Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
Uh so Tuesday would it had was on the Nogzy podcast.
It said that a woman cannot raise a man. That
was that was a big controversy.
Speaker 2 (00:08):
Got stand up young men right now, boys, But they
stand the boys.
Speaker 3 (00:17):
No woman can raise a son.
Speaker 4 (00:20):
And to a man, the only way a son can
become a man is through a father. The other way
is discovering it on his own. You haven't lived the
male experience, a female experience. The female experience. It's more
privileged in a man's position. This chick is on a
shripper pole, can get on a shripper pole and make
(00:41):
bread like that. You know you're speaking about the exception.
I knew y'all was gonna say that, that exception of
men that actually go on a shripper pol and dance.
They don't even make a fraction of the money that
strippers make. So what I'm saying is facts. You don't
have to work, you can sell and still make it.
You live life on freaking easy mode. You can't raise
no son.
Speaker 1 (01:02):
Uh And I think that been forced to right. Do
you think that a woman uh can or cannot raise
a man? That was question we pose to you.
Speaker 5 (01:10):
You said, I.
Speaker 6 (01:11):
Believe a real strong black woman could raise a man,
a young man into a man. Now, I don't think
she could perhaps tell him all of the things and
show him all of the things that a man could,
because she's not a man. But as far as raising
him into and molding him into a good person of
(01:33):
a man, if you will, I think it's a possibility.
Speaker 7 (01:37):
Yeah, I do want to say, man, I'm just talking
about the same subject a couple of days. Don't to me.
I don't think a woman can raise a man, just
I think a man can not wads a woman. I mean,
a woman can give a boy of good quality, can
clean in something first and hydidahimself, like a man can
teach your daughter to always watch it back and keep
poking on what's going on around us, this stuff like that.
(01:58):
But you cannot raise if a woman just put your
name raised dated a baby.
Speaker 8 (02:04):
There's too many examples of women raising men out there,
too many numerous athletes, entertainers.
Speaker 9 (02:11):
Et cetera, et cetera. To say I'd like to give my.
Speaker 10 (02:13):
Mama than for raising me.
Speaker 8 (02:15):
In the perfect world, it would be best to have
a man there.
Speaker 11 (02:17):
But to say a woman can.
Speaker 8 (02:19):
Is absolutely ludicrous because there's too many examples of it
being done and done well.
Speaker 12 (02:27):
Yeah, I just want to say that. You know, I'm
a product of a single family. I'm a single female
raising a black man and I ended up raising seven
daughters and a son. So you know, my father wasn't around,
but I decided to make sure I stayed around. You
know what I'm saying, DLS Right, whatever idiot said that
a female can't raise the sun. You know that's that's
crazy because my mom gets all the props in the
(02:48):
world because she did a damn the job with me.
Speaker 9 (02:51):
I'm a sixty three year old woman.
Speaker 6 (02:54):
I had two kids, a girl and a boy.
Speaker 9 (02:57):
I was a single parent. I said on this twenty.
Speaker 6 (03:00):
Three years old. And he's a man.
Speaker 11 (03:02):
The men's out of town.
Speaker 6 (03:04):
He is the job his life. It did so, yes,
the one they can't right, the man with the man
don't do a job.
Speaker 9 (03:12):
They have no choice.
Speaker 5 (03:13):
So Wednesday, what have happened was?
Speaker 1 (03:15):
You know, we've of course all seen videos of students
fighting teachers. Whether Georgia Federation of Teachers, they proposed a
proposed a legislation called the Parent Accountability Act, where they
will allow parents to be held legally accountable with their
child a social teacher.
Speaker 5 (03:30):
We asked for that a good or bad idea?
Speaker 9 (03:31):
You said, So, I know it sounds like kind of cliche,
but I don't think that it's right, just in the
aspect that you have parents that are doing the best
that they can, and when you have a child that
you can't really discipline, and the school, the system is
out there telling you what your parents can't do, and
then they go out and they run them up, and
then all of a sudden it's the parents fault. That
blows me. I just don't see how they come up
(03:54):
with these rules and they tell you what you can't do,
and then all of a sudden, you're responsible for what
your children are doing, but you can't discipline. So what
else are we supposed to do?
Speaker 11 (04:02):
Yes, I think the parents should be accountable and they
need to do something with them kids right. Because when
we was coming up, if I would have did a
quarter of what they did right, my mother would have
put the belt to me immediately and punish me. But
them kids know their parents ain't gonna do nothing, so
that's why they do what they did, you know. And
they need to be accountable for them right and make
(04:23):
them do what they supposed to be.
Speaker 10 (04:26):
I think laws like this would be a good thing.
Speaker 13 (04:28):
I think if there were recercussions that directly affected the parents,
they would send these kids out here with discipline because
right now there's not really much that can be done
when something is done by a child, so they don't
really care.
Speaker 9 (04:43):
So I think it's a good thing.
Speaker 14 (04:45):
I think that parents absolutely should be held accountable for
their minor children's actions, whether it be punitive, whether it
be legal, whether it be financial. They should be responsible
because even though it may be you know, people saying
take the village, uh, the financial part of this whole
thing should start in the home. And accountability and responsibility
(05:10):
is on parenting for a reason. And if your child
breaks something in a store, they're minor children, but somebody
has to pay for that loss, and it should fall
on the parents.
Speaker 5 (05:21):
And then yesterday we asked what do we ask you today?
Speaker 3 (05:24):
We talked about whether or not you should tell somebody
show somebody your real self.
