Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
It is out of the deal. He will show you
twenty twenty five. Shit, all right, remember that if you're
in Richmond at Richmond Virginia, I will be there this
Friday and Saturday. So two shows Friday, two show Saturday
at the Richmond Funny Bone. In short Pump in Henriko County.
So in short.
Speaker 2 (00:22):
I don't know why that tickles here, but it doesn't.
I mean it doesn't.
Speaker 1 (00:30):
Yeah, I like, I like. Virginia's very pretty. The short
shanago about it. If you run the fall, it's gorgeous.
It's gorgeous. You know it's for lovers, but it's weird.
The girl who's running for governor, what's her name? Winsome
sears the black first oh man. Yeah, she looked like
James Brown. You see her, I'm seeing her. I mean,
if you're gonna be the first of anything, you can
(00:51):
get up and run a comb for your head, can't
you do that? You can bump your edges like that.
Ain't gonna hurt you, is it? It depends you cannot
walk around being a black woman looking like looking like
the model for the nickel. You cannot do it. She's
a Republican toy. Yeah, of course she is very much
so Republicans. The black people that were the black Republicans.
I know they have seated all that. Ain't no lotion,
(01:12):
ain't no cones, no self esteem, nothing for they try
to wear their hair. And Wayne Jints supposed to.
Speaker 3 (01:20):
Me a little edge taming a not nice little brush.
She could she could fix it.
Speaker 1 (01:24):
Her Edg's table better come with a pistol a chair.
I'm serious. Hers had to be made by six free
and Roy. Let me tell you something. Maybe it's a
tribute to Frederick Douglass or ext Wild. Every time she
walked out of here, you a here, you like the
(01:48):
town crier? Where was sleepy hollow at? Where was it that?
I don't know New England, wasn't it here? Ye hear ye?
All right, happy bird. Of course we know it's breast
cancer awareness one, and of course always self examination, make
(02:08):
sure regular doctor visions, exers, exercise water, you know, do
all the kind of things. And uh uh genius and
I have a touching tatas to save lives. Chios right
next to a relax your back and the orange shoes, yes,
m yeah, Tom can and right by omaha steaks that
(02:31):
right there, so I don't want to. Yeah, no, thanks,
we haven't had. We haven't had, you know, our official
paperwork hasn't come in yet, so sot not just yet,
not just yet, so right now we don't have to
wear gloves right now. We almost got the boots out
in front of Victoria's secrets. Yeah, but then there has
been too much. They don't get dressed. Come on over
(02:55):
before you put that bag off.
Speaker 2 (02:57):
I'm feeling nervous.
Speaker 1 (02:59):
Happy if they and Bruno Mars of course we're going
to celebrate today and it makes a happy birthday. The
Nick Cannon, Happy birthday, the mad Damon, Happy birthday of
the Chevy Chase. You know, I didn't even know that
was a welcome chase heavy chase as well in Maryland. Yeah,
Happy birthday to Grayson Allen, Have birthday. To Sigourney Reaver,
have birthday, the CC one is Jackson, Happy birthday, the
Robert cool Baal, Happy birthday, the Karen Parsons had birthda
(03:22):
to Teddy Riley. Happy birthday to Paul Holgan of course,
crocodile Hunter, that is possibus. Of course, Happy birthday to
I don't know what, No, Paul Hope, it's not the crocodile. No,
it's not what I'm thinking of that crocodile hook is
still very much a lot. Happy birthday to Moni Williams,
the NBA coach. Happy birthday the Bubba Wallace from NASCAR.
We got a great show coming up. Jazmin's gonna have
(03:44):
what's training. I'm gonna have a little note from the
ged section. It is the dl HU show. Jazz Many
tell these good people with Twindy what the president of
Ghana wants reparations? I don't blame Did you see this? Well,
A lot of people believe it out on social media.
They're like, nah, we don't need anybody speaking for us.
We haven't gotten reparations over here. Why should you get reparations? Well,
(04:07):
because I mean they took his natural resource. Yeh, that's
exactly what he said, of course.
Speaker 3 (04:12):
But people on social media like, yeah, but some of
your people helped them.
Speaker 1 (04:16):
Here's the thing. They had no idea when they when
they okay, it's almost like you sold your own people,
which is crazy because Pakistan and Pakistanis in India don't
see themselves the same people. Russians and Ukrainians don't see
themselves the same people. So they're not. It's of one
(04:37):
hundred different countries in Africa. They're not the same people
at all. So they were run to sell it. And
plus the other thing about it, they had no idea.
No one knew what slavery was like. They thought that they,
like slaves, had been taken and people would they would
be introduced into the culture. They had no idea. But
(04:57):
every time they wanted to justify the horror that they
have visited upon the world, they'd say that those aren't
the same people. One tribe is not the same as another.
Trip then I all want people. So they didn't sell
their people, they sold other people that they had to
fight conflict with. I mean, I mean that's a distinct
without a difference. But I still think that he I
can understand the basis for his argument. I don't think
it's just five, but I can understand the basis for it.
Speaker 2 (05:19):
Yeah, I mean I could too.
Speaker 1 (05:21):
All those people, all those people. He could have the NFL,
in the NBA, he could he could have all these
dope az artists. Yeah yeah.
Speaker 3 (05:29):
Also trending an update on what Diddy's going through. I
don't know if you saw where. Apparently he already had
some dates on the book to speak because he thought
he was going to get out, and Trump, of course says,
you know that he asked him or somebody from his
camp ask him for a pardon and fifty cent ain't
wasted no time on social media, always got something crazy
(05:49):
to say, you know, always for sure. And you know
a lot of people are making jokes about Diddy having
these dates on the books, saying that you know, hey,
just so you know, Diddy ain't gonna be available, but
if you need somebody, I'm it's crazy. Yeah, I know
he wants to serve his time at Fort Dix or
something like that.
Speaker 1 (06:06):
I bet. I guess the anger from Bad Bunny performing
in the super Bowl has not quite abated yet. People
are still very angry about it. Some people are talking
about boycotting the super Bowl. I remember the thing that
I find ironic. There are seven states in America that
are Spanish of Spanish orbit origin and countless cities, countless cities.
