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February 6, 2023 73 mins

GBR discusses the need for monetary support for the founding fathers and mothers of hip hop, the latest in the aftermath of the murder of Tyre Nichols, Trump's deposition and much 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 get no boys, It's back and reoaded all in
your mind. Yeah, not 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
quoted because we wrote it. The North South East coat
is the g b my keeping your head bobbing, it

(00:21):
ain't no stopping and wants to be drops head by
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 buttoment biscuits. It's Willie d y'all scarfaces in
the building. Collectively we are the ghett old Boys. Reloaded,

(00:42):
Reloaded with another episode of information and instructions to help
you navigate through this wild, crazy, beautiful world in the studio.
Ghet old, ghett old ghett old boys. What's up with
It's up? What's up? Can't king looking mitislif man splitfing look? Yeah?

(01:03):
So have you been following Blastman's to carriss One and
the other hip hop giants that apparently has talked to
h what's his name? That the congressman and the senator, senate,
congressman or whatever, uh shift John what's his name, I
don't know, but Adam Adam something. But I didn't read

(01:25):
into it to what's going on. Well, evidently from where
I got this, some money is going to be set
aside to build a hip hop museum, right um. Honestly,
money being set aside for the hip hop museum ain't
really you know, that's not really helping the cause in

(01:47):
my opinion, you know what I mean, Like we got
we got we got artists that were down, you know,
that actually are responsible for the birth of hip hop man,
and I guarantee you that if you run to them
right now, they're not doing too well. But we've just
been you know, hundreds of millions or double digit millions

(02:09):
on a museum for it, you know, because it ain't
the way that the museum could like maybe help. I
don't know, I kept help. I kept those guys who
need help financially, like by way of perhaps the foundation
or something. I don't know, Willie. But but we need
to really, um start fighting for hip hop, you know

(02:30):
what I mean, We should really start squabbling for hip hop.
I feel like every every every label has taken something
from hip hop. Uh has taken something from that artist
and never gave it back to him. You know what
I mean, Like we used our talents, you know, and
you capitalized. You know what I mean? Like the money, Um,

(02:53):
the money wasn't fair for in the beginning. The contracts
wasn't fair in the beginning. But yet the record label
still hold the rights to the ship. And now they
switched and I was I was watching um dress from
um Black Sheep, madreds Uh. What was the name of

(03:14):
that group? Who's the black Sheet? I can't remember the
name of it was the name of the group black Okay,
black Sheet? Okay that is. But he was talking about
like when we signed our agreements, man, that that foreseen
uh distribution company that has popped up out of nowhere.

(03:34):
Like they don't have the rights to do that ship
to our music, you know what I mean? Like you
you can you you you take our music and you
give us a blessing the penny to stream ourk ship.
But we never agreed to this, all right, We never
agreed to that. And from the way, you know, dreds Foot,
it is like if we're gonna split if if if

(03:56):
his contract read if anything unforeseen would happen, you know,
and future that they would split the royalty fifty fifty
when that the old money. And I really want to
shed a lot of light on this situation really because
we made music, bro, you know, we are we are
an important part of a huge um um what do

(04:18):
you wanna call it? You can a huge uh culture,
you know that steady growing and growing and growing and growing.
But we're not in on the money side of it.
You know a lot of people from back in the
days and we were signing contracts like them, contracts was
sucking five percent or five points or uh ten points,

(04:39):
twelve points you know, max eighteen points, you know, and
and it just wasn't it's not it's not money enough
to sustain that artists that actually created the material that's
being put out. So what do you say to the
people that say, were you signed the contract? Well? Ship,
I mean you can still pack fat oh you know

(05:01):
water these fucking big warners and universals and epics in Atlantics. Man,
you still got our ship. But what do you say
to people that say, well, that's what contracts are. Four
If everybody go to hold on and can I let
me finis because I let you talk like, if if
the contracts don't matter, then why are people signing contracts

(05:23):
every day to to to make sure that that's some
type of structure in case there's a disagreement. I mean
that's what the Okay, I mean contracts is NFL contracts,
NBA contracts, UH acting contracts, UH music contracts. You know,

(05:45):
let's finding dandy. But when you have some new ship
in the game, you know with the streaming, uh ship
that ain't like that can't be in the contract because
it wasn't in there. Our personally think strinch streaming is
like the worst thing that ever happened to music. Okay,
well we need like the whole the whole internet ship,
all of that. It's the worst thing to have. You

(06:06):
took away so many jobs with the mom and pops
and make easy to steal, and it made me way
more easy easy to steal because back in the day
you had you you knew that was a warehouse where
that music was, and you could go to that warehouse
and you could audit. You know, now you can't. You know,
you go to the mom and okay, what what stories
you said? My stuff is it? Okay, I need to
do an art that I need to check. But now

(06:28):
I can't do that. You just gotta like basically trust
their words and take their words. So and and that's
not in the contract. Yeah, that's not in the contract
with it, okay, So that that streaming side of it
never that never surfaced in the agreements that we signed.
So here's the problem with we what we're have him right?

(06:49):
Because because you and I gett boys and not in
our prime at the top, our voice is not as
loud as though and we're action about it right, Our
voice are not as loud. Our voices are not as
loud as the guys who are on the top right now,
like the Drakes and you know, Little Baby and you

(07:12):
know all these guys, right, Cardi B whoever you know. So,
our voices is not as loud as there now. Obviously
the person with the loudest voice, whoever is you know,
at the top of the mountain, they're gonna have a
lot of voice, and they're gonna have more impact and
more influence. But if they if they were to throw
their weight behind it. But the people who are in

(07:34):
those positions, they're not they're not really interested, they're not
really interested in making sure that people under them get
what they deserved because in their minds that that's not
their fight. Just like when we when we were there, right,
we were at the top, we wasn't really interested in
the guys who were crying about not getting their fast

(07:56):
share at the time, right, But now that we got
we that did we have that argument back then? You know,
people not getting that fast here. I think that argument
was that, but but we didn't hear it because we
were so far, were so high up, we couldn't hear it. William,
I'm not I'm not the record the record side of
this ship. You know, the contracts, the agreements or whatever.

