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January 30, 2023 72 mins

Brad and Willie are back this week talking the premiere of "Fear",  the need for recognizing other black heroes outside of black history month, and Willie has some choice words for Ron Desantis, football playoffs, America's lack of moral compass and more. Tune in and join the conversation in the socials below.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
Get up, gett boys. It's back and reoaded. All in
your mind. Yeah, and that deep throating. This is for
the streets, the reel, the railroading, the distant franchise, the
truth escape building. And they ain't knowing we speak the truth,
so they ain't quoted because we wrote it. The North
South East coat is the g b my keeping your
head bobbing. It ain't no stopping and wants to be

(00:23):
drips head by. And then the system is so corrupt
they throw the rock out of their heads and then
blame it on us. Don't get it twisted on code
and me and danced for no buttament biscuits. It's Willie
d y'all scar faces in the building. Collectively we are
the ghett old Boys. Reloaded, Reloaded with another episode of

(00:44):
information and instructions to help you navigate through this wild, crazy,
beautiful world in the studio. Ghet old Ghetto, ghett old Boys. Yeah. Man,
another incredible week and went down. Other incredible week. It
went down, went down. Man. Went to the premier of

(01:06):
the Dion Taylor movie Fear in Hollywood, knocking out the
knock that thing. I let me tell you somethingbody, and
it's horror it's a horror fan. Horror fan, so you know,
you know, I typically don't do anything fiction fictional and
all that stuff. And it takes years between. Was you scared?

(01:32):
I was not scared. I can't. You wouldn't spook at all.
Let me explain something. You didn't jump, Let me explain
something to you. It takes years from between horror firms
for me to like really like a horror fan. And
this is the one, Like, No, I did not jump
and all that kind of ship. I wasn't scared because

(01:53):
I wasn't scared because swarming in your in your chair
and screaming and ship and gangster. So I would not
do ever do them ship like some ship like that.
But did you feel something type of what I did?
Catch a few chills? No, ship caught a few chills.
Goddamn something like it was? It was serious, like because
I'm like, I don't really know it's gonna say cut.

(02:14):
You know, I she didin't really they put you in there?
But yeah, he put me there. Bro you know, I
got um. I really got captivated by my cousin's performance
Molika Franklin in Mandela the film. I mean the screenplay

(02:37):
in New York. So I went to go see her
act right, and it was just something about those actors
that made me forget that that was my cousin playing
with Winnie Mandela. It was killed it. Wow, she killed man.
But she's been trained for that man, so she's real
good man. But it didn't dawn on me that that

(02:59):
that was my cousin until you know, I was like, damn,
that's my cousin. You know. She she she invited me
to the to the to the play anyway, but I
just got lost in it. So I understand what you're saying,
but you know, you know what's you know, what's cut
at the end. But it's like, damn, like I was
in the play. Yeah, so I understand what you're saying, man,

(03:19):
a boy being in being in there like m I
felt that way. When Jamie Fox played Ray, Yeah, I
was like like, you know, you know it's Jamie Fox
is playing Ray. He's playing Ray. It's about pick he's
playing right, but hell, inside five minutes, man, Jamie Fox
was Ray Charles. That was Ray Charles. Term. I think

(03:44):
the next time I saw jam I damn, they called
him right. It was real man, but beautiful man, you know,
shouts out to Dion Taylor and Rock, saying his wife
a husband and wife, a duo in Hollywood, black involved,

(04:05):
and two of the best in the game. I like that.
I like that. Have a conversation. I would love to
have a conversation with him, because you're not got some
sick ass Twitter thoughts, right, I need to talk to him,
you do, Yeah, Willie's um. So, the Martin Luther King
Holiday passed. It just passed, and it's probably really upset you.

(04:27):
But but I'm kind of not cool with it when
because side of all of these funks that have days,
you know, year round, we only got one day to
celebrate our heroes. You see what I'm saying. I got
one point one hero that we really Yeah, we only

(04:48):
have one hero. You know, let the let the rest
of the world tell it. You see what I'm saying.
I guess a lot of heroes that are going unrecognized,
and we should have days for them, right, you know,
we should just start the ship man. We don't need
I don't think we have to wait on America to say, Okay,

(05:09):
it's a it's a holiday, but it means we be
federally accepted and recognized. Though that's good. But until then
we need to just do our own ship, like fuck
them like we did on Martin Luther any day, right, Yeah,
we just need to start saying fuck them and just
do our own ship until they catch up. You know.
It's just like making this music. We didn't cross over.
They crossed over us. So we make our music. We

(05:32):
go out and do our ship and then if you
like it, you like it. If you don't, you don't.
But we're gonna keep it moving no matter what. And
that's the way we need to do when it comes
to celebrate our heroes. Why is shift so much going on, Willie?
Why is American history? Every day something happens, but we

(05:58):
have one month the or this month in the year.
I'm not gonna ask why, but I'm like fun man always.
But we know why. We fucking know why. It's very
much so intentional man, and that that the ship is
just bothering me. Man, It's it's time to say something

(06:18):
about it. It's time. It's time to be vocal about it.
It's time to be uh. We we need to put
some action in place, man, because we are we bigg
Our history didn't start at slavery, Okay, and and and
and ah, it's illegal. It's it's taken out of they're

(06:42):
getting ready to take um African American history out of
the state of Florida. Shitt he already banned it. It's gone.
Rhan de Santis. You low down, dirty scoundrel boy. Your
mama should be in barrassing. Your daddy should have pulled dot.

(07:02):
You don't want the worst? Good God who raised you?
What a low life for? You are a sad excuse
for a human being. How do a woman look at
you and get wet? Good God, damnit, Willie. This dude

(07:23):
band AP African American Studies Advanced Placement AP banded straight up.
We don't want it not in Florida. Texas is next,
Absolutely is next. Mississippi is next year. Yeah, but that's

(07:46):
that's how I go, you know, they you know. The
trip part about it is that if you're if you're so,
I don't understand how you can be so ashamed of
your history and so proud of at the same time.
I don't understand how that works. You know, either you
love it or you hate it. Either you either either

(08:08):
you support it or you rejected. What is it? You know,
It's like what is it? And how do you expect
to be respected by the world, let alone your own citizens? Huh?
How do you expect to be respected when you won't

(08:29):
even tell the truth, when you omit the truth, when
you know for a fact, when people already know what
the truth is now you admitted it for a long
time and people didn't know. Well, well, now we know
omitted period. Not a mass is totally and you decide, well,
it doesn't matter that you know, we still ain't gonna
teach you, We still ain't gonna talk about it. How

(08:49):
do you how do you expect to have respect? Uh? Brother,
a friend of mine, brother of mine used to always say, man,
a man who doesn't know his past destined to repeat it.
So imagine, you know, three generations down the line, and
this history is not being taught no more. You see
what I'm saying, Like I'm seeing I'm looking at how

(09:11):
this country is playing a long game. You know they're playing.
They're looking. You know how we look in thirty years ahead,
They're looking a hundred and thirty years ahead, you know
what I mean, Like they want to make for sure
that our history is wiped and we don't know nothing
about slavery. So when they come back in here and

(09:32):
grab our asks again and start selling us off to
you know, some some formers or some ship that need
free labor again, we won't know nothing about what happened
the first time they did it. All sactions by the
US government. Mind you, I already know it ain't no
coming back from it. I already know it ain't no mercy.

