Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
It is the deal. You can show you a twenty
twenty five edition.
Speaker 2 (00:03):
Remember that if you're in Orlando tonight and tomorrow, I'm
here at the Funny Bone, so come check me out
to tonight and to tomorrow. So come check me out.
If you take a notion, what does it say? Why
do you think that people's perceptions and their ideas of
immigration have shifted in the last few months.
Speaker 1 (00:22):
Why do you think that is yet?
Speaker 3 (00:23):
I think a lot of it has to do with
Donald Trump and the terrible things that he said about immigrants.
Speaker 1 (00:28):
Yeah, but they and they have more positive views.
Speaker 3 (00:32):
You think they're more positive.
Speaker 1 (00:33):
I don't think. I don't think it. People are more
in favor of immigration that well.
Speaker 3 (00:37):
I think well. I also think it has a lot
to do with watching what's been happening, and I think
feeling is if not only could it happen to them,
but it could also happen to you. And I think
a bit of embarrassment by watching the way that they
are being snatched, the way that they are being treated,
and the things that they are doing, like sending them
to other countries. I don't think they thought it would
go this far. And I think it's an embarrassment. Not
(00:58):
only I think you're right to outside of this. When
you go to different places, they're like, oh my god,
what's happening there?
Speaker 2 (01:05):
And it always America has always had to have these
moments like Jackie Robinson had to be.
Speaker 1 (01:11):
Abused and spin on and maligned.
Speaker 2 (01:14):
Right, Remember, they had to see that happen, emmit til
we had to have the casket open, whether it's the
civil rights. They had to see people being slapped and
assaulted and water hoses George Floyd. They had to see
that happen because America will not accept the reality of
itself until it sees a grotesque image.
Speaker 1 (01:37):
It can't do it.
Speaker 2 (01:40):
And that grotesque image is a reflection on who they are,
and they don't like it.
Speaker 1 (01:45):
Overwhelming overnight.
Speaker 2 (01:46):
Everything he was ahead on in terms of things that
they the public gave him high marks on. He's underwater
on like seventy five percent of people in general Democrats
and independence are in favor of some kind of you know,
immigran that we believe it's say, sixty percent of Republicans are,
but it's primarily because they have made immigrants Jackie Robinson,
(02:08):
they have made them I Matil, they have made them
the civil rights, but they have made them. George Floyd,
that is right. They need to see just how grotesque
we are.
Speaker 3 (02:18):
That's exactly what that's.
Speaker 2 (02:19):
Who we are as a country. I agree with that
they need to see it. You can't tell them, you
can't be demonstrative. You have to show them. And every
time America sees how grotesque it can be, it recoils.
They're ashamed of it. And it's a shame that always
comes to This is always as one. If you look
(02:39):
at all of these times we've lurched for them to
try to grapple with who we are. It is after this,
these macabre scenes that they can't turn away from.
Speaker 3 (02:48):
It's pretty sad, though, because it's a shame that you
have to see someone be inflicted with pain or some
kind of harm and suffering before your humanity can can
stop you in your trust and.
Speaker 1 (02:59):
Say a lot of them, it's a lot of them bad.
You know. When they saw it was a movie called
black Whale, Blackfish, Oh I do remember that, yep, And
it was.
Speaker 2 (03:07):
About killer whales, and white women saw that it was
so they reacted so fast. Sea World and all these
they had to call themselves research centers. Now people would
even go to water parks anymore. You wouldn't go see
Shamoud anymore. But it takes a preponderance of those things
happening to us, and no bad, no, no bad, No
matter how bad it is, there are still dead enders
(03:28):
that go.
Speaker 3 (03:29):
Now.
Speaker 1 (03:29):
I don't care. Yeah, fortunate it does.
Speaker 2 (03:35):
Sometimes people get really upset with the things I say,
So we're gonna let them. Ben on our segment called
fu dal hugely, won't you please welcome our fudl hugely?
Speaker 1 (03:43):
Correspondent, Little Nancy James?
Speaker 4 (03:45):
Come up this, Nissy James? You do, Hickley, corresponding her
first fut comment. It's from Instagram. Quan sixty six says Dale.
I heard you prefer to Lena as Telemundo. How can
you call yourself advocate for justice and equality and use
a stereotypical slur to describe a beautiful Hispanic woman? How
(04:06):
would you like it if a white person never called
you by your name but instead referred to you as
Darky or hip hop or midnight or helo, credit score
or what's up sickle cell?
Speaker 1 (04:17):
Qudo Hughly?
