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September 9, 2025 94 mins

Rod and Karen banter about vegan toilet cleaner, Publix “Peach Heat” rotisserie chicken, good soup, football PTO, a woman complaining about an HBCU, and intense public phone calls. Trump complains men can’t get in fights with their wives, Covid cases surging, Trump letter to Epstein, Biden economy had a billion according to Trump, SCOTUS rules that racial profiling okay for ICE, Adin Ross served papers by Megan Thee Stallion’s lawyer, Jameela Jamil calls out Serena Williams endorsing a GLP1, ChatGPT flooding courts with misinformation, man kills roommate on the way to watch college football, son beats up dad for being his dad, men give up search for 5 year old left in their care and sword ratchetness.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Good news everyone.

Speaker 2 (00:03):
I listened to the Black Guy Who Tips podcast because
Rod and Karen hot.

Speaker 1 (00:09):
Hey, welcome to another episode of the Blackout to his podcast.
I'm your host. Rod joined us always on my co
host and we're live on a Tuesday. Ready to give
you some podcasts and find us everywhere you find podcasts.
Leave us five star reviews. If you don't and they're
not nice, we won't read them on the air. You'll
never know if it's gotten to us. The official weapon

(00:30):
of the show is and the unofficial sport and bullet
ball extreme extreme extreme extreme. All right, Karen, got any banter?

Speaker 2 (00:41):
I do?

Speaker 1 (00:42):
All right?

Speaker 3 (00:44):
Do you have any? Do you have any? Do you
have any banter?

Speaker 1 (00:56):
Anter? Anter? Danter? Anter? Do you have any?

Speaker 3 (01:10):
Talk to me?

Speaker 1 (01:12):
Do you have any? All right? Care?

Speaker 2 (01:17):
Why do they have toilet cleaner that is vegan?

Speaker 1 (01:22):
Is a toilet cleaner eating it?

Speaker 2 (01:23):
I don't know? Because you got some stuff and it
had big old plastic on the side vegan. I was like,
who gives a fuck if your toilet cleaner is vegan? Like,
are you eating it?

Speaker 1 (01:32):
If not?

Speaker 2 (01:33):
No, nobody care, I didn't, you know, not not unless
it's a thing that vegan cleans extra clean because it's vegan.
I don't know, but it confused the shit out of
me when I seen it was vegan. I was like,
what's the purpose.

Speaker 1 (01:43):
Of putting that on there? That is interesting because I
don't think people willn't necessarily care about it. I just
want to know why you said it. In the same
case as this, why do you need white man pay
for work?

Speaker 2 (02:00):
Because I'm just as confused as him about the black
man's pipperwork.

Speaker 1 (02:02):
What is going on here? I assume that it's people
care about animals not being hurt like vegans. Okay, a
lot of a lot of people are, you know, I
would say vegans even more so than like vegetarians and
stuff like vegans are very much like I don't want
to cause any extra suffering to the animals. And if

(02:23):
there's something that is happening with the animals and it's hurting,
and that's how they make limit pledged, and you know,
I don't. I don't want to use limit pledged. I
want to use a vegan thing. Yeah. I always find
it interested whenever they label stuff that's not it doesn't
need to be labeled, you know. So I think it's

(02:44):
always interesting when it's like, you know fruit loops now
with zero protein or whatever. It's like, I wasn't eating
fruit loops for protein, right, that's not no, you don't
get no extra shit for that. Like that's that's it's
still sugar rins.

Speaker 2 (02:59):
So what do we do here?

Speaker 1 (03:00):
You didn't even do nothing. You didn't change it in
greet you just put something on the box. That's because
it's not supposed to be in there in the first place, right,
you know, it's like, oh, it's sugar free squash, Like
we know there's no sugar in squash. You don't get
extra credits for sugar free in the squash. But uh yeah,
I assume that that. Now the question is what is

(03:23):
the market for that? That's true. Well, I'm not even
saying it's bigger. I'm just wondering to know what the
market is.

Speaker 2 (03:31):
Ah, because I was like, you got to be talking
to somebody.

Speaker 1 (03:34):
Yeah, this is because like I guess my question is like,
did they just do research on it and they know that,
like maybe there's an extra bump we can get from
saying we're vegan and the other places won't, or you know,
it's just their new advertising technique. I just want to know,
you know, because so I guess vegans don't kind of

(03:55):
DEI so they don't have to worry about the right
getting mad and canceling them, all right, you know, it
seemed like the thing they would be mad at. Let's see.
Uh oh, Publics has limited edition peach heat rotisserie chickens.
You might want to get on that if you got
the publix in your area. Just letting y'all know. They

(04:17):
said limited editions, so I don't know if they coming
back or this is a one time thing or whatever,
but I've seen some and uh, it was well worth it.
That chicken in the bag, don't miss.

Speaker 2 (04:30):
It was sweet, but not too sweet, but I can't
explain it.

Speaker 4 (04:37):
It was really really good, y'all.

Speaker 1 (04:38):
It had that peach heat dog it tastes had that peach,
and it had a little bit that spice. It's worth it.
Y'all should go check it out. I mean, them chickens
is already still. I don't know why the terroriffs hadn't
hit the chickens yet because the public chickens still be
like six seven dollars or whatever. I feel like that's
a lot of chicken. That's a lot of that's you

(04:59):
get meals off there chicken. That's not no one meal chicken.

Speaker 4 (05:02):
If you actually just pulled it apart, Yeah, you can
get several meals.

Speaker 1 (05:05):
A while if I want to go to the other
to the to the you know, meet department where it's
uh where you gotta cook it yourself, like you get
a rotistic chicken. I'm sure it costs more than five
six dollars. But anyway, just.

Speaker 2 (05:20):
Like I guess, because it's in house, they was like,
we already got it. It ain't no extra costs.

Speaker 1 (05:24):
Because I know how y'all are, and y'all gonna wait,
And I hate when I see these posts. Y'all gonna
wait three weeks or some shit and be like, uh, Facebook,
everybody tag everybody this post public is out of peach
heat chicken. I got the last one. Uh why didn't
nobody tell me they've been having this for the last right,

(05:48):
I'm telling you, I'm telling you right now, they got it.
So I don't know how long it's gonna last. But
it's your fault if you get to this podcast three
weeks later because you like to stack them up and Benjamin, shit,
that's true. That is on you.

Speaker 2 (06:03):
I ordered some soup and not really soup. It was
almost like a phuugh and it was really good. And
we were sitting there and before I knew it, I
don't know if you heard me, I said out loud,
I think that this is something that Nauvritobo ordered from
the noodle shop. That shit was so good and it
had so much shit floating in and it was absolutely delicious,

(06:25):
like a big ass in house bread crumbs and not
bread crumbs, but yeah, yeah, I guess you call them
bread crumbs.

Speaker 1 (06:35):
And the noodles.

Speaker 2 (06:37):
Was like thick and homemade, and the soup was absolutely delicious.
And this soup was so good. I hit a bone.
I was like, oh yeah, I like this. If I
hit a bone in your soup, I know that you
actually bought that soup that chicken in it. And he
was like, I got out a big bone with a
small bone, get caught in that.

Speaker 4 (06:56):
That's okay. I hit one of them bones.

Speaker 2 (06:58):
I was like, oh yes, I was having the time
of my life.

Speaker 1 (07:00):
It was absolutely delicious. Alright, Uh, that was some good suit.

Speaker 2 (07:07):
It was so good I was eating the next day.
Roger was shot project throwing away.

Speaker 1 (07:12):
I was like, you're threw it away. He was like
you normally don't eat.

Speaker 2 (07:14):
Leftose and saying I know, but that's what was so good.

Speaker 1 (07:18):
Yeah, I didn't know. I would have kept it. I didn't.
You know, normally you once the food Leah is a restaurant,
you're you're too good to eat it. Football is a
crazy sport, because why can't you just call in sick
when it's your week to tackle Derrick Henry. That don't
make sense. I feel like, all right, they any other
job you could just be like, I'm not doing that today.

(07:41):
That's crazy. But that's the one job where, no matter
how good or bad your team is, no matter how
big or small you are, when it's seven foot tall
thrower motherfucker come through running every week, you can't be like, yeah,
that's actually a crazy coincidence. Boss. I'm actually having my
birthday party that night, so I'm not gonna be here.
I'm yeah, I'm taking a personal day ato time. I

(08:04):
shouldn't have to day hit this big motherfucker fifteen times,
like hitting a freight train. Get can get ct on
every hit knowing it's getting it's just messing my life up.
I can't just wait till we play somebody smaller. I
can't play the Bengos or whatever the fuck Like, It's
just I don't know, man, they need they union is

(08:27):
not union and right, it's not like how you a union,
but you're not negotiating time off? Right? Can I take
my lunch break during the second half, because no, you cannot.
I don't want to hit this dude in the fourth quarter.
You just keep getting stronger and stronger as.

Speaker 2 (08:42):
The game progresses on houseway.

Speaker 1 (08:45):
They need football PTO. Yes they do.

Speaker 2 (08:50):
And my next one, me and rogerck was eating at
a different restaurant. We're just sitting down eating and just
out of nowhere, this blaby she was just going up
about HBCUs and I was like, well, damn, it was
one of them things where she was black. Yeah, the
lady was black, and I guess her baby must have

(09:11):
had a bad experience out of HBCU.

Speaker 4 (09:14):
And you know, we just let her cook, you know,
because she was.

Speaker 2 (09:17):
Just talking out loud like nobody like like nobody else
in there went to one or nobody would be offended
by her statements or anything. And it was just funny
to me because a lot of people feel that way
about HBCUs when they've had a bad experience, but they
failed to realize a lot of people have bad experiences
across all universities, regardless of if it's an HBCU or PWI.

(09:39):
They all have financial a issues. They all have all
types of issues. Now some things might be more specific
to HBCUs for the fact that I guess what, we
don't have the funds and all that stuff, which has
got a completely different thing. And or all children are different,
you know, like like your child, it might not be
a mix for them, it might not be a fit
for them, you know, just to make a whole swath

(10:01):
at it, and it was like, well damn. And also
it's one of those things too, I think about this.
It's a lot of people that's gonna be looking real
hard at HBCUs when it when it comes time, because
it's gonna be like, you ain't gonna get no fundings,
you ain't gona get no grins, and go be like,
well what can we do to get you through school
without an arm in the leg because you know, they
keep changing all the rules and the regulations. Yeah.

Speaker 1 (10:23):
Well, also like will HBCUs even be able to function?
You know if all that comes to past with funding
is you know, as we'll see it's being written in
the Supreme Court. So yeah, and I mean it's that
thing like I don't get too defensive about people that
went to HBCUs complaining about their HBCU or whatever like whatever.