(08:17):
All that's fine and dandy, all right, but but at
some point that artist who helped to create this music
is gonna have to eat, all right, and at some point, uh,
the artists that made that music, uh, and that you're
now streaming that we didn't agree to in the first place.
We didn't agree to that ship. Like, somebody's got to
put a bail on that cat. Bro. Like you you're

(08:40):
talking about contracts, but that's not what we signed. We
didn't sign that, So all of that streaming ship is illegal, bro,
Like I didn't you know how normally when when um
so you do a um I say, you signed a record,
You signed a record deal, right, and then the distributor
is gonna come to you and and they're gonna get

(09:00):
what's that? Is it an inducement letter or some ship
letter of inducement or something. I can't remember what it's called,
but it's a letter that spec to let to let
the distributor note that it's cool for them to distribute
your ship and not in those words, but yeah, they
you signed a letter of inducement or a letter of something. Man,

(09:21):
I can't remember. Man, it's been so freaking long ago,
but you sign a letter, Willie and I never signed
that letter, and you never signed that letter either, because
just this is some unfortunate ship that's happened. The Hip
hop Museum is cool, you know, it'll be it'll it'll
it'll be cool to be a part of that history.

(09:42):
But we don't need that part of my way, bigger man.
We need we need to fucking pension, We need retirement,
We need help care for these for these artists that
that that created the ground for the rest of the
people to stand on, you know what I mean, Like

(10:03):
it's it's way bigger than me and you man, this
is a culture that needs to be protected. What's the
purpose of the museum besides honoring those who have done it?
That and that and that remains should be Uh. I
don't know, Willie. All I saw was that. But but
Chris is talking about this though, Carrien's what was talking

(10:24):
about it, and that's why I felt compelled to come
on here and say something about it also, you know,
but Chris is talking about It's like, we need to
do stuff and that knows where, but we need to
make sure that we take care of the culture and
the people that are responsible for making you know that
that was responsible for making those hits, you know, making

(10:45):
those records, giving us this platform to stand on. You know,
I'm willing to bet you that that, um, Elvis don't
go through that. You know, Elvis, the state ain't going
through this ship, you know what I mean. That contract
might be a little rock and roll, might be a

(11:05):
little set, it might be set up a little different,
you know what I mean. I guess it's a protection
on that side of it, but we need to get
protection on our side of it. Mm hmmm. I'm with yeah,
I'm with you on that. Um, I just wanted to
get that all much. Yeah, now I'm with that. I

(11:26):
think that it's gonna take a conservative effort though, you know,
like it's like it's just too many people, just like
like on the other front, there's too many people that
are just for self as long as they're okay, they
feel like, yo, you know, everything is good. I ain't
got to go out and do that, you know. So

(11:46):
we're gonna that's gonna be a whole lot of that
going on, But we can get past that. Yeah, I'm down,
you know, I'm down with it. You know. Um, let's
talk about Tyree Nichols. Oh that's so man, did you
see that? Horrible? Man, Come on, man, horrible. So these
were black officers, Willie, and you know, we always get

(12:08):
on here and and we're going crazy about how how
the white police officers don't um speak the same language
as the people that they are actually policing, and how
they kick our ass and get away with it. Well,

(12:30):
those it was the five officers that they got, five
black officers, five black officers that got put in jail.
God had been arrested for the damage and injury and
the murder of this kid Willie, I mean kicking him

(12:51):
in the head and tazing and and spreading with pepper
spray and all of that was way way way too much, bro.
And and we and it's it's fair to examine that,
it's fair to go into that. But let's make sure
that we reiterate that, motherfucker, we ain't even you got
one time five black cops killed the black dude. Okay, motherfucker,

(13:15):
we ain't even y'all. Motherfucker's killed black folks every day,
all day long. So this one incident don't mean that. Okay,
now you see what black guys are doing it too,
so it can't be a race thing. Now, it's still
a race thing. The problem is that you're always gonna
have uncivilized MutS in every group. And these were uncivilized

(13:37):
MutS who who got out of pocket. They stretched their
authority to the extent that they forgot what color they were.
And they didn't understand that if they crossed that line.
And and and these in the in the video got
out that they wasn't counting on that video to come out.

(13:58):
So when that video came out, that what did it?
It wasn't even the body the Office of body cam.
It was that pole, the camera that was on the pole,
that's what that's what got him. And you gotta understand this, Brad,
check this out. When you think about why they did
what they did, you gotta understand first of all, why
would they do what they did, And that is because

(14:21):
leadership starts at the top, and something in their mind
told them that that was gonna be okay with leadership. See,
just like your kids know when they go out there
at that house, they represent you. They know whatever they do,
they're gonna have to answer to it. They know they're
gonna have to talk to you at some point. Even
your grown kids know. You know it's gonna be a

(14:41):
phone call coming, you know. So they know. So these
guys knew who they were answering to. Sirling C. J. Davis,
the chief of police in Memphis, is as dirty as
they come. She is as dirty as they come. Yeah,

(15:01):
I'm gonna come. I'm coming because I'm gonna call a
strike and striking the ball the ball I was pulling
for you know, black woman. You know, having a position
like that, Yeah, that's automatic for me. I'm automatically gonna
put poor forward. But man, you know, like all skin
folk can folk and she and she ain't no good bro.
Come on, yeah, let me let me take you back.

(15:22):
Before she got the Memphis, she was in doing North Carolina.
She was enduring him. Okay, so enduringham. Uh. She that
was a situation where black man was murdered by the police.
They tried to say he poured the gun. The video
never showed him the man pulling the gun at all. Ever,
being a danger to police man killed by white police officer,

(15:48):
she protected. She contected the cops, white cop. Yeah, she protected.
Before she got the dorm, she she got kicked out
of Atlanta because she was She covered for a sergeant,
a female sergeant's husband who was caught up in a
pornography case, a child pornography case of white officer. So

(16:14):
she tried to cover. She tried to cover for him.
She tried to sweep it under the rug. And when
the investigators, uh, when they when they interviewed her, they
said that her her testimony was what's that word they used, uh, deceptive?
He said her testimony was deceptive. And the and the

(16:35):
two officers, the two officers who who who exposed her
testimony proved to be true. You know, they were saying.
These guys, these guys were being truthful, and her testimony
proved to be deceptive. These guys went to her when

(16:56):
they found out the information. Okay, what happened is that
one guy was working at a photo lab after I
was or whatever as a second job, and he came
across the photos. So he he takes it to her.
She tells him he said that she said cut it
and then made a motion with her finger like this,

(17:19):
you know, like she was you know, like make the
motion like cutting somebody's neck. So she made that motion.
So they kicked her out. Oh and that ain't it.
That ain't all she was. She was, uh, she was implemented,
or she was at least over this unit called Red Dog,

(17:42):
which is similar to the Scorpions in Memphis where they
have this so called this so called Yeah, the so
called these guys are part of the so called violent
uh task force, you know where where they go after
you know, violent crimes task force, right, but they go
out to the violent criminals, so called violent criminals. These

