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October 17, 2024 34 mins

Tap in to hear why some women will ditch human connection and turn to robots! 

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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Yeah, ask your question real good.

Speaker 2 (00:10):
Let's just keep it real straight shot with no chasing.
So I'm gonna get a little bit rougher. Wait, I'm
here for it. Those who really believe in the American process,
all of us Street shot, no Chase. Whats your girl chanting?
Figure out on the Black Effect Podcast Network. What's having?
Everybody tells on Figure straight shot on Chase on the
Black Effict podcast Network. iHeart Radio. We are in October.

(00:34):
This is actually Jay Welcome Jaye Horel. Good morning, welcome,
not good morning. You see, I'm all over the place.
Good afternoon, beautiful.

Speaker 3 (00:41):
Get afternoon.

Speaker 2 (00:42):
Gorgeous. Yes, I love gorgeous. By the way, it's my
favorite word. By the way, we didn't have a show
about that, the levels of is it beautiful, gorgeous? Cute?
You know, because I don't know about you, but I do.
I do rank them according to you know, my preference.
I don't know about you. There's a hierarchy. Yeah, there's
absolutely hierarchy for sure. For sure. We need to we

(01:05):
need to unpack that one day and kind of go
through that on when men compliment, like, for example, I
don't want to me, I wouldn't want a man calling
me qute like q what is that like? Cute? As? Like?
What that's kids? A dog? You know what are we
talking about? I need? I need, I need certain words
you know that are my love language. So thank you
for my love language. But October is actually the year

(01:27):
in twenty twenty. In October, believe that is when I
released my first podcast on the Black bet podcast network.
So we are officially four years in the game. I
remember side of my contract or Jounala July, but we
did not kick off the network until October, So we
are officially four years in the game. Shout out to
my brother Charlemagne, to God for creating this fifteen twenty

(01:49):
creators going strong. A lot of folks started podcast networks
and they're no longer in existence. A lot of folks
started podcasts that are no longer in existence. And you
know a lot of people say, oh, all you got
to do, you know, is do this and do that,
and have realized that it is absolutely more than what
all you have to do. And I want to make
this point, Jay, because I know, you know, you're also

(02:11):
in the space of what we call you know, a
lot of black media, if you will, and it's no
shade to anybody, But I do want people to know
the different genres and the different terminologies. I was looking
at they're giving out some podcasts awards. I wasn't one,
but they ranked like the best podcasts. And there were
some people in the commons saying, you know what about

(02:32):
such and such and such and such, and they have
YouTube shows And it's no this to YouTube because you know,
I brag on my YouTube numbers on certain projects that
I'm a part of, certain projects. I you know, I
don't talk about my YouTube numbers. So I understand where
YouTube has its significance. But I do want people to
understand podcasts is an audio only format. So what people

(02:57):
may not understand is the Breakfast Club is a radio.
I just want to use Breafast Club as an example
because a lot of people thought the Breakfast Club is
just on YouTube. That's all they've ever seen Breakfast Club
on YouTube. All they saw was on Revolt. So I
want to remind people the Breakfast Club is a morning show.
You know, I said to remind you all the time, Jay,
you keep talking to me, But who did good today
on YouTube? I'm like Jay was an eight million? Eight

(03:19):
million people listen them up. We're in over one hundred markets,
right club actually going to your car turn on ninety
seven point nine, ninety two point one in Atlanta, ninety
seven point nine in Houston. It is actually on the dial.
I know people don't listen to the radio anymore, but
people actually do listen to the radio in the morning

(03:40):
in their commute. They may not listen at their three
o'clock they will put in their you know, put in
their music link they stuff up to Bluetooth or whatever.
But actually Morning Drive that is still a very popular
segment of the day. Steve Harvey, move the show, Ricky
Smiley Morning Show, Breakfast Club sway in the more those

