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July 31, 2025 52 mins

On today’s episode of The D.L. Hughley Show Podcast, D.L. and the crew discuss the 2028 Summer Olympics being held in Los Angeles, CA. Summer of 2028 in Los Angeles will be car-less. According to the mayor, the only way to have access to the Olympic games' venues will be public transportation.  

The Question of the Day comes from a woman who tried to help her nephew. Her nephew was getting bullied in school because of his body odor, so the aunt bought him deodorant. The mom, her sister-in-law, was upset and said that she overstepped. Do you think the aunt was wrong for buying deodorant for her nephew? Also, Jasmine Sanders is Talking All That Jazz with author Derrick Barnes. Barnes, who is just off of a book tour, talks about going from working as a copywriter for Hallmark to being an author. All of this and more on The D.L. Hughley Show Podcast.  

Website: https://www.urban1podcasts.com/the-dl-hughley-show  

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
It is the dal you're gonna show your twenty twenty five.
So I said this yesterday. What does it say that
that Trump is harder on comedians than.

Speaker 2 (00:12):
He is on pedophile He can't take a joke?

Speaker 1 (00:19):
I think, what does it say, like, he got mad
at Rosie O'donnald, He's got mad at Stephen Colbert, He's
got mad at Joey Bahar. He's got mad at Jimmy Kimmel.
He got mad at Bill Maher, Saturday Night Live, he
got mad at Saturday Night Live. He got mad at
John John.

Speaker 2 (00:36):
Stewart, Right, absolutely right, He's a guy.

Speaker 1 (00:40):
I think he's harder on and I honestly think that
a lot of it has to do with the fact
that the number one perpetrators of pedophilia and sexual assault
in America are over willingly white men, as are most
of his base. The largest percent of his base is
white men, so maybe they don't have the same perfume.
I don't want anybody to one of the reasons, you
know it's true because there's so little information about it,

(01:02):
because they have a vested interest and not collecting data
that makes them look bad. But if you look at institutionally,
who headed up the institutions that are just you know
that that are massively exposed to pedipheld the Catholic Who
is it?

Speaker 2 (01:19):
White man?

Speaker 1 (01:20):
Who was it at the boy Scouts? Who wasn't at
the Deaf School of minwalking like every scandal? You know
what I'm saying? And who protects them?

Speaker 2 (01:29):
Other white men?

Speaker 3 (01:30):
Yes?

Speaker 1 (01:31):
Yes, don't tell me again that black people and black
people send our killer to jail.

Speaker 4 (01:36):
Now.

Speaker 1 (01:36):
I know we have a habit of saying f them kids,
but they do. I'm serious. Happy birthday that Arnold Schwarzernigga
Hey okay, okay, right, I bet you what, I bet

(01:58):
you people have called him that to remember when he
got his uh, his maid pregnant, his wife, she's one
of the Kenney's, right, yeah, yes, yes, had a baby,
Maris Shrivers, one of the Kenneys. Yes, and he had
a baby. But he didn't know he had a baby
with the housekeeper. And she should have knew. He the
healthkick because that was the strongest baby can handle a
leaf blow with one hand, the strongest baby I've ever seen.

(02:25):
They kept saying, get to the tupper and he could
take out Terry's and edge of garden. It says so great.
Happy breathday to Terry Crews. Happy breatha of the vivid
a Fox, Happy birth of the Lawrence Fishburn, Happy breath
of the Hope Solo, Happy breath of the Tom Green,
Happy breath that Hillary Swank, Happy breath of the Delta Burg,

(02:45):
Happy breath of the Chris Mullend, Happy brother of the
Bill Carr Right. Happy breath to the Tammy RIVERA happy birthday, possumously,
of course, to Henry Ford, who was also noted racist.

Speaker 4 (02:54):
He was.

Speaker 1 (02:56):
Possible jazz man. What man tell these good people with
trendy Well, we.

Speaker 5 (03:05):
Heard about what happened to Dion Sanders. Yes, and in
the midst of him with this announcement.

Speaker 6 (03:12):
Uh.

Speaker 2 (03:12):
There's also a video that's gone viral.

Speaker 5 (03:13):
Of Carucci at his bedside with a teary face, and
people were like, it's Carouci dating Dion sand.

Speaker 2 (03:22):
Well, No, I didn't come here.

Speaker 1 (03:23):
Yeah, you talked about it.

Speaker 7 (03:24):
One.

Speaker 5 (03:24):
I don't think I did, not Carucci and and and
Dion Sanders.

Speaker 2 (03:28):
I think so.

Speaker 1 (03:29):
I think you did a jazzy report for it.

Speaker 2 (03:32):
You don't remember, No, No, I would remember.

Speaker 8 (03:34):
Now.

Speaker 5 (03:35):
I did remember saying that she was allegedly dating a
rapper at one time, and she was on vacation, but
not Deon Sanders. This is new to just about everybody,
including Antonio Brown, who said, what you doing, Carucci? You
know that man ain't got no Letterer and no toes.
Not funny, that's your okay.

Speaker 1 (03:53):
I can't stand. I can't stand. But you know, here's
the thing about it. Remember when Donald Trump was on
stage talking about any black person that vote for me
need his head exam but he had Tommy Hearns and
Antonio Brown. He need to head examined.

Speaker 9 (04:08):
Literally.

Speaker 1 (04:09):
Yeah, people, I think that the people, of course, but
he I'm pretty sure he had ct. I remember when
Berfect hit him so hard. I could tell today he
got it. Well, Antonio, I can tell like that he
ain't gonna never be right, you know, like somebody get
kicked in the head with a meal and you go,
dan'g gonna be by me? You you could tell that
was one of the hits. I went to heat this
dude will never be right again. And then he subsequently

(04:31):
not proven me wrong.

Speaker 2 (04:32):
Yeah. I just everything he says is just cruel and mean.

Speaker 5 (04:37):
And I don't know, I mean, I feel like just
anytime you take an opportunity like that to make fun
of somebody or even try to make a show.

Speaker 1 (04:44):
It's not funn And somebody who has been a great
ambassador for the NFL, has been a great supporter of
players and former players, has a sturly reputation among Deon said,
has been loved by not only fans but players a
and respect. And I will say this, I'll never forget.
I remember I was getting boycotted in Fort Worth and

(05:06):
Dion Sanders came. The news was there and everybody was
like trying to stop people coming to DCA. I'm going
to see my boy. He always been my dude. I
love that.

Speaker 5 (05:15):
Well, something people are getting tired of, and not black
folks but other folks, is the boots on the ground
and the flag.

Speaker 1 (05:20):
We told you that so I told.

Speaker 5 (05:22):
You a while back of regarding the new policies on
cruises and whatnot. But now just in different places period
like in Florida, they were having a boots on the
ground line dance event.

