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May 21, 2025 113 mins

Rod and Karen banter about Bolinda getting pushy, basic bougie, and Tesla bumper sticker. Then they discuss Gen Z drinking less, Costco buy now pay later program, Trader Joe’s cracks down on eggs, Starbucks lays off 1100 employees, tariffs are wreaking havoc with international grocers, congresswoman calls for Tory Lanez's freedom, DOJ investigating Chicago mayor for hiring Black people, DOJ pulls out of police reform, Fort Branch museum totaled by falling tree, White People News, lotto winner batters cop, MAGA hat triggers attack on old man, man tries to steal back engagement ring and sword ratchetness.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Good news everyone. I listened to The Black Guy Who
Tips podcast because Rod and Karen are hot.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
Hey, welcome to another episode of The Black Guy Who
Tells Podcast. I'm your host Rod, joined us always by
my co host Aran, and we're live on a Wednesday.
Ready to do some podcast and find us everywhere you
get podcasts. The official weapon of the show is the mic, too,

(00:30):
and the an official sport at bulletbarll Extreme. Welcome to
episode thirty one hundred and I'm hitting mics, yep, Karen
hitting Mark.

Speaker 1 (00:40):
I am a professional, y'all.

Speaker 2 (00:44):
Uh, well, you know how we start. Karen, I guess
I'll ask you. Do you have any banter?

Speaker 1 (00:48):
I do?

Speaker 2 (00:49):
Okay, here we go, Do you have any Do you
have any talk to me? Do you have any banter? Answer? Answered? Answered? Answered?
Do you have any.

Speaker 3 (01:18):
Talk to me?

Speaker 2 (01:20):
Do you have any bad? All? Right?

Speaker 1 (01:24):
And this, this, this first one is something that just
reacently happened. And that's because it kind of took me
for a loop. We was in the drive through and
we got ready to drive through. Uh the drive through. Uh,
we were at the bow Jangles and I guess Bolinda's working.
So Bolinda was checking us out and Belinda asked us,
like we was trying to leave a car at Amazon,
would you like to add? Did you want this? Would

(01:46):
you like to add this? Was like, bitch, can I
go please? It was just so confusing to get asked
all those questions. And I'm used to certain you know,
certain you know, would you like to upside? So? Can
I get you anything else? That's cool? You know, or
they know I'm going to ask you would you like
one thing? But it was like two or three things. Oh,
I'm like, gosh, this is like the transaction went on
extra because of that. Maybe maybe mentally, I was not

(02:07):
prepared to be asked for the five questions at to
drive through.

Speaker 2 (02:11):
Uh now when they instruct the employees to do that,
because I've worked drive through before and they do tell
you to ask those questions, are you as upset by
that as you are upset that the Bolinda did it.

Speaker 1 (02:26):
I think, like I said, it's a mental thing for me,
because I'm like, well, then just put a person there,
Like I do not understand the purpose of Bolinda. Just
put a person there. Have the person ask me the questions.
Why is Bolinda asking me all these got damn questions?

Speaker 2 (02:40):
All right? Well, you know, everybody's entied up to their
emotions about things. I think that's not something that upset
me in the least bit. And they normally have a
person do that, and if they don't do that, it's
because the person decided not to do that, you know.
But I like talking into the machines. I feel like

(03:01):
it's one less reason to get shot at the drive.

Speaker 1 (03:04):
Through understanding until terminator.

Speaker 2 (03:09):
Good Olinda can't pick up disrespect so gate. And then also,
like you know those questions, I mean they took ten seconds.
It was would you like to upgrade eliminade?

Speaker 4 (03:19):
No?

Speaker 2 (03:20):
Do you want some new treats for dessert?

Speaker 5 (03:24):
No?

Speaker 3 (03:25):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (03:26):
Do you want to upsize it?

Speaker 4 (03:27):
No?

Speaker 2 (03:27):
Okay, all right, well that's your coadle. Like, I don't know,
this feels a little like people get mad at kids
on the plane or something.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
It's just like, I know, this is old lady yelling
at the clowns.

Speaker 2 (03:37):
I ain't that. No, it's fine. I mean people everybody
is triggered about different things. That's uh, that one wasn't mine.

Speaker 1 (03:45):
Uh. Maybe maybe because I'm like, hey, I can't take
all the jobs. God damn.

Speaker 2 (03:51):
I mean, it's not really even taking their jobs. Because
they gotta still hand the shit out. It's honestly one
of the few times that AI is doing something that
I don't mind. That's not a creative job. It's busy work,
and it's typically distracts from the people in the boat
Jangles and most importantly, Bojangles employees never sound like they

(04:13):
want to be at bo Jangles. Belinda, through her artificial intelligence,
has to sound like that until the artificial intelligence becomes
sentient enough to be depressed. But until that time, it's
nice to go to a bou Jangles and not get
greeted with what you want.

Speaker 1 (04:30):
Huh.

Speaker 2 (04:32):
Now, I wasn't talking to you like this is fine
with me?

Speaker 1 (04:37):
Well, I guess my question is is Belinda programmed to
be like, we ain't got that? That's do they turn
it all?

Speaker 2 (04:43):
I don't know if she is or not, but the
point is it's still we haven't had that conversation, that
that thing. But Belinda never tells you any bad news,
so you know.

Speaker 1 (04:55):
What, that's true, but disappoint her job not to disappoint you.
I am not program. Disappointment is not in my program.

Speaker 2 (05:03):
This is that thing where people just get older and
they just don't like change. Even when it's obviously better.
Because we've done so many episodes of this podcast complaining
about bow Jangles and the people that work there and
the customer service being terrible. We've done that so many times.
It's a running bit.

Speaker 1 (05:19):
They out of this.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
They don't do this. You better get to bow Jangles
before this time.

Speaker 1 (05:22):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (05:23):
And then they put some AI on it, and it's like,
why is asking me these questions? You mean? I questions
Employees are supposed to ask when you're buying stuff, and
they don't ask. They always ask. I mean they ask
them anyway, you know, but like they supposed to ask them.
Do you want to ask them some bob bearry biscuits? No,
I don't.

Speaker 1 (05:42):
Okay, give some watermelon, lemonade, beef, you know?

Speaker 2 (05:47):
Anyway? What else you got?

Speaker 1 (05:49):
Oh?

Speaker 3 (05:49):
You know?

Speaker 1 (05:50):
No?

Speaker 2 (05:51):
In still a show yesterday. This's really nothing happened to me.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
I don no problem. And I've been I been thinking
about this. What do you call somebody that's basic and
boogie at the same time, Like it's the name for
that type of person, you know, how people go you
a basic bitch or you're a boozy bitch. What happened
if you were a little bit of both, like, you know,
like like a combination.

Speaker 2 (06:11):
Yeah, basic boujie.

Speaker 1 (06:12):
Yeah. I like Papa John's, I like Eminem's, I like
Little Mush, But I also like going to the Hornets Gang.
I like fancy drinks, you know what I'm saying like that, Like,
so I'm a little bit of both, you know type
of thing. So I don't know, I've never heard anybody.

Speaker 2 (06:30):
I guess anybody kind of oscillates between the two. Most
people are not, you know, the extreme either one. So yeah,
that makes sense. Basic bougie, I think is the that's
the new term. I think we should just start saying
that I'm basic bougie. You know, I'm not that high
faluting about everything, but there's certain things.

Speaker 1 (06:52):
That's it.

Speaker 2 (06:53):
Oh that was okay, all right, Well I like those.
Those those are good. I wish I had something we saw. Ah,
we saw. I bought this before Elon went crazy. That
bumper sticker on a tesla in the wild. It's the
first time I've ever seen one. I've seen people talk

(07:13):
about it on.

Speaker 1 (07:13):
Twitter, but I've never seen him in the wild.

Speaker 2 (07:18):
Yeah, but I actually saw one. Uh And I don't
know what you do with that. I don't know. I
don't know enough about cars to know if like Nigga,
that's a twenty twenty three he was being crazy or whatever.
You know, I haven't liked Elon much longer than most people.
So covering doing this show covering the racial discrimination.

Speaker 1 (07:39):
They didn't really keep up with him like that, covering the.

Speaker 2 (07:42):
Racial discrimination, how he reacted during COVID with sending people,
you know, trying to make people come to work and
all this shit, moving his plan or moving the company
to Texas because that less right worker right. So I
haven't liked him forever. But I don't know how many
people we're buying Tesla's because of Elon Musk. I think.

(08:04):
I think it is one of the true ironings of
how many people have they their political alignment is the
exact opposite of Elon Musk. But Elon Musk and his
company sell pitch was to liberal people, it was save
the environment, you know, blah blah blah, and it turns

(08:25):
into actually, I'm a weird fucking like conservative, fascist, racist,
neo naziass niggas from South Africa, and so I do
feel bad for them people that, you know, it was
like I still.

Speaker 1 (08:39):
Got cot payments like I'm not gonna get rid of
it for some.

Speaker 2 (08:41):
People or if you paid it off even like, I
do feel bad for those people, because my guess is
a lot of Tesla drivers that bought their cars a
while ago are actually directly opposed to what Elon stands for.
Now agreed, But you know, and at the same time,
like what am I gonna do? I don't really get
mad about them cars like people on Twitter, because the

(09:04):
fuck you're gonna do selling a car buying a car
is a lot like I don't know what the fuck
the Ford Family's up to. If I find out they
were car Ka clans members or some shit. It's not
like I'm gonna be like, well, I guess I gotta
take a loss on this car, like most people gonna
keep driving or whatever. So I understand that that's not
necessarily something that's reasonable for everybody. Agreed. All right, let's

(09:26):
get into the show. That was our banter segment. What
do I want to talk about? Uh hm hmm. I
guess we'll do broke when we play music and we'll
come back and do some broke news. Oh that was funky.

(10:14):
That was called luminous by infrared crypto. All right, let's
get into this broke news because we are broke, y'all.

Speaker 1 (10:22):
Okay, we ain't got.

Speaker 2 (10:23):
It as a country. It's not looking too good and
the signs are everywhere if you look around. Gen Z
is drinking less and one study is study says it's
because they're broke.

Speaker 1 (10:35):
Yeah, they've done studies. They say our generation drinks way
more than the younger generation, like like we are heavy drinkers.
A lot of them have a tendency to do more
like weed and things like that. And so when they
do that, they have a tendency not to drink and
so and when they have concerts and things like that.
When they have like concerts something aimed at older people,

(10:57):
they sell alcohol lefrom right. When it comes to younger people,
they don't move it as much.

Speaker 2 (11:01):
Where you hear all this from, They've done studies that
I believe that they've done. I ask where you heard
it from. I'm not saying you're wrong. I just sometimes
I bring up stuff and it's like dowd you and
sometimes you're like, oh, let me put on my PhD glasses,
you know, in the late night. So I'm just wondering
where you heard it from.

Speaker 1 (11:19):
Probably from like the New York Times, because you know,
sometimes they had like the articles that kind of pop
up and things like that, so periodically, periodically I'll click
on stuff and I'll just start reading into the article,
and sometimes I forget that I'll read them till you
bring something up and it kind of jogs my memory.
But like, oh yeah, I think I've heard about that.
And it's a lot of times I have no idea
what you talk about. It just varies.

Speaker 2 (11:38):
It's just interesting anyway. I mean, that makes sense to me.
I think another thing that might make sense too is
that gens alcohol drinking is typically seen as a social thing,
and if you grew up during the pandemic or that's
like a big part of your social like your so

(11:59):
like say you are twin five when the pandemic hit,
those are prime going out drink and hanging out going
to bars years. So you spent two years not doing
anything your work. You're working remote in some cases, so
that's a lot less hanging out after work, hanging out
with your work friends, even having work friends, right, And
I know people like to, you know, talk about how

(12:21):
much they hate work and co workers and work friends
and shit. But Honestly, I think we went too far
with it. Listen, there's a reason so many people are
fucking lonely and isolated and went into the Internet and
fell into these weird ass conclaves of groups with anger
and sadness and shiit.

Speaker 1 (12:39):
Look looking for social groups.

Speaker 2 (12:40):
Yeah, so you need some thing, and drinking typically is
seen as a thing that social lubricates you, you know,
so it's like, hey, I can hang out with strangers
and not worry about my anxiety if I have a
couple of drinks. So yeah, all that stuff. In addition
to man got it. You know, people ain't got the
money they used to the disposable income. It's not gonna

(13:01):
get better under Trump, Like, no, it is not. You know,
shit is about to cost more under Trump and people
about to have less money to go around.

Speaker 1 (13:09):
Yep. And also the thing is this is a generational
thing too. You have a whole generation that went to college,
get all these degrees and they're getting out and they
wanted to pay them eight dollars an hour, but they
got you know, one hundred some thousand dollars worth of debt. Like,
you know, it ain't the same, you know as it
used to be. And it's one of those things where

(13:31):
I understand a lot of anger from the younger generation
because they was like, we did the same thing that
y'all told us we were supposed to do, and we're
not reaping any of the rewards that y'all said we
were supposed to get.

Speaker 2 (13:41):
Yeah, people can't get houses and all that stuff.

Speaker 1 (13:45):
Less children have less children, and shit could ever be like.

Speaker 2 (13:47):
Wow, people can't get married?

Speaker 1 (13:48):
Yeah, right, because you can't afford it.

