Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Gorge listen to the Black Guy Who Tips podcast because.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
Rod and Karing Hodd.
Speaker 3 (00:13):
Hey, welcome to another episode of the Blackout to his podcast.
I'm your host, Rod, joined us always by my co host,
and we are live on a Tuesday. Ready to do
some podcast and find us everywhere you find podcast. Don't forget.
Tickets are for sale the show notes have them live.
(00:35):
You can watch us even if you're not in person
in Charlotte, North Carolina, at the bloomer Thal Center for
Performing Arts the twenty eighth of February, the last day
of February. It's a Friday, seven pm. Of course, we
will have VIP meet and greet that will start at
five point thirty, so we have an hour to take pictures,
(00:56):
sign posters, all that type of stuff for people. We're
looking forward to all that. But if you can't be
there in person, that's no excuge. You can still get
your virtual tickets and you can enjoy it with us
virtually watching it broadcast live. And honestly, you guys help
us out. We've been setting everything up, paying for everything.
You know, there's you know we do more than just
(01:17):
pay for the venue. You know, you got to pay
for the photographer, the person that's going to Bry broadcast
it live for us. We have to pay some of
the workers that are union workers there, right, you know,
these these stickers and these posters, none of it is free.
So we're we're paying for all this stuff and the
hopes that we make our money back on the back end,
which is from you guys buying tickets. That's really as
(01:39):
simple as it gets. Pay JL cove In. You know,
like we're paying people to come do this stuff, and
we want people to feel appreciated. So make sure you
buy your tickets, is my point, you know, if you
want to support the show, and of course, just like
every time we do this, even though it's more work
for me, if you can make it in person, but
(02:01):
you would like to donate some tickets for somebody that
that that can be here in person but doesn't have
the money, I will facilitate that. Just email me the
Blackouts as a Gmail after you buy your tickets and
after they send you the PDF foul. They're gonna send
you a PDF foul a couple of days before the event.
If you forward me that email, I will pass those
on to people who can't be.
Speaker 2 (02:22):
There surround the area and like I don't got the five.
Speaker 3 (02:26):
Yeah, so just letting you guys know about that, uh,
the official weapon of the show that already say this
folding chair, unofficial sport and bulletball extreme. All right, let's
get into the show. I plenty of stuff to talk about.
You know, we took yesterday off because yesterday was President's
(02:46):
Day or you know, if you've got Google calendars, president
everybody except Barack Obama Day. Karen, do you have any banter?
Speaker 4 (02:56):
I do?
Speaker 3 (02:57):
All right?
Speaker 2 (02:59):
Do you have any.
Speaker 3 (03:02):
Talk to me?
Speaker 2 (03:04):
Do you have any.
Speaker 4 (03:08):
Talk to me?
Speaker 3 (03:10):
Do you have any banter?
Speaker 2 (03:12):
Banter?
Speaker 3 (03:13):
Banter?
Speaker 2 (03:13):
Banter banter? Do you have any banter?
Speaker 4 (03:26):
Talk to me?
Speaker 2 (03:28):
Do you have any banter? Banter? All right, Karen, let's
let's let's banter us up.
Speaker 3 (03:35):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (03:37):
My first thing we was at. This happened a while ago,
but we was at one of them, Me and Roger,
we like like ramens and noodles and things like that.
I was eating so hard I found a noodle in
my hoodie pocket.
Speaker 2 (03:49):
I did not realize that I was throwing down so hard.
I was like, the fuck this no to come from?
Oh yeah, Carrien, you was eating noodles earlier that ship.
It was good and ship I didn't care.
Speaker 3 (04:03):
A little little road treat for you.
Speaker 2 (04:05):
Yes, random noodle and I wil confused myself.
Speaker 3 (04:09):
One for them, one for you, a parent of so,
uh what was I gonna say? What? I had some banter?
Oh you know whoever I was talking with. We were
talking with Keith Malley and he was upset as he
as he gets about Keith Maley from the podcast Keith
(04:30):
and the Girl. He was upset as he gets about
the word or he is a big part of his life.
And uh, sometimes if it's not right, it can bother him.
You know, when they use words like Sally and and
and that's you know, and I get it because I've
never seen anyone use the word Sally myself other than
someone's pro like actual.
Speaker 2 (04:52):
Name, yes, and Sally made the people.
Speaker 3 (04:54):
Sally May is also uh, you know a name. You know,
if someone said, hey, have you seen Sally May, you'd
be like, who is that?
Speaker 2 (05:03):
You know?
Speaker 3 (05:04):
Some money right, so you know. And the other day
the term was Smith like uh, you know, and he
he didn't like it because once again, you know, that's
Joe Smith, Will Smith, Larry Smith. But of course Smith,
you know, probably for me playing a lot of video games.
(05:25):
When I hear the word smith, obviously I think of
a name. But if you told me like, oh no,
it's not a name, what else is I'd be like, oh, okay,
like a blacksmith, locksmith, iron smith, locksmith, word smith, you
know what, those type of topics, those type of things.
But what it made me think about beyond Smith is
(05:46):
that I believe the origin had to be it was
somebody's name, and whoever Smith was had amazing pr That
person was a genius because not because they really were ging,
but they they supplemented their name for expert. So it's like, hey, man,
I'm looking for somebody that can fix some locks, and
it's like, you mean a lock smith. Well my name
(06:08):
is mister Smith. I can fix all the locks. He
could have been lying, but whatever he did, he managed
to insert expert for smith, blacksmith, word smith, whatever it
just means expert Smith means expert. So shout out to
that person, because I mean that could have been No
one knew it at the time, but everybody was up
(06:29):
for the same thing. But none of us had the foresight.
None of our ancestors were like Joan, we could be
like that he's a real lock Jones. Oh you you
need to go to the Black Jones. But Smith beat
everybody to the shit on top of it, So congratulates
to him.
Speaker 1 (06:47):
I found out that just because they call your name
at the game does not mean that you actually play.
We were at the game and they called a player's
name and we've seen the player, and then the player
just this spit didn't come out. Name was up on
the roster, and I was like, oh, it don't mean that.
Speaker 2 (07:07):
You have to play.
Speaker 3 (07:08):
Apparently Joannis was a late scratch. He had a calf issue.
He tried to work it out in the layup line,
but then the the game started and uh, they even
announced Jiannis and Johannis was did not play a second
of that game. Uh, and the people that bet money
were pissed.
Speaker 2 (07:26):
Yeah, because they were very angry in our section.
Speaker 3 (07:30):
Yeah, so he was very upset. But they were very
upset because gamblers depend on that information. He was listed
on the jury port, but he was listed as going
to play, So I don't know what the gambling apps
have to do. I'm assuming, I'm assuming everyone gets the
money back. But yeah, they were pissed. They were very upset.
Speaker 2 (07:49):
Oh, that's that's yours.
Speaker 3 (07:51):
Yeah, go ahead, okay, yeah, oh I know you, I know,
I know, just go okay, finish yours out. I have
one that's kind of long, and I don't know if
I'm gonna do it.
Speaker 2 (08:01):
Okay, I don't know. Problem, I can make this my
last one. Then we had went.
Speaker 1 (08:07):
To this place and uh they had like a like
a tea machine, and as somebody that worked at restaurants,
I know how the tea machine goes, but I mean
t machine like uh.
Speaker 2 (08:19):
Ice sweet tea on sweet tea and stuff like that.
Speaker 1 (08:22):
But this tea machine was very confusing because it was
set up like the other ones, but it had buttons
at the top. They're confused the ship out of me,
and I guess they done spruce it up and made
them fancy. So the sweet tea and the unsweet tea
is kind of in the same thing. I guess they
must got to divide it up. And I didn't know.
Speaker 2 (08:40):
I was like, oh, we I fancy that.
Speaker 1 (08:41):
I was so lost because I was just because it
had the hand, because it had like the handle that
you normally have at the bottom how you pulled, so
I was just pulling the hand that didn't realize I
had my tea too.
Speaker 2 (08:52):
It was so confusing. I figured it out though, but
uh yeah, technology and.
Speaker 3 (08:56):
Old people, okay, all right. I was it like a
curric where like like how Kuric you can pick the
it just makes the water hot and puts it through
the thing or something. Or it was cold.
Speaker 2 (09:10):
No, all the tea was cold.
Speaker 3 (09:13):
Yeah. I don't know anything about this.
Speaker 2 (09:14):
It was very, very confusing. At first. I was like,
what's going on?
Speaker 1 (09:17):
And then I happened to look up and there was
some breaking buttons on it.
Speaker 2 (09:20):
I was like, I think I suposed to push this button.
I was like, sweet, where was this at?
Speaker 1 (09:25):
At that place we went to on su Bowl, they
didn't have the wings.
Speaker 3 (09:31):
The the hot dog place.
Speaker 2 (09:34):
Yes, they had the X place in it.
Speaker 3 (09:36):
Yes, okay, cool?
Speaker 2 (09:38):
All right. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (09:38):
I don't drink tea, so I never know the tea technology.
But I guess you didn't know either. You drink tea
all the time.
Speaker 1 (09:45):
Yeah, I do that why I was confused. I was like,
I've been around enough tea to know that this don't.
Speaker 3 (09:50):
Make no sense.
Speaker 2 (09:52):
Sounds like you need to catch up since apparently I
am behind the times on the tea game.
Speaker 3 (09:58):
All right, so nothing else or.
Speaker 2 (10:03):
Oh I can keep going.
Speaker 3 (10:05):
Okay, keep going. I did not rush you or tell
you to stop.
Speaker 2 (10:08):
Okay.
Speaker 1 (10:09):
Speaking of places, we probably end up talking about this
place when we do another lip smacking good I tried
something called a Memphis dog.
Speaker 2 (10:18):
It was actually really really good. It has slow and
pull a pork on a hot dog. It was absolutely delicious.
Speaker 1 (10:24):
I don't know if that's a true Memphis dog, but
that's what the board called it.
Speaker 2 (10:28):
So don't reawriting up here talking about it ain't our thinny, bitch.
I don't know.
Speaker 1 (10:31):
I know that they said it was a Memphis dog
and it was delicious.
Speaker 3 (10:36):
Your your banter is just stuff you did. That's you,
just right now, stuff you did well. So that sparks
the thought for me, which is who decides what goes
on what locations? Hot dog? How do I know that's
an official Memphis dog? How do I know that that's
how they do it in Memphis? Y'all? The ones that
(10:58):
told me that it was beans and tomato juice, I
might go to Memphis. They just putting ketchup and mustard
on there. And now I'm like, wait a minute, y'all, y'all,
y'all tripping like, y'all, y'all lied, you know, I don't. Now, look,
maybe you just get stuck with a good one. That's
what we did. Because Carolina we get the slaw, the
(11:21):
mustard and the.