(06:32):
Mexico has the largest number of Spanish people speaking speaking people,
and America United States has the second. So you can't
mention the state. I'm from the city, I was raised
in the city I currently live in, or the Street
I live on, but I was speaking Spanish. Now, there
are these people that say that, well, I don't understand
(06:54):
why an American can't do He is American. He's an
American as anybody here, and you really do think that
just because you don't watch him, that the world won't.
There are things that you I remember when Nike did
something and the right didn't like it, and they were
trying to boycott Nike, and Nike stuck with the product
they knew. Ain't no white people selling shoes. The last
(07:17):
white dude with a shoe the shoe deal that I
knew about was Tom Brady and those was Uggs. There's
certain things you gotta tolerate if you want to see
the things that black people do. If you want to
see basketball, if you want to see football, if you
want to see the Super Bowl, You're going to have
to occasionally tolerate things that black people want to do
just because they're in the position to be able to
do them. You're gonna have to listen to the Black
(07:39):
National Anthem. You're gonna have artists like Kendrick lamar A
now bad money that you didn't necessarily like because the
product of the game says it should be. So you
want to see super Bowl, you're gonna have to succeed
seed sometimes to the whims of black dudes. That's who
the game is. It's all black dudes. It's the whims
of black dudes that you have to listen to. You
(08:00):
have to watch. You cannot watch the super Bowl, but
that doesn't mean the world won't because black people are
the reason that the super Bowl happens. And without black
dudes in the NFL, that would be rugby and nobody
watches that. That's a little note from the gd section.
It's the DL Hughgley Show. She's jazz s It's the
(08:23):
Jazzy report on the d L Hughley Sound.
Speaker 3 (08:27):
Travelers could face more delays at major airports nationwide due
to a shortage of air traffic controllers. The aviation problems
come as more controllers are calling out sick amid the
government shut down. Like TSA agents, air traffic controllers, they're
all considered essential employees and they say they must work
without pay. During this impasse, the FAA issued a ground
(08:48):
stop for flights heading to Nashville International Airport due to shortages.
Speaker 1 (08:53):
Now, my uncle was supposed to be here yesterday. It
was from Atlanta to here, and they had a mechanical failure.
Well they had mechanical problem issue, so he didn't get
here to today. I think that they this is this
is unassailable. This is true. Trump has been president two times,
right to the second term, and both terms the government
(09:15):
has shut down. No president's ever done that before.
Speaker 3 (09:17):
No president has also said that they're not going to
get paid. So legally they're supposed to get paid. Even
during a shutdown, he's saying, probably not going to get.
Speaker 1 (09:25):
He's whatever they letting him do, he's trying to do.
And so if this is the country you want, this
is what you.
Speaker 4 (09:31):
Have at it.
Speaker 3 (09:32):
Yeah, A simple eye test can detect a person's risk
of heart disease.
Speaker 2 (09:37):
Let me see your eyes.
Speaker 1 (09:38):
No, I don't look at you that.
Speaker 2 (09:40):
Oh I don't blame you either.
Speaker 3 (09:41):
Researchers found scans of patients retina's picked up on signs
of poor blood flow in their eye, and this could
be used as a sign of cardiovascular problems. Ah yeah,
just take a look.
Speaker 1 (09:51):
You know, I have this new apple that I'll show
it to you later.
Speaker 3 (09:56):
I don't want to say you wouldn't let me look
at your I don't want to look in your.
Speaker 2 (10:01):
App get it.
Speaker 1 (10:03):
I'm gonna let that uncomfortable silence percolate for a little moment.
Speaker 2 (10:06):
I'm not uncomfortable. I feel fairt.
Speaker 1 (10:07):
I didn't say if you were uncomfortable, I said I don't.
It didn't be you grade. Other punishes are twelve year
ol daughter for wearing makeup. This is what this is, Mama.
She right here, Mama, Oh, so you don't win to
school and you got this makeup? A. I told you
she went to school with them, make got this makeup?
All they already told me. So you got makeup? A
(10:29):
that A you're grown. You ain't grown girls in school. Okay,
but you're not the other girls.
Speaker 5 (10:35):
You are twelve years old and you're not a follower.
Speaker 6 (10:38):
You're a legal And.
Speaker 1 (10:39):
That's what I'm raising in my house.
Speaker 7 (10:40):
Leaders.
Speaker 1 (10:41):
It's twelve years old too young to wear makeup? And
if so, what is the appropriate as That's the that
is the question I'm going to ask you. Eight seven
seven two for two two for two six.
Speaker 3 (10:51):
Sort this up on Twitter or dal Huge Radio or
on Facebook. The dal Huge Show on the website is.
Speaker 2 (10:55):
The d O Hugo.
Speaker 1 (10:56):
So mother, this finds out that her twelve year old
daughters may makeup and she punishes her. You know, here's
what I don't understand. Now. I know that part of
weaying makeup would probably be to look older, right, I'm sure, right, right, yep.
And we live in a society where girls are over
(11:17):
sexualized anyway, where where they seem to be predatory predators everywhere.
It isn't this is they wear makeup. It's the way
they dress like. It's the makeup is the easy is
one of the things that first starts to happen. First
there wear makeup. Then they want to address a certain
way and they want to do certain things, and I
think it is a parent's responsibility to mitigate as much
(11:38):
as possible.
Speaker 3 (11:39):
I mean, I agree with some of that. I think
a lot of it is more than just as a girl.
A lot of though it's more than. But but I'm
saying because you said that they do it to look older,
and nowadays, especially more than ever, they do it because
you know, social media picks you apart. So now, if
you don't have the perfect skin, you try to cover it.
If your eyebrows are bushy, you go get them, you know,
(12:01):
bladed or wax or whatever.
Speaker 2 (12:03):
And you wear makeup for that.
Speaker 3 (12:04):
I think it's a ton of different things now because
the pressure of social media to look perfect all the
time is very heavy, especially in young girls, which is
why so many of them now are turning to suicide.
Speaker 1 (12:14):
It's very unfortunate. Thank you for the Jesus, Jess. I'm
just saying he had no hattie over here. True. No,
I don't see. I'm like you. I can take you
at your work. I can say this is what happened,
(12:38):
this is what happened. I will say something you'll hear clicking,
and the best you'll get is nothing like and Shell Pintida.
