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August 3, 2025 104 mins

Rod and Karen banter about Rod’s glasses making him look old, “Unc” as a term of endearment, WNBA commercials, object thrown on floor during WNBA game, reckless drivers, a big truck and tagless cars. Then they discuss RFK Jr. Set to Fire Entire Panel Behind Free Cancer Screenings and HIV Meds, you can pay down the US debt via Paypal and Venmo now, TN school bans doctor’s notes, Stephen A on Michelle Obama, Trump considering pardoning Diddy, Smithsonian takes down Trump Impeachment display, Brown University gets rid of DEI, Gender Wars, White People News, a wine Ponzi scheme, Wendy’s manager kills man and man threatens hotel staff with sword.

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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 because Rod
and Karen are so hot.

Speaker 2 (00:04):
Hey, welcome to another episode of the Blackout Tips podcast.
I'm your host, Rod joined us always with my co host,
and we're live on a Sunday morning, ready to give
you some podcasts and find us everywhere you find podcasts.
The official weapon of the show is the phold and
share and the unofficial sport and bullet ball extreme extreme Extreme.

(00:26):
You know what we do, guys, We're gonna talk about
a bunch of different stuff. Make sure that you guys
are tapped in. Look at all the show notes. There's
links there. There's our merch where we're celebrating the Blackout
Tips Day. September second, our wedding anniversary, which huh this
will be like our twenty third, twenty yeah.

Speaker 1 (00:48):
Like third, okay, yeah, because I know, you don't know
with shit like that, if.

Speaker 2 (00:55):
Only go somewhere to know, if only like came up
every single year and you could like remember, could remember
that it was.

Speaker 1 (01:06):
Ron to keep up with shit like that. He the
anniversary birthday person.

Speaker 2 (01:12):
But yeah, so we you know, we'll be celebrating our
twenty third wedding anniversary, and you know, it's a nice
little tree.

Speaker 3 (01:21):
It's a celebration for the whole community together.

Speaker 2 (01:23):
You know, people go on their facebooks and they tag
us and their twitters and all that stuff they send us,
you know, direct messages and all this stuff, and they
post up in their gear, their merch, they wear stuff,
they post you know, mugs and posters they have, and
you know, it's always dope, and it's so beautiful to
see our fans like celebrating the show together and just

(01:46):
reminds us that we're still you know, we're still out
here together in twenty twenty five doing this thing that
we started in our spare bedroom.

Speaker 1 (01:55):
Yep.

Speaker 2 (01:56):
So make sure you gotta celebrate that. And of course
in the show notes also is stuff like how to
holler at the show and let us know, like, hey,
I'm checking out the crowdcast. I want to get notified
when you guys go live. I want to hang out
in the chat room. I want to see who the
people are that are leaving comments. I want to play

(02:18):
guest the race, you know. I want to be amongst
the crew that's in there.

Speaker 4 (02:22):
You know.

Speaker 2 (02:23):
I think our Amazon wishless is in there. I think
our website is in there. So yeah, And I also
put a episode of Balls DP Sports on the regular
feed for y'all, has commercials in it, but I put
it out there so y'all could get like, this is
what the paywall experience is like if you want to
hear like Balls Deep And that's also recorded live on
crowdcast with the chat room and all this stuff and

(02:44):
people come in and chime in and say all kinds
of stuff. So yeah, make sure y'all check all that out,
you know, without even further ado, Karen, do you have any.

Speaker 3 (02:54):
Banter for today? All right? Do you have any talk
to me? Do you have any talk to me? Do
you have any banter? Answer banter? Banter? Banter? Do you

(03:16):
have any banters? Talk to me? Do you have any banter? Banter?
All right?

Speaker 1 (03:33):
My banter is the first thing I'm gonna talk about
is Roger's glasses. I actually really love them, but every
time I look at you, I always go back to
nineteen eighty eight. Don't ask me why, just the way
they design. They look like really old school, like rich
old glasses. I always think of like workout videos with

(03:55):
short shorts and things like that. Or somebody just gonna
call and call your uncle, old man. It's just hilarious.
Every time I look at them. Classes I absolutely think
they're cute and adorable. But every time I look at them,
I just blink and get a flash back of that time.

Speaker 3 (04:10):
And I don't know why. Yeah, I don't know why.

Speaker 2 (04:13):
Either nobody else has told me they are old people
glasses or make me look old or I'm a unk
or whatever. When I picked them out, I just thought
I was picking out some nice looking glasses.

Speaker 3 (04:24):
No, no, don't try.

Speaker 2 (04:26):
To don't try to smooth it over with be in fun,
trying to be nice, even trying to call me old
in them and make fun of me.

Speaker 3 (04:35):
So it's fine.

Speaker 2 (04:37):
It's just it's interesting because I want people to hear
this and absorb it, because I think when I make
fun of Karen, they right in with a bunch of
fucking like defenses that don't need to be had.

Speaker 3 (04:48):
No, you should order her food for her, You should
never let her ever, just what's wrong with you? Like
you know?

Speaker 2 (04:55):
And I'm like, well, we have a relationship where we,
you know, laugh, and this is safe place for us
to laugh at each other. And I got my glasses
and Karen's been laughing at me since I got them
on Friday.

Speaker 3 (05:06):
If I don't know why.

Speaker 2 (05:08):
I think I don't know why either nobody else's. I've
got nothing but compliments for those who have noticed. But
maybe the other people are just thinking I'm old or something.

Speaker 3 (05:18):
I don't I don't know why.

Speaker 2 (05:19):
These will be more of uncle glasses than these glasses
that I was wearing that were big black glasses.

Speaker 3 (05:25):
I don't know the fashion is like that.

Speaker 2 (05:28):
You also picked on me when I had a polo
shirt that had the hornets on it.

Speaker 1 (05:32):
See you was selling me season tickets, sir, Yes you was.
How would you like your package? Would you like a
half a season pick? Pick your seats in the arena
the way you look at me?

Speaker 3 (05:44):
Right?

Speaker 2 (05:44):
So Karen's Karen makes these jokes and clowns me too,
But I don't get hieve of defenders the way that
that y'all do.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
Uh ain't no rideout, so I.

Speaker 2 (05:54):
Just had to take it and get roasted and just,
you know, privately eat it. So apparently I look old
and like I said, season tickets.

Speaker 3 (06:04):
So there you go, you do.

Speaker 1 (06:06):
But I still love you.

Speaker 2 (06:07):
I don't have a problem about getting older. When I
was younger, I always thought it was weird. I thought
older people were weird that.

Speaker 3 (06:14):
Hung on to being young too long.

Speaker 2 (06:17):
Yes, I always thought that was weird because they would
be you know. And it's weird because I've gotten old
enough now that my peers are in this group of
people who are trying to be too young.

Speaker 3 (06:28):
And I'm trying not to judge. We all deal with
our mortality.

Speaker 2 (06:30):
In our own way, but I am judging a little
bit because I'm like, y'all are the old people I
didn't think were cool when I was young because they
wanted to be motherfucking like with us. They wanted to
be the young folks. They didn't want to be acknowledged
as old school or whatever they you know. But my
favorite older people were not the ones who were trying

(06:51):
to act like they were still in my peer group.
It was the ones that came around, like, what's going on,
young blood or whatever. I like them older people. I
was like, cool, you older, I'm younger. There's a dynamic,
you know. I was realizing, like.

Speaker 3 (07:04):
We're in this era where black people are, you know.

Speaker 2 (07:07):
And like I said, I'm not judging y'all, because I
know it's deeper than that for some of y'all, but
for me, like the people that are like so uncomfortable
with being called uncle and annie dog.

Speaker 3 (07:18):
We're we're like forty five fifty at.

Speaker 2 (07:21):
This point, Like right, I don't know that sounds about right.
I don't you know, like it's I don't think it's disrespectful.
It's like I don't and I don't know what it's
tied to that they want.

Speaker 3 (07:32):
To be fuckable their whole lives.

Speaker 2 (07:33):
They want young people to look at them as as
like peers and sexual or.

Speaker 1 (07:38):
Because once you embrace that, you have to embrace that
you're old. And some people all said that they do
not want to embrace like old and aging and shit
like that. But I guess the part of the process
if you live like.

Speaker 2 (07:49):
The alternative is being like a creepy kind of like
I'm me and the twenty five year olds.

Speaker 3 (07:55):
I see us as kind of the same.

Speaker 2 (07:57):
It's like what or I don't like to acknowledge that
there's a difference. I'm not on the cutting edge of
music and pop culture and what the kids are up to,
and I'm like, I don't know, bro, I don't want
to be that. I kind of do judge the kids,
and I like that distance so we can look at
the difference in our and like our upbringing in theirs,
even when I'm not judging, but just like just the

(08:18):
difference I accept as a difference because that's my reality. So,
you know, when they are talking about how they don't
relate to Pam and Martin's dynamic and dark skinned women feeling,
I'm like, oh, yeah, that's definitely a thing I grew
up during that era. It wasn't as much of a
thing at the time that people felt comfortable speaking about, right,
And so that's a generational difference and what And so

(08:41):
maybe I'm saving myself some time. I notice people that
are still trying to be cool and hip will kind
of delve into those conversations that younger people are having
and like fight them and be like, no, y'all just
too woke, see this, what's wrong with the And I'm
like these people, no, no, they're.

Speaker 1 (08:58):
Not our peers, right, and they don't get opinion.

Speaker 2 (09:01):
I know how my peer group mostly feels about it.
It's of our time. I don't feel entitled or want
to know, like necessarily like feeling titled to what the
younger people think.

Speaker 3 (09:12):
So I don't know, it's weird being in the don't
call me unc era.

Speaker 2 (09:16):
And the thing I remember that I thought about the
most is do white people have an unc.

Speaker 1 (09:26):
Or an equivalent to it?

Speaker 3 (09:28):
I don't know, That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (09:29):
And I asked Twitter this and they answered, and they
all thought they were answering. But I hate to tell
y'all this, and I know I'm not versed in white
culture like y'all. I know some of y'all are closer
to the whites than me. Guys, the answer is no, right,
And I looked at all the answers so like they
were saying, geezer, old man, and I'm like no, because

(09:54):
unk isn't derisive. It's derisive to the people that aren't
comfortable with their own aging, like people that are like,
I'm thirty three, why are you calling me unk? I
get why they would be like damn, I don't like that.
But like if I'm forty seven, if someone calls me
unc I'm not like what the fuck? Like, I'm like, oh, yeah,
that makes sense.

Speaker 1 (10:13):
You're twenty two, Like right, I'm ancient to you. What
the fuck?

Speaker 3 (10:16):
Like? Why would I not be unker?

Speaker 2 (10:18):
And also unk is a term of endearment meaning the
people that take offense to it. Normally aren't taking offense
to the intent. They're taking offense to how they're, you know,
whatever they're dealing with. But if you ask the person
that says it, almost never are they trying to get
you up out of here, like like, you know, let

(10:38):
me call this man unk so that I can like
disrespect him. It's normally a term of like your family,
even though I don't know you. Uncle is family, right,
you know, auntie is family, even though I know people
you know feel away about it. And that's a little
different with gender dynamics, But the point being, I don't
think white people have one. They have general terms of endearment.

Speaker 3 (10:58):
Like Har's chief boss, but those.

Speaker 2 (11:00):
Aren't the same as like unk, like a family. You're you're, you're,
you're a good person.

Speaker 3 (11:07):
I don't even know you.

Speaker 2 (11:08):
You're a stranger, but not related your age and the
fact that you are black. I see you as part
of me, and I am shooting a sign of respect
to your age. Yes, that also is kind of cool,
because it's like I said, geezer is a sign of
this is your age.

Speaker 3 (11:24):
But it ain't cool.

Speaker 1 (11:25):
No, it's not old man. Geeze sounds like you're gonna
roll over and chuck and die. Tomar.

Speaker 2 (11:30):
Yeah, old man is not really a sign of respect
in our society when you call people old man. I
mean you have to be really tight with somebody for
them to let that slide.

Speaker 1 (11:38):
Yes you do.

Speaker 2 (11:40):
So, Yeah, I really do think white people don't have
unk in the way that white people don't have play
cousins in general, right, you know what I mean?

Speaker 3 (11:48):
Like that kid you go up to you're.

Speaker 2 (11:50):
Not related to in any real way, but they just
they your cousin, because everybody in the family say they cousins.

Speaker 1 (11:56):
Your kids know each other, girl together, yes.

Speaker 2 (11:58):
And so they just become I don't think white people
do that as much as we do.

Speaker 3 (12:02):
So anyway, that was my thought.

Speaker 1 (12:05):
You got one, or you want me to that was it.

Speaker 2 (12:07):
Oh, I'll just pay you back on what you said
about me being old, and I'm so I'm so good
with it.

Speaker 3 (12:12):
I finess my thought into.