(10:48):
Everyone has an individual experience. All schools are schools, and
you know I had I know, I had issues at
Fabel State with financial aid coming through it at the
right time, and I had to go down there and
right for it. You really shouldn't have to. I mean,
there's there's entire there's other schools where they don't even
have to do that kind of shit, right, you know. So,
and that's a common complaint of folks that go to

(11:10):
those schools, so you know, it happens. I'm not gonna
you know, that was her experience or whatever. I just
I just thought it was crazy how loud she was
being in the restaurant. I was like, you don't know
that everybody agrees right.

Speaker 2 (11:23):
With the statements that you're saying, ma'am.

Speaker 1 (11:26):
And people may have like went to that school or anything.
It's like, well, damn, I'm not. I'm not arguing with
you over breakfast, like say whatever you gotta say. But yeah,
My last thing is just intense public phone calls give
me secondhand embarrassment. I maybe because I don't ever want
to be on one. Like hopefully if I got to

(11:46):
make an intense phone call, I could do it in
the privacy of my house or something like right when
I see people out even in the car. When I
see people on a phone call in public that's extremely intense,
like oh, man like like like I don't know what
you're going through whatever, man Like, I feel bad for

(12:08):
them that they got to go through it in front
of all of us. I feel like everybody's had an
intense conversation but like having to be like walking down
South Boulevard like no motherfucker, because you're not gonna play me,
just like, oh my god, like that what life? Life
is going bad right now?

Speaker 2 (12:26):
Ain't either they cussing somebody out or somebody cussing them out.

Speaker 1 (12:29):
Something happening, Especially when you see somebody that's walking and
then they hit that stop because that's how mad they is.
They clearly was walking somewhere, but then they stop and
be like like like the person's in front of them,
like what the fuck you trying to do? It's like
that person's not even there. They on the phone miles away.
Yes they are.

Speaker 4 (12:49):
They can't even tell.

Speaker 1 (12:51):
I mean you can hear that they stop, but you
can't really you know they they I'm like, man, that's
just it's a bad day, you know.

Speaker 2 (12:57):
I don't think I've ever had a conversation like that
while I'm you know, just walking and things like that.

Speaker 1 (13:03):
I try not to, man, I've had fun conversations, you know,
like a friend called me while I'm all taking a
stroll through the park or something. I'm laughing, Like I
prefer to do my if I'm might have to cuss
you out type of thing, I'd rather either do it
in person or we do that at the privacy in
my own home, because I'm not trying to. I don't
want to be, you know, making a right on fucking

(13:23):
Alvamar and everybody in the next car, Like why is
this guy yelling at about at top of his voice?
Like this man is having a time, right, I hope
he making down? Yeah, it just I know I'm supposed
to be nosy, but they're far enough away I can't
hear them, right, So it's just it just gives me

(13:44):
I'm not like I'm not even able to be nosy.
I'm just like, oh, that's that's too bad. Whatever happened.
I can tell that's not good. What's happening, man, that's
that's really sad that that you got to go through
this in front of all of us, you know, right
in front of everybody. Yeah, it's at this intersection. Yeah.
I'm not even a huge public phone call person as

(14:05):
far as like public places, Like I don't like if
you're walking on the street, fine, but like you know,
the people that like hop on the bus and then
be on speakerphone, it's always like a weird like, all right,
if that's what you want to do, but it's not.
But you know, I don't judge them too intensely. I'm
just kind of like a roll, you know, roll your
eyes a little bit on the inside. Like I guess

(14:26):
we all need to hear about the party last night
or whatever. But that's fine. Sometimes you know, and you
hear something cool. But whenever it's like an intense fight,
I'll be like, oh boy, oh, so you want us
to get out the bus for you. You need us to
stop the train. Everybody take the next train. You need
some privacy, yes, you do open up the private room
for this person. That's it for me for me. Oh okay,

(14:49):
all right, cool, Well, let's get into another segment. I guess, uh, well,
I guess we have to do politics to get mass
in a while. I didn't know until a number of
years ago when she happened to turn black and now
she wants to be known as black.

Speaker 3 (15:06):
People have got to know whether or not their presidentship crook.

Speaker 1 (15:09):
Well I'm not a crook. I've learned everything I've got.

Speaker 5 (15:14):
I'm saying in Tennessee, I know what she's feted croub
in Tennisty, But just want shame on, shame on, shame on,
shame on you, Shame on you, shame We can't get
fool again. I tell you what, I don't know about you,
but I'm going to go to bed.

Speaker 1 (15:29):
I'm like, I'm going to go Who A lot of
stuff happening right now. Uh, let's do the politics to
we get man. Guys. All right, Chief Justice, lets Trump
remove member of the Federal Trade Commission for now.

Speaker 2 (15:49):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (15:49):
Some Supreme Court rulings came out yesterday, Chief Justice John Roberts,
who y'all will remember as the guy who said that
the reason they could get rid of the Voting Protection
Acts was because the South was no longer racist because
everybody was able to vote. And then, of course when

(16:12):
they stopped enforcing the laws that allow everyone to be
able to vote, suddenly voter suppression came back. It's just interesting. Meanwhile,
those Southern states have been trying to challenge individual rights
the whole time to try to get voter suppression. It
just have been failing into the Supreme Court until Justice
Roberts broke the you know, the time was like, yeah,

(16:34):
it's cool, the South not racist no more, so why
are we even doing it? And back then I still
remember and I get it. You got especially you legal people,
you know, your jail covens of the world. There's a
certain level of objectivity and partiality you're supposed to have.
And I think even those who were upset at him
were more like a he just read the room wrong,
like he earnestly meant he thinks that racism is not

(16:58):
the same because, uh, the people have changed. But it's
really just these laws have enforced it, you know. And
even at that moment, I went, this, motherfucker's a op.
There's no way any right thinking person can have sat
on that bench listen to all the challenges from southern
states that were trying to roll back people's rights and went, yeah,

(17:21):
I think they I think they're not racist down there anymore.
Let's go ahead and remove all the all the safety
valves that are protecting the black people down there. So anyway,
he's been the voice of these newest rulings and they're his.
They're not ain't really explaining much of these newest rulings,
rulings they shouldn't. They're not going to. Oh yeah, they're

(17:43):
just kind of doing them. And they just keep increasing
Trump's power without really much pushback. And so in this case,
they basically broke a like one hundred and something year
president where a president can't remove a member of the
Federal Trade Commission. They basically were like, yes he can.

(18:05):
Like he wants to fire her, he can. Now this
really bodes you got to keep your eyebrow arched for this.
Because there's Lisa Cook I believe it is her name,
who is like the a city, like the second in
command of the Federal Reserve. And Trump said he fired

(18:25):
her via whatever, and she's like, I'm not leaving. You
can't fire me. I'll see you in court, and when
the court allows something like this that's unprecedented, it does
make you think they might allow that which is unprecedented,
which also makes you think that's just a trial to
get rid of Jerome Powell, who is the head of

(18:49):
the of the Federal Reserve, who sets off so like,
I think all of this shit has been set in
motion because it's Trump testing his boundaries, and I believe
that this will embode in him. If he gets Lisa Cook,
it'll embode in him, and then you'll see the Federal
Reserve person be fired quote unquote by the President, something

(19:10):
that has literally never been done before. Just because this
Supreme Court is all about power, people that criticize them
from any other place, I just think I'm being foolish.
These people are one hundred percent about what helps conservatives
and Maggot and Trump is good. Anything that Biden tried

(19:32):
to do, they would limit his presidential powers. You can't
do that. And when people say stuff like why didn't
Biden just do blank? They most of them are just
fucking like people that don't pay attention because agreed, there's
things he tried to do that they literally said he couldn't.
Because that's what the Supreme Court job is. Except when
it comes to Trump, they're like, he can do whatever
he wants, agreed.

Speaker 2 (19:53):
And the thing about it, people really need to be
careful to about the Federal Reserve because dem know the
people that determine what the dollar is worth. They determine
a lot of the interest rates and shit like this.
These are the people that control whenever we're going to
a recession, like like the these are these people, and

(20:14):
so you know, Trump been trying to get them to
do shit, and he was like, no, I'm not trying
to fuck up the dollar.

Speaker 4 (20:19):
I'm not trying to fuck.

Speaker 2 (20:20):
Up the whole ass economy with the bullshit that you're requesting,
like it doesn't make sense.

Speaker 4 (20:26):
Please let me do my job.

Speaker 2 (20:29):
And Trump is like, no, bitch, I want you to
do this, this, that.

Speaker 1 (20:32):
And the other.

Speaker 2 (20:33):
So he has been pleased with them. So people need
to be careful because if he gets somebody in that
that does whatever the fuck he wants to do, the
American economy is gonna be.

Speaker 1 (20:44):
Who knows what's gonna happen.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
I don't mean no harm, like like people take these
people for granted, the people that control how much an
interest rates on your loans are for your house and
your car and shit like this. How much the dollar
is compared to the rest of the world, like shit
like that.

Speaker 1 (21:00):
Yeah, the Court has allowed firings of several other board
members of independent agencies. It has suggested, however, that there's
this like limitation to his power to fire people, and
that's going to be tasted when they get to Lisa Cook.
And it's interesting because just because they say there's a limit,

(21:24):
if they never exhibit that limit, there's not a limit.
And functionality me like, they don't tell him no, So
how do we even how could we ever go? Yeah,
there's a limit to his power. The limit is arbitrary.
They don't even write their decisions down in a way
that would explain it. They're inconsistent. They violate precedent. When
they want to, they imply President that is old. And

(21:45):
when they don't, when they feel like it, like it's no.
This court just does what it wants to attain power.
For conservatives, Donald Trump complains that it is illegal for
men to beat their wives. I saw this clip and
thought it was a joke because it was so crazy.
He really said it.

Speaker 4 (22:02):
Yeah, but ain't ain't that what they want?

Speaker 1 (22:04):
Don't.

Speaker 2 (22:04):
Don't They want women in the house pregnant and having
babies and just being an object that they could just
beat up on, like because you stripping women of all
of their rights so that they could be only dependent
on men for you know, income and and and self
worth and all this other bullshit. So to me, this
is contrary to the message that you're putting out when

(22:26):
you passed. He's fucked up ass laws against women.

Speaker 1 (22:28):
Wait, what's contrary to the to the message?

Speaker 2 (22:31):
Because like every time you turn around, like abortion, you know, no.

Speaker 1 (22:35):
What is his message that's contrary to it?

Speaker 4 (22:37):
Oh? Him, what you just said men shouldn't be women?

Speaker 1 (22:41):
I'm going no, no, he's complaining that you can't beat women.
Oh I heard you wrong? Yeah my bad. Well yeah,
Songe's going right in and say, how corrected you? But yeah,
this this is what happened. It's more than virtually nothing.
A jeez, he looks terrible. I guess he governing this time.
I don't know, man, his hair looks it looks gray

(23:02):
or something looks worse than before Jesus uh.

Speaker 5 (23:06):
And much lesser things things that take place in the
home they call crime.

Speaker 1 (23:09):
You know, they'll do anything they can to find something.

Speaker 5 (23:12):
If a man has a little fight with the wife,
they say this was a crime.