She wasn't looking out what I said on Google. Leave
everything you said. She wasn't looking at what I said
on Google. But the truth of the matter is, I
think that girls wanting to wear makeup is not a
new thing.
Speaker 7 (12:58):
It is.
Speaker 1 (12:59):
The social constraints might be, construct might be, But the
girls wanting to wear makeup and to dress certain ways
is not older. It's not new. I remember, uh uh,
you know. I remember people would hide their makeup in
their lockers at school and they would try to it
was this a whole big thing.
Speaker 2 (13:17):
No, I'm not saying that that part is not true.
Speaker 3 (13:19):
I'm just saying now with social media, it's different because
at that time, you only had to worry about the
people at your school bullying you if you didn't look
right or whatever, and maybe you wanted to look older.
I'm saying one hundred percent. Social media has really impacted
these young girls in terms of what they do with
their hair, what kind, so much so dermatologists have had
to come out and say, listen, these young girls have
(13:41):
got to stop putting so much skincare on their faces.
Speaker 2 (13:45):
It's just too much. You're buying all of these things.
Speaker 1 (13:47):
If you see women on planes, expecially when you go
to some cities and I ain't gonna say there because
I don't feel like arguing with people, but you can go.
You can tell what city you want to because I swear.
I'm like, is this why do put women need? A
lot of women they put so much makeup on. They
like dudes with makeup on. I'm saying, like drag queens makeup. Yeah,
it really looks like drag man. It's so excessive, like
(14:10):
big ass eyebrows and thick ass makeup. And I'm like,
only you only see drag queens done up like that,
and the reason you can't be you can't be this
beautiful God can have done this. I ain't put a
makeup on your Adam's apple to do that. And what
were you gonna say? I was just saying.
Speaker 8 (14:30):
Even drag queens they wear such heavy man because they performed.
It's almost like performance makeup people. But a lot of
times that's where it came from, you know, the drag scene,
and they put heavy makeu because you're on stage. You
got to see it from a distance and everything, and
it's exaggerated. And then they wasn't meant to walk the
street up.
Speaker 1 (14:44):
Well if you if you, if your makeup is really
really heavy, I think you got I do. I'm not
even trying to be funny. They also use it for
beauty patches, you know, yeah, yeah, I don't know if
they have that on Delta and and and see three
four three. I don't know if that's what's going on
back there. Straight it is the deal here can show
(15:05):
you a twenty twenty five this shit. If you're gonna
be in Richmond, Virginia, will be there this Friday and
Saturday at the excuse me Richmond Funny Bone in where
short Yes, indeed, So a young girl is punished. Her
father and mother punished her for wearing makeup? Do you
think twelve is too young? And if so, what do
you think the appropriate age would be? Lena speaking to
(15:28):
the microphone, We're gonna give you another chance because you
never seem to get it right, so I'm gonna give
it a shot. What do you think it's twelve too
young to wear makeup? And if twelve is too young,
what is the appropriate age?
Speaker 9 (15:41):
I mean, I do think twelve is a little too
young to wear makeup.
Speaker 2 (15:44):
But you know that's just my preference somebody else.
Speaker 10 (15:47):
Ma.
Speaker 1 (15:47):
That's why I asked you for your preference. I asked
you to explain what somebody else might have. Just tell
me what you think. Yeah, I think twelve is sweet.
There you go.
Speaker 2 (15:57):
I think the appropriate age is probably like sixteen.
Speaker 1 (16:00):
Okay, there you go see? Yeah, okay, all right, there
you go. See see there you go a king sing
yetta right. When you can wear that, when you can
wear a prom dress and soccer shoes, then it's time
for exactly exactly. Man, If I see one work, so Jasmine,
(16:23):
what do you think twelve? Is that too young? And
if so, what would be the appropriate.
Speaker 3 (16:27):
I don't mind a little something at twelve if you
want to, like I take my knees to get her
nails done. A little lip gloss is fine by me.
But if you're going to do the whole contour of
the face and you know, you know, eyeshadow and all
of that, that's when they what you don't like the
heavy makeup where it's dark here and it's the whole.
Speaker 1 (16:46):
Thing not to see if you're going back to an event,
well twelve, yeah, but I'm saying when you were speaking
about it, I just think that that you're right. I
think there is a lot of I think that a
lot of that came from social media, but out of
that came from the way that these reality show stars
look to people. Oh for sure, without question, because they
(17:07):
they all think that that's.
Speaker 3 (17:08):
But they influence that, they're called influencers, and so other
people want to look like that. And so you watched
your talk and Instagram and all these things, and you think, Okay,
well this, I could make this better. That's the whole
purpose of makeup, not always to look older, because people
who are older wear makeup, but you do it to
look better.
Speaker 2 (17:25):
You do it for various reasons.
Speaker 3 (17:27):
If you want to hide a pimple, or if you
want to carve out your cheekbones, you conjure your face,
you want your lips to send that you should stay.
Speaker 2 (17:34):
I shouldn't do.
Speaker 1 (17:35):
You should stay at Captain D's and people should stay.
You want to cut your face, want to keep it
out of waffle house.
Speaker 3 (17:44):
You know everybody it's not blessed with beautiful skin, so
you know, or features, so they want to you know,
juse it up a little bit.
Speaker 1 (17:54):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, but you don't want to put spackle
on your face.
Speaker 2 (17:58):
Sometimes you got.
Speaker 1 (17:58):
To, man, and if you need that, you need a
head transplant.
Speaker 2 (18:04):
Those are not available yet.
Speaker 1 (18:07):
So the question we're asking ladies and gentlemen. Let me
let you hit his audio.
Speaker 2 (18:11):
But I feel like I'm ma sure enough to wear makeup.
Speaker 1 (18:13):
You're not mature.
Speaker 5 (18:14):
Left the one no make up.
Speaker 1 (18:15):
You're twelve twelve.
Speaker 5 (18:17):
When you're fifteen sixteen, you can we make up, but
you're not going to be doing it at them twelve
years old. And I've told you stop trying to follow.
