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August 10, 2025 91 mins

Rod and Karen banter about fighting about movies on Twitter and how to mourn a porn star. Then they discuss a man who shot up the CDC, immigration corner, Public Broadcasting cuts, Trump fires job data czar after report shows original job reports was wrong, TX redistricting fight, Marc Maron calls out comedians for their role in authoritarianism, Jimmy Fallon pals around with Gutfeld, Gender Wars, robber wears same clothes on different robberies, cocaine found in elementary, Florida man busted with three wives and sword ratchetness.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
To the Black Guy Who Tips podcast. I listen because
Rod and Karen are hot. Hey, welcome to another episode
of the Blackoutists podcast. I'm your host. Rod joined us
always with my co host, and we are live on
a Sunday afternoon. Ready to do some podcasts and find
us everywhere that you find podcasts. The official weapon of

(00:25):
the show is voting chair and the unofficial sport pulletball Extreme.
Don't forget to sign up for our Patreon if you're
having signed up. If you're not premium already, it's another option,
you can go premium. We just put out shows for
the people that are premium over there. So you guys
got a new nerd off, new balls Deep, new pregame,

(00:48):
new spoil movie review, and yeah, and then there's also
people that just want to do just a tip five
dollars a month and you can just get you know,
one episode extra a weeks ran I was picked. And
then the other thing that you can get there is
we email you or we sitting out a little post

(01:08):
there that lets you know when we're about to do
one of these live shows that are behind the paywall.
So like if you want to watch us do balls
D sports with justin see all the behind the scenes.
You want to watch us do pre game, you want
to watch us do the nerd Off, you can watch
it because you know, there's the video elements to these
podcasts as well, meaning like when we do the nerd Off,
I actually play the video of the video games that

(01:29):
we're talking about when we're reviewing them and saying how
we you know, are like this. I like that. So
you know, if you want a more interactive experience with
a chat room, you know, you can get behind the
paywall and experience that with us. Yes, all right, uh
let's see what I was I gonna say, lewis five
star reviews and you get extra commercials during the feedback episodes,

(01:50):
which I'm gonna get my money one way or the.

Speaker 2 (01:52):
Other, you know, So don't forget September a second, which
is our anniversary, is also the black guy who Tips day.
So I'm telling you in advance so you can go
ahead and get your T shirt, your mug, the girl,
whatever it is that you're gonna get so you can
represent that day. People put stuff online, they tag us,

(02:13):
and we just re reshare it online. It could be
old shirt, it could be a new shirt. Or whatever.
You know, we do live shows. A lot of people
wear our swag to the live shows and things like that.
And you know, for some people, you know that you've
been willing to represent us in various different ways. This
is a way, a great way for you to show
your support.

Speaker 1 (02:31):
All right, do you have any banter? I don't think
I really. Let me check this, see if I do.
Oh yeah, I guess I do got some banter. All right,
here we go. Do you have any Do you have any?

(02:54):
Do you have any banter? Anter? An banter? Answer? Do
you have any banters? Talk to me? Do you have
any banter? I only have a couple of quick things.

(03:16):
The first one is, I, you know, I've been going
to the movies. We didn't going to the movies a
lot lately, and I didn't go this week because the
movies that came out I wasn't that interested in. And
the only one that I would have went to see
was Weapons, which is apparently about a bunch of kids
in the town go missing except for one at two

(03:37):
seventeen am.

Speaker 2 (03:39):
I wasn't going to see that one.

Speaker 1 (03:40):
I know, I know it's about me. I know you
this is my banter, and I know you scared like
most black people, but I was thinking about going to
see it, And the only reasons I didn't go see
it is because everybody was arguing on my film Twitter,
Because like Twitter, the algorithm is, you know, I'm trying

(04:01):
to train my Twitter algorithm to show me shit that
I actually want to see, and so there's a few
safe spaces, but if you think about it, most of
the algorithm is going to show me the most contentious,
like what's the most likely thing to get a response?
So apparently it decided this week that I should see
everybody arguing over weapons. And the argument was essentially it

(04:26):
was from a bunch of people that I don't know.
It felt like they were being a bit pretentious or whatever,
but they were saying, like, people are upset because this movie.
They're saying it doesn't have a real plot and it
doesn't make sense. And then they were being real snared
with those people, like the movie doesn't need to make sense,
it's about the feeling and da da da da, And

(04:49):
then the other people were going back being like, this
movie has no plot, it doesn't make any sense. I
don't know what the fuck they made this, blah blah, blah,
and all I could think was like, yeah, and this
is almost skip it cuz I don't. I the most
important part of watching movies is not fighting about them
on Twitter. To Nope, it felt like motherfucker's left. They

(05:11):
left the goddamn movie theater and immediately hopped on their
phone so they could fight. It's like, you're only watching
so you can get amo about this argument you're gonna
have with these motherfuckers on Twitter that disagree with you.

Speaker 2 (05:23):
Yet, Yes, and my and I feel strongly about this,
and I understand other people don't function like me. I
don't have to be in the know all and I
don't have to be up on everything current. Some people
are real bad with FuMO, like they it's something within
them that when things come out and they jump or theever,
like whatever happens, like they have to consume it and

(05:44):
they have to watch it regardless that if they like
the bullshit or not.

Speaker 1 (05:48):
Well, you're saying it as if people went to see
the movie knowing they wouldn't like it.

Speaker 2 (05:52):
Some people did, Yes.

Speaker 1 (05:53):
I'm saying I imagine most of the people that saw
the movie were hoping they would like it. They didn't
spend money to not like a thing. I think most
of these it's just their opinion that they didn't like
it and they didn't think it made sense. And then
the other people they see movies all the time. I
know some of them, like these are people that are
on my timeline, Like, they're not trolls. They go see

(06:17):
the movies because they always go see movies, some of
my movie critics. You know, it's just interesting to watch
that collision happen where there's people that's like, I just
didn't like it. I'm a movie critic. I see movies
every week for my job or whatever. This was one
I didn't think made sense and wasn't good to me.
Happens all the time, you know. I can think of
some some movies that I think are good and some

(06:39):
movies I just don't like that. I think on both
sides of that question, I'm like, didn't really make the
most sense, Like the plot was all over the place,
but I either enjoyed it or I didn't like. Midsummar
was one of those movies for me, while I was
like it kind of made sense but kind of didn't.
I did enjoy it, but I wouldn't really argue with
nobody about it. So I think it's interesting to see

(07:01):
that people the first thought was not let me share
what I thought, but also like, let me debate it
and argue with you about you not enjoying it or
you enjoying it.

Speaker 2 (07:13):
Okay, And for me, I understand that, But I guess
my standpoint is some people do see shit. They spend
their hard earned money on shit that they don't like
and don't watch. They do it all of the time.
And the thing is, because the internet is the place
for argument, it's not. And there are some people who
truly watched it, consumed it and didn't like it. That's cool,

(07:34):
but there are a percentage of those people that their
whole thing is the arguing part, like like they get
their kicks kind of arguing online. And so you know,
for me, I do feel what you say, because when
I go watch something, I either like it or I don't.
And that's kind of the end. I don't consume things
for the sake of arguing. But because of the age

(07:56):
and the Internet and just how people interact, sometimes people's
whole thing is I'm gonna do start shit just for
the sake of arguing, regardless of if the movie was good.
Bad or indifferent.

Speaker 1 (08:06):
Yeah, it's just interesting because I know what you're saying.
I think the only contention I have is I'm not
talking about the people that are just singing movies that
they didn't think they were like and spending their hard
earned money to just be in the conversation. I'm not
even talking about those people. I don't even I don't
know who those people are. I don't even know how
you would parse out which people are for real, left

(08:30):
the house to enjoy a movie and who was like,
I can't wait to hate this, you know what I mean?
That's such a Yeah, that's something I can't even imagine.
So I don't like, I'm sure their day exists. I
can't even imagine what kind of person that's spending at
this point twenty thirty dollars at a movie theater to
be like, I knew I would hate it, but now
I get to fight, you know, at least not for weapons,

(08:53):
but maybe I'm thinking maybe like maybe a bigger like
Marvel or something. Anyway, My point was just so it
was so interesting because I don't think they hate watched it.
I think they watched it and they didn't like it.
I just think but I think what's interesting is the
fight about it became more bigger than the movie. And
one of the reasons I hate that shit. One of

(09:14):
the reasons I hate that shit is not I look
debate about it, dude, go on your podcast, go on
your reddit forms. What I think sucks is they always,
you know, kind of spoiling the movie. Yes, like they
always go back and forth, and it's like, well, if
I was on the fence, so I was like, hmm,
sounds controversial, maybe I should see this. Well, now I

(09:35):
know what happens because y'all were arguing about No, it
did make sense because in the third act when this happened,
I'm like, well, all right, I guess hopefully by the
time I get a screener for this at Christmas, I
will have forgotten that y'all spoiled the shit out of it,
and then I can enjoy it my own way. But yeah,
it's so interesting how much arguing is the such a
big part of movie culture now?

Speaker 2 (09:56):
Yes, And it kind of sucks for just moviegoers across
the board, because, like you said, it's a percentage of
people and it's okay if you like it, and it's
okay if you don't like it, like genuinely and genuinely
you're not trollering or anything like that, but I agree.
That's why certain times, for certain movies that I'm like, oh,
I want to watch these things, I go see it

(10:16):
Wednesday night of Thursday night. I go see it like immediately, because,
like you said, people like that spoil the fucking movie,
and You're like, goddamn, I have to watch this see
it immediately because if I wait till the weekend, I'm
gonna open up whatever platform I own and somebody gonna
be fussing and arguing about either they liked it or
they didn't, which is fine, but some people when they
go online, they just spoil, and You're like, where, you're

(10:38):
ruining the movie for people who actually want to go
see it at a later date or didn't have the time,
couldn't get off work, or whatever the case may be.