Speaker 1 (12:13):
Yours, okay, And and I'm glad you did. And I'm
glad you can. You know, you can take the jok
and things like that, because like you said, that's one
thing about you know, our relationship. We joke, We joke
and pick on each other, all of the time. My
next one is we need to talk about the w
NBA commercials. Uh, their commercials. Some of their commercials are

(12:33):
PSA's instead of just reglass commercials because I guess we
watch it on like lead Pass. One of the commercials
like don't leave your baby in the hot ass car
and one of them was like, yo, mom gonna get dementia.
And I was like, Hey, why can't we have.

Speaker 5 (12:46):
Just wrenkling normal ass commercials doing these breaks?

Speaker 1 (12:49):
What's happening here?

Speaker 2 (12:51):
Yeah? I have many thoughts about the w n b
A in general, but I think I think one of
the reasons that's such a culture shock and disconnect in
w n b A and sports fandom because I don't
think there's a complete overlap. I think there's w NBA

(13:12):
fandom is a vent diagram and sports fandom is almost
it's a vent diagram where the circles overlap.

Speaker 3 (13:18):
But they're not a complete circle. So well, I mean.

Speaker 2 (13:24):
They so by the nature they're touching, they're just not
touching a lot like it's not a complete Circle's right,
it's not one inside of the other, right, Yes, And
and the point I want to make out there is
for a lot of people rightfully, so I'm not judging them.
But w NBA is almost like political, you know, like

(13:44):
like it's not just a I'm supporting this league because
I like fun basketball.

Speaker 3 (13:49):
There's a lot of there's a lot.

Speaker 2 (13:50):
Of it that you and it's almost like the culture
of the league, the culture of the players. You almost
don't have a choice if you like the w n B.
A it's hard to like the w NBA in the
way that people like other sports in America, where look,
we're just bringing everybody together. Don't matter if you're racist,
don't matter if you're homophobic. But like they stay then
there's two and a half hours, we're just all watching

(14:13):
a sport. And when we leave here and you're a
Republican and I'm a Democrat, that doesn't matter.

Speaker 3 (14:18):
The WNBA is not like that.

Speaker 2 (14:20):
And until it started growing over the last two to
three years, and especially after the boom of Caitlyn Clark,
it has become more sports people trying to come over there,
but the league hasn't necessarily caught up to that yet.
In some areas it has, but it hasn't one hundred
percent caught up.

Speaker 3 (14:41):
It's still and I don't think the league wants to
one hundred percent.

Speaker 2 (14:44):
I think they want to stay a political sort of
like we our politics are on our chest because of
who we are. It's like this isn't an option like
the way people keep assuming, you know, like like where
the men come in that don't even really follow the WNBA,
but they follow sports, and they have all this advice
for the league, and all the advice though is really

(15:05):
just treating them as men, like yes, like will men
do it this way?

Speaker 3 (15:09):
And they don't.

Speaker 2 (15:09):
They haven't really stopped to think what if the women
don't want to and aren't going to do that and
are willing to pay whatever the penalty is yep, to
be themselves, Like we're not going to ungay our league.
So I know that if you were a consultant in
a vacuum, you sit us in a room and be like, guys,

(15:29):
could you tone down the gay shit? Like America's already homophobicus. Fuck,
let's just get this money. You can be gay on
your own private time. But let's not let's start with
all the the Twitter and the and the and all
the jokes and all the stuff in the press.

Speaker 3 (15:41):
Cond let's just stop.

Speaker 2 (15:43):
There's a type of person that I'm sure would advise
a w NBA that, and I think it hasn't crossed
that person's mind that The w NBA people are like, man,
fuck you right, we don't like It's like, it's not
just a oh, we hadn't thought of that, it's we
thought of it, and we don't agree. And if that
means means we get ten percent less revenue or something,
then we get ten percent less revenue.

Speaker 3 (16:05):
One thing you don't understand is that when we're already
on the bottom.

Speaker 2 (16:08):
With the payscale the leverage that you're talking about, it
works both ways. Meaning well, if I'm already playing for
sixty thousand dollars and you're saying, what the difference between
you playing for a million dollars or a million and
dollars and two hundred a million and two hundred and
fifty thousand dollars is letting go of all your political causes?
They're like, well, then I'll just keep I'll just go

(16:30):
we'll get a million dollars.

Speaker 3 (16:31):
Then it's still a huge fucking pay raise for me. Yes, anyway.
So all that to say, their.

Speaker 2 (16:37):
Commercials are almost like political ads. Sometimes it is kind
of like the yeah, don't leave your baby in a
hot car and at least on league pass, and like
if you watch TV, it's a little less. It's more
like here's ija Wilson's shoes, here's a ninety commercial.

Speaker 1 (16:55):
It's just caught me off gun and it's just kind
of weird to kind of catch those commercials. Was like
like like doing that leak past.

Speaker 2 (17:02):
Yeah, but but it made me think about that. I
think it's that way because it hasn't it's not trying
to isn't fully a sports league in the way that
the other leagues have completely commercialized and basically sold out like.

Speaker 3 (17:21):
And once again all commercials.

Speaker 2 (17:22):
All the leagues have PSA commercials and ship but not
like this ship like it was it was like man,
that would have just typically been like some other thing.
But maybe it's also that they don't have the things
that we that you're not thinking about that are coded
for men, that are that way. Like I've watched NBA
guys with the Charlotte Hornets and one of the commercials

(17:42):
is from the government is for Fatherhood, So that's a
PSA and that's happening during Yeah, So like maybe you're
not even thinking of it because everything is so geared
to men that You're like, well, that's just a commercial
in the NBA, but technically that.

Speaker 1 (17:57):
Is the same ship you had getting to us the
g Yes.

Speaker 2 (18:00):
They have voting commercials during during the NBA when the
league dedicated their arenas in cities as voting spots. Obviously
COVID vaccine stuff like, so it does happen with men's sports,
and I think also just medicine wise, Oh my god,
there's so many like Viagra and Ciallis.

Speaker 3 (18:19):
And all these commercials during men's sports games.

Speaker 2 (18:21):
Yes, but yeah it is, but you're you're right though,
it is interesting to see a league and I wonder
if they will go to that where eventually it will
see less of those commercials and we'll see just crass commercialism.

Speaker 1 (18:35):
And sometimes I wonder if like the league is slowly
growing and because of that, like because sometimes when you
watch League pass, like they don't show commercials during the
whole time, and then sometimes they'll show, like particularly during
halftimes that show like loops and stuff like. It's really
odd the way they do that, And so I'm wondering
if a lot of the commercial money isn't coming until

(18:58):
they get their next contract. I don't know, if that
makes sense, like like these are the people that they
could get their contracts with that were willing to pay,
you know, me, pay for this particular airtime and D
and and and this is what it was versus like
you said, like, I feel like once everything changed, not
did it go complete shift, but but it'll be it'll
be present I think it's gonna be presented different afterwards. Right,

(19:19):
So that makes.

Speaker 3 (19:20):
Sense that I don't have anymore.

Speaker 1 (19:24):
Okay, Well my next one is, uh, because I got several.

Speaker 3 (19:27):
If you keep going, okay, there's no need for permission.

Speaker 1 (19:30):
My next one is talking about the w NBA. Me
and Rogers was watching the game and the other night
and like about a week ago we could do ago
and somebody had tossed a green dial though out on
the court, and Uh, the thing is, when we was watching,
I don't think the people on the TV knew what
it was. They just seen something fly because when it's

(19:50):
like as soon as they hit it, the camera kind
of almost instantly went away. And then that's what's like, Oh,
I was like, oh y'all, y'all just was trying to
find out what it was and realized it was a deal.
Dough and My thing is I feel as though if
this would have happened in the NBA and anybody would
have thrown anything on the court, you would have it
would have almost been immediately get that person, get them

(20:11):
out of here to fuck you do it? Oh that
person was arrested, Okay, they was okay, Okay. I couldn't
tell at the time, just because the way the count
I was like, did they find up?

Speaker 3 (20:20):
So there's two things there.

Speaker 2 (20:22):
One, when this happens in men's sports at the broadcast
and the announcers are and this is what happened in
the WNBA game, they're basically instructed to not talk about
it the same way when that woman glew with her
hand to.

Speaker 3 (20:40):
The floor of you just you're not.

Speaker 2 (20:42):
They don't want the broadcast to reward people who disrupt.

Speaker 3 (20:46):
The event by being like, oh my god, we have
a streaker.

Speaker 2 (20:49):
That's why you'll see on Twitter they'll be like a
guy ran naked through.

Speaker 3 (20:52):
The Chiefs fifty yard line and.

Speaker 2 (20:56):
You'll be like, on the broadcast, it just kind of
awkwardly cut the commercial, m h okay. And so they're
basically instructed not to do it right because you don't
want to.

Speaker 3 (21:06):
Reward that behavior.

Speaker 2 (21:07):
Yes, And the next night, someone at a different set
of Valkyrie's game, I think it was Valkyries, threw another
green Delle doll on the floor, So I don't know
if it was the same person or a different person,
but like, whatever this is, it's definitely designed to get
viral attention, and of course you can't stop social media
where people are recording it with their phones and shit.

(21:28):
But yeah, they caught the green bandit or whatever.

Speaker 1 (21:32):
I'm glad they did because it's like, why, like you
disrupted the game, somebody actually could have got hurt because
they basically continued playing, because I don't think the people
like the reps. I don't think they've seen it because
of where it was thrown, it didn't actually disrupt play
at the time. But you know, they make all them
announcements telling you, hey, dog, you do this, blah blah

(21:52):
blah blah blah blah blah, and they do that for
a reason for the safety of everybody.

Speaker 2 (21:55):
And with our shit just being so cooked at this
point that people just want attention, I don't know, right, Like,
I literally don't know why they would do it. I
don't know that I'm even interested in why someone would
do that and ultimately like just you know, just banned
them from games and keep them away from the arenas
because it just seems like, whatever the answer is, we're

(22:17):
gonna find out, it's something fucking stupid.

Speaker 1 (22:19):
Gonna be done.

Speaker 2 (22:20):
It can't possibly be smart, it can't possibly be courageous
or anything. It's gonna be some fucking asshole or some
type or just somebody that just loves attention. And you know,
you gotta starve those fires out, Yeah you do.

Speaker 1 (22:35):
Maybe I lately going down seventy seven, I do not
know what this trend is. I think I talked about
it before, but lately is getting real bad because you know,
Charlotte is growing. A lot of people are moving to
our city, which is fine, and you know, we have
a lot of construction and things around town. A lot
of times traffic gets bad. You know, we have like

(22:56):
you know, regular you know, lunchtime on the time traffic
just like everybody else. But lately, like you be sitting
in traffic or or or like at an exit and
you look and you'll randomly see somebody going like eighty
miles an hour down the side then you know, the
side that you're supposed to pull off and park your
car in case you have any emergencies. I've seen that
a lot more frequently than normal. And they'll fly down

(23:18):
and then dart back in the traffic and then fly
down and then dark back and d I said, people,
I was like, what's the purpose it is? You're gonna
cause wreck You're gonna hurt somebody, And it's one of
them times why I turned it to a white woman
carrying like where the police, Like, bitch, don't do this.
Guess what nobody's going anywhere? It's fucking traffic.

Speaker 3 (23:38):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (23:40):
The only thing I have to add to that is
that it's weird that we call that reckless driving. Shouldn't
we call it reck full driving? It is, Yes, it's
not less rex. It's gonna lead the more. Why don't
we say reck full driving reckfull drivers? Maybe I'm missing something.

Speaker 3 (23:58):
In the English language, but yeah, there's more RECs. Yeah,
they're participating.

Speaker 1 (24:04):
Yeah, because my thing is you're going they're going so fast,
and I was thinking if anybody has an emergency and
they need to pull over, also them seeing you are
gonna be low because you don't assume people are flying
down That bitch going eighty miles an hour.

Speaker 2 (24:18):
We know the logic, Karen. These are people don't give
a fuck. It's like, that's the same reason you shouldn't
speed though. I mean, people just do shit, Karen. It's
not it's nothing we can man. I get the observation,
but yeah, I don't think it's a lack of the understanding.
They don't give a fuck about that. They're willing to
risk some fucking crash on the side.

Speaker 1 (24:39):
That's true too. That's that's about as much as that.
We was in traffic the other day and some dude
he came from behind us out of no no, no, no.
Was he in front of us? I think it was
in front of us and people waiting to turn. He
threw his hand up. I don't know if he was
waving directly at us and not, but he threw his
hand up, went up, went around and like cut everybody.

(25:01):
I don't know what he was trying to prove, but
it's like things like that when I'm going, okay, like like,
what is really happening here where? I understand you know,
things are going on, but a lot of people have
a lot of shit in their lives and they're taking
it out on the road.

Speaker 2 (25:15):
Yeah, And it's just, you know, it's one of those
things that is so counterintuitive.

Speaker 3 (25:21):
It's about risk of war, and I don't.