Speaker 2 (13:51):
So yeah. Experts have pointed to health consciousness and social
media in addition to limited disposable income. It's key reasons
for gen Z is a version of alcohol. I wonder
what happens to the alcohol industry. How big of a
dent is this? That said in this pole, which is
just a pole, but it shows adults under thirty five
and UH twenty twenty three it dropped from UH, adults

(14:17):
under thirty five who drink dropped from seventy two percent
in two thousand and one two thousand and three to
sixty two percent in twenty twenty one twenty twenty three.

Speaker 1 (14:26):
UH.

Speaker 2 (14:26):
Technology, marijuana legalization, and shifting social norms also play the role.
Alcohol is a social job. Okay, So it's basically what
I just said. So yeah, I think it's I think
it's all those factors coming in. And also people ain't
got it.

Speaker 1 (14:37):
Yeah, and also you have a kind of a I
don't wanna say a push your way, but you know,
it's a lot of people that may have stopped drinking
during the pandemic and things like that. So a lot
of them when they go out, they want to do
like mock tails and things like that, and a lot
of places don't offer those like like they don't offer
those drinks for them to do the social thing for
everybody else, Like they go, I don't mind going to

(14:59):
like social setting, but I don't want to drink alcohol,
And a lot of places don't have like like the
alternative to somebody wants to hang out but doesn't but
doesn't drink heavy. So for a lot of those people
that go, well, I just really not just a rather
not be in this environment. So I can see a
little bit too with that.

Speaker 2 (15:15):
I don't think that would be a big enough percentage, honestly,
because I don't. I think you'd have to find people
that specifically drank pandemic hit, got sober, and now they're
coming out the house, and they're like, I'm not buying
alcohol anymore, not saying that that's nobody. Just the percentages
that we're seeing is is more societal than just oh,

(15:38):
people start living healthy. I think that's I can see that. Yeah,
it's not that that's zero. Just whatever that number is
is that the industry ain't. Like I think if we
saw a mass exit, if we saw ten percent of
people basically got sober over the last half many years,
I think that'd be a huge story, Like, Wow, Americans
are just getting sober. I think it's Americans can't afford

(16:02):
to drink, that's.

Speaker 1 (16:04):
True, or if they do a lot of the more
people that probably drinking the rock bottom versus.

Speaker 2 (16:08):
Now, because that would count as alcohol that has study
drinking and that didn't say quality, that's.

Speaker 1 (16:14):
True, didn't say quantity. And so yeah, because like literally
like their dollars can't stretch, and they be like, well,
since my dollars can't stretch, I'd rather just you know,
cut it out my budget.

Speaker 2 (16:25):
Yeah. And I do wonder if people that have troubles
with you know, drinking alcohol or quitting alcohol, if even
in a bad economy, if it did, if it is
like well back to the bottom shelf, or maybe they
was already on the bottom shelf. I don't know, you know,
that's not my not my table. I don't know those right.
Costco launches a by now pay later option for online orders.

Speaker 1 (16:47):
Is that common thing everybody everybody's getting? Yes, I said, bad.

Speaker 4 (16:54):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (16:55):
Yeah. Customers can split payments on orders between five hundred
to seventeen thousand, five hundred dollars, with turns ranging from
three to thirty six months. The program includes interest charges
with APR rates between ten to thirty six percent. Thirty
ten to thirty ten to thirty six percent.

Speaker 1 (17:13):
Oh my god, that's how they get people.

Speaker 2 (17:15):
Oh my god, that's like payday loan.

Speaker 1 (17:19):
We choosery we talked about the other day. That's when
they were talking about the door dash. I was like, child,
y'all is no, you're gonna it's that.

Speaker 2 (17:26):
I don't remember what the percentage was on Carner though.

Speaker 1 (17:29):
Me me either, I don't remember. Percentage was thirty six percent. Yeah,
that's ridiculous. Whoa, Yeah, you're talking about credit card range.

Speaker 2 (17:37):
That's way that's way higher than a credit card thirty
six percent. That's a payday loan thirty six percent. That's crazy.
Oh my god, Oh my god. Like, if you buy
five hundred dollars worth of groceries and you gotta pay
that back over like three months, and the interest is
thirty six percent, What the fuck?

Speaker 1 (18:00):
That's by the time you pay that off. You know
how much is that?

Speaker 2 (18:04):
Well, thirty six percent of five hundred dollars one hundred
and eighty dollars, So it'll five hundred dollars will cost
you six hundred and eighty dollars that you need to
pay back in three months. Wow, what the And you're
not borring the money because you got it.

Speaker 1 (18:20):
That's the thing. You're not barring.

Speaker 2 (18:22):
You got an extra hundred eighty dollars in your budget.

Speaker 1 (18:24):
And you ain't split these payments up for no reason. So,
oh my god, what are they gonna do? Come take
the ship, baby, bitch. I don'na cook these groceries.

Speaker 2 (18:30):
The payments must be made through a firm's app or website.
Customers can also set up automatic payments. Please keep in
mind that missed or late payments can lead to penalties
and harm your credit score.

Speaker 1 (18:41):
Of course, of course that's the catch. Shit, man, We
are fucked because people ain't got it.

Speaker 2 (18:48):
Groceries costs more than ever. Now people gonna need it,
Yes they are. You're gonna need people. There are gonna
be some people that just need to use this shit.

Speaker 1 (18:56):
It's just gonna fucate credit them forever. Right, be able
to break that cycle, right, and something like this should
not be this right here, shouldn't go cuntch your credit
score like like I like, I like, because things like
this is already preatory. So people were getting it, aren't
aren't gonna have a lot of money a lot of
times because if you got it, you just gonna pay
for it up front.

Speaker 2 (19:17):
Yeah. Uh, this might be old news. I don't know
if it's still happening. But back in February, Trader Jone's
was cracking down with a one dozen rule amid the
bird flew outbreak. So you can only get a dozen
eggs because people be trying to fucking stock pal them

(19:37):
and you know, do that panic buying and let me
buy fifty million eggs and I'm gonna sell each one
to the hood or whatever. It's just like they were like,
if you come in Trader Joe's, uh, you can you
basically get one dozen lead eggs and then that's the limit.
You can't buy more than that, right, So you know,
even Trader Joe's is going through it. At one point,

(19:58):
Starbucks laid off eleven hundred corporate employees back in February
as well as they were streamlining.

Speaker 1 (20:05):
Not only streamlining, A lot of people don't buy Stobucks
as much, Like I don't know, I don't know if
it's stuff, but I'm not really a coffee drinker like that.
But a lot of people when I was going into
the office and stuff they did, they did not care
for Stopbucks. A lot of them be like cause we
were using like the machine. They were like it's too strong.
Like they were like, it is not the greatest coffee

(20:25):
in the world. So I don't know what happened or
if it because now for a sudden your you know,
your left yo U chapequine and crappuccino and all that stuff.
It's like forty five dollars. I didn't mean.

Speaker 2 (20:37):
Crappuccino, rappuccino or cappuccino.

Speaker 1 (20:39):
Cappuccino, That's what I meant. Okay, Uh, you know it's
expensive and they you know, for a lot of people
that go, I can do better at the house. And
I think during the pandemic, a lot of people figured
out how to do this shit at the house. Like
they started buying the machines and be like, well, if
I gonna spend you know, hundreds of dollars at Starbucks,
I might as well spend a hundred dollars on the
machine and figure how to do the shit at home
for much better qu the coffee. Yeah. Oh, do you

(21:03):
think with all the the the the buy not pay
latest stuff, do you think is gonna come back?

Speaker 2 (21:09):
So that's so interesting because I mean, it's weird that
we even got rid of lailways in general, right, But yeah,
I think I think the sad story, the sad news
of it is I don't think it'll come back. I
think what will happen is that this will replace laiways,
and it's I think it'll be worse for everybody because
the layway, you could at least be like, let me

(21:30):
just put something on it until I got it. There's
no interest to anything. Y'all are holding it as long
as I pay for it. Before y'all released the hold
it is mine, And I don't think I think now
they would say no, get a credit card, get a
Walmart credit card, get it. You know, I'm not saying
they don't exist, but I think if the them coming

(21:51):
them rising to the level of what the credit cards
and the stuff that they're uh, because it's not even
just like a Walmart, right, like is working with a
firm uh door Dash is working with the whatever app
they were, right, So I don't think the incentive structure

(22:11):
for them is just what it used to be, which
is I'm a retailer. I don't really care when you
get the jeans. As long as I get my money
for the jeans. You can get the jeans whenever you're ready, right.
I think now they're like, no, no, no, no, no,
set that motherfucker up for some interest rates because.

Speaker 1 (22:24):
I get my money no matter what. Act like they
have to deal with the non paid.

Speaker 2 (22:28):
Will you leave here with this card if you want
to get gas on the Walmart card, if you want
to go to a restaurant on the Walmart car, it'll
still spend like anywhere else viansa spins or whatever. So
I think they're gonna push credit and they're gonna push
these programs, so I don't think it'll come back.

Speaker 1 (22:43):
And that's kind of sad though, because you know, lol
way for a lot of people is a life save
a lot of people, particularly if you of a certain age.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
The only reason why you've got your toys is because
of lay away. Yeah, and last one for a broke
the price is really up. Charlotte's International Grocers tackle Trump's
tears of costs, and international grocery stores throughout Charlotte, like
Golden Elephant, Asian Market, and Wild Supermarket. Rising prices and
delays and orders caused by Donald Trump's tariffs remained the

(23:11):
topic of any conversation I'd.

Speaker 1 (23:14):
Ever think about that. Yeah, a lot a lot of
Asians because we go sometimes we go to like the
Asian stores and things like that, and we have like
a big spice Indian store down in the Pine Bald
and things like that. So and some of them spices
when probably can only get outside of the United States,
they probably buy in bulkle We have to import it, right,
So yeah, yeah, them prices are gonna go up.

Speaker 2 (23:35):
A twenty three hours bottle of Viet Hong fish sauce
made in Hong Kong costs eight dollars and ninety nine
cents on Golden Elephant shelves, but new shipments to change
stores now mean it cost over eleven dollars a bottle.
That's a twenty two percent increase.

Speaker 1 (23:48):
That's a big jump.

Speaker 2 (23:50):
Everybody's watching what they order, say a fat said recently
at this Northwest Charlotte store, the prices are changing on
a daily basis. How do you construct a bit business
with a budget and uh and you know, a bottom line.
You can't even really put fill your orders out and shit,
because shit is changing today versus tomorrow. Because he's just
waking up and being like one hundred percent terras okay,

(24:13):
no terrors, but thirty percent for the next three days, okay,
twenty percent, and like it's it's crazy.

Speaker 1 (24:19):
It's no structure. And a lot of this stuff is
going to call some companies just the flat go out
of business because, like I said, the fluctuation is going
to be too much for them to handle. And for
some businesses it costs is problems, particularly if you're in
like the construction industry, because like we were saying before,
we still don't know if they're able to put the

(24:40):
shit in the system yet, because you know, you got
to get it involved and shit like that. So you
have shit just like sitting in America on the border
or other places because people go do pay the tails?
Do we not pay tests? How much is the TAF today?
You know? Type of shit? And so you have things
that are being delayed kind of all over the world
because nobody knows what to do and how much shit costs? Right,

(25:03):
and it was strategically and purposefully done like.

Speaker 2 (25:06):
That, yep, across town And while supermarket on South Boulevard
price has started rising in mid April on nearly everything
they like, from produce like avocados, lines and mangoes and
to medicine and cheese. Whoy was the Hispanic supermarket chain
with four stores in North Carolina.

Speaker 1 (25:24):
Hey have we passed by there?

Speaker 2 (25:25):
Yeah? So they said they also having problems just even
getting products now, mm hmm yeah, so yeah, these are
the price. This is what the terrorifs cost us. And
it's funny because I feel like, I mean, I guess
it's my wishful thinking is obviously there's no true correlation.
I'm just voice cashing. But I wonder what happens to

(25:50):
these people who vote for this and believe in it's
xenophobia shit and believing it's like fuck all these immigrants
when they just start seeing stuff just appear from their communities.
Are they like happy there's no Mexican store, or are
they like, damn, I like that restaurant or whatever. I
have no idea. In my mind. I would hope that
they would see the consequences of their actions. But these people,

(26:14):
I don't know what motivates them for real, Like I
assume what motivates them, but I don't know that there's
a consequence to that action that they would The things
that I see as a consequence that lessen our communities
and the melting pot of America, they may see as
a benefit. So who knows if it reaches them.