Speaker 1 (10:45):
And then the last thing I was thinking about what
is the appropriate what was the appropriate way to mourn
a porn start dying, because I always see people so
uncomfortable with the idea. You know, people like, if like
porn is a job like any other job, people watch it,

(11:08):
but people also have a lot of hang ups about it,
you know. Uh yeah, a lot of people have hang
ups about it, you know, from religion, societal shame, stereotypes,
all that stuff. Like it's like it can't be separated
from that type of guilt that people feel as well.
But like I saw the other day, this Brazilian porn

(11:30):
star Victoria Beatrice, who was on the come up No
no pun intended.

Speaker 2 (11:36):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (11:37):
She she was one of the ones, but she she
passed recently. She was in critical condition at the hospital,
and then they just announced it on like Twitter or
like Instagram, like the porn companies announced like this person
dead now, And of course you know all the stereotypes
that come with it. But once again I have to say,
like maybe because I've kind of divorced pornography from the

(11:59):
shame part of my brain where I'm just like whatever,
Clearly it's a billion dollar industry, I don't need to
do the performative like I'm disgusted with myself. I'm not
disgusted with myself. I'm gonna watch it again. But I
just but I think it's funny because like there's other
professions where people either have mental health struggles or drug

(12:21):
addictions and stuff like that, but there's not shame around it.
So Prince overdose doses, Michael Jackson overdoses. There's tributes, we're
playing music, We're going to cont like that at every UH,
at the annual BT Awards as a there's a tribute
for the person that's immemorialms porn is like in this

(12:42):
shame vault for people where it's like they can't say
like damn or like you know what because it is
a loss. Yes, like you can't be like, oh man,
I was a fan or whatever. It's got you gotta
just you know, if anything they do, just like you know,
it's a shame. They go through so much. You know,
she probably had a lot of trauma and stuff.

Speaker 2 (13:02):
Yeah, you see their views and whatever go up online,
you know, but it's one of those things. But that's
the people only way to to kind of well, that's.

Speaker 1 (13:09):
What I'm gonna say. Even when the views go up,
there's other people that will be like, you sick motherfuckers,
look at these views going up. Meanwhile, if some rock
star passes and their streams go up, right, well, like yeah,
people are probably thinking it's just funny. It's like, are
people jacking a half mass? You know man, like they

(13:30):
you know, is it a sad Jack and twenty one Jack.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
Salute, Like what is what is happening?

Speaker 1 (13:35):
Why do we feel so guilt ridden about the idea
that you know there's porn stars that uh and it's
And I follow Cinnamon Love on Twitter, who's former porn
star and also like a very big advocate for sex
work and like she's talked been at the White House

(13:57):
like she's she's she's a she's an activist, she's big
into it, and she'll talk about this all the time too,
where she's like, you know, people try to attach this
shame to it, but like if you know, what's the
woman if Amy Winehouse dies, I mean, they make a

(14:17):
movie about her, people play the songs they sometimes they
release posthumous albums like Tupac is a yeah, we're like
we we we mourn them and their work in a
way that is like, you know, we would not feel
bad about it, like like and it doesn't matter how

(14:38):
they Tupac got a violent death after making much much,
much violent music. And yet I know real people that
just cried and cried and cried and just miss him
to this day and still talk about him. Pointers like
back under the bed with this shit, like you hide this, okay,
put it back in the shoot bars. Everybody just sadly,
you know, just watching.

Speaker 2 (15:00):
Visited by themselves.

Speaker 1 (15:01):
You know, how do you like they is? Everybody just yeah,
like there's no collective place. Like I went to the
Reddit because I knew I was gonna talk about this
on the show, so I went to Reddit and searched
her name to be like, I want to know what
people are saying, and people were acknowledging like man, sad
she passed. But then it's also weird because you can't well,

(15:22):
I mean you can in that form, but in general,
it would be bad for him to be like man,
she was so great, you know, she was so good
at porn. But if like Jimmy Hendrix died and I'm like,
he was so fucking good all along the Watchtower, I
can't be like Man. She was so good when she
did the six Man gang Bang. Motherfucking nobody else was
doing that. She's out there doing an eife for town.

(15:44):
She was a beast. They talk about DPS. She was
on like tree Peece.

Speaker 3 (15:48):
She was doing all she was on the trap Peece.

Speaker 2 (15:51):
You can't.

Speaker 1 (15:52):
It's just weird. That we can't you know that we
can't even say anything about it. That's it's so it's
such a thing. And like I said, because of the
stereotypes of like porn stars troubled trauma, they gonna die,
there's thousands of thousands of thousand porn stars who don't
have that thorn, could you know some continuing to shout

(16:14):
out to when the only fans came along because you
found out that a lot of your faes weren't really retired,
they just retired of putting part of their check up
to a company. It was like, oh shit, Karmel is
still out here. Oh I see you since my bad
I thought you was out of the games, Like I'm
in it for me. But it's kind of interesting to watch,
like how we've attached like us narrative to each of

(16:36):
these people regardless, and then these stories become the stories
that are like this is what porn is, this is
what it does to you. But like I said, we
don't really necessarily extend that to other things where people,
you know, there's a bunch of famous actors who you know,
Matthew Perry odeed. We're not like don't let your kid
go in to act it. Don't hey, listen, man, you

(16:57):
cut that acting shit out. Okay, it's gonna it's gonna
make it, do drugs and kill yourself. So anyway, rest
in peace, Victoria Beatrice. Uh, we'll we'll miss you, all right.
Let's get to uh what you do first? Uh yeah,
let's do politics to get man. I guess I.

Speaker 4 (17:16):
Didn't know she was black until the number of years
ago when she happened to turn black, and now she
wants to be known this.

Speaker 1 (17:22):
Black people have got to know whether or not they're
presidents of crook. Well, I'm not a crook.

Speaker 5 (17:28):
I've learned everything I've got.

Speaker 1 (17:31):
Saying in Tennessee. I know she fects you, probably in Tenniste,
but just fooling me.

Speaker 5 (17:35):
One, shame on, Shame on, shame on, shame on you,
Shame on you.

Speaker 1 (17:42):
We can't get fool again. Tell you what I don't
know about you. But I'm going to go to bed
all right. Here we got a shooter who attacked the
CDC headquarters. Was a thirty year old man from suburban Atlanta,
and he attacked the CDC headquarter because he believed the

(18:04):
COVID vaccine made him suicidal.

Speaker 2 (18:09):
So one out of the bazillions of people that took
this shot the word.

Speaker 1 (18:13):
He was on with five guns, including at least one
long gun, and then he went into a he shot,
he shot up the building, and he went into a
pharmacy across the street, and uh, I guess he took
took himself out. It's interesting because I think this is

(18:36):
the real cost of these conspiracy theories and it's not
just a game.

Speaker 2 (18:41):
And misinformation yep, misinformation and disinformation is is real, and
dipping your toe in it is it's not fun, you know,
it's not It actually is not a game. And when
the information gets out there, it's really easy for people
to be persuaded.

Speaker 6 (19:00):
A lot.

Speaker 2 (19:01):
Everybody thinks that they're above being persuaded, but they're not.
Like they're not. Everybody is susceptible to being tricked, even
though everybody thinks that they're above being tricked. But everybody
listened to the sign of my voice at some period
times been tricked by somebody. So you have to be
aware and alert to these things because a lot of
times these things have partial truths to them, and with

(19:22):
them having partial truths, you will accept the whole thing
is the truth, and it's not a truth at.

Speaker 1 (19:27):
All, and he killed a police officer, I believe, so, uh,
you know, that's that's wild. The suspects father contacted police
identify the son as the possible shooter. Law enforcement told AP.
The father said his own his son had been upset
over the death of the son's dog, and he had
also become fixated on the COVID nineteen vaccine. The family

(19:49):
lives in Kennesaure, Georgia, and Atlanta suburb about twenty five miles.
It's northwest of the CDC headquarters. He shot up the
CDC campus with the thousands of people work on critical
disease research. Uh yeah, it's it's it's And the thing is, man,

(20:09):
I feel like on my phone once or twice a
day for the last week at least, I've got a
live shooter on campus. Alert from my news app, Live
shooter at this live shooter. And it's not just the
CDC just there's just so many shootings. The commonality, of
course is just the access to guns. But there's just
so many fucking shootings, and we're you know, we try

(20:32):
to discuss each one as if it's like an isolated
thing of like, well, you know, the CDC and the
vaccines and and already a RK JR. And it's like, well,
you know, the common thing is people was just shooting
up shit because they could go get a gun and
it's not hard in America to get apparently five guns
to roll up on the CDC vibe. And the thing

(20:55):
is like all the laws and rules and protections that
people have are all these all under the idea that
the person you're dealing with is a insane person who
at least wants to preserve their own life right. And
so often in these cases, people leave the house expecting
to die, if not being like planning to die, like

(21:16):
I Am going to kill myself or something.

Speaker 2 (21:17):
Yep. A lot of times they do. Either they kill
themselves or the officers kill them. They're like either way,
like you say, the decision is made on once I
shoot this first bullet, Today's my last day on earth.
And the thing is, what do you do when you
have all these pretty rules and somebody says, fuck your rules.

Speaker 1 (21:37):
We are deeply saddened by the tragic shooting at CDC's
Atlanta campus that took the life of Officer David Rowles,
said RFK JR. The blood is on his hands too,
in my opinion, like you are part of the reason
that there's so much anti vaccine and anti CDC sentiment.
Trump putting this motherfucker in charge is ridiculous. He's firing

(21:59):
people that are on the vaccine panel, he's defunding vaccinations.
There's people that can't get COVID nineteen shots anymore. Your drug,
your pharmacy don't know what to do. Like, it's really
fucked up what they're doing, and part of it is
activating people like this, and so I don't put it
past them. And I don't know the guy's race. None

(22:22):
of the articles I found had his picture in there,
and then I saw there were fake pictures that posted online,
which tells you another thing about the environment we live
in right now. The narrative is so important to people.
The truth doesn't matter when you have these mass shootings
or violent eruptions that are that typically seen very right
wing coded. The right wing takes an active role in

(22:47):
spreading misinformation, so they will put out like pictures of
black people, pictures of trans people, and be like this
is the shooter and it's not something that's isolated, meaning
you'll see like a elected official sharing it and stuff
like that, and it may or may not be true.
In the wake of how fast things happen, we don't

(23:07):
normally know these things right away, and so it's very
and since our news sources social media, which is not verified,
it's very easy to miss guy people. But most importantly,
when someone has biases, their biases inform what they want
to be the truth.