(09:54):
I already know it's no empathy. I already know it
ain't gonna stop, so, you know, and and that's that's
part of what kept it going for so long. You know,
a lot of our people who came over here, they
thought they were coming to greener pastures. They thought they
were coming to three servants, just like they were in Europe.
They thought they were saying to have a better life.

(10:15):
And and even when they were being treated wrong, they
thought it would get better. And even the first, you know, week,
they thought, Okay, maybe this the last couple more weeks
like this, and maybe this is the was just the
only one that's doing it like this. Well maybe maybe
the rest of the country don't know that this is
happening not here. Is it true that um, when the

(10:38):
servants went from went to Europe, or when afrogants worked
in Europe, that they were treated. They weren't beaten and
and and hung and ship, but they were sold. But
they worked in the house. They had to the same
kind of garb on this ship, right, they were brutalized,
just like they wore over here. No ship. Yeah, they

(10:58):
just slowed it down, asked over that. Okay, if they
were brutalized, and they would be, don't don't don't ever
think they were. They were some type of kind owners.
Well they wasn't kind. They were still serving, still gotta
they still got treated like ship. But they were certain
about the overseers. I don't ever think that they will. Well,

(11:19):
I I stand, I don't know. I stand corrected, but
I still know what you. I still know that it
was some brutal ship happened, because that's the only way
this could have took place. But looking look at looking yeah, man,
looking back at eighty three um In Pace versus at Alabama,
the Supreme Court upholds a law that criminalizes inter racial

(11:42):
sex and marriage. Okay, that was three in nineteen fifty six.
On this day, Dr Martin lut the King Junior's House
in Montgomery at Alabama is bummed while him oh wait,
while he speaks at a mass meeting. King King later

(12:04):
addresses the angry crowd and pleads for none violence. Maybe
that's why they gave King the Nobel Peace Prize, because
he took the non violent approach. You know, I saw
I heard a song. Oh damn, what was the song?

(12:27):
But my point is that, you know, the people that
was talking about Martin Luther King in this song, this
guy that was rapping about Martin Luther King, he was
rapping like you know, it was more it was you know,
it came off like the verse came off. The verse
came off like it was some militant type stuff or
it was like some conscious put it like that conscious right,

(12:50):
a conscious rap song where he's talking about all of
the things that happened throughout history, you know, the done
justices and um um, the you know, misjustice, the misjustices
and uh, the all of the the successes that black

(13:12):
people have had were many of the successes that we've
had and all this type stuff. So we've had that
kind of vibe to it, right that, you know, But
then they get to the hook and then they stressed.
But he did it, But non violence and none violence,
and so it was like I'm listening to it, I'm
like who co signed this ship? Like who who allowed

(13:33):
this song to go out? Who said this was cool
to put out? Because ain't no way I would have
put a song out like that with the hook stressing
non violence, because that is not none. Violence has never
been the way to freedom. Nobody in the history of
civilization has ever wanted to freedom without violence. Nobody just

(13:55):
gives you freedom, nobody. America didn't get this freedom through
without violence. You did what I'm saying, Like, you know,
the British didn't get their freedom without violence. Yeah, Mexico
didn't get his freedom without violence. No, no, no, com

(14:17):
We're not. We're not. But we got a lot of
people that thinks that. You know, like when you start,
it's like everybody can talk about fighting for what their independence,
their liberation, and people say, yeah, that's noble man. Yeah, yeah,
I'm gonna fight for mine too. Yeah, everybody understands that.

(14:40):
Everybody understands that when everybody else says it. But if
that person said, who man, when we got to watch him,
watch him, he's watch him. He got the community to
see that he's he's angry he's angry, but watch him,
watch him. You gotta gotta put him down, you know.
And so and they got so many uh so many

(15:05):
people out there that's ready to tell you for them, hey,
calm down, man, just you know, just calm down, you know,
just calm down. We're gonna We're gonna get there. Just
takes time. How much more time we need? I mean,
she didn't take the scientists no time to ban that,

(15:28):
just days. And in his second term he just went yeah.
And but that's how they've always been able to get by.
Just write it in the law. They just write it
in the law, like whatever you want to do. It's like, see,
morality don't they don't mean nothing. Morality don't mean nothing.
Everybody knows that America doesn't have him more accompassed. And

(15:48):
if it does, it's broken. It's been broken a long time.
And so so so these this guy run the scientists,
he does what America has always done. When they want
to circumvent being civilized. They just write something in the law.

(16:12):
And once you write it in the law, then and
if you don't adhere to that, then it gives them
a right to take you down. So that's how they
do it, and that's how they've always done it. And
this is why and this is why they fight so
hard to do redistrict redistricting, and you know, to to
redraw those lines and move those boats around to this side.

(16:35):
You know, even though the houses and the people that
live in these houses are in the same place and
they they have access to the same, uh inferior resources
and stuff in their communities, they draw the lines so
that they can get more of those people and start
moving there and sut to wing so they can get
more of those people. They draw the lines. Actually the

(16:57):
cutting carve more of those people out of the voting
that voting block sweet so they can have more action
for their constituent, you know, for that for their their
area that they can to listen to me, Man, if
you make the rules, you control the game, right, I don't.