Speaker 1 (18:24):
Behind the repeet skip. You have a beautiful daughter, you
have two beautiful daughters. Yes, yes, I should say, when
do you say it's twelve to young, and well, it's
definitely too young and what would be inappropriate age?
Speaker 8 (18:35):
And you know what sixteen, fifteen, sixteen think about it.
It's not just uh, social media that influences them. It's
a natural thing. Kids look at their parents, their mothers,
and if they see their mom putting on lipstick, then
you know that's why they put on their mama shoes
and walk around the house. They want to be like that,
But you, as a parent have to keep a major
appropriate to keep them predators up.
Speaker 1 (18:54):
Don't wait too long though.
Speaker 3 (18:55):
I got to push back a little bit because I
know a lot of people don't wear like my mama
never wore makeup. Everybody, But right, that's what I was
going to say. I think most of the time you
do what your friends do because you don't want to
be like your mama, So you do what your friends do.
If your friends are wearing short skirts, you want to
wear a short short skirt.
Speaker 2 (19:11):
If they're wearing makeup.
Speaker 1 (19:12):
Your friends get pregnant, you know you want to exactly.
Speaker 2 (19:16):
That's one correct.
Speaker 3 (19:19):
They used to have a pregnancy packed in school. I'm
telling you it's true. You want to do what your
friends do. That's why your mama when she would reprimand you,
she say, so, if your friends gonna.
Speaker 1 (19:28):
Jump off a bridge, you are to your little friends
to jump off the bridge.
Speaker 3 (19:32):
You want to follow behind your friends, you want.
Speaker 10 (19:35):
To do it. Yep.
Speaker 1 (19:36):
Now they try to be your friend on Facebook, you
ain't want my little.
Speaker 2 (19:39):
Friends, right exactly.
Speaker 1 (19:41):
I just think to your point, it has always existed,
but it just didn't have this level of mechanism where
it did. You know, it's social and I think that,
but everything. Twelve is too young, But don't wait too
long because I waited too long and then one of
my daughters just left me. So I think, wow, that's
so stupid. I I should have let her put on
(20:05):
some bluffs before she started digging checks. That's what I
should have done. I mean, I'm just saying maybe. Yeah,
I'm saying, what are you talking about?
Speaker 3 (20:12):
But the times have changed now even now you have
people like companies like Sophora that have twelve year old
makeup influences, right, Like, so it's a lot to do
with social media. You see other people who were doing it.
I just googled it on AI to ask is twelve
too young? They said, no, twelve is not inherently too
old for makeup, as many children started experimenting in middle
school between the ages of twelve and fifteen. But the
(20:33):
decision depends on family values and the child's ready.
Speaker 1 (20:37):
Actually, absolutely so. Even Lana said between twelve to young
and fifteen, right, okay, even in the dominic Kando, Yeah, yeah,
got it.
Speaker 8 (20:45):
You gotta know how to talk to the kids. Like
I remember when Taylor, she was playing coming off soccer field.
She was little, and she saw a cheerleader go by,
and you know, to kids, or a little girl cheerleader
kind of look like a princess. The girl was all
made up, had a little pompom, and she looked at
me and said, Dad, I want to be a cheerleader.
I said, okay, baby, you can be a cheerleader and
cheer for other people. You can keep keep playing soccer
and Neil Chier for you. She looked at me and said,
(21:07):
I'll keep playing soccer. You never had that conversation again.
Speaker 2 (21:09):
Yeah, everybody's different.
Speaker 1 (21:11):
Yeah, all right, So we're gonna ask you that we're
gonna finally get into you because he is the most
important in this thing. I don't care what these people
are saying, who are there what you guys think? Yeah,
so who do you think is twelve too younger? Here
is the idea. You need to stop being a.
Speaker 10 (21:25):
Farther, but be a legal.
Speaker 1 (21:27):
I was never like that.
Speaker 5 (21:28):
When I was in school, I followed myself. I ain't
following nobody else. Now the simple you think that you following,
you want to one of those salts. We're gonna do everything,
see somebody else. Do be a legal, not a follow
because you're gonna follow the role, follow them the road
direction and be head down a roll road because you
want to be like everybody else. You do not have
(21:49):
the wellfay use you're beautiful with diving.
Speaker 1 (21:52):
If twelve is to you where you think they appropaately agents,
we're gonna write to the phones.
Speaker 11 (21:56):
I'm gonna be honest. At twelve or thirty twelve, I
would sneak and rare with stick and maybe eyeliner, but
when I got home it was off. And to this
day I still don't wear a lot of makeup. And
I'm grown and have children, and I think nowadays these
kids are wearing makeup because of the social media and
(22:19):
maybe because their friends are doing it. But and then
the parents, I think are as strict now as they
were when I was coming up. But however, twelve years
old is I think too young to be wearing makeup?
Speaker 5 (22:33):
Right?
Speaker 12 (22:33):
I think to answer his question, I think twelve is
too young if that's what the parents are said. This
is about parenting, and no child is gonna do exactly.
They gonna challenge you. But just by this dialogue and
that exert the daughter knew it was wrong because she's nothing.
(22:54):
Did it after the parent had told her. But you know,
it varies from situation. Can you imagine Blue, Ivy Carter
or Northwest being under the twelve year old makeup rule
in the family that they're in. So it varies. But
when you want to instill something in your child morally,
you're going to teach them and you're gonna stand firm
(23:15):
on it. The young girl said, but my friends, we've
all said that, but we already know what our parents
have said, so it's a teaching thing. Jamaica Kincaid is
an Arthur. She wrote an essay, a short read called Girl,
an Islander Woman and her Daughter, and she gave her
a series of directions to ward her off against the
(23:36):
scienceal norms of today. Please read that Jamaica Kankate's girl
just to keep her daughter straight. But I enjoy your
show and I definitely think the answer yes is too young.
Basically if the parents said it, whatever the parents said, well.
Speaker 10 (23:53):
Twelve year office is definitely too young. They should just
be wearing lip off. Little girls need to say girls
as long as they can. I think the age appropriate
age for a daughter to start wearing make up at
the age of eighteen. Need to teach your young ladies
that you have a pretty fast and you're pretty built.
Theyself for STEAMUK makeup. It's not the answer.
