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April 1, 2025 50 mins

Do soul music groups and sex trafficking have a history with one another? Langston and David chat with Roxxy Haze (BET and The Roxxy Haze Podcast) about this controversial topic. They explore bands who have allegedly dabbled in these acts like The Platters and more. The discussion also goes into topics like orgies, Rick James, Power Rangers, and geographical distances between Canada and the American Midwest. And last but not least, Langston doesn't support Hot Cheetos and David does his best Canadian accent.

Be sure to catch Roxxy Haze on the Whatever Happens, Happen Tour!

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:02):
I really thought anything was possible when I was a kid.

Speaker 2 (00:05):
It's not. That's why we missed the nineties so much,
I think so.

Speaker 3 (00:10):
I definitely like trash Man because of a lad Well.
He has heart. He doesn't need a house or money for.

Speaker 2 (00:16):
A full shirt. He didn't even gotta have a full
shirt on his monkey.

Speaker 3 (00:21):
You know he didn't have a shirt, didn't that's crazy.
But he had heart.

Speaker 1 (00:27):
Yeah, he just got to stay one jump ahead of
the dreadline, two hopped away from ahead of the fly.

Speaker 4 (00:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (00:35):
Wrong ships, racist money turning stuff. I can't tell me.

Speaker 2 (01:01):
It's seven o'clock on the dot. I'm in my drop
top cruise in the streets.

Speaker 1 (01:07):
I got a real, pretty, pretty little thing that's waiting
for me.

Speaker 4 (01:11):
There it is, there, it is.

Speaker 1 (01:12):
Ladies and gentlemen, Welcome to another phenomenal episode of Ma
Mama Told Me, the podcast where we dive deep into
the pockets of black conspiracy theory and we finally worked
to prove whatever bullshit you need proof to get you by.

Speaker 4 (01:26):
That's all we're doing here.

Speaker 2 (01:27):
Let's go.

Speaker 4 (01:28):
We're just offering it up.

Speaker 2 (01:29):
Let's go.

Speaker 4 (01:30):
You take it if you need it.

Speaker 2 (01:31):
You can have it if you want. It's all yours.
You like it?

Speaker 1 (01:33):
I love it. It ain't definitive. I want to say
that's top tier usher. By the way, that's great usher.
That's top tier usher for me.

Speaker 2 (01:40):
He had a long run. Man.

Speaker 6 (01:42):
I just saw did you see online? Did any guys
see online? They were talking about some song that was
only really at least in the UK in one or
two and UK people like, we're getting mad at Americans
because we don't know what I think. It's called populr
Collar whoa yeah?

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Is it heat? Though it was only released in the UK.

Speaker 4 (02:00):
I got say, no, I knew you was bad.

Speaker 2 (02:04):
I just wasn't like this is an anthem for you.
It wasn't like yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. How many people
will eat anything?

Speaker 5 (02:10):
You know? Yeah?

Speaker 2 (02:14):
I bet in Bosnia they're like, this is pretty good
chay of life.

Speaker 6 (02:18):
That's crazy if you don't know seven o'clock on the
dot and all of a sudden, what is your go?

Speaker 2 (02:27):
He makes me feel strong?

Speaker 5 (02:29):
Boy?

Speaker 3 (02:31):
Is that I don't know?

Speaker 2 (02:34):
Oh no, we don't study Eastern Block. It all runs
together over there, mister.

Speaker 6 (02:42):
There's there's whites who look like they've been outside a
long time, and whites who they look like have have
been outside longer.

Speaker 2 (02:47):
Yeah, that's how Europe.

Speaker 3 (02:51):
Makes sense.

Speaker 2 (02:52):
Yeah, it feels right.

Speaker 4 (02:53):
Let me tell you this.

Speaker 1 (02:54):
This is something I've been thinking about the you know,
the j Hood Spirit Tunnel.

Speaker 2 (02:59):
Yeah, I think about it so much.

Speaker 4 (03:01):
I think I think.

Speaker 1 (03:02):
Every single person should have to go down that tunnel
because I think it's the the truest representation that we
get to see of the human experience anymore.

Speaker 2 (03:13):
You're a dancer, though, No, no, no, I don't think
it's about that. I think you're framing this around.

Speaker 5 (03:19):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (03:20):
I think I think you are being presented with your
own theme song by a group of enthusiastic employees who
are happy to be offering you up this type of celebration,
and in that moment, you see it in people where
they they are either made or they are broken, and
it is not about the quality of their dancing.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
Who do you think has been broken by the spirit tunt?

Speaker 1 (03:41):
I think there have been people not so much broken,
but just exposed as like I think, for example, uh,
in this we're getting into dangerous. I'm sorry, I feel
like you're being nasty. I'm don't think it's about the exposure.
But I will happily tell y'all once we get off

(04:02):
of this thing. But but I will say that that
even in like I think about the Anthony Mackie one
in particular, he went down and he looks so funny
dancing in a way that made me fall in re
fall in love with Anthony Mackey.

Speaker 4 (04:16):
I've heard all these nasty stories.

Speaker 3 (04:18):
They said, he's real mean and he's ruey.

Speaker 4 (04:19):
I was like, he looks alike, he speaks.

Speaker 3 (04:22):
They said, he's.

Speaker 1 (04:25):
Videos of him, of him throwing water bottles that had
poor children because he's like, get off my truck, you
poor bitch.

Speaker 4 (04:33):
Insane out in the world.

Speaker 3 (04:36):
I'm just saying all this stuff about his mouth. Yeah,
like his mouth because it always looks like he's holding
secrets in Yeah, real whisper mind.

Speaker 1 (04:47):
They they've said nasty things about Anthony Mackie. But I'll
tell you this that that Spirit Tunnel video made me.
It made me come back around.

Speaker 2 (04:55):
That's not a bad man.

Speaker 3 (04:56):
Came with choreography, you have to though.

Speaker 2 (04:59):
Right, and he's not a good dancer. I have to
see this. Can you pull this up?

Speaker 1 (05:03):
And of course you know it's important that we all
see it. I think it's I think it only supports
my my claim.

Speaker 2 (05:09):
No, I like, because I don't think about him as
a fun guy.

Speaker 1 (05:12):
He looks fun as fucking this.

Speaker 6 (05:14):
I don't ever think about him as a fun guy.
I don't think he even plays a fun guy.