Speaker 2 (05:34):
Shut it down. They were like, we are sick of this.

Speaker 5 (05:36):
And there are multiple places all across the country that
are now saying we don't want any parts of the shutdown.

Speaker 1 (05:41):
Florida shutdown boots on the ground while they opened a concentration.

Speaker 2 (05:43):
Camy boots on the ground.

Speaker 1 (05:46):
Literally, this is one fight they got to stay out of,
for sure.

Speaker 2 (05:50):
That's what's true.

Speaker 1 (05:51):
One of the more onerous least discussed aspects of Project
twenty twenty five, although a great percentage of I think
almost fifty percent of it been and acted, is to
roll back protections for you miners. We know some states
have done it. I think some southern states have said,
we don't need the protections of these kids. And we
know that we up until the industrial age, kids used
to be able to work in very dangerous circumstances. It

(06:13):
was so bad in the grecious that they passed a
law in nineteen thirty eight to stop it. They want
to roll those back. Like on Fox, Charlie Kirk was
talking about having kids, you know, pick blueberries in the summer.
We know that they've pitched that to nurses, to have
you go out there and pick blueberries. In the seventies,
they had a thing called the A Team where they
encourage student athletes, great student athletes to go out there

(06:36):
and pick stuff. But they lived in really horrible conditions
like old army bases, old forts old, abandoning places like
we have an addiction to cheap labor, but not an
appreciation for it. We have an addiction to people doing
our work for us. Now, it's interesting when I hear
people say, we built this country, we want this country back.
The only reason anybody black or brown is here generally

(06:58):
is because somebody did want to do jobs they did.
That's why. So we are where a nation that where
poor brown people do our intellectual labor and poor brown
people do our physical labor. When I hear people trying
to find a way to replace the free, cheap labor source,
cheap labor source, that's what we're bargaining about. If you

(07:19):
want this country to be one thing, homo genius, you
want this country to look like Charlie Kirk, you want
these people to look like the panel at Fox News,
do the job, do the job. But you won't even now,
you rather propose children do a job. Then you take
your ass out there and do it. The thing I
know for sure, the thing that is in the indisputable

(07:41):
America has had a addiction to free and cheap labor
since existence. They are not going to do jobs that
they deem that they're not that are not worthy of them.
So if it is that you want this country back
to yourself, when you look around and you see this
country overall with people you don't like, you don't did
you look at the black and brown people here? Look

(08:01):
at the lazy white dudes who won't do the job.
That's a little note from the ged section on the
d O Hugley Show. She's Jazz's it's the Jazzy report
on the DL Hughley shun.

Speaker 5 (08:16):
The summer Olympic Games in LA will be car free
in twenty twenty eight. According to the mayor, the only
way to access the Olympic venue will be public transportation. Now,
the city will borrow three thousand busers from buses from
all over the country and ask businesses to allow their
employees to work from home. Officials in Paris have been
praised for how accessible the events were nearly at every

(08:38):
venue and has been reachable by public transportation.

Speaker 1 (08:41):
Yeah, that's good. Well, we're supposed to add that train
system built by them.

Speaker 10 (08:44):
Now.

Speaker 1 (08:44):
I don't know that that'll happen, but I remember the
last time in La in nineteen eighty four, it was
a million people came and never left, and it was
no traffic because they staggered the hours and they moved
the homeless people to Arizona. Oh remember doing the Super
Bowls like that?

Speaker 7 (09:02):
Ain't La? When did we get.

Speaker 9 (09:05):
LA?

Speaker 11 (09:05):
Was?

Speaker 1 (09:06):
He had his club dress, so they had his club
clothes on that night.

Speaker 5 (09:09):
What they say, what's going to help too is, you know,
during the pandemic, people learned that I guess you could
work from home thanks to zoom and all of that.

Speaker 2 (09:17):
So they say that's going to actually help quite a
bit as well, for sure.

Speaker 5 (09:20):
So three days is the magic number when it comes
to getting significant gains in the gym. Scientists say that
the importance of regular, frequent exercise when it comes to
building muscle.

Speaker 2 (09:31):
That's the magic number.

Speaker 5 (09:32):
Apparently, people who worked out at least three days a
week saw their strength increase by four percent, and those
who didn't they saw no significant improvement.

Speaker 1 (09:41):
Yeah, that's that sings about the three or four.

Speaker 2 (09:43):
Right Monday, Wednesday, Friday. Most people.

Speaker 1 (09:44):
Yeah, yeah, three or four, Thank you for that. This
is very interesting. So an aunt buys deodorant for her
nephew who was getting bullied at school for his file cent,
but then she gets shoot out by his mind before
overstepping her boundaries. Like it wasn't like she bought her
drugs or we eat or alcohol. She bought him something,

(10:05):
you know, to stop him from getting teased. But do
you think uh she said that, uh that she called
the aunt calls reversible, irreversible self damage to his self esteem.
That's great, and you know what calls just damage your
self esteem? People holding their nose and teasing you.

Speaker 2 (10:21):
Every day and laughing at you.

Speaker 1 (10:24):
Yeah, was the right for intervening or did she overstep
her boundaries? I think you know, if it takes a village,
you know that's a popular assage. If it takes a village, somebody,
some boy in that village got to stop by rada
and get some deodoran. That's what I mean. You know,
you know what I mean because the the the idea

(10:45):
being that that that one child is everybody's child, right
And I could see, honestly if it were something that
you know, like I said, alcohol or religious something religious,
or even food that they don't eat. But the odoran
Come on, now, So do you think she overstepped her
boundaries or do you think was she right to intervene?

(11:05):
So an aunt, her nephew of forteen, her nephew was
getting pully at school for a file cent, so she
brought up to the other and the mother. The mother
got mad her. I would imagine her sister or sister
in law for overstepping her boundaries. We're gonna go Do
you think that the auntie overstepped her boundaries? Or was
she right? We're gonna go to our social media platform skip.

(11:25):
What are they saying out there?

Speaker 6 (11:27):
Jamal and old Cliff says, why are you mad? Because
your son was stinky? She was just trying to help.

Speaker 1 (11:33):
You know what it is. You wouldn't want to be
in a situation where someone besides you loved your kids
as much as you do. You would want to and
you would want them to exhibit that right. And so
if you could do something to stop somebody, to make
somebody's life a little easier, a day a little brighter,
or to save other kids in the classes. Noses I

(11:55):
think you have to.

Speaker 9 (11:57):
Yeah, because the mominter god nose blind, she don't knows
yes too much.

Speaker 1 (12:01):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (12:01):
The saddest part is you know the fact that you
would not be upset that your son was being bullied
and that someone did something to try to stop it.