Speaker 4 (11:23):
Chili.
Speaker 3 (11:24):
That's an amazing combination, sir. But honestly, I didn't grow
up where they was like, obviously, if you ain't get
a hot dog in Carolina, you put the chili in
the slough on it. That's not how I grew up.
They We just was eating hot dogs like everybody else.
And then one day somebody say, you want a Carolina dog?
And I said, what's that? And it was from Wendy's
or some shit, and I was like, what they got slowing?
I guess this is our ship. Now, this is good.
(11:46):
But some of these hot dogs in this restaurant. I
was like, it's no way right.
Speaker 2 (11:51):
I was like authentic. I don't know.
Speaker 3 (11:54):
They're like, oh, yeah, this is a California dog. It's
got guacamole, feta cheese, you know what I mean.
Speaker 2 (12:01):
I was like, this can't be real because we don't know.
So that's why I was saying.
Speaker 1 (12:05):
I know there's some people who this is the jam
and they will feel insulted.
Speaker 2 (12:09):
But this is just my lack.
Speaker 3 (12:10):
I don't know that like a jam or whatever. I
don't know that they were feeling insalted. But I just
feel like somebody made it up in a room. I
feel like we can make these up. Oh it's a
Hawaii dog. What's got on it?
Speaker 2 (12:21):
Pineapples? What ham?
Speaker 3 (12:23):
That's how they eat it out there, pineapples and hams. Like,
that's not true. You know they don't do that. Well,
who's gonna fucking sue us? No one can stop us.
We have a restaurant and a menu and all the power.
Speaker 2 (12:37):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (12:37):
So I don't know if they was lying to me
or not, but it was absolutely delicious, and at this
same place I thought it was very dangerous. We were
sitting there enjoying our meal and Roger looked up. He said,
that's the axe throwing place. I was like, what does it?
Speaker 2 (12:53):
I was like what?
Speaker 1 (12:54):
And I look and it was and it wasn't separated.
It was in there with the restaurant. I was like,
it wasn't nobody ending up. I say, like, if you
have kids or something around, somebody could just turn around
with a fucking axe and just acts everybody down.
Speaker 2 (13:05):
That's not safe.
Speaker 3 (13:06):
It wasn't a cage like you gotta go in there
with the acts. But the cage was like this mesh fabric,
like it was nothing to stop somebody from from if.
I mean, I guess that's the thing about any acts
drawing place though, I mean, technically you just gave somebody
a weapon if they just wanted to kill a bunch
of people, it's right there. I don't know how we
(13:28):
allowed this as a society. It's like having a gun
range but next to some nachos and somehow that's okay.
Speaker 1 (13:34):
And a lot of these places you drink, so not
only you have a weapon this shop, it could take
somebody's head off.
Speaker 2 (13:40):
You are drunk.
Speaker 3 (13:41):
But I guess technically you could do the same thing
with a bowling ball. So maybe you know we're all
just getting by on a social contract that we're not
going to kill each other randomly for no fucking reason.
But yeah, I mean, they do give you a blunt,
h well, a sharp object and say get drunk and
throw it and eat and eat Memphis dogs.
Speaker 2 (13:58):
Yes they dude, they surely do.
Speaker 1 (14:04):
My next one is uh me and rogickkie. It's another
police probably gonna talk about lip smacking.
Speaker 4 (14:09):
Good.
Speaker 1 (14:09):
I had never heard of a bowl callar volcano bowl,
but bitch is hot and it stay hot for a
long ass time.
Speaker 2 (14:20):
And me and Rogick.
Speaker 1 (14:21):
Had ordered some food and it was ten minutes later
and that bowl was still fucking smoking hot. I was like,
holy shit, how is this legal for them to give
us this bowl at the table book?
Speaker 3 (14:32):
I feel like this could should have been a lip
smacking good point. But yeah, that bowl was hot. It
was like scalding hot, and there was no warning on
the label or the like. I think even when she
handed it to me, I don't even think she said
be careful, the bowl is hot. I don't wow, at
least I don't remember her saying that. But it's also
(14:53):
so hot. I don't know how you couldn't know it
was hot. And then the other the other thing about
it out of imagine just someone's gonna see and then
that that practice will stop, just that whell. But it
was cool, and we'll talk about that moral less facking
good because I don't want to, yeah, give all the
people to all the details, but yeah, that that ball
was very hot.
Speaker 2 (15:14):
That bb was smoking hot.
Speaker 1 (15:15):
Uh, and uh, the last thing, I am a true gamer.
I was supposed to be taking a thirty minute break.
My black ass got caught up in the dundon. It
was like, I will not leave here until I beat
this boss.
Speaker 2 (15:31):
And I think I was was I'm.
Speaker 1 (15:33):
Playing this game called a Quisoneer and I probably will
probably end up talking about morning nerd Off tomorrow. And
on the dungeon, I was fighting this big ass crab
and uh, he was really really tough.
Speaker 2 (15:49):
And I was like, damn, I got to go back.
Speaker 1 (15:51):
But I was like, you know what, fuck that ship,
you got to die crap, Like oh you're still don't break.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
I was like, oh shit, this this turned into an
hour break because.
Speaker 1 (16:02):
I was like, you got the you know you are
gaming if you be like fuck that shit, I gotta
beat this dundon.
Speaker 3 (16:08):
Yeah, you always are the one that's rushing back to
work from your breaks whenever I'm like, oh, we can
watch this TV shows like I gotta go. I gotta
go to break.
Speaker 2 (16:16):
But then.
Speaker 3 (16:18):
She was in there for like over an hour. I
was like, what are you doing?
Speaker 2 (16:22):
When are you doing in there?
Speaker 3 (16:23):
She's just trying to beat the boss. But yeah, that
is you know, I feel you. I think we've all
been there all this gamer so so the only the
thing I had to say. But I just feel like
it might I don't know how long this will take
to make this point, and maybe this point is a
bit nebulous. But the other day on Twitter, I saw
this picture here, Uh that picture. Do you know who
(16:46):
that is in these pictures?
Speaker 2 (16:49):
Yes? Up, Peter Parker's aunt, aunt May.
Speaker 3 (16:51):
Yeah, and so these these are pictures that aren't made
throughout the years, So from the comic origine, you know,
oh wow, the original one. Yeah, the animated shows nineteen
sixty seven, nineteen eighty one, ninety four, so on all
the way to twenty twenty five. They didn't do any
(17:12):
of the live action ones. But I think it's a
similar thing with some of the live action ones.
Speaker 2 (17:16):
Yeah, she began to be younger as time went on.
Speaker 3 (17:19):
Yeah, And obviously, you know, people made a couple obvious points,
and I'll address those because I think everyone's thinking about
this right away. Which is one, she was his aunt.
It never really made sense for her to be so
elderly and him so young. Yes, I like Grandma, Grandmama.
(17:42):
She was his aunt, right, And that's a valid point.
You know, although you know technically that parents have kids
far apart sometimes and it could have worked out this way.
But and then the other thing, The other point people
had was like, well people don't people look better now
at older ages than they used to, So like people
(18:05):
at fifty now look better than people at fifty back
in the day, which you know, I think is arguable
to be honest, but it definitely says something, uh germane
to the point I want to make. So I think
those are both valid points, but just yeah, uh, that's
not the point I'm about.
Speaker 1 (18:25):
To make, Okay, And I don't know what you're what
you're having to say. But also sexism, you know, like
that's a big part of this too, because it's one
of the in my opinion, because it's one of those
things where women aren't supposed to be quote unquote sexual,
you know, like like like this is just un in
this so they're not supposed to be anything quote unquote
appealing about her because she's a woman and you know,
(18:49):
Jesus unch And it's almost like like like from my perspective,
I feel like that, you know, like.
Speaker 3 (18:56):
I can see that as a point of view, but
I so the point I want to make is actually
a little bit different. I think this says a lot
about how much we devalue people as they get older,
and how much we're afraid of aging, and how much
we're afraid of death. And Aunt May, who's functioning the
(19:18):
show in the comic book was never really supposed to
be about sex anyway. We're talking about a book where
all the other women are sexual, you know what I mean.
So like it's Madam Webb and her. There only old
people in the book, and Madam web young and fuckable now,
and so is Aunt May. There is something about an
(19:40):
older Aunt May disappearing from our social consciousness that feels
like it mirrors how we think about old people and
aging now, like disappear, get the fuck out of here, don't.
Speaker 2 (19:52):
Don't.
Speaker 3 (19:53):
You're not valuable and you're not worth protecting.
Speaker 2 (19:57):
And but if you live long enough, you're going to
get this age too.
Speaker 3 (20:00):
Yeah, but no one, no one thinks about that to
that on the other side of that, right, and now
they're invisible. You know, we've rendered especially an aging woman,
as invisible. Even the whole idea of sex appeal making
someone valuable, like, well, now Aunt May is valuable because
she's fuckable, you know. Now we got Marissa Tomay Planner.
Now Marissa to May is a certain age, but also
(20:23):
she's one of the hottest women in Hollywood. So it's
it's not it's like they didn't go out and just
go get any actress that's his age. It's like, get
the get the woman who was hot at every single age,
and get her in. Here is hot Aunt May. But
there's the thing when I look at the general trend
of youngering her up and and de aging her and
(20:47):
and how to find her, I think about what the
lesson of having an Aunt May in the first place
is supposed to be? Okay, because Aunt May represented a
maternal or almost grand maternal figure. Yes, and Peter's conscience
(21:07):
and his guilt he let her husband die out of
his own vanity when he didn't protect Uncle Ben and Hubris,
and then she becomes a living reminder of that guilt,
but also a living reminder of the responsibility and the
consequences of inaction and being self absorbed. And so he
(21:31):
wants to protect her in ways that she can't protect
herself because she is frail, she is older. She it
matters just as much for him to be Peter as
Spider Man, because Peter's helping him get that rent paid.
Peter's fixing up stuff around the house. When he lets
(21:52):
her down by not being around, it means something, This
is a person that is depending on you. But also
because some people will go, well why are you? This
just takes away this agency that's not true. It also
makes when she does stuff much more interesting. So when
she starts dating again, it's more interesting when she's older
(22:13):
than if she's forty. Yes, like I see, it's much
more interesting to me a seventy year old woman deciding
like I actually am interested in finding love and dating again.
And how does that? How does Peter feel about that?
When she gets a job? It matters more when she's older.
It's much more to me a statement when she's older
(22:33):
than if she's of working age, where it's like, well
your life ain't over a girl, get out there. This
now is there's a hero there's a heroic nature to it.
Now when she approves of Spider Man or disapproves at
that age, it matters differently than than if she's younger.
