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October 8, 2025 45 mins

In the opening hour, D.L. and the crew spotlighted a disturbing trend: people with severe obesity are facing outright discrimination in medical clinics, with a new study showing that about 41% of clinics refused to schedule appointments for a hypothetical patient weighing 465 pounds. The Question of the Day sparked a fiery debate: a man asks his date to pay $250 for a babysitter so they can go out — should he cover that cost or is it unfair to expect it? The conversation touched on responsibility, courtship norms, and perception of value in modern dating. 

The Human Being of the Week is Colin Kaepernick, who funded and pushed for the autopsy of Trey Reed. It revealed evidence contradicting claims of suicide—underscoring Kaepernick’s continued work for justice beyond sports. 

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

See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
It is a breast cancer awareness months. And for those
of you who don't have significant other others and you
really are, you know, kind of shy about doing self examination.
Juniors and I have started a fledgling program, a pilot
program if you will, called uh Touching to Save Lives
so T.

Speaker 2 (00:21):
T T S L. Have you seen juniors? His hands?

Speaker 3 (00:24):
Yes, he's hand handed.

Speaker 4 (00:25):
Let me hand you looking at the wrong hands, baby.

Speaker 1 (00:29):
Yeah, I've used to look at hands till I needed
the eurologies and then I find a small handed Japanese lady.

Speaker 4 (00:35):
And these are rated five point zero missus count before
they go in.

Speaker 1 (00:43):
Right, Yes, that I don't I've never noticed that far,
but they but they do show curricular on the walls.

Speaker 3 (00:51):
What are they?

Speaker 2 (00:51):
What are they? What are they? What are they poking around.

Speaker 1 (00:53):
For to see if there are any abnormalities?

Speaker 2 (00:58):
Supposed to be small and smooth. Yeah, if it's rough
or you know, well, God bless her. I hope you
get an experienced one because could you imagine they don't
know who you just know it's.

Speaker 1 (01:09):
Not junior college and now you're going to the beauty college.
Is getting a haircut. These people know what they're doing.

Speaker 2 (01:14):
I hope so that it's not the laugh They want
a boyfriend. I'm just trying to think. But he does
call me all the time. He sends you flat.

Speaker 5 (01:23):
While you laughing when they put your feet in the
stirups and crank you open.

Speaker 2 (01:28):
Happened in twier.

Speaker 3 (01:29):
Please, Happy breath to the Simon Cowell.

Speaker 1 (01:32):
Have birthday to Tony Braxon, Have birthday the Bryce Wills
and I actually met his brother Ruth. Happy breath to
Omar Benson Miller. Happy breath to the Charles Wilson from
the NFL.

Speaker 3 (01:40):
Dope Dude.

Speaker 1 (01:40):
Have birthday Nicole Ari Parker at birth to the Joy Bayhart.
Havet birth of the Priest Homes. Happy birthday the Mookie
bets He's killing all the Dodgers. Happy birth of the
Honorable Elijah Muhammad. Had birth of the Archbishop Desmond too too.
Happy birth of the Willie Knowles, who was the first
African American player to be named captain of a professional
sports team, the Celtics. But to the Mods this Fleetwood

(02:01):
Walker the first black pair decades before Jackie Robinson, then
several years before the color line of baseball was Dordan.
He joined the major leagues in eighteen eighty four, after
the game against the Louisville Eclipse, and the Louisville papers
complained about his inclusion.

Speaker 3 (02:16):
They called him Darky woodn't.

Speaker 2 (02:20):
Just take the al they had it down. Look, now
that ain't fair.

Speaker 3 (02:23):
You got the black dud.

Speaker 2 (02:24):
Wait a minute, they didn't call them the black dude
back then.

Speaker 1 (02:26):
No, but yeah they listen. I'm i gotta take that
for somebody who's only it was forty percent white. Let
me do all of that stuff right there. You not
just chiming y'all, keep doing it.

Speaker 2 (02:37):
I bet I'm more African than both of y'all.

Speaker 1 (02:40):
That's come on, you're kidding me, especially you stick with
Jazz je I bet you Jazz and he might beat you.

Speaker 3 (02:50):
Oh you're crazy.

Speaker 2 (02:52):
Nigerian by hiself. We ain't even talked about the rest
of them.

Speaker 1 (02:54):
Yeah, come wait, oh wait, wait, my watch is gone. Wait,
can't stop it. Don't say we got a great show
line up for you, Jaz. I'm going to have what's trending.
I'm going to have a little note from the ged section.
It's jazz man, what man? Can you please tell these

(03:15):
good people what is trending?

Speaker 2 (03:17):
Oh, this is a horrible story that's trending? And it
just really breaks my heart, as it does a lot
of people on social media, and that is the young
man who committed suicide. They're in Texas, right, is it,
Karen Lacey Kieren Lacy. So sad when you find out
that apparently the investigation was all wrong. They did a

(03:38):
lot of covering up a lot of misinformation regarding the
crash that they say he was responsible for. Turns out, luckily,
the DA did their own private investigation to uncover the
fact that he was about seventy two yards behind the
point of impact when the collision happened. Now very young, obviously,
I think he was like twenty four years old, had

(03:58):
his whole life in front of him. On top of that,
they said it was pretty certain that he was going
to be, you know, in the NFL, and unfortunately, you know,
with social media and the criticism of everyone just got
to be too much and he took his life. That's
so sad, so sad considering you know, they have bodycam
footage showing that he was innocent, you know, in terms

(04:19):
of them having to coax people and I guess witnesses
to say things that weren't true. On top of the
fact that them finding out that he was nowhere near
the crash. And when you consider the broader part of
this story, and that is that the mom had to
bury a child who committed suicide and to find out
that her father had committed suicide. So she had been

(04:41):
through this a little bit before in terms of, you know,
having to relive this kind of tragedy. And it's just
so sad now and I don't even know what you
can do at this point. Besides, some people need to
be fired, but it's not going to bring him back.
Some people need to be arrested. Have you just filled
out a fall? I agree with that.

Speaker 5 (04:55):
When I lived in Alabama, I used to be the
ring announcment for Roy Jones Junior. I was on my
way to work a fight and an accident happened around me.
I was involved, but I didn't get hit, and they
tried to blame it on me. Yeah, I was young,
like yo, I didn't do any of this. My car's
not hit. Happened all around me. They try to say
you pulled in front and all that dude did, but
they tried to do it.