Speaker 5 (05:28):
Oh yeah, so how soon?
Speaker 1 (05:29):
We asked if you if you you know, if you
spagin dating somebody, how soon do you let them know
you have a fake lace front.
Speaker 5 (05:35):
Or or bear or beer, fake beard or makeup or
you know, or that's a sign you see the real you.
And you said, so, I was.
Speaker 10 (05:50):
Dating this guy, and I waited a year to let
him see me without my without my regular real hair.
Are we going? I don't wear make up because I'm
knew all least so I'm naturally beautiful. But I waited
a year, and when he was good and in love
but he wasn't going nowhere, I let him see me
without the going so but yeah, it worked and he
(06:11):
stayed around.
Speaker 15 (06:13):
Well, I'll tell you what, man.
Speaker 12 (06:15):
One thing.
Speaker 15 (06:15):
First thing first, Yes, I need to know.
Speaker 9 (06:18):
I need to know you need to show let me
see that face. Uh, let me see you.
Speaker 15 (06:23):
In your natural form, because I'm coming in my natural form.
And if we end up, you know, having sex and
messing around and have a baby, I need to know
what you look like beforehand, make sure we can make
a beautiful baby.
Speaker 14 (06:36):
Hi.
Speaker 16 (06:37):
My name is Mayer from the East side of Columbus.
And I think that if you guys are already sitting
and talking about the subject of getting intimate stuff, when
the conversation should be had like Hey, just so you
know I got this going.
Speaker 10 (06:51):
On or I don't have this going on.
Speaker 16 (06:52):
You already like each other because you've been on three
or four days, so then that's something to be discussed.
And then when the actual incivent moment happens, go ahead
and with it on that because I'm like, let me.
Speaker 9 (07:01):
I'll be like, let me see the table, because I'm like, you.
Speaker 16 (07:03):
Know, you're gonna get who you got before I go
to bed, and when I wake them, I'm gonna.
Speaker 14 (07:06):
Look exactly the same pretty much.
Speaker 13 (07:08):
You know.
Speaker 11 (07:08):
That's it.
Speaker 17 (07:10):
Yeah. I think with the whole fake hair, fake wigs,
things like that, I think you need to tell them
right off the back, because uh, that could be a
deal breaker, you know.
Speaker 3 (07:20):
Uh.
Speaker 12 (07:21):
Some people don't like that.
Speaker 17 (07:22):
Like me personally, I hate when my wife wears wigs
because I feel like she don't need to. But at
the same time, that's just a personal presence. So Amazon
comes in with a wig almost every week.
Speaker 12 (07:32):
Get tired of it. But at the same time, it
is what it is.
Speaker 10 (07:37):
First of all, please stop calling that baby here. It's edges.
Second the a. If you can't take me how I.
Speaker 6 (07:45):
Am, then move on because I ain't faking nothing.
Speaker 5 (07:48):
Now it's time to give it deserving someone the shoe
booty of the week.
Speaker 3 (07:52):
Awar And now it's time for the shoes.
Speaker 10 (07:57):
Who live the week?
Speaker 18 (07:58):
Cool me something to whoop your ass with. Britney Mahomes
as a founding co owner of the Kansas City Current,
a team in the American Professional Top Division National Women's
Soccer medium. She is married to Kansas City Chiefs quarterback
Patrick Mahomes. Wow, So why is Britney Mahomes this week's
(08:22):
recipient of the shoe Booty.
Speaker 3 (08:23):
Of the Week award. Britney gets the shoe booty because
she makes a lot of money, but she doesn't make
sense to go.
Speaker 5 (08:34):
I got to dance this man.
Speaker 3 (08:35):
Recently, Britney tried to pass her good fortune to an
unfortunate family. Unfortunately that pass was incomplete.
Speaker 5 (08:44):
It join me smalls.
Speaker 3 (08:46):
Last week, Britney asked her many followers in an Instagram
story to donate money to a GoFundMe for some neighbors
of some friends of hers. She reported that a couple
with three children recently lost their house. The cause was
a fire that occurred after the kids were making snores.
(09:06):
Got a lot of damage. That's a sad story, even
though the kids should know not to do campfire food
inside usual common sense. Don't get me wrong, it's nice
for Brittany to care but ask for donations.
Speaker 2 (09:23):
How to make more money without your notting on it.
She owns a professional sports team. Her husband just signed
a four hundred and ninety seven million dollar contract. That's
like Drake asking you to pay for dinner after he
(09:44):
rolled up in his new Lambo truck. It's like Diddy
asking you to chip in on a freak off hotel room.
They could cover the family's expenses with the money in
her glove compartment. When social media found out, they drug
her so hard you can see the tire marks on
(10:05):
her face.
Speaker 5 (10:05):
What are you an idiot, Sandwich?
Speaker 3 (10:08):
I mean, come on, she's so rich. Her pool boy,
has a pol boy, a walk in closet, has a Starbucks.
She's so rich. Her pre nup is longer than most
novels and has a movie BeO.
Speaker 4 (10:22):
Then me, he you say that ain't right?
Speaker 3 (10:24):
Did she really care or was it done to make
herself look like a good Christian? Britney tried to pass
her good fortune to an unfortunate family. Unfortunately the pass
was incomplete.
Speaker 5 (10:40):
I award you no points and may God have mercy
on your soul.
Speaker 3 (10:44):
And that's why the shoe booty of the Week award
goes too Britney.
Speaker 5 (10:54):
Mos. Now here's a swift kick in the ass.
Speaker 16 (11:00):
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