Speaker 4 (04:19):
Our next fudo comment comes from Instagram. Lane twenty two
says THEO I notice that you always wear a two
tight extra medium shirt. Do you think wearing a two
small shirt makes you look buff? While those tiny skin
tied shirts may show off your arms, you also expose
your middies. But da hughly today's last fuda hugely comments
(04:39):
from Facebook. We all ain't able, says Dan. There are
times it really seems you are down with the people,
but there are other times when you sound like an
elitist and are very condescending. You talk about flight first
class playing most of us are failing left to be
able to describe you enough money for a dis kind
of coach ticket so we don't have to drive ten hours.
(05:00):
Then you were bragging about your new luxury truck getting
delivered to your house and complaining because something wasn't perfect. Well,
excuse me, you don't know most of us struggle to
buy a used car just so we don't have to
take the bus. So pardon me if I don't express
my sympathy because your new luxury truck mistakenly came with
mink formats when you specifically told him you wanted chinchilla,
(05:21):
but he gleamed Nancy for this meet. This has been easy, James,
You're at you do, he corresponded, and until next week.
Speaker 5 (05:30):
Bye.
Speaker 1 (05:30):
Now it's time what you need to know with the
one and only Sybil Wilkes. It's Sybil Wilkes with what
we need to know.
Speaker 5 (05:36):
In Florida, civil rights attorney Ben Crump is demanding accountability
after video surface showing a Jacksonville deputy punching a black
college student during a traffic stop. Ben Crumb said William
McNeill Junior was simply exercising his constitutional rights when he
questioned why he was pulled over. The case, which Crump
calls a clear case of driving while black, is under
(05:58):
investigation Jackson Bill's Share for lease bodycam footage, but made
no judgment on the officers action, citing an ongoing review.
Federal officials are warning US companies to double check their
remote hires after a stunning case of worker fraud. Prosecutors
say an Arizona woman helped hundreds of North Korean IT
workers get remote jobs at American companies. The workers funneled
(06:21):
over seventeen million dollars in earnings back to North Korea.
Christina Chapman is pleaded guilty and was sentenced to eight
and a half years in federal prison, and in New Jersey,
a political drama is playing out. Elena Habba says she's
staying on as acting US Attorney for the District of
New Jersey even though a panel of judges chose someone
(06:42):
else After the Justice Department fired that nominee. The Trump
administration with drew Habba's formal nomination, allowing her to continue
in the role temporarily. The mother of Beautiful Girl singer
Sean Kingston has been sentenced to five years in prison
for wire fraud. In March. Janice Turner in Kingston, whose
real name is Kashan Anderson, we're convicted of wirefraud. Federal
(07:04):
prosecutors say they use his celebrity status to obtain more
than a million dollars in luxury goods and then never
paid for them. Turner's team asks for no more than
thirty months, pointing to her age sixty two and health issues,
along with minimal criminal history. Kingston is said to be
sentenced next month. To subscribe to my free daily newsletter,
(07:25):
please visit Siblelwilkes dot com for all the news twenty
four to seven.
Speaker 1 (07:28):
Go to newswe dot com. I'm Sibil Wilkes. We informed
the empowered.
Speaker 2 (07:33):
Thank you, Sybil, that's going to do it for us,
Lady and gentlemin It's Sadio Hugley show you a twenty
twenty five addition, if you are in Orlando, Florida, listen
up in the surrounding eras.
Speaker 1 (07:43):
I'm here tonight to tonight. I'll be at the Funny Bone.
Speaker 5 (07:47):
We have.
Speaker 2 (07:49):
Two shows tonight and two shows tomorrow, so come check
me out if you take a notion.
Speaker 1 (07:52):
Jasmine Sanders, what did you learn today?
Speaker 5 (07:54):
So?
Speaker 3 (07:54):
I want to write to be safe out there. There's
that new COVID variant that's going around. Its nicknamed the
razor blue throat is what they're calling it because it's
an incredibly painful sore throat that you get. So I
know people are kind of feeling like, you know, COVID
is over, but no, it's just morphing into different things.
Not as bad as it used to be, but it
could be pretty painful. Junior's hand to the King. What
(08:16):
you learn today, Well, I learned there's no accounting for taste.
Everybody has different tastes for different things. And it's the
Jasmine's case. She doesn't like Tim's you and I do,
and I.
Speaker 1 (08:29):
Love her, but I like her. Yeah, but hey, that
just goes to show we're all different, we all have
we are different. Yeah.
Speaker 2 (08:36):
I like Chris Brown, I said, I like Chris bound too,
Me too. I don't say anything dumb like New Edition
is the greatest group ever.
Speaker 1 (08:42):
I got no one except the lip.
Speaker 2 (08:48):
On the next day on You Miss spoken from jun
Man the military man Jamal Kingsley is going to expose
racism in our every day lives. Plus you got another
special case short bus Wakers, Banker, have a great, safe weekend.
It's a dal Youuglete show. We will definitely see you
on another side. Call my favorite shot bus operator pull
that's string.
Speaker 1 (09:05):
We got to go. It's the Dalhuge show. See you
on the other side.