Speaker 2 (23:27):
Agree, So all they need to do is.

Speaker 1 (23:29):
Present it was a trans person, it was a black person,
it was a gay person, and that is not going
to be undone in a lot of people's minds. They'll go, yep,
that's what it was. I'm not looking at anything else.
Saw Charlie Kirk said it was this, you know whatever,
and so yeah, but yeah, this got shot up the CDC.

(23:50):
Let's see we got more of course, ever, there's all
these are kind of interesting ones. There's a couple who
fled Putin's Russia seeking asylumn in New York City. They
got grabbed by iceing and Trump crackdown. M Ukrainian immigrant
Kate Carolinko saw her husband, Uh, he was on a

(24:14):
bench on the tenth floor with chains around his waist,
wrist and ankles. That was June twenty seven, three days
after the couple went to Lower Manhattan Immigration Courthouse for
what they expected to be a routine hearing for their
joint asylumn case. They fled Russia in twenty twenty three,
fearing her husband's anti Putin politics and her Ukrainian nationality
would lead to persecution. And then Trump and them was like, yeah,

(24:35):
you're under arrest.

Speaker 2 (24:36):
Yeah, but they're gonna do but send them back yet possibly.

Speaker 1 (24:40):
I mean we say that like they haven't been sending
people to the wrong countries.

Speaker 2 (24:44):
Yeah, just I guess just send them anywhere?

Speaker 6 (24:48):
Do you go?

Speaker 2 (24:49):
Wherever it is, it ain't gonna be America.

Speaker 1 (24:50):
Yeah, back makes it sound like, uh, they're they're at
least looking into what's going on with you and being like, oh, okay,
let's make sure we send this to send you where
you came from.

Speaker 2 (25:04):
You're able to be sending someone you and speak the language.

Speaker 1 (25:06):
Yeah. There was another dude that owns like Trump Burgers
or some shit like that, like he he he's uh,
he got he's getting deported.

Speaker 2 (25:23):
Yeah you own trump Burgers.

Speaker 1 (25:25):
Yeah. Trump Burger owner in Texas faces deportation at the
ice arrest. Roland Beanni from Lebanar, who opened the chain
of restaurants and the support of President, says the charges
are not true.

Speaker 2 (25:39):
It don't matter. Now you ain't pure white American. So
you got the.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
Google, Okaren, I guess it's a to go order now.

Speaker 4 (25:52):
It is.

Speaker 1 (25:57):
Yeah, it's he's twenty eight. I Now part of me
wonders if like he's just one of the smart He's
like a chameleon that camouflages itself right next to the
predator's layer. And it's like they'll never think to look here,
because like maybe that's what you do, is you go
so full Trump that it's like he'll never check my
immigration status. And unfortunately for you, Trump doesn't actually run

(26:20):
the government. He doesn't really give a fuck about you. Nope. Uh,
they just got some racist white nationalists that's doing all
this that don't care if you selling trump Burgers or not.
Now Donald Trump may be like I'll pardon him, I would,
you know, suspend it, don't let don't let him stay
he's selling He's got my burgers on the planet.

Speaker 2 (26:38):
That's after the fact.

Speaker 1 (26:39):
But I just feel like the people that are working
on Project twenty twenty five or whatever they call it,
that they those motherfuckers are not They don't care. They're like, oh, brown, get.

Speaker 2 (26:50):
Out brown, that's all they see. Yep.

Speaker 1 (26:54):
But yeah that was immigration corner. Yeah, people getting deforded.
Let's see what else is happening. Well, we know this,
so I don't care about this. Oh, the Corporation for
Public Broadcasting gets his funding cut, and I think a

(27:15):
lot of people don't really know what all it does.
Roughly seventy percent of the corporation's money went directly to
three hundred and thirty PBS and two hundred and forty
six NPR stations across the country.

Speaker 2 (27:27):
NPR taking up huge hit because of that.

Speaker 1 (27:30):
The cuts are expected to weigh most heavily on smaller
public media outlets away from big cities. So you're losing
a lot of rural NPR, like rural news and local news.
Is likely some won't survive. NPR President estimated as many
as eighty stations may close in the next year. And
that's just the next year.

Speaker 2 (27:50):
Yeah, that's not including the ones that eventually will close
because of these cuts too.

Speaker 1 (27:54):
Yeah, that's just the next year. That's a lot to
lose in a year. At Mississippi Public Broadcasting has already
decided to eliminate the streaming channel that Air's children programming
like Kayla Lou and Daniels Tiger's Neighborhood twenty four hours
a day. Main's public media system is looking at a
hit of two point five million, or about twelve percent
of its budget for the next fiscal year. The state's
rural residents rely heavily on public media, the weather updates

(28:18):
and disaster alerts.

Speaker 2 (28:19):
Because they haven't fucking nowhere.

Speaker 1 (28:21):
Yes, this is how.

Speaker 2 (28:22):
They get their information.

Speaker 1 (28:23):
And meanwhile, who's in charge of FEMA, who's in charge
of the helping the weather people? The government? And what
kind of budget did they just pass? So it'll be
big things to It'll be you know, war documentaries, finding
your roots of course, Big Bird, Cookie Monster, Sesame Street,
all that shit gone. And I think also the sad

(28:48):
part is in a cultural war, in a cultural war
that we're having, people will not feel that these are
unifying shows that we should want to all of our
children to experience the the lessons about sharing and and

(29:12):
and equality.

Speaker 2 (29:13):
And inclusion and empathy and things like that.

Speaker 1 (29:17):
Yes, that's woke.

Speaker 2 (29:19):
Right, And and also I did not know this, but
particularly with like a lot of their uh, like the
cartoons and all that stuff. They draw like people of
different like nationalities, Racists shape size and colors just so
they can get children used to a everybody isn't small
and thin. They're gonna be people that are big with
freckles or missing limbs or have a you know, disability

(29:43):
or whatever it is. These are things you kind of
want to instill in treating at a very very young age.
But what's so funn is that everybody says that, and
as you know, people get older, they beat it out
of children. But you know, uh uh to uh be
resistant to things that aren't like you. But it's very

(30:03):
important to children get these lessons because for some a
lot of children these lessons you stick.

Speaker 1 (30:08):
Trump fires jobs data like the person over the job
data platform for Bureau of Labor statistics. So they adjusted
and put out the actual numbers for monthly job figures
would show that jobs had slowed in July but also

(30:30):
was much weaker in May and June than they had
previously reported. So they gave us the truth without the
Republican lie on top of it that you know, oh
everything's great because Donald Trump says it's great. And so
he fired her Erica mcintafar. I think that's how you say,
or maybe it's Mick and Tarfer. But they fired her,

(30:52):
said she will be replaced with someone much more competent
and qualified, meaning because she did the actual job and
told the truth, she has to go right.

Speaker 2 (30:59):
And you know what, it don't matter if you tell
us the numbers are high. People will still be losing
their jobs. So people will You might as well tell
the truth about what's happening, you know, because everybody already knew,
not everybody, anybody with any common sense already knew when
Donald Trump took office, in the policies that he had
in place, people were going to lose their jobs. All

(31:21):
the masks cutting that those did, all the mass slicing
of the federal government, all the firing and rehiring and
all that bullshit. It impacted the economy, all the slashing
of the federal budgets and shit like that. It impacted
the economy, and it impacted jobs. People were losing their
jobs left and right, depending on what field you were in,

(31:42):
and not only that you were in one field, you
got impacted. Other fields got impacted by the downside and
of that field. So you know, a lot of these
jobs and shit are connected to other industries more than
people are willing to say. And some those numbers make sense,
and you know, it's not like they haven't made errors

(32:02):
before and be like, oh yeah, yeah, yeah, those a's numbers.
You know, we went back and re redid the numbers.
These are these are the things for the adjustment. So
it's not like this is something obscure or abnormal, you know,
or something like that. Donald Trump just didn't like her
telling too foods the motherfuckers losing the jobs. Bitch, they
losing their jobs.

Speaker 1 (32:20):
Yeah, here's my thing. At some point original my guess.
I don't know, I don't know. This is speculation. Let
me just start with this speculation, not informed by anything
but my intuition, and I could be one hundred percent wrong,
but it just makes me wonder if someone could get
to the bottom of this and tell us. I wonder
if she was under pressure to report false numbers those

(32:44):
those three months, and that's why those numbers were inflated,
and that at some point she went fucked that these
are the real numbers. Deal with it, knowing there would
probably be a retaliation. She may even get fired, and
then they fire her, and part of what they can
use as the justification for firing her is that you

(33:08):
went along with it in the first place. So they go, well,
you are the person in charge of these numbers the
last three months, you said the numbers wrong. You're fired.
I'm gonna get somebody in that's gonna get the numbers
right now. More than likely, I'm just gonna get someone
that's loyal to Trump who'll say, whatever the fuck I
tell them to tell you yes. But I wonder if

(33:28):
I guess part of me and look, I'm not trying
to blame this woman. I don't know what happened, right,
but part of me thinks, because of that pressure, part
of me thinks, don't ever concede from the gun from
the jump, don't help them at all, don't let them
come in. It's better to lose your job. They one,

(33:51):
But having been like, I will not help you sell
this lot to the American people, agreed then to lose
it three months later and have them go, well, the
motherfucker said the numbers was wrong three months Why would
we keep them on anyway. It's just totally could be.
It's totally speculation on my part, but it just maybe
an investigative reporter or somebody can talk to her because

(34:13):
the other part with professionalism, a lot of these people
will not snitch, meaning even after losing their job in
an unfair way, they won't come to the media and
be like, hey, this motherfucker told me the lot. I
gave them the numbers in a certain time, they turned
in higher numbers than what I told them the numbers.

Speaker 2 (34:30):
Were, and that's what they're betting on because, like you said,
it may have been the thing where they may have
reported the real numbers, but when it came out like
like you said, you never know. That's why you need
somebody to investigate on.