Speaker 2 (22:49):
To me, I one hundred percent agree.
Speaker 1 (22:51):
And as also, like you said, it just speak on
a lot of things because particularly as people begin to
be older, their children have a hard time, particularly if
there's s bouces pass and things like that. Adult children
some just cannot process their parents going I am a
sexual being. I had sex for you to be here,
so and it does not go away for some.
Speaker 3 (23:13):
Simple It's just to me, there's interesting elements, and I
think people want everything to be so easy or to
make like this perfect logical sense. But I think what
makes stories like this valuable is that they don't. You know,
it's more valuable to me to have a story about
his sixty year old on than his thirty five forty
(23:35):
year old on. It just is, especially in the time
where you know, people may feel like it's empowering or
going against the grain. But to me, I'm like, I
don't know, Hollywood cast hot younger women to play older
women all the time, and yet the men get old
and like Tom Cruise gets to be sixty five and
(23:56):
a sex symbol.
Speaker 2 (23:57):
Yes, and you.
Speaker 3 (23:59):
Know Meg Ryan gotta go, you know, not no, no, nothing,
but not to get specifically into her.
Speaker 1 (24:04):
It's like once you get your certain age or either
you're gonna be the mama or the grandma like or disappear.
Speaker 3 (24:10):
Yes, not just mama or grandmama. I mean disappear. Even
the moms have to be kind of hot, you know.
Speaker 2 (24:16):
Or whatever.
Speaker 3 (24:17):
But anyway, it just it was just like an interesting
thing that made me think about aging and how I
think our generation especially has kind of stalled out in
this like not generation, but I say generations and beyond us.
They were so afraid of getting old and being old
and accepting embracing old age and embracing the wisdom of
(24:40):
it and uh.
Speaker 2 (24:42):
The inevitability of it.
Speaker 3 (24:44):
You know, there's so many people they don't they you know,
I cry on my birthdays, you know, or I you know,
I see I tell everybody I'm turning thirty five again,
you know whatever. Like there's a thing to where it's like,
I know that number makes me less valuable. I know
that that makes me closer to death. I know that
(25:04):
that means I've been here long and I'm not cool anymore,
and I'm not I can't keep up with anything. But
they used to be kind of dope about Aunt May
when she would be up on some shit and you'd
be like, yo, Aunt May a cool ass old lady.
You know, Like that was like a fun for me
in the comics and whatnot. But yeah, it feels like
(25:25):
we just kind of disappeared. The elderly aunt May and
many other aspects with this picture specifically just brought it
home for me.
Speaker 2 (25:36):
Yeah, I can. I can see that too.
Speaker 1 (25:38):
And you know, as you become older when you're young,
it's very hard to see ever getting old when you're young.
Anything over you know, depend on how old you are.
Anything over twenty five, you know, fucking die tomorrow. And
you're like that don't make no goddamn sense, you know.
But the thing is, nobody cares about that until they
(25:59):
reached that age. But like, this ain't that old, right,
It ain't that old because you're in that and you're
in the age range, so it ain't old to you,
but it's old to people who haven't quote unquote hit
that range yet. And I know for me, I actually
enjoy sitting down and talking to older people and picking
their brains and letting them tell you stories and things
(26:20):
like that, because.
Speaker 2 (26:20):
A lot of times they have a lot of oral.
Speaker 1 (26:22):
History and shit like that that they are willing to
share if you're willing to listen. But most of the
time people are living their own lives and too busy
doing their own shit to even listen to them.
Speaker 3 (26:33):
Yeah, I just think about it societally, like less interpersonally,
but more like you know this, Like, I know people
don't want to hear this shit right now, but I
think it's it's relevant how everybody thinks politicians should be
young and not old, right. You know, I don't necessarily
agree with that, And I know that we're saying that
(26:54):
because we want people that represent us that are our age,
but also like I feel like people that are older
than us, who are still alive, by the way, also
want representation. Now, what is happening is, I think is
overly weighted one way, and so that's what while we're
pushing back, but the pushback has turned into a dismissal
(27:16):
of wisdom and age as if it is a detriment, right,
And I think in many ways is how we get
stuff like and it's a roundabout way, but I think
it's how you get Trump. Yes, is because once you
dismiss age, and you dismiss the wisdom that comes with age,
you then go what I wanted, something fresh, I want
(27:36):
something new. I want somebody that doesn't know everything. I
want somebody with no experience. The less experience, the better
we flip the polarity on it. And even though Trump
is an old man, a lot of the appeal of
Trump was he's he has no experience, he's new to
a government, he's new to us this second time around,
he's not even new. But the idea is he's not
(28:00):
like these people who have studied, who have experience, who
have dedicated their time and lives to this, to learning
about their constituency. And so while it's not a direct correlation,
I'm not calling Trump a young man. Hopefully no one's
stupid enough to write in about that shit, but I
am saying an I there's like this thing of like
(28:23):
you can be a lifelong per public servant, but you
need to wrap this shit up when you're like fifty
and just go find something else because you're old.
Speaker 2 (28:31):
Now.
Speaker 3 (28:32):
We don't want to do it. They do it with activists,
you know. We don't. Don't be an activist when you're sixty.
Why I'm still able to help and I still want
to help.
Speaker 2 (28:41):
I can teach some people.
Speaker 3 (28:42):
I still have experience. Just because somebody has is young
and energetic doesn't mean they can't learn from people. Even
the whole thing like we'll put somebody you know, bring
some people up. I am bringing people up. So now
what's the problem. You know, I do have people that
are gonna take my place when I'm no longer able
to help, But as of right now, I feel like
I can still help. And so you want me to
(29:04):
sit by on the sideline because you don't want to
see an aging person. You don't want to see you
don't want to think about death. You don't want to
think about how long I've been fighting this fight. You
want everything to be fresh, new entertainment for you. You want
twenty year old activists that burn out in six months
and go back to college and never look back, never
come back. I've been dedicated to this. You might can
(29:25):
learn how to be dedicated to some shit. Maybe instead
of trying to push me out, learn from me so
that you can be here forty years from now, still
helping people within your community. So it is kind of interesting,
just I don't know, this picture made me think about
a lot of stuff, and I know it's not definitely
like one hundred percent correlated, but this is what it
(29:45):
really made me think about, was like, damn, we really
phased old people out of just the zeitgeist, Like, nah,
you old, no, no need. But it's like, I don't know,
go to a Stevie Wonder concert and tell me that
like he need to just hang it up, you know
what I'm say saying like in lieu of pick whatever
artists you want to that's like younger but not necessarily
(30:07):
master that craft that hasn't put in that time. There's
a reason people pay all that money for those like
Paul McCartney tickets, because the motherfucker is an expert and
been doing it for years and that shit he's forgotten
that people will never learn. So uh it is it
is kind of interesting to see like that idea play
out in in a in a fictional character because you
(30:29):
don't have to make her young like and I get it,
you want to make a new, different version of the character.
You can do all kinds of shit, but it's interesting
just she stayed young now for I don't know, ten years,
Like we've just gone back to like young aunt May
need to be hot, need to be fuckable. That's that's
who Aunt May is now to people. And it's interesting
(30:49):
that we've landed there. And I think it says something
about who we value.
Speaker 2 (30:53):
Yeah, it does.
Speaker 1 (30:55):
In mass I think it does, and like you say,
it makes people think about their own immortality and mortality
I'm sorry and things like that. And I think that
people are just afraid because one thing about me is
when people asking me my age, they're just s telling
my age, and a lot of times people are very
shocked and very appalled and very afraid. I'm like, why
(31:17):
I am, like, it is what it is, like, I'm
not afraid.
Speaker 2 (31:21):
I'm actually proud of it because if.
Speaker 1 (31:22):
As I'm concerned, somebody didn't live to see this age,
So why am I ashamed of my age?
Speaker 2 (31:28):
Yeah?
Speaker 3 (31:28):
So, all right, let's get into some other stuff. I
don't even know where to start. I guess it just
starts with some of these political news or whatever, and
see how upsetting that makes us before we get into
some other ship. All right, Yeah, and it is pretty
(32:20):
upset and now I'm looking at it. GOP Senator GOP
Senator Lisa Murkowski slams Trump federal worker firings, saying they're
doing more harm than good. While she supports downsize in
the federal government. She said the abrupt firings are disrupting
essential services. Dozens of Alaskans, possibly over one hundred, have
(32:40):
lost their job, she noted, which could hinder disaster preparedness
and energy production. This is the pain that I'm talking about.
And I fucked this woman. Obviously, I don't care. She
would vote for Trump a million times, and so you
can't trust their lip service. What I look at is
I think the reason she is saying this is because
(33:02):
people that vote for her vote chose not to vote
people whatever in her district. There's gonna be people who
are affected by these cuts who now will have to
be at least invested in what the fuck happens next.
Speaker 2 (33:18):
Yep, not all those people.
Speaker 3 (33:21):
Not all those people are Democrats. There's no way to
go through the government roster and go. It's just the
Democrats are getting rid of. So when they're cutting these
people abruptly, you're either like, they're so worried about Elon
Musk primary and them that because Elon Musk is promised
like any Republicans that's not in lockstep with these changes,
I'm gonna put millions of dollars into your local election,
(33:42):
make you lose it. I'm gonna primary you. And I'm like,
you're not gonna have to do that for some of
these folks, because some of these folks, the citizens are
going to be like, fuck out.
Speaker 1 (33:53):
Of here, right, Like, this job on your watch, even
though we both voted for this, and this is the outcome.
I don't give a fuck. I lost my job, bitch,
I'm mad and I'm looking.
Speaker 3 (34:03):
At you, yeah, and You're saying, we both voted for this,
and I'm saying some of these people didn't vote. So
you know what I'm saying, Like, not all these people,
Like some of these people were people that probably thought
they would be straight either way. Yes, And so now
those are the people that they're not worried about anybody
that was a Democrat. They're only worried about people that
(34:23):
voted for them and people that didn't vote. And I'm like, okay,
but this is the pain I was talking about. I
don't root for it, but it is inevitable and it
has to happen for in order for us that progress,
because you're gonna need some people to feel enough pain
to get off their ass and do the right thing
and say you can't just be in office and discriminately
(34:45):
firing people because you don't give a fuck about shit.
Speaker 2 (34:48):
That's crazy, Yes it is.
Speaker 1 (34:50):
And these are the things that people tried to prevent it.
These are the things that people have told you, you know,
would happen, because, like you say, they are like, here's
the list, here's a dollar maud or here's a head count.
Speaker 2 (35:03):
Make it happen. And they making it happen, and it
doesn't matter.
Speaker 1 (35:08):
They just slicing, cutting, slicing cutting, you know, for all
them people talk about he's a.