Speaker 2 (05:14):
They try to get this crazy. It's so unfortunate too,
when you consider this young man what he was thinking anyway.
Also trending, now this I saw out of Baltimore at
a restaurant called Cross Street Public House in Federal Hill.
Now there was a black bouncer there who apparently this
white dude walked up on and was challenging him. I
don't know if it was about trying to get in

(05:35):
or I'm not quite sure. I do know the bouncer,
the black guy, put him in a choco for about
fifty seconds, and people who were watching were trying to
you know. Of course, some people were saying, hey, he's
tapping out, he's tapping out, and other people are like,
he should have never tried him in the first place.
The guy ended up being okay, but you know, just
the fact that there was this back and forth as
to who was right and who was wrong. I would say,

(05:56):
if it's a big dude who's a bouncer, don't try it.
Blame alone. I don't know what was going on with
leaving law. It doesn't mean that the bouncer gets to
put this guy in a choke over fifty seconds and
the guy literally was tapping and saying hey, hey, hey,
because he could have killed him. So but you know
I would say there's enough blame for both sides, just saying,
but speaking of something on a lighter note, The Tom

(06:17):
Jordah Foundation twenty twenty five Fantastic Voyage literally is around
the corner. And I got to tell you there are
these tickets called the ME plus three. If you've been
wondering how you can pay for it, this is the
way to do it. You get three other friends and
it's only one thousand dollars per person. Now that's based
on four passages in the cabin. But you know, hey,
one plus three is a party. I'm just saying now,

(06:37):
there are very few of these tickets left, so take
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plus three cabin. They're gonna sell out, I'm telling you.
So make sure you get your tickets now and join
me on the Toime Jordana Foundation twenty twenty five Fantastic Voyage.
And that is what's trending.

Speaker 1 (06:53):
June first, nineteen twenty one, in the Greenwood District in
Tot's of Oklahoma, a riot, brace out a race. Right,
of course, white residents take to the skies and airplanes
and drop explosives on the black residents of Tosa, Oklahoma,
killing three hundred people, many of them children. Of course,

(07:13):
no one has ever brought to account for this. It
was the first time that an American city was bombed
from the air, the very first time.

Speaker 3 (07:22):
It would not be the last.

Speaker 1 (07:25):
May thirteenth, nineteen eighty five and six two two one
Osage Avenue in Philadelphia, apartment building is bombed by Philadelphia
Police Operation Move. They dropped a military grade device on
the apartment building. It resulted in sixty buildings being destroyed.

(07:47):
They let it burn for hours. It also resulted in
the death of twelve people, five of them children.

Speaker 3 (07:53):
And though many people.

Speaker 1 (07:55):
Raised doubts and concerns, and they were very angry, no
one was ever by to account.

Speaker 2 (08:00):
No one.

Speaker 1 (08:02):
Now September thirtieth, twenty twenty five, at three o'clock in
the morning, another apartment building is rated. Children infants are
walked out with zip ties on. All of the residents
are told to leave. Here is the thing. These things
have happened over and over and over and over again,

(08:26):
and they so little to no regard for children at all.
And when people talk to me about how far we've come.
It seems to me that the more things change, the
more they say the same.

Speaker 3 (08:42):
That's a little note from the ged section. It's the
deal Hugley show.

Speaker 2 (08:46):
She's jazz, she smiles. It's the jazzy report.

Speaker 6 (08:51):
I'm in d L.

Speaker 2 (08:52):
Hughley sound. The only woman on Tennessee's death row has
been scheduled for execution more than thirty years after after
she killed a teenage romantic rival. The Tennessee Supreme Court
schedule the execution of Christa Gale Pike September thirtieth, twenty
twenty six. If Pike's execution is carried out, she will
be the first woman executed in Tennessee in over two

(09:14):
hundred years.

Speaker 1 (09:14):
Yeah, well Texas did it, cal of Fay Tucker, Carli
fay Bakery.

Speaker 2 (09:18):
But this is in Tennessee. I know, maybe they getting
through the teas well. It's the nineteenth should be the
nineteenth woman to be executed in US history.

Speaker 1 (09:25):
Yeah, Carla fay Baker was ar Tucker was the Calin
fay Baker or Tucker was the last. She was an
axe murder right in Texas and she was born against
Christian that like Texas like well, tell Jesus. We said, Hi, Tucker,
Cali Fay Tucker, you're gonna be talking to the Lord.

Speaker 2 (09:42):
Take home.

Speaker 3 (09:43):
That's right, born again Christian.

Speaker 2 (09:45):
Yeah, I don't know if Tennessee has elected to do
the firing squad. You know, you can have their choice
of the South Carolina, right, or the firing squad you
think in South Carolina. Yeah, it's a couple of places.
I think.

Speaker 1 (09:56):
The lower the IQ, I'm telling you, the lower of
the test scores, the higher the islands, the higher propensity
provider that. It's funny because Texas is now going to Chicago.
Texas National Guards are going to Chicago, and they're driving
past cities that have a higher crime rate. Discussing the
drive through Texas, and both both Dallas and Houston have

(10:18):
higher cos. So your your people got to drive through
danger's neighborhoods to get.

Speaker 2 (10:21):
To get you some place it's not as dangerous. That's
alets stupid, speaking of danger. People with severe obesity are
likely to face discrimination when called health care, with many
clinics outright refuse well, I didn't know they outright refused
to see them, they say. A new study says about
forty one percent of the clinics refused to schedule an
appointment for a hypothetical patient wing four hundred and sixty

(10:42):
five pounds. Come on, now, do you know who the
biggest uh group of doctors are? Who say no.

Speaker 3 (10:48):
White doctors like that.

Speaker 2 (10:49):
No, a certain kind, like a specialty.

Speaker 1 (10:51):
Oh uh, turness, gird just tell me who there?

Speaker 7 (10:56):
Well?

Speaker 1 (10:56):
Yeah, well, because they're always full with food, how could
they get they?

Speaker 3 (11:00):
Yeah, I'm telling you, just shut up and I'm gonna
tell you something.

Speaker 1 (11:05):
Do you know that if this is if the Democrats
fold and the problem can get their way, a couple
making eighty five thousand dollars a year who played seven
thousands a year for a premium, their premiums could go
as high as twenty five thousand dollars. So all these people,
this is what you guys said you want. And if
they fold, if they don't get something, if they don't
get some some of the protectings Obama of the Affordable

(11:27):
Health Care Act, people are going to go bankrupt just
paying for health insurance.

Speaker 3 (11:30):
And this is something you want.

Speaker 8 (11:32):
Is voted for.

