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July 28, 2025 67 mins

Rod and Karen banter about TikTok workout videos, A/C issues, Karen’s facial expressions, porn sounds on Spotify, and the XXL Freshman List. Then they discuss the Tea App getting hacked, Boston’s Asian women get a mobile mammography van, Gender Wars, man assaults fast food worker, officer reports false crime, man kidnaps date and feeds him meth and sword ratchetness.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
I listen to the Black Guy Who Tips podcast because
Rod and Karen Hot. Hello, Welcome to another episode of
the Blackoutis Podcast. I'm your host, Rod, join is always
by my co host, and we're live on a Monday night,
ready to give you some quick, down and dirty podcasting.
The official weapon of the show is share and the

(00:23):
unofficial sport what about and bullet ball, extreme extreme extreme
extreme extreme.

Speaker 2 (00:29):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (00:30):
Plenty of stuff to talk about, sure, but you know,
we'd like to start with some banter, because who knows
what we've been thinking about, So let's go with that.

Speaker 3 (00:39):
Do you have any Do you have any?

Speaker 1 (00:50):
Do you have any banter? Anter?

Speaker 2 (00:53):
Anter?

Speaker 4 (00:53):
Banter?

Speaker 1 (00:54):
Answered? Do you have any banter?

Speaker 2 (01:06):
Talk to me?

Speaker 1 (01:08):
Do you have any?

Speaker 2 (01:11):
All?

Speaker 1 (01:11):
Right? Care?

Speaker 2 (01:13):
I thought I had one, but it ended up I
ended up getting thinking about another one. My first thing
with like TikTok and like YouTube and all that stuff,
how they showed like these workout videos and all this stuff,
like you know, for like you stretching and all that stuff,
and I wonder sometimes who was the first person. It
was like, if I record myself doing this, people will

(01:36):
want to do it too. And you know, now people
don't make as much money off of them, because you know,
you used to have like Jane funding all that where
with the vhs and stuff because people respected work, people
will actually go and pay you for the services. But
now it's not like that anymore. It's like, you know,

(01:56):
I see tons of how to stretch your feed? How
does you know your legs? So it was just just
the kind of like a random thought I had. I
was like, you know, who was the first person that
was like ha ha, I got something here, you know.

Speaker 1 (02:08):
I mean, I imagine the first person was probably somebody
on silent film doing something with a piano in the
background or whatever, you right where they had to stop
and put that that black and white print closed like
caption between each each each sure video. It was like,
you know, before I don't know why it took that

(02:30):
voice in my head before every his Morning constitution on
Henry likes to stretch?

Speaker 2 (02:36):
Yes and one two four and he does because you know,
back then the exoduse probably basic like jumping jacks and
push ups and like it probably didn't target like a
specific group.

Speaker 1 (02:46):
Y'a also made me think about how essentially influencer culture
is as old as time, I mean, and that that
whoever the first person put out an exercise video even
like your uh am, I drawing a blank on this
white man's name Jane Fonders, And why can't I remember

(03:06):
his name Richard Simmons, even though people were mostly influencers, right,
because it's not like it's not like I don't mean
this to be shady, but it's not like people looked
at Richard Simmons like I want to be Richard Simmonson,
look like him. But he was so entertaining and so
fun and joyous and made he knowed how to he

(03:28):
knew how to turn it into entertainment. I'm not even
saying motivation because I don't know if it worked for people,
Like I'm sure it worked for some people, but I'm
sure like any of those craziest tybo whatever it's like
that was. It's basically influencer culture more than it is
the actual exercise because people, because why else do you
need a personality to sell it?

Speaker 2 (03:50):
Right? Why do you need Jillian Michaels.

Speaker 1 (03:54):
Why couldn't it just be silent? Here are the moves,
there's nothing to say. No, you need a person that's
good with a camera, can look at it and entertain somebody,
because at the end of the day, it's it's now
a TV show. And and so even now when you
talk about people stretching and putting it on TikTok and Facebook,
to a certain extent, that continuing the lineage of you know,

(04:15):
is it about my workout specifically or in the moves,
or am I selling you me like I'm out here
and I'm part of the reason you want to watch
me do the stretch or whatever?

Speaker 2 (04:25):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, because that there are some people I'm
not gonna lie. I just enjoyed them. Maybe it could
be from how they talk and how they explain that
it's just something about them that actually draws me in.
And I'm like, okay, cool.

Speaker 1 (04:37):
Right, our AC man, I just want to I just
want to. I just want to tell the AC I'm grateful,
thank you. Karen does not appreciate our AC. Okay. We
live in an older apartment and she has no respect
for what it goes through. Cause it's been out here
triple digits outside, yes, and we keep been cold in here.

(05:01):
And y'all always look at the show and some of
y'all leave little snyde thinking little little picky comments like
how cold is ride keep it in there. How come
Caaren Nonway is wrapped up? She likes it cold and
to put on stuff more than she wants it to
be warm. She would rather walk around and put on

(05:22):
that blanket she always wears. Then she would like to
walk around and just a turk T shirt. I don't
know why. That's just how she.

Speaker 2 (05:30):
Is, child because you can't you're gonna take off of
so much.

Speaker 1 (05:33):
You say it's me, and I'm saying, guys, it's Karen.
She wanted cold as hell. Our ac has been getting
this ass kicked. It's been like for the most part,
for the most part, you know, it's it's it's putting
up the good fight. You know, when it gets cool
at night and it's like eighty which is hot as hell,
but it's eighty outside. It'll get to like seventy in here.

(05:57):
That's cool, that's really cold. But when it gets to
like one hundred outside, and then it has to do
that thing where it's been hot and the sun goes
down but it's still hot outside, and it takes time.
It could get up to seventy eight eighty degrees and
then it starts cooling down throughout the night and then eventually,
like I said, get back to seventy. We can keep

(06:19):
it as cold it sixty six sometimes in here, So
it ain't sixty six out of question. It's never gonna
make it to that, not with one hundred and some
degrees outside. But I just want to give appreciation because
we had to run a couple of errands. I hurt
my hip during my workout Sunday for some reason and
I don't even know when I heard it or what
it was. Shout out to getting old, but I needed

(06:42):
Karen's help. I was like, hey, I need to pick
up a package and I need to do this. Can
you come with me? And we go out and we
come back and it's ninety something degrees or whatever. And
when I opened the door, it was so cool in
here compared to the outside. I said, Karen, the AC
is working. This woman wanted me to call. She wanted
me to call the AC people, like they could fix

(07:05):
what is happening to our old ass AC. This is
just what it is. This what is gonna be.

Speaker 2 (07:11):
I know, I know I'll be all right, I will
be okay.

Speaker 1 (07:15):
All right, that's all I have to say. Thank you,
thank you a c I know you trying. You are
a c I.

Speaker 2 (07:22):
Give you credit. You is keep me cool because child,
it's better if than feeling that heat and humidity outside
because it is myth.

Speaker 1 (07:30):
It really took me leaving the house and coming back
to really appreciate it because I was like, maybe we
do need to call them, and I was like, no,
it's clearly cool. It just can't get cool enough because
it's fucking a hunting. It's not supposed beat as hot.

Speaker 2 (07:44):
It's not. It's not supposed to be this hot at all.
I think that for me. My next one is you.
Was on the Karen Hunters Show today and one of
the shout out to Karen Hunting Show and her fans,
one of the listeners had called in and they was

(08:05):
saying about me on video and things like that, and
it made me. It made me think about now sometimes
and I've gotten better at this, but sometimes I'm not
always like self aware of how loud I am. And
I'm not particularly yesterday. Yesterday I was tripping myself out yesterday,
ain't god damn everything loud? And Roger's like, no, it's.