Speaker 1 (26:32):
Yeah, so they may see as a benefit. And also
there's no personal responsibility. And for people like that, they're
self centered, so anything that happens, it is never their fault.
And there are the victims, and they would still blame
the others for their situation even as they disappear, even
as they're no longer there, they will still blame them

(26:52):
for being in the situation that they're in. And they
will never take personal accountability nor responsibility that they contributed
to this, because that means that they would actually have
to if they feel bad about it, right, right, right,
right now. That never say if they feel bad, you know,
and that's if most of them don't feel bad. Most
of them, this is exactly what they wanted. Most of
them will be happy that this is happening. The only

(27:14):
time they care is when Bob loses his farm or whatever.
And they still gonna blame the leftists and the others
and everything else is gonna It's not gonna be Donald
Trump's fault. It's not gonna be their fault. As they
see people around their community start shutting down and leaving
in some of them, you know, because a lot of
them live in rural areage going to the larger cities
because they cannot survive out in the middle of bumblefuck

(27:35):
nowhere no more, because they just ain't got it. Because
that's the thing. A lot of them, a lot of
these white people they voted for this shit, lives out
in the middle of nowhere. And when you live out
in the middle of nowhere, you're a Canarian. The cold mine,
y'all are the first people impacted when shortages happened, because
there's nowhere else to go. When your hospitals close, when
you know, when when your grocery store is closed, because

(27:57):
they don't have shit now, all of a sudden, you
have to drive hundreds and sometimes thousands of miles away,
you know, depending on where you are to get to
to get to things basically necessities. But a lot of
them will never blame themselves, know their neighbors or their
friends or they for some will, some white people will,
but the most both of them will not, and everything

(28:18):
will be everybody's fault. But there's as the as the
ship continues to sink.

Speaker 2 (28:22):
That just turned into politics till we get mad. All right,
Let's move on to some other news. All right, another news,

(29:01):
Tory Lane's freedom fight heats up. Congresswoman Luna says this
case ain't over. The Representative Anna Paulina Luna is turning
up the heat on California officials with a series of
tweets calling for immediate review impossible overturn of Rapertory Lanes

(29:21):
convention conviction. What I think is interesting about that is,
isn't he in Canada or something right now? But a
Canadian jail ask them holders what's up? Lanes, who is
currently serving a ten year sentence for allegedly shooting Megan
the Stallion at twenty twenty allegedly he was convicted. Why

(29:42):
are we still using the word alleged? Is now at
the center of a growing debate over race, forensic errors,
and due process. Now, the fact that Republicans are the
ones being like, it's about race, and it's about the
law enforcement being wrong, and it's about a immigrant bla
who came to this country and did violence and we

(30:03):
need to free him should tell you hypocrisy is afoot.
Is something these people don't believe in due process. They
want to suspend habeas corpus with the right to a
speedy trial, or they want to suspend the due process
when it comes to these people who are here that

(30:26):
they're saying, you're, hey, we decided you can't be here anymore,
whether you got the paperwork or not. We decide you
got to get out, and we don't want to deal
with the trials and the judges and shit. Now it's
all about due process.

Speaker 1 (30:37):
Yeah, And I'm maybe it's just me. I'm gonna open
up a third down this one. I think that a
lot of I think this is strategic on purpose because,
in my opinion, a lot of the trick bags, it's
not any trick bags. A lot of the things that
they've been doing. Black people haven't been responding, like, you know,

(30:59):
a lot of the why don't you come out in
March or we're letting such such a free, such such
a set, you know, like like like all these big
stories that are coming out, there's not this swelling of
black people running in the street and protesting and being angry.
Everybody's like, Okay, y'all got it, Like we don't care anymore.
We're taking care of our own And in my mind,
a lot of this shit is what can we do

(31:21):
to to get the community to respond? In my opinion,
like like like because it doesn't make any sense other
than that, like, what can we do this niggas being convicted?
What are we doing here? Well?

Speaker 2 (31:32):
I actually do have I think I do have some
ideas about what's happening, Karen. I'm glad you brought it up.
And I don't think it's uh, I don't think it's
as straight a line as people will see. But I
have some deep thoughts on it. Maybe they're deep. I
don't know these are thoughts, but uh, what I think

(31:54):
is happening is conservatives are finding these what I would
consider to be loser issues. They're finding them because they're
cultural touchstones that signal a certain type of gullibility to

(32:15):
the people that are willing to entertain them, and they
can be a gateway into conservativeism conservatism. And I would
say that they use this quite well with q Andon,
and they use this quite well with sex trafficking. They're
sex trafficking because look what mom is not gonna be

(32:37):
worried about her kid being kidnapped, And who's for sex
trafficking other than Donald Trump and Epstein? Right, most people
are gonna be against it. So there's very liberal women
who are like, I'm not a conservative, but obviously if
you're telling me that there's a chance my kid could
get kidnapped and sex trafficking, no one's talking about it,
not even the Democrats. Well now I'm a click on

(32:59):
the link. Now I'm going to the Facebook group. Now
I do want to help you. And then suddenly, slowly
I started being anti vacs. Oh suddenly, oh, I'm getting
some Oh Joe Biden and them are pedophiles. Hillary Clinton is.
And so that's how it happens, right. I think they
have recognized some of these issues, and that's why if
you take a thousand feet away stare at it. It

(33:22):
makes no sense because the issues don't coincide with each other.
They want Derek Chauvain released. They want his federal charges overturned.
I stay charges, was staying, he was stay in prison.
But the point being they want his federal charges overturned.
Why we all saw what we saw on that tape.
They're gaslighting the world like none, no, no, and you

(33:44):
would think, like, oh, because they look what I think
people's mistake is. I have a friend I was talking
to about this today. I think people's mistake is thinking
that these people are either a legitimate and that they
truly believe these things, and they just like like her,
like and a Paulina Luna truly believes in Tory Lane's innocence,

(34:09):
or and a Paulina Luna says social media clout. It's
a big issue amongst a certain demographic. Maybe there's maybe
I'll siphon off a few percentage of black men who
hate black women and their misogyny will be the gateway
into conservatism. And they you know, look what we did
with Dave Chappelle. We got him on trans people. Next thing,

(34:32):
you know, he's give Trump a chance, you know, like
it's it doesn't take much. Nobody thinks they're complicit because
no one thinks they're a Republican in that way. They
don't think they're a conservative. I smoke weed, and I'm
just tired of the Democrats telling me what to do
it whatever it is. Somehow they just end over there
and they're willing to use you as a youthful prop
They don't need you to be card carrying or whatever,

(34:55):
just a headline, just a clip off a podcast that
they can share and be. Like Dave Chappelle said, hey,
uh r, G three said RG three, And this ship
with angel rees I see political like and by political,
I mean people who's content is typically politics, you know,
conservative mag of people. They're joining in the fray because

(35:18):
they see angel ree as a cultural issue. They don't.
They don't. It's never been about angelies, you know. Like
when I was talking about to my friend today, she
was saying, like, you know, she didn't think she thought
Ryan Clark made a misstep when he brought up RG
three's wife at all, Like she shouldn't even brought her
up at all in the point he was making. And

(35:39):
I told her, I disagree, you know, and not just
that it's not off, off topic or out of bounds.
So because like she was like, what the RG three
is using is an excuse, and other people are gonna
do that too, to be like, you don't talk about
a man's wife. You made it personal, and and I

(36:01):
would tell I told her, and I would tell everybody this.
The mistake you're making, in my opinion, is approaching this
like there was a thing you could say where RG
three would respond in a reasonable fashion. You're not having
a debate.

Speaker 1 (36:17):
You're not you're actually not talking to him, you're not
even having a conversation.

Speaker 2 (36:21):
And you know, she's like, well, this thing that was
supposed to be about a black woman is becoming about
this these men, I said, because it was never about
this black woman.

Speaker 1 (36:30):
It sure was not.

Speaker 2 (36:31):
RG three's comments are about his own self hate and
his own hatred of black women. Period. Ryan Clark clocked it.
That's all that happened. He clocked it. We're not prepared
to have these conversations, and nothing's ever going to change
because we give them too many excuses. Even if you
want to act like it's a rhetorical flourish, like hey, look,

(36:53):
he was able to say, don't talk about my wife.
And now everybody's just talking about him dating white women. Fine,
that's what he was only always go be. That's when
he said it the first you think there's another way,
a chess move where it's gonna stay on topic. It's
not a debate with rules. These people don't play by
these rules. What they're actually doing is sending out cultural signifiers.

(37:14):
R G three was sending out a cultural signal to
a bunch of people because he ain't really got no
job right now, and he's like, hey, your Dave port
nois your out kicks, your Fox Sports well available. I'm
out here. I'm willing to say that the hard thing
about the blacks that the blacks won't like, they don't
like me. And when they I'm the one saying, don't

(37:36):
talk about Jackie Robinson. It's not about Angel Reaves. Angel
rees is just the latest thing he's done to ship
on black women. And yes, it is germane to his
fetishization of his white wife.

Speaker 1 (37:49):
And he continu he talks about her all the time.

Speaker 2 (37:52):
Right, it's so it is germane to it. It is
not out of bounds at all, and there is. It
doesn't matter if Steven A. Smith, a well known also
anti black acting dude at many times as likes to
align on the side of whiteness and then scold black
people for disagreeing with him. Him agreeing with that Ryan

(38:14):
Clark went too far. It means nothing to me. It's
just another hit dog hollering. We have to stop conceding
to these people.

Speaker 1 (38:22):
Right.

Speaker 2 (38:22):
People are not prepared to fight, you know. It reminds
me of dealing with a narcissist. I'll listened to a
podcast We Can Do Hard Things, and they had an
episode about a woman who was she's an expert on
dealing with a narcissist and all this stuff, and she
was just going through like some of the stuff people do.
And one of the things narcissists do that they're very

(38:43):
good at. They bait you into thinking that you can
talk to them in a reasonable fashion, because they will
approach you and they'll say, Karen, make whenever you make dinner,
you don't you don't if I'm I'm getting home late,
you don't keep it warm in the oven for me,

(39:05):
or something like that. Right, So then you keep it
warm in the oven form they get home late and
they're like, why aren't we eating dinner together. Everyone needs
to be at the table, and you go, well, you
got home late. Everybody, the kids already ate, we're going
to bed. I said keep my dinner warm so we
could eat together. You didn't say that that was why.

(39:26):
But two now you're making nothing reasonable the man. So
when I go, well, that's not Oh so you hate me?

Speaker 1 (39:31):
Now?

Speaker 2 (39:32):
Is that what you're doing? You hate me? You don't
want me to eat? What the fuck is happening that
this person is? Why are you talking to me like
that's your tone? You're the Yeah, I called you lazy,
and now you don't care. I just accused you of
not caring about me and my family and the family
being eating together. But you're the one being rude because

(39:52):
look at how you're responding to it. They will always
move it. So this idea that you were ever gonna
approach this conversation and get them to go, you got
me dead to rights. Damn. If you wouldn't have brought
up my wife, I would have had to just only
talk about your point with injuries. No, you wouldn't have.
And the point isn't about injuries. It is about your
ass right, And I'm saying I know it sounds like

(40:14):
a slippery, slow thing. But I'm saying, even with this
woman talking about Tory Lanez, it ain't about Tory Lanez.
They can't do shit to get Tory Lanez out. She
promised just like you and I. Tomorrow, I here, there's
some big news dropping that's gonna exonerate Tory Lanez. Stay
tuned to stay tuned, right click follow on me, look
for the alert from me. It's tomorrow already. It's the

(40:37):
point is they find these cultural issues, and I think
our side quote unquote don't understand it because we're reasonable
and we're not approaching it like we're dealing with a narcissist,
where you just ceck that motherfucker off.

Speaker 1 (40:49):
Right.

Speaker 2 (40:51):
If you have something to say about them, you just
say it. You don't say it for engagement. You're not
seeking a rapport with this person. You know, there was
a person who's been acting really weird on social media.
He's turned into like a troll of the left, this
asshole guy.

Speaker 1 (41:08):
And so.

Speaker 2 (41:11):
There was a person there's a person I know where
he like followed them on Instagram and they were like,
why would he follow me on Instagram? Like the motherfucker,
my politics are completely opposite. Is he's an asshole, I
don't like him, blah blah blah. And so they DMed
him to ask why did he follow? And he never responded,
and I was like, he's not gonna respond. I'm not

(41:31):
even sure why you would want a response. I'm not
even sure why you would expect or want a response.
I would not even I would have just blocked them
on there or just made him for something follow like
if I true, like, there is nothing to be gleaned
from why he decided to become a troll of the left.
You're assuming a level of when the red flag is

(41:53):
in your face, you're assuming a level of good faith
that he has not earned. RG three is not earned
good faith. And a Pauline a Luna, they have not
earned good faith. We're we're giving them something but with
no proof that it exists and engaging them as if

(42:13):
we would engage ourselves like that is fair. Therapy did
wonders for me in that area where I'm like, my
gut instinct sees this. I don't need to lay out
a court case. No, you know, if I see a
person walking down the street smacking people, I don't need
to be like, well, if they don't smack me, maybe
they don't smack everybody. I'm gonna wait and see if

(42:34):
they smack me. No, I will knock them the fuck
out first, cause it's because what am I waiting on?
Or I'm just gonna be like, let me get out
of this situation. I'm across the street. Now they're well,
it's gonna look bad you across the street. Are you're
prejudging them?

Speaker 3 (42:48):
Yes?

Speaker 2 (42:49):
I am, actually, And because all their actions have led
to this moment, what is the value of any of
us presenting an argument that and then only judging it
by the standards of these assholes?

Speaker 1 (43:03):
Right?

Speaker 2 (43:04):
Well, what is the asshole gonna say? They're gonna do something? Asshole?
That's what they're gonna do. That's what they do. They
do asshole shit. So waiting for them to have this
come to Jesus moment is still robbing you. Whether it's
through naivety, whether it's through I don't know, denial, whatever
it is, it's still robbing you of your precious time

(43:24):
and energy that you ain't getting more of. Okay, Tom
running down on this earth for everybody, Why the fuck
are we giving air to to like, Well, let's wait
and see what the response is there. I feel like,
and I don't know Ryan Clark, but my guess would
be when he said that shit, he already was like,
I know what the response is gonna be. I'm saying

(43:45):
it because I don't give a fuck, right, and you
have to have that can't just be something their side
has right.

