Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
It's a top Usher song
, but you can't say, like
confessions, you make me want to.
No, no, I guess like the superpopular shit.
So we can top Usher song, thatone that you like to go to when
I'm trying to get some act right.
Oh, usher song.
Speaker 2 (00:19):
Usher song To get
some act right.
Speaker 1 (00:21):
Yeah, first one
that's coming to my mind.
Speaker 3 (00:23):
Can you handle it?
Hey, have your go there, babywith you.
What you do, I ain't talkinghey, yeah, that was shit.
Speaker 1 (00:32):
Hey, that was a
Non-skip album.
Oh man, what that shit came out.
It was in the A grade, we wasall prime Losing virginities and
shit it was.
Hey, usher did that.
The whole generation ofvirginity's lost, lost why your
mama had work eighth, ninth,tenth grade.
Nigga, if you was in there likeyeah you, you lost your
(00:53):
virginity to that confessionsalbum.
More than likely, more thanlikely, more than likely.
Man, that was something goingon that was hot on the internet.
Yesterday Mika actually broughtit to me like what's the top
Usher song?
But you can't say this.
You can't say that, superstar,sometimes I gotta drive.
Speaker 2 (01:13):
No, not that, that's
a superstar.
Yeah same album.
Yeah same album.
Speaker 1 (01:24):
Same album.
This is why you said that's ano skip album, cause all the
songs we just mentioned is onthat same album, from Seduction
to.
Can you Handle it to Superstarto?
Um, what's that?
Speaker 2 (01:38):
I Can't Believe it
ooh, I can't believe it.
You came just in time, but Ineed it maybe come follow.
It's called follow me, comefollow me.
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, towardsthe end like 12.
Speaker 1 (01:52):
Yeah, that was like
the last that album, bruh
confession no skip confession.
No, skip that beautiful shit,man.
Yo you back again, man.
Permission to speak freely, wein here, yes, sir.
Yes, sir, Once again the highestChief, ali, and lay low the
(02:13):
most Jesus' baby brother.
So you anointed like amotherfucker man.
Hey, man, don't mess with me.
I'm going to call my brother.
You anointed like amotherfucker.
That's me.
Don't mess with me.
I'm going to call my brother.
You anointed like a mother man.
And apologies to those wholisten, my guy cussed.
He created all things.
So you might hear me Chief ofheathen.
I'm heaven's heathen, heaven'sheathen.
(02:34):
You just got to accept it.
Yeah, yeah, man, you want me onyour team.
Chief is like Kevin from HomeAlone.
He's always getting in trouble.
You know what I'm saying?
The whole family seem to havesome type of gripe with him, but
at the end of the day, you're afucking hero.
Speaker 2 (02:52):
I'm the glue that
holds these motherfuckers
together, you're a hero.
Speaker 1 (02:56):
I am Michael Jackson
and them, niggas, is the Jackson
5.
All right, get in line, becauseyour solo career might not be
that motherfucking great.
They can't hit that rope outlike you can.
You can sell 50 years off of me, nigga.
You let me continue to be thestar.
You try to not play your role,nigga.
Now you're going to be thetemptation.
(03:17):
Keep on truckin'.
Right here, hey man.
Everybody got to try to dotheir own thing.
You were shy for a little bit,but it ain't nothing like the
group.
They keep on trucking with agood song.
They really was All the lessfor sure, man, but we here, man.
How the week been man, how youfeeling?
Hey man, my week has been good.
Yeah, I'm sitting this week ata healthy 8.8, which is my
(03:44):
natural.
I feel like that's my neutral.
Speaker 3 (03:47):
You're above your
average.
Speaker 2 (03:48):
I'm above the average
.
Speaker 1 (03:50):
I think last time I
was listening man, you said you
were at 8.3.
Which episode?
A couple episodes ago he was at8.3.
Because I think one of theother.
I was coming up, 8.3 wasprobably but I know I was like a
6.5, 6.7, which is low for me.
Speaker 2 (04:07):
Yeah, but it's like
low for you because it's average
.
Yeah, for sure.
Speaker 1 (04:09):
We like to be high.
I got a natural high bro.
Speaker 2 (04:12):
They call it ADHD.
Speaker 1 (04:13):
Yeah, definitely I
call it having a high engine.
Yeah, we like to be up therefor sure.
But week has been veryrefreshing.
Man, been getting back moving,getting like home chores done.
Yeah, been dusting off my toolbag.
Man, we got the investmentproperty, so I've been over
(04:34):
there doing those things.
Solid, solid man, I was doingsome, I was doctoring up some
stuff in the house.
Man, I had to go ahead anddrill a little hole into the
ceiling so I can put the?
Um, I forgot what it's called,but you could.
Uh, yeah, I had to put thechandelier up, but I had to
actually put a hole, because Ihad, like, just wires coming
through.
I had to put a pancake box.
(04:54):
Yeah, then I had to put one ofthem joints up in there.
I forgot what it's called,though, but I had to drill a
little hole up in there.
A little metal plate, not themetal plate, it's the.
I can't remember what it is,man, that's been a long time,
but I know what I did.
Uh, but I put the the.
Uh, I forget what the c I can'tremember the name is but I put
the.
I had to put the box up inthere, screw the little things
(05:14):
in for the drywall, so the hole,and I put the uh, some new
light fixtures up.
So that made me feel like, ohyeah, I got this shit.