Speaker 2 (25:24):
Know what it is about humanity, but we really think
like being five minutes late to something versus driving recklessly
and possibly getting in the wreck, or fucking like taking
risks that might lead to injury, or paying a bunch
of auto insurance bills or whatever. People just make this
math in a head that like chronically like all the time,

(25:48):
it's better to speed and be unsafe for a little bit,
but get there at the time a couple of minutes
earlier or something. But I mean, people make that math
all the time, and it's clearly hum in nature because
so many people do it. But it's also just kind
of fucking stupid, Like the math on it is stupid.
It's what, what is more costly getting in a wreck

(26:10):
because you kept doing like taking risks and now you
have to wait for the police and you have to
fill out insharance report and you gotta do all this
shit and you're stuck in traffic and you are gonna
be late anyway to whatever, or uh you get there
at two oh three rather than two o seven, and
you're you know, because it's not like when people do

(26:32):
shit like that. I don't think, oh, yeah, that's so
they'll be on time or they'll be early. They're doing
that SHITU They're gonna just be two minutes late rather
than ten. It's just like I think everyone would have.
You can deal with a little judgment for being a
little late, but yeah, people just people.

Speaker 1 (26:46):
Wow, I feel you on that one. And I was
on h on my way home and I happen to
look up and all of a sudden, I've seen this
truck back up and this truck like it should have
been like the Monks the truck jam. It had like
those things on the side that like pump the air
out on the side, and it didn't have a hood.

(27:07):
So I was on like that could see the.

Speaker 5 (27:10):
Whole engine on inside of the top of the car.
And I was so confused. I was like, did you
get kicked out in the monster truck? Did you just
lead a monster truck jam? While are you out in traffic?

Speaker 1 (27:21):
I was, so this is my observation show. I was
just so baffled into why this truck was out here
for no apparent reason, and like normal ass traffic, shouldn't
you be with your friends, question cars, why are you
here in the city.

Speaker 3 (27:36):
A lot of traffic related thoughts, just sweek. Yes, you've
been driving a lot of something that's going on.

Speaker 1 (27:42):
I've been observating. I've been paying attention to things on
the road because you do most of the drive and
driving with you. And like the monster truck was me
driving by myself because you had asked me to go
pick up your glasses and so that's when I observed
that one. But I've just been realizing that I've just been.

Speaker 2 (28:00):
I've been realizing that it's a big truck that's nothing
sound like the thing you've been I think you've been
doing a lot of ab certain observational riding.

Speaker 3 (28:11):
It's a theme to this week's thought.

Speaker 1 (28:14):
I've been doing because of a pastor the Princess, I've
been doing a lot of observational ride. I can look around,
So I've been doing a lot of observational riding with you.
But the monster truck was me driving. I was stopped.

Speaker 2 (28:26):
I'm just saying, you got car thoughts.

Speaker 1 (28:30):
You got the luxury to be looking at and judging
the driver when you ain't got to pay attention and
pump gas. That's the luxury of of my princess field life.

Speaker 2 (28:43):
I was just wonder what they're compensating for, Like, why
the fuck are you driving Bigfoot?

Speaker 1 (28:48):
It don't make sense, Okay.

Speaker 2 (28:50):
Do you even I don't like, where do you even
buy that kind of truck? Like, I don't even know
how you get that. I've never seen that on a lot.
Like you can't go to Nissan and be like, yeah,
I need a car that makes people look at my
car and.

Speaker 3 (29:02):
Think Sunday, Sunday, Sunday.

Speaker 1 (29:04):
I need a car that's eight feet high.

Speaker 3 (29:07):
Listen, my penis is very tiny.

Speaker 2 (29:10):
I'm gonna need something that can roll cold and I
can look down into the cleavage of women in the cars.
That's the only way I'm gonna be able to feel
like a contributing member of society.

Speaker 1 (29:21):
I need my tiths to be one hundred and forty
two inches, Sir, You're gonna have to get those professionally made.
Nobody makes tiles like that. How you getting that, bitch?

Speaker 2 (29:29):
I need I need big speakers that like are house speakers,
but attached to the side of my truck, so that
when I'm blasting to.

Speaker 3 (29:37):
Joe Rogan experience.

Speaker 2 (29:38):
I want everyone at the stoplight to have to experience
it with me because my penis is tiny, So what
kind of car can can handle that is what I need?

Speaker 1 (29:48):
And apparently it is that In the last one, this
is car related to but it's just something I figured.
We got a car related random thoughts things happening here.

Speaker 3 (29:58):
Yeah, I think this is a big surprise.

Speaker 1 (30:01):
Nope, Nope, cars, cars, cars, this one is. I've also
been seeing the trend of vehicles riding around but like
no tag, like just just tag just missing out, Like, bitch,
was it stolen? Did it rip off? Did you? Was like,
fuck insurance? You know, I'm just gonna ride dirty and
if I get pulled over, I get pulled over. It's

(30:21):
been the wildest thing. I've seen several cars like that.
And sometimes when people's tags fall off, you might see
them do like well it's like in the in the
back window or something like that. It's not even It's like, bitch,
the tag just ain't there. And I'm like, and you know,
our cars down here ain't like like New York and
the places where you got to have legally you have
to have one in the front in the back of
the back, bitch. And that's it. So I've been like, well,

(30:42):
if you're getting a rack or something, that ain't nobody
gonna gonna have any information like this. It's just wild
to me.

Speaker 2 (30:48):
Well, I think people are riding dirty because also even
you see a lot of temp tags now, people are
actually creating fake temporary tags.

Speaker 3 (30:56):
Oh yeah. So I just think a lot of people
are riding around with no insurance.

Speaker 2 (31:00):
And no you know, no paperwork or whatever and just
helping the police don't pull them over. And I wonder
if it's so many people the police are just letting
like not stopping everybody, because.

Speaker 1 (31:12):
Right, unless you're getting the record something like that.

Speaker 2 (31:14):
I don't even like let my tag, like I've never
even let my tag expire, like I reknew it every
year on the year, because I'm black, and I don't
ever want to give them a freason to pull me over.

Speaker 1 (31:25):
There early pay taxes early.

Speaker 2 (31:27):
Now Randolph Terrence got a mark for me, and shit,
I don't want to angry. I don't want to put
the community through that kind of trauma.

Speaker 1 (31:33):
So right, and then when one time we moved and
I ended up the tag ended up going to the
old address and I didn't realize it and I got
pulled over, and I explained to them, Oh, I paid
all these fees and shit. Uh, but I did not
realize my tag had inspired and it was one of
them things where you know, nothing happened. But I don't
like to get put over for bullshit like that, So

(31:55):
I'm like, Nope, keep that tag current, keep them stick
at current, pay them taxes if you can, because I'm
I don't maybe it's me, I don't. I don't want
any unnecessary interactions like that with the police.

Speaker 2 (32:07):
Yeah, I don't think it's Maybe it's you. I think
it's most of us, uh, especially black folks.

Speaker 3 (32:12):
All right, anything else.

Speaker 1 (32:14):
All those are all my car rin I didn't know
she was black until a number of years ago when
she happened to turn black, and now she wants to
be known as black.

Speaker 3 (32:24):
People have got to know whether or not their presidentship crook.
Well I'm not a crook. I learned everything I've got.

Speaker 2 (32:32):
I'm saying in Tennessee, I know what she's fetched prob
in Tennis Street, but just fooling me. Want shame on,
shame on, shame on, shame on you, shame on you,
shame We can't get fool again.

Speaker 3 (32:44):
Tell you what I don't know about you, but I'm
going to go to bed. I'm yeah.

Speaker 2 (32:52):
Maybe those people are rule breakers like opia and they
don't want the government having a personal information.

Speaker 1 (32:57):
So they just can't be having a license back.

Speaker 2 (32:59):
Put the rest of it, rest of us in immediate
danger by riding around with no insurance because you know,
gotta break the rules.

Speaker 3 (33:08):
Uh, let's see politics. Here we go. God, there's so many.

Speaker 2 (33:14):
Uh some of these are Oh though I think we
already covered.

Speaker 3 (33:20):
Robert Robert Kennedy Jr.

Speaker 2 (33:23):
Uh set the fire entire panel behind the free cancer
screenings and HIV meds.

Speaker 1 (33:31):
You said free cancis screening and HIV meds, right, Okay.

Speaker 2 (33:37):
Yep, this is what people voted for. You knew that
Trump would make h Robert Kennedy Jr. The hells are
And you knew he was anti all pretty much medical
science that we've known.

Speaker 3 (33:53):
So you can't to me be you can't pretend to
be surprised.

Speaker 2 (33:58):
And this is one of those guys that the right
winging spirit was in love with. This was like he
ran for president. People were like, we would like him
to be the vice president. When Trump, you know, when
he jumped out of the office, Trump came to visit
him or to get his support after our RFK JR
bowed out like this, you cannot like, I know they're

(34:19):
gonna act like, well, I didn't think he'd do this.
I don't know why you didn't think he'd do this.
And when y'all say that, you can't have it both ways.
I think he's pretty much an honest guy. He tricked
me and I believed him.

Speaker 3 (34:32):
And also I.

Speaker 2 (34:34):
Didn't think he'd do the things he said he'd do. Well,
which which one is it? If he's honest, that means
you you should think he would do the things he
said he'd do.

Speaker 3 (34:43):
So what's happening?

Speaker 1 (34:44):
And there's also one of the things where a lot
of the because you know Trump is doing what he said,
a lot of this is making the populist a successible susceptible,
susceptible to all types of diseases. Again, does these that
we had actually eradicated a lot of them? Shits that
started gonna start come back. It started when people wouldn't

(35:08):
get vaccines. Now you have children and are suffering from
shit that their parents are vaccinated from, like unnecessarily suffering,
And it's very frustrating because you know, we live in
a world where you know, pandemics happened and endemics happened,
and you know who you know, cause they happen all

(35:29):
of the time. But it's one of those things. Because
we were in the United States, we've had company people in
charge a lot of times they would do things in
advance to prevent the shit from actually spreading to our
borders and shit like that, not that it wouldn't come
here at all, but it wouldn't be like, oh my god,
everybody in the country has caught it. But when you
start doing shit like this, these are the type of
things that happen, like you don't have the knowledge and

(35:51):
the wisdoms. Whose people's whole job has been, you know,
dedicated to studying these this shit since the bubonic glegg
and shit like that. And now they're like, hey, dog,
like what happens when shit happens and those people aren't there,
nobody knows what to do and and and it becomes
fucking chaotic. But that's the purpose, well, because something's gonna

(36:14):
happen because a lot of times they make these moves
and the ideas like these things don't come to fruition.

Speaker 3 (36:20):
So we don't have to worry about them happening.

Speaker 2 (36:22):
The liberals are just in the nanny state, and they're
all worried and they're all over indexing the.

Speaker 3 (36:29):
How big these problems are.

Speaker 2 (36:30):
These are not real problems, they're victims and blah blah blah.

Speaker 3 (36:34):
And so they put people in charge that that carry
that rhetoric.

Speaker 2 (36:37):
Out and the inevitably something will happen. Something's gonna happen
to the economy, something's gonna happen to.

Speaker 3 (36:43):
Health something. And what will be interesting is when it happens.
Because when it.

Speaker 2 (36:48):
Happens, the term is the reaction, meaning if it happens
in the next two to three years, then people may
turn on Trump in a way of like we don't
want a Republican again.

Speaker 3 (37:00):
If it happens in.

Speaker 2 (37:05):
Like say four years and some Democrat is in office,
that democratic get the point.

Speaker 1 (37:09):
For this shit because people don't smart.

Speaker 2 (37:12):
Yeah, it's you know, it's like when people found out
about the ventilator thing. You know, it's like, well, when
were these cuts made? You know, like who decided this shit?
And it's like, oh, yeah, well that happened under Republicans.
But still this Democrat is in charge, and why don't
we have enough ventilator, so it doesn't really matter to
people in a lot of ways. Treasury Department wants you

(37:32):
to help pay the thirty six point seven trillion national
debt via Vemo and PayPal.

Speaker 1 (37:36):
No, bitch, suck my dick. No, not paying for that
bullshit because y'all did things to actually get the debt
to where us you.

Speaker 3 (37:46):
They're just trying to turn taxes into charity.

Speaker 2 (37:48):
Yes, right, like we refuse to tax billionaires and at
the rate that we're supposed to, which will immediately.

Speaker 3 (37:55):
Wipe out this debt.

Speaker 1 (37:56):
Yes.

Speaker 2 (37:57):
So how about you people that are living checked the check,
people who are looking at their grocery bills in astonishment,
people that.

Speaker 3 (38:05):
Are worried about the economy and gas and.

Speaker 2 (38:08):
All this shit, how about you pull up some money
also under this government that Venmo might say dollar.

Speaker 3 (38:15):
Sign Trump, you know, Trump train. I don't know that
it's going to the government.

Speaker 6 (38:21):
I was not.

Speaker 1 (38:22):
It's not. It's going to Trump's personal of the count. No,
you know, And it's the federal government. And for those
of you that dealt with it, y'all know, the federal
government is huge. The federal government is slow. Shit. The
federal government if they want to contact you, bitch, they
gonna send you some shit through the mail. Then you
know a lot of that shit is not electronic or
none of that shit.

Speaker 3 (38:40):
So what are you saying.