Speaker 2 (12:09):
To intervene.

Speaker 5 (12:10):
Right, first of all, how come you didn't get some
yolda and for a stinky self.

Speaker 2 (12:13):
He's in your house right like, you don't sell him?

Speaker 6 (12:16):
Come on, that's the funkiest part of that growing up,
when you go from puberty, like right from puberty. Yeah,
they don't know how to Yeah, hormones change and they
don't know how to deal with it.

Speaker 3 (12:27):
Yeah.

Speaker 5 (12:27):
Man, back and you walk past somebody, somebody was snatching
you up.

Speaker 2 (12:31):
So hey, come here, come here.

Speaker 9 (12:33):
You smell like pig iron. I don't know what that was,
but it smell good.

Speaker 1 (12:37):
I guess. Yeah, you smell like outside. Yeah, this is uh.
I think, and and you know, you know, parenting is absolusly,
deeply personal. But if you could do anything to help
somebody you love out and it's not so obtrusive, I
don't I don't get what the point is. I don't
get what the problem is. So an auntie intervened. Her

(12:58):
fourteen year old nephew was being bullied in school because
of a foul scent, he admitted, you know, and she
bought them to deodor and his mother got mad, said
she overstepped their boundaries. I think, and we've talked about
this before. I think kids have to have somebody they

(13:21):
can talk to or feel like they're close to, or
somebody that they feel like is an advocate for them.
And at some point, generally, even if it's for a
couple of years, and generally it hits in the teen
years where they don't really feel like they can talk
to their parents, you know what I mean.

Speaker 2 (13:37):
I think that, listen.

Speaker 5 (13:38):
I think that you know you're right, someone has to
step in, and especially when you're growing up like that,
you know. I remember when I was a kid, I
had this terrible habit of eating onions just raw like
an apple. I love them. I pulled them right out
of the garden and munch on them. And it took
one of my cousins, when who was older, to say,

(14:00):
you know, your breath is terrible. I was like, huh,
my daddy does it. But you know, my mama didn't
tell me. My daddy didn't tell me. But it took
a cousin to say, you gotta stop eating onions like this.

Speaker 2 (14:12):
And thanks God for that cousin.

Speaker 1 (14:13):
You know you're still find enough to get knocked up.
I know that your breath. Just think that damn bad.

Speaker 2 (14:21):
This was after I stopped eating.

Speaker 1 (14:23):
Oh yeah, I'm sorry, See what happens. You should have
kept a nineties What do you think we wouldn't have joy?

Speaker 4 (14:29):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (14:29):
I think I didn't used to wear a lotion except
on my arms. I didn't know you. I didn't know
you were supposed to wear it.

Speaker 9 (14:37):
No, I didn't know you hit them achilles.

Speaker 1 (14:40):
Yeah, man, no, no, that was.

Speaker 12 (14:44):
Just there.

Speaker 1 (14:44):
But I'm talking about I wore loss on my legs then.
But then I just you know, just was a little
short on the Achilles part of it. But I think
personal hid and it's it's really and generally one of
the things that get you tea is when you're young
is your appearance, right, your appearance and your smell. And

(15:06):
you know that those are the things that generally get
you teased. How you dress and how you look, how
you smell, those are just if your breath stinks, if
you if you think, you know, we used to call
this dude, what was it? What was just called pig pin?
Oh man, he was disgusting. There's always a pit boy

(15:27):
and people, people.

Speaker 2 (15:29):
And kids can be so cruel. Well you know what
I mean.

Speaker 5 (15:31):
So I can imagine the aunt was probably feeling bad,
and maybe the little boy was crying. I mean, I
don't know, but I know kids can be really cruel
in school.

Speaker 1 (15:39):
You know, you funking when they got to get all
over deodorant. You got you need the odor everywhere. Somebody
right now making some looming, when somebody invent looming. Somebody's
a funky ass boy. You need deodorant for every hole
you have. I ain't wait playing all over deodorant. So
uh intervens her fourteen nephews getting bullied at school because

(16:03):
he stinks, and she bought him, and the mother thinks
that she overstepped her bounds and that it could cause
irreparable damage to her self esteem. So could everybody call
you pick van.

Speaker 2 (16:18):
For a long time?

Speaker 9 (16:19):
By the way, be going back to twenty year reunion.

Speaker 1 (16:22):
Hey, I I did a movie a long time ago.
Part of this movie, right, and the actress was gorgeous,
but the wardrobe people used to pick her shirts up
with tongs because she stunk that man, stop stop swear,
I'm not playing tongs.

Speaker 2 (16:42):
She stunk that bad, and nobody told her.

Speaker 1 (16:45):
We were doing a love scene where I was supposed
to cry, and it wasn't hard to do to say that.

Speaker 7 (16:52):
God, you can stop crying.

Speaker 1 (16:54):
Well okay, yeah, yeah, you know because she used one
of those rocks, those stones. You know, everybody thought that
that was the thing when you used that rock. You
remember that.

Speaker 5 (17:07):
Stone a little bit, and yes, yeah, I remember that.

Speaker 1 (17:12):
Somebody whoever invented that, they didn't take this stone and
beat the person inside the head with Who thought that
was gonna work?

Speaker 2 (17:20):
Well I tried.

Speaker 5 (17:21):
It did not work at all, Like a little Crystal right,
Crystal was Crystal.

Speaker 2 (17:26):
Wasn't doing nothing for me. No, used to help myself.
I said, if I don't get my back home, start
all over you ever.

Speaker 1 (17:35):
Like I remember, I was in the airport and I
got up early. I had to run through the airport
and I had I just took a shop, but I
forgot the about gate Sea. I ran into a gift
shop right about gate Sea by man and I had
to stop in there. So young Portuno's getting teased the

(17:58):
school because he is he's smelly, and his auntie bottom
some deodorant and the mother got mad, said she overstepped
her bounds. She said that could cause his self esteem.
I don't understand how that reasoning works. But do you
think the auntie was the overstepped downs bounds or was
she helping out were going to go through phones?

Speaker 13 (18:15):
The aunt was absolutely right to buy her nephews some deodorant.

Speaker 14 (18:18):
I mean, why would you want someone walking around being
musty after they're telling you that they're being teased.

Speaker 1 (18:24):
Better to fix the issue now than to be like,
I didn't know it was that bad, because.

Speaker 4 (18:28):
It was really that bad, you know what I mean?

Speaker 12 (18:31):
Man, I just want to say, Man, I don't know
where all this sought love is going to get us,
because we come from a generation.

Speaker 4 (18:35):
Of tough love and it worked for us.

Speaker 3 (18:37):
But I want y'all to know, man, I got this
African that can tell what tribe you come from.

Speaker 12 (18:41):
Just buy some of your.