Speaker 1 (24:16):
So here's the audios and when.
Speaker 5 (24:18):
You get older you can wait. But from now you
better I wasn't go make up or you're gonna get
to the high tour. Do you understand what's the same?
I can't hear you. Yes, Now you need to write that.
Say your brother's already told me, and I'm glad they.
Speaker 1 (24:33):
Told me about something. Wait before you get home from school,
because you don't do that. This ain't how we rolled
in this house. Do you think twelve is too young?
And then so we'll see prograge you're going to write
to the phones, all right.
Speaker 4 (24:44):
I honestly I think they're too young to be wearing
makeup at twelve. I'm a middle school science teacher in
the morning, and I've never seen the massive amount of
sixth graders that's wearing makeup stones I mean, everything under
the sun. These little girls come to school dressed like
they going out to a club. And I got the comment.
I heard the comment that some of these kids are
(25:04):
doing it. Some of these young ladies and girls are
doing it because they see their mom doing or they're
simple as their sisters. But when the sisters are thirteen
and fourteen years old, how much are they looking up to?
Speaker 10 (25:13):
Like?
Speaker 4 (25:13):
Who are they looking up to? Because they shouldn't be
wearing it either. So I think it's twelve is young
to be wearing makeup as a little girl.
Speaker 12 (25:21):
The key word is a little girl. Stay little as
long as your canyon.
Speaker 13 (25:25):
Uh Yeah. As a single father who raised my daughter
pretty much from birth, we gotta dollar these young ladies
back in twelve is definitely too young to make up.
My family told me that eighteen is too old, so
I'm gonna say maybe sixteen, seventeen untain. But I mean,
you know, let's keep our young women little girls and
(25:45):
tell everybody to blossoming and young women. You know, we
shouldn't over sexualize them and things like that. So yeah,
I think definitely, twelve is way too young.
Speaker 10 (25:53):
Brothers, I think that twelve years old is too young
to her makeup in the African American community.
Speaker 2 (26:00):
But in the Caucasian community, they do.
Speaker 11 (26:02):
Wear eyeshadow eyeliner at twelve years old.
Speaker 3 (26:05):
But for the African Americans, we kind of want our
kids to wait until they at least sixteen seventeen.
Speaker 11 (26:10):
It's fifteen, fifteen, seventeen years old.
Speaker 14 (26:12):
No, hell, no, twelve year old shouldn't be wearing no makeup.
They should be at least and I figured that I'll
give them at least twenty twenty one, twenty two years
old older because even these young ladies, they don't even
know they self yet at that age at twelve years old,
and a lot of the parents they just let these
kids do what they want. But not at my house.
I'm a grandpa and I'll be on I'd be riding
(26:35):
my granddaughters about certain things they should do and things
they shouldn't wear. And I like when they was getting
the graduation pictures, I say, why y'all putting all that makeup?
On your felps. Y'all, y'all look like man against You
can't see the beauty of their faces. You know you're coming.
They're just covering up all their beauty, you know what
I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (26:52):
So no, if you're going to be in Richmond, Virginia,
I'm gonna be on this Friday and Saturday at the
Richmond Fanny Bone. Two shows, right, they two show Saturday,
said them check me after you taking notion? Did you
see where they arrested the person that they say started
the palistatione fire. I did, and he was from Florida.
I gain he would be a right wing that job.
I apologized to can Bass and and uh Gamna Newsom
(27:16):
because they really because it wasn't negligent, it was it
was apologize to him. And they won't do that. No,
of course not, of course, No. Somebody deliberately set those fires.
And if they set those fires, they set them on
the day when they knew it would be like this. Yep,
they say that after ten miles an hour a fire department,
a fireman is just a spectator. If winds are hiding
(27:36):
ten miles an hour, he's just suspectator. Wow, he's just
a referee. And now I remember I told you I
talked to I'd spoken to Steven A. Smith a couple
of months ago, and I called and we talked, and
I was like, I'm you know, what I'm going to
try to do is temper mine. Not that there are
three people I despise. He's not one of them, but
I despised Van Jones, I despised Jason Whitlock, and I
(27:59):
despised myself. I despise them, right, But Stephen AG's my
frad brother. You know I'm trying, So I said I would,
I would be more more judicious about the things I
said and how I said them, right. But his assault
on Jasmine Crockett, which I don't understand because he's like, well,
why she's like, Jasmin Crockett is in the opposition party,
(28:22):
she doesn't hold any political power. She's a very junior citizen.
She is his congressman. She doesn't sit on any other committees,
and she doesn't share any of those. So I would
wonder why he would wonder about her efficacy in terms
of her constituents and not Donald Trump. How does going
after Jimmy fallon Jimmy Kimmel Jemmy Fallon and you know
(28:44):
Roseanne and rose o'donald help his constituents, or rambling in
front of generals, or or rambling in front of navy people,
or or or or doing any number of things he
does all the time. Do you know that Jim Jeffries,
Jim Jordan has been in Hungers for seventeen eighteen years
and never been one piece of legislation. All he does
is roll asleep up and look like it. So I
(29:05):
wondered why it was her that he picked. And it
seems to be because it's low hanging through. It does
because nobody can tell me that Donald Trump works hard,
you know, nobody can tell me that. And I and
I and I wonder why he does stuff like that
because I sincerely, I was sincere my words, I wasn't.
I'm trying to be judicious. That's I think that's beyond
(29:26):
the pale. And I'm not. I mean, jasumine I are friends,
but I'm not. That's not you know, I can call
it like I see it, and I think it's disingenuous
to talk about leadership such at the top. He would
have you believe it started at the bottle correct and
did you hear Don Lemon, you see Don Lemon. He
called everybody gay, he said, Mike Johnson, Benny Johnson, Lindsey
(29:48):
Graham and yeah, and uh then and Tim Scott, Tim Scott, Yeah,
Tim Scott. He he his guns are gay. That's how
I knew he has gay gums. He does. Look at
his gums. You can tell a guess.
Speaker 2 (30:08):
I've seen him.
Speaker 1 (30:09):
Yeah, I mean he didn't start teat until he was
thirty seven. Yes, I'm telling you.
Speaker 2 (30:21):
Oh wait a minute, Karen, let me get my supplant.