Speaker 1 (38:41):
It's like, but you want me to pay the dis
back in Venmo and PayPal shit. But normally the federal
government don't function that quickly. So this is a goddamn scam.

Speaker 2 (38:52):
Well, this is the government that's doing this, Like it's official.

Speaker 1 (38:58):
I understand it's official, but I don't think. I'm like you,
I don't think the money is going where it's to go.

Speaker 2 (39:03):
I wouldn't trust the people running this government that the
money would go where it's supposed to go. But also
just it's weird that this is the official government, Like
I could like, if I were to tell you PayPal
this account a year ago and I said this is
going to go to the debt for the United States Treasury,

(39:25):
you would have been like, so it's a scam because
the government wouldn't do something fucking shady like that, right,
But we are now officially in shady territory, right, Like
this is the official government being like, yeah, man, it's
called gifts to reduce the public debt. It's a portal
on payot goal. Keep in mind, you don't owe the government.

(39:45):
This is not how you pay your taxes or anything.
They just are like, if you want to put something
on it, you got five on the debt.

Speaker 1 (39:53):
I do not pitch in mm hmm. I didn't make
the decisions to cut shit, so well am I paying?
But this what am I pitching in on? For you
to steal in my health care, for me to still
lose my job, for me to steal, you know, not
be able to afford to feed my kids, for me
to still be homeless. Not pitching any of that bullshit.

Speaker 3 (40:11):
Who's gonna do it?

Speaker 1 (40:12):
Right?

Speaker 3 (40:13):
Who are the people that's gonna do it?

Speaker 2 (40:15):
Cause I feel like your name should go in the
registry of a sucker that's born every day, just like
the got some suckers.

Speaker 3 (40:22):
Hey, we just got twenty dollars from this sucker.

Speaker 2 (40:25):
Like I feel like it's all gonna be people wearing
maga merch who feels this much ownership over the debt
of the economy, Like, man, I better do my job
and pitch in. Oh man, I had a hard dad work,
but I want to make sure I give my ten
percent to Jesus, no to the government. Okay, pay unto Caesar.

(40:46):
Tennessee school bands, doctor notes and sites work ethic for students.
Lawrence County School System in Tennessee just told parents their
kids doctor's notes won't mean a thing this year. No
more excuse absences for being sick. If your school kid
misses eight days of school, even with the flu or strap,
the next stop could be juvenile court. Keep in mind,

(41:10):
this is the lie they said Kamala was doing. Like
they Kamala Harris didn't do this for real, You're gonna
look it up and then if you but but people
got outraged at the very idea.

Speaker 3 (41:23):
This is way worse.

Speaker 2 (41:25):
Because they're not trying to help these kids that are
in indigit situations. And get this, what resources can we
do to make sure this family's okay? This is just
like the Republican mantra of like, uh, we gonna scare
you into acting right, well, we'll fuck it take a
kid to court before we If this motherfucker missed too

(41:47):
much school, you better show up sick.

Speaker 3 (41:48):
I don't care if you coughing right.

Speaker 1 (41:51):
All's gonna happen is that kids gonna give to get
other children sick because it is the thing. You're doing this,
but at the same time, you don't have anything to
help the children.

Speaker 3 (42:02):
You're getting rid of the vaccine, can't panle.

Speaker 1 (42:04):
You know, you get rid of the mandates and bullshit.
And my thing is this, some children are very sickly.
There are some children that get cancer and all types
of things that miss big big swaps the schools, so well,
they better show their ass up the juvenile court care
and what happens. So now you take my child to
got cancer and do what Now?

Speaker 2 (42:25):
Now I put them in put them in and put
them into juvenile attention or they're gonna be in class
getting on the IV drip.

Speaker 3 (42:32):
I don't know. They they do not care.

Speaker 2 (42:35):
They think it's just all This is a Republican mindset.
They think everybody is just trying to get over and
if you are punishing them.

Speaker 3 (42:45):
They will stop. That is it.

Speaker 2 (42:47):
That's how they think about welfare, That's how they think
about unemployment, that's how they think about HIV, that's how
they think about health care. Everything is like, if you're
just punished the people, they'll act right. It's very very puritanical,
is very old school white people religious. You know that
type of shit we've never gotten over. Slavery is why

(43:08):
they beat slaves and not not try but you know,
indentured service they treat a little different in whatever. But
so anyway, punishment is everything here, and they truly think
they can punish sick kids into being in school and
then they won't. Instead of investigating why are fourteen percent
of students being classified as chronically absent? Why can't we

(43:30):
dive into that fourteen percent that we know who the
percentage we know who the kids are at let's find out.
I don't know what the race is. You're saying that.
I'm saying you literally, if you know it's fourteen percent,
that means you literally know that demograph the exact kid,
not demographics, No, the exact kid.

Speaker 1 (43:47):
That's true, Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 3 (43:49):
It's not just fourteen percent to the people in this community.

Speaker 1 (43:52):
No, it's not.

Speaker 2 (43:53):
Y'all actually know it's Johnny Smith who has been missing
these days. You technically could you a welfare check, You
could go have a kid talk to a counselor you
could you know, go by the house. You could do
so many things, but what did you do? Pass a blanket?
We will take you the juvenile court thing. That's the

(44:15):
only thing you're gonna do first and foremost. And you
don't see anything in here saying well, okay, we're gonna
do that, but like we're gonna try to like uh,
like I said, even with Kamala Harrison's planning, she never
sent anyone to jail, Like it was, Hey, these.

Speaker 3 (44:31):
Are the resources I have as a DA.

Speaker 2 (44:34):
And then I'm gonna we're gonna come out to your
house and we're gonna try to make do what we
can to make sure you're on the right programs.

Speaker 1 (44:40):
Whatever assistance you know you're in the right program.

Speaker 2 (44:42):
We're gonna we're going to find a way to make
your home life better so that your child may be
at school when they're supposed to be at school.

Speaker 3 (44:48):
Right, that's not what this program does.

Speaker 2 (44:51):
Once a student hits just three absences, three interventions begin
by eight absences, they're looking at court referrals, failing raised,
possibly losing chance to graduate or get a driver's license.
There are only a few exemptions, things like chronic illnesses
with proper medical documentation, family deaths, or religious holidays.

Speaker 3 (45:12):
And parents are not having it, like they're like, fuck y'all.

Speaker 1 (45:16):
Because it doesn't make sense. Like things happen, and my
thing is, how can you do that? But yet there's
no doctor excuses, So no, you're lying. The chronic illnesses
don't matter because because it's going to be up to
the discretion of the school. Just how a lot of
this bullshit goes. So my child is chronically ill. Everybody
knows my child is chronically ill. I'm bringing you notes

(45:36):
to school to saying your notes is not valid.

Speaker 3 (45:38):
Now what who decides?

Speaker 2 (45:40):
Like? Is my asthma a chronic illness? If it's not
a like? If it's not, I have to be in
the hospital every day. But it's Hey, I have asthma.
It's a chronic disease. It's literally labeled that, and it
could flare up and one day I might not be
able to be in school and the next day I
might be able to. But if I accumulate three absences,
here we go.

Speaker 3 (46:00):
Stephen A.

Speaker 2 (46:00):
Smith blast Michelle Obama over offensive Trump comments.

Speaker 3 (46:07):
Stephen A. Smith, My god, what's wrong with this man?
So Michelle Obama said that ESPN.

Speaker 2 (46:16):
It's the same drama. They're yelling at each other. They
don't get along, you know, I mean Stephen A. Smith,
he's just like every other talk show host in the
wake of her jibe because she called him, she said
that it's more like Real Housewives of Atlanta.

Speaker 3 (46:33):
I guess he took.

Speaker 2 (46:33):
Offense, so he went on his podcast because he got acknowledged.

Speaker 3 (46:40):
And he can't help himself.

Speaker 2 (46:41):
He's like a shark that can't ever have a little
bit of discipline or something and go, I'm not gonna
say anything about this, Like as soon as his name
comes up, it's like opportunity to get some cloud, get
some tension. So it said, Michelle Obama, want to take
this opportunity to remind you that while you are revered
by me personally, I truly truly mean that with the
greatest I'm still a bit salty at you. When you

(47:03):
were campaigning on behalf of the former president Vice President
Kamala hash you said a vote for Trump was a
vote against you and a vote against y'all as women.
I want to say, for the record, I took major
offense to that. I think to this day that is
the only thing I didn't like that you said. I
didn't appreciate it because there's so many things that go
into decide to where your vote's gonna go. For some people,
it's all about the economy for others all about national security.

(47:24):
For some people, it's about immigrats. For some people's safety
in the streets. So oh, why am I not doing
a voice? I'm sorry? This is on me, I guess
because I'm so this is how you know. It's making
me mad. I don't even want to do the like
fun voice, right, but I will because I promise y'all something.

Speaker 3 (47:39):
I'm sorry, Michelle Obama. I want to take this opportunity.

Speaker 2 (47:46):
To remind you that while you are revered by me personally,
and I truly truly mean that with the greatest sincerity,
I'm a bit salty at you. When you were campaigning
on the math for former Vice President Damala Harris, you
said a vote for Trump was a vote against you
and a vote against y'all as women. And I want

(48:08):
to say, for the record, I took major offense to that.
I think to this day that is the only thing
that I didn't like that you said, and I didn't
appreciate it because there's so many things that go into
designing where your vote is.

Speaker 3 (48:24):
Going to go. For some people, it's all about the country.
For others, it's all about national security. Some people's about immigration.
For some people, it's about the safety in the streets
of America, long before they think about pro choice or
pro life. Smith then briefly.

Speaker 2 (48:41):
Praised Obama after branding her sensational and claiming both she
and her husband Barack would beat Trump in the election
of either of them decide to run in the future.
He then addressed their comments about ESPN. He say, respectfully disagreed.

Speaker 3 (48:55):
So this doesn't have anything to do with what you
would talk about.

Speaker 2 (48:58):
House sports and reality TV mirror one another, even though
we would beg to differ because a lot of things
on reality TV are made up situations and scenarios to
provoke reactions and all of that stuff. Why we're sports,
that's live entertainment, and you're actually competing against one another.

Speaker 3 (49:20):
It's big time.

Speaker 1 (49:21):
No, reality TV is not like that.

Speaker 3 (49:24):
You're so wrong about that and that assertion. But that's
neither here nor that you will never hear me other
negative word about you.

Speaker 2 (49:31):
But I respectfully disagree and still remain pretty salty about
what you said about us, he said, before adding that
Obama sort of blackmailed us emotionally, and they're trying to
compel us to vote one way.

Speaker 3 (49:44):
Or another.

Speaker 2 (49:48):
I think it's interesting because sports is made up. Right,
Sports is literally reality TV, And I know we place
more importance on it, but it is. And there's the
reason both of those are billion dollar industries at this point.
It's cheap cheaper to do reality TV in the sports.
But it ain't like we'll sit down and watch it.

(50:11):
We don't give a fuck, Like the quality means nothing,
Meaning y'all will stop the world to watch preseason football,
right the same way you'll stop the world to watch
Love Allen seven, the reunion or whatever the fuck like
it's and the other thing she said that it's huge.
She's talking about the coverage of sports, not sports, so
she's talking about and she's right, first take is reality TV.

(50:35):
First takes not about sports. It's literally contrived. Meaning there's
no reason for us to have a is Lebron better
than Michael Jordan debate one hundred times a year on
that channel, right, there's no reason other than it's Steven
a arguing with people, and people tune in to see
who wins the argument, quote unquote, and they become their

(50:58):
own personality. Steve vian a' smith is not revered for
his sports knowledge he's revered for his takes and his
delivery of his take. Agreed, that is different. We're not
talking about Lebron. She didn't say Lebron, James, ESPN and Lebron.
When I see the NBA, I just like, oh my god,
real housewive.

Speaker 3 (51:17):
She didn't say that. She's like, no, when I see
Steven A.

Speaker 2 (51:20):
Smith, who she said by name, you are reality TV,
You're a soap opera star.

Speaker 1 (51:25):
And you get paid a lot of money to do. Yeah, like,
I don't like.

Speaker 2 (51:28):
But once again, I don't know. Whenever it comes to
stephen A, I never know how sincere he ever is
because I know he's lied before, and he says different
stuff depending on who he's talking to, and he's been
caught in line several times. You know, it's at this
point and he has no conscience about it. So it's
not like he's ever gonna stop and be like, yeah, okay,

(51:49):
y'all got me. I did say this earlier, and then
I said this later. So I don't know how much
of stephen A as an act and how much of
the act is stephen A. I have no idea who
that man really is because he doesn't really seem to
move in an authentic way in my opinion just from
a long view away.

Speaker 3 (52:08):
But he's one of the best TV entertainers in the game.
I don't think that. I don't even think that's debatable.

Speaker 2 (52:15):
So you end up with he heard the clarion call
of someone mentioning his name, and it don't matter if
it's a Michelle Obama or not.

Speaker 3 (52:24):
He's going to try to get some get some traction
off of that shit.