Speaker 1 (43:51):
And also it's one of those things to where it
goes back to the fake niceness. A lot of people
have a lot of intern fake niceness that they kind
of put on the outside because they don't want to
be the eyeball. They don't want to be the one
not going along. They don't want to be the outlier,
you know, And that's what narcissists thrive off of. They

(44:14):
thrive off of that because if you get along with
the group, you're fine even though they're abusing you and
doing the same thing they doing to everybody else. But
the second you be like, ay, I'm not crazy, my
reality is real, you know you're not. I'm not going
to allow you to move the gold posts and chase
the topic at hand. You have to go like like
like you have to go. And what I've also realized

(44:40):
when when you're looking at this as a totality, I agree, Roger.
I think that for a lot of people, a they
they are talking to somebody thinking that they're on the
same level and also thinking that they're talking in the
reality of the same facts. If we can start like

(45:00):
that one plus one equals two, we can't have a
conversation like like period, Like we can't.

Speaker 2 (45:05):
Have a conversation your empathy against you, yes, And they
also use your giving them too much credit against you,
you know, like they when you have to quote unquote
be fair to someone who's unfair, right, you already are
conceding ground to them because I'm not promoting unfairness. I'm

(45:27):
just telling them like it is and being like, why
the fuck are we wasting time on this? How many
times do it? Something have to happen to you before
you go out? That's enough. So seeing somebody that has
never shown an ounce of concern about any black person
in the history of this earth and a Polina Luna
does not care about black people.

Speaker 4 (45:44):
Now.

Speaker 2 (45:45):
What she cares about is that I said her name
five times in this episode. What she cares about is
that people are going to talk about her and quote
to her. She ain't taking it down and yes, there's
a percentage of these black hotel ass type niggas that
will fall for. But you know what they were falling
for it already. Yes, they were filling forward when it
was black blogs getting paid by Tory Lane's father to

(46:05):
shit on Megan thee Stallion. I don't know what to
tell people. I don't I'm not here to give you
fake optimism and fake hope. I think what gives me
real optimism and real hope is stone cold, soberly getting
on this microphone and telling you this is what's happening.
I don't get no fake fluffy shit from being like,
well maybe if we just said the argument the perfect way.
It's the same shit people do with democrats. It's the

(46:26):
same shit people deal with Kama Harris. It's always this
idea of like, well, if you just said it right,
no toy is guilty as sin. And there's a million
different conspiracies with no real fucking proof of evidence behind
them that people are floating and the dummies will fall for.
And the point is that the dummies will fall for

(46:47):
If you see it from one thousand feet away and
you see that that's all this is about, it doesn't
matter because every cause has become this. This is my
general repultion with what I'm seeing on social media. I
back away from people. I don't feel like I'm bougie,
but I just there's a disdaining to discuss that I

(47:07):
cannot help. I cannot really mask too well, So it's
better for me to not discuss these things with people.

Speaker 3 (47:13):
Right.

Speaker 2 (47:14):
The Angel Rees debate shit is all just to see
who's dumb enough to go over there and side with
those fucking Republicans and Conservatives. That's all it's ever been.
It's never been about Angel Rees, It's never been about
Kaitlin Clark. This motherfuckers do not love or watch or
care about the w NBA until they found a way
to make it a racial divide. The NIXX showed up,
and yes there's some black people that showed up to

(47:36):
be the opposite culture warriors. I don't have as much
judgment for them, but I definitely feel like you're being dude,
that you're just expending energy in a place you shouldn't.
There's gonna be a bunch of people arguing and making
postings about the Tory Lane shit. The Nigga is convicted.
We already know what are we doing?

Speaker 1 (47:53):
Why are we going back?

Speaker 2 (47:54):
I love having our podcast because it's just a bully
platform where we can just come in and say our opinion.
You don't see us inviting the Hey, so you don't
think Tory Lanez did it come on the show.

Speaker 1 (48:04):
No, I'm not wasting my time. I feel how I feel.
It is what it is, you know, and we've talked
about this. I'm not bringing people do here just for
the sake of arguing you're wasting my time.

Speaker 2 (48:16):
Yeah, you know, they say you preaching to the choir
where the crowd they the closest to the stage. Fuck it,
you know what I mean? The choir saying too, like
the choir pay todds like, I don't understand this idea
of like, uh, letting these people have any more credence
than they have earned. Make them earn it. They might.

(48:38):
They shit on the things that are earned from the
people they don't like. So Angel Reese has earned a
spot in the w NBA. They ship on her. Oh
she just bricked layups and all that. They can only
talk about what she can't do right lead the league
and rebounds as of freshmen as a rookie. Nothing that's
that ain't shit. She just but she hasn't earned anything.

(48:59):
Same people getting rid of DEI everywhere, right, haven't earned anything?
Then they give so much while I haven't earned anything.
On their side, alcoholics running the fucking government shit right,
people skipping fucking security briefings, the head of the FBI. Right.
This is so you want me to pretend that we
have in the actual conversation with these motherfuckers, I'm not

(49:21):
and I'm not, And that's what I'm trying to explain.
Ryan Clark's not engaging in a conversation with RG three.
He's just calling them out the problem, I think, And
this is where so many people are late to the party.
The call out is the currency, Yes, yes, it is.
The call out on the other side is the currency, right,

(49:42):
because they say these dumb things so that some that
people will get mad and they go, see look how
mad I made everybody. The liberals man, they'll never get it.
This is what's wrong with Democrats. This is why they
don't win. Whatever it is is, the call out is
the currency. Them being wrong has nothing to do with it.
If anything, the wronger the better. Tory Lanez does not

(50:04):
come into this woman's uh spear unless its social media.
She sees a way to exploit some dummies, and she's like,
here's a hot button topic because they're not governing, they're
not passing bills, or they're not kind of passed lot.
They don't give a fuck about any of this shit.
If anything, they have a disdain for government and for
governing and for the rights and due processes of people, y'all.

(50:27):
But people will fall for this ship. And when I
say fall for it, I don't mean just the people
that believe like, yeah, Tory Lane is innocent. There's another
group of people, the ones that I'm hoping get here
to sound on my voice right now. Falling for it
is also spending your day arguing with these creeds. Yes,
that is also falling for it. Okay, they're just happy

(50:48):
to have your energy directed at them.

Speaker 1 (50:50):
That's it. Exhausted and angry, and.

Speaker 2 (50:53):
They're using your energy as their credibility to the other side.
Candice Owens uses your clicking, sharing, liking, whatever, even if
it's just a dunk on her, she uses that as
part of her credibility to the conservative side, Like, look
at this, that's what RG three is doing. I'm watching
him do it in real time, and I feel like

(51:15):
people don't understand it. No, like they understanding that they
don't like him. They don't understanding that. No, he is
not an accident that he's doing this. He can't be corrected,
he can't. He's not accidentally stumbling into these horrible, horrible,
horrible takes. And he's not stumbling into being a milk

(51:35):
merchant and making He's not doing that. He didn't think
that that Ryan Clark and soulded his wife. He honestly
didn't think that that we're giving him too much by
being well he said, he we're giving him too much.
And yes, there's a lot of other coonah Jason ass
niggas that's gonna hop on here and be like, yeah,
he shouldn't have said to his bottle's wife because they

(51:56):
also are coon ah Jason. They also have them cte
the coon tendency excuses. They can't help, but hop on
there and be like me too, boss. So you we
can't give them any credit either. People need to earn
fucking credit. What are the in rows they are making
for the community, What are they saying for the people?
What are they speaking on for the culture?

Speaker 1 (52:18):
Too?

Speaker 2 (52:18):
Many of these people have checkered ass track records, and
we're sitting there acting like we have to engage in
good faith every single time. We did not take an
oath in a fucking courtroom to have to be unbiased judges.
I see your track record, RG three, I see your
track record. Congress Person Luna or whatever like it. You

(52:38):
are not worth us engaging with.

Speaker 1 (52:41):
I don't mind.

Speaker 2 (52:42):
Doesn't mean you shouldn't talk about them. I'm not saying
keep your head in the saying. That's why I liked
what Ryan Clark did. It was not a hey, RG three,
let's let's sit down, brother. It was a this dude's
a fucking clown, and sometimes you need that. I feel
like y'all didn't learn enough from Kendrick. Sometimes you just
got to be like, this dude's a And no, it's
not a back and forth and an engagement. We're not equals,

(53:04):
we're not buddies, we're not pals. This person is toxic
for what I believe in, and fuck them because they're
already doing it to you. And if you start to
believe that there's a perfect way to say it that
they won't do that, then you're already falling for Lucy
with the football. So yeah, anyway, fuck this lady. And
it's just something I've noticed. It's been taking in my

(53:24):
brain for a minute, like well, I couldn't put my
finger on it. But it's everything. It's literally all these
loser issues. It's Derek Chavan is a loser issue. Yes,
there's not a win to be had, no, and nothing
change unless you see the win as finding more fools. Yeah,
then there is a win.

Speaker 1 (53:44):
That's the thing to consistently gold mine foods.

Speaker 2 (53:47):
They're finding fools all the time.

Speaker 1 (53:50):
All this shit is and on top of that that
and that's the form of currency of social media. So
when you currency can come in many ways. Currency comes
from follows like subscribes, all this stuff big you know,
people talking about you on various type of platforms. That's
the form of currency. And I will say this before
and I say this again, and even people underneath the

(54:11):
sound of my voice, a lot of y'all like to argue.
You're addicted to arguing. You don't give a fuck about
what it is. You will argue with people for argument's sake.
And a lot of times I look at those people
and I go, you like to argue. Well, then when
you get sad and depressed and have all these things

(54:32):
because eventually that type of person out it will wear
you down. And so it's one of those things where
y'all spend the time, you spend the enage, you spend
the effort arguing with people, and then you won't talk
about everybody else, like you are not contributing to your
own demise.

Speaker 2 (54:47):
They're using us, yes, and it's just you can't wait
on them to stop. You can't depend on RG three
to say, oh I get it, my bad. That's what
happens when you have good faith people, right, like we
all know people, all of us fuck up, we all
make mistakes, like none of us is gonna get it
all right, But there's people, and y'all this is why

(55:10):
when people said that movement about five ten years ago,
the intentions don't matter, only the niggas shut the fuck up.
Intentions always fucking matter of time, they fucking matter. It
doesn't supersede impact or make it, but it definitely fucking matters.
Because there's a type of person that fucks up and
you tell them they fucked up, they're like, oh my god,

(55:30):
I didn't even see that. That will never happen again.
I did not realize I was fucking up. Thank you
putting me back on point. And then there's a type
of person that's like, uh, yeah, I did mean to misgender.

Speaker 4 (55:45):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (55:46):
There's a difference that it's what you know, it's what
I wish people learn from mister Morale, like especially the
song about his h LGBTQ family members, because it was like,
there's a difference between like, I'm trying to dead name
Caitlyn Jenner because I think it's funny. How how fucked
this motherfucker you ain't a woman, blah blah blah because

(56:06):
I don't like you. There's that, there's the uh, I
don't believe in trans people. Y'all just crazy, something wrong
with you. And then there's the hey, I grew up
as a kid calling you one pronoun and one name.
You changed it. Uh, And I'm and I have like
I still have that image in my mind. I am

(56:26):
seeing you as a full person. I'm not trying to
trap you anywhere. I've shown you love, You've shown me love.
I have reverence for you. I stand up and I
protect you, and every once in a while, I fuck
up a pronou, Right, That's the difference and intent does matter.
And as a person that's marginalized, many of us understand.
We know the difference in pain from like and this

(56:48):
is like it became a social media thing, but the
difference in pain an intent, it matters. I know disrespect.
You can call somebody something nice, but if the disc
respect is behind it, we know it. Yeah, there's a
difference between like, why don't you go give me a drink, sweetheart?
And ah, can I have a drink sweetheart? That people

(57:11):
can instinctively know one of them is gonna get you
cussed out, and one of them is gonna be like, oh,
sure anything for you that it matters. It's not I'm
not saying that you can't correct it or whatever. And
if you go, don't call me sweetheart. I don't like that,
no problem. I wasn't intending to disrespect you, but somebody
that was. But I call everybody sweethart. I'm gonna call
you sweetheart. You just gonna get this sweetheart right because

(57:34):
you actually it's never You weren't being sweet. You were
being a fucking asshole. You were just trying to be
a dick and be like I'm gonna I run the
roosts and I tell people what the fuck they gonna
get called?

Speaker 1 (57:44):
Right?

Speaker 2 (57:44):
So anyway another that's a long thing to go through.
But this Tory Lane shit to me was one hundred percent.
Oh they're finding cultural touchdowns, and I'm glad for it
because this was the one that crystallized that point I
wanted to make, which was, Oh, that's why it's getting
so extreme, because these these aren't even like misunderstandings anymore.