Speaker 1 (08:27):
You, You're loud.

Speaker 2 (08:28):
So sometimes I don't realize my own volume coming out
of me. I've realized this, and I'm much better at
it because I don't wait Roger Gump as much in
the morning. But I'm just a loud ass person. I'm
just loud for no goddamn reason. I'm just loud. And
so the person was saying, how my facial expressions and

(08:50):
things like that. Now you if you turned your video
down and just watch my face, it probably would be
a comedy show. So it was just making me think
of think about me just being myself and not and
uh not always being aware. I'm just speaking myself. Being
myself and my facial expressions is always part of it.
I was that little kid that will my mama be

(09:13):
talking to me. I wouldn't open up my mouth, but
my face would actually tell kind of what was going
on in my brain. And I'm not gonna shine perfect
at it, but I'm much much better. I don't play poker.
That's so I don't play poker. I don't have a
poker face, and I poke. My face is terrible, uh,
with my feelings and my emotions and things like that.

(09:34):
So it just it just made me think about being
more aware and and and and just how what I
do can impact other people. And I'm glad people like
and enjoy me and things like that. Uh.

Speaker 1 (09:47):
If you have control over the car Wi Bluetooth for whatever,
if you're the driver or you get connected to the radio,
the people that are listening is I have a fun
game you can have, uh play When you go to Spotify.
There's all kinds of stuff on there. It's not just music,

(10:08):
but you can go to sound effects and uh, and
you can type in anything. I do this all the time.
I type in random stuff and h. I found a
new fun game to play. Is when someone gets in
the car with you, go to the porn sex sound effects,

(10:28):
turn it up and roll the windows down and it
just slowly cruised through like the parking lot of like
your local grocery store down the street, you know, and
just you know, this is like letting the people on
the outside know this is what we listening to in here.
That's what we just how we get down a fun
game for the whole The whole family will enjoy it.

(10:50):
I mean it's very I mean I thought it was funny.
It was hilarious. People are laughing in the chat. They
think it's funny. So I say do this. You know,
next time you get some in the car, you know,
and if they ask, like what you listen to, you go,
oh my bad, I'll listen to that earlier. I don't
know why that's playing, you know, I just listened to
porn sounds some days I don't need It's not music,

(11:11):
it's not a podcast. It's just a sound of people
faking having sex. So yeah, mix it up, guys, have fun.

Speaker 2 (11:19):
It's either that or sometimes Roger could play like random
ass songs sometimes yeah, and it be like you can just.

Speaker 1 (11:25):
Put it over. You can just put a combination of
words in Spotify and some idiot has made a song
about it and sometimes bops. Yeah. I like, right now,
if I type in pussy juice, let's just see what happens. Guys,

(11:47):
there's a song by Elliott T. Nelson called pussy Juice.
What do would sound like?

Speaker 2 (12:02):
Okay?

Speaker 1 (12:03):
Okay, so he must get into the porn sounds too, Okay?
Is it a rap? Is it rock? I don't know.

Speaker 2 (12:08):
I don't know. I have no idea. What's happening here?

Speaker 5 (12:14):
The blackest, the bearance, the sweetest, the juice, and a
man on the planet that she can't subeduce type woman
with never drying loose.

Speaker 2 (12:23):
What we freaking?

Speaker 1 (12:24):
I see your knees weaken. I look down and see
the future.

Speaker 2 (12:33):
That is hilarious.

Speaker 1 (12:35):
Why does he sound in my mind? For some reason,
he sounds like he doesn't pronounce the second that he
doesn't pronounce the agent fish. I feel like he say
fish sandwich. Let me give a fish sound. Come, let
me get to fish sandwiches. I don't know why somebody

(12:55):
hiving him and Brian Pump. I don't even think as
good as Brian Pump. I look down at you and
see secrecious weakens. You can hear the sound.

Speaker 2 (13:07):
I'm not I was not ready.

Speaker 1 (13:09):
I feel like there's a lot of liberties he's taken
with staying on the beat, which I understand is an
optional thing these days, you don't have to stay on
the beat. Oh you don't you know what I'm saying.
Put some respect on silk the shaka's name. He he
he stumbled over these beats so y'all could trample over
the beats and fall into the abyss.

Speaker 2 (13:29):
Ryan, come on now, And like I said, maybe I'm old.
I'm like big win a beat? When to find the beat? Please?

Speaker 1 (13:35):
I saw I saw a who is it?

Speaker 3 (13:39):
So?

Speaker 1 (13:40):
Like every year they have like the double XL Freshman
hip Hop List or whatever, and they'll have like the
new young up and coming rappers will rap on it. Yes,
And when I tell you, these boys were it was
beat optional on it was wrap on the beat optional,

(14:01):
like you it's not a requirement. You don't have to.

Speaker 2 (14:05):
I don't even I looked like, who ain't going by
my business every goddamn year?

Speaker 1 (14:10):
Yeah it was. It was really sad for uh. I
was just watching this shit like, oh man, what like
y'all not even trying right now?

Speaker 2 (14:20):
And the thing is the speed you rap is optional,
but like whatever you do find the beat and you
know not and I don't know if it's I'm cool,
I'm too cool, but I don't care if it's the
you know, the ones in the threes or the twos
in the four you know, because you can wrap all
types of ways to actually find a beat, but they're like, no,

(14:42):
I'm gonna do the one in the sixteenth. You're like, bitch,
that don't make no sense.

Speaker 1 (14:46):
Yeah, it was. It was bad, man. I felt that
it was.

Speaker 2 (14:51):
Yeah, because I don't put no limitations on wraps, you
know what I'm saying, Like, as long as as long
as is good and things like that, I don't care.
But when you have people and they just out there,
like you said, just stumbling and I listen to a lot.

Speaker 1 (15:04):
Of music, but this like this, like this was objectively bad,
Like I can't defend it. This isn't a I like
to pick on the young guys thing. It's these guys
weren't good. I was trying to see if I could
find the video of that I saw because it's it
was like, first of all, a couple of them looked

(15:24):
like that episode of Atlanta from the last season where
they had the white boys they were trying to turn
into rappers.

Speaker 2 (15:31):
Yes, like a couple of them look like that.

Speaker 1 (15:34):
And it was like, oh no, like.

Speaker 2 (15:37):
Like, oh, my thing is just just be able to rap, Like.

Speaker 1 (15:41):
They look like regular white boys, Like they didn't have
the like, oh, these are white people that have been
around black people and respect hip hop so much that
they're like they have a lot of you know, you know,
credibility or a lot of street cred to add. It
was like, no, these people actually suck. It was so bad.

Speaker 2 (16:03):
I have a question do you think with and I
might be wrong, but do you think with like the
tiktoks and YouTube and all that stuff. Like nothing unless YouTube,
but more like the tiktoks and like that stuff has
gotten like some people who talent isn't that good because
they have a lot of followers or whatever into these
realms versus people who actually because I know that there

(16:24):
are people out there not trying to funny, who can
fucking wrap and got talent that could draw circles around there,
but they're not even being looked at because they don't
have the following, like you know, they don't have to
backup or whatever the case may be because not trying
to be funny. It was a time where where that
wouldn't even be allowed. It's like nigga, if you can't
wrap while are you in the room?

