supposed to be, you know, they shouldn't
(41:14):
be that accessible to getting no handguns like that guns period. Man. Yeah,
I'm with you on that. Yeah, it's tough, bro. But
to finish my thought, what I would have done. I
thought about what I would have done, and uh, I
would have went to I would have went to the
back so that I had additional walls, and I would
(41:38):
have got down on the floor and called the police
and told him, hey, come get this little kid out
here with a gun. Because anything else is uncivilized. You
could easily at any point that any point, that thing
could go off and now you out of head, even
(41:59):
just because even just closing your door and going and
going and sitting down on the car, you can still
get the bullicks bullet. You can still get the bullets.
So you gotta put some buffers in between yourself and
that and that damn that muzzle. You know what I'm saying,
it's cold, that's that's cold blooded though, Like, oh man,
it's just sucked up. But do you remember what's his name? Tyreek?
(42:20):
What's his name? From Cleveland? Come on, what's his last name? Uh? Tyrek?
What's the story? Man? The little kid that got shot
in the park with the with the with the fake gun. Yeah, Tyreek?
What's his last name? Um? Rice? Yeah, I'm sorry to me, Rice, Man,
(42:42):
rest rest your soul. But do you think the cops
would rolled up on a little Johnny and popped his
ass when when they without stopping the car? You know,
I thought about the same thing. Yeah, I thought about
the same thing. I'm trying to get us canceled. And
if that little kid was black, they would have killed him,
to kill the ship out of him. You better sucking it. Yeah, man,
(43:02):
they hadn't knocked his head up. But you know, it's
just it's just it's just where we live the world
we live in, Willie. Yeah, man, boys, a lot of
toxicity out there, man, a whole lot of toxicity at that.
People knocking off their family members. You know, I saw
two groups of two different family families get knocked off
(43:24):
this month. Yeah, it was a guy. Where was that
at North Carolina? It happened in North Carolina and ad
in Utah. So black family in North Carolina. Dude killed
his wife, his three children, and himself. This is an
actor guy. The guy was an actor. What's his name?
(43:46):
Robert Creighton? Robert Creighton, Robert Craton. Dude killed his whole
family said he had some episodes of of of you know,
mental health or whatever. He had some problems. But yeah,
but they didn't know exactly what caused him to go
off the deep edge. But yeah, they said in January
(44:11):
of last year, they sent some people out to his
house to do a what do they call it a commitment?
When you when they come to get you and in
voluntarily and in voluntary comment commitment? Would they take you
in involuntarily? And uh, they had sent the police to
(44:34):
the house on like three or four other occasions. But
I mean, let me ask you some how, how how
would you expect somebody Let's say, let's say you you
have a family member in that situation. Let's say it
was your sister or something like that was in that
situation with a guy who's having these type of episodes.
(44:56):
How do you handle a situation like that? I mean,
if you had some say so in it, give me
a scenario with well, the scenario is you got a
guy who's who's unhinged and he's having uh situations where
he's uh, you know, he's having these meltdown, these these
meltdowns and the police is having to be called to
(45:20):
come out to the house. I don't know if there
was any physical abuse before that, so I won't say that.
Here's where I'm at with this Willie Man. The way
I feel about it is like, it's that's that's my sister, man.
(45:43):
You know, that's his wife. All that ship that's in
their house, that's got to stay in their house, you
know what I mean, as long as that ship is
in your house, that she shouldn't affect anything outside your house.
When when when when the shot inside the house started
getting outside the house, then it's time to address the issue.
So this dude is he's he's unheens he tripping and
(46:04):
he he got weapons and ship in the house. The
first first thing you do is you get rid of
the weapons. You put the you put the first thing
you do. First thing you do is get rid of
the weapons. You you put those guns somewhere where he
can't get into, he can't get he can't come in
contact with him, first and foremost, and then get him
(46:26):
some help by um having a psychologist talk with him
man and see what's really going on. And if he's
that funked up and that unheens and he needs to
be you know, committed, and she needs to move on.
If that was my sister, okay, But as long as
it's in the house, man in the world ain't aware
of it, then there's nothing that we can do. But
(46:47):
the minute it leaves that doorstepping outside the world know
about it now, so we gotta address the ship. Okay, hmm,
all right, that's the way I feel about it. So
I got a good one. Kim Kardashian is visiting prisoners
in solitary confinement. In solitary confinement, I read this. They
(47:12):
call that kuka bonding. What do they call it? I
don't I don't know. But here's the thing. Here's the thing.
Her being able to visit prisoners in solitary confinement is
making headway in these prison systems, I mean in the prisons,
you know, because if Kim can go visit. You know,
(47:35):
these prisoners, their families should be able to go visit
to see what I'm saying. I admire what she doing,
you know, on that level, because she's really fucking with
the prisons, you know, prison reformm she's really fucking with this.
But is she going into those rooms by herself? Oh?
I wouldn't go into motherfucking round by by myself. And
I'm a dude. What they call that silence of the
(47:58):
lamb and ah, that would be wild. It's been a
long time. Um, So I'm not mad at her for
for seeking reform, you know, with with the with the prisons,
you know what I mean, that's that that that needs
(48:19):
to be done. Man, what else is going on out here?