Speaker 1 (34:41):
Somebody to tell. I need people to tell, and I
know sometimes they get anonymous stuff. I'll take that if
you want to take that, because to me, anonymous in
this case means we talked to her and she said
keep it off the record, but this is what happened.
But somebody should be looking into this because I don't
that there's too much has been allowed under the complacency

(35:02):
of what do you think he's gonna do? And that's
why you can't allow people like this to be in charge,
because your vigilance immediately dissipates because you're like, well, I
was expecting the worst, so you're never going the outrage
can never be equivalent, whereas with Democrats or whatever, we

(35:23):
always end up with like, well, I was expecting perfection
and I didn't get it. I'm constantly outraged at them.
With Donald Trump is I always expect the worst. So
I'm not gonna ever really make a stink of anything
because it's always terrible, and it just it just keeps
robbing us of our democracy.

Speaker 2 (35:41):
Yes, it does, which I don't want to go away.
And when you tell people that, people look at you
like you're a fucking lunatict because they think everything is
fucking written in stone. It is not. Nothing in this
country is written in stone. When you have people in charge,
you don't give a fuck about your rules. They don't
care about the Constitution to build the rights, they don't

(36:04):
care about anything that is written. They go, bitch, we're
gonna do it and see you in court.

Speaker 1 (36:09):
Texas is going through it because they're trying to pass
a just completely unfair reconfiguration of the electorate and the
maps that they have to basically give Republicans like a
complete advantage. They want to erase like Jasmine Crocketts entire

(36:31):
district so that she can't even have a seat in Congress.
And so the Democrats in that state have flew the state.
They left, they fled the state. And I believe JB.
Pritz girl, I think that's his name. He was like
a billionaire and he's in Illinois. He's like, y'all can
come here and I'll just set y'all up, like you know,

(36:52):
I'll take care of all the expenses of y'all staying
here and shit, just so that they can't force you
all to vote to pass this aggressional map that is
going to absolutely destroy people's democratic right to vote. What
happens is that the media and pundits and even a
lot of citizens who treat politics like sports, what they're

(37:15):
thinking is this is a blow to the Democrats. And
I think we have to get out of that type
of thinking. Not because it in addition to being kind
of misguided, it's it's not the truth. The truth is
they're taking away people's power of their votes. Yes, that's

(37:35):
what's happening. That's what Texas has always been doing. Yes,
And whether it's through you know, the jerry mandering, whether
it's through these voter suppression efforts, you know. I like
what Larry Wilmore, but I remember once he was he
went on he has a podcast. I think it was
called like Black on the Air or something. Anyway, he

(37:57):
has a podcast, and he had a preamble up front,
and he was talking comparing like the idea of people
thinking that voter suppression now is in any way comparable
to the shit that our answers has went through. And
I get like his general distinction of like, you know,
people is literally shooting and killing people at the polls sometimes,
and you know, and some of these grandfather in laws

(38:19):
and all this stuff. Like I get what he's saying,
but it also does the impact as if this stuff
isn't really affecting especially black voters. It is, and it
might not be a gun in particular, but it is
not necessarily something you can just overcome. You can't just
outvote it. You can't just get enough voter ideas to

(38:43):
do it. It's bigger than that. And I think us
trying to compare it is just another way of like
making it seem like this struggle isn't real, to be like,
it belittles the current struggle and the current and not
just the struggle, the outcome, right, because the outcome is
black voters are going to be disenfranchised. And while we go, well,

(39:03):
it's not as bad as it was in Georgia in
eighteen oh three, it's like, well, that's I hear what
you're saying, but who the fuck gives. I'm live right
now and they're stealing my vote today. They're making it
harder for me to vote today. They're changing the rules
on when you can vote, how you can vote. Can
you have water while you're standing in line? Can you
vote on a Sunday after church? Can you take a bus?

(39:24):
Can you you know, stuff that black people traditionally have done.
And this is very important because Democrats are fighting in
this way by running and I mean that in the
best possible way. I don't that's not shade. They have
to do this because these are the recourses they have.
They basically have to make sure they're not in the

(39:44):
state until I want to say, December or some shit,
just to make sure that the Republicans can't steal the election.
And it's very serious. The Attorney General in Texas is
proposing that they arrest Democrats, that they pursue them outside
of the borders of Texas, Like this shit is very

(40:04):
fucking serious.

Speaker 2 (40:05):
Republicans have done this before. What the fuck are we
talking about?

Speaker 1 (40:08):
Like Ken Paxson's cheating ass is out here, Like we
need to see what we can do. We can arrest
them over this walkout. I think it's very fucking serious,
and I don't think it should be taken lightly. And
I applaud these Democrats because they may this is the
kind of thing where like they're gonna wait till jaz
and crockers and handcuffs to be like, man, this is
kind of serious, you know what I'm saying that, Like

(40:30):
they people still think there's some safety guidelines and rules
where that won't happen, and I'm not sure it won't
in America today.

Speaker 2 (40:36):
And my biggest thing I've said this before and I
will continue to say this again, being down south is
very very frustrating because I don't And it's no shade
to Larry Wilmore. He could say that shit because he
don't live downhill, and you know he's not directly impacted
by it. And so you know a lot of times
people that come out with them strong gas opinions like

(40:57):
that they don't actually have to live in the day
to day and in the grind, and they're not actually
in the communities. It's actually being directly impacted by it.
And also for the Democratic products and the liberals, this
is an excuse for them to quote unquote right off
the south of bitch, we in this vote together. You know,
Democrats are in this vote together. Regardless of where you

(41:18):
are in the country, you are being directly impacted, directly
targeted systematically by the Republican Party in this president So
we actually need each other and just to act like
all the black and brown people get what they deserve
just because they happen to live in the state. That

(41:40):
isn't fair to them as citizens, you know. And the
thing about it is a lot of these people don't
get to vote because of these laws. They can't vote
because of these laws. You know, the votes are suppressed
and depend on where people stay. They go, oh, well,
why don't you just move? Bit what happened if I

(42:00):
can't afford to move, bitch, would happen if I don't
want to move with it? It's like I said before,
let me go to your house and look at you
and tell you just pack your shit up and leave
tomorrow because they just doing fucked up shit. Well, let's
getting to the point that no matter where you live
in this country, you are directly impacted by this bullshit.
New York is not safe, California is not safe, Washington

(42:22):
State is not safe these places. But these liberals stay
and live and love and brag to the rest of
the country like they the mother fucking best and we
ain't got no issues, and we ain't got no problems,
and we don't got to deal with the motherfucking racism
that they got down saith. Bitch, Yes, you do too.
You got the same goddamn problems. It might be presented
in a different way, it might have a different a

(42:45):
different twang to it, but bitch is the same. We
are all being impacted by this shit, and we all
need each other.

Speaker 1 (42:51):
I just want to know where am I supposed to
fight for my rights then, Frank, you know, like when
they was marching across the bridge the admin had his bridge,
was you like just move? You know what I'm saying? Like,
where was Martin Luther King the greatest American we've ever
produced in this country? Or not? You know what? What
are we applauding activists for you know, what are what

(43:13):
are the history lessons that we are passing down? What
is that supposed to teach us? Its soupposed to teach
me to run. They're supposed to teach me to just
be okay with this shit. Yeah, So just because they're
doing it in a slicker way, it's not that different.
Like I said, I won't say it's the same as
literally killing someone at the post. I'm not a fucking idiot.
I do understand the difference. But some of this stuff

(43:35):
is the same. Jellybean counting shit is like the same
kind of bullshit they do. Yeah, all that shit is
the same kind of the idea is the same. Just
because they updated the firm where the twenty twenty five
doesn't make it okay. And I think it's very important
to note because what has been said by as a

(43:56):
fighting you know, to try to fight this. What is
been said by some of the Blue states is like
New York, I think Governor Hakele, I think is her name,
is like, well, will redistrict all of our shit, will
jerry manders so that all the districts are blue. And
California Governor News said I'll do the same thing in California,

(44:17):
will trigger California maps and make it all blue. Here's
the only thing. And I know I like the energy.
I appreciate the threat, I really do. But I want
people to stop and think about something really quick. Is
that possible? The reason I ask is that possible is

(44:41):
because will the white voters go along with its plan?
Because that is the that is the reason you'll never
have equal and opposite on the Democratic Party. They can't
with the demographics of America. Jerry Mander, Jerry Rigg, whatever,

(45:03):
voter suppress their way out of free and fair elections
into just one sided Democratic elections. Now that is not
to say you can't tip tilt the scales. That happens
all the time where you're, oh, we'll just draw a
circle in this district and this one looks like this,
and that can't happen. But the idea of you thinking
you can predictably be like, We're gonna separate all the

(45:27):
red and blend it into the blue and then it
will be a blue state one hundred. I don't think
you can because white people historically do not vote Democrat.
They vote Republican, And it doesn't really matter what state
they're in. It like a lot of times, the blue
is achieved by having minorities and people of different backgrounds

(45:51):
in different areas. It's not achieved from the way that
Republicans do it, which is a lot of times like
suppress the shit out of the votes and then draw
the map so that you just carve out the black neighborhoods.
There's seventy percent white people in America. How you're gonna
carve out that type of advantage for the Like I said,

(46:13):
I love the threat. I just think we should not
be thinking, well, when Texas does it, we'll just retaliate.
That's a mistake. We need to make sure everything possible
that Texas cannot do this right that period. Texas should
not be allowed to do this because it will just
be the first state of many states decided to do this.

(46:34):
And I think that advantage will help Republicans, or at
least I don't want to play the I don't want
to play the game and the gamble of well, maybe
California ads for DE seats and New York ad for
DE seats and maybe I don't know that that'll happen.
And then I think Democrats the elected Democrats when not
talking about the voters. I think democrats would end up

(46:57):
taking such a huge repueational laws if they promised something
and did not deliver a California that gave you twenty
more seats, or what if they were like, well, shit,
now that we look at it, we're only going to
gain like a couple of seats from moving everything around.
People would be like, what the fuck y'all just told
us that if Texas did this, y'all were gonna be

(47:18):
bringing us a bunch of new seats of Democrats. What happened?
And so I think, and then morally, of course, you
just don't throw away the people that live in Texas.