Speaker 1 (11:34):
Uh So a man arrives for to pick up a
woman for a first day, and she demands two on
and fifty four a babysitter, and I believe the Latin
word for that is by. I think that that's their laddin.
I'm pretty sure that that. I don't know what that means.
Is it a man's responsibility to pay for a women's
babysitter when going on a date? That is the question
that we're going to post you eight seven seven Set.

Speaker 2 (11:57):
Us up on Twitter at doo Hugley Radio or on Facebook.
The dyohu we shore on the website is THEDEO.

Speaker 1 (12:01):
He was so a man A rives a bigger woman
up for a date. She says she needs two hundred
and fifty dollars for a babysitter. Here's the audio going on.

Speaker 9 (12:09):
You get in, I need to fifty for the babysitter.

Speaker 2 (12:12):
You need to for the babysitter. Yeah, you want to
go on this date?

Speaker 5 (12:15):
Right?

Speaker 3 (12:16):
You aren't going to date?

Speaker 10 (12:17):
Take day?

Speaker 2 (12:18):
I need to fifty for the babysitter.

Speaker 3 (12:21):
First off, are these kids made of gold?

Speaker 6 (12:23):
No?

Speaker 2 (12:23):
Terms of fifty dollars?

Speaker 11 (12:24):
Well?

Speaker 2 (12:25):
Second off, how long are they going to be gone?

Speaker 12 (12:27):
Right?

Speaker 2 (12:28):
I mean, I don't know what the going rate for
a babysitter is.

Speaker 3 (12:31):
Well, I was an out.

Speaker 1 (12:32):
Well as you know, you were baby, I was a babysitter,
was my How much did you get paid for out
of nothing?

Speaker 3 (12:37):
I would see, I was taking it back. It was
for me with slave labor.

Speaker 1 (12:41):
Hold on, I was, yeah, were these children, Yeah, but
it was a slave labor they were. I was forced
but you helped to bring them here? So no, no, no,
but here when I babysitted them. I didn't get it
fair adequate our conversation, I was, I was, you know,
I don't want to say you were free though.

Speaker 2 (12:58):
The slavery is what it was though, access to sunshine,
all those things, how many how many breaks did you get?

Speaker 3 (13:06):
None?

Speaker 13 (13:07):
It was?

Speaker 12 (13:08):
It was.

Speaker 3 (13:10):
It was really slavery.

Speaker 1 (13:12):
Did you say, yes, it was kind of Are you
getting reparation? No, not at all. I'm just I'm the
I'm the black people of our relationship.

Speaker 2 (13:20):
That's what I am.

Speaker 1 (13:20):
I'm I was forced into slave laboring, never fairly compensated. Wow,
And I know I took care of them. I paid
for them and I had to to watch them.

Speaker 2 (13:32):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (13:33):
Yeah, yeah, so I think, uh, but nevertheless, I can,
I think I can weigh in with my level of
expertise is on the world's greatest BASI ever, let's ask
Kyle that maybe I think I think I think that
whatever deal like I would not do it, But then
I means somebody wouldn't do it, and whatever. If he
thinks that's a fair deal, then who am I to say?

(13:54):
But I do think that's awful presumptuous for somebody to
say something like that.

Speaker 2 (13:59):
But we can't authorize. Is the collapse? You know?

Speaker 1 (14:02):
Yeah, if you want that? What the class? Yeah, how
do we do for the It better be worth it.
I take you out two hundred fifty.

Speaker 2 (14:08):
Dollars collaps It sounds like I'm.

Speaker 1 (14:11):
Already If I spend two fifty on on a babysit,
you could expect Apple Bee's or waffle House after that.
I mean, you know, you're done blew all the money.
That a two hundred and fifty dollar a day would
be a good day. It would be a it would
be an expensive day. You It would be if you
went out to two under fifty that you have a
steak dinner. That was that seventy five dollars A piece
of hundred fifty dollars with drinks that's two twenty tip

(14:35):
tip so t shirt. Yeah, so you can run two
undre fifety just going to dinner. But no, but I'm
talking about seventy five dollars if it's all in like
a seventy five dollars meal. I'm talking about size included
or whatever. Salad is A is an expensive meal. So
you you got to remember that. That that that that,
and I ain't talking about the drinks. So you you

(14:56):
could spend two hundred and fifty dollars and that would
be a great day. Yeah, in addition to twenty fifty dollars,
I gotta pay for your kid. That's insane. But if
you will do it, what can I say? I mean,
if you think it's worth it, that's what can I say.
We're gonna get to your calls. And a bit of
man comes to pick a woman up for a date.
She says, that'll be two fifty please can you can
you catch that?

Speaker 3 (15:15):
For these brats I have?

Speaker 5 (15:16):
You ain't even pay for the data card, nothing near
to get out the driveway right right?

Speaker 12 (15:21):
Man?

Speaker 1 (15:22):
So yeah, do you think like that is very presumptuous?
But what do you think is worth it? Eight seven
seven two six It is the deal? You can we
show you a twenty twenty five edition. Remember that if
you're in Richmond, Virginia will be there this Friday, Saturday
and Friday and Saturday, so I think the Saturday show
is already so the first Friday show, so a couple

(15:44):
of tickets less for the later show, So come check
me out. If you take a notion, Jasmine Sanders, is
it a man's responsibility to pay for a woman's babysit? No,
We've had different iterations of this argument, like should he
pay for an uber or should I think whatever you
whatever he feels comfortable doing. Well, first off, whatever she
feels comfortable asking for and he feels comfortable doing, is

(16:04):
that destined here and deal?

Speaker 8 (16:06):
Right?

Speaker 2 (16:06):
That would be what it is. Well, I don't like
the word responsible. It's not your responsibility. It's not your
responsibility to pay for uh babysitters. Yeah, but I think
if you want to, if you have the money and
you know that that's an issue for her in terms
of being able to go out, and you really lie her,
you know.

Speaker 1 (16:25):
Then hey, paper, that would make me look it would
make me look at her differently.

Speaker 2 (16:29):
Well, of course that's why I said that. If she
puts it on you and says it's your responsibility to it,
I don't like that. But I think if you ask
a woman out and she says, well, I would love
to go, but I don't have a babysitter, and he offers, yeah,
I don't know why, it's two hundred and fifty dollars.
But again, I don't know what they're going right for
a babysitter.

Speaker 1 (16:44):
You can't get more for babysitter than chance be for it.
You can't that that can't happen. Bye, let me tell
you something. That's what surprised two or three hour day
two JJ with two to four hours.