(17:20):
I don't. I don't want to to ever feel like
we have control of the game because we don't make
the rules. Yeah, we do not make the rules, so
we can't control the game. Bro. I was listening to UM,
I was listening to uh somebody on this new station

(17:43):
that we don't really funk with talking about gun control
and how how um they are scared to lose their
rights to have guns. Why is that? M hmmm, I

(18:05):
don't ain't UFC fighters. I don't know. Well, I'm gonna
tell you like this, bro, they have their reasons, and
I have my reasons for not want to give up
the guns. I have my reasons too, you know. Let
me let me tell you my first ask you why
I want to give it? Yeah, why won't you give

(18:25):
up your guns? Because they won't give up pails? Okay, simple, yeah, yeah,
give up yours first, and I can said giving up. Man,
I'm still ain't gonna give a mine because they don't
never give up. There, they're gonna start lying, say they're
giving them up. They're never gonna give them guns. Notice,
I said they all consider giving up. Man. Some people

(18:49):
they need them guns because their asses can't fight without
them guns. I don't need I don't need a gun
without them guns. Oh man, Uh, they're just beginning slept
all day, so they got to have guns. They gotta
have a gun. Like if you look at most of
the mass shooters that you've seen, corny ass square dudes

(19:14):
that you know, man, what about the guy in Idaho, Iowa?
Where the funk that strange looking guy is to kill
the students. Where where was that which which students? That?
It had like a few hundred mass murders and so
it was some students. Man, the guy snuck in there
in their house. He was I one. He was a

(19:36):
creepy looking fucker. I'll look it up and get someone
information about it. It's like Donard m hm. The boys
reloaded podcast will be right back after the street. Are

(19:57):
you familiar with that? The guy who was convicted and
incarcerated for for raping this white woman who dreamed he
raped her. You're not familiar with that. She dreamed he

(20:20):
raped her, and they put this man in jail. What
was this? This happened how many years ago? This was
back in seven. This happened eighty seven. But he did
twenty eight years. He did twenty eight years. He went
to trial again. I heard about this. He went to

(20:41):
trial again the second time. He was acquitted. He's already
it was acquitted. And uh, he sued. They gave him
like one point nine million dollars or something, some shitty number.
But you know how they go after they take down
what they want, they take back what they want. But

(21:03):
the trip part about it was that the dude wasn't
even there. Okay, so this this side went. This happened
in Denvier, Colorado. The woman who they called ts right,
they just called about an issue. They won't even tell
us who she is, but they got his face everywhere.
So she goes to a party. This is what she says.

(21:25):
She goes to a party. She comes back home. Three
guys forced their way into our house, and Raper, I mean, uh,
back up. A guy forces his way into the house
and Raper. She gives the police and her sister the
names of three black guys who were at the party
she was with, one of the guys being this guy

(21:50):
named Clarence. What was his name, Moses L. Clarence Moses L. Okay.
Now they go to looking for this guy. They initially
they don't look for him. They're looking for these other guys.

(22:12):
But then she gets to the hospital and she has
a dream and she tells, oh, it's this guy. So
they go arrest him, running through the system railroad the
whole time, he maintains his innocence for all these decades,
he maintains his innocence. Finally, one of the guys who

(22:34):
she initially named as a suspect, or potential suspect admits
to raping her. He was doing time for several other
rape charges, sexual assault charges, he admits, and they finally

(22:54):
let him go. That's this is when he's acquitted. You know,
he got a new trial and he was acquitted. But
even after all of that, this woman still said, well,
he's still the one who did it. She still claiming
he did it, even after DNA. And that's something I
didn't mentioned. His the prisoners, his, the other inmates, they

(23:19):
raised a thousand dollars for him to get a DNA test,
get the DNA testing done. And when the DNA they
they got the money for the DNA test and they
had the kick and the original detective on the case,
guy named by the name. I think it's Huff, James

(23:41):
James Huff. They wrote on the box big and big
bold letters. Bold letters do not destroy. Somehow, some way,
he orders the evidence to be destroyed because nobody told

(24:01):
him how important it was. So the man language didn't
and jail for another eight years before the DNA exonerated him.
Well not the DNA exonerated him, but the other I

(24:21):
exonerated him. Um, but listen, man, the dude was convicted
because this chick said she dreamed he raped her. What's
her penalty for this? Her penalty? Yeah, what is her
penalty for doing this? She can't show a face. That's it,

(24:44):
That's all it. She didn't even do twenty eight years
for this for the wrong conviction. I think the man,
that's something fucked up ship man judge. But listen, it
was a conspiracy. They knew, they had to evidence, they knew,
but they wanted him to do the time. So the judge,
the prosecutors, you know, they suppressed evidence. They they destroyed evidence,

(25:12):
and nobody went to jail. Nobody. And you know what,
I think that when them judges get busted doing unlawful
um uh sentence and convicted, I think the judges, the
district attorneys and all the mothercker's need to do that time.
They should be held to a higher standard than us
and to do that time because if if if if

(25:37):
one of us committed and act that egregious, they'd have
they'd have a law that would put us in jail.
They should have it that that acted they're committee is egregious. Also,
he took that man life away from him. How it
was eighteen seventeen sixteen years old, or some ship took
his life from gave him one point nine million dollars.

(25:58):
Come on, dog, did n't stop man? Um that that
that that should be, that should be in the lines
of like like civil rights issues. Man, Like his civil
rights are violated, Willie. They violated that man, civil rights man.
They locked him up for nothing. They put him in slavery.

(26:21):
But see that that only matters to us and a
few others. You know, it don't really matter to the
people who are hired to show us no mercy. We're
going into these spaces and whether we're guilty or innocent,
we're looking for mercy. You know, you're still looking for mercy,
and we're looking for mercy. We're looking for people to

(26:42):
show us mercy. Who was hired and don't even give
a funk who was hired to not show us mercy?
They were hired to actually inconclerrate us and make our
lives hard. Sure, this is what this is what they do.
So this is why they feel nothing. This is why
a judge can dig into his pocket and count the
change in his pocket, and if he count thirty eight cents,

(27:05):
that's how many years you get. You get thirty eight years.
Remember what's that Judge Poe used to do? Ted Poe, Yeah,
he used to make you whiving many steps it took
for you to get to his bench was yeah. Yeah,
he was a low down, dirty mother riding uncivilized much.
He ran up but he didn't run up, but he

(27:27):
was he was sentence And the guy that was kind
of short, you know, that had a super sharp man
and he and he play that having many steps and
it takes for you to get to me. That's how
many years. I'm gonna give you what roll let him go,

(27:51):
but we got unfair but look but look, but look
hot dehumanizing that you got the roll to freedom? You're right.
Think about how dehumanizing being pulled over by your own
people and they beat the hell out of you for nothing.
Mm hmm. You know what about the case in Memphis