Speaker 2 (52:29):
You know, I don't know if he's talking about Shannon
Sharp no longer returning to the network and his role
in that, like that's probably a lot less you know,
something that he's not he doesn't want to probably get
into that's a little probably a little too real. But
talking about Michelle Obama's podcast, like sure, none of us
were wanting to really know his opinion on that or not.

(52:51):
But you know, I'm sure, you know, I'm sure he
just knows how to get to the attention bag.

Speaker 3 (52:57):
And he did it again.

Speaker 1 (52:59):
He did it again as well. This is what he does.

Speaker 2 (53:02):
No loyalty to anybody, And uh no, I think he
just is just a conservative that you know, Uh, he's
just a black conservative that doesn't want to be strapped
with the cultural label of what it, the responsibility and
the consequences that come with being that. So he keeps
talking in circles around it. But what he's basically saying

(53:23):
is don't tell me about democrat.

Speaker 1 (53:25):
That's basically what that Yeah, that's basically what that you know,
that statement said. And this, you know, it's one of
those things, you know, for me, I'm not trying to
be fun. This is one of the times I be
wanting to say, just just stick to just Daniel lane,
just stick to the sports lane. And now he's like
driving all all over all the lanes. His his Steven A.

Speaker 3 (53:48):
Smith is his lane.

Speaker 2 (53:49):
Yes, so you say the name Stephen Night Smith, he's
gonna pop up and do you know, do his dance
or whatever. But you know, uh m hm, Trump ways
did he party said, But he says it's tough to
do because did he has criticized him in the past,
did he ain't?

Speaker 1 (54:09):
Did he ain't? Will the right the right check? Nobody
crazy yet? I mean I think that's what I mean.
Not yet. Yeah, either the check ain't cash or either
y'all in the form of negotiation, So you just been
like I'm considering it or either you saying that before
did he even reach out to you to let you know,
to let you know that you are for sale. Nobody's crazy, bitch.

(54:32):
Everybody knows you's for sale. Every everything about us is
for sale. Child. The people from China gonna come and
take parts of the White House he done built because
they're gonna be like, bitch, you y'all ain't paid taxes on,
give us our ship back. Everything is for mother fucking
sale for Trump.

Speaker 2 (54:50):
And he didn't say it's impossible, right, He said that
he would have a tougher time considering that, which I
think means price of the brick, Like, yeah, that whatever
I typically charge people for these, it's more for you.

Speaker 1 (55:06):
Yeah, you're gonna have to pay a little bit more. Player.

Speaker 7 (55:08):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (55:08):
The Smithsonian have removed a Trump.

Speaker 2 (55:12):
Display about his impeachment, but now they say it's actually
gonna go back and that uh, it was removed not
because Trump is in office that demanded it be removed.
It was over the design not fitting with something, and
it will be put back up at some point.

Speaker 1 (55:30):
We don't believe you. I don't care what y'all say.
We don't believe you. Somebody reached out to you in
the White House. Somebody said something, you took it down.
You have a lot of people that donate a lot
of money and that love this shit. And they was like, hey, bitch,
history is history. We don't give a fuck about what
he talking about. And you're like, oh my bad, we
can't make we can't make that. The owner's angry and
you put that shit back.

Speaker 3 (55:48):
Yeah, I don't believe in me either. Their excuse was that.

Speaker 2 (55:53):
It the American Presidency of Glorious Burden, was meant to
be a temporary thing and didn't meet their standards. According
to the curators, the Trumpet peachment signage was inconsistent with
the rest of the display in terms of appearance, location,
and presentation. It also physically blocked the view of objects
in the display case. The museum emphasized that no administration

(56:15):
or other government official requested the removal, but do they
need to, No, we don't At this point, I don't
believe that the Donald Trump's administration, which is the point
of why they do what they do.

Speaker 3 (56:25):
I don't think they need to come tell you take
that shit down.

Speaker 1 (56:29):
Somebody made a decision and it wouldn't be surprising, not
only the donus, it wouldn't be surprising if somebody it
was like, hey, somebody is somebody's job, who'd go through
to be sure? It was like, why was this move?
Who took this down? And someone say, well, I just
took it down. They was like, put that back put
that fitch back up.

Speaker 3 (56:44):
That's not what I mean.

Speaker 2 (56:45):
I mean like, if me and you are in this
room and another person's in this room and we're talking
and they come over and smack me and say shut
the fuck up, they don't need to smack you, right,
you just saw what happen to the person that was talking.

Speaker 3 (57:01):
That's what I mean. So when they're like the administration
didn't reach out to us, they don't got to.

Speaker 2 (57:06):
They've been slapping people and telling them shut the fuck up.
So what what the smiths on even need to wait?

Speaker 1 (57:13):
Like, no, they get it. They see what it is.

Speaker 3 (57:15):
They've taken down black history exhibits and shit, they they know,
they know what their funding is.

Speaker 2 (57:21):
The fucking National Public Broadcasting Like department is closing at
the end of the year. There doesn't need to be
a overt Hey, cut it out. The cut it out
is all in the air, it's everywhere it is.

Speaker 1 (57:38):
And it's up to you to determine if you're gonna
fight back about.

Speaker 3 (57:41):
Yeah, and and people aren't gonna fight back. That's the
whole point.

Speaker 1 (57:44):
That's rules.

Speaker 2 (57:46):
Like, I hate to be that person, but I'm gonna
keep saying I told you so because we were right,
and not enough people are talking about how not enough
people are saying we were wrong. So those of us
that are right, I'm not gonna stop telling you how
I was fucking right until every on the same fucking
page that goddamn y'all said this is what would happen,
and that's what happened. Brown University has already gotten rid

(58:08):
of diversity, equity, and inclusion to get like a fifty
million dollar agreement with.

Speaker 3 (58:14):
The Trump administration. The point being everyone who.

Speaker 2 (58:17):
Thought colleges are so liberal and they're gonna stand up
because they're not that. First of all, Republicans were the
ones telling y'all colleges were liberal. If you ask anybody
that fucking goes to college, nobody that goes to college
is like, goddamn man, super liberal.

Speaker 3 (58:32):
Up in this bitch. You're like, oh, this is an
old institution with a lot of rules. That's what everyone is.
Everyone whoever's gone to.

Speaker 2 (58:40):
These colleges, these stodgy institutions. It's not fucking peace and
love and flower children up in that bitch, Like, you're
there to get an education. And the bigger the money,
and the older the university, it's going to lean more
conservative as a culture, no matter what they teach, because
things that last a long time typically tend to be

(59:03):
conservative in nature because you're conserving the past, right, you're
conserving tradition, the ivys and all this shit.

Speaker 3 (59:12):
So the idea that Brown University.

Speaker 2 (59:16):
Who people treat, you know, typically very liberal institution or
you know, just been around forever. Well, we let Trump
in office, yes we did, and you see all the
shit he's doing in these other places. Why the fuck
is Brown University gonna be like we could take him.
Yale couldn't do it, but we got it. No, you see,

(59:38):
but Yale gets slapped in the mouth and toad shut
the fuck up, and you be like, I'll be shutting
the fuck up. And so yeah, they got that fifty
million dollar deal and all it cost him was stop
promoting unlawful DEI goals.

Speaker 3 (59:51):
This is the in that three year.

Speaker 2 (59:52):
Agreement provide gender specific locker rooms based strictly on biological sex,
prohibit gender affirming care for miners on campus something you
know wasn't happening. That, eliminate racial prefaces and admissions, launch
a new anti Semitism survey, and hand over discrimination complaint

(01:00:13):
data to the federal government. Meaning, if you are a
person that's pro Palestinian or whatever, they fit to put
your information to the government. Dog.

Speaker 3 (01:00:25):
The whole thing about this deal be in three years.
It's telling you everything.

Speaker 2 (01:00:33):
This is them saying, as long as he's in power,
they're gonna re up the deal if they can, if
he wins again, or runs again, or the next Republican
succeeds him, or whatever happens. This is not This is
one about if America lets bad people be in charge.
That's what America is.

Speaker 3 (01:00:55):
That's what it is. Dog.

Speaker 1 (01:00:56):
It ain't no.

Speaker 2 (01:00:57):
All that fucking flowery shit that they rode in that
concert don't mean a motherfucking thing. Whoever's in charge determines things.
It doesn't mean it would be perfect under another president.
It just means you would get a chance to fucking
exercise your rights. They was out there in the quad
on under Biden. They was out there protesting Underbiden, it's

(01:01:19):
finna be empty.

Speaker 3 (01:01:20):
School is basically back. It's August. Watch what happens, y'all.
Watch how few of.

Speaker 2 (01:01:26):
These protests are gonna keep going now that they're literally
locking people up, taking their citizenship, kicking them out of
the country, violating their civil rights. And the fucking colleges
are like, yes, sir, daddy, can I have another? That's
what the fuck is happening?

Speaker 3 (01:01:44):
All right?

Speaker 1 (01:01:44):
Yeah? And also I think for me, when you're talking
about people being right, yeah, I'm gonna be right, and
I'm gonna and I'm gonna continue to say that other
people were wrong because I don't know. I'm just tired of,
like the Internet and joy re acting with people and
the loudest people, particularly about a lot of shit, be
so loud and so boisterous and so demanding and so

(01:02:07):
overbearing beforehand. But then when shit happens and it don't
go the way that they quote unquote claim it's motherfucking
crickets and so, but then they want you to shut
the fuck up. No, bitch, you was loud, so let
me be loud. You know you you're going to hear
this until guess what prove me wrong? In two years
when it's mid term, prove me wrong when it's time

(01:02:27):
to vote. Until then, you're going to hear my mother
fucking words. You're gonna hear I told you so, you're
gonna you're going to hear I am mad because you
know what, all that intensity and all that other bullshit,
you have, your intensity left, My intensity stay the mother
fucking same. I was mad before, and bitch, i'm mad afterwards.
Your anger was temporary. My anger was is subscribed in

(01:02:50):
my heart. It's written in the core of my mother
fucking soul. And that's something that you can outlast because
you don't stand for a mother fucking thing.

Speaker 2 (01:03:01):
All right, well, I think mission accomplished. We talked about politics.

Speaker 3 (01:03:05):
We clearly are mad, so let's move into something else.

Speaker 1 (01:03:10):
Uh.

Speaker 3 (01:03:12):
I don't even know what segment to go to after that.
It's pretty pretty bleak out this bitch. Let's see.

Speaker 2 (01:03:20):
You know, maybe we're doing gender war that tends to
shake things up a little bit. People like the gender
wars as a palate cleanser.

Speaker 6 (01:03:29):
Here we go.

Speaker 4 (01:03:32):
Going on outside, went on outside?

Speaker 3 (01:03:48):
All right?

Speaker 2 (01:03:49):
Let me let me know if y'all can hear this audio,
because you know, sometimes we have issues with this, but
it just says a for originality as a caption that
disrespected the is thg is who is who put the
video on Twitter? Forty five seconds long and it's from
TikTok originally, and y'all, the caption says, she brought her.

Speaker 3 (01:04:13):
Kids on a date and expected me to pay for them. Okay,
we all on the same page. What's happening? Okay, I'm
gonna start playing it, y'all. Let me know if you
can't hear the sound.

Speaker 8 (01:04:26):
Y'all want you all to tell me if I'm in
the wrong, because I agree to say this lady out
for her birthday, but she bought her kids with her
two kids now and the baby.

Speaker 3 (01:04:39):
Hold up what you mean and a baby?

Speaker 1 (01:04:41):
It's two kids in like a small infant one. Oh
is that another adult or that's him holding I.

Speaker 3 (01:04:46):
Think that's him holding the baby.

Speaker 1 (01:04:48):
Oh okay, okay, I have to say.

Speaker 3 (01:04:50):
That looks like in your hand, that's not the phone
the baby.

Speaker 1 (01:04:53):
I'm with you now, so it.

Speaker 2 (01:04:58):
Now he did show us her and the kids. Shout
out to this innocent kid whose face is all of
it in.

Speaker 1 (01:05:04):
Right, It's like I'm here because Mama said I had to.

Speaker 3 (01:05:06):
Come now contact clue.

Speaker 2 (01:05:08):
The uh TikTok account is called at Hayes Family TV,
which makes me feel like this is their shared family
account and he's clearly faking this for engagement.

Speaker 3 (01:05:22):
I don't even like they got a long way to
go to make me believe this.

Speaker 8 (01:05:26):
Right, this lady out for her birthday, but she bought
her kids with her two kids, and she expect from
me to pay for the kids to it. I'm like,
I ain't even agree to that. I agree to take
you out, then you just gonna pay. You're gonna bring
your kids for me to pay for them. And it's like,
do you get like a good reason why I should

(01:05:47):
even do that?

Speaker 2 (01:05:47):
Though?

Speaker 1 (01:05:48):
Okay, first of all, you're married.

Speaker 3 (01:05:51):
Yeah, this is okay, that's hilarious. This is they're making
fun of the gender wars. I think they're clearly in
on it. They know that it's bullshit.