Speaker 4 (18:42):
Under arms, man. So that's a good little lick twenty
dollars I got you.

Speaker 11 (18:45):
I don't think she ever stepped that off, not at all.

Speaker 15 (18:49):
I have a grandson and sometimes smell like lutskam, and
I stepped in all the time.

Speaker 11 (18:55):
Somebody got to do it, so she didn't know the
step it off.

Speaker 16 (19:00):
A little wild about this, I understand that now. The
thing about the ordinant, I think they illumin him or
something dinner. But that makes safe the olderance now too.
She shouldn't have her son up in school smell like
no onion.

Speaker 8 (19:12):
I think that mom is very wrong for allowing her
son to be teased.

Speaker 16 (19:16):
If you see a problem that she should have fixed it.

Speaker 17 (19:19):
Aunt shouldn't have to step in and fix the problem.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
That you have in your home. That meaning you're not
allowing that boy to wash his food at home.

Speaker 16 (19:26):
Aunt, he had to step in.

Speaker 4 (19:27):
It's just round the wrong and he's got head bad.
So the stake house people.

Speaker 16 (19:32):
That's gonna do the most irreparable damage to him as
a schoolmate, especially his girl. They're gonna be avoiding him,
calling him funky, stinky, nasty. That's what's gonna do the
most harm to him. Not what I did is I
did what she did out of responsibility and love for
what his mother didn't do. And that's not hurting that's

(19:54):
helping him. The boy needs a learned personal hygiene before
he is. I made an outpass at school, and then
his teacher going to get in bull and his mother
letting him come and Paris letting him come to work
meet school wonky and smelly. So it's a whole big
old bunch of snowball and things. I'll go behind that,

(20:15):
but the world doesn't actually going to make him feel
the work. It's a schoolmates, especially to girl.

Speaker 14 (20:22):
I am afe contributor to mental health. With all the
suicides that are occurring in our younger kids now, it
is just a blessing that this young man did not
turn to social media. He could have done that and
who knows where he'd be today. So we need to
thank God that he was able to reach out to
his family. If he had discuss developed a relationship with
his aunt, so be it that is phenomenal. He at

(20:43):
least knew how to speak up and who to go to.

Speaker 1 (20:45):
So uh Auntie interviews are fourteen nephews getting bullied at
school because he thinks and she by him Jorda and
the mother thinks that he she overstepped the bounds.

Speaker 9 (20:58):
My mother was so like, so much about in the hygiene.

Speaker 6 (21:02):
If she if we ran out of soap in the house,
I ain't nonna tell him what she throw ajax, comet
in the water, pine salt.

Speaker 9 (21:09):
You gonna get cleaned some kind of way. You might
be itching ashy when it's over here, but you're gonna
be clean.

Speaker 1 (21:20):
We're gonna go to the phones.

Speaker 17 (21:22):
I would want somebody to tell me that I'm funking,
and I would want somebody to help me out, because
it takes a village and she's a part of that village.
So I don't feel no type of way she did right, Yes,
nobody want to be smelling.

Speaker 15 (21:35):
No stinks.

Speaker 12 (21:36):
I don't understand. Why do we get mad about somebody
doing something nice for us? He was thinking or he
get teased, so he stinks it's a good thing that
grandmother bought the theorder. Oh man, you smells? Why you
want to get teased at school?

Speaker 1 (21:54):
Like?

Speaker 4 (21:54):
Why is the even mad?

Speaker 12 (21:56):
But hey, God, do what we gotta do.

Speaker 8 (21:59):
I don't think that the mother should have gotten mad
at the Auntie. I don't think that Auntie overstepped her bounds.
If the mother wanted to be bad mad with somebody,
she should be mad with herself for not checking her son.
And like I said, it takes a village, and if
she don't want her son to be part of the village,
and she needs to do what she needs to do
as a mother to make sure her child is you

(22:19):
know that his hygienes are in order. I would have
done the same thing that Auntie did. She probably would
have said something to the mother first, and if it continued,
then I would have did exactly what the auntie did.
You know, he's getting bullied at school, and evidently the
mama didn't take it serious. So I commend the auntie
for doing what she did.

Speaker 11 (22:37):
I think that she could have asked the parents first
if she could provide him with the odorant, because I
find that sometimes it's not like what people do. It's
like the parent just wants to know, they want to
be involved in that decision because otherwise he needs to.
Like and Barris are like, we have a loss of control.
Me personally, I wouldn't have like care. I'd be like,

(22:59):
thank you forgetting some fyodorant, like I appreciate you good
looking out. But I think sometimes like parents just want
to know ahead of time before you take any action
involving their child.

Speaker 1 (23:11):
You know what's interesting, all of us have relayed stories
of our youth. I think the thing that changes behavior
like that is getting teased about it. It is it
as a corrective mechanism. Because the things you know about hygiene,
you genuinely know because somebody told your breath was bad,
or you think or something that's that's generally how it happens,
you know what I mean?

Speaker 5 (23:32):
I think so I think that or either you smell
yourself and you're like, we gotta make we gotta make
some changes around here.

Speaker 2 (23:36):
I can't walk around like this something.

Speaker 1 (23:39):
But I think that whatever it is, generally you're embarrassed
about something, yes, or or or or have the fear
of being embarrassed about it.

Speaker 5 (23:47):
So I think asasing as the stronger encouragement for change.
When I was little, I had buck teeth, very very big,
big buck teeth, and I was teased quite a bit.

Speaker 2 (23:57):
And you know what I did. I put some braces
on those teas.

Speaker 5 (24:01):
Now they're still big, but there they just don't jut
out as much.

Speaker 1 (24:04):
So why because your face grew? That's why you don't
want because around your teeth story.

Speaker 2 (24:15):
It was teased quite a bit. They got me, Bucky Beaver.
I will never forget that.

Speaker 5 (24:20):
But it caused me to say, you know what, because
my mama was not gonna get me bracest. She was like,
I'll find that for you. You have to deal with
those teeth.

Speaker 2 (24:28):
And so when I got to college.

Speaker 1 (24:30):
Was your daddy a domino? Damn looking at them teeth
right there and outside. But that's what I think with
the one and only comedian Damon Williams, who exactly the
self side.

Speaker 17 (24:47):
Coming home.

Speaker 18 (24:58):
Hey, it's David Williams here. When to travel.

Speaker 15 (25:01):
Travel is changing significantly because Southwest Headline has just announced
that they are changing the seating policy.

Speaker 18 (25:08):
To go to as signed seat.

Speaker 15 (25:10):
I've been flying Southwest since the beginning of my career,
and I enjoyed the open seating policy because I fly
so much.

Speaker 18 (25:16):
I get to fly and board early. But also you
could change your.