(58:07):
You know, this is you know, Ashley Babbitt is a hero,
not a terrorist. It's not a misunderstanding of what happened.
You just want to change reality, and if you can't,
you'll take whoever the fuck is willing to show you
you can change their reality, because that because if they
glomb onto it, if you glomb on the Tory Lanes innocent,
you a stupid motherfucker that we can use later. Of course,

(58:31):
I now know your button, so later when I do
some fuck shit, I just know how to wrap it
up in this. Because if you can't trust them on
Tory Lanes, can you really trust them when it comes
to black people having the right ID to vote? I
don't think so. Can you really trust them when they
say they got their paperwork? And they here illegally and
they on the work. No, I don't think so can

(58:53):
you really trust them that they're standing up for Palestine
and not just hating Israel? Can you really trust them?
That's what the fuck people falling for and it be working,
It be working. So that was like a long thing.
But anyway I wanted to talk about that. Let's move
into something else. Oh yeah, you know what. It seemed

(59:14):
like it would be something that people wouldn't like. But
I actually have some fucking with black people that don't
want to talk about. Here we go.

Speaker 5 (59:25):
Walking with black people, walking with black people, with people
fucking with black people walking with black people.

Speaker 2 (59:43):
All right, d o J investigates Chicago mayor for allegedly
only hiring black people. And now I thought that they
were done with the WOKEDI nonsense of looking at race

(01:00:04):
at all. I thought they didn't even see race, just qualifications.
But apparently the new DJ is using the same resources
that the Biden administration was using to try to get
police departments to stop discriminating. They're actually using theirs to
take Mayor Brandon Johnson under some sort of investigation because

(01:00:29):
they think he's violating Title seven of the Civil Rights
Act of nineteen sixty four.

Speaker 1 (01:00:34):
Some bullshit they don't believe in.

Speaker 2 (01:00:36):
This is directly out of the playbook of that project
twenty twenty five. Shit like this is the they've been used.
This is exactly what they did to try to stop
black farmers from getting reparations and getting government benefits. It's
what they did to take down private funds that were

(01:00:56):
giving them distributing the money to black women entrepreneurs. They
do not mind using civil rights law in the opposite
way that it was intended. And the conservative justices are
all too happy to sit by and co sign this ship.
So they wrote a letter to Mayor Johnson. The DLJ

(01:01:17):
Civil Rights Division announced it is looking at into claims
that hiring decisions in his administration were based on race.
The letter signed by Assistant Attorney General Harmeiat Dylon, which
is spelled like he's a Gamer Thrones character. I've never
met a hart meet in my fucking life. Wow, I
wonder what where are you from?

Speaker 1 (01:01:34):
I feel like non American.

Speaker 2 (01:01:37):
Yeah, she's a woman. Okay, she American lawyer and Republican
Party official serving as assistant tern okayground Yeah, oh no,
she's not white. She's not white, right, That's what I
mean or something, My point being like, of course, she's like,

(01:02:03):
I'm literally here because I am a brown person willing
to do the bid in the white supremacy. But you
hiring black people over there. It's no weather all qualified.
That's really what the lawsuit is. Yep, there's no way
black people are qualified to have these jobs without any
white people being in.

Speaker 1 (01:02:21):
Black ass city.

Speaker 3 (01:02:22):
But yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:02:23):
It points to recent public remarks made by the mayor
of the church event where he highlighted several top level
appointments in his administration, emphasizing that many were black professionals.
Among the roles he mentioned, deputy mayor's budget, chief, direct
chief operations officer, senior advisors all identified with him as
black men or women. The Justice Department express concerned that
these hiring choices in the way they were publicly framed,
suggest the pattern of racial preference that may go against

(01:02:45):
federal and our discrimination laws. The DJ's investigation will continue
whether this alleged pattern extends beyond todp. Rose blah blah.
Here's here's a bigger point. I've been saying we should
do stuff like this. We just gotta stop talking about
year no offense to this man. He seemed like a
good man. He was talking to black people. I'm sure

(01:03:07):
he was telling them this with the like, Hey, I
care about us as a community. I care about If
I was some fucking weird ass anti black person, my
whole staff wouldn't be black now Chicago, So maybe it
would be. But who knows, the point being, point being,
I'm sure he wasn't saying this out of a bad place.
They're using noble intentions against us to be like, ah,

(01:03:31):
the real racism is black people having jobs. This is
not a fair fight, and you can't engage it as such.

Speaker 1 (01:03:37):
No, so just do shit. Just just do shit, name
it all types of shit and.

Speaker 2 (01:03:42):
Just be like, well, because you know what, they would
never do say we hired Peter Hexif because he's white, right,
They would never say it. They don't got to say it.
They ain't got to they ain't got to say. They
don't tell the black people they're firing that they're firing
them because they're DEI. They don't write that in the letter.
They just fire them and then they go, we're anti DI.

(01:04:05):
All these people were hired because of d I. Coincidentally,
we fired a bunch of people. I don't know what
happened there. That's crazy zero TI one hundred.

Speaker 1 (01:04:13):
This gets say your Karis, because it's one of these
things where this is what the country elected, and they're
not the only one. They're gonna go after all the
major cities with black people. They ain't gonna go out
to New York because y'all got dipping the mayor. I
love Trump stick until he's gone, he got to run
for re election. Yeah, until he's gone. But for now
they're not gonna go after him. But like here in

(01:04:34):
Atlanta and Memphis, you know, like like places where it's
heavy black population, because the thing is they want to
destroy and tear these places down and get all these
black people out of these positions so they can get
these white people in there that disrupt shit and fuck
up shit and make it harder for the people in
these places.

Speaker 2 (01:04:50):
To live your cars as well. That's terrible. DJ also
pulls out of police reformance cities tied to Brianna Taylor
and George Floyd killing. So on the one hand, they
do have the money to go investigate the mayor of
Chicago because he might have hired too many black people.

(01:05:11):
On the other hand, they are no longer dealing like
trying to help reform the police departments in Louisville, Louisaville, Louisville,
Kentucky and Minneapolis, Minnesota after Breonna Taylor and George Floyd killing.
And keep in mind, the reason those became DJ issues
is because it became it was revealed it it was

(01:05:33):
systemic corruption. It wasn't just a one off incident. They
had history. They had years of you know, demagogue in
these communities and exploiting them, and that led to a
reckless arrest stuff like that, reckless deaths.

Speaker 1 (01:05:48):
And so taxing the people to death by just pulling
them over for no reason.

Speaker 2 (01:05:52):
What I find so interesting is that I believe these
investigations happened under Biden. Uh, the DJ reforms for these
two departments. You'll have people who will pooh pooh that
and say, well, Bid never did nothing for black people.
But when Trump does this, when he takes away something,

(01:06:14):
where are y'all at?

Speaker 1 (01:06:15):
It's criokeets, it's crookeds. It's one of those things.

Speaker 2 (01:06:18):
Jimminy cricket where right? If it frustrates me, it's cricket wireless.
I'm sorry.

Speaker 1 (01:06:27):
Oh you're good It frustrates me because they loud one
way but quiet the other way, you know. And it's
also one of those things where they act like people
didn't see them, you know, continually bash and continually tell
me and gas like me like that old white man
would out there trying to do the best he could.

Speaker 2 (01:06:48):
When it was time to gather up support and votes
to keep these type of things in effect, they we
were told one that didn't matter and they were nothing.
And then there the worst believers were Trump won't even
do anything, like he not gonna take that away. Okay,
what's gone?

Speaker 4 (01:07:07):
Now?

Speaker 2 (01:07:07):
Where's the outrage? You care so much about black people?
You care so much about this, you know, George Floyd
was one of the tentpole things in America where even
at the time even Donald Trump was like that motherfucker
did that shit? He guilty? Not that many years removed
from it, it is now a cultural touchdown on to
see who the fuck is stupid enough for us to

(01:07:29):
get over here, Who will believe any fucking thing?

Speaker 1 (01:07:33):
Yep, anything, And y'all don't be dumb. It's please don't
be dumby.

Speaker 2 (01:07:36):
You know what it is coming at it from a
narcissistic standpoint, dealing with a narcisst, they're finding their flying monkeys.
That's what that's what narcissists do. When you see a
nar like and people I see people get caught up
in this ship. But when you see a narcisst do
some ship like we, it just seems crazy. It's like,
why are you putting all this on the social media?
Why are you telling everybody this snake? This looks this

(01:07:59):
sounds crazy to any objective viewer. They're not looking for
objective viewers. They're looking for people that are so biased
towards them, so scared of them, so needing to be
on the inside, yep, so to get attached codependent that
they end up being like, well, yeah, if you said
Rod and Karen are terrible people, I guess I'm with you.
They'll explain it away, right, because they're just they're only

(01:08:21):
saying that they're not gonna get one hundred percent of you,
but they're gonna get some of you one hundred percent,
And that's what the fuck that shit is like. So yeah, now,
now George Floyd didn't happen or he just died from
a drug overdose. Don't believe your lion eyes for the
non minute video you watch that's not real. Don't believe
the convictions. That's not real. Derek Chavan is a hero.

(01:08:42):
We need to get him out of prison. They don't
for federal charges. He won't be let out of prison.
And they know this, but what they what the other
thing they know those of you that believe they got you.

Speaker 1 (01:08:53):
Oh yeah. And and a lot of people are write
with conspiracy theories some and and a lot of times
when people think about that, they always take an eight
Chan folk chain QAnon and all that stuff. But they
got a lot of black and brown people too. And
when you tell people, ay, doll, you might be down
this hole, they look at you like you're a lunatic
because they're in the middle of it. And when you're

(01:09:15):
in the middle of something like that, it's hard for
you to see the forest for the trees, and you know,
you consistently go down these rabbit holes. And it's one
of those things when all of the saide once you've
dealt particularly with a narcist, and you've been on the
other side, and you kind of see the tactics and
things like that. I know, me, I can see flying

(01:09:36):
monkeys from far away, like you almost can hear that
wings flapping like something happening. You'd be like, oh, here
it come type of thing. But a lot of people
are flying monkeys and will continue to be flying monkeys
until they get tired of flying. But it's gonna take
them realizing that they're being used. But so many people
like being used. They're addicted to being used, like trying

(01:09:56):
me funny. So because they're addicted to being used and
be patted up side of here called good boy, good girl.
You know that is like say, it's a cold dependency
thing and because of that, that's a hard chain to break.

Speaker 2 (01:10:10):
Last story, but the cars for me enough if did
you give it a score? Cars? Yeah? Okay, all right?
Last story. Tree crushes Fort Branch Museum in North Carolina,
not our home state of North Carolina. Oh oh my goodness,
how big was this tree? Last month? We were they

(01:10:31):
put on Facebook. Last month we were surprised to get
a call informing us a large tree at falling on
the museum. Unfortunately it is a total loss. We intentionally
delayed letting everyone knows so that artifacts, the artifacts could
be moved and secured at a new location to avoid
any theft. We have since learned that the insurance on
the building is not enough to replace it with today's cost.
We are devastated. We're looking at other possibilities of funding,

(01:10:53):
including creating a GoFundMe account. Please consider donating to help
Fort Branch replace our museum and keep it available for
the future future generations. Donations to our organization are tax deductible.

Speaker 1 (01:11:07):
Goddamn big was this tree the whole museum out?

Speaker 2 (01:11:10):
Yeah? It's crazy, right.

Speaker 1 (01:11:14):
Old trees?

Speaker 2 (01:11:14):
Karen, what's segment are we doing right now? Currently?

Speaker 1 (01:11:21):
Say? That's the wrong?

Speaker 5 (01:11:22):
What?

Speaker 1 (01:11:22):
What is it?

Speaker 2 (01:11:23):
What's the answer? Fucking with black people? There's a segment?

Speaker 1 (01:11:27):
Okay, I said, I think that's a segment.

Speaker 2 (01:11:29):
Yes, okay, So why do you think I'm talking about
this museum having a tree fall on it because it's
a Confederate museum cares for Confederate history, all right? That Yeah,
they're they're they're here to to Oh this website is
JANKI it's giving me pop ups and ship anyway. Yeah,

(01:11:49):
it's about this Confederate history. Okay.

Speaker 4 (01:11:54):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:11:55):
A lot of people did not necessarily have kind things
to say.

Speaker 1 (01:12:02):
Oh as I did not know this is coming.

Speaker 2 (01:12:05):
One social media person responded, is the tree. Okay. The
Confederate Museum has drawn controversies over the years due to
this association with Civil War memorabilia. Despite this, the museum
officials maintained importance of preserving history urgent community to support
the rebuild. Mm hmmmm mm hmmm.

Speaker 1 (01:12:28):
Now ain't gonna pay for the Confederate dollars?

Speaker 2 (01:12:30):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:12:32):
You know who who knocked that tree down, the same
that burnt down the plantation.

Speaker 2 (01:12:37):
The spirit of the ancestors came through.

Speaker 1 (01:12:40):
They burnt down the plantation and went down there and
pushed that tree over.

Speaker 2 (01:12:43):
Someone made a great point there was like, h they
don't like when people say God did it because that
means God sat through hundreds of years of black people
being slaves. They was like, this is fine, but one
day I'm gonna knock a tree down in the museum
about this shit?

Speaker 1 (01:12:58):
Want to do it right?

Speaker 2 (01:13:00):
Like that is that is a very astute point. That's
a very good point. Uh yeah, you you you cooked
with that one. I forget my man's name, I follow
him on Twitter to day. I was like, you cooked
with that one. That was a good one.