Speaker 1 (23:16):
See, so now I can't claim one hundred percent, but
we are a safe city.

Speaker 5 (23:20):
You can walk to a restaurant, you can walk to
the White House if you work there, you can walk
to the Capitol.

Speaker 1 (23:26):
And even the Democrats, I can't believe it. But they
don't want to admit it. But I can't believe it.

Speaker 5 (23:30):
We could do the same thing in Chicago, New York,
Los Angeles.

Speaker 1 (23:33):
We did it.

Speaker 5 (23:34):
We saved We saved Los Angeles.

Speaker 2 (23:37):
Yeah, this is he just talking. What's a little fight
with the wife? The fuck that means?

Speaker 1 (23:42):
Yeah, It's interesting because I wonder there's two things here. One,
it sounds like he's talking to the press. At least
this is the same room he talks to the press.
Why would anyone be clapping because he's replaced the press
with a bunch of Sicka fans and a bunch of
rightling and ass rightling and assholes. The other thing is,
of course, this is him claiming crime positives them for

(24:08):
DC so that he can expand it to other cities.
Our city is one of these potential cities. By the way,
you know what not just because it's black, but because
there was a high profile crime here where one was
stabbed on the train. She was a Ukrainian immigrant trying
to escape war. A random, crazy person stabbed her on
the train. It was no rhyme or reason to it.

(24:31):
There was no conflict, he didn't know her. He was
just on the train and just stabbed her out of nowhere.
And so Republicans sees on these issues because what do
I keep telling y'all, Narratives are more powerful than the truth.
It doesn't matter what the crime statistics are. They find
these stories that tug at people's already existing isms and

(24:51):
they go black person kills white lady. Keep in mind,
they don't even fuck with Ukraine, the Republicans. They don't
like Ukrainians, they don't like immigrants. But suddenly you have
a pristine looking white lady and you have this homeless
black man and he's done something violent. And now they're like, Charlotte,
we may so we may be on this list of

(25:11):
places because we're a black city. And here comes an excuse.
Now they can find these type of random stories of
crimes throughout the United States, right they can, especially with guns.
You could literally stop in any state and just pick
a city and be like, a gun crime happened there,
we should deploy the National Guard. But there's a reason
they keep doing it for these black cities. But yeah,
meanwhile he's complaining that you can't that a man can't

(25:36):
get in a little fight with his wife without it
being called a crime, which is insane shit. But yeah,
this is the person they put in charge.

Speaker 4 (25:44):
Yep, this is the person that they put in charge.

Speaker 2 (25:47):
And the thing is, ever since I heard about DC,
I ain't trying to be funny, my heart was like, oh, yeah,
I'm on that list. Like I immediately was like, oh yours,
we're on the list, and.

Speaker 1 (26:00):
Nobody any majority black city, suburban type city is yeah,
you're on the list. You're on the list.

Speaker 2 (26:06):
You're not special, you're not above it all or anything
like that. Republicans live in your state too, you know,
because in a lot of these places you have this
concentration of black and brown and other, and then a
lot of places the rest of the state around that
place is fucking red as apples, And so it's just
one of those things where people just feel safe because

(26:27):
they don't go outside of those places, and people that
live in no places to tell you don't go down,
so and so don't go up, but so and so
drive past this because we know that that you you know,
they don't want us there, like we understand that, and
so to live under the illusion and be delusional that

(26:48):
these things will not impact you is nuts to me.

Speaker 1 (26:54):
COVID nineteen cases surge again across the US. Is vaccine
access sparks controversy. So California has already seen hospitalizations near
double and wastewater monitoring conference that virus levels are climbing
across the West, South and southeast. But because of the

(27:14):
updated vaccine meant like rules and restrictions. They have updated
vaccines for us, but we everyone can't get him. You
gotta be sixty five or older, or you gotta have
a qualifying health condition for you to get it, restrictions
put in place by of course, Robert F. Kennedy Jr.

(27:35):
And meanwhile, Trump said some shit about how vaccines work.
They just do or whatever, and everybody's like, ooh, they's
a riff between RFK Jr. And Trump, And I'm like,
what does it mean? If nothing's gonna happen right end
of the day, Donald Trump can go get vaccinated if
he wants to win. That's all he cares about him.
He don't care about us. He doesn't care about what
we think about him. I agree, he's fine. So while

(27:58):
he even him saying that doesn't mean shit. Doesn't mean
all Kevi Junior is getting fired. It doesn't mean that
the vaccine rules will come back. It doesn't mean shit
until something happens like this, like everyone's everyone, this is
a fucking reality show. Like ooh, they fighting, the girls
are fighting. It's like this is our fucking lines, bitch,
it's not. This isn't like a caddy reality show where like,

(28:20):
oh look at this, Kim got into it with Chloe,
Like these are people in charge of shit. So like
the whole like rule you know, big eyes like that
missed me with all that shit.

Speaker 2 (28:31):
Yeah, and that's a lot of times I like you
said a lot of shit. I just don't talk because
I realized, particularly the public and mass is just stupid
and they would rather see that than the reality of
people being able to go get vaccinated. And some states
are like having a fit and like y'all not making rules.
Fuck it, We're gonna make an individual state rule so
our people can't get these fucking shots. Fuck what he

(28:52):
talking about. But all they gonna do is challenging and
and enforce whatever the fuck that they're doing it because
they're gonna be like, you, state can't make your own
individual rules. That's the federal quote unquote federal government's job.
But then it's funny when they want the federal government
to come in and then the shit they need to
come in or they were like, nah, individual states rights.

Speaker 1 (29:10):
Trump's letter to Epstein got released. Some House Democrats got
it out to everybody. Of course, it's the same letter
he denies even writing. When I asked about it, he
said it's dead, it's already been discussed or some shit
like that. These people that believe every conspiracy theory, including
AI videos at ten walls, will not pick up this

(29:32):
conspiracy enough. They like they they it's not enough for
them to get away from Trump, even if they supposed
to believe it, you know. But yeah, so shout out
to the Democrats for doing that, even though I think
it's one of those feudal things that people say they
want say, and then as soon as the Democrats do
it, it doesn't count for shit. It's like you didn't do anything.

(29:54):
But yeah, I don't think this will have any real effect.
I hope I'm wrong. Maybe Joe Rogan and them will
actually go read the shit and be like that's disgusting, man,
But I don't think they really will.

Speaker 4 (30:04):
I don't think yeah, cause it doesn't matter.

Speaker 2 (30:06):
And so that's why you know, when you come out,
you but I didn't vote for this, I personally don't
want to hear and I don't care.

Speaker 4 (30:12):
This is what you voted for.

Speaker 2 (30:13):
You're gonna you're gonna have to deal with that, and
you're gonna have to deal with people looking at you
crazy and all that shit, like like, this is the
reality that you made. These are the decisions that you've done.
You know, these are the people that you put on
your platform, and you're not gonna run away from that
because you use your platform to spew this bullshit.

Speaker 1 (30:32):
Michigan judge tars' case against fifteen accused fake electors from
Donald Trump in twenty twenty. District Court Judge Christian D. Simmons,
So I believe it was a black woman, said in
the court hearing that the fifteen Republicans accused will not
face trial. The cases dragged through court since Michigan Attorney
General Dana Nassa, a Democrat, announced the charges over two

(30:53):
years ago. Simmons said she saw no intent to commit
fraud and to defend his actions, whether they were right, wrong,
or indifferent. They seriously believed there were problems with the election.
I believe they were executing their constitutional right to seek redress.
Each member of the group, which include a few high
profile members of the Republican Party in Michigan, faced eight
charges of forgery and conspiracy to commit election forgery. The

(31:16):
top felony charges carried a maximum penalty of fourteen years
in prison. Supporters, friends and families crowded in the hallway
outside the courtroom cheered when the judge said the case
will be dismissed. Defenders leaving the courtroom cry to hug
friends and family. One woman wept and hugged at another
and said, we did it. Yeah. I mean, when January
six people are literally getting part in. I can see

(31:38):
a judge literally being like, what's the point, right right?
Regardless of where they followed they were, shouldn't they shouldn't
be like that for the record, But I can see
them looking around realistically and being like some of these
motherfuckers are in the party that decide who judges are
in my state. Donald Trump will probaly, uh well, he
can't parton them because these aren't federal charges. But like

(32:00):
just this, they'll be playing the victim. Something else will happen.
It's sad, but I mean, I can't imagine what her
reasoning is other than to be like, who the fuck cares?
At this point, no one's doing anything, but yeah, you
would like to see the judge do something and make
them go to trial. But yeah, so I don't know.

(32:22):
It just sucks. This seems like that's less and less,
if not no consequences for obvious malfeasance. These days, the
US added nine hundred and eleven thousand fewer jobs estimated
between twenty twenty four and twenty twenty five. Now, some
of you may be thinking like, oh under Trump, no

(32:43):
under Biden. And the reason that I'm bringing this up
is because I think you know, once again it's my conspiracy. Okay,
So y'all don't got to write in. I know some
of you niggas can't help yourselves and be like but
ro this happens all the time. This is what I'm saying.

(33:03):
I don't think it happens all the time. I think
under Trump, we can't trust these numbers. I think there's
an obvious agenda, and he puts people in place, he
puts pressure on the people already there to just be
into his will. When they don't, he fires them. He
gets new people in place, and they just fucking report
what the fuck they tell him, Like what will make
Donald Trump's smile is their job. And so now saying

(33:26):
that the Biden economy wasn't that strong, it seems strong,
but it's actually not strong, guys, if you go back
and look at it, actually there were almost a billion jobs.
I don't believe that. Like this is the same guy
that called Georgia and said, find me the exact amount
of votes I need to steal this election. I don't know, man,
I hear y'all. Maybe you know, And look, maybe I've

(33:49):
just been driven crazy by how much you can't trust
this administration, but I just don't. I doubt the validity
of these numbers with this extremely convenient timing. You just
fired somebody for reporting your numbers down three months ago
and was like, no, this is how they're doing a

(34:09):
bad job. But now here we go to be like, yeah.

Speaker 2 (34:15):
Yeah, and it's not to say that they were not
on the way down. But I don't trust this, Like
you say, the timing means something to me, Like with
this one, this is a little different. This ain't no
revise or anything like that. It's oh, yeah, these number's
been down. Yeah, after you fired that lady and got
somebody else in there, he would they would like go
back into when and when the body was in office,
and Lord of them got them numbers too.

Speaker 1 (34:35):
Yeah, all of a sudden, this body handed me a
weak economy, which is why it was weak. When I
first got in the office.

Speaker 2 (34:41):
First man, he was praising about how great the economy was,
how great the stock market was, how great everything was.