(28:13):
with Tyree Nichols. Willie really mean that? Yeah, I'm bring
me up to speed on that one. So the some
Memphis police officers jumped this kid, beat him up. Black cops, yeah,
being a real bad man, took him to the hospital

(28:34):
a couple of days later. Go um, kudos to the
Memphis Police Department for firing the officers on site, they
fired them, They even fired the the paramedics. They even
fired the paramedics. Okay, and you know, kudos for them

(28:56):
doing that. But still that ship shouldn't have happened, you know.
And I'm always I'm always the first one to say, Man,
I don't think that people outside of the people that
live in those neighborhoods should be responsible for patrolling the neighborhoods.
You feel me, because they don't have our best interests.
And we don't speak the same language, you know what
I mean. We don't. We don't, we don't share the

(29:17):
same audeology or nothing. But check this out, Brad. Let's say,
let's say you're right about that. What happens when the
people in our communities go outside of our communities and
face those same laws, those same cops. They still get

(29:37):
killed when they crossed that line. Sure too, They're still
gonna get brutalized when they cry, they'll just sit them
waiting from the cross the line. And and and and
and and rid of me this. Why is it that
black cops, Asian cops, even the Hispanic cops can work
in white neighborhoods and they are not that beating ship

(29:58):
out of white folks and killing white folks? Why is that?
And they talking more, why is that? Why is that?
So it's not just a regional thing, you know what
I'm saying. It's not just a proximity thing. You know
what I'm saying. You know, no, no, no, it's a
cultural thing. It's a cultural thing. And hey, man, ain't

(30:21):
nowhere around it. Uh yeah, there's always an exception to
the rule. But the rule is, white cops kill black
people in black neighborhoods all day, every day. The white
cops are doing the killing. Y'all need to get your
ass out of our neighborhood, straight up. That's all that
is to it. And and but not just that. It's
not just the neighborhood. It's killing black folks period. So

(30:44):
the white cops need to be profiled, just like they profiled,
just like they profile Middle Easterners on planes and stuff.
They still do it. Don't get me, don't don't act
like they don't. They still do it. They need to
profile every single white dude who apply to be a
law enforcement agent. They need to profile. Straight up, I said,

(31:08):
I said, it is always an exception. I said, it's
always an exception, But we're talking about murder, bro We're
talking about murder. Even when you come with the blacks,
they don't kill like these white dudes be killing, but
they will. But my point is that's an exception. I'm
talking about the rule. These goddamn white cops is killing everything.

(31:29):
And they they trigger happy, and they're they're the ones
who killing people for no reason at all. They're killing people,
whether they're sitting inside of their own home watching television
in ice cream, whether whether they're playing a game with
their nephew and with their mama sitting on in the chair,

(31:52):
whether they're sitting in the park in a chair, whether
they're outside or loving your old kid, playing with a gun,
play played gun, whether they're selling and loosely loose loose cigarettes.
You know, it's like every every single situation that a
black person could ever find themselves in, you got a
police who has killed them for being in that situation,

(32:15):
a white cop who has killed them for being in
that situation. And these white cops need to be vetted there,
and they need here, and here's the thing. Not just vetted,
they need to be prosecuted to the fullest system of
the law, just like they do black cops. The reason
why the black the reason why, though full black cops

(32:37):
got fired that fast because they've black cops. And we're
talking about Memphis, Tennessee. So Memphis ain't no, ain't no
less racist than none of these other damn uh cities
around America. The reason why they got fired that fast
is because they're black, point blank period. If there was
white to j who's going to jail? Black that they're

(33:00):
going to jail, they don't find that fast without somebody
going to jail. Oh they're going to jail. They're going
to jail. But see that on mind throwing them away.
But those those other ones, they're like, no, man, we
hired y'all to do what y'all do five years we
hired y'all to do. And it's probably man that they're
probably mad at the black cops for killing them because

(33:22):
they wanted to kill them. Damn. Don't forget what that
badge mean, man, you can look it up. Yeah, let
me get uh, let me get a visual on that
slave patrol badge. Yeah, don't don't get it twisted, man,
that's what that badge we ain, Willie, that's a slave
patrol badge. It looked just like the It looked just
like a sheriff. Sheriffs badge got the stars, but it

(33:45):
said back then it said slave patrol. Then. Look, the
main thing that needs to happen is police officers, point
blank period. All police officers need to be held accountable

(34:06):
for their actions. They need to be held accountable for
their actions. There's no way possible a couple of cops
should be in a situation where some dude is in
an apartment complex eating people and ship and some kid is,

(34:29):
some little juvenile kid is running for their life butt
naked on the streets, and this guy can come back out,
come find this guy and say, hey, he's okay, he's
just drunk, and walk back, walking back so that he
can finish him off. There's no way these guys should
be promoted. And this is after it becomes a huge story.

(34:52):
It becomes a huge story. This is them. This is them,
like just like wagging the authority in the face of
of of of the public saying, you know what, it
don't matter what we do. Yeah we did it. It
don't matter because it's us and we can do whatever
whatever we want to do. And to prove it to you,

(35:12):
we're gonna we're gonna give our guys a promotion. Huh. All.
At that point, the whole damn police department should have
been shut down. It should have been shut down. And look,
fam I know some of y'all is losing your mind
when y'all here defund the police, but that's because y'all

(35:32):
don't even understand what defund police means. So go look
it up. I know, I know you ain't got the patience.
I know some of y'all don't do number read headlines
and watch videos, but just can you just google it
before you make before you make another comment about defunding
the police? Can just google it? Because I know y'all
asses don't read. The ones who got a problem with it,

(35:54):
I know you don't read. That's why you say what
you say. Are are part of the problem and you
want to keep it going. So that's why you used
up your stands as a defense mechanism. You got a
problem with it, because that's your defense defense mechism. The
voice reloaded podcast will be right back after the street

(36:21):
well as you already know, and I know you're happy.
We just ain't talked about it. On another note, that
was lost oh Man lost. The Dallas even show up.
I think they did. They come, that was there. What happened?

(36:43):
But you know what happened, bro, the same thing that
I said would happen. What happened. They were gonna conk
out stop. You know. I was. I was in Sherman Oaks, California,
watching the game, and I'm at a sports bar, and
the majority of people at the sports bar what cowboy fans? Really?