Speaker 1 (01:13:12):
All right.

Speaker 2 (01:13:13):
Let's move into something a little lighter, a little whier.
Do some white people.

Speaker 3 (01:13:18):
News Why.

Speaker 2 (01:13:39):
Only fans any night shocked by how easy it was
to sleep with five hundred and eighty three men in
six hours. Goddamn girl saying okay, men are easy?

Speaker 1 (01:13:51):
What is that? An average per hour over a hundred.

Speaker 2 (01:13:56):
I know it's gonna have to do fucking math today.
I'm sorry, no, so, Karen, I'm not mad at you.
It's just divided by six ninety seven point one six
an hour. I can't imagine what the logistics are like

(01:14:16):
thirty far be it from me to say I haven't
watched a gang bang or two in my time? Okay,
I see, Okay, that's not that I'm not judging in
that way. What I am judging is the quality of
the gang bang. What I mean by that is there's
two types of people that enjoy spicy wings. Right, I

(01:14:37):
enjoy a spicy wing. Okay, I love a spicy wing.
I don't. I like a hot wing. It don't matter
to me because it tastes good. But then there's another
type of motherfucker who's like, do y'all have super nuclear
flaming emoji? Die death reaper killer pep wings?

Speaker 1 (01:15:01):
Blow my asshole out, hot south sir? Right?

Speaker 2 (01:15:03):
Can you. Is that doctor General's butt condition of fark sauce?
Can you put extra update on my wings?

Speaker 1 (01:15:11):
Is this kill kill my liver? Flame sauce?

Speaker 2 (01:15:15):
Let me see? Oh? Is that kernel mustard gas booty explode?

Speaker 1 (01:15:20):
Don't lose my eyes? I go blind, hot house past.

Speaker 2 (01:15:24):
You got some more of that doctor prolapse? Okay, I'm paying.
I'm finna get loose on this. That that's a different
type of wing person, is my point.

Speaker 1 (01:15:33):
Yes it is. I don't like them type of wings.

Speaker 2 (01:15:35):
I would never eat wings with that person because even
though we both like spicy hot wings, we in it
for two different things.

Speaker 1 (01:15:41):
Yes, we are so what it tastes my food.

Speaker 2 (01:15:44):
Yes, I'm using the analogy not because I give a
fuck about that, but because I'm saying there's a nice
sexy orgy that probably stops well below five hundred men,
and then there's this robot ship that must have been
just everybody stick they in one time and then go
home like it can't it can't be anything.

Speaker 1 (01:16:03):
What are you a few seconds at the most.

Speaker 2 (01:16:05):
This is an ordeal At this point, it's not, and
it's I guarantee it's just clinical. At this point, there's
nothing good or sexy about this. There's no way to
have sex with ninety seven dudes at the same time
in an hour and for anyone to watch it and
be like, that's some good sex, right, There's no quality. Hell,
you might as well just put a fucking pocket pussy
in the wall, right, what is this? The twenty eight

(01:16:28):
year old Ozzie influencer, who boasts one hundred and ninety
five thousand followers on Instagram, told us Weekly the five
eighty three in a day is quite a lot. So
she was a bit worried because the most I've done
before was twenty four in a day. But it was
honestly fine. But twenty four a day sounds much better,
especially if you spread it over six hours. All had
a great time.

Speaker 1 (01:16:48):
That's a much reasonable number.

Speaker 2 (01:16:49):
Yes, but it was honestly fine, she continued. She asked
that all the position participants were condos. Yeah, of course,
I mean, well, I was gonna say, of course, I
don't know these people these days, maybe y'all. I had
a bunch of them message me and say thanks so
much for today. I was number two, O six or whatever,
and just being really grateful for the opportunity.

Speaker 4 (01:17:12):
I was number five forty right, I got in earlout
singing something number five girl number is the last one,
treated like the last dude to get drafted in the NFL.

Speaker 2 (01:17:23):
Mister irrelevant. I'm just glad they made in five eight
three just before midnight. On the flip side, she says
she's used to the uptight critics and believes that those
who disapprove her lifestyle are probably just jealous about their
lives being really born. Maybe that's it. I'm not listen,
I'm not critiquing because I'm like, I can't believe you
fucked all those guys. I mean, I can't believe you

(01:17:45):
fucked all those guys in six hours? Can I be
moved out of the uptight people into the like girl,
you'll take your time.

Speaker 1 (01:17:52):
Right this sound kind of rush should have been twelve.

Speaker 2 (01:17:54):
Yeah, enjoy some of this, dick, What are you doing?
You just got a clicker click and that's two click
and that's three. Great, listen, Far be it from me
to judge a cream pile gang bang. You know, I
don't let me toss.

Speaker 1 (01:18:12):
The first who is needed judge?

Speaker 2 (01:18:14):
Yeah, I don't want to toss the first stone from
my glass house.

Speaker 1 (01:18:19):
This house, the first cocky.

Speaker 2 (01:18:21):
This sounds very clinical and not fun, right, uh, she says.
I mean the more they had on me, the more
views I get, the more money I make. Well, you know,
content over everything, she also said, adding the man she
sleeps with our out here living life and having fun.
There you go. I mean, I have masks on. I
do want to know, but they covering their tattoos, wedding rings.

(01:18:41):
I just want to know. I have questions, Yeah, a
lot of questions. Nice recent endeavor came on the hills
of Bonnie Blues reported world record breaking feet in January.
Does again just.

Speaker 1 (01:18:51):
Keep track of this? If they do, they probably they
have to be there.

Speaker 2 (01:18:55):
Bonnie Blue, the twenty five year old onlyfan star, said
she bet at one thousand and fifty seven men in
twelve hours. If true, she broke Lisa Sparks record in
which she slept with nine hundred and nineteen men in
twenty four hours. First of all, U up, not to
get too nerdy, but where are the fucking advancedats. I

(01:19:18):
need some statistics because these numbers you just gave me
are not what I would consider all. These three of
these women don't have the record. First of all, it
needs to be within a considered time frame for each group. Right,
so one you went, one of y'all went six hours,
the other went twelve, and the other went twenty four.
It's like, well, she had the record before. If you

(01:19:39):
fuck a thousand men in twelve hours and someone else
fucked nine hundred and nineteen men and twenty four hours,
you hold the record because your dicks per minute were
much higher. Yes, it was now, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:19:52):
I feel like they don't have a standard.

Speaker 2 (01:19:55):
Five eighty three and six hours is definitely dicks per
hour out I mean, her pr was off the chain,
wouldn't it?

Speaker 1 (01:20:01):
Do you know them them stats?

Speaker 2 (01:20:04):
She was.

Speaker 1 (01:20:04):
She was out here double doubling.

Speaker 2 (01:20:06):
Her winds share percentage was high. I mean, get all
the free throws, give give any credit where it's due,
any night, got g the MVP of this shit. If
we're going strictly off of stets, Now, which order would
I have watched? Wanted to watch at least of sparks obviously,
not that I'm a fan of any This many men

(01:20:26):
is two many. It's just I can't imagine it being sexy.
But still nine to nineteen over twenty four hours definitely
has to reduce the amount of cocks per second, right right.

Speaker 1 (01:20:40):
Like I want real statistic I like statistics.

Speaker 2 (01:20:44):
And endurance wise, that's essentially a marathon or so I respect.
Like if you can do thirty eight dix an hour
for twenty four hours, there's a level of endurance that
I have more respect for that you need one hundred
dicks for six hours.

Speaker 1 (01:21:01):
It's like, it's not bad, No, it's not bad.

Speaker 2 (01:21:03):
But when we start getting to the goat category, Okay,
if you want to get you right right, what generation
did you grow up in? Yeah? Okay, these new TikTok
only fans like this generation. It's not my generation. You know,
I'm more old school with mine. I prefer the endurance. Okay.
I didn't mind that the games were a little lower scoring, Okay.

Speaker 1 (01:21:27):
Right, I didn't mind the little averages.

Speaker 2 (01:21:30):
This this new TikTok generation is just shooting corner threes
of dick but the whole game, and it's really it's
really if anybody want to complain, complain about that, literally
is all threes. It's really rigging the stats. Okay, you're
juicing the stack box, but what about the way the
game is played? Okay, I like my orgies, like playoff basketball.

(01:21:51):
Little physicality, okay, it's a little slowing of the plate, paces,
a little more half court.

Speaker 1 (01:21:56):
Okay, all right, Yeah, everybody's just running gun in it, right, it's.

Speaker 2 (01:22:00):
No way anyway. Good luck to her though, and congratulations
on the being so easy. Who knows that she could
do it? Twenty four hours we're talking two thousand men possibly.

Speaker 1 (01:22:11):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:22:11):
You know, it's funny that people listening to this that
are judging. Not not many of you are, I'm sure,
but there's some of y'all listening there like what a
fucking slut? And you know, I hear what you're saying.
But you know what, I keep thinking, And I've been
thinking this my whole life. And I don't know why
it works this way?

Speaker 1 (01:22:26):
But is it.

Speaker 2 (01:22:29):
Finding six hundred dudes to fuck one? Aren't they the sluts?

Speaker 1 (01:22:35):
If people don't look at it like that? But how
was all? Am I the problem?

Speaker 2 (01:22:39):
How is that that's a weird thing?

Speaker 1 (01:22:42):
That's like a only that's the only men thing?

Speaker 2 (01:22:45):
Like yes, like I said, it's not about judging, but
if you are of the judging kind, men's ability to
throw cast everything to the wind to get a nut
is way higher. You know what I mean, I'm sure
that the gay glory hole probably got the highest fucking
the rate, the rate of like cocks per minute, and

(01:23:06):
and and then the straight glory hole got the second highest.
There's no opposite version, by the way, there is no
there's no such thing as a glory pole where like,
I'm gonna stick my digging this wall, and I expect
straight women to show up and fuck me. Zero women
are going into that situation, bathroom something.

Speaker 1 (01:23:24):
Shouting them fucking hole, no thank you.

Speaker 2 (01:23:26):
But if you can open a glory hole in a
tree tonight, somebody showing up, if.

Speaker 1 (01:23:32):
You put it on Craigslist, that's carse somebody showing up.

Speaker 2 (01:23:35):
But the women is the hose. It's crazy.

Speaker 1 (01:23:37):
But the women is the hose. Right, It's only one
of me, right.

Speaker 2 (01:23:41):
I think about that all the time.

Speaker 1 (01:23:43):
M M.

Speaker 2 (01:23:44):
Anyway, congratulations uh Jojo Siwa and Chris Hughes reignite romance
rumors with cozy new photos from the Happiest Week. Has
to be a hard launch, uh Jojo Siwa, you know
who she is?

Speaker 1 (01:23:58):
Mm okay, I probably probably like I know who that is,
but I don't.

Speaker 2 (01:24:04):
Well, you keep trying to predict what I'm gonna say.
Man as usual, not correct. This a little game we
like to play. Hearon says, this is what you're gonna say,
and then I'll be like no, and I'm about to
say who I am glad you don't know? I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:24:21):
Okay, so we all lost.

Speaker 2 (01:24:22):
And the thing is, she's very famous amongst the blacks,
Like this is like I'm not saying it's the same,
but it feels a little like if I didn't know
who Betty White was. The blacks on the social media
love her. I don't know what the fuck this woman
has ever done. I think she's a singer, but like,

(01:24:43):
how can her be in a singer? Make all these
niggas love her? I ain't never heard her music.

Speaker 1 (01:24:49):
I don't don't know what you sound like. And child,
you're gonna ask me her name tomorrow. I'm gonna who.

Speaker 2 (01:24:54):
Yeah, I know you love to not know. I'm not
of the love to not know. It's just finally good
to align on not knowing. I'm I'm not happy I
don't know. I clearly know a little bit more than
you do, but ignorance is blissed. I have not tried
to look her up, so I guess ignorance is bliss.
I have not wickied her, not one time. I'll see
the Blacks being mad at her about one something one day,

(01:25:14):
then they love her the next and the whole time,
I'm like Juarpo, Who is this woman?

Speaker 1 (01:25:19):
Who is this love?

Speaker 2 (01:25:22):
Uk Allen the Lum shared a carousel via Instagram on
Tuesday that showed the pair of snuggling up while enjoying
vacation in Mexico, where Hughes supported see What at her
Mexico City concert. The previous seven days have been the prettiest, uh,
he captured the post see what agreed comment and happiest, hardest, overflowing.
And they're definitely snuggled up in these pictures, you know, so,

(01:25:46):
I mean he's they're they're they're together, Like this isn't like, uh,
you couldn't mistake this as like, oh, they're just hanging
out now. I don't know who's taking the photos, but
this feels like a hard lunch. And I don't know
much about Jojo Sia, what other than she dressed like
she got drafted in the nineteen ninety two NBA draft,
Like I don't know hahag clothing choices, but you know, whatever.

Speaker 1 (01:26:13):
You know, I heard her music. It might be a bop.
I don't know, but I've.