Speaker 7 (05:18):
Right, and he was always mean or mean adjacent right, right?
He was tupac yes, like a sweetie. Yeah that's not
except for that one when he was a kid.

Speaker 4 (05:34):
Oh yeah, oh yeah he.

Speaker 2 (05:40):
Wait till.

Speaker 4 (05:43):
Oh boy hitting it. Oh yeah, yeah, I do want
to do that so bad.

Speaker 2 (05:54):
Oh oh, put you back to it.

Speaker 4 (05:57):
Wait till the end, Wait till he kicks his little
feet up at the end.

Speaker 2 (06:03):
There you go. Yeah, man, I do love him. You
really got me.

Speaker 4 (06:11):
That's a fun guy.

Speaker 2 (06:12):
That was really good. I don't care if he spits
on kids. Oh not that guy.

Speaker 4 (06:17):
Not that guy. I don't mind at all.

Speaker 2 (06:22):
I'm sorry, I'm sorry.

Speaker 1 (06:23):
We could probably probably better for the audio. Yeah, well,
our guests today. We haven't even introlled her yet. We've
talked to her about Anthony Maggie for some time, but
we have not introed her. She's had a full bowl
of chips, a deep swig of Lacroix.

Speaker 4 (06:40):
Or any brandy. We don't know if you would like
her to have taken a swig of your water.

Speaker 3 (06:45):
You know, it was just sparkling something.

Speaker 2 (06:50):
Sparkling something.

Speaker 1 (06:51):
She's hilarious, hilarious comedian of all sorts.

Speaker 4 (06:55):
Uh, you know her.

Speaker 1 (06:55):
You know her from from All Deaf Digital, you know
her from you know her from be et plus, you
know her from her her tour, she is currently on tour.

Speaker 2 (07:04):
Give it up for Roxy.

Speaker 4 (07:05):
Hey that's a good intro. Yeah, sound important practice, did you.

Speaker 2 (07:13):
He's pretty good about that stuff. Yeah, that's right.

Speaker 4 (07:16):
You know, we're glad you're here.

Speaker 3 (07:18):
Thank you me too.

Speaker 1 (07:19):
You came to us with the conspiracy that I certainly
had never heard.

Speaker 2 (07:23):
I had not heard this either.

Speaker 1 (07:24):
I have no scary and I feel like it has
the potential to be deeply upsetting. Yeah, like this feels
like it could really hurt the rest of my day. Yeah, okay,
And I generalized it a little bit. I sort of
expanded it into a starter conversation. You'll walk us to

(07:44):
the specific place I think you took it. But you said,
my mama told me so music groups has secret sex rings.

Speaker 3 (07:58):
Yeah, yeah, okay, damn.

Speaker 1 (08:01):
And this is not like Lord of There, No, these
are not, but will could then in the darkness behind.

Speaker 2 (08:10):
Then Yeah, yeah, I don't know. You watch those movies. Yeah,
that's the best reference I've ever had on this show.
Was pretty impressive. Is very anti. Uh, he's a real,
push you down nerd type person. You're a meani nerd.

Speaker 4 (08:25):
That's wild, that's not he's a real That's not a
good explanation.

Speaker 3 (08:30):
Like what because I get a nerd?

Speaker 4 (08:32):
I'm like what, No, I hate whimsy? Sometimes you hate whimsy?

Speaker 3 (08:39):
Yes, what's your least favorite whimsy?

Speaker 5 (08:44):
What do you what?

Speaker 4 (08:45):
Spaceships? Probably that's sick space.

Speaker 2 (08:51):
Fantasy war light being.

Speaker 5 (08:58):
Right?

Speaker 2 (08:59):
Bright?

Speaker 3 (09:01):
Oh you don't like happiness, you don't like joy?

Speaker 2 (09:06):
Yeah? Who was? Who was puking? He was? What was he?

Speaker 4 (09:11):
He was like a fairy, I believe.

Speaker 2 (09:13):
I don't like that.

Speaker 3 (09:16):
Was annoying to be fair, Yeah, he was annoying all fairies. Yeah,
you don't like like fern Gully.

Speaker 2 (09:22):
I like that they had that no no no no
the no no no no no no no, they did
have that song. I like that, right, I like that bat.

Speaker 3 (09:32):
Okay, Oh you like the sadness? So you like with
like Star Wars or something evil?

Speaker 2 (09:39):
How much.

Speaker 3 (09:41):
About what I do?

Speaker 1 (09:42):
Okay, The point is, jud tell us a little bit
about this.

Speaker 2 (09:49):
This soul music.

Speaker 3 (09:51):
How detailed? All detailed?

Speaker 4 (09:53):
You tell us what.

Speaker 3 (09:55):
Okay, So this is what my mom told me. So
she's from Buffalo, New York and just like right by Canada.

Speaker 2 (10:00):
Rick James.

Speaker 3 (10:01):
Yeah, oh yeah, yeah she My mama actually used to
make bootleg Rick James stuff and like sell it outside
the constant. My am was doing a lot of stuff
she was supposed to be doing. So you know, Buffalo's
right by Canada. So she told me, like a lot
of these soul singers when they would come to Buffalo,
they would traffic in white women, specifically from Canada to

(10:22):
like sex work down.

Speaker 2 (10:26):
Did Buffalo not have.

Speaker 3 (10:34):
I mean, we don't Maybe it was cheaper, was it not.

Speaker 4 (10:38):
It's just a dollars for white women in Buffalo, That's
what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (10:42):
It is just like a dollar situation.

Speaker 3 (10:46):
I think I think it was just cheaper because they
would have.

Speaker 2 (10:49):
Been from Niagara right.

Speaker 1 (10:54):
Right there stops, I mean, pretty close to the Canadian border.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
So French Canadian women. I don't know how that feels different.

Speaker 3 (11:03):
It's a little I mean Buffalo is kind of hood though,
like it's a lot of hoods. Yeah, it's a lot
going on. So maybe they didn't want the hood white women.
Maybe they wanted, but yeah, yeah, so she said specifically
the Platters. Whoa, yeah, like the Platters. It was a

(11:23):
big thing and I think they got caught. But it
was also like drugs. It was just like a whole
lot of stuff going on.

Speaker 2 (11:29):
So she tells you this, why, I don't know.

Speaker 5 (11:35):
I was.