(04:00):
are morning shows, you know, the seven to ten and
six to ten in most markets. After that they take
the audio only and they put it on the black effect,
the audio only, so the Breakfast Club actually is a
podcast as well, audio only. Then they take the visual

(04:21):
of recording the interviews and put that on YouTube. It
was at one point where they would put the visual
also on Revolt or when we were on bet taking
the visual. So the Breakfast Club is broken up into
three different areas that it goes into. So when people say, oh,
name the best podcasts, and somebody says Joe Budden the

(04:41):
Breakfast Club Dad and somebody that is only on YouTube,
and they say, why didn't you name such and such
on YouTube? They're not a podcast, they are a YouTube show, right,
So podcasts still seventy percent of podcast listeners are white.
The top shows in the country are a white So
what Charlemagne did with Black Effect podcast Network. Although you

(05:04):
see visuals with a lot of these podcasts drink champs
orrible decisions, you don't see a visual mind. I need
you guys to know that the audio is an actual
podcast where people can go to Spotify, Apple, Our Heart,
wherever you get your podcasts, download it, and is the
audio only and it is a totally different listener. A
lot of the audio only listeners don't watch you too,

(05:26):
don't watch it, don't want it anywhere else. They consume
their information audio only. They may be listening while they're
working out. They maybe listening, you know, while they're working
around the house. So we do have audio only listeners,
which is why we don't have a visual with Straight
Shot No Chaser. I do want to do more visuals
when I relocate to Atlanta full time. But this is
actually an audio only show. So I just wanted to

(05:48):
give you guys some facts about that and why it
is a big deal what Charlemagne has done by getting
into the market of the podcast space, because there's not
a lot of so as far as I know black
owned podcasts networks, I'm plenty of black podcasts, but being
able to get into that space consistently and stay and

(06:11):
self advertisement for the audio only is a remarkable thing.
And we're four years in the game. So shout out
to everybody at Black Effect. Please make sure you do subscribe.
I gotta remind you guys every week, even if you
think you already subscribed, subscribe again, Please follow, and please
ask five friends. I do want to increase our numbers.
But speaking of increasing numbers and adding today is a

(06:36):
fun show. Now I'm gonna do a disclaimer.

Speaker 1 (06:39):
Jaye picked this story doc Don't.

Speaker 2 (06:41):
Put It on Me. Jay started off. She know I
was gonna wrong with it, and she knows she loved it.
When I get into these type of conversations and we're
just gonna get straight to it. Hey, you know they
say the the Dayton Pool has peeing it. Yeah, they
say it ain't what a supposed to be. They say
it's not. And this is not a gender thing, this,

(07:03):
I mean a color thing. This is just bottom line
women saying you know what, hey, I'm just gonna get
a robot, take this robot romance Jade and set this
up and so we can chi me in on this.

Speaker 3 (07:17):
So back in twenty sixteen, there was a British tabloid
that reported that by the year twenty twenty five, women
would be having sex with robots more than with other humans,
more than with men, or if they're their preference with
women by twenty twenty five, So the headline actually did

(07:40):
make some rounds. In twenty sixteen, however, that forecast is
kind of coming true. So reports are saying that there
will be robots being put on the shelves all right,
and so doctor Pearson that this is the futurelogist that
you know, made these predictions back in twenty sixteen reported

(08:04):
that there will be a rise in robot phelia, which
is a phenomenon where people develop emotional attachments and even
fall in love with robots. So it's it's crazy, So,
you know. Most recently, Complex magazine put up a story
that sex robots would be hitting.

Speaker 2 (08:24):
The shelves literally hitting Yeah, at the.