Speaker 1 (16:45):
Yes, I think that's a good point. I mean, I'm
of course just going off the top of my head
as well. But yeah, once you make social media part
of the equation, how do you divorce social media following
from credibility Because credibility can't be made through the industry

(17:07):
for a lot of guys in the same way that
since the industry isn't gate cap as much and it
doesn't exist in the same way and honestly, culturally, you
don't even have to be in community with black people
anymore to be a rapper like that, like no offense
to post Malone and some of these other people, but
you don't have to, Like there used to be a
time where you not being in the community was a

(17:29):
fucking that was a bad sign.

Speaker 2 (17:30):
Yeah, and it mattered to people. And because I was
thinking something had to lower the quality, and I was like,
things like that lower quality, and it's impacting anything from
comedy to actor. Impacted a lot of shit because it's
a lot of people who actually, like you said, they
do them ten thousand hours, they do their reps, they've

(17:51):
mastered their craft that they're very creative, you know, and
things like that. But because they don't have the following
all on the platforms, people are like, well, well, you're
not worth our time quote unquote, and not trying to
find the masses decide this that you're not worth our time.
And so I feel like you have a lot of
talent that would have made its way here. This kind

(18:14):
of overlook now because they're gonna we rather have somebody
who we know if we put you on whatever TV
show this is, we're gonna get a million views or whatever,
it's gonna go viral on YouTube. It's almost like quality
be damned. And a lot of times I'm trying funny,
a lot of these freshmen people you don't hear about

(18:35):
them in another year or two because they were not good.
I'm just keeping that real life, like because we've been
having like years and a year because there used to
be a time when they did this. Just about everybody
on that list would turn around and eventually be superstars
eventually or either be middling superstars, you know what I'm saying,
or or be recognized or be on features or something

(18:55):
like that. But now let's getting to the point where
every single time this list come out, I'm like who
and that I never hear most of these niggas.

Speaker 1 (19:00):
Again, I also wonder if that's because of vetting, right,
because like, in order for me to put you on
the list, a label, another MC someone had to vouch for,
Like this, my young dude, he's coming up, y'all need
to put him on your list. And now if it's
more of a social media thing or it's like, uh,
a other another individual rapper who may or may not

(19:23):
care if you're dope. They may just think you're sellable. Yes,
I do wonder if that be part of it.

Speaker 2 (19:30):
And it's not about quality, you know, like I said,
And the thing is I like quality, you know, and
with a lot of social media, when it comes to
these things, you lower quality. And so now I'm supposed
to not and there's still quality people out there, but
now I'm supposed to take bullshit because y'all lower it
the quality, and y'all looking at me like something wrong,

(19:50):
I'm like, bit.

Speaker 1 (19:51):
I mean the fact that I don't know if there's
a physical Double Xcel magazine, right, I don't know. So
if there's not a physical magazine, then what would they
be chasing online currency? If they're chasing online currency, it
will behoove them to go find If there's a white
rapper who's kind of whack, but he has thirty million followers,
you should probably put him on there before you put

(20:13):
somebody who maybe they're a little more vetted, but they
don't have a following. Here's I think I think this
is some of the clips of it.

Speaker 5 (20:19):
I think it's never recommended.

Speaker 1 (20:20):
He's still on.

Speaker 2 (20:21):
They got left in prison? Right?

Speaker 1 (20:23):
What this cannot be? Right? Oh? It is it? Damn it?
Is it okay? Yeah, here we go, guys. I think
this dude's in prison. That's why he ain't got no beat.

Speaker 2 (20:34):
Or nothing, really, because I been in that position.

Speaker 1 (20:37):
Damn on my Britay.

Speaker 6 (20:39):
Oops, I head again, Damn, I'm on my DJ Kellish.
We the best?

Speaker 1 (20:45):
First of all? Is his name really just Iron? Did
I read this right? It is so? This is just
a normal white boy, right.

Speaker 2 (20:53):
You don't even have rap named he not? Did you
put your government name on here?

Speaker 5 (20:57):
Sir?

Speaker 2 (20:57):
He not even really rappings.

Speaker 1 (21:01):
It's like a joke. It's like Atlanta.

Speaker 6 (21:03):
Oops, I hit again. Damn, I'm on my DJ Kellish.
We the best then were rolling hella deep. I feel
like all.

Speaker 5 (21:10):
They question what I had in store while I was
building a plaza.

Speaker 1 (21:13):
I take pride in my scars. Oh I'm really moved, Foster.

Speaker 2 (21:16):
He went trolling that room. Time man, any am rapping
on the beat or they just just freestyling.

Speaker 1 (21:22):
I don't know, I don't know something. Oh no, nineteen
hundred rug rat oh man, oh man? What is this
man doing? Oh god? He did sit the oil? Ain't
time I peded it?

Speaker 2 (21:38):
Seven sis to make well do a three.

Speaker 1 (21:39):
Se I've been killing be some some pies. I called
a first degree when you're talking, no shimmy, This honestly
feel like a sketch from Key and Phil. He does,
oh my god.

Speaker 2 (21:51):
Or something Donald GLOVERO.

Speaker 1 (21:52):
Right, Oh my god. I'm sure people are gonna say
I'm just old, but gods, this are y'all serious, and
this is the highlight Double Excel put out so they
think this is the best stuff.

Speaker 2 (22:04):
Foster, he went trolling that room.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
Time he did sitting oil.

Speaker 2 (22:07):
Ain't time I peded it seven to do it three.

Speaker 1 (22:09):
I've been killing be some some pies. I called her
first degree when you're talking little me in my eyes
this summer, I'm trying to see every day some news
mean tripp Ean Trippling. Now, if you tell me that
was he was from the Dagoba system in Star Wars.
If you said that was a bounty hunter like Ean Trippling, yes,
oh man, him and cat Bab they be fighting. But okay,

(22:31):
let's see what Ian Trippling got. Let's see trying to
see every day some news rap saying our stole flows
some most but couldn't make another hit.

Speaker 4 (22:39):
Yes, my daddy is the reason why I act like this.

Speaker 2 (22:42):
They not like us. They rapping, but it's not like this,
no power but soft like any choice.

Speaker 1 (22:47):
Actually, she was the closest the good that was she was.
They should have gave her a little bit more. Uh
she she at least was rapping. Yes, I don't know
who her daddy is because she brought him up some sin,
so I don't know who. But yeah, she actually she
actually was. I recognized that it's rapped.

Speaker 2 (23:06):
But it's not like this.

Speaker 1 (23:08):
It is powered, but theset like. Don't regret any choice.
I made these just the cars that baby Chief do it.
It is his name, he looked. He looked precious, He
looked like wow, wild age. Yes, how old is he?

Speaker 2 (23:23):
I don't know. I need to get this baby lunch money.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
Look he literally a baby like baby Chief. Don't regret
any choice.

Speaker 2 (23:30):
I made these just the cars that I was dealt.

Speaker 1 (23:32):
Could not save them al and I knew that, but
I still tried to help. I gotta imagine my face
with a turbine, even though laser damn seven hundred. Okay,
all right, oh my god, this is tough of my
egen servant turned out the smoke permanent. I could have
sawd to a journalist. Different drips. I got my drip
for generally he almost had me. But that last line

(23:57):
when he took the breath and paused, if felt like
he wasn't actually supposed to do that, like it did.
It felt like that fucked up the rhythm of the flow.
Not it wasn't a purpose for like let me pause here,
then I'm a hip hit come back on beat. They
you know it didn't It felt like he forgot his
lyrics for a second.