Speaker 3 (11:35):
We're at my grandma's house, and she had like a
picture of the Platters, like an autograph your grandma. My
mom had it at my grandma's house on the wall.

Speaker 4 (11:43):
So your mom liked the Yeah, so that's what she said.

Speaker 3 (11:48):
She just said it, you know what. But my mom
used to like model and stuff too, So I'm like,
you were. I don't think she was part of the
sex trafficking stuff. Yeah, but I'm like, you know, used
to hang out just like out here, like we'd be
knowing stuff be going on. You may not be part

(12:10):
of it, but you see what's happening.

Speaker 2 (12:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (12:12):
She's like, oh that girl she was out here.

Speaker 3 (12:16):
But it was like an autograph frame picture, and I
was like, oh, that's cool. I was like, who is that.
She's like, oh, that's the Platters.

Speaker 4 (12:21):
You know.

Speaker 3 (12:21):
They used to be running down from Canada, and I
was like, Okay, what are we eating? Because I'm twelve.

Speaker 2 (12:30):
About running down from Canada with you.

Speaker 1 (12:33):
I'm really you really lost me at those are the Platters?

Speaker 4 (12:37):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (12:39):
Can you look it up?

Speaker 1 (12:40):
Because I did not actually think they have more hits
than we realized, because when I was looking them up yesterday,
I immediately was like, oh ship, they made that, and
then I as quickly as I recalled that, forgot what
their songs were.

Speaker 3 (12:55):
I hear it I platters it out, but it's who man,
hate that joke. They were like everybody in like the
fifties and sixties. They all had like the same kind
of names with the on the what's.

Speaker 1 (13:06):
The difference between the shot Lights Chicago is that? Oh yeah,
I think that's that's about.

Speaker 3 (13:14):
It, Temptations, the Four Tops, all of them kind of
merge in my mind.

Speaker 1 (13:18):
They're all like, let's look up their big hits?

Speaker 3 (13:22):
Was what was the one?

Speaker 1 (13:24):
They're in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame?

Speaker 2 (13:26):
Really? Yep? And they're from Buffalo too. I don't know.

Speaker 3 (13:29):
I didn't ask no question.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
So it could have been like your mom hung out
with them one time?

Speaker 3 (13:34):
Yeah, like I probably shouldn't now she's passed away, so
it's like too late to too late to find.

Speaker 1 (13:39):
Well, I think if you you probably had other questions
you want covered.

Speaker 2 (13:43):
I don't think you before this, like it's.

Speaker 4 (13:46):
The last.

Speaker 2 (13:49):
Please you have to.

Speaker 3 (13:53):
How much was paying? Like they on the tour bus
you got, but I don't know why. It was just
weird specifically. Look, I get the juxtaposition like you were saying,
like why I just get local.

Speaker 6 (14:05):
And I don't want to be rude to any of
our listeners out there. Canada is not a place known.

Speaker 1 (14:12):
I'm saying now here's I'm sorry to do this, but
I actually disagree, really think that while Canada is not
known for their bad bitches, we are wrong about the
number and quality up there because they have such a diverse,
weird mix of international people. They be making some baddies

(14:33):
talk about Toronto Toronto specifically, but Montreal to Montreal has something.
I gotta assume it's nothing but dog faced weirdos.

Speaker 3 (14:48):
Dog face where face is so hurtful, you know.

Speaker 1 (14:55):
What I mean, Because it's people who like work oil
rigs and they ain't even got that much oil. It's
like bad, there's people people punished by the land. Yeah exactly, Yeah,
that's that's how you know you're from a harsh place.
The land takes it out on your face. Yeah, little
Little Rock scratches a couple of dense, no thinking and short.

Speaker 3 (15:21):
Oh wait, did you find the platter song?

Speaker 2 (15:23):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (15:23):
So so some of their top ten hits, The Great Pretender.

Speaker 2 (15:27):
We may have to play it in order. I don't
know that tender.

Speaker 4 (15:33):
I like that you thought you knew that I was.

Speaker 2 (15:37):
I was pretending.

Speaker 4 (15:37):
Let's look it up.

Speaker 1 (15:38):
This is this is a fun game. We get to
play The Great Pretender.

Speaker 4 (15:45):
No I cry, I don't cry.

Speaker 2 (15:49):
It's going to help me. You ain't gonna help, man,
You just stay there. I really thought you had it.

Speaker 4 (15:58):
Man, I'm the Tender's Blue Moon.

Speaker 2 (16:10):
Yeah, you know, very young.

Speaker 4 (16:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 3 (16:16):
My mom passed in her set like she had me
at like thirty nine. Oh wow, I remember she was
talking about she had like a Frankie Lineman Vinyl at
her fifth grade dance.

Speaker 2 (16:25):
Wow.

Speaker 3 (16:26):
And the teenagers, old lady, let's they that's the number one.

Speaker 1 (16:31):
That's their big their big hit. They also had smoke
gits in your eyes. They had they had a number
of big hits, number one on Billboard Top ten multiple times.
I think I think they were. They were talented.

Speaker 4 (16:44):
Only the the only you and you alone, The only
you is that that one.

Speaker 2 (16:54):
I need you all the time. I don't know if
that hits home for you know, any of these songs.

Speaker 1 (16:59):
I knew the Great Pretender having heard it, okay, but
I would not have recalled that somebody was like, yes, singing,
I'd be like, my man already, my man already saying
pretty good, I'm biling.

Speaker 4 (17:14):
You don't really like Ryan, but he used to know.

Speaker 1 (17:27):
I don't know enough about the Platters music, I guess
to be able to be an expert on their behaviors.
It is worth noting for your edification and maybe yours.
There were It was four men and a lady in
the group. Their their setup feels a little odd of
this one girl with four men.

Speaker 2 (17:48):
D rather be one man for girls. That's my.

Speaker 5 (17:53):
Girls.

Speaker 3 (17:55):
I don't think about I never know, because they had
a whole.

Speaker 1 (17:58):
I think the whatever the fuck uh dream girls?

Speaker 4 (18:02):
That Eddie Yeah.

Speaker 1 (18:06):
All away, No, they but for a minute it was
just him and for backup thunder Early.

Speaker 2 (18:11):
Yeah, there you go.

Speaker 4 (18:12):
But he's pretended.

Speaker 2 (18:14):
So what the fuck do we know? Yeah? I don't, Yeah,
I don't know, man, I don't think they do that
very What.