Speaker 15 (25:21):
Seat if somebody sitting next to you and they was
a little mustard, you can get up.

Speaker 18 (25:25):
If somebody kept passing gas.

Speaker 15 (25:27):
By you, or they had a crying baby that's about
to try for three four hours, you could get up
and walk to a different seat.

Speaker 18 (25:33):
But you know what, they had to change it because.

Speaker 7 (25:35):
You know who you are.

Speaker 18 (25:36):
People were abusing the preboard policy.

Speaker 15 (25:40):
Preboard is designated for people who have helments and the
physical issues, but people is using pre board as the
first class path.

Speaker 18 (25:48):
So now here I am.

Speaker 15 (25:49):
I earned my seats, I earned my A list status
and you get to get on the flight before me
because you lie and seeing someone's wrong with your big too.

Speaker 18 (25:57):
Hey, you get to bring somebody with you.

Speaker 15 (25:59):
So instead of me being in the first part of
the plane, it's forty people on the plane before the
people who supposed to be on the plane. And that's
because y'all gonna use that system. When flights took off,
all those preboard people had all types of limps and
ailments and wheelchairs. But when we land miraculously, everybody was Okay,
well that's over with. Now you're gonna get on the

(26:22):
plane and sit where they tell you to sit. That's right,
You're gonna sit to the tail, on the tail because
you didn't get your ticket in time in order to.

Speaker 18 (26:31):
Have a better seat.

Speaker 15 (26:33):
Southwest Airlines also now is instituted a bag seat. For years,
bag fly free was the main reason to fly south
Wind because you don't have to pay for that luggage. Well, Southwest,
we gonna see what happened, because now you're just like
everybody else. We the people don't want Southwest having bags fee.
And if you don't listen to.

Speaker 1 (26:52):
The people, there are consequences.

Speaker 18 (26:55):
You don't believe me, just ass target now. It might
not be right, it might not be true, but that's
what I think.

Speaker 15 (27:02):
Check out all my days around the country, including the
Martha's and your comedy fest all of August, and that's
all on Damian.

Speaker 1 (27:07):
Williams Comedy d Thank you so much, mister who it
is out of the dal. You can show you a
twenty twenty five edition in case you are going to
be in Saint Louis, Missouri. I will be there this Friday,
Saturday and Sunday at the world famous City Winery. I'll
be there to Friday to Saturday and one Sunday, looking
forward to it. So I I don't Abby Phillips. Of course,

(27:28):
he has a show on CNN and Scott Jenny's Who
I Want to Throttle and the Due Kevin Leary. But
he's stuck. He's like, uh, he was talking about Trump
and the Epstein debuckle. Now a lot of people thought
it would be over by now I knew it wouldn't be,
but he was Basically, if you really cared about this woman,
you would keep harping on it and tragging them out.

(27:48):
They want to get over it, like how do you
know that? See which wright men think they know everything,
which is why the world is the way it is.
They without sight, unseen, never met anybody, never talk to anybody,
probably didn't even buy the story. All of a sudden,
now you're an expert on what these women need to heal.
They are childbearing ag and they got children. And he said,
it's pragmatism. Pragmatism is probably when you're pragmatic, that means

(28:11):
you take in information, gets both sides, and then come
to a decision. Correct, not the ones we're in. The
situation we're in right now. Because Trump promised members on
the right, because they believe all the conspiracy theories that
this was they were democratic pedal rings and that they
were gonna all be exposed in a deep state. He

(28:32):
threw that out there like red meat. And then when
it came time to put up a shut up, he
knew his name was on that list, and he pulled
back and they didn't like it. And now everything like
when he's talking about Jeffrey Epstein, he was talking about
how you know, he took some of their workers. What
is the sixteen year old doing at a spa? Correct?

Speaker 9 (28:50):
Working at a spa?

Speaker 1 (28:52):
What is I mean? Honestly, I don't care if they're
taking tiles, I don't care. Whatever. You gonna see naked
grown people. And then Florida're gonna see naked, old grown people.
Here's the simplest thing. I didn't do it. I'm going
to ex I'm clear my name and take a look
at everything. He'll never say that because the thing we

(29:13):
talk about this yesterday, eighty percent, eighty percent of registered
sex offenders in the United States of America are white males.
Interestingly enough, if they you could they Charlie Kirk and
the like and quote statistic on black criminality at nauseum.
But never you know who who rapes the most, who

(29:36):
who sexually assaults the most, Who is the most dangerous
when it comes to children? Never that you know what
Black people at three percent? So they will protect children
from anything but them. Look and you look at every
behind every scandal from I don't care if it's from
Catholic the Catholic Church. I don't care if it's Penn State.

(29:58):
I don't care if it's Ohio State. I don't care
if is uh the Boy Scouts of America or death
schools across the country. Who were in charge and who
was in charge of investigating those those those people charge
who wasn't white men?

Speaker 9 (30:12):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (30:13):
And who is the ones who hand out these lenient
sentences on that Who is it white men?

Speaker 9 (30:17):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (30:17):
So it what does it say?

Speaker 6 (30:20):
Mm hmm?

Speaker 5 (30:24):
Well obviously not as well as you writing all these
books and being so successful.

Speaker 13 (30:30):
I just got off the road because you know, I
had a little makeshift tool.

Speaker 4 (30:34):
They had me in black on book stores. So I'm
also like a month where I'm working on like three
books right now.

Speaker 2 (30:41):
Oh my goodness, that's amazing.

Speaker 7 (30:45):
Yeah, So how do you go?

Speaker 5 (30:47):
How do you go from being uh the creative copywriter
at Hallmark to now writing your own books? So basically
you just expanded, you know, obviously in a different direction
in terms of writing.

Speaker 7 (30:59):
How do you.

Speaker 2 (30:59):
Make that move? And what was it?

Speaker 4 (31:01):
Then?

Speaker 2 (31:01):
You have you always wanted to be a writer.

Speaker 4 (31:04):
I've just been a creative person, you know, all my life.
I wrote for my college newspaper, Proud Aluma of Jackie
State University. I wrote a column called brown Sugar. My
name was, well, you know, everybody on the yard called
me Hershey Brown, that was my nickname. So it was
brown Sugar written by it was a vice. It was

(31:25):
it was like Philly d Williams me dear Abby.

Speaker 2 (31:29):
That's hilarious.

Speaker 4 (31:32):
And so graduated from there, I did the whole spoken
word thing and Hallmark was my first was my first job,
you know, right out of college, and it was like
being a graduate school. It was my first time being
in an environment surrounded by you know, other creatives, so
many talented artists, painters, writers, and landing my first book deal.