(18:05):
guys when they start these little special task force, these
task force are notorious for overstepping boundaries. They're notorious for
being brutal, notorious for being murderous and thieving and lyne.
They just they are notoriously corrupt. So this red Dog
unit was in Atlanta, and I got all kinds of

(18:28):
people hitting me up, subscribers and stuff hitting me up,
saying that these guys would pull up on people in
the neighborhood and just start beating them up for no reason.
They would jump out, they would jump out, they would
jump out of car, moving cars, uh, smacking people, putting
their heads in the aunt beds. Uh. Just they say

(18:51):
that they would be just chilling, just be chilling in
the neighborhood, and out of nowhere, the police come in,
make everybody laying like everybody laying on the ground and
beat people up. And then even when they didn't find anything,
no apologies, no nothing, to just drive on off into
the sunset and still take people to jail, just putting
all kinds of cases on people. Year old woman that

(19:15):
that that got killed on her watch. It was this
was a no knock warrant executed by this this her department,
no knock warrant. They killed this ninety two year old
woman and she covered. She ain't no good bro, She's corrupted. Right.

(19:37):
And here's the thing I'm not I'm not sure that
what what what the complexion of you know, innicity of
the officers were. But the bottom line is that it
happened on her watch. So just looking at the patterns,
it seems like she is protecting Or. She offers protection

(19:59):
for or. But as soon as as uh uh, Pooky
and Ray Ray getting some ship me. Well, now here's
what it is. She offers protections for all of the police.
Look after the police, she offers protection for all of them.
But when she hit the fans, somebody gotta go. He's

(20:20):
got a roll and it's quick and and so when
the ship at the fan with black officers, he's are
gonna roll faster. And this is something she should have.
This is something that they should have known. She knows this.
They knew that, and that's why they were they were
comfortable with doing everything that they were doing, was because
down they know her history with in law enforcement. In

(20:45):
law enforcement, you get rewarded for bad behavior, not good behavior.
You're right, you get rewarded for bad hand. You get
promoted for bad behavior in law enforcement. Remember the Jeffrey
Dahmer coops. They got promoted to it two of the
worst to ever do it. They got actually promoted. And

(21:07):
this is because they were in line with the agenda.
The agenda is to cause confusion. The agenda is to
cause disruption, to beat brutalized still, lie, cheat, defraud everything
you can think of, and then put the badge on

(21:30):
and and and the uniform and making arrest every nonw
and then and make the dummies out there. I think
that you're doing something good for society all over this country. Dude,
that same mentality is mirrored and and and you know
that that that that was protections offered, you know, until

(21:53):
like you said, some hands got it roll Willie. And
and what they did to to to that young brother
was just as foul as anything I've ever seen or
anything that I've ever heard brutal man, uncivilized much. It
takes uncivilized much to even thinker like at some point, okay,

(22:15):
let's just say they were the uncivilized much we know
them to be right, even the uncivilized mutton has to
say to himself, you know, damn man, oh man, you know,
maybe we shouldn't be beating him like this, man, you know,
especially like since you know we're doing this on the
back drop of the George Floyd case. What black man

(22:36):
was beating the death and stuff, and you know, maybe
this this might come back to get me. You know,
I ain't I know, I ain't ship. I'm uncivilized, money
ain't ship. But I don't want to go to jail
for this. So let me just stop. And made me
make sure that they stopped too. Hey many guys cut
it out now say that. Yeah, see that's what he said.

(22:57):
I hope they stomp is that's what they do. And
and listen, they was calling the man bitches and holes
and our motherfucker this and that, just talking to the man,
you know, like he was nothing, like he was dirt.
The dude's attitude warranted nothing close to that type of
language then, and I felt like it was personal. And

(23:20):
when I started hearing about that, I heard that it
probably was personal. You know. They were saying that he
had some type of relationship with dudes ex girlfriend what's
his name, Haley Demitris Haley Sos Haley. He uh. They

(23:44):
were saying that Tyree has some type of relationship at
FedEx with the woman. But Tyree's father recently said, no, Dice,
he said, that's not true. But at the same time,
I know as a parent you don't always know who
your kids friends are and who they're dealing with. So

(24:07):
but I do know that that is very plausible for
something like that, because police officers often use the shield
to get back at their enemies, and they you, and
they get with each other, they gang up, they get
with each other. Look, man, I'm gonna beat this mom
right here asked that I don't have I got a

(24:28):
problem with, and I'm gonna hand him, and then, you know,
you cover for me, And then I'm gonna cover for you.
Are you get him? I won't. I can't stand the
mother and ask him. Do whatever you gotta do to them,
get them, get them, get getting for me, and then
I'm gonna get one for you. You see, I'm gonna
get one things. And I'm an I'm gonna cover for you.

(24:48):
When you beat up your wife. You cover for me
when I beat up my wife. This is why women
are scared to death. Women are that are in relationships
with police officers are scared to death because who do
you call when the police violate you? That's heavy? Who
do you call when the police is committing the crime?
That's heavy? Really, but it's but it's happening. You know,

(25:11):
it's heavy all day every day. Man, But it's that
cold game. But you know, they didn't count on Tyree's family.
They didn't. They didn't. They didn't bank on them being
assertive about getting justice. Boys reloaded. Podcast will be right

(25:33):
back after the point. How long did it take for
them to actually get some movement in the police department.
Didn't take long at all. It didn't take enough two
or three four months. It was like less than twenty days. Damn.
The boys was out of here in less than twenty days,

(25:57):
you know. And the footage that they did have, the
cam quarter, the body cam footage that they did have,
that came out in record time. Now here's the deal.
All of that body cam footage should come out immediately
every single time. I don't care what the what the
situation is that in fact, body cam footage should be

(26:17):
made public immediately, like should automatic as as soon as
it's damn you should be made public in real time.
And they got a way to do it. They got
a damn way to do everything. That's with technology. They
got a way to do it. Make that body cam
footage available available in real time. Well, they'll probably say

(26:39):
something about it, you know, it being some type of
security risk or whatever. But at least you know, within
you know, minutes after the incident, make that body cam
footage available, because we all know that if they are
left with the task of releasing that body cam footage

(26:59):
at their leisure, well we know that they can doctorate,
and we know that we are doctor you know, and
they have had a ship where you can't see nothing.
They've doctored it a lot. I saw a dude, I
think a chic dude like get shot by the police
in a video today. And the dude was willed in

(27:23):
a knife and he got the police shot him. He
ran up on the police with a knife and the
police shot him, and they they blurred his face. They
both they blurred the victim's face of the cop. They
blurred the victim's face, and I think the cops face

(27:43):
was blurred too. But damn. But here's a thing. How
often do they do that when black people get shot?
Not very often, if at all. Exactly exactly so so
so the message is to traumatize the black community and

(28:04):
normalize pain. Normal normalize can be insensitive toward it, make it,
get it so they can be insensitive toward it, and
so that the black people who are not as strong
willed it as who is not as strong willed it
a strong willed can be, can feel inferior. You know.