Speaker 3 (18:21):
Was the lady's name though, Was that Zola Taylor or
was that somebody? Because Zola Taylor was the one that
would smashing Frankie Lineman. He was a child. What group
was she in?

Speaker 4 (18:31):
I want.

Speaker 3 (18:36):
All of them should have went to jail.

Speaker 5 (18:37):
Yea.

Speaker 2 (18:37):
His group was called the teenage.

Speaker 3 (18:39):
They didn't give a damn man, wonderful actor.

Speaker 2 (18:45):
Come on, she is not listed.

Speaker 3 (18:47):
That's crazy.

Speaker 1 (18:49):
It's it's Freddie Mercury.

Speaker 2 (18:51):
I didn't know that was his name.

Speaker 1 (18:53):
Mike Moran, Alan Jones and Harold Fisher are the personnel.
Maybe when they say personnel, they mean like the backup,
you know, the accompaniment.

Speaker 2 (19:06):
Who are y'all? Man?

Speaker 4 (19:08):
Oh?

Speaker 1 (19:08):
Okay, here we go from left to right. We got
her name was so La Taylor.

Speaker 3 (19:14):
You're right, okay, there you go smashing a little boy.

Speaker 1 (19:17):
Oh she was smashing franklin Yeah.

Speaker 3 (19:19):
She was one of the ones. She was one of
Ali Barry played okay, and then he didn't pay for
her house. Gave him the stuff and he didn't pay.
But he was like fourteen. You gave like a child.
It was like blank check almost. Yeah, he gave a
child a check to pay for the house. And then
he didn't.

Speaker 2 (19:33):
Another movie where he also got a girlfriend.

Speaker 3 (19:35):
Weirdly, which was wild, but she was trying to use
him to but she said.

Speaker 6 (19:40):
She would date him in four years. Blank Check recently.
Really yeah, it was embarrassing because that is no I've
seen it before. But then I was telling my girl,
I was like, you gotta She's like, had you know,
we all have gaps. She had never seen her, she
never saw never saw pla check whoa.

Speaker 2 (20:01):
And I was like, how do you know all the words?

Speaker 4 (20:03):
That everything?

Speaker 2 (20:04):
You know all the Aladdin songs? Inside?

Speaker 5 (20:06):
Now you know?

Speaker 2 (20:06):
I mean what I mean.

Speaker 1 (20:07):
Though, The point is she never saw black Check and
we were watching it. She is kind of like, I
can see how you thought this was cool as.

Speaker 3 (20:13):
A kid, because he's like buying all this the first
of all that million would have been ran out. He
spent way more than a million just off the house.

Speaker 2 (20:20):
But that's what his girlfriend tells him. She's like a
million dollars.

Speaker 3 (20:23):
She wasn't his girlfriend, she was just a cop.

Speaker 2 (20:26):
I don't know that.

Speaker 1 (20:28):
Girl.

Speaker 2 (20:29):
She was open to it. There was a weird section.

Speaker 4 (20:33):
That's what I'm saying about the movie. It's crazy.

Speaker 1 (20:35):
It honestly was when I was a child, and I'm
not proud of this. It was the more appealing part
of it was I was like, oh, he got a
baddie off this.

Speaker 2 (20:43):
I didn't say it for a long time.

Speaker 6 (20:44):
There was stuff in the nineties that made little boys
think that they could hook up with adult women.

Speaker 2 (20:49):
Yep, there was a.

Speaker 4 (20:50):
Lot of like, there was a lot of that going on.

Speaker 1 (20:54):
If you were charismatic enough kid, Yeah, that's because the
street wise, street wise young kid. And then this girl's like, oh,
you're kind of cute though. You really thought you could
make those moves, bro, that's there was a couple of
years in I was like.

Speaker 2 (21:12):
If I could meet Mariah Carry, I could get his.

Speaker 5 (21:20):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (21:21):
Yeah, you hear this from your mom. You you said
you were young at the moment.

Speaker 3 (21:29):
Sorry, my Alley.

Speaker 1 (21:31):
Well, it might be all them hot cheetos. I don't
know that those help with allergic reactions. I'm gonna be
honest with you. Flaming hot is not as his the me,
you know what I mean.

Speaker 2 (21:46):
I think it's uh, maybe it's gonna flare you up
a little bit.

Speaker 4 (21:49):
Maybe you're right.

Speaker 3 (21:50):
I think that makes logical sense because I was chilling.

Speaker 2 (22:00):
That's that powdered red running through your That's.

Speaker 3 (22:04):
What this is. I'm thirty six. I'm too old for flaming.

Speaker 2 (22:06):
Do you do feel it? When that red hits?

Speaker 3 (22:08):
It's hidden, that extra die in the back of my throat.

Speaker 2 (22:12):
Red.

Speaker 1 (22:13):
Just yesterday, Yeah, yeah, I treated myself red.

Speaker 2 (22:17):
Yep, just brought some red. Yeah, it's the talkies. It's
too strong for me now.

Speaker 1 (22:22):
Talkies are wild, They're so salt, they're too it's too much.
It's like he is trying to like prove a point,
and it's like, bro, whatever you're proven.

Speaker 2 (22:30):
I don't need it. Yeah, I didn't have to be blue.

Speaker 3 (22:32):
No, yeah, and that just looks nasty. It's not the nineties.
We used to rock with blue in the nineties.

Speaker 2 (22:38):
No, some of us never stopped pouring up.

Speaker 3 (22:41):
A bowl of blue, oh blue blue.

Speaker 1 (22:46):
Your mom tells you this, you believe it, You take
this and you carry this forward? And how do you
how do you approach music? I obviously we weren't listening
to the platters.

Speaker 3 (22:59):
But actually what like I used to so my parents
are old, but look, I didn't start listening to like
rapping stuff till I was in middle school. So I
used to listen to like all Motown, all like earth
wind and fire all that kind of stuff, And then
all it did was just make me know, like, oh,
everybody's like freaky, which I already knew everybody was. This
is gonna be a lot of information. I talk about

(23:20):
it on stage, so it's fine. My parents were also
like swingers, so like I already knew. Yeah, So, like
I had found some tapes of them doing this the
whole thing, so I already knew.

Speaker 2 (23:41):
You what, it's probably a core memory.