(37:08):
It tripped me out because you know, I know what
cowboy fans look like in Texas. I know what it
looked like in Houston and Dallas and Austin, San Antonio.
But cowboy fan now Sherman Oak and California. Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah dude. I'm thinking, because I'm in California that it's

(37:31):
gonna be a bunch of forty nine the fans up
in there, right, and I'm thinking I'm gonna have some camaraderie,
you know, for the Niners, Go for the Niners, you
know who in Sherman Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, Well I was.
I had some. I had some well, I had some
forty nine A fans sitting next to me and we
were cool. And then I had some evil people that

(37:54):
that was rooting for the cowboys behind me. Yeah, yeah, man,
you know I can't rock with the cowboy because I
cannot rock with Jerry Jones. Well, I do not rock
with Jerry Jones, so I cannot rock with the cowboy. Hey, Dallas, Hey,
I love y'all, man, I love, I love, I love.
I love the people of Dallas. You know, I love
the city. But I do not cannot rock with the cowboys.

(38:17):
You can't rock with Jerry Jones until Jerry Jones kicked
the bucket. After Jerry Jones kicked the bucket, your biggest cowboy, man,
fuck it all right with the cowboys. Oh, and that
that got to go, and Zekle got to go. What
the fun is in ex what's his name? It's not
Exacle what's his name? That's cool? Leave you? What is

(38:39):
it though, Ezekiel? Yeah, I'm thinking about the Bible, man,
you know, you know saw the way you put him.
And I'm done. I'm done. I'm finished. Finish, I finished,
I'm done. I'm done. I don't like those two. They
don't have a spine. I don't like him. I don't
like him because they don't have a spine. Look, man,
if you're not gonna if you're not gonna support our causes,

(39:02):
if you're not gonna support black advancement, our movement to
get our fast share in this country, if you're not
going to support it, just shut the funk up. Just
don't say not. Just get out of the way, you know,
don't open your mouth and had that big platform and
start yes a Boston and tap dancing and all that,

(39:22):
and that's what they do. So I don't. I can't
rock with those dudes. Yeah. On another note, I'm thinking
about the Houston, Texas. I know this is old news,
but they fired love Eve. Wait a minute, but wait,
they fired Lovey and love You put that deuce up
on them at to anyone in the game, and knocked

(39:44):
them out of the first round draft choice right again,
which shows me the incompetence of that team in front
office exactly how your your ass ain't won a game? All, okay,
you won two games. Oh damn yeah, you've been getting
your grass whoop drove, just whoop the ship out of

(40:08):
now you at. You're the last game and all you
gotta do is be yourself, be a regular losing the
ass self, and you win the damn game. And trick
yourself out the bag. Trick yourself out the first round
draft pick you dumb mother. Well you're talking about dumb

(40:32):
stupid Will. I can't rock with it. Man, Man, season start, man,
damn spring training. Now listen, man, are you telling me
that you fall love you? Huh? You fall love you
because you gotta fall because he's now he did what

(40:54):
they told him to do? Who them? Who the fuck
is them? Come on, man, you know it's deeper than that. Look, look,
it's too much money on the line, baby, It's too
much on the line. I know, and it was supposed
it's too much on the line. And everybody know what
time it is going in the game going in. You
already know what time it is. How do you who
they talking to over that? Who? Who? You know what?

(41:16):
Perhaps perhaps the Vegas money was bigger than a lot
of repeat probably was question. How do you turn around
the team that's always had a losing record in one season?
I mean, we the Texans? And I hate that fucking name.
Mind you like Texas. It was the worst name. It

(41:39):
just makes you started off bad, started off bad. It
makes you sound like we It makes it sound like
we were cowboy boots and fucking ten gallon hats. And
that's not us in Houston at all. Okay for one now,
how can how can how can somebody from uh Seattle?
You know you're going to raid and see hottle, but

(42:00):
you're down here and they call you a Texan? No, Bro,
you will Seattland. Okay, you can never be a Texan. Man.
Bring us back the oilers, bro, bring us back the oilers.
Can we have like man? People in Pittsburgh die hard
Steeler fans, Steeler, I'm a Steeler. I got people down here,

(42:23):
what they would still attach you on their arms. Man,
shout out to my homeboy Tony with the steel attach
you on him. But I'm just saying, man, if you're
a green baby packer fan, your cheesehead, man, you can
be a packer. But did Bud Adams take that logo
and it's budd still alive. Did he take it to
the grave with him? Maybe he took maybe take maybe
maybe said that's part of the deal. I'm taking my

(42:45):
signal with me. Man, I'm taking it to the grave.
Y'all not having it, y'all cannot have the oilers. Remember
he was piste off. That's why he left in the
first place. That's why he went to Tennessee. But he
that's why he moved the team of Tennessee. Give me
that damn name back would be a good idea. I

(43:06):
definitely I would be there. I would be there. Man,
we will be the biggest oiler fans ever. Man, he
should definitely like it. Oh. I would definitely preferred over
over Texas. Right. And I was watching Isaiah shout out
to Isaiah carreya uh. And for those who don't know
who Isaiah, he don't want to say. And in this
day and in this small little fucking the fund is

(43:29):
that got bugs and ship flying around and this motherfucking
me at this country, that's old boy. So they get
ready changed uniforms, right yeah, Um, they're getting ready to

(43:51):
change uniforms and get ready changed coaches and and and
hopefully they're getting ready to change quarterbacks and hopefully they're
getting ready to change. Um the GM. It's time to go.
It's time to go. You let the number one wide
receiver like like d hop, I'm don't give a funk

(44:11):
what happens, Willie, Like everybody a uh you you you
uh Jay when you gotta stay, Petro, you gotta stay
uh you, you and you and you and the rest
of y'all can go hop You ain't gonna know, motherfucker. Well,
come on back over here with me. Man. Look what
they did Andre career though, man, and then they sent

(44:33):
him to Indianapolis after all that. Lord, Man, that's why
I say, That's why I say, man, let these players
get their money. Man, y'all get your money. Man, get
your money. About these damn looking look at at least
he got two out of it. But his name, his
name needs to be raised up higher in the greatest
basketball players of all time. Why they're holding their nuts

(44:55):
on a key man, that's Hakey Malijah one, bro, ain't
no sinner, ain't no sinner. We had to skill set
of king all that Hakim of this these people. So
these people are looking at analytics. They're looking at over

(45:17):
the analytics. They're not looking at skill set. They're looking
at analytics. Okay, if we look at skill set, then
Hakim is the greatest center that ever played the game. Man, Hakim,
and he got the numbers two, he put up numbers two,
he got he got numbers. Man. I love the admiral Um,
I love Kareem Abdul Jabbar, Patrick Ewing. I love Shaquille O'Neil,