Speaker 2 (24:16):
Yeah. And also you know it's one of those things too,
where like you said, if you do them ten thousand dollars,
you learn birth control.

Speaker 1 (24:23):
Yeah, ten thousands.

Speaker 2 (24:24):
I'm not trying to be funny, like.

Speaker 1 (24:26):
They're so young. Can they do ten thousand hours? That's true?
Do they have ten thousand hours yet? I don't know?

Speaker 2 (24:32):
Yeah, Like like like there are certain things that and
you can tell when rappers are really really good at
what they do because they can go long periods of
time and they know how and when to breathe, so
that you don't know why why they're trying to lift
their beats.

Speaker 1 (24:48):
And yeah, and I think also we're putting people on
before they're ready and then and this is freshmen, so
that's you know, Yes, it's pressing for a reason. Maybe
they're doing that for a reason. But the other thing, too,
I would say, is that this is what happened when
you grow up in a generation that already has rapped
established so far, I feel like the only one who
brought it was whatever there was Marsin, And I wonder

(25:13):
how much of that is because she's a woman and
everybody else up there as a man. So she was like,
let me actually sure, y'all, I can fucking rape because
I can't just rely on whatever this cool boys shit
y'all got with you. I don't even care that I'm
not off beat.

Speaker 2 (25:26):
Yeah, and that's one thing about women day. Whenever they
enter the room, they're like, oh, y'all can bullshit? I can't,
So I'm gonna actually rap.

Speaker 1 (25:35):
I could have sold to a journalist, different drip. I
got my drip for journaly y TV fat just feel
like a skitch' if you told me none of these
people were really rappers except some Marsin. I believe y'all
be like, oh, Keenan and Kale, they got us a
new they must got a new announcement for TV show.

Speaker 2 (25:53):
And also, I wonder is the thing not to have
a beat because like, nope, there's no beat.

Speaker 1 (25:58):
There's no beat, but you can even hearing the rhythm
of the words that're not on the They're not holding
the beat by themselves even.

Speaker 2 (26:04):
Right, because real rappers don't need to be like they
can flow where you can actually pick up whatever whatever
they're flowing is to beat.

Speaker 1 (26:10):
Maybe that's how they fucked up, is putting it out
without a beat, because off.

Speaker 2 (26:16):
I've been.

Speaker 6 (26:18):
Here, who like bag on the side of the city, dude,
I put on the beaskie.

Speaker 1 (26:23):
I literally couldn't understand what he's saying. But okay, no
offense to him is maybe I need to listen again.
I don't know. I mean on by this neo paid
I guess he's singing. I mean on party. Put your
hands off.

Speaker 6 (26:35):
It's a robbery baby riding nigga like you mean, so
you love like when Iver's singing and get that been while.

Speaker 1 (26:42):
You not not had your little ball he wanted the freshmen,
I mean I swerve. They hit them corners too. I
must have swerved too hard. I'm in the wrong in
the freshman group.

Speaker 2 (26:54):
What ain't my age?

Speaker 1 (26:56):
Is it not an age thing? Maybe it's his first
year of rapping.

Speaker 2 (26:59):
Might be I don't know. I think that's how they go.

Speaker 1 (27:02):
Maybe they changed freshmen from it used to be these
are fresh faces that y'all haven't heard of. Now it
might mean this literally they took wrap one oh one.
They this they first semester rapp.

Speaker 2 (27:17):
You know what, I think that's what it is, because
it used to be a These are people that you've
never really heard it for, like almost like fresh on
the scene. Yeah, and now they go these are people
who you may have seen before, but this is like
the first time that like they put an album out
or something like that.

Speaker 1 (27:34):
I don't know, first semester of rap. I saw that, Karen,
I already know what it is. They still they still
are in the November of their school.

Speaker 6 (27:41):
You hating on the young bull man because your life
feeling empty?

Speaker 2 (27:44):
Boy in my pockets full? Yeah, and all damn day,
I'm straight out playing cool.

Speaker 3 (27:50):
Wow.

Speaker 2 (27:52):
And I guess he would last for a reason.

Speaker 1 (27:54):
He was the best that they had. He saved the
best for last, or he has the highest following on
social media.

Speaker 2 (28:02):
That's that too, that that's absolutely true.

Speaker 1 (28:05):
Did you have any more? I don't even know how
we got into that. Did you have anything Okay, cool,
we can move into other.

Speaker 2 (28:12):
Things I know and I don't and and the and
the thing is is the thing is I like young rappers.
There are a lot of young rappers that I enjoy.
It's just like I said, I just have certain standards.

Speaker 1 (28:24):
Name five. Okay, I'm calling you bluff all these young
rappers that you love. Okay, you just want to say
something nice before you say something mean, even if it's
not true. You don't like these rappers that I just
showed you. You don't have to change, you don't have
to live. You're like I listened to all the young
people and.

Speaker 2 (28:42):
That I don't. I don't listen to all the young
people in the hippie hot because like everything else, U,
it's good to have diversity in rapping. I don't like that.
I don't have to like all of the ship and
I like pronunciation, and I like to be able to
hear you and I like for you to be on beat.
I have those standards.

Speaker 1 (28:58):
That's that's what you really want to say.

Speaker 2 (29:00):
And tried to pretend that, Okay, but then I'm not
compliment on the young people. Get any of these people
other than other than the mellow Bowles.

Speaker 1 (29:09):
Brother right, All right, let's move on. We got new
new Transition music today, even though I kind of already
had which topics I want to do? But send us
a couple of new songs. Here's Lover Girl Man, she

(29:58):
don't give us nothing but right.

Speaker 2 (30:00):
This sounds like this sounds like some insecure shit would
east to be doing some shit in the background that
you'll go to me right.

Speaker 1 (30:06):
Uh. Hackers okay, leaked thirteen thousand user photos and IDs
from the tee app, designed as a women's safe space.

Speaker 2 (30:22):
What is the t app?

Speaker 1 (30:23):
Okay, you're not out in these streets?

Speaker 2 (30:25):
You on line? I don't know. I don't be sitting
on that type of tea.

Speaker 1 (30:28):
Hackers have reached a ta app, which recently went viral
as a place for women to safely talk about men,
and tens of thousands of women's selfies and photo ideas
IDs have now been leaked. So the te app, it
was basically like you could post a picture of a
man from maybe a dating site or some on you're
dating and be like, anyone have any tea on this guy?

(30:51):
And I mean, I don't know how explicit it was getting,
but it sounds like you might come make an argument
that stockers could use it or some one could use
it and violate someone's privacy or something.

Speaker 2 (31:03):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (31:04):
Obviously, if someone's cheating or whatever, that's that's bad. But
at the same time, like, I don't know how we
navigate the rules of Like if I posted Caren, I
suspected Karen was cheating on me, and I posted her
picture and said, this is Karen and she's from Charlotte
and she's just old. And then people started being like
whether they whether it's real or not, like, oh, yeah,

(31:26):
she cheated with me and I used to date her.
She did this so it was already in some frack
territory and felt like a lossit waiting to happen. But
it turns out they didn't really seem to have a
lot of security on their site.

Speaker 2 (31:42):
And you know what, baby, none of them do all
these sites. That's like we lock shit down. They never
invest the money because a funny you get what you
paid for.