Speaker 2 (35:12):
Good business man. This is what the fuck business people do.
Speaker 3 (35:14):
They slice the He's he's not even doing this, that's
the thing. Elon Musk is doing it. So it's not
even Trump and his I'm a big good businessman shit
like he don't care about running the government or not
running the government, agreed. This is just a big experiment
for Elon Musk, And so he's the one cutting the
(35:34):
purse strings. And he's immittedly said on record that he's
gonna make mistakes, meaning he doesn't know what all this
shit means. People catch him in mistakes on Twitter all
the time, the Doge Department or whatever, people catch it
all the time. Trump like he's even now moving to
this is himself from being the head of the Doge thing,
(35:55):
even though we all see it. He's taking credit for it.
He's spoken as the department lead. He's now saying he's
not because people are legally starting to challenge it, like
you were not elected, you are not appointed. This is
not a real department, right, And now he's like, I'm
not in charge, I'm not doing it because people don't
like what people don't like the results of what he's doing.
A judge has denied a request to judge denies requests
(36:18):
to temporarily block Doge's mass firings and access the data.
A federal judge and watching on Tuesday, denied an urgent
request to block Elon Musk in a Department of Government efficiency,
from firing employees or accessing sensitive records from a half
dozen government agencies. US District Judge Tanya Chuckin, who previously
oversaw Donald Trump's criminal election interference case, said, and she's not,
(36:40):
she's not on the take. She did that case. She
did that case on the up and up. She said
the States didn't show the immediately irreparable harm with result,
noting that the court cannot act based on media reports.
Plaintiffs asked the court to take judicial notice of widespread
media reports that Doge has taken or will soon take
certain actions such as mass terminations. But these reports cannot
(37:02):
substitute for the specific facts in an affidavit or verified
complaint that clearly show that ammdiate and there for reparable injury.
Speaker 2 (37:10):
Loss, or damage or results. She wrote.
Speaker 3 (37:13):
So I'm sure she would love to have actionable stuff,
but to be honest, this will happened when you put
these people in charge. It's not actionable, you know. Or
you gotta like you're gonna have to wait for them
to do something fucked up before you can be like, oh,
but that's illegal. It's gonna be too late. People are
gonna already be lost their jobs by then. Yes, sir,
(37:33):
I thought this video was interesting. It's from Jesse Waters,
who I believe is on Fox News. But he was
talking about the information system of the right.
Speaker 2 (37:46):
So here we go.
Speaker 5 (37:47):
It's not really the same, Danny. We are waging a
twenty first century.
Speaker 3 (37:52):
And let me know, if y'all can't hear it, sorry if.
Speaker 5 (37:54):
You can't, information warfare campaign against the left, and they
are using tactics for the nineteen nineties. They're holding tiny
press conferences, tiny little rallies. They're screaming into the ether
on MSNBC, this is what you call top down command
and control. You get your talking points from a newspaper
and you put it on the broadcast network.
Speaker 4 (38:15):
And then it disappears.
Speaker 5 (38:17):
What you're seeing on the right is asymmetrical. It's like
grassroots guerrilla warfare. Someone says something on social media. Musk
retweets it, Rogan podcasts it, Fox broadcasts it, and by
the time it reaches everybody, millions of people have seen it.
Speaker 2 (38:33):
It's free money.
Speaker 5 (38:35):
And we're actually talking about expressing information. They are suppressing information.
Speaker 3 (38:43):
And I think that is the thing I was trying
to say earlier, like last year, late last year, earlier
this year, this idea of like Democrats need to have
a campaign, that is, they get a Joe Rogan on
their own, Mike, Republicans don't have a Joe Rogan as
much as Joe Rogan is a Republican regardless of what
(39:06):
you know, John Stewart would have you believe where THEO
Vonn and Joe Rogan and all these like right wing
centered podcasters are just these free agents who just happen
to just you know, hey, they just have legitimate concerns
and they're not operating on any side. Sure, they won't
(39:27):
interview Kamala Harris. But they interview Trump, jd Vance and
Elon Musk. But but yeah, sure it's not. It's just
a coincidence. And they're comedians. They're not really, they're comedians
with the biggest platforms in podcasting. And I don't think
there's some easy solution. I don't think there's anything you
(39:48):
can build from the ground up that can rival what
they're doing, because what they're doing is essentially, as he said,
free money for Republicans, meaning you don't have to put
honey into the Joe Rogan Fund. Like when you hear
people talk about what Democrats can do, it's always something
like they should pay to do ads on this station,
(40:08):
they should do an interview here, they should go there.
They don't have anything that just does the work for
free like that, right, it's also platformed. There's stuff where
you would platform the person, like they why don't Democrats
spend x amount of money on this radio station and
help them get a bigger, you know, bigger footprint. They don't.
(40:30):
Donald Trump ain't spend a dollar for Elon Musk, don't
got to for what just willingly handing everybody that listen
to him over to that Elon Musk, Donald Trump, you know, JD.
Vance Trum for it. So I think it's interesting. Uh,
And they're saying stuff like that right in front of
your face, like it's not it's not a secret. And
(40:53):
I do think when people talk about how this thing
would like, you know, what did the left do to
make this happen or whatever? And I'm like, part of
it is, yes, it's the way we talk to each other.
It's the way online, like social media has like turned
(41:14):
us into these like we're into this group and don't
talk to this person and don't explain nothing and google it, bitch,
google it is free or whatever. And I'm sure that's some
of it. I'm not trying to say that has nothing
to do with it. But a lot of this stuff
is like I don't know. Some people just want to
believe the lies.
Speaker 2 (41:29):
Yes they do.
Speaker 1 (41:30):
They would believe it over the truth any day because
it makes them feel good.
Speaker 2 (41:34):
Some people just want to Some people just racist.
Speaker 3 (41:36):
Some people will see a plane crash and if you
come out and tell them it was black people somehow,
some way, and it's JD. Van saying if it wasn't
for Di, a racist person just gonna believe that there's
no liberal podcast equivalent that will make them feel okay about.
Speaker 2 (41:55):
It, right because we base shitting facts.
Speaker 3 (41:57):
They're just not gonna eat that up. That's my point,
like the only and it's why we end up in
this situation where the only real solution becomes like, why
don't the Democrats just be more like the Republicans? And
they don't mean, like I think a lot of people
think you can. What a lot of people think when
you say that is that Democrats can repeat the Republicans' tactics.
(42:21):
They cannot. The reason they cannot is because their base
has to be a coalition of like minded people who
have their own self interest and just happen to be
okay with other people benefiting from it. That's really how
it goes. It's not we're all we're all together over here. No,
there's a lot of issues where people are kind of
single issue voters, but they're over with Democrats because that's
(42:44):
where their issue will be met.
Speaker 2 (42:45):
Right right.
Speaker 3 (42:47):
What I mean by be more like Republicans is you're
gonna end up with with with like the Bill Clinton
type of type of Democrat where he's like, I'm heavy
on get the fuck out of my country, immigration, heavy on,
like go to jail, you know what I mean, And
as many people wanted to cry, like if he was
the worst type of Democrat, right.
Speaker 2 (43:08):
But he won.
Speaker 3 (43:10):
And the reasonhy he won is because he was like,
actually fucked those issues. What we're supposed to be super liberal.
I'm not that'll get enough white people to come over here,
and we'll get some of those things to help everybody,
but at the expense of some of the people within
the group, you know.
Speaker 2 (43:28):
And I worry that that's how.
Speaker 3 (43:30):
People's reaction to Donald Trump's one percent victory is gonna be.
Is this idea they keep pitching, the idea of like, no,
Democrats need to go more left, And I'm like, but
that's never worked in America. It's gonna end up being
I hope not, but I think it's gonna end up
looking more like what what issues and what people do
we cut off?
Speaker 2 (43:50):
Or do we say, hey.
Speaker 3 (43:52):
Look around, we're not as bad as the other group,
fuck you. And I'm worried that that's what's gonna happen
when you look at you know, this whole idea we
need a Joe Rogan. It's like, No, what you do
is you start and I don't want them to. But
what you do is you're gonna start making policies that
make a Joe Rogan go, oh, that's not that bad
of a policy. And that's how you get your own
(44:14):
Joe Rogan. You get Joe Rogan, you know what I'm saying,
not like you get him. And the reason the way
you get him is by doing a bunch of shit
that I think is fucked up, like a bunch of
regressive policies and politics. And I hope they don't do it,
but I don't know that the numbers will ever add
up to this thing.
Speaker 2 (44:31):
Whereevery, if you just.
Speaker 3 (44:32):
Go as liberal as possible, you still get a plurality
of people to vote in mass because we haven't been
seeing that.
Speaker 1 (44:42):
Not only that most people aren't liberal like like like
they like people cling like.
Speaker 2 (44:47):
These extreme, extreme, extreme people. Y'all are on the fringe, y'all.
Speaker 1 (44:51):
I hate to break you, know, to break it to you,
y'all are on the mother fucking fringe. Most people do
want the police, they just don't want to whoop in
their ass. Most people do won't lost, they just won't.
They just want shit executed right. Most people do want
the government to function properly. We want these things, we
won't devote people in office that are gonna do what
(45:12):
they We want these things, And what happens is that
white people panic, White democratic white people panic, Liberal white
people panic, and they go, well, what can we do
to beat them?
Speaker 2 (45:24):
And if we can't beat them, join them?
Speaker 1 (45:26):
And joining them means, like you say, erasing women, erasing
brown people, erasing LGBTQ people, Like, let's just erasing.
Speaker 2 (45:34):
Let's just make it Howard used.
Speaker 1 (45:35):
To be white on white and y'all just shut the
fuck up and do what we told y'all to do,
because we actually started listening to y'all. And when we
quote unquote started listening to y'all and and let that
black woman run and and she.
Speaker 2 (45:46):
Lost, So we ain't. We ain't doing this bullshit no more.
Speaker 1 (45:49):
Like like I really do think that's how that's how
they feel that a lot of white people.
Speaker 2 (45:52):
Are in panic mode, and they go, what can we
do the correct it?
Speaker 1 (45:55):
Instead of them reaching out and talking and figuring out
how to actually make in rolls with all these different groups,
they don't want to do that part.
Speaker 2 (46:04):
They don't want to do that work. They'll just say,
let's just be like the upther side.
Speaker 1 (46:09):
And you know what that means, My black ass is
not gonna be a part of your coalition because y'all
gonna just write me off. You don't care about jerry mandering,
you don't care about all these fucked up laws.
Speaker 2 (46:18):
You don't care about people's votes getting suppressed. You actually
don't care.