Speaker 1 (23:45):
Let's not just go ahead and throw that one away.
You brought up vital information. You might as well share
some of the details. We found a tape of.

Speaker 4 (23:54):
I found the tape.

Speaker 3 (23:55):
I found several tapes. Okay, So my parents, I don't
even have to start the story. So my parents got
divorced when I was like seven. Was raised by my dad,
and so my dad had a old TV, you know,
with the VCR on the TV and when you turn
it on, it would automatically play whatever tapes in there,

(24:16):
and so my parents didad. So it's like, I don't know,
I feel better talking about it now that they're gone.
So I used to go in my dad's room to
watch like Fox and stuff, like regular TV. Because we
had Cape on. It's too much to unhook the box
and all that. So I just go in his room
to watch whatever was on. And so I sinkly remember
going to watch Power Rangers and I want to turn

(24:36):
the TV on, and tape just automatically started playing, and
I was like, and I had at that point, I
had already seen some porn, like I knew what it was, like,
I didn't know what it was, but I had just
seen Daddy yeah, and so I was like yeah, I
was like, oh yeah, I just I was like, oh,
this is on TV. You know, we just be saying
stuff as kids, and so I was like, okay, this

(24:56):
is point I'm going to turn off. And I'm like,
wait a minute, Oh, no, know that.

Speaker 5 (25:00):
Yes, I know.

Speaker 2 (25:02):
I know.

Speaker 5 (25:04):
In the front.

Speaker 4 (25:05):
No, it's an orgy. God is an orgy.

Speaker 3 (25:09):
So I'm like, my mom's sucking my dad's dick and
they're divorced. They're divorced, and so I'm like, why are
you watching this right now?

Speaker 5 (25:16):
This is going on?

Speaker 3 (25:17):
So yeah, I didn't even get to watch Pine Rangers.
I just left.

Speaker 1 (25:20):
He was like God has been coming in between and
my lady for some time. We got to get a
divorce so we could let the devil in I like
that happens. He's like, no, I'm gonna keep it. I'm
gonna keep kicking it with you, but we can't do it.

Speaker 2 (25:35):
We can't do it under Yeah, it was.

Speaker 3 (25:41):
It was yeah, very a lot. That's not the only
thing that I had found, even like as an adult.
So I'm gonna just fast forwarded my dad and his
wife later in life. They were doing like.

Speaker 4 (25:55):
Born and they stopped doing that that that door opens you.

Speaker 3 (26:02):
They like made a website and posted it on Facebook,
okay on Facebook. On Facebook about that.

Speaker 1 (26:09):
They posted, I'm sorry, I'm just trying to put it
all together, giving us They posted their on porn site
on Facebook and when they posted it, were they like
were they friends with Facebook?

Speaker 2 (26:24):
Friends?

Speaker 5 (26:25):
Yes?

Speaker 3 (26:25):
And they were like people from my grandma's church. So
like I found out because my friend called me. She
was like, hey, get on Facebook, and I was like,
we're talking about going there, and my brother's already on
the computer because when friends called yo, it was a lot.

Speaker 2 (26:41):
Mind you.

Speaker 3 (26:41):
My daddy's like sixty at this point, so yeah, it's
a soul. Having all that background here, my mom say
the thing about the platters it's just like, oh, this
is just another yo.

Speaker 2 (26:51):
You got it.

Speaker 4 (26:52):
They were freaky swing misbehavior. So that's what I'm like.

Speaker 3 (26:59):
I believe you because I saw you, so I don't
think you would just make this up.

Speaker 1 (27:05):
This is really fascinating going on. We've never had I
don't think a person have like this level of like
first hand information. A lot of times there's somebody speculating
and speculating in the way that we all speculate based
off of like Internet evidence, which may or may not
be legitimate at all. But you're saying your mother had

(27:28):
first hand experience watching the Platters bring Canadian women down,
traffic them, fuck them, and then I probably send them
on their wedding damn.

Speaker 3 (27:41):
And then I think on their Wikipedia page because I
did end up looking like a couple of years ago,
I think somebody got arrested for something.

Speaker 1 (27:48):
So maybe this is a good time to take a break. Okay, no, yeah,
because we miss you every day, Platters. Uh we were
going to take a break and when we come back
will unpack some of that arrests that you're speaking of.

(28:10):
Uh so some more. We'll come back in a second.
More Roxy Hayes More, my mama told me.

Speaker 2 (28:23):
That and you know who loves fucked your woman? Most
likely the Platter. It's true.

Speaker 4 (28:34):
I thought it was okay, it's true.

Speaker 1 (28:36):
The Platters blue you old woman's back out. She said
she was going to Niagara Falls for a vacation. She
stopped in Buffalo. Listen, got some of them originally listen
she put on a slicker.

Speaker 4 (28:49):
But it wasn't for what you think it was.

Speaker 1 (28:51):
She was definitely she was definitely the mate of the
miss if you know what, if you know what the
Platters mean, I've been on the mad of it's fun.

Speaker 2 (29:02):
It seems awesome. Yeah, it's really fun. I haven't had
the pleasure put them up there and I went I
went over and that's nice.

Speaker 1 (29:10):
Yeah, you talked about the arrests. There is a famous
arrest of the Platters specifically, and you you kept framing
it as one of them, but it's actually the four
male members. She was like, she's too busy fucking Frankly,

(29:31):
I like.

Speaker 2 (29:31):
The big he wrote that song right, he just came out.
I was like, who got putting?

Speaker 5 (29:47):
This is a song in the tell what man?

Speaker 4 (29:54):
He had a good day? Got some Puzzy wrote to
hit record. He was doing great.

Speaker 2 (29:59):
I think the day you lose your virginity, you should
have to write a song.

Speaker 1 (30:03):
I think more people should have to have sex in
one room and then get in the booth right after.

Speaker 2 (30:09):
Immediately after.

Speaker 6 (30:11):
I want to feel the feeling because, like you ever,
sometimes you listen to songs and you're like, damn, that
sounds like they just got dumb sucking and that's a
good feeling.

Speaker 2 (30:20):
Yeah, yeah, pretty much every ted Teddy Pendergrass, forgive me
for being crashed.

Speaker 4 (30:31):
Sometimes he's singing like you've got his dick in his hand,
if that's sounds.

Speaker 2 (30:36):
If he did.

Speaker 1 (30:38):
He turned the light off with it, like like he
had a naked lady as his engineer giving her instruction.