Speaker 1 (31:55):
I know Ashley Madison didn't and that shit costs a
lot of money, but I don't. I don't know that
none of them have security. I truly don't. I think
you just have to be careful because I I and
there's no way to know for sure, agreed, But like
some places, it's not all we read about hacks happening
in the dating sites all the time. Like, but some

(32:16):
of these newer, untested social media esque things we found.
We've seen so many times when somebody just threw something together,
just threw something together just to get that. And this
is a good what do you call it a hook?
This is a good hook for an app. Come here,
spill the tea on these dudes, you know, because people

(32:37):
will come there just to god, so people gonna take screenshots,
go to social media and but like I found out
he was doing this, so like it's it's the kind
of thing where people will just start lining up to
sign on, I think. But whenever things move that fast
and that reckless, you just never.

Speaker 2 (32:52):
Know no regulations, like you know, like you said, you're
talking about people's privacy, you're talking about picks and all
those types of things, and like I say, not you're
not all of them. But it's certain things that draw
certain people that they just do not invest in. That
they just don't invest in that part of it, the

(33:13):
pact that they promise you that they're supposed to do.

Speaker 1 (33:15):
Going fast and getting the clicks and getting the attention
is more important to some of them that actually functioning
as a website right. A spokesperson confirmed the hack Friday afternoon.
The company estimates that seventy two thousand images, including thirteen
thousand verification photos and images of government IDs, were assessed.
So you had to put your license or some other

(33:38):
that have an ID to have an account on this website,
and they gonna get sued.

Speaker 2 (33:44):
YEP, a lawsuit waiting to happen because people are gonna
be like, now I'm scared people are showing up with
my people are particularly not in front of women. You
have a bunch of just fucking dudes that are like stupid,
so you just never know. You have people that are
product you know, might be running abusive abusive people and shit.
Now all of a sudden that shit is out there.
So now I got to pack up and move my family,

(34:05):
changed my name like like like like this is messy. Yes,
I would sue you too.

Speaker 1 (34:09):
And the thing is I get the gender power dynamics,
but just honestly, this is the kind of idea that
was gonna be messy from jump, even if it worked
exactly how they wanted it to work. Because docsing somebody
to be like, do you have a tea on him?
Everyone's thinking of the best case scenario, which is, yes,
I have the tea, and I'm gonna stop this guy

(34:30):
from cheating on you or whatever like some if he's scary, abusive, whatever,
But none of us thinks about the commonplace scenario of
either a nobody knows who the fuck this guy is
and at the same time, at the same time, you
just made a bunch of people aware of whoever this
this man is, where he stays, how old he is,
his name, whatever. Another thing that could happen too is,

(34:52):
of course people could use it in bad faith and
like I'm stalking my egg and I want to know
where he lives now, So let me say, you know, TikTok,
do your thing basically to the tea and get more
information on them, or I want to harass somebody or
someone you know, I'm I'm a narcissist and I'm this

(35:15):
is my victim. I'm gonna get the Internet to turn
on this guy by lying and make it up a
story that all of you will assume is true, because
that's what's more fun, more content. So it could ruin
someone's life like it was always a very dangerous idea.
Teas designed to function as a virtual whispering room whisper
network for women, allowing them to upload photos of photos

(35:37):
of men and search for them by the name. Users
can leave comments describing specific men as a red or
green flag and share other information about them. It gained
popularity because it was that it became a top free
app on Apples app Store. Last week they said they
have recently gained a million new sign ups.

Speaker 2 (36:00):
And I'm out, I've never heard of this ship in
two of three minutes ago when you started talking about
this article.

Speaker 1 (36:07):
Signing up for the Tea requires users to take selfies,
which the app says are deleted after review to prove
they are women. Apparently it's not all. Users who get
accepted are promise anonymity outside of the user names they choose,
taking screenshots of what's in the app. It's also blocked,
which you can take off a picture of your phone
or something. The hacker accessed a database from more than
two years ago. The Tea spokesperson said this data was

(36:30):
originally started compliance with the law enforcement requirements related to
cyber bully and prevention two years ago. The Tea spokesperson said, basically,
we ain't We ain't responsible for what happens the y'all.

Speaker 2 (36:41):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (36:42):
They have hired third party cybersecurity expersus working around the
clock to secure their systems.

Speaker 2 (36:46):
People ain't gonna hear that they're gonna're still gonna sue you,
because they was like, by what I signed, you told
me you was gonna delete this shit. How did they
get access to? What?

Speaker 1 (36:54):
That means?

Speaker 2 (36:54):
It's not being deleted? How do they get access to this, this,
that and the other that that means you're not doing
what you're supposed to do.

Speaker 1 (37:00):
Chain user posted a link Friday morning allegedly allowing users
people to download the database of stolen images and trolls
of alleged victims identification photos. Keep in mind your license
name address. It's backfired to though. If it's supposed to
be safety for women, it's backfired in the most spectacular way.

(37:22):
The Tea's app creator, Sean Cook, a man of course,
said on his website that he was inspired after he
watched his mother's terrified experience with online dating, including being
catfishing and lonely dating men with criminal records. On Tea,
users can run background check search for criminal histories and

(37:42):
reverse search photos to check whether a man is catfishing.
The app also claims to donate ten percent of his
profits to the National Domestic Violence Highline. Are they gonna
get ten percent of the lawsuit money back for him?
Some men online of expressed the online posts they fear
being misrepresented or docks on their platform. Yeah, that's definitely Listen.
I know people are going, Oh, if you're not cheat,

(38:03):
don't worry about it. That's assuming everybody operates with good faith.
And I'm telling you they don't.

Speaker 2 (38:09):
People lie like you say, women can be the stalkers.
So you just never you.

Speaker 1 (38:14):
Have a bad breakup and someone's on there just lying
on you, you know what I mean, Like like they
didn't have to be even anything animosity, like maybe they whatever.
I don't want to make up a scenario, but somebody
does something, you well within your rights say I don't
want to be with you anymore, and then they if
they're angry at you, they can just go make something
up on this tapp. Others, including some users of the apps,

(38:35):
have also raised concerns of the app coolete the harmful
cyber bullying unrelated to actual service right because once you
put someone's picture out there, people are going to share
it. It doesn't matter turn off the screenshot uh function or
not on people's phones. People gonna make tiktoks about it.
They're gonna share the stories about it the guy. And

(38:56):
that's when I found three other girls that had like,
it's just you're right. You can't control the fire that
you're starting.

Speaker 2 (39:03):
And it's what happens.

Speaker 1 (39:04):
And of course men want to create the Man's Only app,
which which would be the reverse where they ship shout
out thessis had normative shit I'm talking about, but this
is what the app is talking about. Anyway, they want
to make a reverse one with now you out here,
and they would clearly lead the harassing women and shit,
it's it's like the dumbest world's dumbest gender wars.

Speaker 2 (39:28):
Yes it is, yes, it is so yeah anyway, and
the thing is you getting suit from everybody, because you're
getting suit from men who going, hey, don't put my
pitching in your app, and then you're getting suit for
women in this like hey, my shit leaked, right.

Speaker 1 (39:42):
You know, So it's like yeah, clusterfuck.

Speaker 2 (39:46):
Right, and guess what, y'all not profitable because the shit
is free, so you're not charging people. Sound like it.
So guess where your money comes from? This adventure capitalist
bullshit that you were talking about at the time. People
just throw money at Bright at these great ideas.

Speaker 1 (39:58):
Yep. Speaking of women, for Boston's Asian women, a mobile
mammogram VAN has helped close a huge health equity gap.
So basically breast cancer screening rates among Asian women in Boston.
Only in nineteen ninety nine, only twenty five percent of

(40:21):
Asian women in Boston had had a mamogram. Oh that's low,
which is half the citywide average. So they now have
a seventy seven percent screening rate.