(45:46):
but I don't see them in the same I don't
see them in the same light as I do Hakim Man.
Hakim was that dude. It's just it's just bottom line
is that he was just that dude. And and one
of the reasons why Hakim don't get a lot of
praises because he don't do a lot of me. He's
not out there, you know, like he don't he's not
out there. You know, he don't do interviews, so, you know,

(46:10):
out of sight, kind of like out of mind. But
guess who all the great basketball players get their footwork from. Yeah,
they go see they go see big Dream. They're gonna
see dream. Kobe to go see dream. Yeah, y'all mean
what to go see dream? Dream? Shake was so nasty.
If I was like on a basketball court in the
hood and he did that to me, I swing on

(46:31):
that evening here an die right there on that mother
hit you so hard. Really, he would die. You better
kill men because he would die on that court. I
don't give a damn hard the mother. I'm the one
who road side ain't ship. And I meant that I

(46:53):
don't give a damn about no size, but man that big.
Give a damn about if his fist was big as
it's table. I don't even damn anybody can get it
if you breathe and bleed. Hey man, shout out to
the big dream and and all of the other. And
why you gotta be talking like that about love? I love?

(47:16):
I love? Yeah, man, stop, but got me gotting them?
Imagine if fighting man, we got we got we got
some fire uh teams, you know, potential, team potential. We
need to change the Texans back to the Oilers. We
need to get us. We need to work on these Rockets.

(47:38):
And you know what, I think it's the Rockets need man,
They need Jim Cream. I think that I think the
Texas and the Rockets need Jim to bottom ships because Man,
the man know how to put people in place to
win championships. Willie think about it. But you know what,
also though, he put people in place just who want

(48:01):
to not just win for themselves, but they want to
win it for him because he a good dude, fantastic dude.
He's a good dude. He deserves to win. Yeah, he's
a good dude and he's a type of dude. I've
seen him many times. You've seen he'd be around him
way more than me. But you know, I've seen him
many times. You know, just walk out into the into

(48:24):
the crowd. People don't even know. He's just walking and walking.
I'm like, look at I'm like, where are you going, Jim.
He's like, I gotta go. He's just ned to be walking. Yeah,
he's just be out there. Somebody noticed me, but you
ain't gonna catch it because you're walking so fast. Now
he's stopping saying hello, man, ask you how you are.
I'm talking about when he on the move, when he's

(48:44):
when he's on the movies, on the move. But yeah,
he do. He's here stop and just you know, talk
to people and just yeah, like he got he got
that very like that, that grounded like that that you
know that the regular guy type. Yeah, So put put
put those teams in the hands of people like that. Man,

(49:05):
I can guarantee championships, will it? Otherwise we're gonna be
firing another head coach next year. Oh, Damiko Ryan, he
took the interview, Is that right? Yeah? Um, um, Sean Payton,
I didn't know Demiko Ryan was in the coaching ship
he coached. The part nine is he didn't want to

(49:25):
go out on Dallas. Ass. I didn't know that. Yeah,
he's the defensive quarterbab. I didn't know that to see
because I don't watch football like that. You know, I
ain't a lying fair weather. You know I ain't The
first game, the first four game of football I watched
since the beginning of the protests, what protests? God damn

(49:45):
will it? The first four game I watched was Dallas.
That game they just played Dallas and for the nine.
And that is because I wanted to see the farty
nine spank that. But I wanted to see that. Man,

(50:08):
where are you going, bro? Come on you? No, no,
we got we got, we got, we got got a
little bit more time. No man, I'm not gonna keep
letting you do me like this. Man, Yeah, we got
a little more time. Hey, give you a few more minutes. Man,
But that really you don't watch football at all? Are
you talking about the Texas. I can look at the

(50:28):
damn highlights and see motherfucker's getting drove. I can see
that score, uh fitted and nothing fitting. You don't even
funk with football and basketball and baseball at all? Right,
Baseball you're not with baseball but basketball, football during the playoffs,
hockey playoffs, soccer, soccer, no boxing, Yeah, of course all

(50:55):
day every day. Okay, Javonte and uh what's the name?
I see you? You know what it is, Javante take
on bus his ass? Al Right, oh ship, why did you?
I told you that's not right. When take was a
little boy, when with a little kids stole off on
take it here and they are so hard. He turned

(51:17):
around and went back. I want to pull this up
so people can see this ship, Willie. It's the funniest
ship ever. It's a video out there of him when
he was seven years old. Bro. Tank was like seven
years old. Man, that little dude here, take and take dude,
turn around and walked off, like take it the dude

(51:39):
and do turn around and walked off. Hey, Willie, he's
like he said, funk that take with like seven years old. Man,
I want you to look that ship up. Man. But
what about that viral video that's out right now where
the guy swaying on to get These two guys are
getting the ring and the one guy through a dummy jab.

(52:04):
The other guy did like this, now no, no, he
did like this. The one guy through a punch through
a jab and the other guy was like almost like
he got hit with the jab, but he didn't. It
was like he threw the jab and do then like
he didn't even come close to do face due the
like that I didn't see that, you do. He threw

(52:30):
a punch like that looking no way, and I posted
it on my Instagram looking at it. Man, this dude
is crazy. Man, how you but look, man, they need
to fight these people. That's putting these dudes in the
ring like that, Like these dude gonna get killed. Like,

(52:54):
how do you put somebody in the ring like that? Man,
I'm talking about for a pro fight. I gotta understand
the dude ain't never fought before. But even if he
never fought before, you do not put somebody in the ring,
even in an organized amateur fight. You don't do that.
You know that. This this guy, this guy walked out
there like like somebody prized surprised him at his house,

(53:18):
like somebody came from around the corner and surprised and
he like and he wasn't really a fighter, so he
wasn't even supposed to be there. Madness, What the hell
is this? So now I'm seeing it, and you know,
it's not for everybody. It's not like that that guy
that you just you just posted on your page, he's

(53:41):
gonna get killed. I think that's his last fight. I
hope so because he lost and he lost. When I
getting hit, I don't, I don't even think, oh man,
this this dude didn't even get hit. Man, and he
just he just knew that she was gonna hurt. That's crazy, man.