Speaker 2 (16:57):
Sometime to figure out, like, what is the price per
hour fifty hour? I don't know, two hundred fifty dollars?

Speaker 3 (17:01):
You could get a good hooker for that, I'm telling you.
I have you ever been on Instagrams?

Speaker 1 (17:06):
I'm just telling you that there will be Now.

Speaker 2 (17:12):
I think, wow, what national average rakes about nineteen fifty
per hour? So you'm an average?

Speaker 3 (17:20):
So you want double the average?

Speaker 12 (17:22):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (17:22):
Now in California it's twenty three almost twenty four hours an.

Speaker 3 (17:24):
Hour, But you want double the average?

Speaker 2 (17:26):
Yeah you do?

Speaker 1 (17:27):
Hell no, hell no? And how many kids are we
talking about? And who wouldn't do that? For two undred
fifty Most people don't make two on fiftyous a day.
Dollars is the date we're just gonna stay at your Yeah,
that's yeah something most people in America do not make
two on fiftyous a day, especially now.

Speaker 3 (17:45):
So do you think it's worth it? It is the deal?

Speaker 1 (17:49):
Can we show you twenty twenty five edition. I will
say this so you know I did. I host it
to kamalas I moderated her book uh tour on Saturday
a Sunday. Didn't she say that he would try to
invoke the insiration she did? And he's trying to do words.
We have troops that are leaving Texas going to other states.

(18:09):
I know that if if somebody came to Texas and
tried to tell them what to do, it would be
a problem. And you're gonna go to the wrong place,
and you're gonna have a problem with your with your
drawl and your accent and your air of nah. That
ain't gonna work everywhere, baby boy, We're gonna have a problem.
And that's exactly what he's doing it for. He's trying
to antagonize people. Anyway, back to the matter in hand,

(18:30):
This traffling ass chick fifty dollars so they can they
can they can watch your kids.

Speaker 3 (18:37):
What do you think, Julius, would you do it?

Speaker 4 (18:41):
That would be new? But I think it's for two
hundred and fifty. It was probably for a mama. You know,
you get a mama to watch the kids. You know,
I got to suck on the I don't care who
was for. I could see I could see a hundred.
I can see a hundred. Yeah, yeah, I could see
a hundred.

Speaker 5 (18:54):
And you know what that Just like Jasmine said, you
talk about that when I ask you out on a date,
don't they pull up and say all right leave? Yeah,
say hey, I love to go out with you, but
I don't have a babysitter.

Speaker 2 (19:03):
And okay, we'll talk about that.

Speaker 1 (19:05):
Right, Imagine the kid, because a lot of people back
in the day used to make money babysitting, right, yepes.

Speaker 3 (19:12):
Right, imagine a kid.

Speaker 1 (19:14):
If a kid got two and fifty dollars for babysit
kids that he wouldn't make that in a in a day,
in a good.

Speaker 2 (19:21):
Job, he might make more than his daddy, right, just
saying he might a couple of hours or a couple
of hours he might.

Speaker 5 (19:29):
If I'd have known that, I'd have brought my teenage kid.
We watch these kids while I break off.

Speaker 4 (19:33):
There there, Mama, wait a minute, or they so bad
ass kids and they need extra protection.

Speaker 2 (19:37):
I don't know what's that eighty five dollars hour?

Speaker 3 (19:40):
Man? Come on?

Speaker 2 (19:42):
And I also think it was again very inconsiderate to
just springing on him at the last minute, like you
just show up. Of course, I'm fair you springing up
at the last minute instead of when he asked you, you
should have said, well, I don't know, let me see
if I can get a babysitter, and if not, you know,
I have to work around that.

Speaker 1 (19:58):
And if I picked Coke come to pick you up
and you already know how much the baby's is gonna be,
then you already you're trying to hustle me. Because if
you already know what the baby, that means you already
arranged this person for this amount.

Speaker 2 (20:12):
And why are you still paying this particular babysitter who's
charging you two hundred and fifty dollars, you know, for
a couple of hours. Why are you go get somebody
up right jetting down the block? And then she wanted
a high end restaurant. I thought, we go to a
higher risk. Well, baby, you just knocked it down to
it try to got that.

Speaker 1 (20:29):
Just knocked it down to Have you ever been have
you ever had steamy hot churches, chicken in the parking?

Speaker 2 (20:34):
Let me tell you?

Speaker 3 (20:39):
Let me tell you something.

Speaker 7 (20:40):
No.

Speaker 3 (20:40):
No, first off, I don't know if I like you
at all?

Speaker 2 (20:44):
Right, at all?

Speaker 1 (20:46):
That is very presumptuous. But what do you think? So
the question we're asking this is the scenario.

Speaker 2 (20:51):
You want to take me on a date. So these
high end restaurants, you can't pay some.

Speaker 9 (20:54):
Fifty four day The money I got is for the date, though,
one for your baby, So I won't you had your
babydaddy pays for what?

Speaker 3 (21:01):
Well, do you think it was his responsiblity? Want that
regular focus?

Speaker 11 (21:04):
Hell to the non, absolutely not unless the guy has
offered in advance. I will pay your babysitter, you know,
whomever is going out with him. That is your responsibility,
the woman's responsibility to make arrangements. That is absolutely wrong
and it's wrong for any female to think that it's

(21:28):
okay that he should pay.

Speaker 8 (21:30):
No, what you should do.

Speaker 11 (21:32):
Is you should stay home.

Speaker 12 (21:34):
If just at the date you should be able to
have You should have a daycare.

Speaker 8 (21:37):
Every set up a man's already paying for the dinner
in the show, you.

Speaker 12 (21:40):
At least take care of your own kids. That's what
I feel about it.

Speaker 8 (21:44):
Absolutely not. And then what type of a woman?

Speaker 11 (21:47):
First off, you must got have five or ten kids?
Come about two hundred and fifty four dollars?

Speaker 8 (21:53):
First off, who's gonna pay two hundred and fifty four
dollars to go out on the date? This is not
his responsibility. Those are not his children.

Speaker 13 (22:01):
And as a first date, who does that?

Speaker 8 (22:03):
He needs to leave her at the door and keep
it moving. I think that man should not be responsible.
A fay for the babysitter to say, the man shows interest.
He asked the woman out on the tea. Now the
woman needs to decide that she wants to go on
the date. If he is interested in going, she needs
to look at her personal life and agenda in her

(22:24):
personal world and see if she is able to go
on the date. But that's not his responsibility. He just
expressed interest for those are her kids, so she needs
to figure out what she want to do to do
what she wants to do.