Speaker 7 (30:27):
Thanks so much for having me.
Speaker 3 (30:29):
Of course, absolutely so let me ask you this right
out the gate. How in the world did a kid,
you know, directing the church in Chicago and just doing
your thing there end up traveling around the world with
some of the greatest artists that we've ever known.
Speaker 7 (30:45):
Grown up in Chicago, I had a love for music
and singing, and that led me to get my degree
in music and then moving to la just wanted.
Speaker 1 (30:56):
To pursue this as a profession.
Speaker 7 (31:00):
My family is a musical family. We grew up in
church thinking and doing things like that, but nobody really
ever had taken it to the next level and done
it professionally. So my moved to LA in twenty fifteen
was my attempt to really go after it and really
get some things started.
Speaker 1 (31:19):
My original plan was to come out here.
Speaker 7 (31:22):
And do a few auditions and you know, get on
a tour singing background for someone. That was really the peak.
Speaker 2 (31:29):
Okay, wait a second to you.
Speaker 3 (31:30):
So I mean you moved out to LA and you
didn't have a contract or anything with anyone, so you
just came out here on a dream.
Speaker 7 (31:39):
I came out here on the dream and vibes right now.
Speaker 3 (31:43):
See, that's how you do it. That's how the dream works. Though,
you got to step out there on faith and make
it work. That is a lot of people wouldn't do that.
And from Chicago to LA.
Speaker 7 (31:51):
It was such a huge jump and definitely a faith
move because it was really a culture shock too with
just the the two different cities and really meeting you.
Because I didn't know anybody in La, so didn't have
a job, didn't really have a lot of connections, so
really had to start from zero and hit the ground running.
Speaker 2 (32:12):
So let me ask you this.
Speaker 3 (32:13):
I know in reading a little bit about you, it
talks about how you bring an artist's vision to life.
What does that mean? And how do you do such
a thing.
Speaker 7 (32:23):
So all artists that I work with are different and
each process is different. So meeting with the artists, I
really try to get try to get into their brain
and try to really get inside their creative their creative cocoon,
if you will, just to see where they're coming from.
What they want the performance to look like, what they
(32:44):
want the performance to feel like, especially if they want singers.
How many singers do they want? All women or all men?
What will they be wearing? What does the lighting look like?
So I really try to get as much information up
top because I think that that informs the vocals. Because
thinking is all about emotion and conveying a story. So
(33:06):
if my small piece in the performance, I need to
ask all those questions to make sure my piece is
aligning with everything else. So just really getting it to
fit and feel good for them, and obviously I would
like to like it too, but you know, sometimes the
artists want what they want.
Speaker 3 (33:24):
Have you ever had somebody that you consider like a
big disaster or something.
Speaker 2 (33:27):
That you really wanted to work and it just didn't.
Speaker 7 (33:29):
Oh yeah, all the time. I wouldn't call it a
big disaster. It's just a part of the process. It's
like I can think something is so dope, and I
teach it and I, you know, show it to the
artists and they're like.
Speaker 2 (33:40):
We don't like that, we don't want to see that.
Speaker 7 (33:42):
And I can't be I can't be emotionally attached to
the work because it's not always about me.
Speaker 3 (33:48):
So let me ask you this, this live now. How
can people who want to get involved with that? How
can they reach you? Contact you? Register? How do they
do that?
Speaker 10 (33:57):
Yes?
Speaker 7 (33:58):
So right now, you can follow me on Instagram at
live now Culture l I d E n ow Culture
and that's where all of my information and and everything
will be flowing from. You can also email me at
live now Culture at gmail dot com for any booking inquiry.
Speaker 3 (34:18):
So right you better put that, you better put that
out out there to get that work. I'm not mad
at you, see, do what you gotta do. I'm so
happy for you. I'm glad that that this is working out,
because I think it is. It's it is not often
like I said that, somebody will have a dream, move
on that dream and a big move at that, you know,
with absolutely nothing going in your favor other than God
(34:38):
and faith. And you did that, so congratulations. I wish
you continue to success. I do want to say this
really quickly. With this this Live Now, is there like
I don't know, like an age limit, because you.
Speaker 2 (34:50):
Know, I have people who.
Speaker 3 (34:52):
Know me, and especially the executive producer on the show
and everybody they know. You know, I'd like to think
I can sing, and you know I.
Speaker 1 (35:00):
Want to go on twelve a little, I hear, I
want to.
Speaker 3 (35:04):
I want to register so that we can work on
these vocals so I can find out. Am I that
me me?
Speaker 2 (35:09):
Me soprano? Am I right?
Speaker 3 (35:11):
Because you know they talk about how deep my voice
is and I ain't. I'm not ashamed of it. But
I think we got something, some magic in this. I'm
gonna work with you on that Live Now and we're
gonna see what we can pull out.
Speaker 2 (35:20):
Is that a deal?
Speaker 1 (35:21):
Yes?
Speaker 3 (35:22):
I know you're probably out here in La. I'm in
La too, and now you know I'll stalk you and
find you. I'm just saying, let's let it up.
Speaker 7 (35:28):
Let's set it up.
Speaker 2 (35:29):
It sounds good.
Speaker 3 (35:30):
Steve, thank you so much for stopping by to talk
to us. I really appreciate and again from my heart,
I do wish you continued success and.
Speaker 2 (35:37):
Anything you need for us from us, just reach out.
We got your back.
Speaker 7 (35:40):
Thank you so much. You guys have a blessings.
Speaker 2 (35:42):
YouTube s team. Take care.
Speaker 1 (35:43):
It's just time to give a deserving someone the Shoe
Boo Week award.
Speaker 6 (35:47):
And now it's time for the shoes.
Speaker 1 (35:54):
We don't like your kind around here. Ally I look
at not having an anxiety.
Speaker 6 (36:00):
Attack is an American far right radio show host and
prominent conspiracy theorist. He hosts the Alex Jones Show from Boston,
Texas Wow. He is the founder of Info War's websites
that promote conspiracy theories and fake NEWSQUW.
Speaker 14 (36:18):
That comes no big surprise to me, sir.