(31:54):
The guy that illustrated my books Crown and O to
the Fresh Cut, and I remember good thing Gordon to James.
He actually worked at Hamewark as well. He connected me
with my literary agents, like in two thousand and three
assist name Regina Brooks. I've been with her ever since
two thousand and three. So well.

Speaker 5 (32:14):
I love the fact that you know the titles, you know,
the King of Kindergarten and even the one about you
know the Crown, you know I you Know and Owe
to the Fresh Cut. All of these things speak to
not just children, but I think even when adults such
as myself, when you see these things, you know, I
feel blessed and lucky to know that, you know, there

(32:35):
are titles and books that that can contain subject matter
that was not available when I was a kid. You know,
when I was a kid, it was you know, everything
looked a particular way, and it certainly did not include
black and brown kids. And I think we already know
how impressionable kids are, and they like to read stories
that reflect them. And so is there is there something

(32:55):
about your childhood that kind of made you decide? You
know this is because I mean being when you're a
great writer, you can write anything, but you chose a
particular topic and content.

Speaker 2 (33:06):
Is it because of how you grew up?

Speaker 4 (33:09):
I think a lot of it has to do with
my role as a parent. We had four beautiful sons.
I have two boys in college, one in North Carolina
and t he one and said, you know state, we're
a HCCU, certainly, but I think a lot of it
just comes from being the father of the Mighty Bones brothers.
We moved to Charlotte. I live in Charlotte now, like

(33:30):
eight years ago and I had eight books out and
my career just was fizzling, you know, I was. I
was on the verge of quidment. But I didn't quit.
I continued to write books. I wrote like thirty books
between twenty eleven, twenty and seventeen and were first old
jare you know? My office was pretty fair, didn't have
any firms anything. Yet if I would sit on the

(33:52):
floor and work on new books. And one day my
second eldest boy, Solo, he's eighteen now, he's just like
ten at the time. He came in the house smelling
like outside. He had been playing basket on the back
and he saw me working, and he's an apple and
he looked. He looked at me, and he's like, Dad,
you know what.

Speaker 14 (34:08):
You should do.

Speaker 4 (34:09):
He should write the blackest book ever. You already not
getting no book deals. So you know, he reminded me
of who I was writing for. Like I had started
to write for those gatekeepers, but Solo reminded me that
I'm writing four and two black children.

Speaker 13 (34:27):
And so I always try to center my characters and
center my stories around issues and affect black children.

Speaker 4 (34:34):
I always want to make sure they are.

Speaker 13 (34:36):
The center of every story.

Speaker 4 (34:38):
I want every black child to be able to go
into a bookstore and see my book and feeling power.
But it's also important for white children to see black
children as centers, so that they know that they're not
the center of the universe. I think every child, every
race deserves going to a bookstore library and see a
book that centers them. But I always want to make
books with black boys. They have their heads up and

(35:01):
empowered smartest ones twenty pages. You know what I mean,
just you know, you know the heroes.

Speaker 2 (35:08):
I love it, Derek.

Speaker 5 (35:09):
Thank you so much for the hard work that you do.
And you know what, I'm gonna look you up on Instagram.
I'm gonna follow you. I'm going to repost and post
about your books. I'm going to buy the book.

Speaker 4 (35:18):
All right.

Speaker 2 (35:19):
Thank you so much, Derek. I appreciate it. Continued success.

Speaker 4 (35:22):
Thank you, thank you so much much love, thank you.

Speaker 1 (35:24):
It's now time to give a deservice. I one to
shootoo you the Week award, and.

Speaker 7 (35:28):
Now it's time for the shoe Moody of the Week Coward.

Speaker 1 (35:35):
Oh yeah, that's nice.

Speaker 7 (35:37):
Ted Cruise, you can French kiss the guy next to.

Speaker 3 (35:40):
You is an American politician, attorney, and political commentator, serving
as their junior United State Senator from Texas since twenty thirteen.

Speaker 7 (35:51):
He is a bad bad man. A member of the
Republican Party, Cruise received widespread popular backlund for objecting in
the twenty twenty presidential election and given credence to the
false claim that the election was fraudulent.

Speaker 4 (36:09):
I'm sure of it.

Speaker 7 (36:10):
So why is Ted Cruz this week's recipient? Of the
shoe Booty of the Week awards.

Speaker 3 (36:20):
Lying Ted gets the shoe booty because he was literally tripping.

Speaker 7 (36:26):
You're killing me, small, Tellytubb.

Speaker 3 (36:28):
Ted is drawing heat for chasing the sun in Europe
as his constituents back home dealt with a devastating crisis.

Speaker 7 (36:36):
You are hopeless and I washed my hands of you.

Speaker 3 (36:40):
Yes, while a devastating flood was killing and displacing Texans,
Kremlin Cruise was in line to visit the Parthenon in Athens, Greece.
This is after Governor Greg Abbott announced twenty four deaths
and signed a disaster declaration.

Speaker 7 (37:02):
This guy, this is not my kind of guy.

Speaker 3 (37:04):
And speaking of can Coon, this is not the first
time Cruise has drawn scrutiny for enjoying sunny trips abroad
while his state contents with crisis.

Speaker 7 (37:17):
That comes with no big surprise to me, Sir.

Speaker 3 (37:19):
The Senator was spotted boarding a plane for can Coon
while his constituents dealt with the power outage caused by
a historic win no weather.

Speaker 7 (37:29):
You're in big trouble, mister, and we all know fat.

Speaker 3 (37:32):
Wolverine will take his direction from the commander and soiled
briefs and just like him, he'll show up late for
the fight and take all the credit for the win.

Speaker 7 (37:44):
This is going to be a fraud like you've never seen.

Speaker 3 (37:47):
And that's why the shoes Booty of the Week award
goes too. Dead Cruise, now yours a swift kicking the ass.

Speaker 1 (38:03):
Skip, it is you have an uncanny ability, should I say,
an uncanny ability to find you, like you know how
pigs his sniffle truffles.

Speaker 2 (38:15):
Yeah, it's a very weird.

Speaker 1 (38:17):
Uh No, pig sniffle trufles you no, I know they do,
but you dog sniff truble.

Speaker 2 (38:21):
Connect that with Skip.

Speaker 1 (38:22):
I'm just saying, how you sus it out? I'm not
you know a secret? Sure.

Speaker 3 (38:28):
The way we do it is we take a dead
cat swinging around and you know, as the saying goes,
you can't swing a dead cat without hitting the shoe booties.

Speaker 1 (38:34):
Oh yeah, okay, that well, I said, Hey, that's scientifically proven.
That's pure peraded right there everywhere.

Speaker 9 (38:43):
I ain't never swung a dead cat.