Speaker 3 (46:23):
Yeah, I disagree. I think they do care about that
one specifically because black people are such a vase and
such a reliable voting block. So the things they don't
care about won't be your ability to vote. It's gonna
be shited like the cops fucking you up, or you
know whatever black specific issue that you're like, this helps
(46:46):
black people because Democrats have to have the black vote.
They don't have a choice. I'm not saying they care
out of a good place. It's just if you said,
fuck it, the black people can't we don't care. If
they can't vote, okay, then you just will never ever
ever win another election. So we're stuck together. Is how
black people are Democrats and how Democrats are black people
(47:07):
in my opinion, So I don't think they will drop that.
That will be the if you ever see a legal
challenge about Jerry Manner. It will always be from Democrats.
You'll never see it from Republicans. Whenever you see somebody
about getting out the black vote or whatever, it's gonna
always be Democrats because they don't have a choice. It's
not that I'm saying that great people or that these
white people care so much about us and as Democrats,
(47:29):
I don't think they necessarily do. But I think in
that area I would say specifically, I don't think I
think they will be fighting.
Speaker 1 (47:38):
Okay, my and I guess the way my mind is
ticknies this. I was talking to a lot of these
extreme people, a lot of them extreme people. Other people
that I was talking about that don't care because like
when you make these extreme points and want to erase
and wanting to get rid of, I'm a part of
the group that you want to get rid of. So
I'm like, you don't actually care care about the coalition
(48:01):
because if you did, you would consider it.
Speaker 3 (48:03):
I was just I was just saying about the voting thing.
I don't. I just don't that like this is such
a pal too far for them that they if they
said we give it up, fuck it, do whatever you
want to to the black vote, they they would lose,
So it just wouldn't make sense. And they're never going
to win enough white people to be able to do
it without black people. There's no amount of policies that
(48:24):
can have that were out trump the right wing when
it comes to winning white people votes.
Speaker 1 (48:30):
Agreed, And Yes, the Democratic Party as a as a total, yes,
Like as a totality, as a group, as a collective.
Speaker 3 (48:37):
Yes.
Speaker 1 (48:38):
My problem is like with the subsections that has a
tendency to be very loud and think that they actually
have more power than they do when they want to
come in and fucking demand ship and you like, you
better get the whole ass out of my goddamn face
because you don't care.
Speaker 3 (48:50):
Yeah, yeah, I mean we've seen it with Bernie and
all that stuff, where they don't care about black people.
They're angry, they care about the economy, but they're they're
basically a different version of the Democrats message to black people.
If anything, it's a lot more callous of a message
because like, well, the economy will fix the racism, and
when we say, but we've lived here and it doesn't,
(49:12):
it does not, And he's will shut the fuck up.
I'm Marshall King, and it's like, Okay, y'all just think
that Bernie's like a pokemon that's gonna fix everything. But
matter of fact, John Stewart was on a podcast the
other day and he spread that lie that I fucking
hate that white people do a lot of where the
Democrats stole this election from Bernie in twenty sixteen and
(49:33):
put their thumb on the finger and made sure Hillary won.
And a lot of people were very upset with John
Stewart because he said that, and he said Joe Rogan
and Theo vaugh are not part of the right wing
media spear or whatever, not part of the Trump not
part of the Trump media. And I can't fundamentally disagree
(49:55):
with him more because I have eyes and I see
things too, and I don't have the bias of we're
all comedians and I will always protect my fellow comedians
from anything, right. You know, I think he's kind of
full of shit on that. I think, you know, it's
truth to power when you want the responsibility, and then
it's no responsibility.
Speaker 2 (50:15):
When you don't want it.
Speaker 3 (50:16):
I agree, And he's a guy that doesn't seem to
run his own platforms that way. But he'll make a
defense of Dave Chappelle being transphobic because he thinks that's
comedy license, but also because he gonna see Dave Chappelle
somewhere and you want to kick it with him and
be friends. Same thing with Joe Rogan and Theo Vaughn.
You got people at political events and the jokes are
ha ha, Puerto Ricans are trash. I mean that seemed
(50:39):
different to me than just he was, you know, like
he's just a comedian, what's the problem. But that's why
those guys aren't good enough, right, That's why they'll never
be good enough, because they're not actually able to have
you know, that's why why Sannac still don't fuck with him,
because at the end of the day, those kind of guys,
they have a limit. Limit is just I'm still this
(51:01):
white dude in my imagination. It has to be limited
by the fact that I can't see these other people
as bad. Joe Rogan can't be bad. Bill o'reiley, his
fucking friend, can't be bad, no matter how many women
he's been accused of sexually assaulting and shit, that's got
to be the homie, right. So you know, these are
(51:21):
the people that we're in coalition with that are supposed
to be our allies. So you know, I definitely take
your point about how it's they don't genuinely care about us,
and it's not enough. Like I said, the only difference
is they definitely want us to vote, they won't. The
only value they see in us is that we would
probably vote in a way that would help them get
(51:43):
what they want. But they don't see much value in
us beyond.
Speaker 1 (51:45):
That right and a whole and what's so fucked up
about it is And the thing is is like, you
want our votes, but that's it. You don't want our opinions,
you don't want you know, anything else that comes with us.
Speaker 2 (52:01):
You just want us to just do what you tell
us to do.
Speaker 1 (52:04):
And that's why a lot of times, a lot of
white people in the Democratic Party have a problem with
these other groups because the second they cater to them
because you need our votes, we'll start telling you the
things to help in whiteness, your whiteness, their whiteness will
kick in. And it's that you know, you have some
white people that have okay, good, good and they'll do
the job, but you do have some people that go,
(52:24):
I'm not doing that shit, or I do it just
enough to be elected.
Speaker 3 (52:28):
Yeah, banks approve of Republicans increasing bank fees. So Biden
had a rule that limited overdraft fees is now under
challenge and lawmakers use bank lobbyists for their testimonials, meaning
that the Trump administration and Republicans are about to change
the cap on overdraft fees that banks can charge their customers.
(52:52):
The rule pay the overdraft fee was limited to five dollars,
and now they want to bring it back to thirty
five dollars.
Speaker 2 (53:00):
How we for.
Speaker 1 (53:01):
Those of you that wanting around long enough to remember
this bullshit, you know me and rond you used to
remember not only was it like thirty five, it was
twenty five dollars pop went to thirty five dollars popping,
and none.
Speaker 2 (53:12):
Of that they was it was unlimited.
Speaker 1 (53:15):
And then they would have machines and systems that was
just to strategically go through. And you know now they
have like two PM, we're depositing and all that shit.
Speaker 2 (53:24):
First Trust that's about to go away too, and.
Speaker 3 (53:27):
Like that, well they have they have in this article
what happens. But basically banks with scheme and scam to
maximize overdraft fees. They so they set new rules without
notifying customers, or even engineered the order transaction to generate
more fees, so that let's say you had forty dollars
(53:48):
in your bank account. You thought you had forty dollars.
You thought you had more than forty dollars, but you
only have forty. So you write a check for thirty
nine dollars. You're right, a check for and you're right,
seven checks for one dollar. Okay. The way the bank
would do it is they would take the thirty nine
(54:09):
dollars one first, so that now you only have one
dollar left in your account that you started with forty.
Then those seven one dollar ones. They processed those seven
one dollar checks in a row so that you end
up with six overdraft fees instead of just where they
could have done all seven of those one dollar checks first,
(54:31):
and then the thirty nine dollars one h oh overdraft.
Here's a fee. No, they processed it on purpose that way,
and it saved Americans five billion dollars a year by
capping those fees and raining those banks in. But now,
and the rule was finalized last December, and it was
(54:52):
going to become effective in October, so we haven't actually
lived under this new rule yet. But now they're trying
to Republicans and the banks are combining to try to
stop the rule from taking effect.
Speaker 1 (55:06):
Of course, because you know, they talked about the fees
and how over the years the bank charge fees went
through the roof and the banks.
Speaker 2 (55:13):
Are basically dependent on the fees.
Speaker 1 (55:15):
Instead of just bank, instead of just fucking banking, you know.
Speaker 2 (55:19):
And what's so fucked up about it is these.
Speaker 1 (55:22):
Things end up hurting most Americans, people who literally can't
afford the fees. And then it gets so fucked up
that if let's say you do got direct the positive,
your whole fucking check gun when it hits because you
got to pay them fees before you have any extra
money left over.
Speaker 3 (55:40):
Well, do a couple more. I think I already said this,
but yeah, the federal prosecutors dropped the charges against Eric Adams. Yeah, okay,
so we'll do a couple more. VA healthcare workers have
been blindsided by masks layoffs. We've been betrayed. Uh yeah,
(56:01):
they don't give a fuck that to the Veterans administration.
They don't care about veterans, do not and I'll.
Speaker 2 (56:06):
Have seen you the water get fucked up, but they
don't care about you.
Speaker 3 (56:09):
And it sucks because we know that a lot of
people in the militaries vote Republican and consider Republicans like
the best people to be in charge for the military.
But at the end of the day, the ones cutting
your health care benefits be Republicans. The ones that don't
give a fuck about you haven't fought for this country.
And you knew that because at every step of the way,
(56:29):
Donald Trump's been disrespectful the veterans, whether it was John McCain,
whether it was that last kerfuffle they had at the
cemetery where they disrespected the cemetery. Yes, like so, I mean,
I guess you know, I won't paint with a broadbrush
like everybody over there votes Republicans because I don't believe they.
Speaker 2 (56:49):
Do, Nope.
Speaker 3 (56:50):
But yet it's it is a betrayal, and you've been
betrayed by your country, and by your country, I mean
by the voters in your country.
Speaker 2 (56:58):
Yes, who voted for this man.
Speaker 3 (57:00):
They wanted to see Mexicans get get get deported or
whatever the reason, whatever racist ass reasoning they got right.
And there's also you know, one of those things to
where you hear veterans complain about how long it would
take them to get service and to.
Speaker 2 (57:16):
Get care and all these types of things.
Speaker 1 (57:20):
And the Democrats are the wanted ones that hire all
these people to quicken the process so that she could
get done faster. Now we're about to go to where
some people gonna die before they actually get the services
that they need.
Speaker 3 (57:33):
Yep. Trump administration gives schools a deadline and DEI programs
or risk losing federal money. Uh, they wanted they give them.
They gave schools and universities two weeks to eliminate diversity
initiatives or risk losing federal money, raising the stakes in
the fight against quote unquote wokeness.
Speaker 2 (57:53):
Yeah, they don't plan, don't giving nobody no money anyway.
I mean, I hate to be like that. They don't.
They don't plan, don't give me. I don't know why,
y'all they're cutting everything.
Speaker 1 (58:02):
They do not plan on giving nobody no money. All
the states that own their goddamn own. Hm.