Speaker 2 (47:29):
Like that, right? And I guess my biggest thing of
when I look at this is you set precedents, and
that's what people fail to realize. And all you gotta
do is, Okay, y'all Democrats are office now. But what
happens when y'all not in office? Y'all lose y'all seats
or something happens, you know, you'll be y'all will be

(47:52):
looking like a Texas you know, Because the thing is
what I've realized the a lot of Democrats talk a
big game. But they ain't about that fight like like
like like the Democrats and a lot of the liberals.

Speaker 1 (48:08):
Now when you say that, who are you talking about
the voters?

Speaker 2 (48:10):
Oh okay, that they're not about that fight like like
like they are not built for the fight that's gonna
have to happen if you change these rules and and
then offices changed and somebody else get in there, they're
not gonna be They're not gonna have that wherever thowt
or of that demand, because it seems like once Republicans
get in office, all the fight and a lot of

(48:32):
these liberals and Democrats leave and they just follow the
motherfucking rules. Like I said, the populace has showed me
that they that that that they talk a big game.
They YadA YadA, YadA, we're gonna do this, but when
it comes, when when it comes to actually actions, you
know they're not they're not built for that, like like
they're not built to sustain a consistent anger. They're not

(48:54):
built to put like this. And the thing is a
lot of their demands are been very unrealistic for the
Democratic side, But you don't have those same demands for
the Republicans, and you never will because you know they
don't care know what they hear you, So you don't
care about what they do. And I agree with you.
Say you do it and you don't heed it, You're
gonna have a bunch of Democrats I have wind and
complaining and flopping when all they were trying to do

(49:16):
is help.

Speaker 1 (49:17):
Yeah, I just think numbers wise, I don't. I mean, look,
and I hope I'm wrong. I hope I'm wrong. Because
here's the other part of this that if if Hulk
O and knew someone are telling the truth, why are
you waiting for Texas? Why wouldn't you just fucking do that? Now?

(49:39):
If that was all it was, just, hey, we're just
gonna go ahead and change the districts, It's clearly not
that simple if you're waiting to do it in retaliation.
So it just makes me wonder if it even is
so Like, Look, I'm not saying it's impossible. I'm just
saying I wonder if it can make an equal and
opposite thing for liberal people, because I just don't trust

(50:02):
white voters in this man. A lot of people don't
even know California's gotten redder, even though it's considered a
blue state. And a blue stronghold. It has gotten redder
and redder and redder every year. New York has too, right,
so you just have to be this idea of like, no,
we'll just make it all blue. You're assuming a trusting

(50:24):
these white people to be like faithful Democratic voters in
a way that I don't know anyway, but I hope
they're I hope we don't have to see this. Let's
go to the comedy part of this and then we'll
wrap it up of politics. He will get mad. What
do I start? Oh, you know, let's start with Mark

(50:45):
Maren Mark Marin, who just put out a special that
I really enjoy.

Speaker 7 (50:50):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (50:51):
It's called petic I think is what it's called. And
it's on HBO. Man, I forget the name of the
brand now, HBO, it's some wherever you stream HBO. Guys.

Speaker 2 (51:08):
It's not my fault, but.

Speaker 1 (51:10):
Because of you put out this special and he stopped
doing his podcast. He's basically doing a tour, uh showing
that you know, hey, I'm uh you know I'm doing uh,
I'm doing the podcast circuit. And so he went on
Howie Mandell's podcast and they put this clip out and
let me know if you guys can't hear it. I'm

(51:30):
in the right browser, so you should be able to.
But I just never know.

Speaker 5 (51:33):
Point it's lazy and sloppy and hackneyed. You know, to
be in a club where you know, I walking down
the hall at the comedy club, at the comedy store,
and you know, in one room someone's doing their bit
about trans people, and then I get down the hall
and there's someone on stage going, well, I guess I
got to do my bit about trans people.

Speaker 1 (51:50):
Like no, you don't, you don't. It's fun.

Speaker 5 (51:53):
It's hack now. I mean, you know, you guys got
the freedom you wanted. You can now say whatever you want.
They're defeated, the rights have been denied. The policies that
you guys encouraged, what to your stupid material, are now policy.
And now, like you know, half the people under the
umbrella of anti woke, we've lost a tremendous amount of

(52:13):
democratic leaning ideas and movements. So whether they knew it
or not, that's what they were spearheading. So now it's reality,
and you want to still keep kicking them. I don't
know that the comedians have had that much power.

Speaker 2 (52:28):
Out of your mind getting his ass because he won
of them. I hate to be like that because every
time you come out, he's saying some dumb ass shit.

Speaker 1 (52:37):
Cares talking about how you ran Dale. I'm not gonna
go ahead.

Speaker 5 (52:41):
You know you can't. You can't separate. Like if the
movement is like, you know, we're being censored, No you're not.

Speaker 1 (52:47):
You're not.

Speaker 5 (52:48):
There's no constitutional censorship issue with your free speech. You
say things and in a democratic shit show of an environment,
you know, like Twitter or whatever, there's cultural push And
I'm not saying that it wasn't. It was pretty bad
in terms of you know, people getting canceled and stuff.
And I and I agree that was an issue, but

(53:09):
that's a specific issue. To frame it as some sort
of free speech problem was was a misdirect right. It
wasn't a free speech problem. It was that people were
getting cultural pushback. That is not a constitutional issue. No
one was being put in jail for saying anything. That's
a free speech issue. But my problem is is you're

(53:29):
going to start talking about anti woke and that's going
to be your point of view, that's going to be
your ideological you know, grounding for what you do. Okay,
that's fine, but why does it have to be the
same four things. You know, It's like they talk about
the same shit and I don't know a better definition
of hack.

Speaker 2 (53:47):
Yeah right right yeah. On the podcast one agree And
I'm glad he didn't let him spew it of a
bluish sheet because he was about to say some bullshit.
He was like, no, well, we're not gonna do is
act like these people freedom of speech was violated. They
were not. And like he said, you got what you wanted.

(54:07):
You wanted this, this is what you would like. You said,
whether you knew or not is irrelevant. This is what
you was pushing. You won. Okay, now you need to
go on and say all the slurs you want to
now because you, quote unquote you got the right to,
but you always have had the right to.

Speaker 1 (54:23):
I really enjoyed him, him and Bill Bird naming names
because I felt that there's not enough, there's not enough
of this energy being pushed back. And Mark and Bill
for the most part have kind of been like they've

(54:45):
been keeping it real. You know. I think Bill still
does a little bit of the both sides bullshit, but
in general, like they're not afraid to call out their
peers and stuff. And someone said they don't listen to Mark.
Was he talking like this for the election? Yeah, Mark,
Mark Maren's always talked like this, but I think he's
been more invoted after the election to name other comedians.

(55:07):
But he was doing that before. He's done it on
his podcast before. But on this special he calls out
like THEO von and shit like that. I know he's
talked about Joe Rogan. You know, he's done a radio
uh for years before he even did his podcast. So yeah, anyway,
I appreciate him keeping that energy because I think, and

(55:28):
I'm gonna get to it in a second, but I
think there's other people that aren't. For example, Jimmy Fallon.
Jimmy Fallon went on Colbert's show at the Colbert was
canceled or told that they would be canceling year right,
and he was like standing in solidarity with Stephen Colbert.

(55:49):
It was him, John Stewart, Jimmy Kimmel, I don't know
who else went on that, maybe John Oliver, I don't know.
All the white guys who still have late night shows
because no one else does. And so they went and
showed solidarity for Colbert of like, you know, this was
fucked up. CBS's cowards, blah blah blah. Okay, I didn't

(56:12):
really go up for that at the time, kind of
because I don't really know that those guys are righteous
in that they are standing with him against Trump, they're
standing with him against the CBS, they're standing again with
him in solidarity of like, you know whatever, or if
they're just guys who are like, look, we're straight, rich

(56:36):
white dudes who all feel that we are entitled to
have late night platforms because that is what our career
has led to. And if those platforms lose forty million
dollars in a year, they still shouldn't get canceled because
god damn it, we're white guys, and I don't I
know that's a very cynical take, and that's why I
didn't express it at the time, because I know that that,

(56:58):
you know, that's informed by some feelings on my own.
But still it's kind of like a when I look
at John Stewart, a guy who would I think defend
a theovon he would he defended Tony Hinchcliff's talking at
a Trump rally that was a xenophobic rally, and so
under the thin blue line of comedy he'll capitulate to

(57:20):
cowardice and be like, hey, we're just joke tellers. We're
just comedians. We don't have any real power, you know,
we're just clowns. God stop looking for us for anything.
And meanwhile, the clown is taught is at the president's inauguration.
Joe Rogan's at the president's inauguration. They're they're putting him
on the biggest platform of in media in the media landscape,

(57:44):
on the Joe Rogan Podcast, and not just him, but
his vice president and Elon Musk. And yet they're powerless,
they have no power. And yet all the time comedians
try to tell us that they're the real philosophers of
the day, the only ones speaking truth to power, the
people that are so brave. They all want to get
the same credit as comedians who challenged free speech right

(58:06):
rules and were arrested and stood up to the government
and shit. And yet these motherfuckers can't wait to the kneel
before Zod and be like, actually, you know what, man,
it's just jokes now. And so I like that In
that case, Mark Marin's and Howie Mandel's face like nah,
bro it, like you can't be full of shit. You

(58:27):
can't be lying and saying it's about free speech and
the government and the Democrats when it's just people on Twitter.
Don't think you making jokes about trans people's genitalia is
as funny as you would like them to think it is.

Speaker 2 (58:39):
That's it.