Speaker 1 (34:49):
I remember so, and yes, I get it. There's a
history of revising. You guys are right, and maybe y'all
don't look maybe y'all all right, and I'm tripping and
I'm just going way too hard right now. But I
don't trust it. I don't they. I know they revised
these reports before, but they they also said that the BLS,

(35:14):
which is the Bureau Labor Statistics, has been under attack
from the Trump administration. This is from the AP. I
believe or is it the ap axios? Okay, Trump has
seized data seized on data from previous qc W reports,
suggesting without evidence that the figures were politicized. Top Trump
and economic officials, including Treasury Secretary Scott Bascent, have been

(35:38):
wanting that today's report would show notably slower drives growth.
We're going to get revisions for last year next week.
Butcent said on NBC News Meet the Press on Sunday,
I'm not sure what these people who collect data have
been doing. Okay, if y'all want to believe it, that's fine.
I'm not telling y'all not to. But I don't, and
I'm just don't leave it at that. I don't. And

(36:01):
maybe it's just me.

Speaker 2 (36:02):
Last year's next week, A year's worth for ship like
that can take a while. But you asked me somebody
to go back and get last year's information and revamp
it basically and give it back to you within the
week basically.

Speaker 4 (36:17):
M h Like, maybe that's just me. I don't know
how shit worked.

Speaker 1 (36:20):
Don't get me wrong, because it wasn't at all. I
think it's that quick because it couldn't have been that
long ago. He got rid of this person. It kind
to be like a couple of weeks at best, right,
because recovered that just recently that he was trying to
get rid of that person, and that person got fired,
and now what two three weeks later, we have a
billion dollar billion jobs for Biden were overcounted. But the
reason they got rid of that person because they apparently

(36:43):
overcounted jobs for Trump and went back to a mendos.
So yeah, we'll see, make it, make it make sense dog.
Speaking of which, the Supreme Court, the Supreme Court lifted
a restriction on la immigration stops where they can now

(37:06):
consider people's race for probable cause for stopping them, just blatantly,
like that same Supreme Court that said you can't consider
race when it comes to getting into college or hardships,
but if you want to, you know, stop and fresh
some brown people for speaking Spanish or being brown or

(37:26):
going to work in or wondering whatever, you can do that.
It was a sixty three decision, so complete Republican majority,
and uh yeah, they're all along those those lines and
they don't Yeah, they basically just said they don't care.

Speaker 2 (37:45):
Mm hmmm, they do not care. And my heart goes
out because you know what, it shit starts there.

Speaker 1 (37:51):
You know, all the city La is the place they start,
but all the cities, all the cities, and John Cavanaugh
roll in his like whatever his decision was, like, well,
when they find out that the people are legal, city sends,
the police just tend to you know, they'll just let
him go because that's the right.

Speaker 2 (38:09):
Thing to do.

Speaker 1 (38:09):
It's like, okay, no, that's not the same administration that's
been fighting the saying, uh, a dude to a country
he's not from and it's been like months now like
that that that these this ice, this this administration, that'll
be like, oh oops, we had the wrong guy. The
people that you had to fight to get him to

(38:31):
bring back somebody to from from a place they shipped
them out well illegally.

Speaker 2 (38:36):
And the thing is with this ship, it ain't gonna
care about how much paperwork you have. It ain't gonna
care about how how what kind of documentations you may
have proving things like and shit like this is happening
before in our country. And it's just like he says,
many things of history, just repeating ourselves. It's like, am
I just gonna have to just carry a bunch of
shit on me? But like you say, if you hit

(38:57):
the wrong person, don't give a fuck about none of that.
Burn it in front of my face, and still don't
fucking arrest me and take my black ass to jail.
There's nothing I can.

Speaker 1 (39:05):
Do, yeah, man, And you know it relies on that
similar type of thing, like something like I forget if
it was John Roberts, but there was a quote from
one of the justices that was something like, this doesn't
move our country backwards, roll our country backwards. It moves
us forward. And I'm like, y'all are just literally saying
shit from Twitter, right, y'all supposed to be legal scholars.

(39:27):
You're not citing President, You're just citing like when one
of these decisions gonna be like cry your liberal tears.
It just makes me smile, Like at this point, you know,
I know you are, but what am I?

Speaker 4 (39:40):
Okay, I'm rubber for breakfast.

Speaker 1 (39:43):
Yeah, I'm rubber. You're glue. Like these decisions no longer
seem to have be about legal precedent or upholding any
of the values that they sworet up hold when they
took these offices. And you know, but the other thing,
the other thing was Scotus with the Supreme Court that

(40:04):
I have to bring up every time. And I know
people don't like to talk about this because especially democratic
liberal people like to just get mad at you know,
the Hillary Clinton and they like to get mad at
Ruth Bader Ginsburg and they still get mad at that,
and I can't you know, they like to get mad

(40:27):
at Obama. Guys. We the people knew. We knew. Like
I'm sorry, but everything they knew, we knew. So when
you say something like Ruth Bader Ginsburg knew she was

(40:47):
too old and she needed to step down, yeah, we
knew that too. When it was time to vote, and
we still didn't go out and vote for Hillary Clinton,
we did not. So we put that Supreme Court justice
on that. We put Cavin on there, We put Amy
Cumming Burtt on that. We did that. Yes, we did.
That's not so that wasn't done to us or for us.

(41:08):
We did that. We had the best motivation. We had
an empty Supreme Court seat during one of these elections, yes,
empty one, meaning we knew that if Donald Trump was elected,
he would be picking a Supreme Court justice and we
knew the Republicans that were in office at that time refuse,

(41:29):
refuse to go through the process, and we were so
busy blaming Democrats that we didn't stop to look around
and say, but we can stop this by just making
sure a Democrat gets elected, Yes, sir, And the anger
comes at ruthe Bade de Ginsburg, comes to Obama, comes
to Hillary Clinton. The anger for me is firmly on

(41:50):
the people, and it's never gonna move for me. It's
not everything else seems like an obfuscation of the absolute
truth that we are living in a country where fifty
percent of the motherfuckers that vote are just fucking evil
motherfuckers that are villains that hate us, and we're and
we're trying to find some way that is not just
as well, it's these complicated others. It's not that complicated

(42:11):
to me. People that vote for this shit care more
than we care about the right thing and righteousness and
protecting each other. Like they built they literally are built differently. Yes, yes,
so yeah, I think that's why I fall on it,
and I hear what people are trying to say. I
just and like I said, I don't talk politics with

(42:33):
most people anymore because I have such a level of
anger that it's not it's not anger that is, it's
rational it's thoughtful, but it's not sparing of people. Meaning
I don't right when people say stuff in my brain,
I'll be thinking like this stupid motherfucker, and it's not deserved,
meaning like right, these people are smart, they're trying to

(42:56):
think their way through it. Some of them are emotionally
rationalizing things. I'm just I feel like I've just gotten
to a point where it's extremely simple. Yes, and I'm focused.
It's just everything everybody's saying, none of it changes the
fact that there are people out here who are just
straight up voting for this shit ye, and we're letting

(43:18):
them cook because we're going somehow this is Gavin Newsom's fault, somehow,
this is Kamin Harrison's fault. And it's like it's really
not though, because everything you know, they knew. And yet
when it's time to go vote, those who didn't vote,
those who voted again voted Republican, all those who wrote
third party roles who you know left the top face,

(43:39):
those who left the top blank. To me, all of
them are equally complicit. I know that doesn't sound fair
to people. It should be some nuance and levels are great.
It's not for me, No, I have contempt for all
people like that. And I could sit up here and
try to pretend that it's not I could even you know,
I could key key with you Democratic shit that did this.

(44:00):
It don't matter to me. We're living in a huge lie. Yeah,
a big lie about like, well, you know, the Democrats
didn't do this. Everything they say they didn't do they
did everything. You know. I saw. One of the things
Trump is doing is taking down the signs from Joe
Biden's infrastructure project, the bill he passed against Trump and

(44:20):
against Republicans, got it passed anyway, this huge infrastructure bill.
You're getting bridges, you're getting roads. These are Joe Biden achievements.
He is taking the signs down, He's putting up Trump
signs to say he did it. And sure, some people
are gonna fall for that. But the reason they're gonna
fall for that is because they're fucking stupid, or they're
willfully ignorant, or they're complicit. That's what they're gonna fall for.

(44:43):
So should I be mad at Trump. I'm always mad
at Trump, but I'm not really that mad at Trump
about this. I'm mad at these stupid motherfuckers, the people
that go but Trump gave me a trump check. You're
a stupid motherfucker, Sexy Red. I can't respect you. You're
dumb and not in a dangerous way. That's dangerous to
all of us. So I while people I'm harboring more

(45:07):
anger than your average, Like I'm just mad about this.
I'm I'm mad at at at millions of people, billions,
like not billions of people, not not just this one
guy who gets on TV or not just Scott Jennings
or whatever. It's a lot of motherfuckers I don't fuck with.
And I can't ever see me fucking with period to
the day I die. Same. And and some of them

(45:28):
are your just crunchy vegans that want you vegan fucking
roach spray and don't you know of vegan bathroom cleaner
and they and you would think they're a good person.
I'm like, this, motherfucker, let us get to this situation right,
so fuck them too. So anyway, that's uh, yeah, I'm mad.
So I guess we can move on. We can go ahead.

Speaker 2 (45:49):
You gotta get and I agree with you and the
anger and the it you're all that I have and
my hardest serious like like people fail are realizing and
if you talk to me, my anger to you would
be irrational and illogical. To me, I'm one hundred percent logical.

(46:09):
And the reason why because I don't want to hear
any excuses, and so anything that you come up with,
I'm gonna be like, I don't care. I don't want
to hear it, because at the end of the day,
people are.

Speaker 4 (46:19):
Dying and all you're giving me is excuses.

Speaker 1 (46:22):
And you're not even trying. Like it would be one
thing if they were saying, well, the reason people are
dying is because fuck them people. They're saying, no, I'm
letting the people die because I care more than you, right,
And I'm like, that's the dumbest shit I ever heard
in my life. But yeah, once again, I you know
it's that, it's you know what it is. It's the
old adage the customer is always right, and anyone who's

(46:44):
ever worked the job where you dealt with customers knows
that that's not true. But it's an old adage that
we decide to act like it's true. And America has
made this thing, and I think it's because of white people.
Where the voter's always right, it's never the voters fault.
If they're white, it's voted fault when they're not, though right,

(47:05):
black people, low information, uninformed, biased, you know that kind
of shit. But when when it's white folks, they just hey,
they're just hard working middle of America, just anxiety. Yeah,
it's everything, but their response, they're not responsible for what's happening.
It's Joe Rogan being like, I didn't vote for this.

(47:25):
It's Andrew Schultz being like, I didn't vote for this.
I have to spend it ten years on this man's
dick trying to tell us all he's gonna save the world.
It's that kind of shit. So, yeah, I I hold
contempt for all of these motherfuckers. All right, let's see
if we can move into something else. What other things
that I have to talk about? I feel like I

(47:45):
have other things. I'm trying to see what segment to
get into. Uh you know what, let's do. Uh, let's
just do some regular news.