I've been doing it.
But it started making me doctorup stuff for the house, started
making me clean out stuff forthe garage, and I'm a huge out
with the old, in with the new.
Yeah, my garage is a mess.
(05:35):
Hey man, I'll come and help youbro, I got to get that together
.
I'll come and help.
But I'll tell you what myneighborhood though.
They started doing a bulk dayevery week, not just once a
month.
All right, and butt is a butt.
You can only put like fouritems out there at a time.
It might be more than that, Ithink it's like six or seven,
(05:57):
but you can't just put my wholegarage out there in one day and
everything ain't trash.
You know what I'm saying?
Hey, I say to Gates just put itall out there and let them
choose.
Y'all gotta take that shit back.
They don't give me a ticket,they're gonna give me a ticket,
like you.
Gotta put this shit back.
That happened to us.
Man, pull it back when we first.
I ain't bringing all that shitback, bro first.
Okay, listen.
So the bulk stuff.
Let me tell you what happenedto me when we first moved in.
(06:18):
We threw out all of theappliances, okay.
Now, what I didn't know is thatwhen you put out a refrigerator
to be taken away by the city,you got to snatch the doors off.
I didn't know that.
Okay, I'm new, you have to takethe doors off.
I don't know why.
They scared the raccoon won'tcome out, you know.
So I know why?
Okay, I would love to know.
(06:45):
Refrigerators were only able tobe open from the outside.
When you would sit therefrigerator on the curb and
kids would play, they'll go onthe inside and get stuck and
suffocate or die, couldn't,couldn't get out, with no way to
push it, like you like now, asa kid who used to play in the
refrigerator, like I was astrange child, sorry, uh, but we
would do that, we would like wewould.
But that was one of the things,man and I actually saw it on
(07:07):
tiktok.
Just one of them like snapplefacts.
Did you know?
Wow, I had no idea.
Good to know, good to know.
And I was gonna ask the questionwhy not take it?
It might be a kid in there?
Yeah, so, yeah.
So I put the whole refrigeratorout there.
They didn't take it.
Uh, I called and I oh, did youhave the doors off?
(07:27):
No, I'm novice like a mug tothis.
I have no idea.
You know the rules of throwingout, you know big shit.
So the next week I got thedoors off, I put it back on the
lawn.
They don't take it like yo,what is going on?
I had so much I'm talking thatwe threw out a bunch of stuff
from the house that came withthe house refrigerator, the
(07:49):
stove, the dishwasher, a door,interior door just throwing all
of this stuff out and I'm havingno idea why they're not taking
my stuff.
So what I did the next time isI put the stuff on the front
tree lawn instead of the side,where I put just a regular trash
.
You do got the corner lot, bigboss.
Now imagine me taking a wholebunch of stuff you know my house
(08:13):
, a whole bunch of stuff out ofmy garage, lugging it to the
front of the house, yeah, andthen having to take it back.
I'm not taking that shit back.
Speaker 2 (08:24):
They got to dolly all
that shit.
Yeah, that's what I did withthe last refrigerator.
Speaker 1 (08:28):
I dollied it, put it
in the street cause the street's
moving in the sidewalk dolliedit on to the front, made sure
the doors was off.
You know cause?
Now I knew the rules.
I had experience with throwingout a refrigerator.
Yeah well, they pick up likesto, like stoves or dishwashers
couches.
And then on the flip side, youthought stuff like that
scrappers be coming through.
They know every city's trashday and the scrapper.
(08:50):
They come through, they pick uptrucks and I put that
refrigerator out there about 4pm.
By the time my wife got homelike 6, the refrigerator was
gone.
Speaker 3 (09:00):
Oh yeah, it wasn't
going to make it.
Speaker 1 (09:02):
Because this was an
LG refrigerator, stainless steel
joint.
You know what I'm saying, butit was old.
When we first got the house, weneeded a refrigerator and,
granted, we threw out the onethat came with the house because
it was an older, you know,regular little apartment
refrigerator.
We wanted something a littlemore, so we bought it.
My wife found it on Marketplace$400.
(09:24):
Went on and grabbed that jointand we had it for four years.
So it served this purpose.
That refrigerator served thispurpose, man, but it started
going out.
The door wouldn't like seal.
You would go to get some milkout of the refrigerator in the
morning.
There would be a bunch ofcondensations.
What's this shit closed?
Yeah, you like gotta push it tomake it close.
If you a parent with kids, well, that's the only way you become
(09:48):
a parent.
That's a fact.
You can marry into some kids,you know.
But if you have children, man,you done probably woke up with
one in that refrigerator andthat beer hot and you're in that
condensation.
Speaker 2 (09:59):
Gotta throw that milk
out.
Speaker 1 (10:00):
They ain't close it,
man, so it's you.
They ain't close it, man, soit's you.
Need that seal, bro.
You need that good seal on thatdough.
Need that for sure, For sure,man.
But that's my story with therefrigerator.
So garage gonna get cleaned out.
That's the point of this wholething the garage gonna get
cleaned out.
Amen, matter of fact, I'm gonnastart next week, man, I'm gonna
take a couple things up there toget tossed out.
(10:22):
That'll be your in addition toyour, your man cave.
Yeah, because I told you, man,I'm, you know, possibly maybe I
may move out to the garage.
If I can get it right.
I gotta insulate the garage.