Speaker 1 (01:06:05):
Yes, that's hilarious. Now this is just like a spoof.

Speaker 3 (01:06:08):
Yeah, if anything, that's adorable.

Speaker 1 (01:06:11):
We're married, Yeah, and we're married eleven years. These kids
are ours, yours.

Speaker 3 (01:06:19):
It's its own kids, all right.

Speaker 1 (01:06:23):
That's a good point.

Speaker 9 (01:06:24):
I forget about this.

Speaker 3 (01:06:26):
I forgot about that zero that was zero.

Speaker 1 (01:06:36):
H hilarious. I am not offended at all. They will
not be they will not be worn over this.

Speaker 2 (01:06:43):
Yeah, it's a zero because they they're in on it,
and I just can't see Bravo.

Speaker 3 (01:06:49):
Anyone that's in the chat.

Speaker 2 (01:06:50):
Trying to like fight over is just a piece of shit,
Like you gotta really really just be a dummy to
be like that.

Speaker 3 (01:06:56):
I'm gonna fight anyway.

Speaker 1 (01:06:57):
Hilarious, that was so funny.

Speaker 2 (01:07:01):
Take a vow that was fucking wow, like phenomenal. What
a great palate cleanser too. Honestly, I didn't even know
that's how that was gonna go, and I'm so glad
that that's how it went, because damn that we needed
that ship. Okay, it's it's one of them days. One
of them days. All right, let's see do something else

(01:07:23):
kind of fun or whatever, you know, Let's do some
white people news. Okay, I know people love to see
what the whites are into. Hopefully it'll be a little
more upbeat than you know that. Ain't we lucky we
got them ship? We were just talking about, all right,

(01:08:00):
white people news. Uh, Bobby Altaf who.

Speaker 1 (01:08:07):
Actor?

Speaker 2 (01:08:08):
No, I don't know if she's an actress or not,
but I know she's a podcaster, okay, and she's the
podcaster you may know from doing all the like she
does a lot of the dead pan like review interviews
where she you know, black people know her because the
black interviews, but they think she only picks on black
people and that's not true.

Speaker 1 (01:08:28):
We talked about her before then.

Speaker 2 (01:08:30):
Yes, she actually is awkward. That's her brand, that awkward whiteness.
And she brings on all kinds of people that she'll
bring Scar Joe on and be like, oh so you like, uh,
what like do movies or something.

Speaker 3 (01:08:42):
You know that kind of shit.

Speaker 2 (01:08:43):
Well, she's ending her her podcast, The Really Good Podcast.
After just over two years of dead paying interviews, viral moments,
and a whilely unpredictable for Matt, Bobby Altaf has officially
signed off from The Real Good The Really Good Podcast.
She confirmed the end during her final episode, stepping in
front of the mic dressed in black guys, I don't

(01:09:03):
think there's any really good.

Speaker 3 (01:09:05):
Way to say, but this is the last episode, she shared.

Speaker 2 (01:09:07):
Standing beside her sister Lexi, She sang an off key
Lujah to close things out. Her unconventional style of the
podcast rides fast host of major names like Drake, Scarlett
Johansson and Shack. Her infamous Drake interview, filmed in Bed,
racked up over a billion views. When asked how she
scored it, she said, she said, I simply reached out.
She reflected, this podcast started off with just a girl with.

Speaker 3 (01:09:28):
A dream to make more money. It has been a
dream every second of it. Uh So we don't know
what's coming next for her. But you know, the whites,
I know they love her.

Speaker 1 (01:09:37):
Day day they dude, I'm just sorry. I could see
that just being a lot like well people fit to realize.
People think when you quote unquote blow up like that,
you're prepared. You're not always prepared. There's no instruct She.

Speaker 3 (01:09:49):
Got divorced and stuff.

Speaker 2 (01:09:50):
During the middle of that, there was of course a
ton of like the negative stuff that people thought about her,
and then there was like rumors that she was like
sleeping with people and shit. It was it was you know,
I can see being at the center of that.

Speaker 1 (01:10:03):
Yeah, just being like I'm I'm okay with this, like and.

Speaker 3 (01:10:08):
It's also just we're in a weird place where like.

Speaker 2 (01:10:12):
I don't I don't want to say anything disrespectful for
her necessarily, but what is your talent. Really it's awkward,
dead paying interview comedy kind of And it's like I
can see feeling like there's a limit to what she
can and can't do. She may have other aspirations. That's

(01:10:33):
true too, but it would be out of character. Maybe
she wants to be an actress or maybe she just
had And my guess is someone like this has agents.

Speaker 3 (01:10:40):
And because when you make the kind of money and get.

Speaker 2 (01:10:42):
The kind of viral fame that she got, you got
a team, Like you're not just hopping off the podcast
and and and that's it.

Speaker 3 (01:10:50):
It's probably some more shit.

Speaker 1 (01:10:51):
Y'all can see her somewhere else, whatever her other endifference are.

Speaker 2 (01:10:56):
Hogan died, uh And so now all his information is
coming out and his estrange, his rift with his daughter
is coming like, more information is coming out about that because.

Speaker 3 (01:11:10):
We all know Brooke Hogan his daughter is.

Speaker 2 (01:11:15):
Who is the woman that he was talking about when
he was filmed without his knowledge on that sex tape
where he was having sex with his friend's wife. Bubba
the Love Sponge was like, hey, you want to fuck
my wife? Hulk Hogan said, sure, why not? And since
I'm in here, might as well reveal some of my
innermost racist thoughts since I'm not being recorded, And so

(01:11:38):
he told the dude like he didn't want his daughter
dating a black person, but he said the N word instead,
and it was like, it'd be different if it was
a rich N word that played like eight feet tall
to play basketball, but like this just a regular black
person that I'm supposed to just act like a's a
regular human.

Speaker 3 (01:11:56):
No regular, it's for white people.

Speaker 2 (01:11:58):
You can date a regular white man, but he better
be a rich black And he says, you know, I
think we're all a little racist. And Brooke did I
believe ultimately stick beside her father in that wake of that.

Speaker 3 (01:12:09):
I don't know that.

Speaker 2 (01:12:10):
It was like people try to trace it back to
that moment and be like, Brooke Hogan, she's a real
stand up person. She like stopped fucking with her family
or because Hulk Hogan was racist, But that's actually not
how it went. It took years before this relationship actually deteriorated.
And the reason it deteriorated was because of his treatment

(01:12:32):
of her after this, and he remarried and people thought
it was his new wife maybe that made them not work,
But no, that's not that. It's not even the new wife,
and he just like literally just married his new wife
in twenty twenty.

Speaker 1 (01:12:49):
Three, so that's real recent.

Speaker 2 (01:12:51):
Yeah, and they're like Brooke Hogan's like, we've been a
strange since before that she had he had allegedly refused
to meet Brook Hogan's before he died.

Speaker 3 (01:13:03):
Like that's that's some old school beat. Her husband, who
I believe was a.

Speaker 2 (01:13:08):
Former hockey player or something, Steven Oleski Alexi, I think
his name, he said, I sent I sent text message
once again to kind of gauge where he was at,
but there was no interest in basically reconciling. Nick offered
to bring him to our house to meet the kids,
but it never happened.

Speaker 3 (01:13:25):
That Rith had been going for years.

Speaker 2 (01:13:27):
After his death, critics questioned the absence for WWE tributes.
Brooke responded via Instagram story saying at WWE to not
extended an invite following his passion from a heart attack.
She shared a heartfelt message, I know in my heart
I did everything I could. He knew I would run
through a burning building for him. He knows how deeply,
how hard, how purely I loved him. I'm at peace
knowing this all ever wanted from my father was loved.

(01:13:49):
I understand deep connection and for a few special years
I had that my world has forever changed. And I'll
say this too, man, and I felt the same way
with Diddy's kids. I don't know what the fuck you did, right.
I literally can't imagine the head trip and how long
it takes to truly undo this programming, because this person

(01:14:12):
is one of the first people you meet on Earth,
and they have all these formulative, formative years before you've
developed any of the morality and lessons and knowledge and
wisdom that comes with living life, and they're responsible for
passing it on to you at first, so.

Speaker 3 (01:14:30):
Even that original shit you learned is from them.

Speaker 2 (01:14:34):
And then as you get older and realize this is
a horrible person, how do you break that mental programming
of this is the person that fed me, burnt me,
walked me.

Speaker 3 (01:14:48):
Yeah, you gotta undo that? Was it all bad? It
was all bad?

Speaker 1 (01:14:51):
No, someone's good, you know.

Speaker 2 (01:14:53):
And I know people can be very harsh on this
because they're strangers and shit. But for me parasocially, I
remember going through this with listening to Keith and the
Girl and Keith Maley's friend friend of the show. He
has a father that's you know, he wrote a book
about him, like literally the dad Emails.

Speaker 3 (01:15:13):
Look it up.

Speaker 2 (01:15:14):
It's a great book. It's very funny. But uh, and
he came on here, he did an episode about it.
We interviewed him about it, and in the dad Emails
he talks about like.

Speaker 3 (01:15:27):
All this horrible shit. His dad has been his whole
fucking life.

Speaker 2 (01:15:31):
But when he started that podcast, Keithing girl, Uh, I
remember listening from near.

Speaker 3 (01:15:37):
The beginning, and it took him a while to even
accept like, fuck, I was abused growing up.

Speaker 2 (01:15:43):
Yeah, it takes wait a minute, and like people were
telling him that as he told these stories, but like
because it's normal to you, there's some weird mental shit
these motherfuckers do to you as a kid, and shit
to where you're like, nah, nah, I can't be that
not real abuses blank whatever, And it's like, well you
were hit no, I guess no, but that well then

(01:16:06):
he made you do this, and it's like slowly people
wake up.

Speaker 3 (01:16:09):
So I just I mostly feel bad for the people.

Speaker 2 (01:16:13):
I don't feel this like anger at them too, Like
prooor Hogan, why are you writing a tribute to your racist,
fucking dad. I'm like, oh god, that must suck because
when h co Hogan died, to me, a racist just
left the earth.

Speaker 3 (01:16:25):
That's all that happened.

Speaker 1 (01:16:26):
But for her didn't have a personal relationship with him.

Speaker 2 (01:16:29):
Yeah, the man that got because I think she wrestled
for a bit too, Like yeah, it's you know, the
reality show shit, I can't imagine, you know, the pain
of not wanting to see and it's him not wanting
to see her kids.

Speaker 3 (01:16:41):
And she had white kids.

Speaker 2 (01:16:43):
For the record, her husband's white. So it's like, I
don't know, he just seemed like a toxic, fucked up
person and I know white people and the Dead Laboratory
show been walking around talking about how it's like complicated
with his legacy. It ain't complicated. Shit is as complicated
as you want it to be. This time, I get
there's some people where.

Speaker 3 (01:17:03):
It is complicated. This one wasn't complicated.

Speaker 1 (01:17:05):
And I used to love him as a child, like
before all these other things happened. And a lot of times,
like a lot of celebrities, people can be celebrities that
can bring joy in your life and still be horrible
ass human beings, right, And people can't decipher and separate that,
and they when things like that happen. I get it
where it dims and it almost kills the pre the

(01:17:27):
joy that you had at one period of time, but
also trying to fund depend on what it is. Everybody
makes these compromises. People think they don't, but everybody has lines.
They draw various different places and for some people people
go well. I enjoyed Holking for what he was while
he was wrestling, but he still can also be a
racist piece of shit. And I could say that too.

Speaker 2 (01:17:46):
He could both and he had a big impact on Karen.
I remember when I met Karen, she was wearing like
these yellow T shirts with no.

Speaker 3 (01:17:53):
Sleeves ripping them.

Speaker 2 (01:17:56):
One of the reasons that she has those huge pythons,
that's what she collar arm muscles is because she used
to eat her vitamins and prayer, say her prayers, brother,
and uh that you know she I am a.

Speaker 1 (01:18:09):
Real love American American dad heard her when when when
he turned out to be a piece of ship.

Speaker 2 (01:18:16):
Mariah carried fifty six puts on a leggy display and
four figure, four figure hugging outfits as she headlines brighton Pride.

Speaker 1 (01:18:28):
Come on through. I know you've got pictures.

Speaker 2 (01:18:29):
Of of course, she wild fans On Saturday, she took
to the stage for her much anticipated headline slot at
Brighton Pride. The superstar singer fifty six put on a
leggy display and four figure hugging outfits. It's for we're
reading four figures, so that's four number, four figure hugging outfits.

(01:18:52):
Because I don't know, because we just talked about wrestling,
but I keep hearing figure four in my fucking brain.
She glittered in a silver gradient. Well, come on, she
loves glitter everything.

Speaker 1 (01:19:02):
She I don't think she had an album called glitter.

Speaker 3 (01:19:04):
Yeah, she don't own shit that don't glitter.

Speaker 2 (01:19:07):
Okay, you may be sparkling, you, Dave, Mariah Carey, you
just got to deal with the glitter that come with it.

Speaker 1 (01:19:12):
Yes, it's pre glittered.