Speaker 3 (08:28):
End of this year or into twenty twenty five, soup y'all,
I said, literally hitting and hitting the shells. So, I mean,
this raises a lot of questions, Tis, and I knew
that this would be a conversation that would be highly
engaging if you would lead us in this conversation about

(08:48):
you know, a lot of women weighing, you know, their
neat needs sexually immediate gratification versus long term relationships. Right
that people such as you know, Candy and or other
celebrities and folks who have created their own sex toy brands,
for example. But with these robots and with AI incorporated

(09:13):
into these robots, you know, this takes that media gravity
gratification idea, and like like non human interaction, it takes
a different level. And so a lot of women are saying,
you know, according to these reports that we're seeing. When
I was researching this topic, I was like, oh my gosh,
this is so interesting. They're saying that women are preferring
to just sort of be alone and not deal with

(09:36):
a lot of the drama.

Speaker 2 (09:37):
Because but if a man doesn't have emotional connection anyway,
what's the difference I'm just going by what they say.
You know, if if if you if you're not if
you're not getting the emotional of you know, again, you
can't get one hundred percent of anything from anybody, but
if you're not, and let's just kind of take it
back a little bit. Men have always used a sex dolls,
so let's just diverse dolls, right, Yeah, let's just first

(09:59):
put that on the table. Men have always used sex dolls.
It's never been you know, that goes way back. You know,
if you even google, if we can google in real
time to see when the first sex doll. Matter of fact,
look look that up while I'm talking. Let's see when
the first sex doll was actually made. So men have
always used rubber dolls, sex dolls, it's always been uh,

(10:21):
you know, not every man obviously, but it's always been
on the market. As we talk now about the same way,
men have always you know, had had ways to relieve themselves,
and it was always a natural thing for a man
to masturbate our man to you know, self relief, take
care of himself. As things continue to evolve, women have

(10:45):
started saying, you know what, I know how to make
myself have an orgasm? I can get a toy. Toys
have gotten better and better and better and better, you know,
as over the years where women can now you know,
find pleasure without the companionship. And because you know, and
again I'm not saying I would be interested in a robot,

(11:06):
but I can certainly see as as as women are
starting to say, you know, what does companionship look like?
Is that always sexual? It might be let's just put
it on table, Jay. You know, it might be a
guy that's just a great friend and gives them great
camaraderie and gives them, you know, a peace of mind,

(11:29):
somebody they can talk to, somebody that fulfills them a
lot of ways. Platonic relationship that they're not attracted to sexually,
but she still has sexual needs. There's a such thing
as having different boxes checked, you know. And so for
women who are saying, you know what, I'm not interested
in being in a in a sexual relationship with a
man maybe STDs maybe you know, the the not wanting

(11:53):
to have a relationship be sexual, a man that don't
want to commit to you. Maybe you know, if I,
if I'm gonna do that, I might as well be
with Roger the robot. You know, with no commitment at
least I know where at every night I don't have
to be tossing and turn it you do get so
I can see, you know, as things continue to evolve,
you know that there are going to be other options

(12:17):
for women like there, like there has always been options
for men. Not a route that I will particularly you know,
be interested in, but certainly not judgmental at all. Now
Here in the article it says could ever they could
actually start falling in love with the machines because of AI.
So I guess, I guess they can tea the machine

(12:39):
and tell lies.

Speaker 3 (12:39):
Is that what they're saying, I don't know, or just
you know, women will be able to program these sex
robots to you know, accommodate them emotionally as well.

Speaker 1 (12:51):
Now, to answer your question about when, like the.

Speaker 3 (12:53):
History of sex dolls, according to Wikipedia, I'm seeing that
they had some variation of sex dolls in this sixteenth
century and Europe and then with the rubber boom, you know,
with I guess you know, with imperialism and you know,
them tapping rubber and the rubber trade. They're saying that
there were eight rubber sex dolls were invented in the

(13:18):
eighteen hundreds with the billion rubber boom. And I'm not
I'm just reading what it says. Okay, it says. The
first document to appearance of these rubber sex dolls is
in an article from a French newspaper called Lay Figureo.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
Are you kidding me?

Speaker 1 (13:33):
I'm bad. I'm gonna send you the link so you
know I'm not capping. No, I'm gonna send you the screenshot.