Lisa Presley died. Oh yeah, man, a man, you know
I didn't even realize how heavy she was into philanthropy. Yeah, man,
that she wasn't. She was not a bad person. She
was she wasn't. She wasn't like and to think that
(48:41):
she came from music royalty and she you know, her
father was Elvis, her husband at one point was Michael Jackson.
She was really low key. She was really low She
was low key, but again, like very involved like I didn't,
you know, and Charity, I didn't, even though that she
(49:03):
had done so much work with the Katrina Reliefs, had
no clue like she was. Then that just goes to
show you, man, that you don't necessarily have to be
all in the face of everybody when you do something cool.
You know, she did something cool and we had no
fucking idea that between her and whoever it is she serves.
(49:27):
Um her dad. On the other hand, Elvis, you know,
I hear that he was raised around black people, but
he was a very racist man outside of that. Did
you hear the same thing? Yeah, I've heard, actually heard
some conflicting stories because I've heard people say that he
(49:50):
was and then I heard others say, no, he wasn't
like and and here's the reason why I asked that question, Like,
evidently he didn't raised or she wasn't raised with those
type of values. You see, you feel me like she
was not raised with the I hate black people in
Tounity because she married Oh yeah, yeah, but you know
(50:20):
she married Mike Man, you know, really in a then
and I think about it, man, Mike was a real dude,
Like he wasn't he wouldn't um like everybody think he
was like when he said, you know, like all nary guys,
he wasn't. I heard Mike talk cash ship, so yeah,
(50:42):
and I heard that from a very reliable source that
Mike was not bullshit and that was just the image
that he portrayed in front of the people. But UM,
I bet you Mike had hands like a motherfucker's much
so so Lisa Marie, Uh philanthropist. Uh, Michael Jackson, fucking
(51:08):
king of pop should have some kids. But that's the
end of Elvis. His bloodline direct descended from him. He
had no boys, so that name is not gonna live
forever anymore from him. Um, what else is going on
that I wanted to address while I was here? Oh? Shit,
(51:29):
too Short. I've seen Too Short for the first time
in my life. And I've been knowing him for thirty
five years. Damn there, forty years and I've seen him
with a fucking suit on. Oh for that man, too
short E forty and Mr fab and Swaye went to
(51:50):
the White House, bro and that man, that right there, man,
is one of the moments that that's that's one of
the old ship moments. And that would be that that
would be an old ship moment for me to go
to the White House and be like, Man, I grew
up at my grandmother's house is a little bitty house
right here on this street, right here, and raising this kitchen,
(52:10):
you know, eight food off that table set on this
floor in front of his TV. To the fucking White House.
That right there is big to me. So you would
go to the White House big time. Yeah. Black people
built that thing, man. Black people built that White house, man.
And I'm as fucked up as the buildings that surround it,
(52:32):
you know, the capital and the courts and ship, as
fucked up as those buildings are. Man, there's still a
lot of Black history in there. And Black history didn't
just start at slavery, y'all. Black history didn't start a
slave man. Speaking of black history, did you see the arms? Oh?
(52:54):
Did you see that? I couldn't figure it out forever, bro.
I kept looking at it, and I heard people saying,
it's there hugging. I'm like, who's hugging? Because he didn't
have heads on the statue, and I'm like, who's hugging?
I just didn't know what willy man. Let me let
me just cut to the bull. Let me cut the
bullshit out the whole picture. Who wrote that check? You
(53:15):
know what I'm saying, Like, it's it's it's it's a
few million dollars put into that ship, you know that, right?
Who cut the check for him to do that. I'm
not I'm not mad at it. I'm not questioning him.
I'm not none of that ship. I just want to
know who gave up the money to do that. Yeah,
you know, it's artists a black guy. It's a black guy,
(53:38):
and it's art. I agree, it's art, and art is
what you see as art. You know, art is like
an opinion. Everybody has their own opinion on art. But
it was I think it was DJ Pooh who put
up the side by side comparison. Okay, thank you DJ Pooh,
(53:59):
because it looks like that, you know, from the side,
but from abandon the ship, it looked like some crazy ship. Yeah,
that was crazy. It was crazy, man. What about DJ Paul?
What about DJ Paul? Answering his critics. They were mad
at DJ Paul because he didn't go against the Booze funeral.
(54:22):
And DJ Paul made a response and he said that
you know, hey, I paid for the funeral, and you
know y'all need to you know, ship the f up.
You know, I paid for the funeral um and you know,
Boo understood how much I loved her. You know, I
(54:42):
understood how much she loved me. And you know he
said I was on tour. And but and even if
I wasn't on tour, I don't do funerals. You do
funerals sometimes, but very seldom do you do funerals. No,
I'll go and pay my respects if I couldn't, if
I'm available to do that, I'll pay my respects. But
(55:03):
I would definitely call. You know, I'll definitely go see that. Yeah,
I would definitely go see the family. You know what
I mean. Uh, But I'm not big on funerals, bro,
I don't do the funeral partment. I'll go and pay
my respects at the at the at the wake or
the visit of what they call it ever, we call
(55:24):
it wakes out here, the viewing and we call it
the wake out here in Texas. But the view I
go to the viewing man, I'll signed the book men
and and and hugged the family and I get on
my way. But the funeral and I'm not doing that.