(28:29):
One of the things that I hate is when when
black people post stuff about they do this to us.
You know, they post video or video or uh, there's
an image and somebody say they do this to us,
and blah blah blah. We know what they're doing us,
we know whatever. But when I hear people saying this
is what they do and and it just sounds like

(28:50):
somebody that's scared to death, and like, I don't like
that scared of death ship. I'm like, a you know,
you know, you know what it is, like, you know
what it is right now, we already know what it is.
So yeah, that that that fair shake, that break that possibility. Um,

(29:11):
that ship is slim, the none and slim just lift like,
we're not gonna it's not gonna ever be fair. The
skills of justice will not ever tilt in our favorite willy.
So what's happening? What's so? What's happening? We're dealing with
a lot of bullies right whether the police officers. Uh,

(29:31):
anybody else you know, a Karen or whoever. These are bullies.
They're all they're all bullies. No, you can't be here,
what you're doing right here? Uh? What is your name?
You know? Stand right there? You know, don't walk you
can't be you can't walk over that. These are bullets.
And you know, the way to deal with a bully

(29:55):
is a bullet. You gotta put something on the bullet ass.
I'm telling you, bro, Like any time I've ever had
to deal with a bully, the way I got the
bully to get in line, the mind to get up
off me, it's putting something on their ass. And when
they know that's what you you about, and that's how

(30:16):
you get down. Just magically they somehow find some type
of respect for you. They just magically find respect. This
is why if America could roll on China right night,
would but it won't. It could, but they know it's
gonna be annihilation. Like they know what's gonna happen. And

(30:39):
that's what bullies need to understand. Whoever the bully is,
they need to know there's gonna be some consequences and
repercussionists every single time. That's what they need to understand like,
you ain't gonna get away with nothing, not one time.
You ain't gonna get away with nothing, not one time.

(31:00):
I'm not not with me online, not one time are
you gonna get away with it? And I don't give
a damn about what they're saying about what the law
he is and all that ship. You know, hey man,
Americans understand that. Americans understand justice. They understand when justice

(31:21):
is not served, justice is gonna be served. They understand that. Yeah,
but it is. It's the same justice for black people,
really absolutely not. But but hey man, you know, but look,
black people know what time it is tried everything else.
Black people know what time it is. All that damn
crying and what they do what is to us? And

(31:43):
and we do this in the all that you know
what it is. Man, Let's get with it. You know
what I'm saying. Let's get to it. In two today,
a mob of two hundred white people caeesar is a
black man. Um his name was Thomas Brown, and he

(32:03):
was in jail right and they lynched him in front
of the courthouse and they accused him in an assault
in Nicholasville, Kentucky. I don't I don't Um, it's just
just just ongoing. It just don't stop, you know. And
they got him out of jail and did him like

(32:26):
this William uh in nineteen o two, and then ship
is still going on right now. But this time it
was your skin folk. Mm hmm. Your skin folk did
that to you. That's how I go. A lot of times,

(32:46):
the black person ain't even get a position unless they're
gonna acquious to the system. Acquious less. They're gonna get
down whatever the systems say. Get down. They haven't said systems.
They get down. That's what they're gonna do. They're gonna
get down with the system. They're not going to even
get in. They're not leave letting them in. This is why,
this is why every single black person that come into office,

(33:09):
coming to any position of power, should not be judged
strictly by the color of their skin. They must be
judged by the content of their character. You must absolutely
vet them, find out who the hell they are, where
they come from, and what are they going to do
for you, Because it's too many of them that's just

(33:33):
been getting the past. It's based strictly off their skin color.
They are part of the system, and many of them
are part of the problem. Many of them are the
gatekeepers of black society. If you look around and a
lot of these cities where you see young people trying
to come into politics, young people trying to make change,

(33:56):
the biggest adversaries are black gate keepers. Because those black
gate keepers, let me let me rephrase that. Oftentimes the
biggest adversaries are the black gate keepers, the old ones
who've been in so long, who got their position, who
getting their money, who who who? Who? Who's using their

(34:16):
power and their influence, who don't want to see no change.
They're good, they've been selling out all their damn life,
and i'd be damn it, I'm gonna let your little
fresh ass come up in here and change something. The
youngsters got some good ideas, they got a lot of
good energy, They got good intent that they have that
they have not been jaded, They have not been jaded.

(34:38):
But a lot of these old, these old gate keepers,
they are the worst, and their asses got to go.
They gotta go. Bro Shout out to all the youngsters
out there that's running for political office, who are running
for these politicals offices and with with with change in mind,

(35:00):
you know, like they want to make change. Man, and
I respect that and know y'all know it's going to
be an uphill battle. It's going Don't think just because
you get in that's it. You still gotta deal with
a bunch of uncivilized much to reason. You gotta understand
the reason why you want to make changes. Because the

(35:21):
people that are already empower ain't doing what they're supposed
to be doing. So if they're not doing what they're
supposed to be doing and you come in and you're
trying to change that, you're gonna have some problems. Because
just know that, and know that you don't have to
be in at all by yourself. Get yourself some allies
on the way. Get allies. Don't try to go in
and do it all by yourself, because you're not going
to be successful. You need allies. Huh, you have to

(35:47):
have allies. Brother, what's that You have to have allies? Yes, No,
that's that's just Um. They are fucking with Biden again
and going to his house. You can't take that ship
out let people house, man, even leave alone. Man. Uh,
it's just crazy ship going on Willie uh gunming in

(36:10):
d c uh starms and metro station shooting people up. Um,
it's the first week of Black History Month, right, Black
History Month? First week? Are you gonna eat your chicken? Man?

(36:31):
Why did this lady, why did this lady make the
damn international news with a black stereotype, like one of
the worst black stereotypes out there? And it is it's
it's only a stereotype because people are chicken all over
the world and we're not talking about the same ship.