It's not insulated at all, becold and shit in there.
Um, I gotta get some drywall upthere.
Insulate the inside, throw thedrywall up there.
(10:43):
Insulate the inside.
Throw the drywall up there.
It's only two exterior wallsWell, three, if you count the
doors.
But the doors themselves areinsulated, but they only keep
out so much air.
Yeah yeah draft.
You know, because the garage isconnected to the house, so just
that back wall and then thatside, if I can insulate those
and get some drywall up there,get it cleaned up, maybe get
(11:07):
somebody to come through, dosome epoxy on the floor, throw
beads and shit out Now speakingof that man, first off, I think
that would be fly shit.
But the project that, when itcomes to the garage floors, I
was thinking of the same thingas you, Like mine, pitted my
garage floor.
Pitted on that, you Gettinglike mine, pitted my garage
floor pitted on that side.
Speaker 2 (11:27):
Yeah, mine too, man.
Speaker 1 (11:28):
So I was thinking
either call the people out that
come in like even it out theyjust pour like the little
self-leveler in there or I waslooking on Amazon like finding
the garage floor squares andputting them in there.
Garage floor squares they gotsome like garage floor squares
that you in there.
Garage floor squares.
They got some like garage floorsquares that you like, they
like.
(11:48):
You know how you got the gymfloors.
Yeah, they got it, they likethat tough Kind of puzzle them
together.
That type of material you canget the color, you can get your
emblem in there, you can get itto say stuff.
So I was looking like, hey,this might be the way to go,
instead of saying it might becheaper compared to going to go
pay maybe two grand for them tocome and do the you know
(12:10):
concrete, put the freckles inthere and shit.
When you can just get someflooring that got the freckles
on it, you might pay like $7, $8for the square footage or
whatever I'm going to have tolook into that too.
Speaker 2 (12:24):
I was seeing you some
stuff, man.
Speaker 1 (12:26):
I was trying to cut
costs, man, I was trying to.
So home improvement stuff hasbeen one of them things that we
always discuss, man.
That's 1%, 5% and 10% problems.
Okay, owning things come withowning things, man.
Right, right, all right, owningthings come with owning things,
man, alright, but I love doinghousework on the crib man.
(12:50):
That shit is therapeutic to meand it's like an art of my skill
at a home.
Man made me go back and feellike Tim the Two man Taylor on
some home.
Speaker 3 (13:00):
TV type stuff, man
who had a very supportive wife.
Speaker 1 (13:04):
Yeah, for sure, she
was very supportive wife.
Speaker 3 (13:06):
Yeah, for sure she
was very supportive.
Speaker 1 (13:07):
Yeah, she was.
She be throwing shade though.
Speaker 3 (13:09):
What wife don't?
Speaker 1 (13:10):
Have you watched Home
Improvement lately?
Is that the last five years?
Nah, nah, do so, it's going tobe even more hilarious to you.
It was funny when we was kids.
That was my big brother'sfavorite show, kid, that was my
big brother favorite show.
We all had like our favoriteone.
His was like home improvementand cops.
(13:30):
My sister's was fresh prince,mine was family matter, but, but
, um, but I forgot.
I forgot what I was saying, bro.
But oh yeah, home improvement,when you watch it as an adult,
especially when you own propertyand shit it would he'll be
doing shit in the house.
Okay, I think, episode one,season one, episode one the
(13:53):
dishwasher wasn't working, right, man.
So, man, this nigga tim hookedup like some goddamn nitro tanks
to the dishwasher.
He's like oh honey, yeah, it'sgonna clean it like crazy.
A bunch of torques on the water.
You'll never wash a dish againin your life.
Got this shit hooked up underthe sink, all kind of tanks and
(14:15):
pressurizers and fucking metersand shit.
It's like nigga, it's adishwasher man.
He gonna turn that shit on.
Speaker 2 (14:22):
That shit he's like
yeah, man, that man, he gonna
turn that shit.
On that shit he like yeah.
Speaker 1 (14:27):
Man, that shit
missile blow out the back Of the
cabinet.
I die laughing, man, cause thattrial and error be part of it.
Speaker 2 (14:36):
Yeah, yeah, man, and
the.
Speaker 1 (14:37):
Tim the Tool man.
Tyler can mess up, damn it.
I can mess up too.
Yeah, if you ain't neverInstalled a Dishwasher, knock
out the drain plug, damn it.
I can mess up too.
Yeah, if you ain't neverinstalled a dishwasher, knock
out the drain plug to thegarbage disposal if it ain't
already out before you do it,because I learned the hard way,
man.
So Freedom Speakers, thank youall for tuning in to this
(14:59):
episode of Permission to SpeakFreely Podcast.
I am your host, the highestchief, ali, and I'm here with my
bro host the most Laylo, themost so on one of my home
improvement ventures, I wantedto update some things in our
home, one being the dishwasherand one being the garbage
(15:19):
disposal.
So went to local Home Depot andthat's my preferred's, my
preferred store.
Shout out to home depot, uh, Iworked at home depot.
And low.
Shout out to those.
Uh, both of them establishments.
But that being said, when Iupgraded and updated the garbage
disposal and dishwasher at myhome at the same time, I'm
(15:40):
pretty crafty and pretty diykind of guy you know.
So I got everything hooked allthe way up and I'm looking for
leaks and I'm looking for thisand I done.
Put my little putty around the.