Speaker 5 (30:47):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (30:48):
Yeah, he's telling her what he's about to do, and
I learned the lights. Yeah, it was nasty, but some
of it didn't sound like that.

Speaker 2 (30:58):
Sorry, no, please about this. The other day, I love
the music boys demand didn't sound like they.

Speaker 3 (31:04):
Were you know, they were always whining, even.

Speaker 2 (31:08):
All make love to you.

Speaker 4 (31:09):
It didn't anybody.

Speaker 6 (31:11):
You don't like it, right, It's like Rex and Effects
was fucking you. Want to see what they felt like.
They're kind of like they felt like they were finger
popping it's harmonious.

Speaker 1 (31:22):
There's not enough of like the just the raw sort
of like loosely.

Speaker 3 (31:27):
Yeah, it even just like and hones you're tight, You're like,
I don't want to be smashed to that.

Speaker 4 (31:33):
Yeah, it's not smashing music. It's not smashed.

Speaker 2 (31:36):
You know, you gotta smash to his motown Philly. If
you have smashed the motown Philly, go ahead and send
us an email.

Speaker 3 (31:56):
About it every day, smashing the motown Philly.

Speaker 5 (32:00):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (32:01):
The summer of nineteen fifty nine, the four male members
of the Platters were arrested in Cincinnati and were accused
of having sexual relationships or relations rather with four female miners,
among them three white girls. The men were later acquitted,

(32:22):
but public reaction caused some radio stations to pull their
single War off the radio, and they never really recovered
locally from that that issue. In fact, so much so
that I believe they flee the country. Where did they
go They at some point.

Speaker 5 (32:41):
I believe.

Speaker 1 (32:44):
They were home, they went where to pussy is Abet?
I think they went to Europe for some shit, basically
like trying to get away from some of like they
basically it was it was less about them being like pariahs.
Here and more just that they had hit a wall
where like their success started to fall down and they

(33:08):
were like, fuck it, We're gonna go over here where
we have a little bit more a better chance at
you know, fame and stardom and shit.

Speaker 3 (33:17):
But then now the trafficking things sounds plausible.

Speaker 1 (33:20):
Like it does change things. When I first read this,
and I'm curious to hear both of your thoughts. When
I first read this, my feeling was, well, this is
another example nineteen fifty nine of a black person, a
group of black men being accused of falsely raping someone
when in fact they didn't. Now my issue or where

(33:42):
this becomes complicated is their miners. Yeah, and it's like, okay, well,
even if this was consensual, you still fucking around with kids?

Speaker 6 (33:49):
Yeah, well, and like because that was the game and music.
I just listened to a podcast about groupies weirdly, and
they were talking about how like led Zeppelin, like that
whole Sunset strip, a lot of that, like the High
House or whatever. They would like get these girls, but
then they would like while they were on tour, they
would just have the girls live at the hotel and

(34:09):
they'd go and come back because they didn't want to
traffic mining. So I think it's like a common thing
in the music industry. Like they would go, they'd go play,
like when they were on the American leg of their tour.
Every night they'd come back to the girls, but they
couldn't fly the girls out because they were minors whoa.

Speaker 1 (34:27):
Just truly protecting themselves through the technicality.

Speaker 2 (34:30):
Yeah yeah, yeah, goddamn.

Speaker 3 (34:32):
And a lot of times they would have like, you know,
their managers and all of them, you know, find the girls,
bring the girls. It was high schools and stuff like that.

Speaker 6 (34:41):
Yeah, they had a groupie magazine. They had a groupie
magazine in seventy three. Yeah, the podcast was crazy. It
is a wild scene. Yeah, but these girls were yeah,
they were all kids.

Speaker 3 (34:54):
Yeah, well thirteen is like super young.

Speaker 1 (34:56):
And I think about how much of the people who
buy music generally are children. Yeah you know what I mean,
Like every year I become further and further from whatever
is like the most popular song in the country, because
I truly am not tapped into whatever fucking fourteen year
olds are listening to.

Speaker 2 (35:17):
But like, you know, when when what's his name with
the nigga.

Speaker 1 (35:21):
With the rainbow hair that kept yelling about Kashi Takashi
when he was at his height.

Speaker 4 (35:26):
He was really at a height. Yeah, and I had
never heard.

Speaker 2 (35:30):
A sing song. Yeah, yeah, Gomo did go crazy. Yeah,
but but.

Speaker 1 (35:35):
Truly it wasn't even me being like, oh I hate
this dude. I didn't know he existed, right, because he
was the biggest artist on the planet for children.

Speaker 2 (35:44):
Yeah.

Speaker 6 (35:44):
Also, children are more prone to idle worship, where when
you get older, you look at it that shit and
you're like, oh, kind of dumb, you know what I mean,
Like like like, look, how do you feel about rappers
and shit like that when you're thirty, when you're almost forty,
which we're not, what's twenty eight?

Speaker 1 (36:07):
But yeah, no, I totally agree. There were so many
people that I admired that I was like, oh, these
are like the most awesome dudes. I thought D twelve
was so cool.

Speaker 2 (36:23):
The losers man, Yeah, they made drugs sound shitty.

Speaker 3 (36:26):
Yeah, they took a couple of.

Speaker 2 (36:30):
Couple.

Speaker 4 (36:31):
Yeah, I thought it was. I was like, man, these
guys really got it.

Speaker 1 (36:35):
They're rapping, but they're funny.

Speaker 4 (36:37):
Yeah, how did they think of it? There's twelve of them,
but only but they all had double personality. Yeah, twelve.

Speaker 2 (36:47):
Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 3 (36:48):
That's how those like perverted famous people get it.

Speaker 2 (36:52):
You know what I mean.

Speaker 3 (36:52):
It's like these kids do worship them and look up
to them and just like think they're great. So they're
very just susceptible to getting taken it, taking advantage of
and stuff like that is wild.

Speaker 5 (37:02):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (37:03):
Now now the question, I guess when you hear this
and and the white girls specifically, do you presume that
these are Canadian?

Speaker 3 (37:13):
I kind of now, you know Cincinnati from Canada.

Speaker 6 (37:18):
Cincinnati is down by Kentucky. In Kentucky March fourteenth, it's
like further south. But Ohio connection, it's all it's northeast.

Speaker 4 (37:28):
Yeah, it's not.