I did I went to my grandmother's funeral, Bro, And
you just had to be there, you know, for your family.
(55:46):
You know what I mean. I had to be there
for the family because for me not to be there
at my grandmother's funeral to said a lot about me
and in the relationship that I had with the rest
of my family. So I wanted us to come together
for that last time as family. But what you had
been offended if like one of her kids didn't show
(56:08):
up for the funeral, I don't think that would have
been possible. I'm just saying if hypothetically speaking, hypothetically speaking,
I'm saying, I'm just saying it too. That could never happen.
It's hypothetical, Brad, it doesn't happen. You know where one
of her kids didn't not make that funeral. You know,
(56:29):
my uncle who taught me out of box did not
come to my mom's funeral, and they're twins. Ship, and
I had a grudge, Bro. For a whole year. I
didn't speak to that man. And this is my favorite uncle.
I didn't speak to him for a whole year, and
I saw him at my sister's house one day, and
(56:52):
you didn't say ship too. I had to address it.
I addressed it, and he told me, he said, I
couldn't see your mama like that. I couldn't see a
land in that can skeet like that. And it hit
me that people grieve differently, Like you can't tell somebody
a mouthful right there, bro Like people greed differently. Man. Yeah,
(57:17):
that that was that man's sister. He knew that, sorry sister.
They was born together, Willie. Yeah, like that, And he
knew him longer than I. He loved him longer than
I had, and trying to judge him how he was,
(57:38):
how he chose to cope with her pass and he
went and trade a fighter. He had a fighter. Uh
had a fight that weekend and he just went out
there and he you know, he did that, And I
just like, man, you know what's closest y'all were, and
much she love you and you wouldn't show up whatever.
(57:59):
But when he said that, man, I just I got it.
It would like you know how sometimes you can have
convictions in life and you can be stuck on something
for years and years and years how you feel about
something absolutely, But you can be stuck on something for years,
but you hear one thing somebody say one thing, like
all the speeches talking reading that you can do uh,
(58:23):
And you could ignore something. You can ignore the fact,
the truth or whatever. But you hear if somebody said
one time the right way, and it can Oh, I
got it. I get it all the time, and I
got it bro all the time. But haven't said that.
I'm still not going to a funeral somebody I don't like.
(58:46):
I don't. If I don't like somebody, I ain't going
to the funeral, you know. And and it could be yeah,
it could be anybody. If I don't like somebody, If
somebody don't like me, why would I go to the funeral?
It makes no sense to me. It doesn't make any
sense to me. And and funerals are for the living anyway.
(59:08):
The funerals are not for the dead. Funerals are for
the living. That that's my opinion. UM okay, I'm I'm
gonna ride with you on that. But um, I have um,
I have one right before I let you go. And
I'm sure you're gonna let me know. Why? Why what?
What's the purpose of telling the motherfucker uh publicly that
(59:31):
you don't funk with them no more? Why don't you
just not funk with them no more. Sometimes people just
want to get sh it off their chest. I'm saying, man,
But the lawyers that work with Kanye are saying publicly
that they don't funk with him no more. Just not
just don't funk with it. What they're trying to do
is mitigate liability. What does that mean? They're trying to
(59:53):
minimize that their role and whatever whatever, you know, like
trying to distance themselves from him, and so everybody will
no like all those people, all those people that knew,
like just like they was bragging about where we're Kanye
West's lawyer and they're hanging out and parting together and
all that stuff. They're trying to make sure that, hey,
we ain't got nothing to do with that, because we
(01:00:14):
know it's coming. Hey Nike, we still like y'all, because
we got other clients. Hey Adidas. We're not Nike, but
hey Adidas, we still like y'all. We got other clients, Hey,
Blicia go or whatever. Uh we got. We got other clients.
We got on the client's gap. So when with that,
we're not with his program. That's what that's about. Yeah,
(01:00:37):
Well I had a good as time, man, absolutely, absolutely
It's always good to set at the table with you man,
and congregating and and pick you know, and pick my
brain like I picked your brain. Yeah yeah, yeah, man,
something I say we go, get us a cold Miller light, um,
(01:01:02):
get some fucking nachos, and what you wanna do? I
drink a bud like, but I drink the Miller for you,
you know, just just for karatarie purposes, you know, like
you know, like you drink what I want to drink.
Sometimes I drink what you want to drink sometimes, you know,
(01:01:24):
and then it's other times we drank whatever we want
to drink. Why are you leaving? Man? What did I say? Asked?
Did I say something wrong? Y'all? See that? Family, This
is what I have to deal with with this guy.
I mean, he's incorrigible. Anyway, fam, We appreciate you all
(01:01:49):
for checking us out. Until next time, No more talk.
This episode was produced by A King and brought to
you by the Black Effect Podcast Network at I Heart Radio.