I put a new drain in there, puta little seal in there, little
plumber's putty, and I'm proudof myself.
I got the, I got the big dog,uh, the Moen.
I got it was 198,.
Speaker 3 (16:01):
Well, five, six
horsepower, I got the big dog.
Speaker 1 (16:05):
Migo's mad at me
because I like to do shit right,
man, but go ahead.
So I didn't do shit right, notfully Okay.
So I had everything hooked up,but one of the things that I did
not do was knock out the drainplug for the garbage disposal
that allows the back pressure,the back flow and all that to go
(16:27):
, or to drain out.
Yeah, for it to go into yourdisposal.
Yeah, man, I'm washing the loadin a dishwasher like uh-huh,
yeah, yeah, yeah, it's on.
Yep, look at that, you see.
Look, you see how smooth thatshit is.
The other one was antique.
You know what I'm saying.
It still worked, but it wasantique, had a funny smell when
(16:49):
you opened it.
That being said, when the waterstarted hitting the flow
because it had to go somewhere,water got to go somewhere.
And this is when you startreading instructions, your
manual, all kind of shit.
So four gallons per wash iswhat's used in your dishwasher.
In average dishwashers that'sjust four gallons of water
(17:12):
swishing around.
So people be like oh, I'mreading.
Them kids will run thatmotherfucking bathroom.
Right, yeah for sure, balanceout what you want.
But the water had to gosomewhere.
That shit started spilling allon the floor.
I'm trying to dry it up withall the towels.
Now we arguing about where thefucking towels at, why we ain't
got no to order some towels.
(17:34):
You ordering everything elsebut towels, order towels.
A mop head ain't going to getthis.
He's trying to deflect.
Trying to deflect man, but itwas it.
Take me back to even before wego.
Speaker 3 (17:45):
Don't use the white
tire.
Speaker 1 (17:47):
Take me back.
Before we even get to the wateron the floor, we had to go get
a dishwasher from Home Depot andI'm driving an Audi A6.
Oh man, and that's a guy thatAudi Q3.
If you don't know those cars,you can't put no goddamn
appliance in there with two kids.
(18:08):
So, bro, that was one of thegripes with having one of those
luxury cars of like I'm acraftsman DIY type of guy.
Nick, I can't put no morekitchen cabinets.
Speaker 2 (18:19):
in this bitch, I need
AWD.
Speaker 1 (18:22):
So, that being said,
man, water spillingilling
everywhere.
We trying to clean up all thewater.
I'm reading the manual.
What's going on?
Like man.
What the fuck is something?
Is it leaking?
Is like I'm put.
I even got it set out on thefloor in the middle of the
kitchen letting it run.
I'm like man, it's probablyleaking in the back.
Nah, then knock themotherfucking drain out and the
(18:45):
back flow all through that bitch.
Yeah, warped up our kitchenfloor, mad as fuck about it.
The water had to go somewhereand I did it like three times
until I read in that manualbefore you get started, don't
forget to knock out this drainplug if you're using, if you're
connected to a dishwasher, ifyou're connected to this.
(19:05):
Yeah, if you're not connectedto a dishwasher, do not knock
out the drain plug.
That's why it's there.
And you gotta hit that bitchhard.
Yeah, you take a screwdriverwith a hammer.
Yep, pop that chips with thatbitch man you could either.
They say like you can grind itup if you want to, or stick a
hand there and pull it out.
I'm like I'm pulling'm pullingthis shit out.
Hey, man, I watch too manyhorror movies as a kid where
(19:27):
there's just electronicsmalfunction.
Too much home improvement.
Yeah, yeah, man, check out HomeImprovement.
Man, please, as an adult, doyourself a favor, man.
This week.
Five episodes, I will.
That's two and a half hours, 22minutes per episode.
Speaker 2 (19:41):
Yeah, cause it's.
Speaker 1 (19:42):
TV For sure, for sure
, yeah.
So Just do that man.
You gonna be like Yo this shit.
You gonna understand the dadmore now.
We used to watch this shit as akid.
You know what I mean.
So you used to be Little Timmy,you looking at it.
From Jonathan Taylor Thomas.
Yeah right, yeah, them niggasNow you.
You, tim, the two man, taylornow.
So you, tim.
(20:03):
The Tool man, tyler now.
So should be different.
Man, you got to go back.
You remember when you used tobe Chris?
You're Julius now.
Yeah, that's you, you, julius.
Now, man, I get the big pieceof chicken, little ass, chicken
wing.
Yeah, man, you got to do that,you got to do that, yeah.
So I'm going to check that out,man.
So I will say this, when thispast weekend, like I said this
(20:27):
week, knocked out some housethings, but I actually got a
chance to sit down for a secondand just reflect.
So, as I'm reflecting and I'mchilling, man, I'm sipping me a
little bit of something, man,I'm puffing me a little bit of
something, I'm just, you know,relaxing, taking the load off.
I'm watching, I'm bingewatching TV shows, and that's
not a usual thing To me to do,but I be.
(20:47):
I sometimes feel like It'd be awaste of time, cause I'm one of
them Active people that bedoing stuff With my hands all
the time.
But In this moment, nigga, Ineed my body To sit your bitch
ass down, bruh and catch up onyour shows.
Catch up on your shows.
So I start hitting on Um SomeTV shows and then the
provocativeness if that's a wordin me, took over of Aztec, as
you said, as a grown-up.