Speaker 2 (40:34):
Oh, let's go.

Speaker 1 (40:35):
And that was from twenty twenty three. And part of
the reason they did is because there's this Dana Farber
Cancer Institute. They launched a mobile mammogram meet mimography, mimography,
A mobile mimography. I hope I said that, right van,

(40:55):
and they travel to the community and they do the
screenings there to each in your neighborhood, so they can
you know, have Asian people that work there or cater
their language to people.

Speaker 2 (41:07):
Right, And it's more convenient and you don't feel intimidated
and there's also one of them things where it's convenient,
you know, because depending on the culture and habits how
it's set up. You know, a lot of people they work,
and they work long hours and things like that, so
they might not have the time to schedule to actually go,
you know, to the doctor and all this type of stuff.
Versus if we come, like you said, you come to

(41:29):
the community, you have people that look like them, can
speak their language, make them feel more comfortable and not
try funy to explain things to them in a better
way that they can better understand. These numbers will go
up because at the end of the day, you want
to save lives.

Speaker 1 (41:42):
Yeah, it's I think it's such a beautiful story because
it's like what we can do when we think about
community in a way with a spirit of like giving
and a spirit of effectiveness and not the coldhearted shit
that people talk about, you know, you should do this,
or just yelling at people like just go get your breast,

(42:02):
you know, squeeze, just do it, you know, And I
get the anger and admonishment and shame does motivate some people,
but a lot of people it doesn't, especially if you
come from a community that's kind of insuler, and it's
you know, like it's kind of dope that they came
up with a solution and they're still able to a
lot of these women. Is not that they can't afford

(42:22):
them or they don't have the coverage. Your insurance pretty
much covers this, so you can pretty much get it
for free, right, But but someone coming out to you
and putting it posting up your neighborhood is just so
much more convenient for people. It is.

Speaker 2 (42:35):
It is because the thing about and I just have
to be blessed to have the job. You have to
sketch your time off, like you have to schedule time off,
you have to go up there type of type.

Speaker 1 (42:46):
There's like instructions for how you can bathe in the morning.

Speaker 2 (42:48):
And yes, yes, a lot of rules and regulations you
know to it, yes, and and things like that and
so it's uh one of the things and just the
convenience of it, and you know, most likely you're going
to be around all women, which has a tendency to
make women feel more comfortable.

Speaker 1 (43:08):
I think also just the culture stuff that we don't
know right, Like if your culture grows up and you're
it's an insular culture, like I can carry my language
from overseas with me. I can carry some of my
customs my family. Uh, we married mostly within the culture,
stuff like that. When that can lead to either distrust

(43:32):
of stuff outside the culture or just a thinking of well,
that's not of our that's not what we do. Yes,
you know. So like it's kind of cool because you
can you can bring those type of people in the UH.
And by type of people, I mean like whatever culture
you want to adjust to. Like this was being in
COVID for black people. They would put some of these

(43:53):
centers in the community to be like, come get your boosters,
come get your vaccines. And when you go there more
some people working there black and so it like they
talk your language, they know some of your cultural touchdowns.
They you know, they know what you're sensitive about. If
your community don't talk about sex like that or something
like that, they might understand that language a little better.

(44:14):
So I just think it's like a really neat story.
I don't like, I didn't have anything funny to add
about it or anything. I just was like, oh, look
at that solution. We need more of that spirit in
the world. All right, let's see what else did I
want to talk about? I feel like I had an
idea for something before we got on the air. Now

(44:37):
I'm already like, what the fuck was ill trying to?
Was it gender wars? You know, let's do a gender
war real quick.

Speaker 3 (44:47):
Why nothing war going on outside?

Speaker 2 (45:02):
He is a warp went on.

Speaker 1 (45:04):
Outside, all right? Someone sent us this one and they
were like, I'm not sure if this counts as a
gender war, but people are arguing about it. Someone said,
it's all things Fimby. This is exactly on threads. This

(45:25):
is exactly why I'm single. The men are not showing up.
I have amazing people in my life already, So if
a man can at least match that energy, there's no
need for him to be here at my big age.
I only care to put in an effort where effort
is given. And then she attached this video, so let
me see if I could play this video for y'all
with the sound on.

Speaker 4 (45:47):
Woman who was running in a marathon and when she
looks over, she notices a friend of hers flew in
from London to watch her finish.

Speaker 1 (45:54):
The friend flew in for like.

Speaker 4 (45:55):
Twenty four hours, and she sees the friend and she
immediately starts bawling. She's like crying and running, and you
can tell she's like, ohver joy that her friend would
do such a thing. I think sometimes when men are
questioning why women are choosing to be single, why some
women don't want to be in relationships, and I think
it's because for some women, they experience such rich relationships
in their lives, with their friendships and with their family,

(46:16):
and people who show up for them, who believe in them,
who cheer for them, who hype them up, who give
them all this confidence because they're always complimenting them and
being sweet towards them. It's hard to go from that
to a man who won't text you back, who won't
call you, who doesn't compliment you, who doesn't plan dates.
I think sometimes the other relationships in a woman's life
set the standard for what she will and won't settle for.

(46:36):
She's not gonna let every other relationship but her life
be amazing, and hers with you be like her settling
for the bare minimum.

Speaker 1 (46:43):
Yes, okay, so that was her uh you know her
video and then it turned into a thread from some
of these comments. Some reading comprehension examples are hard. If
you think this is man bashing, you could understand what's
being said here. Also, that's not me and I can
relate to us being said. So I reposted it, but
I fully agree with it. She said, this is this

(47:05):
case for some women. I am one of those women,
So this is about my experience, not all women. Nobody
said this is a blanket experience. It got seventeen about
eighteen thousand hearts, one point one k responses, only four retweets.
Is that what that is? Only four reposts? They don't

(47:25):
be reposting on threads, but one point nine million share
So many people tagged it to their stories or something,
and some of the replies, I don't think this is
man bashing, but this is male center because how did
you see this sweet video of this girl and her
friend and make it about dating expectations? Okay, that's a
valid point. Snezzyba says, Wait a minute, what we went

(47:48):
from a friend surprise another friend? The fuck niggers?

Speaker 2 (47:52):
Oh that's hilarious.

Speaker 1 (47:54):
Credit god one oh one says let's be real. Women
show up for other women in way more than they
ever do for the men who genuinely show up for them.
A man could be present, supportive, and loyal and still
get overlooked for the same dudes, y'all swear you're done
with men. Get tired too, tired of the games, tired

(48:17):
of the double standards, and tired of the bs. Target
with the what the dark going through a emoji? Because
he was that he had to target it himself because
it was so on point. He couldn't wait for somebody
to tell him he was being on point. He was like, no,
I we all know that I'm on point. So uh,

(48:42):
you know, I totally you know, I totally get it.

Speaker 2 (48:45):
Who hurt you?

Speaker 1 (48:47):
Mm hmm?

Speaker 2 (48:48):
Who hurt you?

Speaker 1 (48:49):
Baby?

Speaker 5 (48:50):
Let me see as a man like women's shit, worship
me like man eats state pork, chity woman eat salad?

Speaker 1 (49:04):
What it is?

Speaker 5 (49:05):
I want to watch football games, eat food with women.
They supposed to be they supposed to be loving us.

Speaker 2 (49:12):
You feel what are you married? Nah?

Speaker 1 (49:15):
Man, I ain't never had a girlfriend.