Speaker 2 (01:19:14):
She glittered in a silver graded a dress that she
paired with a del Monte pink jacket and silver boots
before changing to blue and turqoise number that kept their
legs on full display. Her package set list included hits
like Vision of Love and Heroes As she gave the
Longer Way to performance that was initially scheduled for twenty twenty,

(01:19:34):
but was canceled because of the COVID pandemic. She later wrote,
damn they got that five years later. Wow, she really
was committed to do and making sure she did that.
She later wrote he Instagram, thank you so much Brighton
Pride for having me tonight. A special heartfelt thank you
to the LGBTQ plus community for your ongoing support.

Speaker 3 (01:19:52):
I will always be there for you. Love MC.

Speaker 1 (01:19:55):
She looks good.

Speaker 3 (01:19:56):
She always looked good.

Speaker 2 (01:19:57):
Man, Man, that's a fine woman. I'll never forget jersey
dress at the motherfucking Wizards. Uh the Wizards jersey dress
at the NBA All Star Game that.

Speaker 3 (01:20:09):
Changed my life. I was like, oh my god, I
love women.

Speaker 1 (01:20:15):
I will love for women.

Speaker 2 (01:20:19):
She took the offortunity to show and support for the
trans community by embellishing a pink jacket with the phrase
protect the Dolls. She elsewhere in the performance, she's stunned
in a more loosely fitted gold dress and thigh high boots.
She also changed to a longer black dress.

Speaker 1 (01:20:36):
I have a question, to protect the dolls? That like
a phrase or something.

Speaker 2 (01:20:39):
Okay, it's a sluggan to protect trans kids, protect trans people.

Speaker 1 (01:20:43):
Okay, Okay, I want to be sure. I understand I
thought that what it was, but I was like, let
me ask in case of me something else.

Speaker 2 (01:20:48):
No, No, it's always good to ask, and I didn't
take offense to you asking for clarification.

Speaker 1 (01:20:53):
Thank you.

Speaker 2 (01:20:55):
Elsewhere in the performance from r Stunned in a more
loosely fitted gold dress and thi high boots, we also
change it to a longer black dress and open toe
glittery hill high heels for a more upmarket glimmers look.

Speaker 3 (01:21:06):
Fans were quick to praise the.

Speaker 2 (01:21:07):
Performance in Riah Carreri's Instagram, writing, what an amazing performance
vocals on point me me, I have no words to
describe this night. Best two hours of my life. Thank you, Mariah.
You don't know how much love how much you and
your songs mean to me.

Speaker 3 (01:21:19):
Love you. You are perfect.

Speaker 2 (01:21:21):
Protect the dolls, protect the dollars on that jacket. So yeah,
she was out here giving it to him, give them
high pitched notes and all that stuff that's to protect
the dolls jacket.

Speaker 1 (01:21:30):
Oh that's adorable.

Speaker 2 (01:21:32):
Yeah, So congratsta to her and everybody that got the
witness that performance. We love to see Mariah here flourishing.

Speaker 3 (01:21:41):
She's come a long way.

Speaker 1 (01:21:43):
You don't get that, diva.

Speaker 3 (01:21:44):
Yeah, all right? And then oh you know what.

Speaker 2 (01:21:49):
Actually this is a momentous occasion. I don't know them
to get a chance to play this song. But maybe
Rod needs some ride changes mind music.

Speaker 1 (01:21:57):
Like shit, we.

Speaker 3 (01:22:03):
Might changes changes, rid changes, rid changes changes.

Speaker 1 (01:22:12):
Mind might need every single time that my mind is changing,
d changes, my dad.

Speaker 2 (01:22:22):
Might ch so yesterday, like and I did say on
the show live, like, hey, I'm not fully finished with
these thoughts.

Speaker 3 (01:22:30):
I fleshing this out and we went on a long tangent.

Speaker 2 (01:22:33):
And I normally try to bring more things I feel
more solid about than then just thinking out loud on
the microphone doesn't happen all the way all the time,
but I try to be like, Okay, I'm sure this
is how I feel. But I was like talking about
like some of the general scuttle butt of like the

(01:22:54):
online like and I still do feel that the online
social media, like con the rage thing is it's something.

Speaker 1 (01:23:03):
It's not it's something.

Speaker 2 (01:23:05):
It's definitely fucking us up and we're not living in
the same realities anymore. But in all fairness, I lucked
in the Sydney Sweeny reaction to that. I was like, man,
I think people might be reaching on the Sydney Swinny
thing too, Like I just and it's not necessarily that
there there's no cause to be to find fault in

(01:23:28):
her advertising. It's just that this shit rising to like
honestly getting as much or more attention than shit.

Speaker 3 (01:23:35):
That is really like laws and stuff.

Speaker 2 (01:23:40):
That feels like we're doing that because it's easier than
talking about real stuff. Yes, like like you know, conservatives
boycott it is you know it's conservatives boycott beer because
a trans person got a thirty second ad or some shit,
And You're like, these fuckers I have lost their minds,

(01:24:01):
Like why do they even care this much? Let's say
you do have a problem with trans people, why are
you trying to destroy bud Light over this shit?

Speaker 3 (01:24:08):
This is crazy you got So now we have that.

Speaker 2 (01:24:11):
With American ingles, like let's destory American ego whatever, which
I don't give American ego any dollars.

Speaker 3 (01:24:16):
So I don't really have much to do to add
to this.

Speaker 2 (01:24:19):
But in all fairness, I said that, and I went
to watch the ad, and I'll play the ad for
all of us so we can see it together.

Speaker 1 (01:24:30):
I've never seen it, right, I went to watch the ad.

Speaker 3 (01:24:33):
Here's the ad. It's only thirty seconds.

Speaker 7 (01:24:36):
I'm not here to tell you to buy American egle chans,
and I definitely won't say that they're the most comfortable
Chance I've ever worn, or that they make your butt
look amazing.

Speaker 3 (01:24:49):
Why about I need to do that.

Speaker 7 (01:24:52):
But if you said that you want to buy the chance,
I'm not gonna stop you for us to. We're clear,
this is not me telling you it's by American Chance.

Speaker 3 (01:25:02):
This is not the right ad.

Speaker 4 (01:25:03):
This is uh.

Speaker 2 (01:25:04):
And it said sweeny Sidney Sweeney has great jeans. But
that's only one of them. It's a different one, multiple ones.

Speaker 3 (01:25:12):
Yeah, there's there's one.

Speaker 2 (01:25:14):
Where a guy's talking and he's like, Sidney Sweeney has
great jeans.

Speaker 3 (01:25:18):
Let me find that one. Uh, but it's yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:25:23):
So that ad is the one that seemed like it
got everybody pissed off, and it's so funny that they
don't wanna.

Speaker 3 (01:25:32):
Okay, maybe we'll do this. Okay, here we go. Oh wait,
I gotta share my screen again, right, jesus, here we go?
Boom back. All right, I think this might be it.

Speaker 6 (01:25:46):
It's still okay, Sidney's Sweeney has very keens.

Speaker 2 (01:25:58):
Okay, so there's multiple ads that slogan. Okay, that's one
of them that's still not the one that made everybody mad.

Speaker 3 (01:26:06):
H you know what, Twitter might be better.

Speaker 2 (01:26:08):
But there's one where she's talking to where she's like,
I got great genes and I and they've been passed down.

Speaker 3 (01:26:16):
Uh, and my genes are blue.

Speaker 2 (01:26:19):
And so the the argument not I don't want to
say argument, but the point they're trying to make is like,
it's not it's a play on the word genes.

Speaker 3 (01:26:30):
That's not just genes like J E.

Speaker 2 (01:26:34):
N S, but genes like genetics, and so people are like,
it's promoting this in this time where we're kind of
promoting this, we're dealing with a racist government, racist power structure,
resurgence of white nationalism. Why are you having an ad
talking about eugenics?

Speaker 3 (01:26:53):
Here we go.

Speaker 7 (01:26:54):
Gens are passed on from parents to offspring, often determining
traits like her color, personality, and even eye color.

Speaker 6 (01:27:04):
My chains are blue, City's tweety hatsburg keyns.

Speaker 2 (01:27:09):
So that's the that's the one that made people be like,
what that's it? Yes, that being said, I'm changing my mind.
I think I think people are right. I think it
is signaling towards that and the reason I think that
I mean, and it's not just because she registers a
Republican in twenty twenty four in Florida, which is what

(01:27:30):
that's like, of all the times, to decide to join
the Republican bandwagon.

Speaker 3 (01:27:34):
That's wold, but I think it's.

Speaker 2 (01:27:40):
It's rightfully dog whistling at something. And let's say, you're like, nah,
that's a stretch. Do you know who the people are
who are defending the AD and using the AD to say, like,
you liberals are being crazy?

Speaker 3 (01:27:55):
JD Vance Fox News. So they picked up the.

Speaker 1 (01:28:00):
Okay oka Like a lot of times, when you look
and you be like who is defending you? You go, oh, okay,
I might be on the wrong side.

Speaker 2 (01:28:08):
And the reason I have to bring it up, I
think is that I said last year, and I'm trying
to stay more on the post of this. So much
of the fight that we're experiencing in America is not
one of facts and not one of overt stuff. A
lot of it is just culture war narratives and signaling.

(01:28:32):
And so when you see people like JD. Van's being
like great job, Democrats, First of all, Democrats don't have
a problem with this. I haven't seen a single Democratic
politician bring this up. So it's not a Democrat thing, Okay,
So why are Republicans and white nationalists latching on this
ad then and saying it's the Democrats and the liberals

(01:28:53):
and the progressives who are upset with Sidney Sweeney, who
they've decided is an avatar for like their version of
white supremacy. She's a very attractive, young white lady with
blond hair and blue eyes, which they whether And I'm
not saying this with her consent.

Speaker 3 (01:29:07):
I don't know this is now.

Speaker 1 (01:29:09):
They just pick avatar.

Speaker 3 (01:29:10):
I understand what most people would do with a segment
like this. This is not what we're doing. I don't
know this woman. I don't really know what her politics are.

Speaker 2 (01:29:18):
I have some reasonable assumptions I could make, I'm not
even making them right now. What I am saying is
they have decided she's an avatar, and much like when
they did this with Taylor Swift, and Taylor Swift was
under the management of her father at the time, and
it wasn't until she got from under her father's management
that she started being like, man, fuck what y'all talking vocal? Yes,

(01:29:41):
I'm liberal, I'm a Democrat. I'm going to tell my
people to vote for liberals. I'm pro LGBTQ. Fuck y'all
and fuck everything y'all stand for right. Essentially was her
her music and her voice. I'm not saying, you know,
obviously her her boyfriend works with a what I would
imagine being a Trump supporter at work in football, So

(01:30:03):
who knows how that works.

Speaker 3 (01:30:04):
But my point being, Sidney Swingeing may or may not
be okay with this. I don't know.

Speaker 2 (01:30:12):
She may have intended it, she may not. I'm sure
there was many drafts of this commercial and this campaign.

Speaker 1 (01:30:17):
She played like fourteen cuts of it.

Speaker 2 (01:30:19):
Yeah, it's but to me, that's that tells you how
this wasn't an unintentional decision, is my point.

Speaker 1 (01:30:26):
Oh, okay, you can't.

Speaker 2 (01:30:28):
You don't accidentally make fourteen commercials with this is the branding,
and go.

Speaker 1 (01:30:33):
What on earth?

Speaker 3 (01:30:34):
How's everybody fucking getting that out of it?

Speaker 1 (01:30:36):
That's too many cuts.

Speaker 2 (01:30:37):
I'm not gonna go as deep as other people into
the nauseism and shit. I don't because mostly because I
don't understand it. I don't have that education to be
telling y'all this is Nazi imagery and shit, and maybe
that is the deep end for me, where I'm like,
I wouldn't go that far, but I do take it back,
I really do. I changed my mind once I looked
at that specific ad because I hadn't seen that one

(01:30:59):
that would her talking about my jeans are blue and shit.
I had seen some of the other ones, and I
was like, oh, I guess, like, you know, she has
great jeans. You know, I'm not telling you to buy
the jeans. I'm just saying they look you know, my
flat button looks great at them, and shit, like, okay, cool.

Speaker 3 (01:31:13):
She seemed like a whatever. It's like puney.

Speaker 2 (01:31:17):
Yes, you know it's not funny, but puney jeans and jeans,
and it's from a person that everyone thinks is super attractive.
But nah, seeing that particular one, yeah, I get why
people upset by that. So I would take that out
of my dissertation from yesterday and my like, I don't know, man,
I feel like people be kind of reaching, and that

(01:31:38):
one I'll take back and be like, so I changed
my mind.

Speaker 3 (01:31:41):
Guys, all right, all right, let's move on. That was
Rod changed his mind segment, Brandy brand New segment.

Speaker 1 (01:31:48):
Apparently, uh, you should because you'll never change your mind.

Speaker 3 (01:31:53):
According to these people, that hate the show, but keep listening.

Speaker 1 (01:31:58):
According to them, it's never happened before.