(36:52):
What are you talking about. I'm talking about the black
ladies Berna Ladele, Brunner Ladele and Harvey Leno. Yeah, she
stole all the chicken. She stole one point five million
dollars worth the chicken. That's impossible. How do you steal
one point five million dollars worth the chicken? And they

(37:12):
said in eighteen months she stole about one point five
million dollars in chicken. And the sixty thou question is
is the chicken? No, it's it's two. It's you know,
it's two different types of chickens. Right, you got the
chickens the legs and then you have the chickens. You

(37:38):
see what I'm saying, there's two different types of chickens.
Is she talking about the chicken from the chicken house
or is she talking about the chicken from the chicken house? Man?
How does the lunch lady they said she was she

(38:00):
the lunch ladies that she was. She she was. She
was in charge of ardoring the food for the school.
So so what she did is they they alleged that
she made two separate artists. She was ardoring for the
school and then she'd make a separate artor. I know

(38:21):
there's chicken at that house because if she ordered a
million dollar chicken, they had chicken every motherfucker, Like, yeah,
what kind of chicken we have in tonight? Mama fried
about tomorrow name mama mother. They had a bunch of
mother chicken baer chicken. Yeah, she definitely stands up to

(38:47):
that stereotype. She holds that stereotype like like, yeah, it's chicken, baby, dude,
how do you I wouldn't want I mean, I wouldn't
want that. On my record, some chickens. They're like one
point five million dollars with the chickens and the rest
of you gotta pay restitution. Why do you paying restitutions
in this amount of money, ma'am? Uh? They say I

(39:10):
stole some chickens the school lunch ladies got hit with
a depth charge for one point five million million worth
for chicken with the chicken. Wow, that's cold blooding times
are hard, man. It this happened during the pandemic when

(39:32):
the students were not on campus. Does even worse? Oh,
she was dealing It was college campus. It was like
an element school school. What kind of school? I don't know.
I mean, it's a lot of goddamn chicken. They should
have threw up a red flag the minute that order
came out. Okay, I'll ask you a question. One of
my fathers asked me, what if she was using the
chickens to give to the homeless, to feed the homes?

(39:55):
Did you laugh at that person? Did you should as
you should? I want to give nobody no fucking chicken.
You know what the bottom line is that you know,
I tried. You know, somebody else said that, you know, well,
what if she did at the feed her kids and
that self feed and self and her kids? And I said, ship,
I tried that with the judge. That ship don't work. No,

(40:16):
it don't. That's not gonna work. Yeah, that might that
might work for certain people, but that don't work for
black people. Uh. At all and and like you know, bro,
I was I was reading something Willie. Man, they were
talking about white America and Black America. Right, It's just

(40:40):
it's one American. Ain't no white America. It ain't no
white America or no black America. It's one America. And
I have to always correct them. It's two different Americas. Man,
it's too different America. As Willie, it is a white

(41:02):
America and it is a Black America. We get sentenced.
If you look at case law, you you'll see that
if if that lady that stole them chickens the time
that they gave her, they're gonna give her or whatever

(41:22):
her restitution or whatever's gonna be. And you go and
you look at white America's side of the same thing
for the same crime, or of a crime, of the
crime of the same value. I guarantee you that this
black lady who allegedly stole all them chickens, it's gonna

(41:42):
get listed. This white lady that has a crime that
has the same amount of money involved in it, she's
gonna get more. She is the black lady that that
that allegedly stole chickens. YEA, So it's two different Americans.
Really it's two different Americans, bro. And you can tell

(42:05):
by the neighborhoods that we can deem to live in,
you know, the grocery stores that we are uh we
have to shop at. But but you know that there
are a lot of food desert food deserts uh in
white neighborhoods too. Right, See, when we think of white neighborhoods,

(42:26):
we only think of the good neighborhoods in the city
and in the towns that we live in. The neighborhoods
always there in the trailer parks, there in the trailer
parks that there in the trailer parks are typically located
in the industrial areas, and they're often they're at the
that the end of streets, like like streets where you
see like uh at the end of the streets where

(42:46):
you see like mechanics shops and all that kind of
stuff like, and they're in the rural areas. So white
people's uh ghettos are tucked away out of sight, ods
of like right there in your face, so you see it.
So this is what makes us think that oftentimes we
think that only back people live in bad neighborhoods. Only

(43:09):
Mexican no, no, there's a lot of poor white people
in this country who live in in very, very bad,
bad conditions, but they tucked away from the from from
the prying eye of society, so you don't see that. Wow,
I saw a little kid. Uh, a little kid looked

(43:33):
like look like you had down syndrum or whatever. I've
told you this story because I'm looking at this kid.
I'm I'm just scrolling through them or whatever. Man, kids
look like you got down, say drums. It's one of
the ship going on with him. But he has on
the shirt that says, at least I'm not a nigger?
Is that a true? True happened? He saw it on

(43:54):
the internet? I saw you. I have took a picture
of it. Yeah, at least I'm not. I feel what
he's saying. I ain't a nigger either. I feel him.
I get it. You sure this is really? Did you
authenticate this? Man? You shoot this real? Because I want
I want to make sure it's really if I go
on to live down sing and do because everybody black. Yeah,

(44:16):
it wasn't even real. You need to do your you
need to do your research. Looks let me see, well
you want to go to the original. No, I'm trying
to just see m so it's really blurred. All right,
let's find another one. I'm not sure. I'm not sure
that's real. You're gonna go ahead and date. I'm not

(44:38):
sure that's real, Brad. But I wouldn't be surprised. I mean,
you can't be surprised by something like that. Um. I
wouldn't be surprised by that at all. Voice reloaded podcast
will be right back after the spreet. When's the last

(45:00):
time you've been to a Hollywood party? I never go
to that. Come on, man, I said, when's the last
time you've been to one? Ship? Maybe the nineties? Yeah,
well you went to a party you're doing drugs. I
don't remember about that. Uh did you did you have

(45:22):
to sign a packminatic guys? Come out, I don't do that.
No illuminated people, No, we saw that ship. Yeah so
I saw that real. That sound like some bullshit to me.
People want to believe the Illuminati is so bad they
want to believe in the illuminate. Wanted to draw my blood.