Speaker 14 (22:37):
I have charged a man to bet, you know, to
go out on a date for him to watch my kids.
But the difference was when we went out, it had
to be the first date. I would choose a price
like Applebee's, you know, somewhere where two could dine at
a minimum price, and that's kind of compensated him praying
for the for the babysittle. But I wouldn't charge an

(22:57):
outrageous price like two under the figure dollars.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
It's just great.

Speaker 15 (23:00):
Well, my whole thing is I mean, first of all,
two hundred and fifty dollars, that's an expensive babysitter in
my opinion. Now you know, maybe the race have changed
since last time I had to have a babysitter. That
seems kind of expensive to me. But at the same time,
did this young lady tell this man that was that
he was gonna have to pay for a babysitter before

(23:22):
she agreed to go out with him? And I'm just
wondering if he went ahead and paid the two fifty
for the babysitter and then took out for a date,
because I know if it were me, I will probably
have reservations about taking this young lady out on a
date if she sprung this two hundred and fifty dollars
thing on me. As I'm coming to the door to
pick her up.

Speaker 3 (23:42):
So the question we're asking this is the scenario.

Speaker 2 (23:44):
Why don't you get in the.

Speaker 3 (23:45):
Car, like, come on, you, I can't just leave my kids.

Speaker 2 (23:48):
We were coming up to.

Speaker 9 (23:48):
The week though, Okay, so you ain't got two fifty
to the baby, so I'm paying for the day on all,
I'm saying, listen, I can't. I can't give you two fifty.

Speaker 2 (23:57):
Now you want to take me on a date.

Speaker 10 (23:58):
So these high restaurants, I pay to fifty for a day.

Speaker 9 (24:01):
And the money I got is for the date though,
one for your baby. So why don't you have your baby?
Daddy paid for the kid.

Speaker 2 (24:06):
Okay, so then he should be taking me on the day. There,
I'm saying, like, come on, you should have had that
to care before I pulled it up. What Okay?

Speaker 10 (24:13):
So then I think you should pull off because that's.

Speaker 9 (24:15):
How you feel, right, because that's not my responsibility.

Speaker 7 (24:19):
Yeah, if you want to take me on to day,
it's going to.

Speaker 2 (24:22):
Be your responsibility.

Speaker 9 (24:23):
What you're talking about, it is not your responsibilities, you
know what.

Speaker 3 (24:26):
Yes, you can pull off because you already talking about
my kids.

Speaker 16 (24:28):
That's your responsibility obviously not.

Speaker 10 (24:31):
Obviously not obviously not yep, Uh huh, you gone off
going on.

Speaker 2 (24:36):
Out bye goodbye.

Speaker 3 (24:39):
Do you think he was responsible? I was going to
the phones.

Speaker 7 (24:42):
I don't think he really wanted to go, not with
not with two hundred and fifty dollars on the sleeve.

Speaker 8 (24:47):
She didn't want to go.

Speaker 12 (24:48):
That was a red flag for him to run.

Speaker 7 (24:50):
If I came to a man and said two fifty
for my children before you take me out, I'm ficking,
I'm finn play you, I'm fitting, I'm figuring work with brother.

Speaker 8 (24:59):
So he needed to go.

Speaker 11 (25:00):
I had to run while he got a chance, because
that was a red flag.

Speaker 8 (25:03):
It all depends this is the first date or that
it was the first date. Yeah, I go and pay
the babysit like I'm trying to hit. But that that
hit ain't no more babysit not going on my pocket.

Speaker 7 (25:13):
I do believe he has a point. But I will
tell you one thing. Women and men who leave with
their money now, they open themselves up for a.

Speaker 8 (25:20):
Whole loup usury.

Speaker 7 (25:22):
Now that I was a man, I would take a
woman out and I would spend a minimum amount, you know,
a reasonable amount, just to see where her head is
really it. Because these women out here are ferocious.

Speaker 12 (25:33):
I mean, they don't give a damn.

Speaker 2 (25:35):
Some of them, not all now huns.

Speaker 7 (25:37):
Some of them will just take and take and take
and take and expect you to pay for them, their
children and their friends, which is ridiculous.

Speaker 12 (25:45):
You know, the man, he's.

Speaker 7 (25:46):
Dating you, he's trying to get the date you. You know,
you know everything else comes secondary.

Speaker 11 (25:51):
You know, you have to get pants at first.

Speaker 7 (25:53):
But anyways, I say, you know, just be careful because
no matter who you are, these people out here nowadays,
they will rip you all the way off.

Speaker 13 (26:00):
That's crazy when the dating becomes such a chore. Now
why it's a woman, whoever has the kids, that's your responsibility,
or maybe you shouldn't be going on dates, if you
know what I mean. I mean, but it's not the
man's responsibility to do it. It's absurd the things that
I see these young people go through now in dating.
It's like they forgot what the whole purpose of dating

(26:22):
is for. So uh, no, you need a child, you
need someone a babysit your kids. Stay home and stay
with your kids and stop dating.

Speaker 12 (26:32):
I think that's insane. Why someone pay a babysitter just
to take them out, or just to pay the girls
babysitter to take them out. That's asking for way too much.
Does he even know the kid?

Speaker 5 (26:43):
Like?

Speaker 12 (26:43):
Why am I paying for the child services? And this
is not my child? Like that's crazy, that's crazy.

Speaker 1 (26:48):
Now it's time for the Bootleg movie review with a libo,
the Bootleg Warrior.

Speaker 17 (26:54):
I'm there, sell me and I who lie? May says
t me tim me hamm oh dl my home?

Speaker 13 (27:06):
Brother?

Speaker 6 (27:06):
What's that?

Speaker 12 (27:07):
What?

Speaker 6 (27:07):
The holiday season is almost up?

Speaker 3 (27:09):
Yes, this is.

Speaker 17 (27:10):
The time of the year when everyone start planning to
spend time with the cheddish friends and the family. You
sit around the dinner table and you're reming in this
about the older days. And as you know, I am
from a warrior family. We were completely different. I was
a warrior from my first breath. After I cut my

(27:31):
own an umbilical cord, the doctor.

Speaker 6 (27:33):
Cried, I'm serious.

Speaker 17 (27:35):
I arrived at home in the first words I added
was Daddy's home.

Speaker 6 (27:40):
I'm serious.