Now I'm in the grown-up rolebut I'm looking like hey, hey
(21:10):
man.
Some of the shows I waswatching I'm like hey man.
Peggy Bundy really wanted tofuck Al a lot as a husband.
Now, what's wrong with Al?
Speaker 2 (21:23):
I'm Al I'm.
Speaker 1 (21:25):
Al, I'm Al Bundy.
Okay, because if you tempt atwo-man tailor, I'm Al Bundy, I
go to work, I'll cuss people out.
Everything I say is wrong.
I got smart-ass mouth Me and myneighbors be getting into it.
Yeah.
But I was just watching some ofthe TV women on the shows of
(21:48):
like hey man, how they treatthey husbands or how they deal
with the husbands, from some ofthe comical sitcoms to some of
the ones that were actually moreserious man.
So I was looking like hey man,peggy Bundy one was bad, she
didn't work.
Speaker 3 (22:03):
Peggy Bundy was bad
Peggy Bundy one was bad.
Speaker 1 (22:04):
She didn't work.
Let me look her up.
Peggy Bundy was bad First.
Peggy Bundy was bad Big redhead, leggings, titties and she
stayed at home.
She had no job and Al worked atthe shoe store.
Al worked at the shoe store andshe wanted to fuck Al all the
time.
Speaker 3 (22:24):
Oh, al, and he he
like god damn it, peg he.
Speaker 1 (22:28):
He was so irritated
by his wife but it's like hey,
man yo some niggas would wish tobe in your shoes, bro.
Speaker 2 (22:38):
I see what you mean,
bro, yeah man peggy.
Speaker 1 (22:40):
Peggy bundy was, it
was what was one of them.
So I'm watching now as thehusband like al.
What the fuck is you trippingfor, bro?
You come to bed, peggy, wherethe fuck?
And you just irritated manbeautiful is that her?
That's her you might notice hertoo for another generation of
people who may be listening tothe show.
(23:02):
She was one of the maincharacters on Sons of Anarchy.
You have your hip.
The sons of Anarchy.
Speaker 2 (23:09):
I'm hip to Sons of
Anarchy.
Yeah, so she was on there aswell.
I never watched it, though.
Speaker 1 (23:13):
She was on there as
well, and she voiced one of the
characters, the lady with thepurple hair, and went out on
Futurama.
Speaker 2 (23:19):
That's thank you.
Speaker 3 (23:26):
So you're a fan, I'm
a fan, I'm a fan, I'm a fan.
You're a fan of this woman.
I know all that.
Speaker 1 (23:29):
First off hey man, I
love women and but I love like,
if it's white women, I like theredheads, brunettes.
You know that when I look at myporn search for like white, I
look at like red heads.
So you need specific with a.
I specifically like white girlswith red hair, white kind of
Like gingers.
Butts.
I like those.
Yep, I look those up.
(23:49):
But Peggy Bundy, I was likePeggy was bad, always wanted to
fuck.
Al Seemed like she'd irritatethat nigga, get on his nerves,
but it was like, hey, she wasall for her, nigga.
Though.
Speaker 2 (24:01):
I liked that.
I liked that.
Speaker 1 (24:05):
So one I couldn't get
with, though I was watching the
bitch, watching everybody hateChris.
And I love Tashina Arnold, butI cannot.
I don't find her attractive asRochelle.
As Rochelle.
Speaker 2 (24:14):
I don't find her
attractive Because.
Speaker 1 (24:15):
Pam was fine, pam was
finer than Gina.
Yeah, like for real, if I wasan adult they was pushing Gina.
You know what I'm saying.
She's the love interest, shelikes him.
Yeah, but Pam though, pamthough, and you know, because
Martin was always roasting herand shit.
You know what I'm saying.
Funny that they have more of aconnection, even on the show,
(24:36):
than Gina and Pam.
Yeah, for sure.
But I didn't find Rochelleattractive because she's like
mom, mom, mom.
Okay, she's mom mom.
But I did find Elyse Nealattractive from the Hughley's DL
Hughley wife on there.
Speaker 3 (24:55):
I found she you be
hitting me with real names, bro.
Yeah, I'm a fan, bro, I'm a fan.
Speaker 1 (24:59):
What's her name?
Elyse Neal, oh, elyse, yeah,ely Elise Neal.
She was the mother on the DLHughley show and I'm trying to
think of anyone else?
Yes, she was the wife onHustlin' Flo.
What's the name of the wife onHustlin' Flo?
Anthony Anderson's wife.
Speaker 3 (25:15):
Uh-huh.
Speaker 1 (25:15):
Yep, yep, yep.
But another one.
I was looking at her like hey,just a Woo, you just hey, you
got me one you might be fixingto say it go ahead.
I don't wanna that's that, them, my only two, that I got.
So far man I only had two and Igot three.
Now, I had one in mine, but it,like you said, man, now these my
(25:39):
TV crushes, they're wives, butthey're.
But I'm looking at it from thehusband perspective.
I don't want to be rude.
I'm fantasizing about fuckingsomebody else's wife.
You know what I'm saying.
It's like I'm attracted to thecharacter, the fan.
You know I'm a fan.
But I was looking at them, justlooking at the husband
perspective, like hey man, shereally, she down, she down.
Speaker 3 (26:02):
So I got my two.