Speaker 5 (49:17):
But what I'm saying that the reason why I haven't
had one is because be tripping.

Speaker 1 (49:23):
Right Uh to add more context, as there are people
crash now, I'm gonna tell you right now, and this
is a telltale sign I've experienced myself. When you started replying
back to the haters, it's already it's already over. But yeah,
it's getting a lot of replies though, and they are fighting.

(49:43):
Y'all be looking for the ship your women friends do
out the man you're dating. I mean, that's literally what
the video is about. Men are unable to grasp contexts.
What she's saying is that this is the type of
things women want and we could get it from other relationships. Yeah, okay,
all right, car Z to ten. How do you give
the great this gender war?

Speaker 2 (50:03):
I'm not trying to find it. This gets a two.
And the reason a two, Yes, the biggest reason why
it gets a two is because, similar to the other person,
this is about somebody running looking at their girlfriend, and
you took that and you twisted it into a gender

(50:23):
wars versus if there would have been a man doing
something to her or somebody said something about it man
like or something like that, I'd have been like, Okay,
I see, I can understand the jumping off point, if
that makes sense. But if you're gonna, if you if
we're gonna have like a gender war, like a real

(50:46):
gender war, you don't have to trick people into gender warring,
if that makes sense, because in my opinion, I feel
like it did. His job. But to me, it's not
trying funny, it's not authentic. It's I was like a trick.
It's like this was a woman happy. You need to
hear girlfriend loving the relationship with her girlfriend. And that's
kind of the structure of the video. There's nothing in like,

(51:08):
like unless it's part of the video that I'm missing.
Not trying funny, I'm not seeing it's like you use
that as a jumping off point to insert gender wars.
In my opinion, it's almost like you didn't do the work.
You didn't like, you missed the homework assignment on this one,
and that's kind of why I feel like and the
thing is just like her tone, It's like it wasn't

(51:29):
sassy like like when I think of gender wars. That's
kind of more of what I'm thinking of. And I
felt like you missed them more in my opinion, Like.

Speaker 1 (51:38):
Yeah, it is always in your opinion. Your pinion is
valid here, we're just both scoring it. Personally. I felt
the opposite about you to the stretch. I thought the
stretch was them showing how much they wanted to start
this gender war because that first video and got shit
to do with man the first like to be looking

(51:59):
at that. You have to be an innovative mind to
see to look at that sweet video of Wow, what
a dope friend this person must have, and go, how
do I make this about how men don't they not
good enough? And I know they say it's not man bashing,

(52:19):
but come on, it kind of has to be like
it's so like even not admitting that to me, I
think it's a smart it's a deaft hand. It's a
deaf touch to be like, no, I'm almost gaslighting you
the watcher that yes, I made this whole thing about
men versus women and it wasn't really that. But guys,
I'm not making it about men versus women. I'm not

(52:41):
bashing man. I'm just saying I want people that show
up for me. The other thing is just in the
context of it. I don't see anybody asking in the questions,
but maybe someone did. But like, we don't know how
long they've been friends. We don't know if she got
a man, we don't know if she's straight, we don't
know how she feels about relationships. And she's like, I'm

(53:03):
not looking for relationships and I have incredibly high standards
because my friends do stuff like this so we don't
even know, like it's not even the person in the
video talking about it. Nope, it's it's honestly, it's beautiful.
It's so amazing, it's so crafted to make people want
to fight and like it. If it wasn't on Threads,

(53:25):
I feel like it would have it would have blown
up even bigger, because but I don't think Threads is
a good environment for gender wars for real. For real,
it's actually a little too liberal. It's a little too
much like we all understand women having hard you almost
need to take it to a Twitter or a Reddit
or somewhere where where people are like the real problem

(53:47):
is women, because if you get both sides fighting, like
if mother fucking uh the what do you call it?
The shade room or something like that. Had I posted this,
ooh it was sli thug would have been saying ship
it was. I don't know, can I get it?

Speaker 2 (54:07):
Though?

Speaker 1 (54:08):
I personally I think I give this like about a seven.
This is a good one to me. Really, I applaud
to work because what a fucking reach. Oh my god,
oh my god, their reach was. I don't even know
how deeply unhappy you'd have to be to look at

(54:30):
that original video of my friends showed up and surprised
me and be like, fucking men, I knew it. They
always the problem, right, I was like, Oh my god,
I'm sure, and I'm sure that people have tons of
videos of men doing something romantic or whatever it is,

(54:52):
but that's a different context and you're not gonna make
a gender war off of It's just a sweet thing,
like I love. One of my favorite sweet videos is
the where it's like, uh, women record their men at
work or something like that, and then they kind of
walk up to them at the job or wherever they're distracted,
and they record the men's face and demeanor change when

(55:13):
he seizes her.

Speaker 2 (55:14):
I've seen those. Those videos are.

Speaker 1 (55:17):
So sweet. Theres nothing to fight about. There's no gender
war thing, oh yeah, other than like the only gender
war in that is to be like if your man
don't look at you like this, get a new one
or something like that. You know, but yeah that I
don't know that that goes as viral as fighting anyway.
All right, let's move on to one last thing, or

(55:38):
not one last thing. Yeah, let's do some uh I
guess the race and they will come back and do
soort ratchetness. It's hard.

Speaker 6 (55:59):
It's time to catch the race.

Speaker 1 (56:04):
It's time to catch the race. Houston police seeks suspect
the cues of assault over fast food drink cost. Oh shit, Houston.
The price of the can, the price on the can. Though,
the Houston Police Department.

Speaker 2 (56:19):
Is all this free way change me for the ice.

Speaker 1 (56:21):
On the lookout for a man who on Tuesday morning
came aggressive over the cost of a drink at a
local fast food restaurant and assaulted and employee during the confrontation.
Damn happen around ten forty five am. Well, thank god
it was at the breakfast because it was coffee. You
just missed it within the confines of an eatery. They

(56:41):
didn't say which one. Uh they said, I.

Speaker 2 (56:43):
Guess that must be the crime. In the confine of
an eatery.

Speaker 1 (56:46):
Oh yeah, police reports, uh say the suspect requested a
cup for a drink. He was asked to pay, but
he became all right, yeah, he cost the counter boundary
to take a cup and went confronted by staff, engaged
in a physical altercation that included striking the employee in
the face. He then fled the scene. Didn't even get
nothing to drink. Now he're out in the hot sun

(57:07):
running the geo he could use I drink and no
clear direction that has been provided that Mike Aiden is apprehension,
so they don't even this man has escaped. I'm looking
for a man between thirty five and fifty, approximately five eleven,
weighing between one hundred and fifty and one hundred and
seventy pounds. He's last seen wearing a tan shirt, tan shorts,
and white shoes. So Karen gets the race of this man.

(57:31):
We don't know his name, just know what he did.

Speaker 2 (57:39):
Black.

Speaker 1 (57:39):
Karen's going with black. Let's check the chat room. See
what they believe. Smooth black criminal. I mean, if he
got away, I guess that'll make him smooth. My water
should be free, white cup of ice, black run forest white.

(58:00):
The correct answer is he was black. A couple of
you did miss it. How did you get that, Karen?
That's how'd you know?

Speaker 2 (58:21):
I was just taking the swing at it, and I
was like, I could see black people getting really mad
when you charged in for a cup. They like, the
water is free, the ice is free. Why I gotta
pay you twenty five cent for the fucking cup? Gave it?