Speaker 17 (27:41):
When I was six years of age, I started telling
my parents the bedtime stories of my conquest, and when
I would give them an allowance, they all thanked me
so much.

Speaker 6 (27:52):
Oh oh, when my older sister.

Speaker 17 (27:54):
Lost her virginity, I found it and gave it back
to our I'm.

Speaker 18 (27:58):
Sitting to Do is about the fact the movie is
one battle after another, starting Leonardo de Cappuccino and Tianna Taylor.
In this movie, a group of ex revolutionaries must reunite
when the evil enemy their surfaces after the sixteen years.

(28:20):
They must come together because they must rescue one of
their own daughter. You see, Leonardo de Cappuccino and Tiana
are a couple, and Tiana gives a new meaning to
determine ride or the dye cheek. She riding and a
lot of people are dying because the daughter that was
kidnapped was hers and Leonardo's.

Speaker 6 (28:43):
The movie is filled with action and a lot of blood.

Speaker 17 (28:46):
Leonardo de Cappuccino, he's very good in this film, but Tiana.

Speaker 6 (28:52):
Steals the film.

Speaker 17 (28:53):
She is turning into a good access She kicks ass
with her find ass.

Speaker 6 (29:00):
I'm City Off.

Speaker 17 (29:01):
I get this movie, four Handbags and my newborn game
water Up Family Fuel. It's a game where two families start,
but only one family finishes the game. I'm City This
is in Libo your hacking Water Off with the strim
haking movie of you.

Speaker 6 (29:19):
I'm There, Selamney and Honey.

Speaker 17 (29:23):
Stay safe and healthy omy omonym.

Speaker 1 (29:30):
Oh oh, it is the deal. He will show your
twenty twenty five. Sure, if you're going to be in
the Richmond area, short pub he Rico County. I will
be this Friday and Saturday at the Richmond n prov
So tickets going fast.

Speaker 3 (29:43):
Come check me out if you take a notion.

Speaker 1 (29:45):
What I find interesting is I watch I don't watch
Seeing End because it called me. I like Abby Phillips
a lot. But Scott Jennings, the white dude who's always
on the shows. Yeah, that Scott Jennings. He has to
be her co sign like it's apparently he's a chaperone.
They have to have a white guy who is sitting
next to a because I don't understand what his use
is because he's always going to There is nothing he's

(30:07):
ever heard or seen that Republicans have done that he
would not justify, including marching children now with zip ties on,
and it's like there's a dangerous gang and they use
them for human shields. How many times did we watch
children be harmed because somebody said they were using them
as human seals?

Speaker 3 (30:22):
Don't we have a hole?

Speaker 1 (30:24):
It isn't not a you know in a country in
the region of the world thousands of miles away where
people are saying exactly the same thing we are supposed
to do. Shoot through the kids to get to the
people you want. And kids don't get to decide where
they live. And this is the thing people don't seem
to understand. Do you remember three or four, maybe two
or three years ago, there was a neonatal nurse at

(30:44):
a hospital in Virginia and she was breaking the black
infants legs. Kid remember that she was breaking their legs.
Now we have another example. I remember the first time
I ever had a policeman pull a gun on me.
I was eight seven eight seven, eight years old. It
was the first time I ever smelled garlic because I
didn't know what it was. I'm like, what is this
smelling like? He was talking to me and I smelled

(31:06):
like I was. He obviously had had lunch, and I'm like,
maybe it's why I don't like garlic now, But maybe
I'm serious. I can't stand garlic. But imagine, the best
time of teaching child is when they're anything?

Speaker 2 (31:20):
Is when what when they're young?

Speaker 3 (31:22):
When they're young?

Speaker 1 (31:22):
They say that children can learn things while they're in
the world. Yeah, for sure, so if I learned, if
that's my why do you?

Speaker 2 (31:30):
So you will?

Speaker 1 (31:31):
And I guarantee you that that experience that those kids
have had in Chicago's not too much difference than the
ones I had. I imagine that they are black children
all over the country and inner cities that learned their
lessons at a very young age. So then you create
the very monster that you say you're worried about, just
like those kids who grew up somebody broke their arms.
This country tells you over and over again how it

(31:52):
feels about you, and you can't tell you you're making
You're basically creating the environment for them people. Then you
worry why we don't trust this country. You wonder why
we don't trust these people.

Speaker 2 (32:04):
And you wonder why when a black person sees a
police officer they run right and you say, well, they
were fleeing. They were skinned.

Speaker 3 (32:11):
First off, they don't know how to flee.

Speaker 2 (32:13):
They know how to flee, They do know how to
and they know how.

Speaker 3 (32:19):
They don't have a frolic No, not not us. Maybe
these new dudes do. I've never heard.

Speaker 2 (32:26):
We didn't.

Speaker 1 (32:26):
The worst thing I saw was skip, that's all. But
that frolicking and fleeing.

Speaker 2 (32:31):
It's a whole movement over the summer and last summer
hashtag black boy.

Speaker 3 (32:35):
Did you missed that one?

Speaker 2 (32:36):
Ski I missed that one?

Speaker 3 (32:37):
Yeah yeah, frolicing of course, yeah, hell yeah.

Speaker 1 (32:40):
Sometimes people get really upset with the things I say.
So we're gonna give you an opportunity event with that
segment called that few deal Hugly won't you please welcome
our f you deal Huglely cours find that little Niee Jane,
This is.

Speaker 16 (32:51):
James Huge corspone our first be kind of it's your Facebook.

Speaker 6 (32:57):
Later sixty five says d L.

Speaker 16 (33:00):
I thought the audiobook version of your new book.

Speaker 3 (33:02):
I enjoyed listening to you.

Speaker 2 (33:03):
If there's one problem your voice?

Speaker 16 (33:06):
You say, when I get an audio book, I listen
to a smooth voice, read a voice like Jajol Jones
or the God from All State. But instead I listen
to your gravelly voice. How much do you smoke?

Speaker 2 (33:18):
But do you gurgle with razor blades? Next time, get
someone with a nice voice to read your audiobook.

Speaker 16 (33:23):
I'd rather listen to someone rake their noise across the
chalkboard to listen to your horrendous voice.

Speaker 3 (33:28):
Tugly, Our next.

Speaker 16 (33:30):
F you deal Hugely response comes from a deal Hugely
show listener who sent a message.

Speaker 3 (33:35):
To the app.

Speaker 16 (33:36):
pH Me seventy five says, d O I listen to
your little radio show near the every day. Admittedly you
are very entertaining. The problem is you think you know
everything about anything. What are you the smartest uneducated middle
school dropout the world has ever seen?