(54:04):
They need to be a little bit more mindful of
who were throwing the ring. Like boxing, like rapping, ain't
for everybody. Football ain't for everybody. Uh, it's just not
for everybody. Man. Boxing is definitely not for everybody. But
but can you imagine, like at least when it comes
to like like football, if you you got to be

(54:25):
a bad motherfucker to get on that field. I don't care,
you know, Like we can we can joke about Dallas,
and we can joke about teams getting drove or whatever.
We can joke about detections. But to get to a
professional level a football, you gotta be a real deal.
We got to be a bad motherfucker. Bro, you got
to be ain't it's so competitive, it's so many thousands

(54:49):
of people buying for that one position. Everybody like all
of these think about all of the kids coming up
from I mean from elementary to middle school, hig school, college,
and they're all trying to get up here to the
NFL and all of them. Until you got thousands of cornerbacks, quarterbacks, linemen,

(55:13):
boy cornerbacks. You know what I'm saying, like safeties, like thousands,
you got that level. But you got to be a
bad boy to go to get to that level. You
got to be a bad boy to get to that level. Yeah,
so you know, uh, shout out to the dudes who
put the work in. Yeah. But like I was saying,
the Miko Ryan's had been interviewing for the Texans head

(55:36):
coaching position. Um Sean Payton, Um who else we missed?
That's a few more has been interviewed for for for
the coaching position. But I think that until they changed
that general manager Willie, we're gonna keep getting, you know,
new head coaches. Oh golly man, you would ask me

(55:59):
some ship like that? Um uh man, let me think
youre um nickas Harrio, Okay, nickas Harrio. You see a
black coach. If a black coach come in, he got

(56:22):
he got to win a championship the first year. Yeah,
but you don't have They don't your black coaches a chance, Bro,
Like I've seen white coaches come in and he can
be a losing ass coach for for six seasons, you know,
six seventh seasons. He can lose, lose, lose, lose. Look
just like the coach that we had. The first couple
of coaches that came in lost for Google. They lost

(56:46):
for years, I mean just getting and they went to
the job security and he messed up Alabama to the
other coach that yeah, I was here, Who's name? I
los his escape? Man, I don't blame you. I can't.
I can't remember. But it's it's just some things that
have to take place and and for this uh, for
this team to win a championship. And let's starting with

(57:07):
the quarterback. That's the first. Well you see how barrel
short or you don't know about football, so I leave
it law. But I do know that this is the
fifty seventh year of football. You just know that cause
Rihanna is playing the Super Bowl and uh and and
baby Faces singing a national anthem. Don't do that, Willie,

(57:27):
don't do that, Bro, What does it matter. Why what
is the matter? Why? No? I know, you know, but
this is the fifty seventh year of football. Uh and
no NFL team in Houston has ever won a Super Bowl,

(57:48):
being has never been to a super Bowl. That has
never been to a super Bowl. Well, at least I said,
I took my little league football team to a super
both of you. We had that. We had the Houston Gambles.
They want a couple of not super Bowls, but you
know that a couple of playoff games. Champ you know,

(58:10):
that's why your homeboy played it. Her shell Oh her shell, Yeah,
her sell her shell, herschel runner, her sell her shell.
Crawler crawler, Huh that's hershell carler Yeah, crawler. Yeah. But

(58:33):
uh yeah, the gunners, we had the Houston gunners. That's
that's where the boy was at. That's where he started
off that right, I'm sure that. Yeah, he ended up
there wanted too. Yeah, we think, yeah, well it doesn't
matter because he probably don't even remember. He got that
boy got that CT that boy got. But he punched.

(58:56):
Then he used the box too. Yeah, I think he
boxed one or two? Was that him? So I wasn't him?
That was kidning knowing that was kid. No, that was
his daddy. That was a box that was high Smith,
high Smith boxed and too tall Jones box and two tars.
That was my partner. Yeah, looked like you're about fifty
three years old, under sixty. Hey, how young? It's too

(59:21):
young to get a tattoo. What's a good age limit?
I didn't mine when I was eight. Yeah, but she
was a wild, uncontrollable child. And my homeboy did my
ship with a needle and some any in its garage
on the front porch. A needle in what Indian Indian ink? Okay? So,

(59:48):
but but okay, Now that you're grown man, and you
you've you've lived a little and you have kids of
your own. You know, you've been around the world. You've
seen some things. How how young it's too young? No
reason why I'm asking. The reason why I'm asking is
because this lady in New York I was reading her

(01:00:10):
story It's to stirred from a few years back. She
lived in Highland, New York, and she got arrested for
permitting her ten year old son to get to get
a tattoo on his forearm, on the inside of his forearm. Now,
she said, that she thought to tattoo was temporary, you know,

(01:00:32):
after they arrested her. But guess what, they didn't just
arrest her, they also arrested the tattoo artist. That's a bullshit.
What was what was it? What was the charge? Sometimes
of endangerment to a child? But but here's the thing.
Like in New York is one of the cities that don't, uh,
that requires a child to be at least eighteen years

(01:00:55):
old to get to have a tattoo. The other states
on the country that will allow kids to get a
tattoo and has no age limit. Uh, But as long
as they have parental consent, they can they can get
a tattoo. Well, here here's my thing. Um, at any age,
the first thing that I would tell my kids they

(01:01:16):
want to get tattoos, if they don't go away? What
if your child is five years old and they want
to get it, do they even accomprehend that? They don't
go away with discussion? So you wouldn't allow your five
year old to get a tattooed? How you put gonna
get a tattoo? Fun? Okay, Okay, let's let's listen, keep
going about five Let's go team Okay, Okay, that is

(01:01:38):
fifteen years old. Fifteen is high school. I don't know
you live in my house. Okay, so it's okay, so
so too young is living in your house? You live
a mouse. You're not gonna bring no tattoo in my
house because I know, I know what tattoos are. I

(01:02:02):
know they don't wipe off. And then you got shipped
on your arms. That's gonna last you a lifetime. And
when you get my age, are you looking at these tattoos? Like? God, damn,
what the fund was I thinking? I got a tattoo
of motherfucker blowing his brains out on my own. What
kind of ship is that? But I was young? M hm.

(01:02:22):
You know, being young is no excuse for ignorance. Yes
it is, that's the excuse. That's the only the reason.
It's not excuse. You know why, because if you got
to shoot, somebody is still going to jail. It's still
an excuse. But don't clear it up. It don't clear
it up. Ignorance is no excuse for the law. True

(01:02:44):
and will and true enough. But okay, okay, okay, listen,
there's youngsters out there who don't know ghetto boys music.
When we were not check the out and people said, well,
you know they like people like you said, well, she's young.