Speaker 6 (36:20):
So why is the screen king this week's recipient of
the Shoe duty of the Week Award? It this Info
Warrior gets the shoe mouty because he did a social
experiment and everyone said zag kile no. When the right
(36:42):
wing conspiracy theorist began Thursday show, he was wearing what
was formerly called the toothbrush mustache but is now more
commonly known as a Hitler mustache.
Speaker 1 (36:55):
We can go viral with this one.
Speaker 6 (36:56):
He said he was conducting a social experiment see if
the world has changed over the last eighty years. It
was based on the fact that he and JD. Vance
or Junior Donald Vance, demand Americans stop using the n
word Nazi.
Speaker 1 (37:15):
It's weird.
Speaker 6 (37:16):
If you want everyone to stop using the word Nazi,
then stop trying to take away the Civil Rights Act,
stop trying to control education, stop sending the military to
police the streets. In other words, if you don't want
to be called a Nazi, stop doing Nazi things. Yeah,
(37:43):
his show in for Wars is about as reliable as
a dog writing a news report with his tale. It's
as reliable as a paper umbrella and a hurricane.
Speaker 1 (37:56):
This was a.
Speaker 6 (37:57):
Social experiment because when he came back after the break
the stash was gone. He realized during the period he
lost over sixty percent of his audience. And let's submit it,
the only thing the right wing conspiracy cult cares about
is ratings.
Speaker 1 (38:16):
He failed again murdering Trash.
Speaker 6 (38:19):
The Bald bull Horn Bandit thought it was a funny joke,
but he was the punchline. And that's why the shoe
Booty of the Week award goes too.
Speaker 1 (38:34):
Alex jokes.
Speaker 6 (38:37):
Now here's a swift kick in the ass.
Speaker 1 (38:41):
Now right now, it's time for what you need to
know with one and only Sybil Wilkes.
Speaker 9 (38:45):
It's Sybil Wilkes with what we need to know. President
Trump says he's not ruling out using the Insurrection APT
to address violent crime in Chicago. Speaking to reporters this week,
Trump said the Act has been involved before, so that
if Illinois Governor J. B.
Speaker 1 (39:01):
Pritzker can't do the job, we'll do the job.
Speaker 9 (39:04):
The Insurrection Act of eighteen o seven allows the president
to deploy the military to suppress rebellion or civil unrest
last US during the nineteen ninety two Los Angeles riots,
Governor Pritzker sharply criticized the suggestion, calling it an unconstitutional
invasion of his state, as ICE operations continue throughout Chicago.
(39:25):
In Virginia, a top Democrat is standing by embattled Attorney
General candidate Jay Jones after his controversial text messages came
to light. Jones, the Democratic nominee, has apologized for a
twenty twenty two message referencing a hypothetical shooting of ben
House Speaker Todd Gilbert. Virginia Senator Tim Kaine said the
comments were indefensible but not reflective of Jones's true character,
(39:49):
adding that he believes Jones can still serve honorably. President Trump, however,
has urged Jones to withdraw from the race, calling his
apology too little, too late. The Supreme Court is waiting
in to a deeply divisive issue so called conversion therapy.
Justice has heard arguments Tuesday in a case challenging Colorado's
ban on therapy intended to change a minor sexual orientation
(40:12):
or gender identity. Supporters of the loss a it protects
LGBTQ youth from harmful and discredited practices, but a Christian
therapist argues the ban violates her free speech and religious rights.
Nearly half of the US states currently prohibit conversion therapy
for minors, and the Court's decision could have far reaching
implications nationwide. To subscribe to my free daily newsletter, please
(40:36):
visit Sibilwilkes dot com. For all thenews twenty four to seven,
go to News one dot com. I'm Sibil Wilkes.
Speaker 2 (40:41):
Be informed, be impowered.
Speaker 1 (40:43):
Thank you, Thank you so much. Sybil jazzin. I don't
know what it means. I mean, yeah, okay, we'll see
it that week. We'll get more more of the DLH
WE show coming up. Directly. It's the dre We show
is out of the DL You can we show your
twenty twenty five In case you're going to be in Richmond, Virginia,
I'm gonna be there this Friday and Saturday. So two
(41:03):
shows Friday, two shows Saturday. I'll be there.
Speaker 2 (41:07):
If you were just leaning in waiting for my chance
to say it.
Speaker 1 (41:10):
Well, short, yeah, one.
Speaker 2 (41:14):
Yeah, who named it that? I gotta go?
Speaker 1 (41:16):
It was it was a it was nothing used to
be there. It was I don't know what they call it.
There was nothing there and then they developed this, you know,
this shopping center.
Speaker 2 (41:24):
But out of all the things they could call it,
why would they call it?
Speaker 1 (41:27):
Do you know what they have in Northern Virginia. They
have a park called Mount Trashmore because it was made
out of trash. So I don't think they have like
it's look it up, short Pump. It's called Mount Trashmore
because it's made out of trash. So I don't think
they have really the most innovative it's made out of which,
because I say, we call it Mount trash Moore. Yeah,
(41:51):
but you know they have in Richmond, they make a
series of patron Adaversorry of nineteen sixty four. They make
a series. They don't make it, but they're one of
the only four stores that carry this rain gauge and
size of of pajol eder for sorry sixty four. We're
the only ones that do it. So, uh yeah, it's
(42:13):
a dope little experience.
Speaker 2 (42:15):
I'm going to google short pump.
Speaker 1 (42:16):
It's short pump, I'm telling you, and google Mount Trashmore.
While you think I already told you about that. You
already told me about that one you did? Yeah, And
they're like, it's made out of trash? So what should
we call it? Mount Trashmore? So what is it saying
about short pump? What is your computer? Is it by
sun Dial? What you got? You still? Type of goodness? Grazy?
(42:37):
What is it?
Speaker 7 (42:38):
She?
Speaker 3 (42:39):
So it's named after a short handled pump located at
a historic stage coach stop between Richmond and Charlotte. Yeah, yeah,
which is a popular meeting spot for drivers. Oh, meeting spots.
So it needed to be you know, sure pump.
Speaker 1 (42:53):
Okay, well I know that they have when I say
that it's a great soul for restaurant.
Speaker 2 (42:57):
Oh I'm nice, I have.