Speaker 2 (33:54):
Fuck you deal Googly.

Speaker 16 (33:57):
Today's last fu dl Hughley response is a message from
Facebook from another radio listener. Crunch forty five says, Dio,
how are you always giving us healthcakes?

Speaker 2 (34:08):
You'rewly saying, don't eat.

Speaker 16 (34:09):
Nitrates, don't use antipersp watch your sugar and carbonekis. But
you smoke and drink every day? Do you like the
fat doctor who tells me I need.

Speaker 2 (34:18):
To lose weight?

Speaker 16 (34:20):
You dl Hughlely.

Speaker 2 (34:22):
That's it for this week.

Speaker 16 (34:23):
This is been NISI James your f you DL Hughey correspondent,
and until next week.

Speaker 1 (34:28):
Fine, I'm gonna recognize the good and so one as
a human being of the week. Jazz and somebody out
there as human find them and tell us who it's actually.

Speaker 2 (34:33):
Colin Kaepernick. Oh yeah, yep, he funded an autopsy that
actually found out that Trey Reed did not die by suicide.

Speaker 3 (34:40):
Yeah, of course, of course he didn't die by no.
Yeah of course, but you know.

Speaker 2 (34:44):
You have to have an investigation, of course, be able
to pay for the I didn't know autopsis cost so much,
they like at least ten grand.

Speaker 3 (34:49):
Well you are, yeah, and that's why they don't do
them on poor people.

Speaker 2 (34:53):
Yep.

Speaker 3 (34:53):
That's why he looked like he got stabbed at me. Okay,
that's it.

Speaker 2 (34:57):
Do you agree?

Speaker 1 (34:58):
Yeah, you know that's why they'll make these monikers like
natural causes, how you die at natural closes at twenty something.

Speaker 7 (35:06):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (35:07):
But Colin Kaepernick is our human being other week, and
you know what, I'm so glad that he got a
lot of money. I'm glad that he I mean, I
wish he could have played, but you know, he's still
doing things and being true to.

Speaker 3 (35:19):
What he believes his mission is.

Speaker 2 (35:21):
Hasn't back down, and so I'm.

Speaker 1 (35:22):
Very proud of So he's our human big the other
week when we give him the class there it is
right there.

Speaker 3 (35:27):
Now, it's time. But what you need to know with
the one and only Sybil Wilkes.

Speaker 10 (35:31):
It's Sybil Wilkes, with what we need to know. The
Canadian Prime minister is returning to Washington, d C.

Speaker 2 (35:36):
This week.

Speaker 10 (35:37):
President Trump and Prime Minister Mark Kearney are scheduled to
meet at the White House Tuesday. Reports suggests the two
leaders have grown closer since their last tenths exchange, when
Trump joked about making Canada the fifty first US state.
Canada struggled to finalize a new trade deal since the
United States in post a thirty five percent tariff.

Speaker 2 (35:57):
I'm Canadian exports.

Speaker 10 (35:58):
White House officials say that visit will focus on strengthening
economic and security cooperation between the neighboring countries.

Speaker 2 (36:06):
In Illinois, Governor JB.

Speaker 10 (36:08):
Pritzker is accusing President Trump and ICE of thuggery in Chicago.
Pritzker says ICE agents staged a military style raid on
an apartment complex, calling the operation an invasion targeting residents
by race.

Speaker 17 (36:23):
I mean, we had a week in Chicago where eleven
people were murdered and thirty eight people were shot.

Speaker 2 (36:28):
And then if we have a governor get up and shay,
oh it's shape, we.

Speaker 10 (36:31):
Can head it.

Speaker 2 (36:32):
He can handle it.

Speaker 10 (36:32):
The governor warned the administration's plan to federalize three hundred
Illinois National Guard members will only heighten the tensions. Kroger
is recalling several Deli products over possible listeria contamination. The
recall covers basil Pesto, bow tie salads and smoke Mozzarelli
Penny salads, sold in nearly two thousand stores across twenty

(36:55):
eight states. Customers are urged to throw away or return
the products a refund.

Speaker 2 (37:01):
Sean Diddy comes is.

Speaker 10 (37:02):
Asking to serve his fifty month federal prison sentence at
Fort Dix in New Jersey. His legal team says the
low security facility is closer to the family and offers
a top rated residential drug abuse program. Did He has
already spent a year in custody at the Metropolitan Detention
Center in Brooklyn, New York. To subscribe to my free
daily newsletter, please visit Sibilwilkes dot com. For all the

(37:25):
news twenty four to seven, go to newswe dot com.
I'm Sibil Wilkes. Be Informed, b empowered.

Speaker 1 (37:31):
Thank you so very much, Sybil Jasmine Today, Well, I
guess we don't keep on going more. The deal Huge
Show is coming right up. It's the Huge Show. It
is the dl Uge Show. Your twenty twenty five. Hey, Richmond, Virginia,
you're up next. I will be there this Friday and Saturday.
So we have two Friday, two Saturday, and so I
think the first Saturday show of the first Friday show
and the second Saturday show, we might.

Speaker 2 (37:53):
Have tickets four.

Speaker 3 (37:55):
I think this, you know, for the two late show.

Speaker 1 (37:57):
So come check me out if you take a notion
this whole bad bunny thing, which is really interesting to me.
You know, there are seven states in America that had
that originated with Spanish names, right the California, Arizona, in
the bad New Mexico, Texas at Florida, yep. Right, many
of us live in like I live in a city,

(38:18):
the city I was raised in, Los Angeles city I
live in now Calabasia.

Speaker 3 (38:21):
The street I live on are all Spanish.

Speaker 1 (38:24):
And you've got these people talking about, you know, the
the what country has the most Spanish speaking people?

Speaker 2 (38:29):
What you say it is, Oh, probably in the United.

Speaker 1 (38:31):
States, Mexican Mexico, you know, as a second in the
United States. So US saying that we don't know how
to speak Spanish here you can't, right, you can't. Mostly
the seventh States you can't go through primarily wealthy, the
wealthiest ones, right, California and Texas and in Florida, among
the wealthier states, I'd say that they're.

Speaker 3 (38:50):
In the top five.

Speaker 6 (38:50):
Right.

Speaker 3 (38:52):
You can't. You can't. Where do you live? What city
you live in?

Speaker 5 (38:56):
Uh?

Speaker 3 (38:56):
Skip?