Speaker 6 (48:01):
Listen, listen, you see, you see, you see, you see.

Speaker 1 (48:30):
Megan the Stallion's lawyer served streamer Adam Ross's court papers
via Mariachi band, So, according to him, whatever it takes.
He was on a live stream with DJ Academics the
twenty four year old Kickstreamer revealed he had been served
papers from the thirty year old Grammy Winners lawyers in
a really creative way. Listen to what the lawyers did.

(48:51):
They called him Mariachi to my house. They called him
Mariachi like a Mexican band that perform outside my house.
That made me want to come outside so they could
serve me the paper. That means you've been avoiding the shit,
that's what that means. That means they have been trying
to reach you, in contact you, and you'd be like nah.
They were like, you know what, bitch, We're gonna get you. Yep,
that's all that means.

Speaker 2 (49:09):
Sound like a bitch because you don't want to be
a kelled accountable.

Speaker 1 (49:13):
They're not giving up. DJ Academic said, stunned by the gesture. Ross,
so prominent and controversial internet personality Whole Course Online with
problematic rappers and politicians alike, including Donald Trump, was allowed
vocal supporter of Tory Lanes, whose real name is day
Star Peterson. But yeah, I guess uh. He advocated for

(49:33):
Lanes release and alleged that Megan was lying and she
was like, oh word, yes, uh free motherfucker. Tory lanes.
I will always stay with this statement. I don't give
a fuck out where I'm at in life, Free Tory Lanes.
And see. Part of it is that people like DJ
academics and that in cel crowd, they cater to a
certain type of man that hates women. And so part

(49:56):
of the Meghan the Stallion thing is not at all
about Meghan. The statis it could have been about any woman.
It's just here's a prominent woman that we can bash
in front of each other to show that I'm I'm
your favorite in cel. Keep supporting me and kicking you know, yeah,
kicking it with me on the channel. Megan got caught line.
She got caught line at four k He said they
weren't having sex. Then they said fucked a few times.

(50:20):
She never even shown her foot, he claimed, and another club.
He doubled down. Tory had no evidence on this ship.
Bro Toy ain't do it. I promise you it's always free,
Toy showed the bullet won't bitch.

Speaker 2 (50:31):
Oh but yeah, yeah, you're gonna get them papers. You
you gonna get every single paper.

Speaker 1 (50:37):
I will see you in court. In an addition to
his frequent commentary, just two weeks ago, DJ Academics was
deposed by Megan's team about whether or not he was
solicited to take such a strong stance against her online
held poorly call her a liar. During his deposition, and
while on his live stream with Ross, he claimed he
may have to return to re answer one question. They're
not giving up, he reiterated.

Speaker 2 (50:58):
I wouldn't either. I'm gonna be as adamant as you
are about your statements.

Speaker 1 (51:01):
Yeah. You know what's funny to me too, is like
there's many a lot of times that we're seeing now
these like streamer type people who aren't legal experts or scholars.
They don't have a legal team around them. You know,
this isn't like this isn't like Game Theory, where we
had a legal department and shit, their whole job was

(51:24):
to be sure shit was right right. So like with us,
you it's like you could not you couldn't say certain
shit if it couldn't get past the lawyers. You have
to find a way to say it, or you have
to leave it out. And they obviously don't have that.
But almost everyone has the same recourse. If someone was
to pop up and do like hey, season desists, everyone

(51:48):
always forgets you can cease and desist. Yeah, you can
just stop. You can be like, hey, let me just
leave it alone. But I'm thinking about people like that. Tasha. Yeah,
Tasha K thank you.

Speaker 2 (52:01):
Yeah, she showed her pure ass. I don't blame CARDI
like it get to the point where they just get
worse and worse and worse and worse and worse. But you, like,
you know what, I was gonna ignore you, but you
out forcing my hand.

Speaker 1 (52:11):
Candice Owens with the Macron So yeah, with the French people, Yeah,
like they're crashing out over this because somehow it's more
profitable or this. It is more sensationalistic to just ride
the thing until you're just fucking sue to oblivion. I
guess because to you, to me, you would think someone
and I'm sure he's very rich and powerful or whatever,

(52:34):
but you would think, okay, you know what I mean, like,
oh they said that, Okay, well legally I don't actually
know shit. I'm just on here talking shit anyway, you
would think. But they, in their mind there must be
some sort of equation, like me being openly publicly defined
if this woman is worth the capital that I gained,
whether it be money wise or fame, wise or whatever,

(52:57):
like just the acknowledgment of this famous person is more.
It's bigger than me saying, man, let me just stop
talking about this lady so I can fucking like move
on with my life and not worry about going to
court because they don't have any evidence or know anything
that the rest of us don't know. Right.

Speaker 2 (53:12):
And also, it's just one of those things where, like
you said, people get these things kind of all the time,
and most people, guess what, they just stopped talking about
the shit and just move on and guess what, It's
not a big thing.

Speaker 1 (53:21):
Don't nobody even know they got the fucking papers.

Speaker 2 (53:23):
They just all of a sudden, they just pivot towards
something else, and people wonder why.

Speaker 1 (53:27):
Yeah, let's see, I feel like SNL offices really white
people knew, Yes, it is, even though I know some
of the people were black. Let's see, Oh, Serena Williams uh,
I guess we didn't get to this a while ago,
but she uh as like a spokesperson for GLP one,

(53:49):
which is these medicines like ozimpic to help people lose weight,
okay and all that stuff, And so she came out
and then you know, it's endorsed it, and then she
revealed her you know, stunning like, you know, like thirty
one pound weight loss, and you know, she brought up that, Hey,
after I had my baby, my body kind of changed.

(54:13):
I was like, if you remember, even after having her baby,
she was still the like number one tennis player in
the world at one point, but her body never looked
obviously like it used to look. So she's using her
platform basically to promote this drug and be like, listen,

(54:35):
if there's a stigma attached to like, oh, you just
gotta eat, write, and work hard, I'm the person that
was doing all that. Y'all know I was doing all that.
Nobody was working harder than me, working their body, and
I still couldn't get my body to look the way
I wanted it to. And so I took this drug
and now I've lost like thirty one pounds, and you know,
I'm feeling confident better on myself now. Obviously I'm not

(54:58):
a dummy. You're not a dummy. It's an a.

Speaker 4 (55:00):
Yes, it is stupid, like paid to endorse.

Speaker 1 (55:04):
But being paid to endorse, and it actually haven't worked
for her. I mean, we got odds. We can see
the change that she went through. I do have some
sympathy for her because genetics is a strong thing and
people don't like in our push for this toxic positivity.
Sometimes we don't even like to discuss like everybody's body
is different. It is. There's also just pressure from society

(55:29):
to look a certain way. There's a bunch of shit
happening at the same time, and it's just people kind
of cherry pick what side of the fence they're on.

Speaker 4 (55:35):
So, and it also depends on who the person is.

Speaker 1 (55:38):
Yeah, So Jamila Jamil who is an actress and an
Indian woman from Canada. We've talked about her before because
she's had controversies, Like I mean, I want to say,
we were talking about her ten years ago. She's been
around a very long She used to being fucking with
black people because people used to be mad that she

(55:59):
would like do these like culturally inappropriate raps and all
this shit. It was a lot, but she never really
bothered me one way or another. But you know, I
just knew that people were very annoyed, Like you couldn't
bring her name up on Twitter at one point, but
she chimed in on it and basically tried to say
that The thing I feel, she said, Serena Williams is

(56:23):
selling GLP ones. The thing I feel most uncomfortable about
here is that celebrities have access to doctors. Most others
don't have access to these miracle weight loss drugs come
at a price. Now, Jamila has never been bigger or whatever, like,
she's always been like a pretty thin model type. You know.
The side effects can include paralysis of the gastric system,

(56:44):
pancreat titus, cancer, hair loss, osio porosa, severe mault, nutrition,
muscle mass lost, depression. There have been reports to suicide,
thyroid issues, blindness, and they can really recab it on
your metabolism if for some reason you have to suddenly
come off. Many people gained the weight back and then
some fast. It's not so it's it's much harder then lose.
Nobody tells you these things and the adverts in the media.

(57:06):
You need blood tests, decks of scans. Nutrition is a
dedicated weight regimen to maintain muscle mass and bone dicity.
You need medical support or things go wrong. You don't
have a billion dollars to fix it. That's why I
don't like celests pushing drugs with such drastic documented side effects.
Then she wrote that's just the caption, the picture of it,
the words. Then she wrote an even longer thing in
her response, like her actual caption to this long ass

(57:32):
you know picture of words. I got this information from
websites of the drugs and side effect page. You can
go see for yourself. Go ahead, take the drug or
anything you like. Please just make sure you have access
to proper healthcare before you make the decision. Take any
drug that's drastic results. Things can go south very fast,
as is documented in many lawsuits emerging regarding to these
medicines can They can be amazing for some, but also

(57:52):
devastated for others. So make sure you're prepared in case
you are one of the unlucky ones. That's all I asked,
hard Emojips. Many people have asked me to highlight the
fact that Serena's husband is an investor in this company,
another reason we should take every celebrity in endorsement with
a pinch of salt. PPS. This post is about transparency,
not judging Serena's body, nor is it judging you or
your decision. Take it?

Speaker 2 (58:13):
What the fuck are we talking about here, grel Ain't
nobody stupid? Nobody is stupid, and I want to ask you,
have you ever endorsed something? Have you ever sponsored something?
Have you has anybody ever given you something and you
talked about it. The same thing applies to YouTube you, then.

Speaker 1 (58:26):
It's a literal, factual evidence base. Plead to make sure
you have adequate medical support if you do take these drugs.
Therefore the long term and we should always be prepared
for anything that can significantly change our body functions for
better or worse. If you have a problem with my
call for transparency and medical responsibility, you are the problem.
My size does not change the fact that we need
to maintain transparency, especially when celebrities make millions from endorsing

(58:49):
the drugs. So basically, people, I'm sure in her comments
she was getting a lot of pushback in addition to
it being Serena, who is very beloved, but also just
like ma'am, this isn't even your struggle like you like not,
and it doesn't mean she doesn't have body issues, right,
but this specific you. Your body is extra heavy, so
you are made your doctor. You may inquire about GLP ones,

(59:13):
your doctor may recommend it. That's not her struggle. So
I'm sure people were mad about that, whether or not
you know.

Speaker 2 (59:20):
And my thing is, have you ever talked about this
in any period of time, like like like if I
go through and come through her, have you ever been
an advocate for this?

Speaker 4 (59:28):
If not, I don't believe you.