Speaker 1 (58:40):
You're not a fucking You're not a fucking activist. You're
not a civil rights hero trying to be a bully
that punches down in a country that is going to
pass the laws that you will then go on to
be like, I didn't see that because you don't have
nothing to say about these laws, you know. I still
where's the Dave Chappelle set about all this dracone fascism

(59:00):
that Trump is doing? What the fuck is that ship?
You know what I mean? Like they just disappeared into
the background when it was time to pick on the
trans kids and the and the artsy kids at your
at your old Alma madel Oh. You couldn't wait to
fuck them up, you know. But then when it's like
people that got actual power in this country, it's it's crickets,
it's not it's quiet for them. And so Jimmy Fallon

(59:22):
recently had Greg Guttfeld, who was a late night Fox
News like late night host, and it does a bunch
of raceist shit. You know, recently tried to reclaim the
word Nazi. He had him on his show, and he
gave him a Jimmy Fallon gave him, you know, Pat

(59:42):
on the head type, you know, soft pedal interview all
of a sudden, Now it's just you know, hey, we're
just we're just hanging out, man, We're.

Speaker 2 (59:49):
Just having fun.

Speaker 1 (59:52):
We're just clowns.

Speaker 2 (59:52):
Yeah, you could have said no, not him.

Speaker 1 (59:54):
Why was he on the Colbert Show? Why'd you go
on the Colbert Show? Anyway? Late night with Colbert? What
was you trying to prove? What was you trying to
prove there? What was I supposed to take from you
doing that? Because then you turn around and be like, hey,
we're all buddies, right, great, Gutfield, you know the fashions
when you're spreading that's fine, it's just jokes. We're pals.
Let's do a softball interview. I'm not gonna ask you
a single tough question. We're just gonna show the world

(01:00:16):
we can get along. Have the conversation, right, bullshit man?
All right? I played a Bill Burgh clop clip, a
different day because I am mad and I do want
to move on. Let's move on to a different segment.

Speaker 2 (01:00:33):
Shit, you.

Speaker 1 (01:00:38):
Know what, Let's do some gender wars that always lightens
the move for me coming off of heavy politics and
anger segment. Why can't I find the gender wars music?
What am I doing wrong with my life? Maybe if
I type it in the search bar, there we go.

Speaker 8 (01:01:00):
Going to war.

Speaker 2 (01:01:02):
War is a war going on out socks?

Speaker 1 (01:01:10):
Hes a war went on out socks anyway. Shout out
to Mark Maren though for being like, no, we're not friends,
you bitch white people. I don't know why white people
don't tap into that energy so much more often because
of all the people that can get away with it.
It's all them. It's all them, Like it's a cost
to be paid for so many other types of people

(01:01:31):
when they go fuck you to your face, and now
they can't, they basically boxed out of a career. Mark
Barren can say fuck you to autumn people and still
be Mark Maron ain't ship. They gonna be able to go.

Speaker 2 (01:01:40):
He steek and steek still gonna make his money. He
can still do his thing. He's not sorry around, He's
not gonna be extra sized, and the thing.

Speaker 1 (01:01:49):
Is people, damn it, why is it doing that?

Speaker 2 (01:01:52):
Go ahead, I'm sorry, people need to have his and
uh Hunter Biden's energy, like just had that. No, fuck y'all,
y'all was wrong. I'm white too, what you're gonna do
type of thing? And I I appreciate it, appreciate it
coming from men and not women, because women is considering that.

Speaker 1 (01:02:10):
Already been there, Ellen degenerous has been there yet. No,
I appreciate that it's a white that is white dudes
or being like fuck that because somebody gotta do it.

Speaker 2 (01:02:20):
Man, everybody can't.

Speaker 1 (01:02:22):
God damn, You're not gonna be able to be friends
through this. No, all right, anyway, gender wars. Sorry, we
meant to lighten it up and here we go again.
Someone sent this to me on TikTok It, says the caption,
don't skip this video. This might be the most unforgettable
moment of my life. Hashtag lawnmower, hashtag moment. What what
does this have to do with gender wars? Kean the

(01:02:44):
garden lawn care. Okay, somebody is under investigation if this
ain't about gender wars, because I don't even know. I
didn't break any laws.

Speaker 4 (01:02:54):
I just wanted to help someone who couldn't afford help.

Speaker 1 (01:02:57):
Oh no, I don't think this is gender wars. We'll
skip this one. Let's go to another one, don't. I
don't know. Maybe I saved the wrong. Maybe it's not
there far, maybe it's mine.

Speaker 2 (01:03:06):
Maybe I saved Yeah, all right.

Speaker 1 (01:03:08):
There's a different gender or trick Daddy the rapper, Yes,
you're no, Nan, take to the house. Trick Daddy faces
backlash for saying that he's not into women over thirty

(01:03:29):
five years old.

Speaker 2 (01:03:32):
Sir, if you don't get on.

Speaker 1 (01:03:34):
The fifty one year old rapper claimed older women are
damaged goods and too emotional.

Speaker 2 (01:03:45):
Coming from you, okay, mm hmmm.

Speaker 1 (01:03:47):
Yeah, who looks like a rapping mister Hanky from South Park. Yeah,
he went on the knieee Leaks show. Oh she got
a show? Uh, and he just went off with no filter.
During the podcast, he shared experience with lupus, how the
diagnosis affected him personally and professionally. He also spoke about

(01:04:09):
his prior runners with the law and the things he
learned about maintaining his financial freedom and lifestyle that the
entertainment industry brought him. Though it wasn't until the type
of a dating came up that the conversation took a turn.

Speaker 2 (01:04:20):
And my thing, Yes, ain't like these women. I hunt
you down, sir, Yeah, I don't understand. You're talking about
a group of people. Women, people don't give a fuck
about you.

Speaker 1 (01:04:31):
I have not really heard a lot of women going
after how they need to get with trick Dady.

Speaker 2 (01:04:36):
But it could just be my Yeah, could be my demographic.
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (01:04:40):
I don't know. Maybe it's a lot of under I
don't hang out a lot of under thirty five women,
so maybe under thirty five women.

Speaker 2 (01:04:48):
He's he's at the top of Q. I don't know.
I don't keep up with them.

Speaker 1 (01:04:51):
Yeah, maybe they they sit up there like I want
to ride that slipping slide records, you know, I don't
you know, I want him to. I call him trick Zaddy.
You know, maybe that's what they want. They need a thug.

Speaker 2 (01:05:04):
I'm just gonna drink my water and be hydrated.

Speaker 1 (01:05:08):
So she asked him about his relationship status, what is
a strange wife joy young? And then he's Then that
led to them talking about him currently dating. He said,
I'm very wide I'm like wide open, very horrorsh man
with the exception of you and maybe two or three
other women. Right, I'm not attracted to no women over
thirty five years old. Y'all standards are too high. Y'all

(01:05:30):
are too emotional, y'all are damaged goods from y'all past relationships.
After the clip went viral, one x user tweeted, I
hope I never reached this level of delusion in my life.
Another said, y'all standards are too high, so you want
younger women to do less for them. I'm telling your
standards is too high as a as a slash against

(01:05:52):
you in mass is so hilarious. I know, it's just
such a funny thing to be like. I can't believe
y'all have a high stand I have a high standard
of you not being thirty five and have a high standard.

Speaker 2 (01:06:05):
And being one hundred and twenty five pounds.

Speaker 1 (01:06:08):
But he did, you know it did attract a lot
of people being upset, So I feel like that was
mission accomplished. You know, that is part of the job.
The clip that I saw from the art or Dialogue
where he said this had three hundred and eighty six
replies one point seven million views. Some of the replies
sent up there looking like a pall of shit talking

(01:06:28):
about damaged goods. Yeah, okay, his raisin looking ass has
the audacity, and then they had a gift of the
California raisins.

Speaker 3 (01:06:38):
Oh no, that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (01:06:42):
You can't you can't be like that and look the
way you look at think people are gonna be like okay.

Speaker 1 (01:06:49):
And half baked Brownie in the pan's calling women thirty
five plus damage goods. Oh no, this man sitting here
looking like the litter the literal interpretation of Doodoo Brown
talking about women in the thirties. Please, I don't like
women look like women over thirty five. Face ass. It's
always bad when it's just a picture of your face

(01:07:11):
and they're not. They didn't doctor it, like like, that's
my favorite Twitter reply is when somebody says something about
somebody's looks and then the reply is just a close
up of their screenshot, like like I know, thise, my
fuck ain't talking. It's like that's that shit is like pretty,
it's like one hundred percent, it's pretty effective. Damaged goods

(01:07:34):
Florida evans tripping, Now, why you gotta do Florida like that?

Speaker 2 (01:07:37):
What she do? What she do?

Speaker 1 (01:07:39):
They deserve that he's looking like that, saying women are
washed up after thirty five. Okay, unc, they're damaged goods.
What the fuck is he? They about to cook him
so bad they gonna have to re spark the colorist conversation.
Oh no, I ain't know what that means. Bitch, you
look like boy sweet potato served fuck you?

Speaker 2 (01:08:01):
Oh no, no.

Speaker 1 (01:08:07):
I don't know why, but the sir, dude, that's the
That was the part that got me. Sir, respectful, you
look like a voice sweet potato, sir, fuck you? All right, Karen,
zero to uh, what do we do zero to ten
on theans? What would you give it? Oh? We do

(01:08:27):
zero to TM. Yeah. For how good the original Gender
Wars material was with.

Speaker 2 (01:08:32):
Daddy, I'm gonna I'm going to give this one. Like
I said, I didn't hit the video because he didn't
even on Needy Leak Show. I'm gonna give this one
a seven because it served its purpose. And he is
a lightning rod, like you know, just him opened up
his mouth saying anything talking about the opposite six is
automatically gonna start a gender war, just period. Because you're

(01:08:53):
gonna have some men that's gonna defend him no matter what,
because you know, some men think that men can look
any old type of way and and bitches just supposed
to fuck him because they got a dick, and you know,
they gonna come out to woodworks, and then you're gonna
have a lot of you know, women that's like, hey,
not you like, like what, I'm gonna come out. We're
gonna come out with these jokes.

Speaker 1 (01:09:11):
What I'm so interesting is that nobody seems to be
on this side, which is not good for gender war.
It's normally better when people think it's a fifty to
fifty thing, so people can argue about it forever. But
instead of everyone's just kind of powering on. Here's a
clip if you want to hear it.

Speaker 8 (01:09:25):
Maybe you and and one or two other women, right,
I don't I'm not a.