Speaker 3 (58:13):
That's interesting because I think they will follow through on
this threat. I think maybe it's just for this year.
Maybe it's maybe they maybe next year they give nobody
funding at all. But something about this, I I would
not put it past them to follow through on it.
It's gonna end up in court, you know. But I mean,
you can't convince me that they're gonna be like, actually,
(58:35):
you know what, we don't mind.
Speaker 2 (58:37):
That's why a roadside assistance is.
Speaker 3 (58:41):
I don't know why that started, but they're just gonna
You can't convince me that. I can't put it past
them being like, actually, y'all did keep the black studies,
African American studies, and we're cutting your funding.
Speaker 1 (58:54):
Now.
Speaker 3 (58:54):
Maybe they end up cutting everybody's funding eventually and it
won't seem like it matters. But I mean, shout to
the schools that's gonna fight it. Yeah, the ones that comply.
It's just gonna be interesting because this is not like
private business where they tell target or something and target
could just be like, man, fuck y'all, we pay y'all,
(59:16):
you don't pay us. Schools depend on that federal money.
So there's gonna be some schools that cave on this shit,
of course, so it'll be interesting to see what happens there.
Arthur Ashley Saint Clair claims Elon Musk has neglected her
and their five month old baby at the paternity revelation.
(59:38):
The only thing I'll say about this trick is that
she had the nerve to say, Kamala Harris slept away
to the top. There's no woman, no man. She won't
bend over for She deleted that tweet after everyone caught
her on not even caught her. She went on Twitter
and tweeted that this man ain't come to see her
in this baby.
Speaker 2 (59:56):
Uh.
Speaker 3 (59:56):
And then also a lot of Republicans that typically have
a lot to say about people having babies out of
wedlock and baby mamas, all of a sudden they were
congratulating her. People like CJ. Pearson, we're congratulating her now.
But yeah, she tweeted. Five months ago, I welcomed a
new baby into the world. Elon Musk is the father.
I have not previously disclosed this to protect our child's
(01:00:18):
privacy and safety, but in recent days it's become clear
that tabloid media intends to do so regardless of the
harm it will cause. I intend to allow a child
to grow in a normal, safe environment. For that reason,
I asked me to honor our child's privacy and refrain
from an invasive reporting. But then he replied WHOA, And
she said, Elon, we have been trying to communicate for
(01:00:39):
the past several days, and you have not responded. When
are you going to reply to us? Instead of publicly
responding to smears from an individual who just posted photos
of me at my underwear at fifteen years old. It's
interesting that Elon's responding to this clearly and Jess screenshot
that was discussed with his teen months ago in a
documented call. Now he's decided, he decides to respond to
(01:01:01):
a publicly from an account that posted underage photos of
me as if he wasn't asking me to have more
children last week. I would like to take this offline
for our child's sake, and have been attempted to for weeks.
Ha ha, I mean you, I mean I don't have
(01:01:21):
any sympathy for this lady. You know, the the obvious,
you know the obvious aside.
Speaker 2 (01:01:30):
You know I'm supposed to feel sorried for that. I
don't like.
Speaker 3 (01:01:36):
It's amazing how often the grift is right in everybody's face.
Everybody sees the grift. The person is obviously grifting, They
admit to the grift. And what three months from now,
two months from now, she'll still be around somehow, some
people will still follow her. They will make it allow
us for her because when they say baby mama, they
thinking black people or something. Yes, you know, but this
(01:01:58):
man ain't nothing but Nick Cannon will all Ti or
whatever like this.
Speaker 2 (01:02:01):
A bunch of kids out there, y'all right.
Speaker 3 (01:02:03):
But you let him run the country, y'all thought, you know,
it's so funny, man, it's so surd. But like Elon
Musk running the government under by paying for Donald Trump's presidency,
I can't even imagine the black version of this.
Speaker 6 (01:02:21):
M M.
Speaker 3 (01:02:22):
I can't even imagine it.
Speaker 2 (01:02:23):
Like, what would it look like?
Speaker 3 (01:02:24):
Is it Oprah running the government but Kamala Harris became president?
The America would not stand for that shit.
Speaker 2 (01:02:32):
They would burn shit, they would be like shit.
Speaker 3 (01:02:35):
Would be fucked up in America if they was like
Oprah's Department of what she named everything after herself. So
it won't be Doge, but it'll it'll be, you know,
to be Oprah Harpo. Yeah, the Harpo Department is has
has cut federal jobs. People would be ready to they
would be January six times too. Everybody be up in
(01:02:57):
that bitch. This dude is just fucking us up. Not
even from here.
Speaker 2 (01:03:01):
Not even from you don't belong.
Speaker 3 (01:03:03):
Here, not even from here, and yet somehow just like
this is the goofiest ship that we have ever had
to deal with? Is this motherfucker right here, just right
just and just having babies? Just just just what a
wild fucking time. What kind of ghetto shit is this
to be having break babies and ship and you're supposed
(01:03:24):
to be running the country and you ain't talking to
your baby mamas, like like your fucking NBA player that
flew out an ig model. It's and you you're supposed
to be some type of paragon of conservative values and
you you just a mattress actress giving up giving it
up to to fucking Elon Musk. We know you can't
(01:03:45):
think he's attractive. We know you didn't fuck him because
because you're like, oh my god, it's just a bag,
you know what I mean, It's just a bag somehow,
And now you mad you ain't get the bag because
this niggain't calling you back. It's crazy. Yep, that premiacy
be kicking the ass. Easter Ray and Shanda Rohm said
(01:04:07):
since Trump trying to take over the Kennedy Center organization,
they will not be doing their events and they stepped
down from their positions.
Speaker 1 (01:04:13):
I don't you know. I don't blame I know that
was a hard choice, but I don't blame them. Don't
know about I want to deal with Dad.
Speaker 3 (01:04:18):
I don't even think it was a hard choice. I
feel like they unbothered. They was like, well, I guess
we're out of that fuck that.
Speaker 2 (01:04:24):
Yeah time, my time was free. I could be doing
other shit.
Speaker 3 (01:04:27):
Yeah, they was doing good work. But it's like that
money ain't going nowhere but Trump Bank account.
Speaker 2 (01:04:31):
Now, yep, you.
Speaker 1 (01:04:32):
Ain't gonna waste my time and or my money and
my resources and the money I'm raising, it's not going
towards that.
Speaker 2 (01:04:38):
I can take it and start my own fund.
Speaker 3 (01:04:40):
Then, and the last story is in this political segment
is this one, and this heartbreaking, but it also is infuriating.
A Texas sixth grader reportedly takes her on life after
bullies starting to report her family to ICE. At eleven
year old Texas girl took her on life earlier this
month after enduring relentless bullying at school, where classmates mocked
their fan only's immigration status and even threatened to report
(01:05:02):
them to ICE. According to the family, Jocelyne Rojo Caranza,
a sixth grade student at Gainesville Intermediate School. Died on
February eight, five days that she attended suicide. Her mother,
Marbella Caronza, said she had no idea daughter was being
tormented until it's too late. I waited a whole week
(01:05:24):
for a miracle that my daughter would be well, but
unfortunately nothing could be done. My daughter will always live
for me. I will always love her. According to report,
school officials were aware that she was being bullied. The
rastmen had gotten so bad she was meeting with the
school counselor multiple times a week, yet her family was
never informed. Her bullies allegedly taughted her about deportation, telling
her she would be left alone where her parents were
(01:05:46):
sent away. Despite the severe nature of the bullying, her
mother only learned about it after her daughter's death. Now
she's demanding answers, working with investigator the school officials to
understand why she was never told about the emotional told
her daughter was facing. Here's so obviously that's true, and
that's infuriating and on the mother's behalf, obviously, but.
Speaker 2 (01:06:07):
This is the point. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:06:09):
So there is a YouTube clip of us talking about
Waka Floka and him supporting Trump, and in the clip,
part of the conversation is about immigration. Now we could
have made it a direct, more direct line because waker
Floka also got upset because Trump wants police community and
(01:06:29):
now a Trump's one, He's like, well, you're not gonna do.
You can't have police community. They fucking up black people.
Wow wow, bitch. But there's comments on that YouTube video.
I haven't deleted them or taken them down. If that's
what people want to put up there, they could put
that up there. But there's a bunch of comments on
that YouTube clip of people being like, uh, he need
(01:06:52):
to report anyone who wasn't here illegally. So what's wrong
with deporting people? All this shit?
Speaker 2 (01:06:59):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:07:01):
This is what they really want. It's not about deporting
people far as we know, she's in this country legally.
Speaker 4 (01:07:09):
Right.
Speaker 3 (01:07:10):
It's the cruelty of it. It's the bullying of it.
It's the othering of it, the otherization of it. It's
that these are not white people because they don't have
a problem with South African African nerves, the white the
white South Africans. They're have a problem with them coming here.
They pass the road to let them come here. Right,
They got a problem with brown people. Being in America
(01:07:35):
legally or illegal. They don't care. They might start with
this this shit, but it's not gonna end here.
Speaker 2 (01:07:43):
And more important than even if they.
Speaker 3 (01:07:44):
Can do it, because they don't have the facilities actually
do what they're pliming to do. They don't actually have
the amount of holding and employees to actually get all
these people out of the country. What they do have
is the zeitguys. What they are weaponi is our attitudes
towards each other.
Speaker 2 (01:08:02):
What they do.
Speaker 3 (01:08:03):
Want is you to feel like this brown person is
not as much of a citizen as I am, regardless
of what they did legally, regardless of if they were
born here or not. They want to repeal birthright citizenship,
so now it's not about whether you what you did
at the time was legal. They want to retroactively make
(01:08:25):
it illegal to be brown and not from here and
brown and from here right, even.
Speaker 2 (01:08:31):
Though y'all niggas came on the bunk two.
Speaker 3 (01:08:34):
So my point being, the story is infuriating on multiple levels.
Obviously on just a family school level, but these are
kids right our society, This message of otherization has gotten
so deep, it is is so insidious that now the
(01:08:56):
children are doing it. And that's why I'll never come
on this show and say something like what the next
generation will save us? The next generation learns from this generation, yes,
and this generation is still fucked up, So they learn
from our fucked up stuff too. They learn from what
we allow, and they learn from what we promote. And
what we've allowed is bigotry to take the highest office
(01:09:20):
in the land while having no actual plans to make
any of our lives better, but just to make other
people's lives worse. That's what the fuck just happened. So
this is just part of the fallout. But this kid
is not alone. There's trans children, there's there's there's LGBTQ children,
(01:09:42):
there's black children, there's you know, there's all kinds of
people that all kinds of children that are gonna get
other messages from just girls. You're fifteen and you get
pregnant somehow, you in a state where you can't get
an abortion, right like, this is this This isn't the cost.