Speaker 2 (13:39):
Yeah, no, the links so I can pose it. It's hilarious,
Lay Pigaro.

Speaker 3 (13:45):
So yeah, the eighteen hundreds and the first exhibition of
American rubber like rubber products were at the eighteen fifty five,
like worldfare and sex so as we're part of it.

Speaker 1 (14:01):
So there we there, we have it, Ley figure O.

Speaker 2 (14:04):
Yeah. So again it has always been like let's just
you know, put it out there. Women have always been
uh disposable in that way. Let's just be you know,
I don't let me not use the word disposable, but
a need that a man has, It doesn't whether it's

(14:24):
it's a physical woman or it's a hole in the
wall or sex doll or whatever. Getting a knee feeled,
if you will, I would say objectified, objective.

Speaker 3 (14:32):
The woman has been turned into an object. Yeah, and
women are turning men into objects. Of course, that's exactly it.
I think objectified is some of it. But also I'm
struggling with other words that I want to put. That's
not even because it's not a real woman, so you can't.
You can't objectify an actual doll. But I do know
where you're going with that.

Speaker 2 (14:53):
But I think also it's looked at as just say,
you know, this is just this is what takes care,
this need. I don't need any additional connection. It doesn't
have to be a relationship, an emotional connection, anything outside
of that. Just this is what's gonna give me off.
And I have that need, and men have that need
many times, once a day, twice a day. It is

(15:14):
a need for men, and it's looked at as hey,
as long as it's just a woman that I can
just get that off on, it doesn't matter how I
feel about or no emotional connection, move on. And what
has happened due to all of the experiences that women
have had, unfortunately has allowed women to go into a
space to say, you know what, if y'all can do it,

(15:35):
I can do it. You know if if the same
way you can just get with a doll and discard
the doll to the side. I can get my physical needs,
sexual need taken care of and discarded to the side.
I think it's interesting to know that they're talking about
these dolls and the emotional connection because notice they didn't
do that with men dolls, but still recognizing that there's

(15:57):
an emotional connection that women may need need. But I think,
and I was just talking about this with a friend,
where you know, they say, and I love when I've
always heard this with men operating in abundance and women

(16:18):
operating in scarcity, meaning that if a woman doesn't have
all of her needs metter she's a faithful woman, she
just goes without those needs. Where men will absolutely have
those boxes check you know, the work, wife, the strip
at the club that they like, the side piece, the
wife at home, the girlfriend, the you know, all of
the needs that they have that they need to get

(16:39):
fulfilled and do that very well. Where women are just
say I'll just be in this one relationship and even
though that person only has the capacity to make me
happy sixty or seventy percent, I'm okay with that. And
so women just do without where men again, hence the
sex dog haven't had to do without. So now that
women are becoming were evolved more affirmed than their sexuality,

(17:03):
I can certainly see where women are saying, you know what,
I'm talking about it with my girlfriend, you know, with
you know, going in and having babies with our men
and now sex dolls with our men. Now and you know,
a lot of men are not gonna like this. You
know they're gonna say, you know, this is the problem
the traditional family, this to that. But you know, let
the record show that men benefit from marriage far more

(17:25):
than women. You know, I know they like to say
that it's the woman, but no, according to the stats,
uh Jada Jade. Now again, alimony split up once it's over. Yes,
I can say that women typically if the woman doesn't
make more, but in the marriage, in the actual marriage,
the man benefits emotionally, spiritually, physically, all of those things

(17:49):
more than the woman. So now that women, you know,
are are looking at other options for partnership, companionship and
still having a sexual need, this just seems right in line,
you know with women who are saying, you know what,
and it may not be. They may water relationship, they
may want to they may say I'm tired of just
friends with benefits. If I'm gonna do that, I might

(18:10):
as well just have a robot, you know. I'm tired
of a man having sex with no commitment. I might
as well have a robot, you know. So it made
sense to me, Jay, I can absolutely see it.