Speaker 3 (01:32:02):
All right, guess the race. It's time to guess the race.
It's time to race.

Speaker 6 (01:32:15):
It's time to catch the race.

Speaker 3 (01:32:18):
It's time to guess the race.

Speaker 2 (01:32:21):
All right, I guess the race. Time time for us
to be racist like Sidney Sweeney.

Speaker 1 (01:32:27):
Okay, down for us to talk about other people jeans.

Speaker 2 (01:32:33):
Okay, let's see what's going on over there. A rare
wine scammer, please guilty in Brooklyn to ninety nine million.

Speaker 1 (01:32:43):
Dollar God damn, what kind of wand was you in? Two?

Speaker 3 (01:32:48):
Okay, that's vintage for real.

Speaker 2 (01:32:51):
A ponzi schemer who misled his victims into thinking they
were giving loans to a wealthy wine to wealthy wine
lovers using their rare bottles as collateral, has admitted to
his role in the ninety nine million dollars ponzi scam
in Brooklyn federal courts.

Speaker 1 (01:33:05):
Oh so these were people who were wine collectors and
had like ones and were like giving their want Why oh,
I will be livid because you know some people have
ones that have literally been passed down for generations.

Speaker 2 (01:33:17):
Stephen Burton, sixty and his accomplished James Wellesley put the
lite to the Latin phrase in Vino Veritas, creating a
company called Bordeaux Sellers in twenty eleven and claiming they
could connect investors with high net worth individuals who owned
pricey wine collections but needed a quick loan of cash.
The targets of the scheme were promised repayment on their

(01:33:38):
loans with interest over twelve months, but their promises were
more vinegar than vintage. The rich wine owners were noting
more than a boozy mirage, and many of the specific
bottles of wine identified as collateral didn't exist instad. The
duor used the money from new investors to pay initial

(01:33:58):
investors the interest they were expecting. Burton admitted Thursday in
Brooklyn Federal Court that he pleaded guilty.

Speaker 3 (01:34:05):
There was no wine for some of those loans. There
was no wine. He played it guilty.

Speaker 2 (01:34:11):
He played guilty the wire fraud conspiracy and money laundering conspiracy.
He could face between twenty four to twenty nine years
in prison based on federal guidelines when he sentenced on
Juary six.

Speaker 1 (01:34:22):
That number just sounds so ridiculous. That got to be white.

Speaker 3 (01:34:25):
Aren't cares going with white?

Speaker 1 (01:34:27):
If you just said, ninety nine million of shri raka
or something like that. You know, just the stuff, the
stuff the black people drink, Crown roll. I'd have been like,
okay black.

Speaker 2 (01:34:40):
He pitched his wine his collateral business in twenty thirteen
in an interview with CNBC, saying he catered to people
with bad credit or other problems with banks who were
wine rich and cash for He told the station he
could provide twelve to eighteen months loan worth thirty five
percent of the market value to Wind and charge fifteen
percent a year interest, as well as a one percent

(01:35:00):
facility feed, passing twelve percent of the interest onto his investors.
We can offer these people along within twenty four hours.
I'm not a pawn broker. I'm a wine dealer, he
told his audience. He got the idea from an article
about a pawnbroker. He said, you know what, we can
do that with wine. So I aren't care going white.
Let's check the chat room.

Speaker 3 (01:35:21):
Classic ponzee scheme, La da da, I.

Speaker 1 (01:35:22):
Know he is.

Speaker 2 (01:35:23):
I know this is white folks, white riasling, white, shoder
nay fake payday.

Speaker 3 (01:35:29):
White. We don't drink hennessy white.

Speaker 2 (01:35:35):
All right, seemed like everyone went with white on this one,
and the correct answer is he was.

Speaker 3 (01:35:43):
He was white. Y'all got it right.

Speaker 1 (01:35:46):
I was about to say that they did that much
money with a nigga. I know something's wrong. Everybody would
have been checking checking his credentials.

Speaker 3 (01:35:59):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm with you. I don't think they
let a black get away with this.

Speaker 1 (01:36:05):
It had turned into ten dollars that had been like
where my money plus interest? So no, thank you. You're
definitely white.

Speaker 3 (01:36:12):
It's like even if it was a forty ounce, like, hey,
the fuck is going on over there? Buddy? Right, I
need my interests back on that dollar ninety nine?

Speaker 1 (01:36:21):
You sir?

Speaker 2 (01:36:22):
All right, Let's go to another one. Let's see how
about man accused of threatening Oh wait, no, I'll make
that the last one.

Speaker 3 (01:36:33):
Wendy's manager shoots and kills man arriving to take employee home.

Speaker 1 (01:36:39):
Oh was yourn A kidnapped the employe? What happened?

Speaker 2 (01:36:44):
A Wendy's manager in Tennessee is accused of shooting and
killing another man at the fight between them broke out
at one of the fast food Chained locations in Memphis.
Darrel Browers, thirty seven, has been charged the first degree
murder According to court records, he's in Shelby out of
jail under no bond. The fight is said to have
broken out on Monday because an employee wanted to leave

(01:37:05):
her shift early.

Speaker 3 (01:37:06):
Now that's crazy.

Speaker 2 (01:37:07):
We got a managers sending people home early, and then
then the manager get killed for sending them home early.
Now we got an employee who wants to leave early,
and the manager is killing shooting people that come.

Speaker 3 (01:37:22):
To pick her up. Can't win for losing, right.

Speaker 2 (01:37:27):
The Memphis Police Department said it received a call at
five to twenty pm by the disturbance. It was Bowers
who made the call, that's the shooter and the manager.
As officers were on their way to the scene, that
received additional reports that a shot had been fired and
a person was hit. The out of reporter police Arriderportly
found Stephen Shepherd in the Windy's parking lot with a

(01:37:48):
gunshot wound to a stomach.

Speaker 3 (01:37:49):
He was hospitalized and later died, so he killed him.

Speaker 2 (01:37:52):
Court documents alleged Bowers is the one who shot Shepherd
with a bell scre screening from form for the suspect,
claiming he shot and killed the victor. Water two were
fighting the employee who wanted to leave her shift early,
called Shepard to pick her up after Bowers threatened to
slap her.

Speaker 3 (01:38:09):
That's a lot of pressure at work.

Speaker 1 (01:38:11):
I go home too.

Speaker 3 (01:38:13):
I gotta go home early.

Speaker 2 (01:38:14):
I will slap the shit out of you. Okay, I'm
gonna call my daddy. Sometime after Shepard a ride, the
two men started fighting. The video posted social media show
parts of the violent confrontation. Shevard can be seen throwing
a punch at a man said to be Bowers before byers. Bowers,
clad in a classic red shirt worn by Wendy's workers
so you can't see the blood, appeared to hold his
own his two clasps hands together in front of him,

(01:38:36):
shortly before a gun shot is heard.

Speaker 3 (01:38:38):
The man in red then walks.

Speaker 2 (01:38:40):
Over to the gun shot victim and appears to slap
him in the face as he laid down. He did
say he was gonna slap somebody, though he did. Yeah, okay,
promises made promises, kept kept that same energy.

Speaker 3 (01:38:53):
The person who got shot.

Speaker 2 (01:38:54):
He ended up swinging on the manager on the store,
and the manager pulled out his gun and shot.

Speaker 1 (01:38:58):
Well.

Speaker 2 (01:38:58):
He already had his gun in his hand when he
first got shot. He was screaming, but after a minute
he just stopped moving. The victim and the suspect knew
each other. Bowers Is said that have not resisted the
rest and admitted to being the one fire to shot Bowers.

Speaker 3 (01:39:11):
The schedule up here in Quart. On Wednesday, a spokesperson
for Wendy said.

Speaker 2 (01:39:17):
The restaurants followed strict safety protocols, including the escalation and
we have a zero tolerance policy on weapons. Karen, guess
the race, No bond black, No bond black, says Karen.

Speaker 3 (01:39:32):
For Darrel Bowers to'll see what the chat room believes.
Bringing Black pop bringing Black Popeye's behavior to Wendy's.

Speaker 1 (01:39:40):
Oh manious love.

Speaker 3 (01:39:42):
Them shootings at Popeyes. Uh, No one else is guessing.
That's probably a slight delayer or something. I think you
know how it is. H yah, I'm just unplugging something.

Speaker 2 (01:39:56):
Dave would never black the character from the TV show
Smoke Black.

Speaker 3 (01:40:01):
Oh come, you goot to go home early? You shift
not even done black. The correct answer is black.

Speaker 2 (01:40:12):
Everyone got it right. I feel like Memphis was the
real giveaway. Mm hmmm, Memphis be having.

Speaker 1 (01:40:27):
A type he does it's Memphis, man, Memphis ain't nothing to.

Speaker 2 (01:40:32):
Fuck with is he trying to be mister Wendy's Why
do you care so much and then afford to be
a person you knew that's crazy? All right, let's get
to the last one. Let me go to the bonus.
Rol caring is two for two. Yay?

Speaker 1 (01:40:53):
Why I am racist? Autonizing racist about anybody or anything
in my life? How can I call them niggas? Just
call them niggas? This tar to go, go change wearing
Fried Chicken.

Speaker 2 (01:41:12):
And the Skitties, Monkey Boon, Big Guys, rubber high jumping,
speed chucking, three hundred and sixty degree.

Speaker 1 (01:41:21):
Basketball, Cape GIRARDA man is out on Oh okay, it
started to play and then an ad popped up, So
let's give this a ten.

Speaker 9 (01:41:30):
Seconds bond after allegedly threatening all.

Speaker 3 (01:41:32):
Here we go and you let me know. If y'all
can't hear this in the chap, you should be able to.

Speaker 1 (01:41:36):
Say, Cape Girardi.

Speaker 9 (01:41:37):
Man is out on bond after allegedly threatening staff at
a local hotel over the weekend. Forty one year old
land and Red is charged with unlawful use of a weapon.
It all began when investigators say Reid cursed at a
hotel worker and threatened to harm a supervisor on Saturday.
According to a probable cause statement, Read was carrying a
Civil War style sword and making threats. He was released

(01:41:58):
from the Cape County jail this morning. He is scheduled
to be in court on Thursday.

Speaker 3 (01:42:03):
That's right.

Speaker 2 (01:42:04):
This guess the race is also sword ratchetness at the
same time, so we are two for one. Yeah, all right, car,

(01:42:31):
guess the race of mister.

Speaker 1 (01:42:32):
Landon Red London Red is white. I was thinking black
because of the behavior, but then they turned around they
said Civil War style sword and I was like, I
have seen people do like the reenactment, like in their costumes,
and none of them are black.

Speaker 3 (01:42:49):
I do wonder, and there has to be some black people.
There has to be some.

Speaker 2 (01:42:54):
Black people that own Civil War memorabilia, but I don't
wonder with who they are.

Speaker 1 (01:42:58):
I've never met one, and last time I checked, we
don't be out here doing no reenactments.

Speaker 3 (01:43:03):
Let's see what the chat room says. Fought for the
South white. It's smart.

Speaker 1 (01:43:12):
They didn't say which side to sow and belong to,
so who knows Hulk Hogan's racist fave white.

Speaker 3 (01:43:18):
My granddaddy fought for this hotel's confederacy white.

Speaker 1 (01:43:22):
That's hilarious.

Speaker 2 (01:43:24):
Oh my god, the correct as is white. Even having
that on deck as an option is insane.

Speaker 1 (01:43:38):
Yes, it is.

Speaker 2 (01:43:40):
You just got Civil War era swords that you use
to handle your disputes on what what are you?

Speaker 3 (01:43:46):
What is in eighteen eighty five? What are you doing?

Speaker 1 (01:43:48):
Right? Well?

Speaker 3 (01:43:50):
That's it. That's so ratchet. For one, Yeah, I feel
like we got we got it all.

Speaker 1 (01:43:55):
Yeah, like miss Mussel after reddit, just just just just
gotta hanging on your hip?

Speaker 3 (01:44:00):
Did you unsheathed?

Speaker 1 (01:44:01):
Did you have we?

Speaker 2 (01:44:02):
Did it?

Speaker 1 (01:44:02):
Have that? Little boys? And you know what the sund
effects you're in your full Confederate grades, Like what were
your when it hits?

Speaker 3 (01:44:10):
Do you keep it in the trunk in case?

Speaker 2 (01:44:11):
You just keep that thing on your case of Civil
War reenactment breakout any time?

Speaker 1 (01:44:16):
Is it?

Speaker 2 (01:44:16):
Like how I used to keep my basketball clothes in
my trunk of my car, Like in case of game breakout,
I got my shoes and my socks and my shorts.

Speaker 3 (01:44:23):
Let's fucking get it done.

Speaker 2 (01:44:25):
But he just do that with Civil War mem rebellion, like,
don't make me pull out the musket up in this bitch.
We get to reenacting, Okay, all right, y'all.

Speaker 1 (01:44:34):
That's it.

Speaker 3 (01:44:34):
We'll be back throughout the week until next time.

Speaker 1 (01:44:37):
I love it, I love you too.
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