Speaker 2 (26:06):
I'm going to back out
for a second.
Speaker 1 (26:06):
I think I got my
three now, you mentioning her,
Elyse Neal you said Elyse.
Neal you mentioning herreminded me, and I'm going to go
ahead and give you this thirdone first.
Okay, Bet, bet, bet.
Now I don't use real names, bro.
Honestly.
Speaker 3 (26:25):
I.
Speaker 1 (26:25):
But she was on the
Jamie Foxx show as well and we
got to talk about him a littlelater on, wanda.
Mack On the Bernie Mack show.
Oh hey, hey, yeah, yeah, hey,yeah, hey.
Man, that's an honorablemention.
Speaker 2 (26:42):
Is that a TV, mom?
Speaker 1 (26:43):
I mean technically
she didn't have children.
Speaker 2 (26:45):
She's auntie, she's
Aunt Wanda.
Speaker 1 (26:48):
Yeah, uncle Bernie.
Uncle Bernie, she's Aunt Wanda.
But, man, I had to clarify therules with you.
On the TV, mom, yeah, man, well, you know, I went mom, milf
type husband, but it's TVcrushes.
Don't forget about Aunt Wanda.
Tv crushes, bro.
And she was a chocolate delight.
Yeah, chocolate delight.
She got some really nice eyes,nice eyes, nice lips, just a
(27:09):
beautiful face.
You know what I'm saying.
She was also, I think, for me,because it's more than just the
aesthetics of the woman.
Another thing that you likedabout Peggy was not just the way
she looked, but just hercharacter you know man she was
always trying to look out forher husband, even though this
nigga be he used
Speaker 2 (27:31):
to play football.
Speaker 1 (27:33):
Nigga, fuck this
woman, yeah he's still living in
his high school glory days andshe rock with him.
But uh, but unwanda's character, I mean, hey, unwanda, she
always kind of came through forthem kids, when uncle bernie was
, you know what I'm saying, thevoice of reason.
And she was able to calm theMac man down a little bit.
Speaker 2 (27:49):
Jordan, you know what
I'm saying Bernie, come here,
wanda, I'm talking you right,honey?
Speaker 1 (27:58):
You know what I'm
saying.
She was able to do that, soshouts out to Wanda Mac man
what's her real name, please, Iwould like to shout her out.
Speaker 3 (28:04):
Oh shit.
Speaker 2 (28:05):
Shouts out to you,
Wanda Mack.
Speaker 1 (28:06):
I'm so sorry, but
she's a beautiful actress.
Yeah, beautiful man.
I got Alright, so we talkedabout this a little bit before
the show.
Her last name wouldn't beWinslow, would it?
But Rachel, aunt Rachel fromFamily Matters, richie Mama,
richie Mama.
They were my stepson when I wasgrowing up.
(28:28):
They were my stepson, but I hada crush on Rachel, always had a
crush on Rachel.
Man, I'm talking as a kid, bro.
When I was a kid, yeah, Iwatched cartoons, but Family
Matters was like my show and itwasn't because of Rachel.
I like Aunt Rachel more thanLaura't because of rachel like
(28:49):
I'm not like rachel more thanlaura.
Speaker 2 (28:50):
Yeah, you know what
I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (28:51):
But like man, she's
so pretty, you know what I'm
saying.
And she was, she was the sister, because, you know, because
harriet was the, the mom is mom.
You know what I'm saying, what?
She got Three kids.
One of them disappears, so shegot two.
Speaker 3 (29:08):
Remember the baby
sister yeah.
Speaker 1 (29:09):
Harriet couldn't seem
like.
See, harriet was Carl's wife.
Yeah, and then Rachel wasHarriet's sister.
Who could never get Her shittogether.
Speaker 3 (29:17):
Yeah, and so she was
there.
Speaker 1 (29:18):
She was staying with
them.
We don't know where Richiedaddy was.
That's why I come in.
You know what I'm saying.
I, we don't know where richiedaddy was.
That's why I come in, you knowI look out for him.
Speaker 2 (29:24):
You know saying they
loved you for that.
Speaker 1 (29:25):
Give him a little
bite for christmas, you know.
So I look out, I do what I got.
Y'all just type shit I be doingright, but uh, but no, rachel
was always very attractive to me, pretty smile.
You know what I mean, and she,and I mean this respectfully, I
mean this respectfully.
The same way they would useMyra for, like, the sexual
(29:53):
innuendo for the show.
You know they wouldn't useLaura for that, you know they
would use Myra and Myra, youknow.
Rest in peace to her,absolutely.
Speaker 2 (30:05):
I forgot what her
actual name is was.
Speaker 1 (30:05):
I'm not good at that,
but she was very beautiful and
you know she wanted Steve, youknow, but they would also use
Rachel.
When the adult Characters werein the room.
I remember she had a saxophone.
She ended up finding hersaxophone, or something like
that, and Apparently she reallycouldn't play, had a saxophone.
Uh, she ended up finding hersaxophone or something like that
and, um, apparently she reallycouldn't play the sax for shit,
(30:31):
but she liked, she liked to playit.
So she found her saxophone inthe attic or whatever.
And then she come out therelike oh, I found my saxophone,
so then she go.
Speaker 2 (30:43):
They used to call me
hot lips.
And then Harriet go.
That before you got thesaxophone, Rachel.
Speaker 3 (30:52):
Shit like that it's
like what Adult jokes, Rachel?