Speaker 3 (18:20):
Yes, And according to another source, this is out of
Chinese publication, there is saying that there's a whole booming
industry around humanoid sex robots. And I mean, I know,
I saw this topic trending, and then I saw the

(18:41):
article in Complex, and then it went back to the
British the article from the Sun that was, you know,
in twenty sixteen, and these predictions seem to be, you know,
coming closer closer as we approach your twenty twenty five.
And then they're also making other predictions about what would
happen in twenty fifty that you know, a lot of
people will be in love with these robots, especially with

(19:04):
this technology with AI and how you can literally program anything.
I mean, we programmed Serie, we program Google, we programm
a Lexa, and so there's gonna be a lot of
programming going around. So I just I just find this
to be a really interesting topic. I am a proponent,
you know, a strong advocate of the traditional black family,

(19:25):
but not everybody is going to see it that way.
And so you know, somebody's buying these robots and so
this humanoid robot industry.

Speaker 2 (19:32):
Yeah, I'm an advocate of it as well. You know,
I'm an advocate of it as well. I can be
advocate for plenty of things, but that doesn't mean, you
know that it's everybody's reality, right and everybody and again,
everybody doesn't want a family, so let's be let's just
name that. You know, so everybody doesn't want children, everybody
want to be married, everybody want you know, the human
needs still has a sexual human need, so family doesn't

(19:56):
necessarily correlate with sexual need and desire. We know that
by plenty of people who are in marriages and still
to step out on their marriage. So I think this
is something that people recognize they have a human need,
just like with a sex toy, and they're really they're
willing to step it up to go from just using

(20:17):
the roles to get Roger the robot.

Speaker 3 (20:19):
Listen, Roger the robot, who probably won't you know, talk back,
He probably won't give me no headaches, he probably won't
make promises and break them right or whatever the workings are.
You know, it's really interesting. I just wanted to name that.

Speaker 1 (20:34):
What was it?

Speaker 3 (20:34):
A couple of years ago, I went to I went
on vacation and to a wedding in the Dominican Republic
and stayed on a you know, a private It was
like an adult it was a resort. One side was
a family side and the other side was the adult side.
And I literally saw like a white dude with a mannequin,
carrying this mannequin around everywhere he went.

Speaker 1 (20:56):
It was the strangest thing to me.

Speaker 3 (20:58):
I could only imagine what that would look like if
we see these robots like actually walking down the street
with their girlfriends or boyfriends or their owners or whatever,
going to coffee shops or it's just I don't.

Speaker 1 (21:09):
Know, I don't know.

Speaker 3 (21:10):
This just seems like some futuristic stuff. But according to
what I'm reading about this robot industry and the rise
of robophilia again, which is a phenomenon where people develop
emotional attachments and even fall in love with robots.

Speaker 2 (21:26):
I mean, people items gonna go and keep real people
fall in love with their toys, you know, they fall
in love. We're being funny, but yeah, I don't like
futuristic what like, people need companionship, you know, on different
and not everybody, on different levels. People cope that they're animals,
you know, love their animals. But is it real companionship though,

(21:46):
if it's an object or whatever, or is that I
don't know. Is the man sitting next to you real
companionship if you just acting like an object or if.

Speaker 1 (21:55):
It's a robot though?

Speaker 3 (21:56):
Is that like a mental illness if you're treating it
and you know, making if you really think that this
is a human being that has.

Speaker 2 (22:01):
This spear, I don't think nobody asks it like it's
a human being. I think it's it's fulfilling a need.
I don't think that the article suggesting that people are
you know, treating it like a human being. I think
it is being programmed to address a human a need,
just the same way animals. People cope with animals that
are that love they animals like they're humans because it's

(22:22):
a coping mechanism for them that makes them feel safe.
It makes them feel comfortable. They're not as lonely, they're not.
Now again, it's not for me, but I know, we
quick to jump everything on mental illness, but I guess
we would have to look at the individual person and there,
you know, I don't think they're actually thinking Roger the
robot is a real person. I think Roger the robot,
you know, is fulfilling a need. I don't know about
the AI thing and having it being programmed to say

(22:43):
different things, but I certainly can see I certainly can
I mean certainly can see it and feeling a physical
need for.