(01:03:05):
She don't know. He's young, but I'm letting him. I'm
turning him onto it. Right. But when we were younger,
we knew we goddamn show. We knew Steve, we know him.
When we heard the stylistics, we knew. We knew that
ship got band coming the boots. You know, we we

(01:03:30):
get name it starting smoking. We knew, we knew we man,
We knew that. We knew, we knew for sure. We kids,
we knew Tom Patty, he were maiden. We knew Black Sabboth,
we knew. We grew up listen to it. Yeah, we did,
because our parents listened to it, and they opened up,

(01:03:53):
They opened us up to it. You know, my mom
listen to R and B and soul, and my dad
listened to pop, souf rock, not pop, but solf rock.
That was my daddy's station. So that's why, you know,
I know so many artists in those genres, and I'm
so familiar with that music I got. I got to

(01:04:16):
rock and roll on my own, and when I was seventeen,
I started listening to the rock and I'm but you
grew up on. I didn't pick up rock until I
was seventeen later in life, and that was kind of
late for me. You know, that's late, but I picked
it up. But again, though, youth is no excuse. That's
why I say youth, there's no excuse for ignorance because

(01:04:38):
you know, you can learn a lot of things. I
can get it. It's a reason, right, because you don't
know music. You know what it is. I think people
get offended by the word ignorant, our ignorance, ignorant and
ignorance the same definition I'm asking. It's ignorant and ignorant.

(01:04:59):
It's a variation, of course, because it's two different words.
But but they're in the same family, you know. But um,
I think people get offended by the word. How you
use the word, But you know, I think we're saying
it's pretty much the same thing. I'm just talking ship.
You're talking ship. You know that. I wouldn't have it

(01:05:21):
no other way. Agree with you all the same time,
what do you mean? But I do believe that that
the parents. If you listen to a lot of a
lot of kids today, when they say, well, I'm younger,
that's because their parents did their parents listen to their music.
The parents listen listening to the music the kids are

(01:05:42):
listening to. And today they listened to the same music.
So a lot of times the kid hop in the
car and the kid control the radio station. Anytime I
couldn't control the radio station when in the car, you
cannot troll the control the station is the car. Can
you jump in the car with your mama, your daddy,

(01:06:04):
You know you couldn't do that. But now the kids
jump in the car and they control the car. They
control you know, what's being played on ready or the
parents are listening to the kids playlist, whereas we listened
to our parents playlist. So that's the big difference. Wow, man,
you're crazy. It's a crazy world. Crazy world when when

(01:06:24):
when when straighted for nothing, um, the kids listened to
the parents listened to what the kids listened to. And
you know what, for the first time in my life, man,
and I want to go back. You remember, do you
remember when we first started going to New York and
were doing the music simitar and and people was doing
us and ship right, remember that uget it? And then

(01:06:47):
we go back to Madison Square Garden and then we
get a standard ovation right, and that the apolo. But
just imagine how hard it was to break into the
East with our music, right. And then it went from uh,

(01:07:10):
it went from the way it was to rapping like
the subthing matter that we wrapped about, right, and then
it changed again. So now you hear people, you hear
rappers on the East Coast sounding like they from the sound.
I ain't never just walked up on somebody until now

(01:07:31):
and just heard that. Uh, like, man, even in New York, bro,
what happened to the New York action? You know what
I'm saying, Like, man, put your tongue in your mouth
and talk. You know what I was about to say.
It's kind of funny, but it's really not. It's really not.

(01:07:51):
You sound like you're talking like that. Yeah, come tell you,
like what's I would say? Like, Um, it's sad to
hear some New Yorkers, real New Yorkers who really love
New York hip hop have to acquiesced to the sounds

(01:08:14):
of New Yorkers behaving like they're from somewhere else the South,
sounding like they're from the South somewhere like even well,
even the subject matter, because you know, no matter what
New York rap was always conscious. It had a consciousness

(01:08:35):
to it. Even the party stuff had a consciousness to it.
Even the real stuff had a consciousness to it. Yeah,
I say, they always had a consciousness to it. And
ship that's over for the most part. We all fish.
Better teach your folks giving money to eat. The next
week he broke you know, oh man, next week he

(01:08:57):
squeezing at your throat. You know, like you had, you
had game in rhyme back then. I had eight niggas
growing up eight seven, seven turns to sixth. But that's
why I like you in heaven, you know. That's what
I rhyme. That's what I liked to buy New York
hip hop. I like that it was different from our

(01:09:18):
hip hop, right. I like that it was different from
West Coast. That's what I liked about the West Coast, Right,
it was different. It was different to me, and it
was different. I like that. I love it. We had
that diversity. I love listened to hip hop, don't know
where it came from, what it is now, I'm like, man,
who is that is that? So? Now that song is

(01:09:39):
I'm like, God, damn, that sounds just Ali who's growing up.
That ship was called Biting man fifty years in hip hop,
Willie fifty years in hip hop bro, and all of
my fifty two years being here on this earth. Man,
I cannot believe that we have taken this turn. We
have let this music slip out of our hands, and
now it's being controlled by somebody who has no idea

(01:10:02):
what this culture is, what this culture is about. How
do you get it back? It's too late. Take all
your ship down from streaming, put it up on your website.
You gotta you gotta be gangster, because they're playing gangster
with you. They're not leaving you an alternative. You don't
either play by my rules or you ship not gonna
be on here. Okay, fine, you don't either play from

(01:10:24):
You're gonna need to play by my rules or my
ship not gonna be on here. Imagine if everybody took
their ship off streaming platforms with day Lassos music was
screaming streaming platforms, they just put it back on. They
put it back on. Yeah, I don't know why. I
guess they put it back on or they put it
on for the first time, But anyway, I did see
and I make it to where you can get mine

(01:10:45):
and get your ship on on on your website. Man,
take take all of that ship out man until they
are willing to demolish those streaming sites. Man, because you
got as under a penny and it costs you over
a thousand or something dollars or more to make a
fucking song. And all they're gonna do is stroke a

(01:11:06):
big one. They're gonna stroke a fatty to somebody and
prop them up out there as the example, and everybody
they're gonna chan everybody gonna change the exactly. Well, that's
cold blooded, man, and that's why, that's why we continue
to sit in the positions that we sit in. For
every major corporation, and I ain't even just talking about music.

(01:11:30):
I'm talking about in every major corporation in this country.
You may have a black and a higher position, but
you'll always have somebody higher than them that don't look
like them. And that's the fact, Jack, that's cold blooded.

(01:11:53):
So ask yourself, what are you doing to change in
the artive? No More Talks. This episode was produced by
Aching and brought to you by the Black Effect Podcast
Network at I Heart Radio.
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