Speaker 2 (30:55):
what you doing?
Speaker 1 (30:56):
You started blow
skiing and shit what you doing.
But yeah, I'm Rachel man, shoutout to her I got to get real
names, man, I want to get themtheir flowers.
One more, I'm Rachel man, shoutout to her I gotta get real
names, man, I wanna get themtheir flowers.
One more, bro, one more.
Okay, bet, bet, bet, this onegone, trudy Proud Thick Trudy,
(31:22):
yeah, her, I forgot she was alsoon Hustlin' Flow Her.
I forgot what.
I forgot who's voice she wasalso on Hustlin' Flow.
Speaker 2 (31:26):
Uh-huh, yeah Her name
.
Speaker 1 (31:28):
I apologize, Let me
get her real name real quick.
I forgot what her name is, butI like her as well One, and this
might sound sexist, but I likeher as an actress from the movie
Sprung.
She was in the movie Sprungwith Tashina, I mean with Pam,
(31:48):
we don't know my character names, but she was in the movie with
Sprung and as a kid I used tojust like her mouth.
I liked her lips, yeah, herteeth.
Speaker 2 (32:01):
Big mouth ass.
Speaker 1 (32:02):
Paula J Parker.
Yeah, paula Jai, middle nameJai or J Parker.
Yeah, paula Jai, middle nameJai or J, shouts out to you.
She did the voice for TrudyProud, but Trudy, trudy, trudy,
yeah, man, I know we gettinginto the animation world,
forgive me, you know what I'msaying.
But Trudy Proud, man, becauseshe also had that character too,
(32:26):
where she was very, because youain't never heard trudy get out
of pocket.
You know I'm saying oscar willbe.
You know I'm saying mama.
You know I'm saying but whentrudy.
Come to oscar, you know.
Come sugar mama, you know, shewas just so comical.
So it's more than just theaesthetic of the woman, for sure
it's the character.
I want y'all to understand thisfreedom speakers.
(32:47):
I ain't a complete freak,you're just not a complete freak
, just a little bit.
But you know it's her voice,her tone, just the way she was
as a mom, as a wife, and she wasa professional woman as well, I
believe.
But Trudy Proud, man, anotherone of them, tv moms, yes, yeah,
shout out to Trudy Proud, shoutout to Paula J Parker for the
(33:09):
show man.
So to finish this off, pause.
Oh, you got your third.
I got my third.
Talk to me, man alright, talkto me.
Felicia Rashad as the mother.
Oh man, on the Cosby Show.
You know what One?
(33:31):
We can't do this, okay one.
You see how my voice changedLike I'm talking to her.
She's very sensual as a woman.
She gives me very Women of herera like her.
Stephanie Mills yeah, stephanie, like was it Ivana Zanvat?
(33:54):
What's her name?
Speaker 2 (33:54):
Ayala Van Zant.
I want to make sure I say itshe fine for real.
She fine for real.
Speaker 3 (33:58):
Ayala, like whoa Miss
Van Zant.
Speaker 1 (34:01):
Remember, these
aren't.
I think with these women we'renot only just talking about how
beautiful they are exterior,we're talking about the
aesthetic of a soul, y'all man.
Okay, stephanie mills, soul asa woman is so sensual and soft
and it's like why are youhypnotizing me?
Don't be eye candy with feliciarashad.
(34:21):
Just the way that she looks sosubtle, she don't gotta be that
eric that.
Um, lisa bonet, like you couldtell she got that same from her
of like no, be a, you ain't gota herb baby, you can be still.
It's power, yeah, it's power inthat man, so we're in being
still.
I see, I see that man.
So they uh, what was it, claire?
(34:45):
Claire, huxtable, what?
Speaker 3 (34:46):
was her name.
Speaker 1 (34:46):
Claire Huxtable.
Claire Huxtable was letting, ifyou watch some of the episodes,
like they wouldn't be sexualbut they would be intimate, yeah
, you would see them laying inthe bed together fully clothed,
but he'll roll over, cliff willroll over and kiss her gently,
(35:07):
just touching on her.
Boop, bop, bam.
You know whatever they doing,but it's.
It's like hey, they got eight,nine kids in this, but you don't
think.
You don't think that happens,man.
I was watching the episode ofthe cosby show and we're gonna
get back to felicia rashad.
We're not just gonna roll over,but I shout out felicia I gotta
mention this, man.
It was this episode where, uh,it was the end of the episode.
(35:27):
Man, I swear this wasn'tscripted.
Man, um, mrs huxtable was, shehad some lotion and she was
rubbing clips, maybe back orshoulder, arm or something like
that.
You know what I mean and as awife, you know she kind of got
done with that section.
It's very inappropriate for tv.
Man, with your children, youjust don't get it.
(35:48):
But, uh, she goes, um, I'mgonna have to pull it up.
Man, I don't want to misquote,but she said, uh, would you,
would you like anything elsebefore I go to bed?
And she kind of, you know,using the rest to rub into her
hands.
So then, cliff Bill Goes, whydon't you reload Over there?
You know?
So she gets some more, she gets.
(36:10):
This is on TV.
She gets some more.
This nigga Bill Go to SloshDown, he doing this shit, he
doing that shit and then shetake the lotion and she like Put
it on the nigga face and theaudience go crazy laughing and
shit and that was the end of theepisode.