Speaker 1 (22:51):
Sure, gotcha.

Speaker 3 (22:52):
Yeah, I mean it seems like some folks, a lot
of those plastic dolls though they would look at them
even they didn't talk back, and all that I've seen
on one of them HBO Special, you know where those
women those dolls now, not the plastic ones, but the
ones that really look like a real person.

Speaker 2 (23:09):
I don't know if you ever said, but they've done
plenty of documentaries on this, and they look like real people.
And men were getting connected, you know, uh, to those
you know, to those dogs, and it was companionship. You know,
everybody can't secure companionships. I don't know if it's a
mental illness as a matter of not being lonely and
whatever that, you know, I guess feels that void opposed

(23:33):
to depending on a human to do it and not
being able to get that knee met, but very much
still having the need, you know, is it a mental
illness that people get attached to their dogs again in
a way that is very human like sleep with the dog,
eat with the dog, they with you know. So I
just think it's just a need for connection and more
and more, especially if people are secluding themselves and you know,

(23:55):
the anxiety the people are dealing with, the depression that
people are dealing with, I could see them become and
you know, coping with something like.

Speaker 1 (24:02):
This got you.

Speaker 3 (24:03):
I can also see men getting jealous when they started
to see women are programming Roger to robot to be
Roger to jump off and they replaced by technology. So
I definitely, definitely, definitely am curious about what these scientists
and futurologists are making predictions about in terms of women

(24:26):
just sort of not interacting with other human beings in
the future, or or they're seeing more and more trends
of that, like women are tending to be like hmmm,
I don't want to be intimate, you know, or physical
with anyone.

Speaker 1 (24:39):
Yeah, another thing.

Speaker 3 (24:40):
Along these lines test because I know you mentioned earlier
in the show on this topic that a lot of
women opt out of human interaction, you know, due to STDs.
There's a study, an article that came out that said
that gen Z is ditching condoms, and the World Health
Organization even put out a statement about the alarming decline

(25:03):
in contraceptive use among gen Z. So I wonder if
you know gen Z will be I don't know if
they're you know, with technology and how society is changing,
I just thought that that was interesting, like.

Speaker 2 (25:16):
Yeah, they passing all types of stuff around. It Again,
in my era before me, when AIDS came out, it
was such a scary, scary thing, you know, in the nineties.
Now that you have medication that pretty much HIV is
no longer a death sentence. I can see how younger
generations just feel like, oh, well, you know, whatever I get,
I can just take a peel for it, you know,
And so not using condoms and not having safe sex

(25:38):
and not all those things. I could see that being
an issue. But I also, on the other hand, can
see where somebody will want to be the robot because
you're tired of constantly having infections and BV and all
these different kind of things because these men out here
for everybody. But in a lot of situations, a.

Speaker 3 (25:54):
Lot of women I've never did I've never done it,
never optics to do it.

Speaker 1 (25:57):
I had to do it.

Speaker 3 (25:58):
But a lot of women that I know that have
done online dating, they're saying that the dating pool is
looking real crazy right now, Like it's slim pickings out there.

Speaker 2 (26:07):
Yeah. I think it all depends on if you're talking
about black women as a whole nother show. It's slim pickens.
If you are limiting yourself to one race, one tight one,
this one, that definitely slim pickens. If you are open
to various careers, various stages in life, various.

Speaker 1 (26:29):
Israel should launch a large scale.