This is just one example of the cost of letting
(01:10:04):
this bigotry run them up. All right, Let's try to
get into some other things, because I know that was
a kind of a downer, but I don't know. I'm
struggling with doing the show because it's like, I don't
want to ignore this, right at the same time, you know,
I'm not trying to turn our whole show into this,
so I get that, you know, people feel away about
(01:10:25):
that stuff. But you know, we gotta do the vegetables
as well as the uh as as the desserts. Here.
All right, let's get into I said I was gonna
getting something a little bit better, but actually I'm gonna
do fucking with black people. But but it's not all
but it's not all bad stuff. So we'll do fucking
with black people.
Speaker 4 (01:10:45):
Who who.
Speaker 1 (01:10:54):
People?
Speaker 7 (01:10:55):
Because they just fucking.
Speaker 4 (01:11:08):
Fucking all right.
Speaker 3 (01:11:25):
The first story is, uh, oh wait, why is it
doing this? Okay? The first story is from the n
double a c P. Okay, they have released a consumer
guide tracking companies with commitment to d E.
Speaker 2 (01:11:41):
I I love.
Speaker 1 (01:11:43):
It, yeah, because as as an individual person, it's hard
to keep up with that, like like if this is
your jam, it is hard because it's you don't.
Speaker 3 (01:11:51):
Know, they launched the Black Consumer Advisory and they have
a website for it and everything. You gotta NAACP dot
org campaigns slash campaign slash Black consumer Advisory or you
can just google that. But yeah, they they are going
(01:12:12):
to inform and caution black consumers about going and about
the ongoing and and intentional rollback of nationwide diversity equity
inclusion commitments. So yeah, they have like a document where
they're gonna keep you in uh, I guess, keep you
in the loop.
Speaker 1 (01:12:31):
And regardless of how people feel about the NAACP, they're like,
we are a large enough organization where we can have
the manpower to do shit like this. Like I think
sometimes people have a tendency just to be like, but
y'all always be here, y'all don't do shit, y'all are worthless.
Speaker 2 (01:12:47):
No, that's not always true, y'all.
Speaker 1 (01:12:49):
They actually do got a purpose that they can do
this shit because guess what, you ain't find this shit
online in one collective place, like nobody has the manpower
or the research and the.
Speaker 2 (01:12:59):
Build the teacher do it.
Speaker 3 (01:13:01):
I also wonder if they're how deep the research goes.
But yeah, they they who's recommitted the Dei, Delta Airlines, Apple,
Ben and Jerry, who's rolled it back? McDonald's met a Walmart.
I do wonder how deep this list is gonna get
because I feel like we're at the cut, we're at
the beginning of it, and like Costco isn't on here
and Costco has already recommitted to DEI. I don't see
(01:13:24):
Target on there as a rollback. So maybe they're doing
more research than the surface level of like oh, this
article said, maybe they're actually talking to people within the
companies to figure out who's doing it or who's not.
But anyway, I appreciate them doing it zero twe hundred.
Speaker 1 (01:13:38):
I'm not fucked with at all because somebody's got to
do the work, and I appreciate them for doing the work,
you know, the organization, And it's one of those things where,
like you say, people have a tendency to take old
institutions for granted and just assume they're always gonna be there,
and then there's something happened to them. Not everybody's looking
crazy because nobody actually wants to do the goddamn't work,
(01:13:59):
but that you want to come plaining about the motherfucker's
doing the job.
Speaker 3 (01:14:02):
Okay, did you say huh?
Speaker 2 (01:14:04):
I said, I'm not fuck with it all?
Speaker 3 (01:14:05):
Oh zero? Okay, coo cook and I give it zero
as well. Good job, and I hope they go and
dept with it. Uh Disney, speaking of DEI, Disney is
scaling back warnings about stereotypes and classic movies. So you know,
Dumbo with the Crows, Peter Pan, these movies from nineteen
(01:14:28):
forty one, nineteen fifty three, respectively.
Speaker 2 (01:14:31):
So they're gonna do it like we used to just
watch the movie. Yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:14:34):
Originally they had a disclaimer that warned people about uh,
negative depictions and or mistreatment of people or coach os instead.
Now reason this program is presented as originally created and
ma contain stereotypes or negative depictions. The move is reportedly
part of a broader shift in their DEI initiatives. They
(01:14:54):
are facing increased scrutiny amid political pressure, particularly from the
Trump administration.
Speaker 2 (01:15:00):
All right, zero t one hundred, I don't know.
Speaker 1 (01:15:04):
I'm not fucked with at all, Like from my if
I'm understanding this, right, y'all basically taking that disclaim off
and go here's the movie.
Speaker 2 (01:15:11):
Yeah, and I don't have a problem And.
Speaker 3 (01:15:13):
It still has some level of a disclaimer, just doesn't
specifically say mistreatment of people in their culture.
Speaker 1 (01:15:18):
Right, I don't have a problem with that at all,
because I do understand trigger warnings.
Speaker 2 (01:15:26):
And I do understand preparing people.
Speaker 1 (01:15:28):
I get that, y'all, but there are some things in
life you just that's impossible.
Speaker 2 (01:15:33):
And so for me, I don't have a problem with
it all. Either watch it or don't. Yeah, I'm not
gonna lie.
Speaker 3 (01:15:38):
I never cared about these warnings. It's just I. But
I've said it on the show back when they first
brought these warnings into the zeitgeis. It's like, if it
helps people, good, but I'm not a person that needs it.
I don't know, like I knew this was from nineteen
fifty one. I hit play, and I also feel a
way like I don't mind warning, take it or leave.
(01:16:01):
It doesn't bother me. I think the broader message of
like they're doing this in the midst of rolling back
DEI stuff because of the Trump administration, that's a little
bit bothers them. I'd say maybe twenty five for me,
because I just don't like that these Trump people think
they're winning anything, right, but I wasn't. I wouldn't have
fought to keep these warnings. If I worked at the company,
(01:16:21):
I wouldn't even have told them to do them. So
that's not it. The thing that normally bothers me was
the worst. I think it's the worst thing you can
do is when they started taking taking down episodes of
shows because they because the episode might be offensive. So
we taking down this episode of Office. I hate that shit,
me too recorded it. It should be out there, but
don't like it. It becomes people's least favorite episode. And
(01:16:43):
y'all just have to deal with the fallout.
Speaker 2 (01:16:45):
But right, you know, don't erase shit.
Speaker 3 (01:16:48):
But that's but they didn't do that. So that's the
only one. That's the only way it would have bothered me.
All right, we'll do two more.
Speaker 2 (01:16:56):
All right.
Speaker 3 (01:16:57):
Cyprus school you is in were in letter to parent
in a newsletter to parents. Uh, all right, let's see
what's going on.
Speaker 2 (01:17:08):
It's a special school.
Speaker 3 (01:17:09):
Cypress is the location, Okay, okay, okay, like Charlotte.
Speaker 2 (01:17:13):
School or something.
Speaker 3 (01:17:15):
I guess it's in Texas. Cory School facing criticism after
a racial slur. It makes it into a newsletter sent
to more than one hundred families. Thank you all for
joining us. So I'm Keith Garvin.
Speaker 2 (01:17:25):
Good evening, I'm Daniella Gusman. Well tonight.
Speaker 5 (01:17:27):
The school leader is apologizing, but one family says that
doesn't go far enough to addressing the issue.
Speaker 2 (01:17:33):
K PRC twos.
Speaker 6 (01:17:34):
Bryce Newberry is in Cyprus tonight with the fallout. The
newsletter didn't look much different than normal when it hit
inboxes on Sunday, but then the school sends an apology
email and parents looked a little closer. That racial slur
that we aren't showing on TV jumped off the page.
This email attachment starts with a Valentine's Day greeting kicking
off February, but scroll to page three and the words
(01:17:57):
are anything but lovely.
Speaker 8 (01:17:58):
I was shocked, Jenny.
Speaker 3 (01:18:00):
Okay, so let's just go to page three trying to
see where's the where's the slur? Have you ever warned? Okay?
I don't know.
Speaker 6 (01:18:14):
Jeanette Dove received it.
Speaker 8 (01:18:15):
It's one of those things like you're trying to make
sense of it, but then you relize, Okay, this is
not something that's going to make sense.
Speaker 6 (01:18:23):
And couldn't believe what she saw sent by her four
year old daughters Montssori School in Cyprus. This is a
greedious the paragraph.
Speaker 3 (01:18:30):
Reads, sometimes just spending that quality academic child, which academic time,
which a child one on one in the comfort of
your home, can be equal to, if not greater than,
the academic authorization of a real nigga bitch.
Speaker 2 (01:18:45):
Oh oh mm hmm.
Speaker 6 (01:18:49):
Sometimes just spending that quality academic time with your child
one on one in the comfort of your home can
be equal to, if not greater than, the academic authorization
of a real We had to burrow the rest from
my child's school.
Speaker 3 (01:19:03):
I mean, it's not an inaccurate sentence, uh, I mean
I have found that to be, at least in my experience,
that spending quality academic time with your child one on
one in the comfort of your home can be equal to,
if not greater than, the academic authorization of a real
(01:19:26):
nigga bitch.
Speaker 2 (01:19:27):
I agree. I just wouldn't, Yeah, I wouldn't.
Speaker 3 (01:19:31):
Put It's like something I might say privately to a friend,
you know, maybe something I would say on Twitter to somebody.
But I have found that to be my reality and
that I've learned a lot from real nigga bitches in
my life. Yes, sir, I'd say, sometimes even more than
(01:19:52):
a lesson you can learn in school. It's like, thank
god I was around now, But the.
Speaker 8 (01:19:56):
Rest from my child's school, of all places, I mean,
I want my child's school to be a safe haven.
Speaker 6 (01:20:04):
The Lycei Montissori School director assuring KPRC too the offensive
language isn't condoned, but unsure of how it made it
in the publication that went to more than one hundred
and fifty families, and promising this family that security has
been tightened around the accounts used to create and send
the newsletter.
Speaker 8 (01:20:21):
The bigger issue here is that there's someone on your
staff who deemed it appropriate to access the document, put
in that language, and then send it out to your constituents.
Speaker 6 (01:20:32):
Find the timing intention title at the start of Black
History Month. Now uncomfortable and unable to send her daughter
back to the school.
Speaker 2 (01:20:41):
This is not a problem we ask for.
Speaker 8 (01:20:43):
This is a problem that we're having to respond to.
Speaker 6 (01:20:45):
The school director told me over the phone today that
this newsletter has gone out every month for the last
eight years and there's never been a problem. But if
they can identify the person who's responsible for this, they'll
be fired immediately.