Speaker 1 (59:30):
I don't know if she has or not. Okay, So
I don't want to say that because she's a person
that gives her opinion on a lot of things, a
lot of times warranted and unwarranted. She's a she's one
of those like slash activist type internet activist people. So
I would not be surprised if she has spoken about
stuff like this. She kind of speaks, she kind of
speaking of all kinds of things, whether people. That's one
of the putt It's been a long time ago, so

(59:51):
I know you don't remember, but that was one of
the things when we used to talk about on the
show A lot was people being like this ain't her lane,
Like she's talking about this this type of racism in America.
She don't know what the fuck she talked about. Oh yes, okay, okay,
yes she's talking about cultural appropriation, but she ain't from here.
She don't know how black people feel, you know, that
kind of thing pp as cancer is not a direct

(01:00:12):
side effect, but a risk for anyone with a predisposition
towards thyroid cancer, which sadly many doctors forget to ask
when they give out these drugs.

Speaker 4 (01:00:20):
Girl, don't about to care about all.

Speaker 1 (01:00:21):
That you got two comments.

Speaker 2 (01:00:24):
Don't know about to care about that you spoke out
about Serena or did like did the drug was a
jump off point for you to talk about this woman
and people was like, bitch, what you're talking about? And
then you want to give us this long ass quean
wa wa wa wa wa wa wah wahlahlah wah instead
of taking personal accountability for the words that came out
of your mouth.

Speaker 1 (01:00:41):
Yeah. I think so there's a lot going on when
it comes the way embody in America and the world
in general. America does have like an obesity, you know.
I mean we're living at the peak of it right now,
whatever you want to call it. And I think there's

(01:01:01):
a different type of shaming that happens that it's like
you're not losing right weight the way I think you
should lose weight. And whether it be a drug or not,
you know, some of these people have had fucking fillers
and injections, and they also have access to billions of
dollars or they have access to doctors that you know,

(01:01:24):
specifically working there in certain areas. I think the biggest
issue with this is more the assumption that all these
people are just fucking dumb, Like like everyone saw Serena Williams,
who openly she's talking about transparency. Serena Williams is like,
I am endorsing this thing. This is a this is
an AD, but it's an AD that's a personal thing

(01:01:45):
that's worked for me. Oprah's done this with weight watchers,
you know. Like, So to me, what the assumption is
is that everyone just sees celebrity Serena Williams so what
I like, and then immediately goes, I don't need to
talk no doctor, give me the drug. And there are
people that do that. There are gonna be some people
that do that. There's nothing you can do about those people,

(01:02:08):
like they're not gonna be like, wellther Jamila Jamil Post
saved me from the I wasn't gonna sould the doctor.
I was just gonna start taking this drug without anyone's approval,
no medical whatever. I don't know that this is heading
that off at the path. Could it be jealousy? Could
it be you know, you just don't like that shit?

(01:02:30):
Could it be, like I said, a different type of
hang up about people's bodies, which is this, you need
to lose weight in the quote unquote right way or whatever.
And my thing is what is the right way? It's us,
it's whatever they decide. Because remember with Lizzo, there were
people that were mad that she was big. Then there

(01:02:51):
were people that were obviously defending her being big, but
it's her body. She went on a juice clean. This
is before she lost weight. She just went on a
juice clean and it's like the sides flipped. There were
people that were mad at her for oh, you took
this juice clean so you could lose weight, which is
that's what she wanted to do. That's her fucking right,
it's her body. It works both ways. Like body autonomy

(01:03:12):
is body autonomy. It can't be body autonomy sometimes or
whatever unless the person's like, uh, harming themselves or something.
They're allowed to do what they want to. They have
full and they have full understanding and h the assumption
is they they understand what they're doing, but they weren't going, well,
you know what, she probably doesn't have access to doctors.

(01:03:34):
She was just losing weight the wrong way. You know,
you go on these juice cleans, it's gonna cause your
body to do this right. Okay, then she lost weight.
She's been open about, like she's obviously posting her exercise
on that stuff. But she also was like, I tried
those in before a little bit, and I got off
of it because I didn't like the way it made
me feel. But there's people that's like, well, even then,
there's something wrong with the way you're losing weight. Oh,

(01:03:55):
you're doing it because you hate being fat. You're doing
it because you hate fat people. It's like a lot
of different Yeah, it's a lot of different they coming
to a person. So for me, it's a lose lose situation,
particularly being a public figure. They can never do it
right if they do it the quote unquote right way,
which is a lot of people consider that without any
type of drugs, all of a sudden they gonna claim

(01:04:17):
that you're on the drugs regardless.

Speaker 2 (01:04:20):
So it's like, I didn't do the drugs, people, but
bet you lying you like I didn't do drugs. I
actually got nutritionist and all that shit. You lying, because
nobody can prove, like, unless you show your record saying
that you would never own it, nobody's gonna believe you.
Then there's people who use these drugs and the and
and and and it works for them, it's great, and
they use the way and that's for what all the

(01:04:40):
reason is, but they still lose two.

Speaker 1 (01:04:41):
But also, let's say you use the drugs and it
doesn't work, then you switch drugs or you go the
other thing, like they always go with the most catastrophic thing,
like and you're gonna die, and it's like this fake. Okay,
So let's say point one percent of people died during
this drug and let's say more people might die doing

(01:05:03):
I don't know, more people get addicted to painkillers, more
people did die from medical procedures like libo section and shit.
Like at some point you have to be like, these
people made an informed decision. They're adults, and that's it,
and that's it. And obviously even in the ad, it's
gonna tell you consult your doctor. I'm sure Serena Wood
is gonna tell you consult your doctor. So that's why

(01:05:25):
I'm like questioning Jamala Jamil because what what her comment
makes it seem like, is that Serena goes don't say
these things like, hey guys, there are no side effects.
Don't consult your doctor. Listen to me. I'm Serena Williams,
and I one million percent guarantee you that's not what happened.
That is not But that's the way her comment frames it,
like I'm informing you, but you're really not. It does

(01:05:46):
come off. It comes off weird to me, like like
overly concerned by concern trolling of bigger people.

Speaker 2 (01:05:54):
Yes, that fake that fake concerning, you know, and I
feel like a lot, particularly online, a lot of people
and they do that fake concerning when they actually don't care,
but they just using these things and it's an excuse
to show that they're more virtuous than you are.

Speaker 1 (01:06:08):
Yeah, and like, and I think subconsciously people feel like
fatter people do not deserve comfort, ease, they don't deserve hate,
and it's gotten so polarizing that it's like if you
are happy in your body, they're like, you should be miserable,

(01:06:28):
but for the right reasons, Like you should be miserable
about your body, but it should make you want to
eat vegetables and run every night. What am I doing.
I don't have the same genetics as you. I mean
pizza and doing the fuck I feel like doing. But
fucking right, you know, she's working in an industry where
like being ninety four pounds is like a requirement to
be on screen. They probably tell her to lose weight.

(01:06:49):
And she's not a big woman at all, right, she
lives under that pressure too, but she's like, listen, I
want to be seeing as a good person. Other people
are bigger and we should be accepting of that. Okay,
unless it's time to get cast in a role, then
nobody get believed that shit. The other thing I would
add too is a lot of people are resentful of
it being easy because to them, they they are always

(01:07:13):
tempted with their own body issues. And it's like, well
then I'm only ten pounds of awegh, Maybe I should
get on one of these Oh you got on one?
Fuck you, your fat piece of shit. Like it's like
that type of thing, like you're cheating somehow it's right,
And most people don't stop to think about their inner
voice and why it's the way it is or whatever,

(01:07:33):
or even just in a polite way to be like,
hey man, it's not my body. It's not really my problem.
So yeah, you end up with people like that look
like Jamila Jamal warning the rest of us off of
something that essentially, if you talk to your doctor and
you and your doctor and yo and whatever people y'all decide,

(01:07:54):
you know, your nutrition is you, that's your fucking business.
It's really that. And an ad is an ad the
same way that when you do an ad for fucking uh.
She's on like the cover of Vogue or whatever, like,
I'm not, guys, this cover has been photo shot, Like
I don't, we get it. We know how covers work.

Speaker 2 (01:08:14):
We should do we know how to work, and we
know how they function, and it's for me. It's just
one of those things to where like I said, a
lot of this is fake concern trolling, a lot of
it in my pinion, for some people, it's like a
lot of things intersections here.

Speaker 4 (01:08:34):
You have jealousy.

Speaker 1 (01:08:36):
Possibly I don't know, but yes, possible, but you know,
not everything. But but for something, I'm just throwing it
out there that you know it's possible because I did
say that too, but I want to say I'm not.
I don't saying she is. It could be I don't know.
It's just it's such a weird thing. You go to
the rest of her page and it's all fucking glamour
shots of her being beautiful, you know what I mean. Like,

(01:08:56):
it's not like this is a for even for her.
This is kind of it's been a while since she
did something like this, and so of course you're like, yeah,
why what is going on with this?

Speaker 2 (01:09:07):
Right? And the thing is, you know, people say things,
and like you said, I think a lot of times
people look on the outside and they just see of
weight people and they just think you're supposed to suffer.

Speaker 1 (01:09:18):
They think you're not.

Speaker 2 (01:09:19):
Supposed to be happy at whatever size you are, and
they would rather you do things that are more hurtful
to your body to lose weight than to actually do
things that Actually what's talking at you more.

Speaker 1 (01:09:31):
Well, it's to another thing this So I don't think
it's coming from I want to see you suffer place
in her. I think it's coming from a positive place.
I think she thinks, no, love yourself at wherever you are,
whatever weight you are, And just like I think things

(01:09:51):
are that flat on social media. So it is, but
anyone who's thinking of these medicines or even thinking of
lifting weight, and but they that person is having more
concerns than just a being positive about their body.

Speaker 4 (01:10:08):
They put some thought.

Speaker 1 (01:10:09):
You know, when I saw this, the whole thing I
thought was like, everybody, just if you have a doctor,
GOKUSULDI your doctor. If you don't have a doctor, go
find a doctor. If you don't have a good doctor,
keep working until you can find a doctor. If not,
then none of this conversation is gonna be for you
because you can't even get this medicine without a doctor.
So so the point being like, if your doctor's like

(01:10:30):
your blood pressure is, how what are we gonna do?
That's your business, right, let's get it down. Yeah, but
what happens is conversations online take these one of these
two lanes. Everything's polarized. So it's either fat people are
terrible discussing horrible people that suffer and should suffer and
they and fuck them right, they're just bad. They they're lazy,
they're just bad people. And then there's the other extreme,

(01:10:50):
which is like everything's fine, don't worry about nothing, don't
listen to your doctor, don't listen to your family, don't
listen your body. Easy to just do it, And and
so those are the ex that's I don't talk about
this on the show because those are the extremes online.
Even what we're saying right now, there's somebody mad somewhere.
I don't know what partner man at. We weren't positive enough,

(01:11:11):
we weren't negative enough. All I'm saying is people are
individual agree their motivation is individualized, and honestly, like, it's
not really anyone's business. No one's really old transparency anyway.
And Jamila Jamal is not providing transparency for Serena Willims,
which is how she captured her conversation. But only Serena
Willis can provide transparency for Serena Williams. And all this

(01:11:35):
information you just told us, it's public information and stuff
that's in the commercial stuff that's she's talking about. So
so what is the real motivation for this? You know,
that's the question. Yeah, we'll never really know because I'm
not reading her mind. But yeah, it was a big
deal a couple of weeks ago. It kind of passed,
so you know, it's not like the hugest deal anymore.
Which is probably the best time to talk about it

(01:11:56):
now that everybody's had time to process this shit, right, yeah,
jamalall be doing too much. It's all good. Let's see
chat GPT floods courts with fake cases. Sanctions follow course.
Across the US are grappling with a wave of legal
filings that contain fabricated precedent generated by AI tools like

(01:12:18):
chat GPT. Yep, because motherfuckers are lazy. It's just in
there citing fucking court cases from movies. M uh your
honor in the case of Jonathan versus Taylor about the
auto mechanic theft. Imagine if that little girl was black,

(01:12:38):
I rest my case chat GPT right.