Speaker 1 (58:33):
So racist but that's that's like you're like, listen, that's
how black people get. That's the kind of stuff we
get mad about. Don't try people taking in stride. I
don't know why, but white people have a long history
of just taking things in stride just a mile exhibiting
plenty of patients. A Lakeland officer arrested after reporting false

(58:55):
crime after unmarked patrol car window was shattered. Oh, he
was arrested for fosster reporting a crime. At that he
claimed three juveniles threw something at his agency issued vehicle
and unmarked Chevrolet SUV, So it sounded like that's not
what happened, but he made it up. He was like,

(59:16):
all I heard was cash money taking over for the
nine to nine to two thousand, three times in a row,
and then three juveniles showed up. That's all it took
and started throwing rocks in my car window and say,
you're working with a crash ad the smash year. Let
me get a get a rock year, tak Ya Michael Hunt.

(59:36):
Michael Hayes, forty two and a twelve year veteran of
the Lakeland Police Department, told deputies that his window was
shattered on Friday while driving out Yates Road, told deputies
here unknown juveniles threw an object at this vehicle while
turning his vehicle around to try to catch up. What
said juveniles who took off? He said he ran over
a small sign, damaged the front of the vehicle. This

(59:59):
sounds like maybe right, this sounds.

Speaker 2 (01:00:02):
Like maybe you ran into some shit.

Speaker 1 (01:00:06):
And then was like, ah, where are the juveniles who
did this? But debd said they later found a photo
take it twenty four hours before the crime was reported,
where the back window was already broken. He was like,
I didn't think y'all was gonna look it up. I
don't think y'all gonna look at cam footage. When in
front of with this information, he told him he believed
his child broke the back window with a baseball and

(01:00:27):
he panicked and did not know what to do. After
that he could explain the damage to the vehicle. He
was arrested and booked in the Polk County Jail at
least on a thousand dollars bond. Mm hmmm, he is
a police and he lied. Okay, all right, care guess
the race of mister Michael Hayes.

Speaker 2 (01:00:46):
Why don't don't don't he know the rules. Don't talk
to the police. You got the right to be.

Speaker 1 (01:00:53):
Silent, ser excuse us. From the White Cop playbook, White Latin,
says Marl White, says Trey White Knight. The correct dancer
is white. One person said Latin. But they missed it. Man,

(01:01:21):
his hair looks extremely unkempt for officer of the peace.
What is going on with this man's hair?

Speaker 2 (01:01:28):
He got that anime here, right, Yeah, that's how they
heavy looking.

Speaker 1 (01:01:33):
He was like, if uh if Jeff Epstein was drawn
by an anime artist. Yes, good grief. It was the juveniles.
You know how you'd be winding out street and juveniles
just do stuff to you in your unmarked police car. Crazy.

Speaker 2 (01:01:51):
It doesn't like cloud from a final Fantasy. Somebody chat
room said that.

Speaker 1 (01:01:56):
All right, we got one last storycaring is two for
two to right? Oh yes, yeah, all right? Was why
I am racist?

Speaker 2 (01:02:08):
How can I be racist about anybody or anything in
my life?

Speaker 1 (01:02:15):
How can I call them niggas?

Speaker 2 (01:02:17):
Just call them niggas?

Speaker 7 (01:02:20):
Charge go change fed b skis, boon big fasts, high jumping,
speed chucking three hundred and sixteen degree basketball.

Speaker 1 (01:02:35):
A man was charged after allegedly kidnapping a victim after
meeting him through a dating app.

Speaker 2 (01:02:40):
Oh, no, did he get hacked.

Speaker 1 (01:02:43):
He could have hacked that person up in the pieces. Yes.
July nineteenth, Barbara County Sheriff's Department responded to a call
of a person experiencing an altered mental status in the
area of Art and Church in Philippi. When debies arrived,
they made contact with the individual, who stated that Joshua Bennett,
forty three, had kidnapped him and forced him to consume

(01:03:05):
methan fhetamine for the last two days. God damn or
was I like to call it a good time? The
victim told deputies that he made contact with Bennett on
the app grinder that Bennett had picked him up at
a residence in Elkins while en route to Barbara County.
The victim told Bennett three different times to let him
out of the vehicle. Once been and the victim rid

(01:03:27):
of the residence, the victim witnessed several people in the
household using meth and Bennett was going to attempt to
tie the hands of the victim before decided not to.
When the victim hasked to lead the residence, Bennett threatened
to hit him in the face with the rings on
his hand to smash his head against a rock. According
to the complaint, when all the homes occupants fell asleep,
I must yeah, he said it was that two days

(01:03:49):
because that myth I.

Speaker 2 (01:03:50):
Was so say they were up.

Speaker 1 (01:03:52):
I can't think it nothing. Scared and waiting for meth
heads to fall asleep, right, because it's only gonna be
for four minutes.

Speaker 2 (01:03:58):
They ain't gonna sleep long.

Speaker 1 (01:03:59):
You got the time? That shit perfect. Everybody gonna fall
asleep at the same time for the same four minutes,
but it's only gonna be four minutes. Bennett has been
charged to kidnapping. He's being held in the regional jail.
Guess the race of mister Joshua Bennett White. Karen's going
with White for Joshua Bennett. Let's see what the chat
room believes. Here we go, Oh, no guesses yet, all right,

(01:04:24):
we take the time, chat room. It's just a tough one.
White says. White says Trey. It looks like a lot
of white so far. All right, Well that those are
only two guesses. I'm calling White's only town. The correct
danswer is White. Oh yeah, yeah, I feel like he

(01:04:54):
did catfish somebody he didn't get. I don't know if
he pulled somebody. Well maybe you never know. I don't
know what people into.

Speaker 2 (01:05:01):
You're into a bear?

Speaker 1 (01:05:02):
Yeah, so and myth apparently, I wonder if he thought
the myth was like a value added service. And he's like,
I can't believe you fucking betrayed me like that, bro,
I gave I took you to my house and gave
you two days worth of free myth. And you this
is really you can't do nothing nice for nobody. Why

(01:05:23):
can you fly out to a marathon to see me
in another country? Huh h uh b w C. Man

(01:05:52):
threatens to kill friend, charges California officers a sword before O.
I s is b w IS it's a big white cock, right,
And I was about to say, you know BBC.

Speaker 2 (01:06:05):
Yeah, I'm about to say these initials b w C
all right.

Speaker 1 (01:06:08):
The Sacramento Police Department released body warn camera footage showing
the events leading up to shooting of a man who
charged officers with a sword after a standoff. Happen at
one thirty am July fourteenth, after a man called now
on one stated he had a sword and intended to
kill his friend. Oh this is suicide by cop. Basically,
when officers arrived at the home. They encountered the collar

(01:06:31):
outside the residents holding a sword. The crisis negotiators and
patrol officers attempted to de escalate the situation for about
thirty minutes, repeatedly asking him to drop the weapon. The caller,
who can be heard saying he wanted to take his
own life. Yup. He refused to follow commands and repeated
I tried eeny meanie mighty mo before walking towards officers

(01:06:51):
with the sword in the hand. They fired both lethal
and less than lethal round striking him and he was
transported to the hospital where he remains critical condition. If
it survives, he'll be booked into jail. Oh cool, congratulations,
welcome back to life. It sucks on charges of assault
with a daily weapon on a peace officer and resistant arrest.

(01:07:11):
So there, you guys go. Another reason to not have swords. Okay,
all right, y'all, thanks for listening. We'll be back throughout
the week. Until next time. I love you.

Speaker 2 (01:07:22):
Why
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