(45:44):
She's like, this is we're talking about the chick? Whoa
was it? Woa? Vicky? That's the check that used the
N word and said she was black, so it was cool.
The white chick, she said, she was black, so it
was cool to use N word. But she was talking
about the time you went to a party in Hollywood
and they asked for her to leave her phone at

(46:07):
the door. They wanted her to Also, what was it
the phone signing N D A and perk up blood,
I mean prick up blood. They want to prick up blood.
So she was like talking like it was some Illuminati stuff,
and like, man, that standard when you go to like

(46:28):
a party in Hollywood and you're hanging out with ultra celebrities.
You know, that's the standard thing. And as far as
as far as the blood thing, you know, that's you know,
that could explain that was doing COVID. So they were
testing people with blood. Uh, it was testing people's blood
back then. Also that was another way to test to
do COVID tests back then. So but you had people

(46:50):
all in the comments like yeah, you know, and this
is an old they want to they want this ship
to be so real, so fucking bad. But let me
let me give an eye opener to um to these
conspiracy theorists that like, we're black. Okay, Now, if it
was any kind of sucking. Uh, human sacrifices and ship

(47:11):
going on with with with anybody with us, We're fucked.
Can you imagine? Yeah, Well Jay Z had uh ten
victims with their heads cut off in his basement and
like that. It's no such thing that with you know,
sacrific sacrificing, uh some ship for the Illuminati. No, not here, Like,

(47:35):
get that out of your fucking heads. Like black people
are not a part of the Illuinati. Even I don't
even know if white people are. But I know that
ain't no in the world gonna get away with sacrifices
some ship and they know and ain't no human sacrifices
in the in in the black, so with the black.
So get that ship out of your fucking mind. We

(47:57):
may have some crazy motherfucker's that's back, you know that
that do crazy ship. We may have some crazy motherfucker's
is black that do some crazy ship, do whatever the
funk I said, whatever the funk I said, do some
crazy as ship. But the Black Illuminati is not real Illuminati,

(48:20):
whatever the funk you want to, it's not real. Guys.
Don't get that out of your fucking head. It's not real.
And this was an old video this is something that
she said I believe back in two thousand one, But
still it doesn't matter if it was to day. People
just really want to believe the illuminati exist. And you
hear people saying all kinds of crazy things about celebrities

(48:41):
all the time. But I'm like, Okay, yeah, I know
that there are some messed up celebrities out there that
are weirdos out there. But it trips me out how
so many people seem to hate entertainers, but everybody want
to be entertained, man, And then why why if you
hate entertaining it's so fucking much? And why are you
in their lives? Why do you scroll their page? I

(49:06):
was looking at Okay, so funny ship over the over
the uh over the past weekend. I was I got
a chance to play in the Reggie Jackson UH Foundation,
the golf tournament of the Foundation. Right here, I saw
you over the cheese and with with with Broadway Joy
Joe Yeah, and uh in fifty cent and Travis Scott

(49:27):
and Bunny and uh everybody. Man, this was out there. Man,
it's a beautiful. It was a beautiful thing, a beautiful
sight to see. But I was looking and reading some
comments man like calm. It posted me and my Mark
Wahlberg and and you know, I was glad to see
Mark because you know, I'm a fan or whatever. But

(49:48):
just motherfucker's just had goofy ship to say, man, you know,
like uh, Cali playing golf now talking about highest swing
and ship. If you don't like him, get the funk
out the page. You know they're talking about um uh
you know, Nigga's playing golf or some ship like that.

(50:09):
That's some bad ship. Like this is great and I
think that everybody should take up the game of golf
right now. But you know, you gotta understand, Brad, some
people are just stuck. Bro. Really, dude on my page,
Get some dude on my page. I I can't remember
the post that I made, but I know it was
some type of post that I made about Oh, the

(50:32):
football player who was cussing out the Cincinnati Bengals. He
was somebody when we say that back to sense like that,
and I said, you know what happened to sportsmanship? You know,
because it is a nationally broadcasting game with what children
are watching, and so it was a lot of profanity
being used. I was like, you know what happened to sportsmanship,

(50:53):
and so some dude commented this same dude was talking
all this, talking to all that, doing all that cussing
twenty years ago, and is in his music, motherfucker twenty
years and years. Yeah. Okay, So there are some people
that are just stuck broke and they don't want you
to grow. They don't even in fact, growing is offensive

(51:16):
to them. Growth is offensive to them. And when really
it is imperative that we grow the fuck up there
you are, regardless of whatever situation you in, bro, you know,
whatever your your your your family are you bringing? Like like,
when do we evolve? When do we when do we

(51:39):
pick it up? When do we do different ships in
our lives? Man? That shows growth? Man? You know what
I mean? Like, bro, woll I look like walking around
here and not growing man, not showing growth, not showing
my children and I'm growing, you know, not being not
being uh grateful to have another shot in life? Man,

(52:01):
Like why why why would you not grow? You know?
Why would you mean mad? Because Willie is growing? And
what the funk would make you take time out of
your day to post some on this man's page? Are
you fucking bored? What's wrong with you you're watching this
man page, you come in up like you could have.

(52:26):
You could have went and got a fucking ice cream
come from somewhere instead of wasting that precious two men
is texting the motherfucker on social media, Like, I'm disappointed
in in in people today. Man, If you if you
dislike these entertainers or these lifestyles and the people that

(52:46):
you're probing that you continue to probe to get the
funk off the page, why are you here? Because they're
pain freaks? Bro? Oh they are pain freaks. Is that
what that is? I'm gonna tell you, Bro. I don't
follow nobody that I don't like. Accept the president, you know.
And I followed the president because the president is the
commander in chief. But other than that, yeah, I gotta

(53:08):
see what's going on. I don't I don't follow people
that I don't like, bro, speaking to speaking to presidents.
How many times it Donald Trump plead the fifth in
the deposition? I didn't see? Is that food? And they

(53:31):
have they have a video of Trump being deposed Willie
and they said he might have uh pleaded the fifth
like four hundred times or some ship man you know
that was gonna happen anyway, you knew that was gonna happen.
Hold on, man, I gotta look this up. Bro. I
know this sucks that I'm not all the way together,
but I just want to look at him. Man. Okay,

(53:53):
So he had a deposition. He had a deposition with
the New York Attorney man, and in the h whytch,
Trump repeats the same answer over and over whild pleading
the Fifth Amendment. In new footage of New York fraud deposition.