Speaker 2 (01:12:41):
And you know they've done no studies to say that
it hallucinates and just to give the shit like do
your jobs and like somebody say, pay a pair of legals,
like it's somebody's job that was supposed to verify and
check that shit. They was like, we cain't get the
computer to do it. It probably fired a bunch of people
and realizing no, bitch, you can't. You better hire on
people and get them people back in there.

Speaker 1 (01:13:02):
AI hallucinations occur when an artificial intelligence system like chat
GPT produces information that is false misleading, are entirely fabricated,
but it's presented in a way that appears confident and credible.
This practice often leads to legal disciplinary actions. Oh you
mean lies. In May, the Utah quart of Appeals sanctioned
Utah based lawyer Richard Bednar after it was found he

(01:13:22):
used chat GBT to produce AI hallucinations, filing false citations
to a non existent court case. Back in June twenty
twenty three, a Manhattan federal judge find attorneys five thousand
dollars for citing non existent cases generated by chat GBT
in the New York case. Yeah, we're just lucky that
those people caught it. How many times has this gone
through when we haven't caught it yet? Right? Who's in

(01:13:45):
jail or free? That shouldn't he? Since then, such instances
have multiplied and June Damien Charlatan, what a funny last name,
a legal researcher found ninety five AI involved fraudulent cases
in the United States since June twenty two, twenty three,
with fifty eight occurring this year. So it's escalating. Oh yeah.
Despite the rest of growing useed of AI legal proceedings,

(01:14:06):
it's driven by pressures to save time, cut costs for firms,
and meet rising client expectations.

Speaker 2 (01:14:12):
Yeah, but it's not safe. Like you know, I'm supposed
to be representing you. You want me to be as
accurate as possible. And the thing is, I don't mean
no harm.

Speaker 4 (01:14:22):
The time it takes you to verify the shit that
he gave you, you.

Speaker 1 (01:14:25):
Might as well have a human being, do it, Jamela
Jamil need to get on top of this, Yes, she does.
What's your opinion on this, ma'am? We need a post, ma'am.
And also, like, I just hope Jay ol Covin ain't
using AI now to hear a lawyer again. He had
a lot of cases today. I'm rooting for him, but
he gonna be in there, you know, exciting Martile versus Riggs,

(01:14:46):
and it's gonna be like, that's not even a case.
That's just two people from a movie. That's lethal weapon. Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:14:53):
A lot of times, depending on what kind of absence
should you use, everybody be wanting you to use the AI.
She's like, no, bitch, my shit might be simple, but
I don't. I'm good on that right.

Speaker 1 (01:15:03):
Alright, let's do some guests the race. Uh, wrap this
bad boy up in a neat little bow. Uh, here
we go.

Speaker 2 (01:15:18):
It's hard to guess the race.

Speaker 1 (01:15:20):
It's time to catch the race. It's time to catch
the race. It's time to guess the race. Man kills
roommate on way to watch college football for not chipping
in financially. Oh shit, he didn't put five on it.
I guess not. Mm mm mm. A man in Saint Louis, Missouri,

(01:15:45):
is accused of shooting and killing his roommate as they
were on their way to watch college football because the
roommate did not help pay for drugs. Huh m, you
hate that. Uh he literally didn't put five on it.
He didn't.

Speaker 4 (01:15:59):
Yeah, I mean we d I mean it ain't like
you don't know where he lived.

Speaker 1 (01:16:02):
Marvin Bird, fifty four, has been charged with first degree murder,
armed criminal action, unlawful possession of a firearm, and felling
your resistant arrest. He was arrested Saturday, the same day
the shooting took place. I'm assuming neither one of them
made it to the game there. I guess not. He
went to join him and his roommate went to join
the small Gavin to watch college football. However, Bird allegedly

(01:16:23):
became agitated at the man with whom he shared a home.
A perceived lack of financial contribution to the household and
recreational drug expensions led to the shooting. Bird is accused
of preceding the shooters roommate in the street, oh placing
his handgun on the ground, and then sitting in his
vehicle till the police arrived. He was fed up. I

(01:16:45):
am sick at yo. Shit. It's weird that he got accused.
He also got charge of resisting the police because I'm like,
it sounded like he was ready to go. He was like,
that's it, pole, I'm going to jail.

Speaker 2 (01:16:56):
Fucking and it sounded like he wasn't gonna have nowhere
to stay either. He's like, I get arrest, at least
I have a bed.

Speaker 1 (01:17:02):
The roommate must have brought up a parlay or something.
He must have been like, yeah, man, if I can
hit this parlay, I can get the money for the weed.
It was like, no, no, that's too much. You gambled
the weed money and I wouldness Is said they've heard
the shooting. Uh, they witnessed Bird standing in the street
with the firearm while the victim was on the ground.
He affirmed that the defendant was the only one he
saw with a firearm, though Birder parly waited in his

(01:17:24):
vehicle for responding law enforcement. When he arrived, he allegedly
fought against being handcuffed. Finally, he was arrested, read his
miranda rights an interview where police say offers several different statements.
He claimed his roommate was being verbally reckless and that
the man charged at him, so he was talking, shit,
you get your money when I feel like I could

(01:17:47):
see Yeah, something like that was exchanged. Now keep in mind,
this is the shooter's version of events, so who knows
if any of this is true? That's true too. I
can't trust these articles if like shooter claims, womens said,
I gave you herpies and it's like you just killed
her because you've been beating her for three years. Right anyway,
Surveillance footage from a nearby door camera assistant in the

(01:18:09):
investigation apparently showed investigators tracking bullet showed investigators tracking bullet
cases on the ground at the Crown scene. Investigators also
know that how Bird had a prior convintion for being
convicted felling in possession of fire arm, so there you go.
He was arrested around eleven pm on Saturday night. No, no,
they didn't say what team he was rooting for. And
if they want, can guess the race of mister what

(01:18:34):
was his name? Marvin Bird? Oh Berg White, Karen saying
white like the white meat, like the white meat, whiter
than the sheets on his jail bed. Oh man, that's crazy.
What are you in for my roommate? They want to
go half on a bag white. So we only got

(01:18:57):
two guesses and they both say white. The correct answer
is is everybody said white. The correct dancer is white
like math white Warrior. Okay, the correct dancer is actually black.
You all missed it. Yes, Marvin B. Marvin B. You

(01:19:25):
know that's him. He looked like he was fed up.
Oh yeah, like, man, he did that ship?

Speaker 2 (01:19:32):
Do you like?

Speaker 1 (01:19:33):
You know who got the whole rent the state on
this cell? Right?

Speaker 2 (01:19:37):
And this is like, this is some shit that happened before.
And he was like, I told them, motherfucker, he changed
me again on these drugs.

Speaker 1 (01:19:43):
I wasn't gonna put up with that boot.

Speaker 2 (01:19:44):
I guarantee you that's the shit that went through his head.

Speaker 1 (01:19:46):
Yeah, all right, let's go to another one. I am
O one one. Yeah, son beat up his dad for
telling friend he was indeed his father. Was he ashamed of?
But something? What's happening here?

Speaker 4 (01:20:02):
This is reverse DNA? The hell is this you not
my dad?

Speaker 1 (01:20:06):
Yes, I am. I will beat your ass in front
of my friends. A man in Memphis, Tennessee, is accused
of beating up his own dad because the elder man
told a friend of the younger he was indeed his father,
Miguel Gomanz Junior. So you're a junior and you were like,
that's not my dad.

Speaker 2 (01:20:22):
What y'all got the same damn name?

Speaker 1 (01:20:25):
What is this sir? Wow? He was like, I can
show you the license. We the same. Miguel Gomez Junior,
thirty two, has been charged of aggravated assault by strangulation
and domestic assault, and the arrest AFFI David shows this
happened August tenth. Miguel Gomaz Junior was at his home
with his son, and when he asked him if he

(01:20:46):
had told one of his friends he was with his dad,
he was his dad. Go Man Senior replied telling him
that he did, and that anger go Masz Junior and
he punched go Mass singing in the mouth with a
closed fist. That wasn't the end of us all. The
younger man caught up with his father because he ran
and he struck him again. Then the defended allegedly slammed

(01:21:08):
his father on the ground again, dragging him on the pavement.
I'm gonna tell you like this, the man doth protest
too much if I was a person that he was
trying to convince that's not his daddy beating his ass
in front of me, because he said he your daddy
feels like something you do, because that show daddy. Go
Mass Junr. Then wrapped his arm around go Mass Senior's

(01:21:29):
neck and tried to choke him. As the alleged attack
was taking place, a man referred to as Gonzalo was
driving down the street and witnessed the crime. The witnesses
said that screamed after the suspect, causing him to momentarily
release his grip. Still, Goman Senior was not freed, so
the victim bit his son near the chest, enabled his
father to stand up and run to his truck. From

(01:21:50):
there to drip. Victim drove to the police station, where
he delivered his account of events. He suffered cuts on
his mouth and a brak into his arms, swelling on
his head. He identified his son as the attacker, and
then that just made him mad again. He's like, oh,
if I wasn't in his handcuffs. Uh. Miguel Joe Go
maz Junior was booked and assessed the bonding two hundred
thousand dollars for the charges against him.

Speaker 2 (01:22:12):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:22:12):
He appeared in court for preliminary hearing on Wednesday this week.
Caaren guess the race of Miguel Gomasz Junior.

Speaker 2 (01:22:18):
Uh, Latino all right, and sounds like this shit has
happened before, because did he beat his yep?

Speaker 1 (01:22:27):
Did he whoop up on his daddy? Why you think that?

Speaker 2 (01:22:30):
Because most people don't fight their parents like like like
you know, like like fight their parents like that. So
this sounds like he's been allowed to do this to
escalate it to this point of or he's done this before,
but it hadn't been to the point where his daddy
felt like he had to to.

Speaker 1 (01:22:47):
To do this.

Speaker 2 (01:22:49):
But I maybe this one got kids.

Speaker 1 (01:22:52):
I have a rule.

Speaker 2 (01:22:52):
I'm not living with somebody that I feel safe around.