Speaker 1 (01:09:29):
Tra Okay, let me start right that. What is it
about misogyny misogynistic men that they can't get the plural
and the singular of women and women? Right?

Speaker 2 (01:09:41):
That is, there is a difference that that.

Speaker 1 (01:09:43):
Is very consistent and underrated. Not a lot of people
are noticing this, but like they've struggled. I don't know why.

Speaker 8 (01:09:51):
He's like, maybe you and one or two other women, right.

Speaker 1 (01:09:55):
You and one or two other women.

Speaker 2 (01:09:58):
Women right right?

Speaker 1 (01:10:00):
You know I will not look I want no woman
or whatever. It's like, what is heavening?

Speaker 8 (01:10:07):
I don't I'm not attracted. There no women over thirty
five years old.

Speaker 1 (01:10:10):
You're not well, honey. I know you are attracted to me, honey.

Speaker 8 (01:10:14):
But y'all, y'all standards are too high, y'all too emotional,
y'all are damaged.

Speaker 1 (01:10:20):
Good from past, damaged.

Speaker 8 (01:10:22):
You don't even realize your damage, you see.

Speaker 1 (01:10:25):
Yeah, all right, Yeah, I think I'm with you. I
wanted to give it a ten, to be honest, because
it's the it's it goes viral and it's the perfect
thing to dunk on, and I think that, you know,
but it's so one sided. I don't know that anyone
like I know you said there's some men that I
can't I haven't seen one like. I just feel like

(01:10:48):
even the men don't want to be have don't want
him as the avatar of the people that agree, like, yeah,
trick Daddy talking, he's talking about that's my life, Like
they're like, no, it is my life. But I don't
want to Trick Daddy to be the symbol of my life.
So I think the messenger is kind of hurting this
a little bit.

Speaker 2 (01:11:08):
So yeah, that's why I don't get a ten.

Speaker 1 (01:11:10):
Yeah, I think I would go like a seven on this.
But but it's but it is good, like you know,
it's the audacity that makes it good when you like,
I know, this motherfucker cannot be serious.

Speaker 2 (01:11:24):
That was my whole thing. You can't be serious.

Speaker 1 (01:11:28):
Yeah, so I do get you know, that part of it.
But yeah, it's pretty pretty terrible. All right, Let's see
what else I want to talk about before you start
wrapping this thing up. Do I even have a lot
of guests the race trying to think? I guess I
do have some. All right, well, let's do some of
my guests the race, everybody, and start rapping this bad

(01:11:52):
boy up. It's time to guess the race.

Speaker 7 (01:12:02):
It's time to RaSE.

Speaker 1 (01:12:05):
It's time to guess the race.

Speaker 8 (01:12:08):
It's time to guess the race.

Speaker 1 (01:12:11):
All right, this is Amaha, Nebraska? Uh as you bout it?
Bout it food?

Speaker 2 (01:12:20):
Is that the endless nigga in Nebraska?

Speaker 1 (01:12:23):
Is you bouty thirty fool?

Speaker 2 (01:12:24):
Shut out to John?

Speaker 1 (01:12:26):
All right? Let me know if you guys can hear this,
but you should be.

Speaker 4 (01:12:29):
Able to stir video of a thief who either doesn't
like to change clothes or he has his special stealing outfit.
Either way, police hope his specific style will look familiar
to someone. You can see it only in KATV crime Stoppers.
The first incident's bold stealing from a fitness facility while
people are working out nearby. This is eleven o'clock the

(01:12:51):
night of Sunday, June twenty second, Blue Moonfitness near one
hundred and eighth in Q. That's our suspect scoping out
the area. He starts working on the castra at the
front counter. It's not easy, but it turns out he's
resourceful and strong because he ends up using a pair
of scissors to pry open the locked box getting to
the cash inside.

Speaker 2 (01:13:11):
Damn.

Speaker 4 (01:13:12):
After opening one, he how much cash?

Speaker 1 (01:13:14):
Do they even keep it in a gym?

Speaker 2 (01:13:15):
Right? It? Most of the transition, most of the transaction
transactions are going to be like Trunyeah, Like.

Speaker 1 (01:13:20):
Who's paying cash at the gym?

Speaker 2 (01:13:22):
Right? Who walking in the gym with a full ass wallet?

Speaker 1 (01:13:24):
Yeah?

Speaker 4 (01:13:25):
Goes to work on the side.

Speaker 1 (01:13:26):
I thought it was gonna be he was breaking the
people's lockers or something, but he's still in cash. From
the desk.

Speaker 4 (01:13:31):
That can drawer keeps going even though someone's walking right
through the lobby. He pockets the money, picks up his wallet,
his hat, and his phone, and he heads out. The
second case was an even bigger workout for him. It's
a few days later, two twenty in the morning at
a Scooter's near ninety sixth and Q. He's persistent because
it takes him ten minutes to pry open that window.

(01:13:53):
Rolling in, he immediately tries to open a cash register,
but it takes a lot of work. Eleven minutes in,
he goes looking for something else to use and finds
a baseball bat. Going back to the register, he starts
swinging away.

Speaker 1 (01:14:08):
They had a baseball bat just sitting in the in
the in the restaurant, which tells you, listen, these restaurants
are dangerous. I keep telling y'all, minimum rage is real.

Speaker 4 (01:14:20):
He eventually gets to the money inside, but there's a
second register. It's the same routine. Starts with a hammer,
switches to the bat, and at three zero five he
pries open the drawer, gets the bills, scoops up the change.
He grabs a couple of cans of what looks like
red bull and then finally, at three twelve fifty two

(01:14:41):
minutes after the whole thing started, he simply walks out
the back door. Okay, investigators want you to pay close
attention to the clothes. On the front of his sweatshirt
the words make America gleeful again on the back Kodak fight,
he had on those red sweatpants, possibly with the words
grateful debt on him. And in the first theft, he

(01:15:02):
was wearing a ball cap or a trucker type cap
with designs on the front and on top of the bill. Okay,
do you know him or where he may live, then
use one of these ways to contact crime stoppers.

Speaker 1 (01:15:13):
All right, Karen, guess the race. I don't have his day.
Just what was described white?

Speaker 2 (01:15:18):
That shit took so long. They just not letting niggas
sit there and stand there, and people just walking all
around him.

Speaker 1 (01:15:23):
The restaurant was closed, nobody was in there. Oh okay
at the white at the other one, yeah, I.

Speaker 2 (01:15:29):
Was like yeah, they was like he when people walked past,
someone was like yeah, some some white person. Alert would
have been up, like hey, what are you doing over
that darker?

Speaker 1 (01:15:37):
Let's check the chat room see what they believe this
gentleman's race, energy drink thief, white, white and needed drug money.
Those gym membership cancelation fees would make you do it white,
deadheaded white, white, crime and plane sight, grateful dead Ozzie
Osbourne white, pre workout, powder lift white, Lieutenant America of
United States of meth white. The correct answer is everyone

(01:16:00):
un said the same thing, white and everyone got it wrong.
He's black.

Speaker 3 (01:16:05):
Are you serious? Are you serious?

Speaker 1 (01:16:19):
Soak it in?

Speaker 2 (01:16:20):
And nobody stopped him.

Speaker 1 (01:16:22):
Yeah, that's him. That's as grateful dead pants. That's the
back of his hoodie that says Kodak fight with Donald
Trump and make America great again. And him doing the
like after he got almost shot, fist in the air.
That's the front make America gleeful again. This is when

(01:16:44):
he went. That's him all up in the restaurant for
fifty minutes breaking shit. This is him at the gym. Sorry,
this is him at the gym and people. That's a
guy walking past him.

Speaker 2 (01:16:56):
Yeah wow, and nobody is like, what are you doing
over that? Do you work here?

Speaker 1 (01:17:03):
And that's why I don't tilt the game.

Speaker 2 (01:17:08):
I'll take that LDN. That's one time I'm glad to
be wrong.

Speaker 1 (01:17:13):
Make America gleeful again. That is wild wild business. Uh,
let's do another one. Suspicious substance found that Sally zetter
Rower Elementary leads to arrest an employee on the custodian

(01:17:34):
staff at Sally zetter Rower or et cetera. Rower Elementary
faces drug possession charges at The bag that was later
determined to be cocaine was discovered at the school Friday,
August first. According to a post on Facebook, the school
resource officer Jessica Kite was notified by a school administrator
that a member of the custodial team had discovered a

(01:17:58):
small clear bag containing this specious white substance on the
floor of a commons area inside the school. They sent
the substance to the Sheriff's Office Crime Suppression Team for analysis.
It was confirmed to bean. According to the post, Safety
director Todd Mashburn and school administrators reviewed the footage from

(01:18:19):
the school security cameras. The review led to identification of
a potential suspect who was an employee of the school.
Pamela Darien was arrested. It's been charged the possession of
cocaine and violation of a control substance law within a
drug free zone. Darien, who was listed as a member
of the custodial staff, voluntarily surrendered, and that's messed up.

(01:18:41):
So another custodian found a cocaine because they was doing
their job cleaning up, and then they was they turned
it in and now you going to jail as a
fellow custodian.

Speaker 2 (01:18:53):
Right, you ain't meet the woman? Like, fuck it, I
don't give it. Damn. I got to go home like,
I ain't trying to fill out no paper.

Speaker 1 (01:19:00):
If I gotta clean up throw up with sawdust, I'm
gonna need to be a little hot. I mean, it's
only fair. At this point, y'all should be happy. I'm
not on crystal men, right, but yeah, they fired uh
Pamela Darien the postals of states. At no point did
any children come into contact with the substance. The safety
of our students and the staff for mad is a
top priority for both. Da Da Da Da da da.

(01:19:23):
All Right, Karen, I guess the race of Pamela Darian.
Pamela Darian, cocaine possessor and custodian. I'm going to go white,
all right? Spelled the last name Okay, the last name
is spelled d uh hold on D A R I
E N if that helps it all? Kochie Caucasian, Damn,

(01:19:48):
Nikki and her Man really fell on hard times. White
still doing going white for the long back in a
blood in a bag black. So this one's more divided.
Karen said white, y'all said white, Some of y'all said black.