Speaker 1 (37:29):
It's not impossible. We're above the Mason Dixon So.

Speaker 6 (37:32):
And Canadians they like to travel. It seems like a
place where you have to travel further to get to
big cities to stuff, you know what I mean. I
think I'm down from Saskatchewan. That was my best Canadian.
Oh you got the shoes there.

Speaker 3 (37:48):
But Minnesota it's like Bobby's Mom from Bobby's World.

Speaker 2 (37:56):
I think it just depends on how you and the sentence. Yeah,
I like it when they say it's a beauty it's
a beauty, always a beauty. Oh he's a beauty, dude.
They like it when you go there and make fun
of it.

Speaker 4 (38:12):
They do, but they don't have a lot.

Speaker 2 (38:14):
No, they're just happy you're here.

Speaker 4 (38:16):
Thanks.

Speaker 2 (38:20):
Always got professional.

Speaker 1 (38:23):
I always find that with when I go to like Canada,
I'm like, I make fun of them, and they're they
laugh hard.

Speaker 6 (38:29):
They're really funny though, Seth Rogan, dan Aykroyd, like, what's
his name not Chris, Jim Carrey, Jim Carrey. They I've
always I've always thought that Canadians are very funny. You
gotta think that's per capita, Like I think they're pound
Canadians are pretty hilarious.

Speaker 2 (38:49):
They're very funny.

Speaker 1 (38:50):
But but I think, uh, the the very premise that
despite all the all the changes, all the successes we've
found in takenology and resources, they still have to leave
their country to truly ascend sex with the Platters.

Speaker 4 (39:07):
It's it's too much. Let's not accuse of spin.

Speaker 2 (39:16):
Good guys, Good guys.

Speaker 1 (39:17):
Now, So your mom believed this about the Platters? Did
she then expand? Was she like, oh, these other groups
are doing that too, or were the plan?

Speaker 3 (39:27):
She was just telling me random stuff about random stuff,
like a long story, how why.

Speaker 2 (39:37):
She ever talked about fucking any other singers that came
to Buffalo.

Speaker 3 (39:42):
So I know she used to date some NFL player,
but I don't remember who. And then she did tell
me about the Rick James thing, and he charged her
up outside of a show because so she was making shirts,
so I think she was like drawing him on the shirts.
So she was selling the shirts outside and I think
she was cool with somebody that was friends with Rick
James and then he saw the shirt and he was like,
those shirts are ugly, just walked away, so he was

(40:08):
he was.

Speaker 2 (40:14):
I'm not a fan, was going through it.

Speaker 3 (40:17):
But yeah, I've just heard different stuff about because my
dad was also an actor and a college professor. It's
a lot. So I've just heard a lot of random
stuff about random celebrities doing random things like Jimmy what
was the name.

Speaker 4 (40:31):
Jimmy J. J.

Speaker 3 (40:32):
Walker d. Yeah, he said he was like just super rude,
and I've heard that from a lot of people.

Speaker 4 (40:38):
I've heard that that he was very rude.

Speaker 3 (40:39):
Like he came to a play my dad was doing.
It was like he was all right. They came backstage
and telling him like we want ship. He told me
about like.

Speaker 1 (40:47):
Jimmy Jimmy, I would say, holds the record for keeping
the mic furthest from his.

Speaker 2 (40:54):
From his face when performing.

Speaker 4 (40:56):
Not no more.

Speaker 2 (41:00):
Right.

Speaker 1 (41:02):
He passed away Jimmy Jimmy believe saying like your culture culture.

Speaker 2 (41:10):
Yeah, it was.

Speaker 1 (41:11):
It's he's he's a real nasty motherfucker. See they don't
we want Seven years old, he's still kicking. I'm still
say it was very rude. He told me about like
how the mafia used to come up to like charge
people up that were doing plays and stuff, like you
had to pay them when they were like blow your
ship up.

Speaker 2 (41:30):
And I would be so fisted. I'm just trying to
get off.

Speaker 1 (41:34):
My community theater. It ain't even about I'm just trying
to show the kids are raising in the sun. You
want the money.

Speaker 3 (41:45):
Yeah, Divine was nice. I would have cried, I don't
know why.

Speaker 2 (41:52):
I don't want her to I don't want her to
be man, I don't want her to be.

Speaker 3 (41:55):
She's all of our mom sometimes grandma.

Speaker 2 (42:00):
I hear this now and.

Speaker 1 (42:02):
A part of me is like, yeah, it is silly
for me to have even questioned it. It feels very
sort of rounded in a real legitimate like thing.

Speaker 6 (42:12):
I mean, the only even part of it that makes
me like, oh, that's crazy is the Canadian part.

Speaker 3 (42:18):
Yeah, like why were y'all going up? I feel like
you could have got like you said in city, Like
why do you get it in city?

Speaker 1 (42:24):
My guess is it may have been less of like
this specific to Canada thing, But because your mom was
in Buffalo, that's where she was getting, they maybe have
been like routing a tour and they're going up and
down and in certain areas, and so what your mom
is witnessing is every time they're back here, they keep

(42:44):
getting these same Canadian to come down. And I bet
in Cincinnati there was some bitches in Kentucky that they
show up because they were routed that way, Like I think,
and all, you know, this maybe expands the conversation a
little bit, but I think all of it ultimately makes
me feel like it's such a shame that the freaky

(43:05):
stuff you're describing on them tapes was not more accepted
in a public sense so that the platters don't feel
like they have to be trafficking women in order to
get whatever.

Speaker 3 (43:17):
Their career, and it's been being freaky freaky, I think
people should be free to be freaky and do what
you're doing, because it.

Speaker 7 (43:26):
Does ruin people's life, like just be nasty age.

Speaker 3 (43:31):
Oh yeah, I forgot about that, That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (43:37):
It still was. It wasn't just like they were like,
I just want to be fruit.

Speaker 3 (43:43):
I don't we're going under the When they were doing
it with the adult one, that was wrong, absolutely, because
that's not freaky.

Speaker 6 (43:54):
That's crust what I'm saying. But the freaking point we
have to get Canadians.

Speaker 1 (43:58):
And to me, I don't know that I maybe this
is dangerous to say a part of me wonders how
much those four dudes were all pedophiles, Like you found
a super group of pedophiles where they can just sing
and are all like minded, you know what I mean?