Speaker 2 (38:57):
I live in a suburb of Dallas, Plano.

Speaker 1 (38:59):
Yeah, I bet it's I bet that Spanish cert wars.
It's a lot of cities in all of these states, right.
And the thing I can't stand is, how is it
that you suppose that those states and cities and streets
got Spanish names.

Speaker 3 (39:13):
I don't think they hear, no, but it's so hypocritical.

Speaker 2 (39:16):
No, I get that.

Speaker 1 (39:16):
I don't think a lot of Spanish they just don't
care why you're speaking Spanish. Why because if I wanted
to write you, I be speaking Spanish. If I wonder
if you gave me your address, I be speaking Spanish.

Speaker 2 (39:28):
You're going on that girl's trip to Las Vegas, I
be speaking Spanish. And somebody I saw a video a
couple of days ago on social media where this white
lady in home depots was very irritating because she would
she was like, she's speaking Spanish.

Speaker 1 (39:45):
To me, Like, you know, my grandkids can speaks some Spanish,
and you know they also like U like they love
to mop for some reason they love I swear, I'm
not even trying to be fun. I'm not trying to
be funny. I'm not trying to wear your failing miserably said. Man,
if you don't put that little mob down, I bet
you better.

Speaker 11 (40:05):
I want.

Speaker 1 (40:08):
I'm getting my youngest one of leaf Bloord for Christmas.
But that's so funny to me. All you're gonna do
do in the super Bowl to eat anyone? You're not
gonna hear a bad bunny of the country of your nachos.

Speaker 3 (40:20):
Fat ass.

Speaker 2 (40:22):
I mean, I will say, I will say, I think
it's really sad that you would, you know, be upset
that a very popular, successful artist is performing during the
Super Bowl because you have an issue with their language.

Speaker 12 (40:38):
You know.

Speaker 2 (40:38):
I feel the same way about anybody who said or
spoke sideways about Jennifer Lopez and all of that. I
think it's the same thing. But I think I think, well,
they were pretty big stars, and I think I think
you go with whatever you think the audience is gonna like.
Its case, I think people want to see bad money,

(40:59):
give them bad money.

Speaker 3 (40:59):
Why do I want to see Dad. Why do I
want to see him?

Speaker 2 (41:02):
I didn't know you did.

Speaker 3 (41:03):
No, I don't know.

Speaker 8 (41:03):
Why.

Speaker 3 (41:04):
Why do I think that this is important.

Speaker 1 (41:06):
I think it's important because I think it says something
about who America is.

Speaker 3 (41:12):
He she cares, not American, he is.

Speaker 1 (41:15):
He's an American before me at an American event, and
he has international appeal. He's an American. Some lives are
worse than nothing. I'm just trying to read it, though,
and we're going to prove it. To give us, just
give us the five thing, not the top.

Speaker 2 (41:33):
Five worst lives Man worst lies men tell women by
Julia Austin from Adam to War. Number five, I'm not married.
Self explanatory right there. Numberfore the top five worst lives.
Man tell woman my phone died. But yeah, I see you.
You see that little green dot right there social media.

(41:53):
Number three of the top five worst lives Men tell women,
she was just crazy when you're talking about that may
not be true, that may not be hugely it is.
It's not the worst, but it's definitely one the top five.
Number two of the top five worst lives men teld women.
I was just tested right along now square on. I
need to see all of this and the number one
of the top five worst lives Men tell women, I've

(42:15):
been single for a long time. That's really who's that
waiting in your car? Exactly? Who's that ring of your belt? No,
I'm sentimental, That's why I keep the ring out. Yeah,
I'm sure that's going to do it for it.

Speaker 1 (42:27):
Lady, gentlemen to deal, he ca, we show your twenty
twenty five edition. If you're in Richmond, Virginia. I will
be there this Friday and Saturday. So at the Richmond
Funny Bone in Rayko County. Short Pump. Yeah, sure, in
Racho County. So we have two Friday and two Saturdays.
Come check me off you taking no Ja said, what'd
you learn today? Do you remember Castor Samina cast Seminia,

(42:50):
the girl who was a DNA.

Speaker 3 (42:52):
She had a more.

Speaker 2 (42:55):
Yeah, and she was fighting for her position as a woman, yes,
as a woman man to continue to participate. She finally said,
I quit. Yeah, I just give up. She had been
I guess, challenging this and battling in court for seven years.
And you know, of course, in terms of her sex,
her eligibility was very high. It was, but she she

(43:16):
also had a certain amount of estrogen more than men,
and that was the conundrum that she was in the balance.
If you will she do for me? Yeah, at the
same yeah, basically, and she you know, was like, look,
I'm a woman. I just am And they were like,
that's not what this is.

Speaker 3 (43:32):
Some people that are born with both sex orders.

Speaker 2 (43:34):
Yeah, when Jamie Lee Curtis one of those.

Speaker 6 (43:35):
Yeah, I never saw it.

Speaker 3 (43:38):
I mean I didn't want to see it, but if okay,
well you know, I want to see the lady whatever.

Speaker 2 (43:49):
I just hate that for it though it went through
so much as she was incredible Now, I'm not going
to lie watching her. And it's probably sad to say,
but looking at her initially when I saw the first race,
I was like, Wow, that guy was running with the girls.
I didn't. I didn't know that. I felt really bad
about it. So I can only imagine where she was
going through mentally.

Speaker 1 (44:05):
Maybe her and Brittany Grinder, Yeah, they both have the
voice that you heard him skip my man, cheat them.
What'd you learn today?

Speaker 2 (44:16):
I wonder who Trump is gonna parton first. It's gonna
be Diddy or just Lain Maxwell.

Speaker 1 (44:20):
If he laye Maxwell, he is going to be held
Even Republicans go get man. We'll see he would never
get mad. I'll tell you you're gonna pardon a know'spetitor,
just cause that's still gonna tip of people from testifying.
They gonna get this.

Speaker 2 (44:37):
Listen, get it.

Speaker 1 (44:38):
It's gonna come out. And so of course by the
time they come out, you'll have troops in every city,
so you can all right on the next day you
can show jazz and said, it's gonna be talking all
that jazz with a vocal director and artist Steve Epting Junior.
Plus we gotta be giving the Deserver someone on to
the shoot me the wik Award. It's the deal you,
we said, we will definitely see you on the other side.

(44:59):
Cayle my favorite show up us operator Pool Leustraight, we
got to go.

Speaker 3 (45:02):
It's the deal you. We shall see you on the
other side.
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