Speaker 2 (01:20:01):
I'm gonna change it to black based off of the
spelling of that last okay, because you know I've seen
it spelled variation different, you know what I mean, like
ways I assumed it was another way.

Speaker 1 (01:20:12):
Okay, white is the powder in that bag and up
her nose Alcatraz, Latino. The correct answer is black. You
got it? Care many of you did go white and

(01:20:33):
you missed it?

Speaker 2 (01:20:38):
Yeah, that's spelling.

Speaker 1 (01:20:39):
I was like, yeah, look I blamed the clips. They
knew what they was doing, pushing t I've been looking
at the corners a little harder lately, thinking about getting
out there slanging that thing. I don't know, all right,

(01:21:00):
So caring is and one and one. Uh, but you
know we still got the bonus round triple.

Speaker 6 (01:21:08):
The points triple, the points triplets triple, the points trip triple,
de raetrip points trip triple, the points triple, the points,
triple points, triple the points trip true.

Speaker 1 (01:21:27):
All right. A Florida man who said I do not one,
but two too many times has been sentenced for his
felony bigamy conviction. Henry Betsy Junior, who sentenced to two
years probation on July thirty first, after being convicted of
being married to three separate women at the same time.
Well damn uh. None of the women were where he

(01:21:51):
was married to any of the other women, or that
he was or that, and that he married the women
in separate counties, helping him avoid detection from the state
as well. He's fifty. He pleaded guilty to the felony
bigger me charged in May. The Ali Reporter that he
attended that court here with a new girlfriend by his side. Okay,
he keep them one ah ah a, what's funny. She

(01:22:12):
was at the hearing. She ain't know what it was about.
She thought of diggn't She's like, listen, he is single
and ready to mingle. I don't even know what this
sentence is for. But at this citizen he was alone
with He was alone when he was confronted by all
three women. He buried. See that's how he keep them separate.
The new girlfriend didn't see the three women he sold
the perfect person when in reality he was none of

(01:22:33):
those things, said wife Tanya Betsy, who unraveled her husband's
deceptive plot when she began searching his name in county
databases across the state, revealing he was still married to
two other women, Michelle Betsy and Brandy Betsy. Now what's
funny to me is something had to be going wrong
for you to search his name in all the county records.

Speaker 2 (01:22:53):
Three different families. Nigga, there's no way you were spending
equal time with everybody. You can't be for be going
on trips for months on. Then we kind of god,
damn job you got.

Speaker 1 (01:23:03):
She found me and she messaged me. I had no
idea that she was actually still married to him, said
Michelle at the Centazen. The wives all said they met
Bessie on dating websites and married him at the local courthouses.
He said all the right things. His profile read looking
for a beautiful woman who understands the ups and downs
of life, is trustworthy and no games. What he should

(01:23:28):
looking for a sucker? They say one's born every morning,
every minute, but I need three of them.

Speaker 2 (01:23:34):
They're trying to get the foe.

Speaker 1 (01:23:36):
But the women told the court last week that his
own games began in November twenty twenty, when he first
married Tanya after meeting her on tender Bessie then married
Brandy in February at the meeting on stir, and then
tied a third night with Michelle three weeks after they
met on match dot com. So he just stay on
different sits, right, y'all better check the other profiles. He

(01:23:57):
might be married on Christian, Mingo, farmers only.

Speaker 2 (01:23:59):
This is the just the three that found out about
each other.

Speaker 1 (01:24:02):
Hinge, Like, he probably married on LinkedIn, you never know,
not even dating sites. He he's just on their Like
how you get married on Amazon?

Speaker 2 (01:24:12):
You got a TikTok wife, sir.

Speaker 1 (01:24:14):
The three women told the court they believe Bessie married
in the game access to their finances. Well, hey, no
romance without finance. We all know that.

Speaker 2 (01:24:24):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:24:24):
Bessie reportedly apologized to the three women in their families
as well as his as his at his well, which
one is his? I apologize to y'all and your family
and my family which is one of the y'all three families,
or maybe it's what this new lad is my family.
I don't know. I'm always looking for family. I'm a
family man. Family, so call me Peter Griffin. I'm a

(01:24:46):
family guy. I want to apologize to the latest and
I want to apologize to the court administration and to
the family and friends that have been to be had
to be involved in this because ultimately this is something
I didn't wish to be a part.

Speaker 2 (01:24:57):
Of what but you were part of it.

Speaker 6 (01:25:01):
Not.

Speaker 1 (01:25:01):
He didn't mean to be a part of getting caught, Karen.
He wanted to be a part of having three different
women's Uh. The wives didn't buy his apology. What they
don't believe him.

Speaker 2 (01:25:13):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:25:13):
He avoided jail time, He's still convicted. LaGG does a
convicted felon, Well, I can get I can see why
he would be confused because like, what is the law
in Florida? Like having three wives? I feel like three
different counties that should be okay as long as one
of them is a gator. I'm sure that I'm sure

(01:25:34):
that it was only said because it was recommended by
his attorney to say, said Tanya. Do I think he
has any remorse? Absolutely not. Fernando County inmate records review
by People show. Betsy was released from custody July thirty first,
after a sentencing.

Speaker 2 (01:25:50):
So does it a know that marriage just then? I mean,
goddamn three of them, they all can't be real.

Speaker 1 (01:25:55):
I'd imagine it has to be right. ABC Action News
reported that the judge ordered him to staff so media
and not have contact with his three wives. All right,
I guess it's gonna start pen pal uh records from
the jail. Karen, guess the race of mister Henry Betsy Junior.

Speaker 2 (01:26:17):
I'm gonna white with this one, Henry Betsy or I'm
gonna white.

Speaker 1 (01:26:26):
Let's check the chat room see what they believe mister
Henry Betsy Junior's races. Betsy will do it again Florida
man white. In the heat of the night episode Black
Florida triggerments with two first names white, next Governor of Florida, white,
whimsical white. Black. I bet none of them were over
thirty five. Black, Papa was a rolling stone white. Every

(01:26:48):
single one of them is white. White. With the Professional
Dating Profile game, the correct answer is, Karen, you went
black or white? You went white? Right, You're wrong. He's
black and everyone who said black you got it right.

Speaker 2 (01:27:19):
Oh now he ain't no trick, daddy, he started talking,
it would started, didn't the world?

Speaker 8 (01:27:27):
For real?

Speaker 6 (01:27:28):
Well?

Speaker 1 (01:27:29):
I think do you think he has those are his
natural eyes? Are those contacts?

Speaker 2 (01:27:33):
I wonder might be contacts.

Speaker 1 (01:27:35):
I just wonder, you know, because I feel like he
has a tight and the women that he was able
to U scam, they are all white women. And I
feel like I wonder if he was limited in his
ability to scam sisters because he got them them green,

(01:28:00):
them eyes that seemed like contacts. I just wonder if
it was hard for him. And of course he showed
up the court with his new white woman, so he
had okay, he keep it a certain way.

Speaker 2 (01:28:13):
He sure does. That's a white ass name.

Speaker 1 (01:28:15):
Though, Betsy.

Speaker 2 (01:28:17):
Uh well, Henry Betsy Junior too, mm hmm.

Speaker 6 (01:28:22):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:28:22):
I just wonder if if that was what happened, because
I feel like when he came to court.

Speaker 7 (01:28:29):
Playing field is magnificent. Man, snow Bunny is everywhere. Now,
you know what I'm saying. I just I feel like
sometimes I'm on a ski tripping because I ain't never
pulled so many before.

Speaker 6 (01:28:42):
You know.

Speaker 7 (01:28:42):
It's like I go to the to these clubs down
here and downtown, and it's like snow bunny heaven, you know,
blonde hair, BRUNEI it hal Hey, sometimes I go for
the freaking when the purple blue you know hall, I
like them with the Caucasian girls. They hey, they like
to fell on me. I like to fill on them

(01:29:02):
double d's. Hey, that's what it is.

Speaker 2 (01:29:06):
Yeah, one of my favorite clips.

Speaker 1 (01:29:08):
I think he got I think he got a tight Okay,
you know what he does? Uh who sore ratchetes time
mm mm hmmmm.

Speaker 6 (01:29:23):
H.

Speaker 1 (01:29:43):
I feel like as soon as you show up with
them colored eyes, I'm like, he got three wives.

Speaker 2 (01:29:50):
Something happened in your three wife you're putting them in
the days? Get away from me?

Speaker 1 (01:29:54):
Them contacts? You you you don't nothing about you is real.

Speaker 2 (01:29:58):
You will not give me. Van picked it away from me.

Speaker 1 (01:30:00):
You know, just because you went to the blue eyed
contacts door don't mean you're a white man. They can
have four wives, right. A thirty three year old North
Bay shore man the arm with the Sword, was arrested
for threatening officers August fifth, one, twenty six pm. Officers
responded to a nine one call reporting a hostage being
held at a house. When officers arrived at the home,

(01:30:22):
Joseph Resciano threatening officers by brandishing a long sword and
refusing commands to drop the weapon. The taser was deployed
with additional commands to drop the sword. The taser was
not effective, and he did not comply with the police.

Speaker 2 (01:30:35):
Oh baby, he was on something. Yeah, when when I've
seen nothing them videos that when they start tasing people
and they don't go down, It's like, oh them, it
is Drews. Because if you ain't got no drugs your
system and that electricity hit your body, bit you dropping
like bricks.

Speaker 1 (01:30:50):
Well, maybe he was on a mission to be the
hokaga bearing this. So at least one officer discharged their weapons,
striking Restiano. Restiana was transported via an ambulance to South
Shore University Hospital and treated for injuries. There were no
hostages in the house, so maybe he called it in
and hoped to get like a death by cop situation.

Speaker 2 (01:31:07):
Yeah, suicide type of thing.

Speaker 1 (01:31:09):
Yeah, any one way information on the incident, blah blah blah.
All right, y'all, that's it, Thanks for listening. We'll be
back throughout the week. Hope you had a good time.
We did. Until next time, I love you, I love
you too.
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