(54:17):
See once once they started pleading the fifth You know,
that's always exceptions, but typically that's guilt because you don't
want to see anything because you know, you don't want
to get tripped up on those lives. H If you

(54:42):
get caught in line under oh, then that's your ass right,
it's supposed to be asked, but it's not for him, right,
it's supposed to be Yeah. People do go to jail
for that though all the time. Well not Trump man,
because Trump is but you know, a trip me out.
Why is it cool for people, normous, regular citizens to

(55:05):
go to jail for line and the oath? But cops
don't go to jail for line. I know, oh, ship
cops lie all the time and when they find out
they lie, they just Okay, well, don't worry about that testimony.
We can't use that anymore. Nothing happens to him. Hold up,
they're never put on a stand either. Noticed that. Well,

(55:26):
from time to time they are, But but when they do,
they lie most of the time. Hey, the man that
the black guys said he was reaching from a gun.
You know, I was did you see that? The from Memphis?
He was like what he was? They hit me? He
tried to hit me, And I like, damn, who is
he talking about when he was doing his uh when

(55:48):
he was talking to I don't know if it was
a superior officer or a um I'm supervised. I don't
know who he was talking to, but he was. He
was saying that the dude all here, he reached for
his gun and ship and all that. You know, the
guy that that had the child support issue. How you're
shot in the back and you're like shots fire, shots fired.

(56:10):
He reached on my taser. Throw the taser down on him. Like.
It's just a long list of bullshit that that that's
that that they do, and they lie about it and
they never go to jail for it. Yeah, then Prosecutor
don't go to jail for suppressing evidence. They lie all
the time, just railroad and people throwing people in jail

(56:30):
left and right, man, and they never face punishment. I mean,
it takes an Act of Congress literally for a prosecutor
to get prosecuted. That's crazy, Willie, and I want to
go back to that Hollywood thing for a moment, this
illuminating thing. Let me explain something to your family. So

(56:52):
the reason why if you go to a party in
Hollywood or any of this really party where you're gonna
be around ultra celebrities, more than likely they're gonna tell you.
They're gonna tell you to put that phone, check that
phone in because they want that phone because they don't
want you capturing images of people having a good time

(57:15):
and compromising positions. And they don't want you taking photos
and images of those, uh of the contents that maybe
in that room or in that house. Understand that you're not.
So that's hard. So when it comes to the n
d A, they want you to sign that n DA

(57:36):
so you don't go on social media running your mouth,
you know, like like people so are so quick to do.
And at the end of the day, going to a
party in Hollywood is just like going to a party
anyway else. If you see something that's weird, you got
three choices. You can join in, you can observe, are

(58:00):
you can leave. Ain't nobody in Hollywood holding guns? Okay,
you're in here now, all right? Give me the body? Uh?
And ain't nobody throwing water over your head and writing
on your on your on your forehead and saying, all
right now you are illuminating? And repeat at the me
Ain't nobody doing that? And so when you whatever you
do in Hollywood, you do voluntarily. Ain't nobody holding you

(58:23):
against your wheel? If you go out down and go
to one of those parties, hey man, you're gonna have
to get down like they tell you to get down
with the rules? Are you bounce? Willie? At what point
it's the party over? Where the party doesn't start? I

(58:43):
walk in, I probably won't leave the thing in but
in the meantime and then between times and I work
min We came here together. Man? What's up with Houdini? Though? Yeah?
With that? Who did? I just love it? Who? Yeah? Really?

(59:06):
But when is the party? What is the party over? Like?
At what point? Mad you? Real life party? I'm just no,
not the life party. I'm just saying it. And listen
to me. I'm just saying, like, when is the party over?
You know, like when do you say, you know what?
A party? Like a motherfucker when I was in my teens, over,

(59:26):
when I was in my twenties, and when I was
in my thirties, forties, fifties, sixties, seventies, eighties, mothers still
trying to go the parties and ship man like, when
does the party end? Like when? Like goddamn dog, Like
we're gonna keep going the parties, like you want to
be in somebody's life so fucking bad until you just

(59:48):
want to go to the party. You know what, Nobody,
that's your party. I mean, you're welcome to come to
my point, but I'm just saying that I don't think
the part No, wait, it does end, But listen, you
can bring your fucking thought into my party because there's
nothing going on in there that I wouldn't want the
world to see it that party. That party. Yeah, you're

(01:00:08):
welcome to join me if I throw a party. Man,
pull up, I have some cool last parties. But here's
my thing, Willie, Like, eventually, bro, like the party you're
not You're okay, not you. But here's here's the thing
with it. Like you're every day Joe blow and it's

(01:00:30):
costing you a thousand dollars to get in this party.
You're skipping the line. You ever, you know you gotta
get them going work in the morning. You know, Uh,
you didn't rented this Rolls Royce for the weekend. You
know that's you. You bought some ship that you really
can't afford, you know, to get in this party, to
this for this party, like you're going to be something

(01:00:55):
at this party that you're not. For real, Now ask
you again, when does the party stop? When do a
motherfucker wake up and say, you know what, that's Floyd
Mayweather's lifestyle. This ain't, man, I work at fucking fridges. Well,
first of all, for the party to end, a person

(01:01:17):
would have to be themselves tired of the party. They
have to be done with the party. They have to
come to the conclusion that the party is over. They
have to come to the conclusion that the party no
longer benefits them or serves them in any type of weight.
And they have to come to the conclusion that the
party is now a pain. And if you don't ever

(01:01:42):
come to that that conclusion, then there's no change because
just like in life in general, people would change when
the pain of the same becomes greater than the pain
of the change. Said again, people would change when the pain. No,
people would change when the pain of the same becomes

(01:02:04):
greater than the pain of the change. When it becomes
greater for you to stay the same. When the pain
becomes greater for you to stay the same, then it
would be for you to change. Then that's when you change.
Come on, what's the prime? Can you remember that ship?

(01:02:25):
All that is? You said, okay, all right, just making
sure because I damn then walked out because I thought
she was going to make a song with some ship. No,
I'm serious, I'm sorry. I'm sorry, but but it comes
down to like like any bad habit, like any habit
or anything that doesn't benefit you, anything habit ship Brian
rabbit rabbit, Hey, and rest on the Sabbath, rest on

(01:02:53):
the seventh Willie, Uh, well, you are at the Super
Bowl coming up? Yeah? Who are you thinking on? Do
you bet on the sup Man? I might have to
bet because for the first time in the history of
the suit of of of the NFL we have to. Yeah, yeah,

(01:03:17):
African American black quarterbacks. I just love that ship. But
any time you say for the first time and you
put black in it and too fucking long. Yeah yeah, man,
it's the first time a black stopped, that's too fucking long.
Like this, this fucking country has been in existence since

(01:03:38):
what seventeen seventy eight or some ship like that before
that way before. But I'm just saying, like when they
declared their independence, all right, Like, if it's the first time,
if it's the first time that a black person did
anything in this country, that's too fucking long. It's not

(01:03:58):
seventeen seventy five. Will it's two thousand and twenty three.
That's too long. That's a good point. That's way too low.
So like I was saying, man, the first like like
I was saying, like, for the first time you got
Africans in in the in the history of this country.
You got to African African American black kids playing in

(01:04:18):
Super Bowl. That's big, right, That's that's that's that's bigger
than the super Bowl itself. Two people that that um
that it means something to you know what I mean?
Like that ship means something to me. These little kids
grew up playing football and in little league and junior
high and in high school and college, and now they're

(01:04:41):
playing on the biggest stage of the sport. You know,
two black kids quarterbacks. All right. I love that. That's
absolutely fantastic. Okay, um, I think that uh uh the
enemy is the he's the offensive coordinator for the Chiefs.