Speaker 3 (01:20:57):
How would you not be able to identify the person
that's responsible for the newsletter for the last eight weeks.
Speaker 2 (01:21:04):
Y'all only got eight people. What what is happening? I'm
pretty sure this little school ain't got no, hundreds of
people to have access to this letter?
Speaker 3 (01:21:11):
Why he trying to act like we're asking them to
get a forensic accounting in A and UH and call
matlock like this is pretty Who's who signs it? Who
gets entered?
Speaker 2 (01:21:22):
Right?
Speaker 3 (01:21:23):
I have a I have a conspiracy theory of my
own though. I think I know what happened.
Speaker 2 (01:21:28):
What happened.
Speaker 3 (01:21:29):
I think it's AIM.
Speaker 1 (01:21:33):
I think it's I could yeah, I could see something.
I could see somebody running this bullshit through AI. And
they didn't spell chick. They didn't actually go through the reason.
Speaker 2 (01:21:40):
That's why we not.
Speaker 3 (01:21:40):
I'm not worried about losing my job to AI yet
because A I don't know not to put real nigga
bitch in the It does not The AI was it
went the Urban Dictionary was like, what's wrong with this sentence?
This is this is how people talk?
Speaker 2 (01:21:55):
All right?
Speaker 3 (01:21:55):
Ze te hundred?
Speaker 2 (01:21:56):
Can this gets a your cars?
Speaker 1 (01:21:59):
Because I would be highly upset if I got this
letter UH sent to me for my child school and
y'all talking about we all know who had access to
this account and we don't know what we're gonna do,
but you better know something. And it's probably a private
school I'm fucking paying tuition and shit.
Speaker 3 (01:22:16):
Okay, I give it a seventy five. The school did
apologize and said they will find who's responsible. But also
I'm not as mad as she is because she threw in,
it's the start of black history. Off. Oh, she says
the start.
Speaker 2 (01:22:36):
She says, it's the beginning what is happening. But like
what she's like, somebody purposely they.
Speaker 1 (01:22:46):
Did this.
Speaker 3 (01:23:00):
In that throwing in that black history mother some just
a chef's kids, doctor umar bird level of wokeness. She
threw that. She was like, they did this on purpose
because they knew February first was coming.
Speaker 2 (01:23:13):
This was somebody plotted in their scheme. They didn't say
real niggas in March. I know that they show didn't
They ain't do it in January. Okay, they pulled that.
I reduced letter every more off. They pulled that shit
out in February.
Speaker 3 (01:23:25):
Right, My third I sense is tingling, all right, speaking
of now it's my turn to hit the third eye
for our last fucking with black people. Okay, Now this
may not seem like it's fucking with black people to y'all.
Tom Holland says he went to Target to buy Barrow
b e r O his own non alcoholic beer, but
the staff wouldn't sell it to him because he couldn't
(01:23:47):
prove his age. He was a video.
Speaker 2 (01:23:50):
Okay, you certain success.
Speaker 3 (01:23:52):
I'll never get used to this man being beans and
toast because he's so good as Peter Parker. It sounded
like he from from New York. But yeah, anyway he
is in his regular voice.
Speaker 2 (01:24:02):
Okay, so success I found.
Speaker 3 (01:24:05):
Wait a minute, as an aside, do white people also
get mad about British people taking their jobs and acting?
Because I know Black people definitely get mad. They be
mad as hell when they find out what these dudes
is a mash and banger's guy. They'd be like, I
can't believe Idris is stealing our jobs and damns and
Idris all the indresses ain't from here. But do white
(01:24:26):
people feel this way when it's like why why Peter
Parker get to be Andrew Garfield and this guy they're
not even from here anyway? So success, I found some
a boy they wouldn't accept whit id because it's.
Speaker 2 (01:24:43):
English and I couldn't prove my age.
Speaker 3 (01:24:45):
Really, lovely employee, I guess stand there, id, and.
Speaker 6 (01:24:50):
Uh, it's kind of my running though I wasn't allowed
to behind my own product.
Speaker 2 (01:24:55):
But yeah, feeling good. This is really exciting. It's weird
when the non alcoholic, right, why would you even need that? Right?
Speaker 3 (01:25:03):
But uh, all right, Karen ze T one hundred, what do.
Speaker 2 (01:25:05):
You get us? Oh, I'm not fucked with at all?
Speaker 3 (01:25:09):
Huh not fucked with it all? You say?
Speaker 2 (01:25:14):
Really?
Speaker 3 (01:25:15):
Hum mm hmm, okay, because I give it to your cars.
Speaker 2 (01:25:19):
Wow.
Speaker 3 (01:25:40):
And he's supposed to be dating a black woman and
he's up in Target buying beer. Oh, I'm sorry, brother,
brother Holland Vanilla King.
Speaker 2 (01:25:54):
I thought we we Vanilla King. I thought we was
boycotting Target.
Speaker 3 (01:25:59):
Oh, but now when it's your beer, the white man's money,
it's time to shop. So y'all just gonna go in
on Tabitha Brown. I didn't, y'all just gonna cancel.
Speaker 2 (01:26:14):
Tab But oh, Peter Parker ass.
Speaker 3 (01:26:17):
Can just web web zip his ass on in there
and get some beer and then make a cute little
video about how man.
Speaker 2 (01:26:26):
Mm hmm.
Speaker 3 (01:26:27):
Well he wasn't wearing the venom suits. I knowiced that
time he didn't want to be black of your cars.
Time you canceled, Okay, you're either staying with the people
or yeah, or we all fall apart. He's just like,
this is why they be Jerry.
Speaker 2 (01:26:45):
Manner and us. This is why I know I'm part
of the problem. Yeah, yeah, yes, I am all that.
Speaker 3 (01:26:50):
Ain't go over the white allies not doing enough and
let them swing from a web all of a sudden,
you just ready for massive time to come in and
tell us what you show him. You let you let
me go buy some of that beer. You're gonna go
buy some of that beer. You're gonna go to the
Target and give no.
Speaker 2 (01:27:04):
Good d y'all dogar if I can find it. No,
you're not.
Speaker 3 (01:27:08):
If I can find it, I don't believe you.
Speaker 2 (01:27:11):
Oh, I'll walk my black ass right on in Target.
Speaker 3 (01:27:14):
We'll see, we'll see.
Speaker 2 (01:27:16):
We just haven't been the one in a while. M hm.
Speaker 3 (01:27:19):
Why do you think that is right?
Speaker 2 (01:27:23):
But if we do, I'm not protesting.
Speaker 3 (01:27:26):
That's why I got deal with you.
Speaker 2 (01:27:27):
Suall do.
Speaker 3 (01:27:29):
All that hang over the Democrats and you can't wait
to go to Target and give them your dollars because
guess what, white man by the way, not even saying
you're going in there to get Tabitha's cutting boy, You're
going in there to give the white spider man, non
alcoholic beer money that you won't even fucking drink. That's crazy.
Speaker 1 (01:27:47):
I don't have a problem with it him knowing target
is a politician.
Speaker 3 (01:27:51):
M M all right, that's it for to day show.
I can't stomach. I thought we had principles and integrityize
I was in it next to the sage. S uh
we do soord ratchiness and get out of here. That's weird.
(01:28:30):
That's not showing my sword ratchiness stories for some reason.
Speaker 2 (01:28:33):
Oh no, huh.
Speaker 3 (01:28:35):
If I switch it to this damn man that's only
got one story, what the fuck?
Speaker 1 (01:28:42):
What's have a number that in your computer is doing
its own thing to decide to check a vacation.
Speaker 3 (01:28:46):
It's like I'm tied to I can try opening different
browser and see if it'll work in there. But for
some reason, when I went to sword it by soword
ratchiness stories, it just didn't put any of them up. Okay,
I found one Samurai I saw Lord Weldon. Agent can't
remember new arrest. Former realtor might need to see video
(01:29:07):
of his latest arrest to remember the incident. After being
taken to the hospital following the aledged spate of assaults,
Carl Adam Howard was previously spared jail for a drug
fueled attack on two women that involved a samurai sword.
The forty eight year old face caught again on Tuesday
when he appeared via a video link from his hospital
bed following the ledged assaults on four people in Sydney's
(01:29:30):
Inner West. His lawyer, John Sutton, requested vision of Howard's
arrest to make sense of the matter. He has no
recollection of a significant portion. He might have been experiencing
an episode of psychosis at the time of the incident.
The former real estate agent allegedly assaulted a forty nine
year old woman at the demanding her car keys outside
(01:29:50):
of a store at ten to twenty pm on Sunday,
before allegedly assaulting a fifty five year old man who
followed him up the street. Howard is also accused of
subsequently assaulting the forty year old woman and a thirty
nine year old man, both of whom police said he
knew at a nearby unit complex. Everybody was getting.
Speaker 2 (01:30:07):
Hei tas up for everybody.
Speaker 3 (01:30:09):
He allegedly assaulted the woman again after she fled the unit,
while the man collapsed unconscious outside Damn. They were treated
by paramedics while Howard was arrested after the officers negotiated
his exit from the union unit. He has been charged
with fourteen offenses, including one kind of aggravated breaking and
entering while inflicting actual bodily harm as opposed to what.
Speaker 2 (01:30:30):
Supposed to what?
Speaker 3 (01:30:32):
As opposed to what actual as opposed to figurative bodily
harmed and.
Speaker 2 (01:30:36):
The real bodily harm. What's happening here?
Speaker 3 (01:30:38):
He implied bodily harm, but this time he did it.
The charge carriers a maxim on twenty year jail term.
A police officer remained on guard in the room with
Howard face court for a hospital He did not apply
for bail and his dude to face court again April fifteen.
Howard was placed on a twenty seven month intensive corrections
order in November twenty twenty three after pleading guilty directly
(01:31:00):
sleep causing grievous body harm for a drug fueled attack
on two women.
Speaker 2 (01:31:06):
This is jam yeah.
Speaker 3 (01:31:07):
The centers allowed him to remain out of jail while
he completed the period of home detention and community service.
He was earlier found not guilty on two kinds of
grievous bodily harm with intent to murder over the incident. There,
you guys, go okay, be careful out here.
Speaker 2 (01:31:21):
The real estate agents, theay wilding in the streets.
Speaker 3 (01:31:25):
They got sores and they don't mind hurting people.
Speaker 1 (01:31:28):
Apparently, have your paperwork together, please all right, and.
Speaker 3 (01:31:31):
Make sure you have your paperwork when you go buy
the white Man's Beard target. Please do not even gonna
call you a doctor. Lamar will say, all right, y'all,
we'll talk to y'all. Talk to y'all the next time.
Until then, I love you.
Speaker 2 (01:31:45):
I love you too.