Speaker 2 (01:26:17):
One photo show see what's sweetly laying her head on
his shoulder with her eyes closed and relaxed pose. Other
picture showed the celebrity Big Brother UK co stars hugging
and smiling while laying together on the couch. Social media
users claim the duo was confirming their relationship status with
the images. This has to be a hard launch. If
you guys come out and say you're still just friends
after this, my heart is gonna break. Lots of smiles,

(01:26:40):
lots of togetherness, his brother being said, nice to see
a smile on your face. Two blue heart emojis. She
also shared her own Instagram post about her trip with Chris,
calling experience more magical than anything, full of surprise, family time, performing, chilling, laughing,
love and smiling and meaning and good, meaningful cries. Absolutely beautiful.
Wouldn't change for a single thing. Heart emoji. A week

(01:27:01):
I'll remember for the rest of my life. She captured
the FoST which included even more PDA packed pictures. In
one photo, she's seen rest in her head on his
chest while please playfully tugging her ear. This is like
a happy Birthday piece of cake he had. She also
included a picture of him taking part of her birthday

(01:27:21):
celebration as he finished eating her chocolate dessert, which was
decorated with the words happy Birthday, Jojo. See what came
the post? Came out to see What? Twenty two and
Hughes thirty two.

Speaker 1 (01:27:32):
Okay your gap?

Speaker 2 (01:27:33):
Yeah, a shout out he gave. She gave him a
shout out on stage during her performance of Bet Davis
oz Per the Irish Son on Wednesday. The reality stars
are also seen looking very close on the set of
Access Daily, Access Daily. Well, they were like, oh, maybe
they were doing prs. I don't know. Maybe that's how
you are a lot of relationship. You go to Access

(01:27:54):
Daily or whatever.

Speaker 1 (01:27:55):
Fuck right, extra extra, Yeah, that's what it sounds.

Speaker 2 (01:27:58):
Like to me. A video show, see What, appearing to
cut the interview short after her former dance Molls coach
Abbey Lee Miller put a spotlight on her PDA with
Hughes saying she was sitting on some hot guy's lap.
Oh so that's all part of the rollout. Well, my
question is, what did they do? I know what y'all saying, like,
it's just nice white people shit. I don't know. This
feels like something about to happen. Something y'all trying to

(01:28:20):
get ahead of some Yeah, why is it news? Y'all
love each other right ahead. That's some news is getting
ready to break. I know, Jojo see what. People wasn't
liking her for something. I didn't even look into it.
I told y'all, I did not google anything about this lady,
but I did see that those people on the timeline,
I'm not liking her.

Speaker 1 (01:28:36):
Oh okay.

Speaker 2 (01:28:38):
So I don't know what she said or did, but
it was people like I'm tired of her shit, and
I wondered. She was like, actually, I'm I'm with us
since head white man, we look at us being beautiful
looking at the camera. Y'all we happy. This is the
happiest time of my life. I'm so happy. I was like, Okay,
I guess when she said the N word, she didn't
mean it. I don't know. I don't know what she did.
Update on some other white people news. Well, it was

(01:28:58):
guess the rights first, but now it's white people news
because the perfect the culprit turned out to be white.
Remember that woman that pooped on someone's car? Yes, yeah, uh,
Well Uh, alleged Delko Why was this doing this? What
was happening? What is happening here? A bunch of shit

(01:29:21):
is popping up now. Oh I can't read it. Oh
well you know what. You can't stop me. I'll just
read it straight from the others. App I you's ha ha,
Now who's laughing?

Speaker 1 (01:29:32):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (01:29:32):
Greg Ferrari is a normal Delco teenager. You got a
cool mess of up. Why are they going to so
much details? Anyway? This woman, her name is Christina Solometto. Uh,
she has been dubbed the Delco pooper for her actions
on that video. Alleged actions, Well, she pooped on that

(01:29:53):
person's hood or that car, and.

Speaker 1 (01:29:55):
You've seen her pooping too.

Speaker 2 (01:29:56):
So she went to court. Uh she's charged h uh
for indecent exposure, disily conduct, criminal mischief, harassment, and depositing
waste on a highway, along with the new charger for
open lowdiness. Uh. She test Ferrari, that must be the person.

Speaker 1 (01:30:13):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:30:13):
Ferrari testified that he was driving his truck to his
friend's house April thirtieth when he was forced to stop
his vehicle because two motorists were arguing in the intersection.
I thought they were going to fight, so I put
out my phone to take the video. Oh, he's the
one who recorded, and one of the people ended up
going to the bath on the other car. His video,
which he said he shared with his baseball group chat
and then posted to Facebook by someone else, subsequently went viral.

(01:30:36):
In the aftermath, his Instagram follower account grew. He appeared
on the Preston and Steve Show. Okay, hey, he's all right,
must be white people this white people news.

Speaker 1 (01:30:47):
They might be big time chat chat. He blew up.

Speaker 2 (01:30:50):
Then he's been asked to pose for photos with people
at graduation parties. Uh so he for taking the video.
That's my not be a lot going on in that
city for your graduation party, that's anyway. So yeah, no, no, no.
Chen counter that if Solo Matto sat on the hood

(01:31:12):
of the car during the ledge act, she was exposed
to the person in the driver's seats, So they said,
that's why they're calling exposure.

Speaker 3 (01:31:19):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:31:19):
They also argued against the disorderly conduct charge, saying the
tenants required and there's no proof that she intended the
cause of disturbance. Of course they disagreed, right.

Speaker 1 (01:31:27):
You shouldn't you've went to cause the disturbance last time
I checked, unless you were like a bathroom, it's a
disturbance to somebody.

Speaker 2 (01:31:33):
It requires some level of intent to deficate on someone's
car on demand. I don't think you can accidentally do that,
said Chin agreed. So, yeah, it sounds like she's going
on trial. She said there's lots of threats against her child.
There's lots of threats against her personally. Okay, said that
her lawyer outside the court. This, This is not someone

(01:31:54):
who's used to be in the spotlight, especially under these circumstances. Yeah, oh,
poor her Man.

Speaker 1 (01:32:01):
Situation. Ah, it was. I couldn't help myself.

Speaker 2 (01:32:11):
Yeah, yeah, she didn't deserve to be canceled.

Speaker 3 (01:32:16):
Cancer culture can be cruel.

Speaker 2 (01:32:17):
It can be it can we hate to see it?
Happy to you, sis. All right, let's see I have
one more white people knew the story I was gonna cover.

Speaker 3 (01:32:29):
What was it?

Speaker 2 (01:32:32):
Oh? Here we go, well ship. Sean Painn defends Woody
Allen against Dylan Dylan Pharaoh molestation allegations. I can't get
a read on Seampagne the actor, Yeah, because like people
act like he's a good person, but he always saying
some bullshit.

Speaker 1 (01:32:53):
He he ain't been acting in Forever. I know he's.

Speaker 2 (01:32:56):
Judgmental as fuck, but I heeple seen that. They're like
he helped Louisiana and then you read further it's like
he actually made it worse or whatever. I'm like, I
don't know how did he get here, but I definitely
know siding with Woody Allen in twenty twenty five not
really a good not a good move. So, yeah, he

(01:33:17):
was on the Lewis Thorough podcast.

Speaker 1 (01:33:20):
And now who did that do?

Speaker 2 (01:33:21):
Right?

Speaker 1 (01:33:22):
Like you said, might be being over there and in
the white Lands, but I have no idea who that
white person is.

Speaker 2 (01:33:28):
He was asked if he'd ever consider working with Woody
Allen again. He said, I worked with him in a
heartbeat if it was the right project. Now, Woody Allen
should call him on this. I got the project of
working on come on over.

Speaker 1 (01:33:40):
I guess I think he gonna find a way to
be I don't know if it's just right.

Speaker 2 (01:33:45):
Maybe if the character was a little different, well how
should it be different? Maybe if the character was younger. Okay, well, CGI,
you will make you young. Oh you know. Also the
characters should probably be black. Oh we'll do black face.
We don't care. Uh, do I think he has a
bad rap with these things. I don't know anyone well
enough to say one hundred percent this didn't happen, that
didn't happen. The stories I'm mostly told by people that

(01:34:06):
I wouldn't trust with a dime. It's just seems so
heavily weighted in that way. The Road pushed back on
Pen's response, asking for clarification about where he stands. It's
only the Fame director was accused by mainly his strange daughter,
but also his son ronand Ferrell. The journalist, doubling down
on the support for Alan, Penn explained why he has
doubts about the allegations against the eighty nine year old.
Put it this way, I'm not aware, and maybe I'm

(01:34:28):
just an ignoratmis that's a possibility. I'm not aware of
any clinical psychologists or psychiatrists or anyone I've ever heard
talk or spoken to around the subject the pedophilia that
in eighty years of life there's accusations of it, only
of it happening only once. I'm not aware of that.
And when people try to associate what were he is,
let's say much younger girlfriends, right or wrong, it's not

(01:34:50):
the conversation here post puberty consentraal stuff is to me
a different conversation. Now he is also married to the
daughter that me and Pharaoh adopted. Oh and yeah, so
they that's so it's not just anyway. Let's just take
a second, That's all I'm saying. I see, it's been

(01:35:11):
a lot of seconds. We've taken more than this, a
fair amount of seconds.

Speaker 1 (01:35:16):
So a whole bunch of seconds.

Speaker 4 (01:35:17):
This.

Speaker 2 (01:35:19):
Yeah, people that like what is happening here? He said,
I see he's not proven guilty, so I take him
as innocent and I will work on him in a heartbeat.

Speaker 1 (01:35:28):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:35:29):
Dylan has consistently maintained uh, she was sexually abused by
her famous father.

Speaker 3 (01:35:34):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:35:35):
He has never been charged with a crime. In twenty
twenty one, HBO release of four part document series Allen
versus Pharaoh, investigating sexual abuse allegations brought against my watch that,
of course, Allan denied all the allegations. So there you go.
All right, how long we've been going one thirty five? Uh,
you know what, let's do a little guest the race

(01:35:56):
and then we'll wrap this up. Guys, I know y'all
want to get you guess on might as well find
my music for it first, though. Here we go.

Speaker 3 (01:36:15):
It's time to guess the race. It's time.

Speaker 2 (01:36:20):
It's time to guess the race.

Speaker 3 (01:36:23):
It's time to guess the race.

Speaker 2 (01:36:25):
All right, you know what it is. It's guessed the race.
Time we go around the globe, find different articles. We
guessed the race of the people involved. Caring plays, the
chat room plays, and they're all racist, all right. They
might as well work for Elon Musk. Powerball winner behind

(01:36:48):
Bars for battering cop. I guess it wasn't his lucky day.
That's good, thank you, thank you?

Speaker 1 (01:36:59):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (01:37:00):
I mean.

Speaker 1 (01:37:02):
There uh.

Speaker 2 (01:37:03):
Days after claiming one hundred and sixty seven point three
million dollar powerball jackpot of Kentucky, man's behind Bars charged
with kicking a cop in the face during a melee
at at Oceanfront Hotel in Florida. I guess he said,
I got fuck you money. Apparently soon, according to court records,
James Farthing, a fifty year old ex con, was arrested
Tuesday evening on felling and misdemeanor charges the connection with

(01:37:26):
the fracas at the Trade Winds Resort in Saint Pete Beach.
Got a fracas, A damn fracas uh farthing was at
the resort with Jacqueline fight Master. Come on, that's a
mad up name.

Speaker 1 (01:37:40):
That's somebody's stage name.

Speaker 2 (01:37:44):
It's just the irony of beating the cops. Ass, and
your friend is Jacqueline fight Master his forty.

Speaker 1 (01:37:51):
They missed Jackeline fright Master's match at two pm because
of this Ruckus No sorry, Frucus.

Speaker 2 (01:37:56):
Fight Master sounds like they fought in one of them
old like run running Shaw films. Inspect the deck. The
fight Master, Yes, the hard Master, his forty two year
old girlfriend and seeing well a lot farther than fight
Master appear. Tuesday at Kentucky a lot of repressed Congress
announcing the power ball win fatheran who won the Aprils

(01:38:19):
twenty six powerball drawing, purchased the winning ticket from Clark's
Pumping Shop in Georgetown, not the pumping shop. Yeah, I
gotta say they showing their face holding that that big
ass check. That's they live life dangerous on Tuesday evening,
one day after.

Speaker 1 (01:38:34):
Post states is required. It depends on the state. Yeah,
some some states you can be like anonymous. Some states
is required. That's why some of the states is required.
For some people, they come up like masks and shit
like that because they don't want their face to be recognized.

Speaker 2 (01:38:47):
One day after posting with an oversized jackpot winter Check,
Fathering punched a male victim in the face during the
argumented trade Wins, Cops say. Subsequent to that alleged battery,
it Shares deputy decided to break it up and interceded
in the brawl. Deputy Nicholas Aristo ario Statico reported being

(01:39:07):
kicked in the face by Farthing. After reviewing body Warren
camera footage, ario Statico stated he observed the defendant winding
up his right leg, kicking your your fire in the face,
and an attempt to injure or incapacitate myself, so they
got him dead to rights. After being cut kicked, the
deputy ordered Farthing to turn around and place his hands

(01:39:29):
around his back. The defendant refused to do so and
attended to flee on foot out of the hotel. The
money don't make you smart.

Speaker 1 (01:39:35):
No, it don't, was the money behind him as he ran,
everybody just reaching up for dollars.

Speaker 2 (01:39:40):
Simultaneously, fight Master was actively engaged in our argument involving
another guest and her boyfriend.