Speaker 2 (44:16):
Person those words together, super group of pedophiles.

Speaker 1 (44:19):
But also I mean, do you know what I'm saying,
Like I think, I think if you spend enough time
with people doing sort of like these secretive, vile things,
then you start.

Speaker 4 (44:30):
To bend and bend and bend.

Speaker 1 (44:32):
And now suddenly you have a fourteen year old and
you're justifying it anything. She looks grown and she which
is so wild. Her parents said it's cool, like whatever
it is.

Speaker 3 (44:46):
They used to do that too, like were coming off,
but oh yeah, go have sex with Elvis because I
want to be famous. I mean even the stuff with
R Kelly were they're like, yeah, send your child and
R Kelly will give you singing lessons.

Speaker 2 (44:59):
Like I think there's a I think while it is vile,
it is wrong.

Speaker 1 (45:04):
I am not advocating it at all. I understand how
a train of thought is created for those individuals that
go from having sex with grown women to suddenly having
sex with children.

Speaker 4 (45:17):
It's fucking up.

Speaker 3 (45:18):
People be nasty, especially like they love being if your
thing is like you love being worshiped. You know, they
were liking that these children are so excited to see
them and they're big fans. It's like a grown woman
is going to be a fan, but not it's not
the same energy. Is a nasty? Do agree? We're not
saying pedophilia part. We are saying, like, be consensual with

(45:42):
your nasty.

Speaker 2 (45:42):
Yeah, you could be nasty. It's okay to be nasty.
I think, Yeah, I think nasty does not have to
be a bad word.

Speaker 6 (45:52):
No, we should take the connotation off because it's everything
everything nasty everybody boo boos.

Speaker 2 (46:00):
They gotta wipe it. It's all nasty.

Speaker 1 (46:02):
We're not supposed to be touching them holes mostly at all.
They're supposed to be just purely functional in some ways.

Speaker 3 (46:10):
And and we've denied being there and all this stuff
we've be doing, we're not supposed to be doing it.

Speaker 2 (46:14):
That's not what we're here and we're doing. I want
to be I'm a big fan.

Speaker 4 (46:21):
I'm never changing my ways.

Speaker 2 (46:23):
Yeah, you're just saying that it is.

Speaker 4 (46:25):
You know, it isn't what God intended.

Speaker 3 (46:28):
You're supposed to.

Speaker 5 (46:33):
God.

Speaker 4 (46:34):
If God didn't intend it, it wouldn't it wouldn't.

Speaker 2 (46:36):
Fit in there.

Speaker 3 (46:39):
Sometimes it doesn't, okay, Sometimes it don't.

Speaker 1 (46:44):
Sometimes you don't. You gotta be like, we just got
part ways to shake hands.

Speaker 2 (46:49):
It didn't work out.

Speaker 3 (46:50):
I appreciate your respect.

Speaker 2 (46:52):
You you respect me. Tell your friends.

Speaker 4 (46:56):
Already in the.

Speaker 3 (46:57):
Group somebody else over, that's cool, as.

Speaker 4 (47:07):
I do.

Speaker 2 (47:07):
Like Canada, I think we did it. I think this
feels like we covered the bulk of it.

Speaker 1 (47:13):
I think it we're all in agreement that certainly this
type of freaky dicky behavior existed, and whether or not
the platters specifically we're trafficking women exclusively from Canada. It
does not seem out of the realm of possibility that
y'all were doing some nasty ship and got caught.

Speaker 4 (47:31):
Yeah, yeah, I agree.

Speaker 1 (47:33):
All right, Roxy, you want to sell the people where
they can find you going on? Look, I think you're
right there.

Speaker 3 (47:39):
Yeah, they can find me everywhere at Roxy Hayes ro
o x X y H A z E. I do
stand up. So I'm currently on a tourist called it
Whatever Happens Happens to Her and you can check out
where I'm at at Roxyhayes dot com. I also am
a nerd core wrapper, so I have an album coming
out in like a month or two. Okay, so yeah,
check that out. It's called Never Knows Best. Also game,

(48:00):
so check me out on Twitch. I do a lot
of stuff, so just look at my stuff.

Speaker 4 (48:05):
Here we go, go Twitch, go listen, go see her live,
follow the whole shit.

Speaker 2 (48:11):
What you got? I do two to three things?

Speaker 6 (48:18):
I do him good though, two cool guy jokes eighty
seven on Instagram, Patreon dot com, backslash David Bori go
buy my special Birth of a Nation with a g
very funny and April twenty fifth and twenty six, you
can see me at the Dallas Comedy Club in Dallas, Texas.

Speaker 2 (48:37):
I got a new set. It's pretty good, yeah, than
the last one.

Speaker 4 (48:42):
I like it.

Speaker 2 (48:42):
Baby, I never left, but I feel pretty good about it.

Speaker 1 (48:46):
You can follow me at Langston Kerman on all social
media platforms.

Speaker 4 (48:49):
You can see me live.

Speaker 1 (48:51):
April tenth, I will be in Salt Lake City at
The Wise Guys. And then April seventeenth, I'll be in
Las Vegas the Wise Guys in Las Vegas. And you
can send us your own drops, your own conspiracy theories.
You can tell us what other groups are super pedophiles.
Send it all to my Mama pod at gmail dot com.

(49:12):
We would love to hear from you. Give us a
call at eight four four Little Moms. We love hearing
your voices. You've been sending so many drunk voicemails. It's funny,
it's hilarious. We don't ask that of you, but we
appreciated every single time. And like subscribe by the merch
rate review. Remember Love is Love by Bitch My Mama

(49:43):
Told Me is a production of Will Ferrell's Big Money
Players Network and iHeart Podcasts.

Speaker 2 (49:49):
Greet It and hosted by Langston correct Co.

Speaker 4 (49:52):
Hosted by David Bori, Executive.

Speaker 6 (49:54):
Produced by Will Ferrell, Hansani and Olivia Akilom.

Speaker 4 (49:58):
Co produced by Bee Wayne, edited and engineered by Justin.

Speaker 2 (50:02):
Kommon, music by Nick Chambers, artwork by Dogon Kriega.

Speaker 1 (50:06):
You can now watch episodes of My Mama Told Me
on YouTube. Follow at My Mama Told Me and subscribe
to our channel
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Hosts And Creators

Langston Kerman

Langston Kerman

David Gborie

David Gborie

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