Speaker 1 (38:45):
Now, all right, right, right now, the SPC I mean
that Pete is gonna be called the Great and we
don't mean the bread either. Now it's time for what
you need to know with the one and only Sybil Wilkes.

Speaker 2 (38:56):
It's Sybil Wilkes with what we need to know new
develop mints.

Speaker 10 (39:00):
In the deadly Manhattan shooting that occurred Monday, authorities believe
the semi automatic rifle used by gunman Shane to Mora
was assembled from parts acquired by an associate. Investigators say
Toma left behind a note about CT and may have
been targeting the NFL's New York offices. Police say the
probe is still evolving, with leads stretching back to the

(39:22):
shooter's home in Las Vegas. In housing news, press are
cooling slightly. The S and P Case Shiller Index shows
that while home values still rose in May, the annual
rate of increase dropped from three point four to two
point eight percent. Experts say rising mortgage rates are putting
pressure on buyers, while increasing inventory slows price growth.

Speaker 9 (39:45):
Attorneys for Sean Diddy.

Speaker 10 (39:46):
Combs are seeking his release on fifty million dollars bail
as he awaits sentencing in October. Combs was convicted on
prostitution transport charges earlier this month, but acquitted of more
serious racketeering and sex trafficking charges. His legal team says
exceptional reasons warrant his release.

Speaker 2 (40:05):
And are asking he'd be allowed to stay at his
Miami home.

Speaker 10 (40:09):
Controversy in Mississippi, Meiji police chief Dennis Borges is facing
backlash over comments made on Facebook.

Speaker 2 (40:16):
He vowed to crackdown on what he.

Speaker 10 (40:18):
Called hood culture, threatening to shut down businesses if violent
incidents continue. His statement came after a weekend of fights
at a local sports complex and restaurant. Critics says the
post was racially insensitive and inflammatory. Beyonce's Cowboy Carter Tour
officially is the highest grossing country tour in history, breaking

(40:40):
in over four hundred and seven million.

Speaker 2 (40:42):
Dollars across just thirty two shows.

Speaker 7 (40:45):
Way to go, Queen Bee.

Speaker 10 (40:46):
To subscribe to my free daily newsletter, please visit Sibilwilkes
dot com. For all the neews twenty four to seven.
Go to newswe dot com. I'm Sybil Wilkes. Be informed,
be empowered.

Speaker 1 (40:56):
Thank you so much, Sybil. We have more, allegedly we
have more, of course. Okay, well then we're gonna keep going.
It's the Hugley Show coming right back at you, the
d El Hugley Show. It is the do Ehugley Show.
Your twenty twenty five edition. In case you are going
to be in Saint Louis, Missouri, I will be the
show me State. I would be there this Friday, Saturday
and Sunder. They're going to be at the City Winery
in Saint Louis. So Michael Rappaport I used to be

(41:19):
remember we had them on our show.

Speaker 2 (41:20):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, absolutely.

Speaker 1 (41:22):
I think what happened with with Gaza, you know, and initially,
you know what happened when they took the hostages, and
then you know, I thought that they lost the more
high ground when they started to be so many people dying. Yeah,
I mean like now, and then y'all said, there's not

(41:42):
a there's not a you know, uh, you know, a massacre.
Ethnic Clinticy going over there. They say that ninety percent
of the buildings are destroyed, they've they're allegedly four hundred
thousand people are dead. They're all kinds of Here's the thing.
It's imposed to look at the pictures of the kids

(42:02):
that are start starving and not be reminded of the
things they went through. It's impossible to do that. And
what I find particularly interesting is that what if it's
always interesting when the person who is allegedly perpetrating the
violent act or the genocide or the mass killings, says,

(42:22):
nothing's happening here. I don't care who did that. When
the Turks did to our meanings, oh no, he didn't
do anything. If you would look, white people talk about
what they've done, Oh, that wasn't anything. So every time
the people who perpetrated are in charge of the narration,
it never is as bad as as history bears it
out to me.

Speaker 5 (42:39):
Yeah, but the thing is you have to remember nowadays,
with social media and people having cameras, there's a way
that we're going to be able to see images, and
once you see those images, you can't unsee them, and
there's no way to spend it other than that what
it really is.

Speaker 1 (42:51):
Even Donald Trump believes this happening. And I'm sure he
has an intelligence I don't want to say intelligence in
his name at the same time, but I know I'm
sure that he's being you know, updated on the things
that are going there. But Michael Rapperpot jumped into this
whole Hogan thing. Michael Rapperport, who's only relevant because of his, uh,
you know, his association with black people, claimed that he

(43:13):
didn't know what Hulk was. But I guarantee if Holt
says something about Jews he did, we didn't heart. He
didn't do it, then he would have knew it. Then
he made three videos with your dope. He's aging like
bad fruit. That's what I mean.

Speaker 5 (43:28):
But you all, you you've said this, and you said
there is something about people white men, especially as they
get older, no matter how cool and dope.

Speaker 2 (43:35):
They were when they were younger, they still because.

Speaker 1 (43:39):
You know that there's a Scottish they make this meal
out of the sheep's stomach. He looks like that. Really,
I mean, I'm telling you when he some of the
things that he said about you know, Kamala, or some
of the things he said about you know when leading
up to the My full position is this, I don't
I think Israel obviously has the right to exist, but

(43:59):
not at the expense of annihilating the entire race of people.
I don't think anybody else's right to life is any
more sack or sanct than anybody else. And I think
that if all these allegations are being made, there's a
simple way to assuage people to satisfy that, and that's
to let the media in to see.

Speaker 2 (44:16):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (44:17):
I mean, if you keep sliding in their dms but
never getting any response, we're gonna tell you why. You know,
it's interesting. I don't think. Well, I know I've never
sled in anybody's DM, but nobody slides in. Mind, that's
so crazy.

Speaker 2 (44:29):
You don't even check your dms. So how do you
know if anybody is probably sitting in there or not?

Speaker 1 (44:35):
Okay, Well, then you made me feel better.

Speaker 2 (44:37):
DML deep, it made me feel better. You're welcome.

Speaker 1 (44:41):
Or maybe maybe it happens and Jay Vega checks it now.
That might be because it never happened. I don't see that.
I think check my DM.

Speaker 2 (44:49):
I'm pretty sure it happened.

Speaker 1 (44:50):
No, no, no, I'm gonna see. You're gonna do this,
I'll be I'll be checking out what people if it's
not number five? How old is that picture? Yeah, you
put your best photos in there if you want to
get a response. You know, online dms that come off wrong,
I'd rather not say what I do?

Speaker 4 (45:12):
You know? What do you do?

Speaker 5 (45:13):
I'd rather not say that classified? Yeah, classified and illegal?
Right number three at the top five online dms that
come off wrong. I don't want to I don't want
to get hurt again.