Speaker 1 (01:39:46):
What sense right? Fight Master was fighting what is a rose?

Speaker 2 (01:39:50):
Is still a rose?

Speaker 1 (01:39:51):
What am I supposed to do? Stand still? Do nothing?

Speaker 2 (01:39:53):
No right? And was trying to true to her name
fight the other patrons at that bar busted for causing
the disturbance. Fight Master appeared very top skate that was yelling, screaming,
and making incoherent statements. Fatheran was booked in the county
jail the morning for battery on a law enforcement officer,
a felony and two misdemeanor counts. I wonder if when
they tackled him if rings popped out on him like

(01:40:15):
sonic coins everywhere. While bond has been said at ten
thousand dollars on the felony Florida felony wrap farthing remains
behind bars due to a Kentucky parole violator warrant. Kentucky's
Department of Corrections issue the warrant in response to father's
new arrests and the fact that he left to stay
with out permission of parole officer Karen. Guess the race.

(01:40:37):
They're both the same, right, white? Karen's going with white.
Let's check the chat room. White white white white white.
Looks like everyone's saying white. The correct answer is white.

(01:41:00):
That's them right there. Yeah, a lot of neck tacks.
But uh yeah they him and fight master. They was
they got enough money to make bail though they should
be fine. By yourself, by your way out of problems.
That's what the rich do.

Speaker 1 (01:41:16):
Yeah, they do.

Speaker 2 (01:41:18):
Let's see cops. Maga hat triggered attack on man seventy two.
We're not guessing the man, We're guessing his attacker. A
seventy two year old man wearing a Maga hat was
struck in the head by a woman who she who
admitted she approached approaching the victim and questioning why he
would support Trump. The conversation yesterday afternoon at a park

(01:41:42):
in Clearwater, Florida, resulted in the rest of Lord Garrett
thirty three for battery on a person sixty five or older,
which is a felony. It can't be beating up o people,
y'all not in Florida. According to investigators, a verbal argument
broke out between Garrett and Gary regarding the victim wearing
a Maga hat. Garrett allegedly struck Gama on the back

(01:42:05):
of the head shoulder area with a can she was holding.
Was it arizon iced tea praise?

Speaker 1 (01:42:12):
Don't can?

Speaker 4 (01:42:13):
Right?

Speaker 2 (01:42:14):
Following the battery, cops charged Garrett jumped over a fence
and began walking away from Gamma, who lives about a
mile away from the park. When police subsequently located Garrett,
she reportedly acknowledged approaching Gamma and questioning him about the
support of Donald Trump. She also admitted to point the
contents of her can on the victim, but denied hitting

(01:42:34):
him with it. The conversation between Garrett and Gamma was
observed by an independent witness, who provided cops with a
sworn statement. She struggled with officers, threw herself to the ground,
kicked her feet. At one point, she allegedly wrapped the
legs around one cop and forced him to the ground.
She was eventually subdued with restraints and escorted it to
by four officers. In addition to the battery accounts, she
charged the battery on law enforcement officer of feling you

(01:42:56):
and resistant police, a misdemeanor. She scheduled this afternoon for
initial appearance. Guess the race of Laura Garrett.

Speaker 1 (01:43:03):
I'm going to go white.

Speaker 2 (01:43:06):
Okay, Karen's going white for Laura. Let's see what the
chat room believes. Was there any clue that made you
go white.

Speaker 1 (01:43:15):
I mean just bold enough to pull a can and
bold enough to go to a Trump person and be like,
why you got that? We don't do that. We we
just ignore you. We're like, okay, I treat that hat
like like you say, like I treat the black and
yellow owners own the bumble bee or wasps they myss away. Uh.

Speaker 2 (01:43:33):
Surprisingly, white black says Ratchet as scientists, and white says Tray.
So white is the majority and white you gotta correct
one person missed it.

Speaker 1 (01:43:52):
So yeah, what the hell color.

Speaker 2 (01:44:01):
All the crystal gems?

Speaker 1 (01:44:03):
Right?

Speaker 3 (01:44:03):
Uh?

Speaker 2 (01:44:04):
Now she's look, she's like she about that action. She
definitely went to that march the other day. All right,
let's get to the bonus round of the final round.

Speaker 1 (01:44:13):
Younger about that life, Yeah, she's like gonna buy the battle.

Speaker 2 (01:44:17):
Caring is too for two.

Speaker 1 (01:44:18):
Yay, that was why I am racing. How can I
be racist about anybody or anything in my life?

Speaker 2 (01:44:32):
How can I call them niggas?

Speaker 5 (01:44:34):
Just call them niggas?

Speaker 3 (01:44:38):
Go change.

Speaker 2 (01:44:44):
Big high jumping speed chucking three hundred and sixty degree basketball.
I knew it. I had a that was a story
that was almost too perfect, and now I think it's fake. Okay,
because I've been clear looking on it and every place
to say four or four story not found. I'll tell

(01:45:06):
y'all what it was, but I think it's a fake story,
which is why I'm telling y'all. It's a couple lost
opposite arms while holding each other as tornado ripped apart home.
Who I was like, what a sweet, lovely story. These
people was holding arms and they wouldn't let each other
go and they lost their arm. But now it's none

(01:45:28):
that it's not other places. I'm like, I don't know this. Yeah,
I might have to say no on that one. All right,
let's go to a different one. Let's see queens Man
uh accused of trying to steal back engagement ring glad
he's not marrying his ex? Oh, I don't know that

(01:45:49):
sentence doesn't really like it felt real petty to include
the last like five six words. Queen's Man accused of
trying to steal his still back engaging ring should be
the title? Should then they act glad he's not marrying
his ex? Like, who cares if he's happy about we
assume that when he wanted to ring back right, Queen's
Man accused of pushing his ex to the floor was

(01:46:12):
slat with a restraining order because he was trying to
get back a twenty eight thousand dollars engaging ring that
he bought her. Uh, he couldn't be happier about it,
his lawyer said Thursday. Okay, well that's a damn that's
a technique in court. I don't know. Could be happy
about push don't know if I want my lawyer saying
that you know the crime they accused of doing that
I'm saying not guilty. They could not be happier about

(01:46:35):
what they did because they definitely did do.

Speaker 1 (01:46:37):
It, and they don't have you why we having the
court case.

Speaker 2 (01:46:40):
He'll let me tell you before we even get this
bitch started, zero remorse, no regrets.

Speaker 1 (01:46:46):
No, they're doing it again.

Speaker 2 (01:46:48):
When it comes down to sentence, you you might as
well throw the fucking book at him. Right, they're doing
again because when it's time, when it's time the sentence,
I'm telling you, I can't wait to do it again.
We are very happy to have an order protection here
because my plan agrees that he should have absolutely nothing
to do with this woman ever again in his life.

(01:47:11):
I told my client Neville, his lawyer said, which we're
not guessing his race. But the lawyer's name is James Neville.
I told my client, and I hope you quote this accurately,
that after the case is over and there's no more
order of protection, my client should send this woman a
fruit basket as a thank you, because to not marry

(01:47:31):
her was the best thing ever got Donald.

Speaker 3 (01:47:33):
Trump for a lawyer.

Speaker 1 (01:47:34):
Right, he's seeing like bitter old men. Right.

Speaker 2 (01:47:37):
Police said to brothers, you don't like bitches.

Speaker 1 (01:47:39):
I don't like bitches. You could be a lawyer. What
is this?

Speaker 2 (01:47:42):
Police said? The brother and sister argue with LRD Diez's
ex are April twenty four for reill turning some possessions
to jack and hide apartment that they shared on thirty
second Avenue on ninetieth Street. The couple recently broke up,
prompting a dispute about getting back the thirty four year
old victim's ring. Take the ring, barked, according to the prosecutors,
and her brother then allegedly knocked the victim to the

(01:48:03):
ground attempt to snatch the ring off the ex's hand.
The victims of her bleeding, redness, swelling of her hand,
and substatch of pain to her help. Uh the siblings
left without the ring.

Speaker 1 (01:48:14):
All that you even get the ring right when they
were gonna give it to you.

Speaker 2 (01:48:18):
Which is twenty eight thousand ring according to the lawyer,
twenty eight thousand dollars ring.

Speaker 1 (01:48:23):
Yees sure receipts on that.

Speaker 2 (01:48:24):
Buddy never agreed that Lord Diaz wanted the ring back
and that he grabbed a woman's hand, but claimed that
is as far as it went. He did not throw
her to the floor. She the complainant, threw herself to
the floor.

Speaker 1 (01:48:35):
Tell me how that makes sense.

Speaker 2 (01:48:36):
I could be a lawyer.

Speaker 1 (01:48:38):
That's the best about Like the case where what was
it food or something? And the person was like they
put the they put food on themselves. He was like,
none of the what you're saying is true.

Speaker 2 (01:48:46):
Yeah, I could be a lawyer. Lord Daz later surrendered
the police. His sister was picked up by cops only
after they released a wanted poster showing her wearing a
tight fit and revealing top. She wore a baggy sweat
suit in court and cried after the proceeding, So they
put out her thirst trap like y'all seen her, and
let me tell you they was gonna find her.

Speaker 1 (01:49:06):
Yes, have you seen? Yes? In fact I have.

Speaker 2 (01:49:10):
If five hundred and eighty three people could show up
to fuck somebody at Gloryhole.

Speaker 1 (01:49:13):
They gonna find that they made in.

Speaker 2 (01:49:15):
We're gonna find these titties when I show y'all the pictures.

Speaker 1 (01:49:19):
If anything else, they're gonna like it's real.

Speaker 2 (01:49:21):
I know they had a search party for this lady.

Speaker 1 (01:49:24):
They got a search squad.

Speaker 2 (01:49:26):
Despite a bell request from prosecutors, and siblings are free
without bail for now. Laura on her own recognizance and
her brother on supervisor, re lease, guess the race of
this these family members?

Speaker 1 (01:49:36):
White?

Speaker 2 (01:49:37):
All right, Karen is saying white. Let's check the chat
room see what they believe. Latina says, just Annie, Okay,
what were the names? The names were Carlos Lord Diaz
and his sister Lucy.

Speaker 1 (01:49:51):
Laura, Oh okay, yes, it's just I'm glad to ask.
But then your Latino.

Speaker 2 (01:49:55):
Now you're changing d'artina. Yes, okay, all.

Speaker 1 (01:49:57):
Right, that makes more sense. I was thinking white than
I I was like, wait a.

Speaker 2 (01:50:00):
Minute, latina, Latina. Everyone said latina, even though it's two
of them, but yes, the correct answer is latino. I
would have accepted white, though, mm hmm. You know this

(01:50:22):
guy looked like Latino Jerem john burnhal little bit, Uh
give me Marien back was jay, I was here to
say that I'm obviously not good.

Speaker 1 (01:50:34):
Let you say you show us her pick?

Speaker 2 (01:50:36):
Oh I didn't. I thought I just did. Okay, okay
her I thought you. Oh yes, I was okay. They
was gonna find this woman. Okay, This him obviously, this
the this her crying in court, very sad. This them together,
and then this is the picture on the wan.

Speaker 1 (01:50:54):
Yeah, they were gonna find her dog.

Speaker 2 (01:50:56):
They was gonna find this lady. Okay, they don't even
need the face to find this lady. That was like,
I know those tities you're talking about. Lucy worked down
at the at the at the other court, at the
five and dimes.

Speaker 1 (01:51:10):
Hilarious, wanted posted too.

Speaker 2 (01:51:11):
Yeah that one these knew what they was doing with
that bullshit.

Speaker 1 (01:51:15):
That like somebody did a glamour shot. That's hilarious.

Speaker 2 (01:51:19):
It's like being we're looking for Cherokee to ass y'all
seen her.

Speaker 1 (01:51:22):
We will find her. Yes, if if, if she's in
this vicinity, particularly in New York, everything, everybody on top
of each other, we're gonna find.

Speaker 2 (01:51:28):
Her, all right, sword ratchetness Uh tom kah yah h uh,

(01:51:56):
let's see a man who threatened police with a gun
and a samurai sor it arrested after nine hours standoff.
Nine hours Yeah, a fifty three year old man was
arrested after he threatened police with a gun and a
Samarai sword.

Speaker 1 (01:52:09):
I guess he had more endurance to that woman three
extra hours but less cox YEP.

Speaker 2 (01:52:14):
Shortly after noon on Monday, Worcester Police or Worcester Worcester
Police said they were dispatched to Forrestdale Road a dress
for well being checked. When they arrived, officers were told
the resident was making threats. They determined that the resident
had bolted his door shut and that the threats possibly
evolved explosives.

Speaker 1 (01:52:33):
Damn.

Speaker 2 (01:52:33):
Police took positions outside the apartment, and the resident, Raymond Knightam,
aimed what appeared to be a rifle at one of
the officers while shouting threats. Officers took cover and called
in their Christis negotiation team. Night Am shouted at officers
of repeatedly threw items out of the residents. He also
armed himself with what appeared to be a Samarron sword.

(01:52:55):
Officers attended to negotiate for hours, and the swat team
was called in USSIS. About a nine and a half
hours later, item exited the apartments placed under the rest
for so out with a daily weapon soday. You guys
have it all right, Thanks for listening. That's it for
the week until Saturday's feedback show will help you enjoyed it.
Until next time, I love you, wh
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