Speaker 1 (01:22:55):
But you got to go. I'm paying rent you leave.
Oh my god. I will vote. I will vote for
Donyelle try Latino Departino Latino papa was a rolling stone
because son pushed on Latino. Uh embarrassed his son in
front of ice recruiter. Latino, Oh de portino, Latino, Latino,
not my poppy and Latino. The correct answer is Latino.

(01:23:16):
Y'all got it? Yeah, And like even being able to
beat up your dad is like you know, you know
boody too. Yeah, he grown grown. You must have got

(01:23:37):
a good dad, because I feel like he could have
got Marvin Gate up in this bitch.

Speaker 4 (01:23:41):
He got our great dad.

Speaker 2 (01:23:43):
Because I'm tell you one thing, you come back all
the all the locks has changed, everything has changed.

Speaker 1 (01:23:49):
No, bitch, you can't get back up in here. Yeah,
I'm not talking about I'm talking about getting shot in
the chest. Oh yeah, he be his dad didn't take
him out.

Speaker 4 (01:23:57):
Yeah, because a lot of men.

Speaker 1 (01:23:59):
And I'm claiming your ass too. That's what's crazy. It's
not even like I'm disowning you mad because I'm in
your life, nigga, damn dad, because I'm here. His dad
must be real messed up, all right, caring you're one
and one triple the points triple, the points triple, the
points triple, the points trip triple the rae points triple

(01:24:21):
points strip trip triple points to triple the points, triple
the points trip triple the points trip trip all right.
Men arrested after giving up on searching for a missing
five year old that was in their care to Florida Mats.

(01:24:41):
They was.

Speaker 2 (01:24:41):
They was like, they were like, like, fuck it, it can't
be found.

Speaker 1 (01:24:47):
They was like, I tried to find my iPhone. They
didn't ping. I don't know. They was like, this kid
is really good at hide and seek, very good at hiding.
He's much better than the average five year old. You win,
I go on back.

Speaker 2 (01:25:00):
Home, right, like, mom, we're still out here.

Speaker 1 (01:25:03):
Two Florida men have been arrested after allegedly told police
that they stopped looking for a five year old boy
in their care who ran off and was later located
as he was about to wander into a busy street.
Oh Craig Darnell Presley, fifty two and Chadwick Roddel Smith Junior,
twenty seven were taken in the Cussy over the weekend
in charge of one count each of the neglect of

(01:25:24):
a child without great bodily harm. I can't believe there's
a crime in Florida. I mean, you're not teaching the
kids shit, I didn't know. Wow, you're not vaccinating right.
Officers responded to a call near an apartment complex September seventh.
They spotted an unaccompanied child walking toward the busy street.
A group of nearby teens who did not know the child,

(01:25:46):
assist the officers and are covering the boy, who they
said was pulled back from the road just prior to
a vehicle driving by. Police spoke with the boy, who
was able to provide his name and age, but was
unable to tell the officer where he lived. A resident
from the Parmer complex recognized the boy and assistant officers
in locating the child's apartment number. The officers escorted the
boy to the apartment where he was, where they found
an additional five children inside.

Speaker 2 (01:26:09):
What this is a legal daycare?

Speaker 1 (01:26:10):
What is this? Okay? First of all, they only lost
like one sixth of the kids. That's a pretty good day. Okay.
If you shoot that percent from the free throw line
the NBA, you can make the All Star game. Police
spoke with the kids, who informed them that the five
yeard had a history of taken off and that adults
in the home looked for him before giving up and

(01:26:31):
returning home. And one of the parties even fell asleep afterwards.
It'd be tired. When you chase after a little missing
five year olds, you'd be ready to take a stress. Now.

Speaker 2 (01:26:39):
You didn't call the police at no period of time,
but like, hey, we got a kid.

Speaker 1 (01:26:42):
We don't know where they are. As the children were
speaking with the officers, Pressley came out and appeared a
dishevel Knowing that he had to hold up his undone pants,
he allegedly denied having been asleep. Officers soon got in
touch with Smith, who allegedly confirmed that he and pressed
It were watching the children while two adults the children
mother and grandmother, were grocery shopping. Just bumbling, stumbling, y'all

(01:27:04):
can't watch the kids for a grocery shopping trip worthless?
Just wow, Smith, what if this kid is just that good?
What if this kid is like the escape artists of kids? Right,
motherfucker's Houdini. They're just like, hey, what happened to the
other kids?

Speaker 4 (01:27:19):
Like this was he always returned.

Speaker 1 (01:27:21):
We figured out he come back a puff of smoke
and he just turned around like commission to Gordon. He
was gone right. Smith allegedly told police that after the
child ran off. He looked for him, but when he
couldn't find him, he returned home. Yeah, because you got
to watch the other five, Like what, they're gonna be
more upset by y'all lost one kid or you lost six.
It's common sense. Come on, don't be stupid, the officer said.

(01:27:42):
Smith appear unbothered by the boy's disappearance, right because he
didn't care. Both men said they had not contacted authorities
or other adults after the children went.

Speaker 2 (01:27:51):
It was to y'all, so one could have stayed with
the kids by the other one continued to look.

Speaker 1 (01:27:55):
But then how I'm gonna take my nap. When the
other adults returned to the apartment, they allegedly said they
had left the children in the kara. Smith to Presley
for about thirty minutes, that's all before the five year
old was found in the road. Thirty You couldn't make
it thirty minutes. Oh my god. As a two mini
roll to the jail in police cousin, Presley allegedly stated

(01:28:16):
that he was only looking at his own five children
and not responsible for the five year old. So he's like,
these five is mine? That was five? That one must
be another daddy that's not my kid. He ain't come
over and watch his own kid. This is a gender war.
He basically like, listen, I brought my kids McDonald's in
the a gender war. This ain't my kid. He can

(01:28:38):
have the napkins. Presley appeared before Judge Susan Miller Jones,
who ordered him to be released on his own reconnaissance
after he paid an undisclosed amount at old child support.
Oh lord. The one thing he had in his favor
is he could have said, well, I'm an active father,
I'm watching my five kids. I'm in their life. Okay,

(01:29:00):
it's over here, like pursuit of happiness. I'm about to
cry tears taking care of my baby. But then you
old child support, which is like you know what, Smith,
who has two previous kept family convictions, is being held
in little twenty five thousand dollars bond. It was not
immediately clear when the two when next kept. The appearent caught.
Karen gets the race of the Craig Darnelle Presley and

(01:29:25):
Chaderick Rodell Smith Jr. They're both the same race. I'm
going black.

Speaker 2 (01:29:29):
I will be surprised if we have any white people
with them names.

Speaker 1 (01:29:33):
Okay, chat room, baby, daddy, day care, Black abandon his
kids and then is in his DNA child support platinum
plan black and it black Ados, daddy, black, black, everyone
black on this. I'm surprised no white warar drills the
correct black.

Speaker 4 (01:29:53):
Okay, I said, don't you put no plot twist.

Speaker 1 (01:29:58):
On me now, I don't even know how it would
begin to Uh. They both look The one on the
left look like he just woke up from that nap
looking for them kids. Yes, he's like, damn it, I said,
let me sleep. Oh, it's the police. I ain't seen
that kid. It's not even my kid. I got my
five what's the problem. And the other dude looks like

(01:30:19):
he's still looking for the kid, like is he over there?
Is that the kid? No, that's a different five yo anyway,
different one. That's so sad man. All right, thirty minutes,
thirty minutes thirty you lost a kid at third I'm
sure that it's easier saying I'm sure. I'm listen, I'm
talking for a place of privilege. I've never had to

(01:30:40):
watch six kids at the same time, but I have
a feeling I can make it thirty minutes. But I'm
just I'm just going on vibes. I don't know. I
might be wrong. I might lose one in thirty minutes.
Maybe I got six, maybe maybe, and maybe I would
have been The thing is that just he lost the
kid at thirty minutes. He gave up looking, went and
took a nap within thirty minutes. So what do he

(01:31:01):
look like four minutes? Yeah? Okay, And that's that's the thing.

Speaker 2 (01:31:05):
If I lose a kid, the first thing I'm doing
is condon, I'm out here looking for a kid. Can
y'all help me find the kid, because then no charges
would have been at you, because they know you at
least trying.

Speaker 1 (01:31:15):
He's but he and the kids say he went looking
for the other kid, gave up, came back, took a nap.
That's thirty minutes. Yeah, you look this, How is that
even possible?

Speaker 2 (01:31:24):
You look to smooth five minutes, ten minutes at max?

Speaker 1 (01:31:27):
They want a word, They must to wore his ass out?

Speaker 3 (01:31:29):
You know?

Speaker 1 (01:31:30):
Did sword ratchet this time? A very long sound effect
that has no payoff, And that's part of the joke.

Speaker 2 (01:31:37):
That is part of the joke, because soors have no
payoff other than death.

Speaker 1 (01:31:52):
A Lincoln man is charged at the police find the sword,
brass knuckles and a pound of weed. So damn the tryfapto.
Lincolnman's charged with at the thirty five drugs, sword and
brass knuckles in his home. They said, Uh, the Narcotics
Task Force were conducting surveillance on the residence UH five

(01:32:13):
fifty pm in order to serve a narcotics related at nighttime.
No knock warrant. Damn, they was coming with the heat.
Court document show investigators had evidence that fifty one year
old Jamison Bennett was smelling was selling marijuana and myth
from the home. Gus the race in myth. What was
her name again? His name is Jamison Bennett. Karen's going

(01:32:40):
with white on this. One guy's the correct answer is
in the bonus round, right, congratulations, Karen made up for
the women missed. Wait a minute, I'm sorry. Yeah. So
they said they had evidence he was selling marijuana and

(01:33:02):
meth from the home. And a pound does sound like
you're selling it. You know, a pound is a lot,
especially if it not like rich and you just buy
pounds like you're not having a party. Authorities followed Bennett
as he left the represents, and a vehicle picked up
another man drove to a gas station. Both men were
detained so the warrant could be served ben it was
taken to the station. The other man was least at
the scene. Investigators returned to business home to execute the

(01:33:24):
search warrant, discover more than a pound of weed, twelve
hundred and seven dollars in cash, brass knuckles in a
twenty four inch because I he swored, and a pause
in the pet tree. What's happening here? As a convicted fella,
he is prohibited from possessing deadly weapons. He was charged
Thursday with two counts of possession of a deadly weapon
by a prohibitive person, two council possession of a control
sub possession of money while violating twenty eight Dash four

(01:33:47):
one six, and delivery or manufacturer with intent to deliver
control substance. A judge rule that he be held without bond.
So there you guys go. That's it for this episode.
A Boss These Sports is tomorrow. So for premier people
behind the paywall, get that that secondhand of that sports
for you. For everybody else will see a Saturday for
the feedback show. We also should have a movie review

(01:34:12):
for you Thursday night. So we got we got a
lot of stuff going here. If you're premium everybody else uh,
we will highly at y'all on Saturday. Until next time.
I love you, ye
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