Speaker 1 (43:00):
I never get this more than mother pork chots, but they.
Speaker 2 (43:03):
Have get the pig knuckles.
Speaker 1 (43:04):
No, I've had pig knuckles since well. There is a
place I get pig knuckles, and it's in Saint Louis.
So don't say, don't judge me like that. I'm not
it udge me like. And I get there's a place
I go to, a really upscale joint where I get
scrapple in Baltimore. Yeah, wow, scrapple. I'm like, man, but
(43:27):
I never eat that stuff, like, hardly a lot. But
when I did, hardly a lot. It's chunks of port.
It's just like, yeah, that's what the title says, the
scrap scrapple. Y, you know who loves it? You know
who loves it? Grow, yeah, scrapple and eggs eat that lot? Yeah, yeah, scrap.
(43:50):
You never heard a scrap? Look up scrapple.
Speaker 3 (43:52):
It's a breakfast meat product, often like into a savory
breakfast cake made from pork scraps I don't know what awful,
awful and trimmings mixed with corn meal and some spices.
Speaker 1 (44:06):
Scrap And I'm gonna tell you they love it in Philly,
they love it in Baltimore.
Speaker 3 (44:10):
Tell you what it includes pork, liver, heart and trimmings
along with the cornmeal, wheat flour and other.
Speaker 2 (44:18):
Spicy Yes, scratch, I don't want the heart.
Speaker 1 (44:20):
Yeah. Do you drink snapple?
Speaker 15 (44:22):
They're hard and the short pod. What an evening, ladies
and gentlemen, Yes, an evening with the cardioc Now, of
course it is breast cancer.
Speaker 1 (44:38):
Weareness month and we're gonna talk. We're got to do
we can to keep you educated. Jazz and give us
Five things to know about breast cancer by Sarah Smith
from Farm d.
Speaker 3 (44:47):
Surgery is the main treatment for most breast cancers. Yes,
there are two types of love victimy and yeah. Number
four The top five things to know about breast cancer.
Breast cancer can be invasive or not bases. Yes, Number
three of the top five things to know about breast cancer. Biops.
He's the only way to know for sure if the
lump is cancer us. Yep, got to get that done.
Speaker 1 (45:09):
Yep.
Speaker 2 (45:09):
Self checking obviously, no more tattoos for touching or whatever
it is touching The top five things.
Speaker 3 (45:18):
We don't need it, we don't have the out five
things to know about breast cancer. Metagram screenings find most
breast cancers before the symptoms developed.
Speaker 1 (45:26):
Great.
Speaker 3 (45:28):
Yes, the number one of the top five things to
know about breast cancer.
Speaker 1 (45:31):
Being a woman is the main risk factor. Yes, you
know you did very good right there. I got to
give you that was very good. It was just, you
know it was. It was poignant to the point, you.
Speaker 2 (45:43):
Know, not go on and say something stupid.
Speaker 1 (45:45):
It really was. I'm giving you a complicate, dumb ass.
I'm telling you what you do.
Speaker 2 (45:49):
Nothing like that.
Speaker 1 (45:54):
All right, that's going to do it for us. It's
a deal. You can show you a twenty twenty five edition.
If you're going to be Enrichmond, Virginia, I will be
there and short Pump specifically, I will be there at
the Richmond Funny Bone. I have two shows to u
two shows on Friday, two shows on Saturday. So come
check me out if you're taking notes and see how
(46:16):
a great mind is never distracted by eads at all.
Speaker 2 (46:20):
But I love my juniors. Came right on it.
Speaker 1 (46:27):
Get pumped. Oh my goodness, here we go, Jas Sandy,
would you learn to get.
Speaker 2 (46:31):
Your tickets for the ME plus three please?
Speaker 3 (46:33):
Tickets are gonna sell out and I want you to
be able to come aboard at the time. Jordan Foundation,
fantastic boy, you crab plus three is super dope because
it's only one thousand dollars per person, but you need
three other friends because the prices are based on four
passengers in the cabin, which is a Friday cabin. Let me,
I'll trade a cabin a manut. Let me give you
this number. It's two, one, four, four nineteen sixty three
(46:54):
me plus three.
Speaker 2 (46:55):
Come along and ride. I don't know who the cabin's looking.
Speaker 1 (46:58):
Yeah, well you should. They should have some idea. Skip
my man, cheat them? Did you be in one of them?
Speaker 8 (47:06):
Rather?
Speaker 1 (47:06):
What did you? It's gonna be hopeless? Hopelus shut up.
Speaker 2 (47:12):
Jus were on the same page a few minutes ago.
Speaker 1 (47:15):
In the same stateroom. Skip my man, cheat them? When
you learned today?
Speaker 8 (47:22):
You know, earlier today we wished a happy birthday to
Ceci Wining.
Speaker 1 (47:24):
So h you know, and I thought about it.
Speaker 8 (47:26):
C c Wining has not been back on our show
ever since d L told her she had a fine ass.
Speaker 1 (47:31):
You remember that, did you lie? Yes, you're telling your story?
I never said that.
Speaker 16 (47:43):
Yeah, yes, fine, but it's okay, yeah say something, but
she was I couldncur yeah yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 (48:01):
I will be going to save me in order to
see the lost Oh friend, I'm sorry. She was laughing
and everything was all of a sudden.
Speaker 8 (48:18):
Yeah you hit you know what?
Speaker 1 (48:20):
You know well, because she's she she goes to a
black church and she's not used to do compliment stop
it's usually when did you get that?
Speaker 10 (48:34):
Ye?
Speaker 1 (48:36):
Hold my tambourine. I'll show him. All right, we got more?
We got what?
Speaker 10 (48:43):
What? What?
Speaker 1 (48:44):
What am I doing? Sanders? What's going on on the
next day? You can show you a ka especially our
kid is gonna drop his joint on short Bunch Records.
Butsmeice man Jamal Kingsley, he will be returning to exposed racism,
hitting it out every day live. It is the deal
he can show. We will definitely see on the side
side car my favorite shortbus operator, port Less Dring. We
guys to go. That's the deal here. We shall see
(49:05):
you on the other side.
Speaker 12 (49:10):
M hm