Speaker 2 (26:31):
I don't one second, Dwayne, let me my TV just
came back on. I'm gonna pick it right where I
left off, various stages in life, various racists. Then yeah,
slim pickings. So if you're saying I only want black
men who are certain height, with a certain income, and

(26:52):
it comes from a certain background and only this only that,
then yeah, slim pickings. But it's not sam Pickens. If
you're open to dating anybody, there's billions of Peo people
in the world, it's not slim pickings. If you're willing
to relocate, it's not slim pickings. If you're willing to
date out of state, it's not slim pickings. You know,
if you don't have and I'm not saying not have standards,
but if you're just open to love, it's not slim pickings.

(27:14):
So that idea that you here on social media coming
from people you know who like to make particularly I'm
just gonna be honest. If this is a black show,
like to make black women feel as if you have
to tolerate any and everything because you know, with slim pickings.
So actually it's not. It's just what you may be
interested in, you know, what works for you. Just being honest,

(27:36):
got you?

Speaker 3 (27:37):
Got you?

Speaker 2 (27:37):
Yeah?

Speaker 3 (27:38):
And I also know that people invest money in and
they pay for things that they value. So I'm wondering
what the price of one of these Rogerta robots might
go for.

Speaker 2 (27:47):
Oh yeah, did it say?

Speaker 1 (27:49):
No, I didn't say, but I'm wondering.

Speaker 3 (27:52):
I would be curious, and I would be curious to see,
like yo, how much women would would be willing to
pay on average for these It's a couple, a couple
of weeks.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
Hey, hey, well a lot of these women who are
taking care of me and at home. What's the difference
You're you're paying a couple thousand anyway. I mean, let's
just name it, Riss, name any any woman that's going
for this. Circumstances led her to this, So nobody get
offended about what I'm saying. I'm saying what it is.
If a woman is willing to invest in a robot,

(28:22):
that means she's exhausted all so it's no point in
playing about it. She's exhausted everything across the board. So
if she's willing to pay ten thousand for this, that
means she's she's has she has probably spent more than
that on relationship, lost more than that on relationship, constantly
always giving in relationship. If you're to the point where

(28:42):
now you're going to Roger the robot, the investment is
well worth it.

Speaker 3 (28:47):
I get a treat adversus.

Speaker 2 (28:52):
A one time investment. It's a one time investment like
those shows for one Time nineteen ninety nine. One time.
It's one time in investment. Yeah, you're done with it,
You done ruins your credit behind them, You done got
everything in your name you don't like, let's name it.
Anybody that's going to look for Roger the Robot has
exhausted all of the possible options and find this to

(29:16):
be the most reasonable solution for their lifestyle. Sounds worth
it to me. I'm not interested in Robert Roger the Robot.
I wanted to feel real and I'm but again, I'm
at a different place in my life right right, Yeah,
So everybody has to know, you know, when it comes
to where you have to know, like where you are
in your life, you know what what you're looking where

(29:38):
you are in your life, you know, and I've already
had those things done those things. So hey, you know,
it's just a you just got a couple of jobs
with me, and even that is a challenge. So you know,
when you look at women, even a couple of pop
it's like, hey, you only got a couple jobs. You
only just need to hang out. Made me feel GOODA
do that? Yeah, you you might give replace with Roger

(29:58):
the Robot. Now, maybe for a woman that wants a husband,
never been married, wants children, maybe Roger the Robots not
an option. But then you got to watch out for
people like my girl that went, you know, and got
artificially insiminated like women with money got options.

Speaker 1 (30:12):
Baby, yeah they do. And folks don't like it.

Speaker 3 (30:16):
They don't like it all the time, but they don't
have to like it because they don't have to raise
the babies or you know, live their lives or you know.

Speaker 2 (30:23):
It's right, listen, I got up to everybody in twenty
twenty five. I'm definitely gonna post this on my Instagram
because I just want to see the feedback and say, hey,
might as well cheaper, no drama, no std I'm with it.
If hey, you love it, you like it, I love it.
I'm necessary necessarily interested in Robert the Robot, but please

(30:46):
know it's nice to know that Roger the Robot is
an option, because life, at the end of the day,
is all about options.