Speaker 1 (45:23):
I don't know that that comes up wrong.

Speaker 2 (45:25):
It does come off wrong right, but.

Speaker 9 (45:26):
It makes your day gonna be tippy toeing around you.

Speaker 5 (45:31):
Put other top five men's online dms that come off wrong.
Find me someone hot that's gonna come off wrong.

Speaker 1 (45:40):
Nobody so far.

Speaker 5 (45:41):
Let me see your d ms. I don't believe you.
I bet you some thousand and one people in your
d ms. First of all, this is not your d ms.

Speaker 2 (45:49):
This is this is not your d M.

Speaker 9 (45:51):
Hold on, oh h the little message thing up in
the corner that you got a.

Speaker 2 (45:57):
Lot of d ms. Let's let's do this instead the
top three. Hey, when are you back in l A
next week? Here we go, Here we go. You got
a lot of d M.

Speaker 1 (46:06):
Let's do this list.

Speaker 2 (46:08):
Okay, Hey, baby.

Speaker 18 (46:13):
Is good.

Speaker 1 (46:14):
I don't know.

Speaker 2 (46:16):
Who are you. Your d ms are popping. Look at them,
d M. Yes they are where they are? Where the
fans at? You know where they are?

Speaker 1 (46:33):
Look at this is not it.

Speaker 2 (46:35):
Look let me sure the d ms are right here.
Let's get into them again. Thank you for the and
the d M goes to and the best d M
goes to Elizabeth. Elizabeth, Who's lashunk?

Speaker 7 (46:50):
Give me that fun? It's there.

Speaker 2 (46:56):
You know where it is, and that is the number
one of the talk.

Speaker 1 (47:00):
Nobody ain't nothing.

Speaker 5 (47:06):
Somebody's been checking your d ms, though probably probably Jay,
because you can tell when d ms have been checked
because they're bold when they haven't been opened, grayed out.
You said that green means that they're online at the
same time it's grayed out when it's been checked.

Speaker 1 (47:25):
I've seen again. Let's go through because wait. First off,
it's very uncomfortable the phone and holds it. That's crazy.

Speaker 5 (47:33):
What's even more uncomforted to watch you swing your feet
left and right as I'm reading.

Speaker 6 (47:37):
I don't know.

Speaker 1 (47:40):
It's nothing interesting happening here.

Speaker 2 (47:42):
You gotta keep but you've got a lot to go through.

Speaker 1 (47:45):
Nothing, nobody interesting, nothing, Sure, nobody ever says anything sexy
to me. It's crazy.

Speaker 2 (47:56):
Oh they do get the phone.

Speaker 1 (47:59):
You can have the phone. You just got to show
me what your referenceing. Just hold it up paying No,
I don't trust you now, Atlanta, come over here and
read these now. None of these are good. These are
my dams. Right when I said, okay, you said this
is not my damn.

Speaker 7 (48:15):
Let me say, hey, what's coming up next?

Speaker 2 (48:17):
There you go, what's coming up? Next more of d
l's dms coming up right here on the DM here show.

Speaker 1 (48:23):
I'm scared they're gonna be born, all right, So it's
the deal. You can show you a twenty twenty five
edition in case you're going to be in Saint Louis.
It's the dates coming up twenty twenty. Excuse me, it'll
excuse me this Saturday, Friday, Saturday Sunday at the City Winery.
I will be there too. Shows Friday to show Saturday,
one show Sunday. Last night I was I'm hititing in
my book, so I needed to have a drink. I

(48:45):
go to have a drink and these Mexican cats we
were having a drink. They were the coolest dudes.

Speaker 2 (48:50):
I saw this.

Speaker 1 (48:52):
But this dude named One he wanted me to see
his dog. I said, oh man, I thought it was
a little rug. It was a French terry like it
wasn't a bulldog. And I said, hey, man, you can't
be a dude named Wan who owns a weed distribution
company and show me a French bulldog. He said, nobody's
he's what do you calling me? Called him? He's adorable.

(49:14):
I said that, man, I'm not gonna sit here and
drink what you want? You talking about adorable about little dog?

Speaker 4 (49:18):
I won't.

Speaker 1 (49:21):
It's you and the dude name Season. We have a
good time talking, and you told me about the adorable dog.
I got to leave. I had to put. I didn't
think anybody would believe me, so I had to.

Speaker 2 (49:31):
The thing was his screensaver on his phone.

Speaker 1 (49:36):
Then I showed him Charlie and I was like, his dog. Yes,
my dog almost killed Tyler's dog. Oh my god, I.

Speaker 2 (49:46):
Almost killed everybody in the neighborhood.

Speaker 19 (49:48):
Yes, Jason Sanders, what'd you learned today? Besides that, yeah,
murder they gave him. I learned that your d m
s are popping with very nice.

Speaker 1 (50:01):
I wish come on, nobody ever says anything skip my man.
See them what you learned today?

Speaker 6 (50:09):
Rumors have it out there that Trump is seriously considering
pardoning Diddy. No, you know, Trump is you know, distraction,
anything for distraction. So he throws some red meat out
there just to get people talking, to get him out
of there. But that that that is, So that's a
rumor out there.

Speaker 1 (50:26):
We'll see. Yeah, well he's he's he might as well
do maxwell too, to see that's what that's what that
one will help him. No, because let me tell you
something that a lot of people be mad. She definitely
is a pedophile. A lot of people will be upset
about that one pedophile says that you're not a pedaphile.

(50:47):
That'd be great.

Speaker 2 (50:51):
She's definitely accessory.

Speaker 1 (50:55):
It's broad that everybody's upset about doing the gene correcion Sydney.

Speaker 2 (51:00):
Oh yeah, they've been mad at her though.

Speaker 1 (51:02):
She's adnick though, over and over and over. Definitely a redneck.
Definitely a red nick definitely. But I don't care, like
who's gonna buy if you buy an American ego jeans?

Speaker 5 (51:13):
You know, first of all, I did buy a pair
because I wanted to see what the hubbub was about,
and I gave them and apparently it's like, look, you
get them up over my hips.

Speaker 1 (51:24):
So I just said that I don't know what navy.

Speaker 4 (51:27):
This is.

Speaker 1 (51:29):
High SpongeBob, shut up this This must be Michael's navy,
because we ain't got that here. Coming up for the
next deal, you can show Kyle aka especially our kids,
the latest tie record producer, and we will here his
latest project on short Bus Records, Bus the Lifit to
Man Tomorrow. King's returns to expose racism hitting our everyday lives.
That's next on the d O you can shows, the
del you can show We will definitely see you on

(51:49):
the other side. Kyle, my short bus operator, poor less string.
We got to go. It's the d you Can Show,
see you on the other side.
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