(01:05:04):
I think that he did a brilliant fucking job and
it's time for him to go somewhere. NBA head coach, man,
pick one. I'm trying to get who you got. Who
you got? I got, football? Man, Well, how are you
going to bed? If you ain't gonna pick a winner?
You gotta pick a winner. I'm gonna go with the

(01:05:24):
Philadelphia Eagles. And let me tell you why because Okay, so,
Kanna City, I like Kana City Chiefs a lot, and
I'm gonna go with with the Eagles because Jalen is
from uh he from Houston. And that's that's my story.

(01:05:48):
I like Philly better, let me put it like this.
I like Philly Moore. But it's something about that damn
quarterback that the Kenn City Chiefs have, and that Patrick
Mahle's special. He knows how to win. He just he
knows how to win. He knows, he has that that

(01:06:10):
Tom Brady type effect. He does like he knows. Like
I don't even like him as a person, you do,
I don't like How can you not like him? I
don't like him. I don't like it. I don't like
how he presented himself well during during the whole knee
in situation. I don't like that. You know, he was

(01:06:31):
on some of that respect the flag stuff. I ain't
with that, really, do you? Um? I? Um? I like?
I like. I like the idea of people using the

(01:06:53):
flag to represent their country or represent their gang bang
or whatever the funk, you know what I mean, Like,
like the American flag is a big as gang bang,
the Chinese flag is a gang bang. Like yeah, motherfuck
this song so so and so China, or this song
and so so and so Pakistan and this song so
so and so. US say, everybody using they flag the
rivers and gang bang. Right? You agree? Okay? I like.

(01:07:24):
I like the flag of Ghana. I like the flag
of Ghana. You know why, Because I'm black, bro, I'm
gonna ride with the black panther flag. I don't even

(01:07:49):
know why you said that, I'm just saying, Man, I wanna,
I wanna. I want to go to Ghana. I want
to move to Ghana. I want to move somewhere. I
was talking to my buddy, you know, Beato. I was
talking to Beato man, and Beato was talking and you know,

(01:08:10):
he got deported, and Beto was like, Man, for the
first time in my life, I see what it's like
being a first class citizen. Yeah. I hear a lot
of black people say that that black people who have
moved to like Jamaica and in Africa, you know. Yeah,
I hear a lot of black people say that. Like you,
you wake up and you don't have to worry about

(01:08:31):
being judged. Just you had to worry about being murdered
by the police, you know, just you know, when they
come to your house or something, or you get pulled over.
You don't have to worry about. Oh. The reason why
she got an attitude is because you know I'm black,

(01:08:51):
because you see it all the time, you do. I
even noticed it, Like I even noticed, I even noticed
man that I was not. I was in this Chinese
restaurant a couple of months ago, and I'm sitting with
this young lady and the waiter was she was waiting

(01:09:14):
on the booth right next to us also, and when
she was waiting, was doing what the Asian lady was
waiting on this white uh these white people that was
in the boot next to us, and I'm looking and
and every time she go to the white table, she
going back and forth to white but they had a
lot of demands, so she kept going back and forth

(01:09:36):
to that from that table at our table. And when
she go to that table, she was doing like this.
She's like, huh, yes, okay, she was smiling. I swear
to God, she was doing it just like that. Okay, yes, okay, okay,
you're right. Okay, she come over our table. I can't
help you. I swear to God. Man shed twice if
she did it. After she did the first time, I

(01:09:56):
was like, now a girl that I was with, she
couldn't see what was happening because I was facing the
other boot. So she had that back to them, and
I was like, man, did you notice? Because I was like,
could you did you notice how polite she was to them?
And then I should she was to She said, oh no,
I didn't notice. So I was like, watch this here

(01:10:17):
she kin so she come over that. She's like she's
talking to other Uh to the yes, okay, yes, smiling
there the teeth everything. She come over. She came over, Okay,
what you want. I was like, Man, I'm not pairing

(01:10:40):
on a man. It's not all in my head. Man.
They do it. White folks do it. Everybody does that.
Mexicans they do it. They all do it. But you
know what, you know what's worse, it's when we do
it to each of them. I just went to a
seen that happened too. I went to a place today. Um,

(01:11:04):
I mean not today, I went to a place. Yeah, today.
I when I got I went and got some food
from a place. I'm not gonna name the name of
the place. But the lady was like, she was mad
that I came in there to get some food from them.
And I don't think that we should spend our money

(01:11:27):
where we're not welcome. So that's automatic. So um, if
they're not treating you with the same respect that they
treat their other um patrons, then then you should walk
right out of that motherfucker. Um. I was at the
airport the other day and the lady was super asked
kissy white lady was super asked kissy to white couple

(01:11:53):
and then, um, you know you want a package like
a pack? Yes? Yeah, And I get up there and
I paid for my water and my am and because
I'm eminem fanatic, and uh, this didn't even greet me.
Oh yeah, yeah, yeah, I've I've experienced the same thing.
I gave a bit of money or whatever I'm saying

(01:12:14):
because she was a bit. Look, I've experienced the same thing.
But like I said, I've also experienced it from from
buck dancing, shooking jive, black folks who will give other
people more courtesy than they get their own people themselves.
Ship low down, you, low down, dirty scoundrels, you low

(01:12:37):
down dirty scoundrels. You've your mama should be embarrassed and
your daddy should have yanked his meat out. Wow Wow, Okay,
that I'm out, man, Man, there's nothing else to say
after that. Man, I'm done. Man, I'll see you next week.

(01:13:01):
Are you leaving for real? He man? Man? Because I
use your slogan. Yeah, alright, ladies and gentlemen, I guess
we really got me back with dust in my own
fucking Madison. Until next time, peace, love, soul, and booty oles.

(01:13:23):
This episode was produced by A King and brought to
you by the Black Effect Podcast Network at I Heart
Radio
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