Speaker 3 (30:53):
I just want to say, I noticed that you just
mixed their names up. You said Robert the Robot and
then you said Roger the Robot.

Speaker 2 (30:59):
Oh, I can have them both. They twins. This whole
thing is a poly It's a poly thing. I don't
I don't have to just have one options Roger, Robert, Riccardio,
like all of them. I can. I can call them
different names. All of that with no talk back. So
yeah that see that? See how the beautiful thing about options?
I can mix up the names. I can mix up

(31:21):
the names with no consequence behind it. Due this story
was gonna be interested, but I didn't realize that.

Speaker 1 (31:30):
It would be that fun.

Speaker 2 (31:31):
Yeah, No, it's fun.

Speaker 3 (31:33):
I love.

Speaker 2 (31:33):
Hey, it's all about options, girl, do what work for you,
and guess what brothers do will work for you. And
if you are tired of having to take care of
a woman or woman needing this, woman needing that, and
you know y'all constantly talking about child support, and how
y'all you know the system always taking from you and
this and that. Hey, by all means, go get rid
of the robot. You ain't gotta worry about it getting pregnant.

(31:55):
You ain't got to worry about a trapping you. You
don't have to worry about being on like for real.
You ain't got to worry about her sleeping with no
bunch of men. You don't. It's all yours. You can
say is yours and not it is yours. You ain't
got to worry about no, no mistrust of Hey, read
of the robot is also an option. So I'm with hey,
end date, Do it work for you, baby, do it

(32:16):
work for you.

Speaker 1 (32:18):
Shout out to read it, readA and Ronda and the.

Speaker 2 (32:20):
Real shout out to read program it to say all
everything I ain't gonna say, programming to not talk back,
programming to have the tone you wanted to have, programm
it to do all only thing. She ain't gonna do it.
She's gonna get up and paying no bills. She ain't
gonna cook, clean nothing. The same thing with these men, y'all,
these men robots, they not gonna pay no bills, like nothing.

(32:41):
So you need to handle all that on, y'awn. But
if you're willing to handle all it on, y'all, get
rid of the rope. Just agree with everything you say.
You ain't gotta worry about nothing. So I'm with it.
I'm with it if you if human interaction no longer
works for you, by all means, get a robot. I
endorse it. I support it. You guys, you can listening
a straight shot, no chaser. I look forward to twenty

(33:02):
twenty five. Y'all. Keep me post on how much it
costs so we can see what it is on the market.

Speaker 3 (33:07):
Yeah, well, were keeping our eyes out and then Also,
I want to keep studying this term robophilia, and I
want to follow and see these if these predictions are
coming true, and what the new predictions are for twenty
fifty and beyond along this topic.

Speaker 2 (33:22):
Yeah, and then people are robot field. Guess what some
people cheat philia, whole filia like whatever it is, whatever
floats your boat, baby, it ain't hurt nobody, It ain't.
It's only costing you money. It's deprivacy of your home.
You at least you ain't lying to nobody in playing
no games. So if it's a mental illness, then then
what is this up? And what is lying and manipulation

(33:43):
and games and cheat? You know what is that? I
guess has a mental illness as well called pathological life.
So end of the day, find your mental illness that
works for you.

Speaker 1 (33:53):
Well, what that's say? I guess you didn't land at
the plane.

Speaker 2 (33:56):
That's right, A lot of land to play, all right, y'all,
y'all have good week with tap In tap In with
his next week. Peace peace. If you like what you
heard on Straight Shot No Chaser, please subscribe and drop
a five star review and tell a friend. Straight Shot
No Chaser is a production of the Black Effect podcast
Network in iHeartRadio on TESZLM figure out, and I like
to thank our producer editor mixer Dwayne Crawford and our

(34:18):
executive producer Charlotmagne da God. For more podcasts from iHeartRadio,
visit the iHeartRadio app, Apple Podcasts, or wherever you get
your podcasts
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Host

Tezlyn Figaro

Tezlyn Figaro

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