That shit was hilarious man heybro, the way this he teased
(36:34):
your ass.
He going along with it, man.
Shout out to man, that shit wasfucking bad.
The Cosby Show?
Shout out to Felicia Rashad,such a beautiful woman, and so
Grace Adonis Creed, mama.
She played there too, For sure.
(36:55):
Shout out, man.
Hey, felicia Rashad, man, she'sstill very much a fine woman.
I remember when Drake wantedher.
I watched her Breakfast Clubinterview, and Drake wanted her,
for was it the?
Speaker 2 (37:15):
Keisha Do you Love Me
?
Video Keisha, do you love me?
Speaker 1 (37:18):
He wanted Felicia
Rashad in the video to be like
his love interest mom and shewent on and did it.
But Felicia Rashad's daughter,I believe, is her manager video
to be like his love interest mom, you know, and she went on and
did it.
But you know um, feliciarashad's daughter, I believe, is
her manager, and so felicia'suh daughter was like oh well,
mama, you gotta do it.
Speaker 2 (37:35):
And she's like I know
, I know, but I'm gonna make him
wait, make him sweat a littlebit so she know what she be
doing, she know, know what shebe doing she make Drake wait.
Speaker 1 (37:44):
I'll email back in a
couple days.
Nigga, I'm Mr Rashad.
Nigga, others still take plans.
You can wait for me.
But yeah, man, shout out toFelicia Rashad.
It's the only real name we knewaround.
I knew her, I knew that, I knewthat.
Now Got it over her for sure.
Man, that's wild man.
(38:05):
So honorable mention would be.
I know we did three, but anhonorable mention would be.
And she's not a TV wife orwhatever.
But when I said Stephanie Mills, just the essence, that's very
comparable to Felicia Rashad,did you see when she pulled up
on Dion Cole?
yeah yeah, bruh, that thatfreedom speakers.
If you have not seen thatBreakfast Club interview with
(38:28):
Deion Cole and then StephanieMills pulls up on him, and if
you don't know who StephanieMills is, she used to date
Michael Jackson back in the day.
She was Michael Jackson'sgirlfriend and she would tell
you and she had hit songs.
I don't know who they are rightnow, but she's a beautiful
woman and I like her music and Ilike just how her aesthetic as
a woman I've been seeing her,like you say, on there and how
(38:50):
she speaks as a woman and speaksof women empowerment and how
she talks to men.
Yeah, how she talks to men.
I think that shows a certaincharacter of her mannerism, how,
how she was raised, what shedidn't exercise and seen work
for her.
You know what I'm saying In anindustry dominated by men, which
(39:12):
is, you know, entertainment.
It was definitely when she wasdoing it.
But when I seen her in thatinterview talk to him and go so
subtle to him, just grab hishand and rubbed on his face, I
think, and he just pulled shewas with mike when he was still
black yeah, yep, yep, yep, yep,yep, yep, yep, yep.
We had mike with the big fro.
(39:32):
Mike was like 20 so, but when Iseen her talk to deon cole and,
uh, pull up on him and addresshim, real subtle as a woman and
real, you know know, flirty andsensual, she had a whip.
Yeah, at least in my mind shehad one.
She had like a leather jacket.
(39:54):
She kissed my man on the lipsand he just, oh yeah, but you
see how he was like, oh yeah, helike them.
He's like did you see her?
Speaker 3 (40:03):
though, yeah.
Speaker 1 (40:04):
He's like them
vintage women.
Yeah, like them vintage Vintagewomen.
And again, no disrespect Withthe word.
When you think of vintage, youthink of you know.
Speaker 2 (40:11):
Old furniture.
Speaker 1 (40:13):
Still got value, but
old Like nah, vintage in a Very
lovely way and preserved Exactly.
You got better with time.
You skill your classic moves isshitting on all this artificial
that's out, oh man.
So shout out to those who dothe minimum and get the most.
(40:36):
Shout out to those beautifulwomen who have found beauty
within themselves.
And sometimes, you know, it canbe difficult.
You never know what a personthinks about themselves For sure
, that's true.
So, freedom speakers, continueto love on yourself, continue to
find love within yourself andfind people who love on you for
who you are.
At the same time, don't be no,just bullshit-ass, sly
(40:58):
motherfucker.
Step your shit up.
That's the show, man.
Put some pep in your step andfind another gear.
All right, mother fucker ain'tgoing to just accept.
So I'll say this, man, I waswatching 600 Pound Life with
Ness and I like watching thatshow and I watch it on some fat
nigga shit, like I always eatwhen I watch it, because then I
don't feel bad, that's for sure.
I try to watch it because you gowatch it and I like doctor.
(41:26):
Now all right, I was gonna bedoctor now for uh, that's a good
one man, I was gonna be doctornow for halloween, some hair on
my was gonna give me a goldstethoscope and a trench coat I
mean a lab coat and walk inthere like hey, aren't you hey.
Speaker 2 (41:37):
So what's the problem
?
I sent you, uh, four months ago.
I gave you a goal to see if youcan lose 20 pounds.
Not only have you not lost 20pounds, you gained another 8
pounds.
So I'm not going to do thisshit with you.
Speaker 1 (41:53):
If you're not going
to, then at the end we're going
to do the little one-on-one forthe video.
That's my favorite part,because he be brutally honest,
honest as fuck.
Speaker 3 (42:04):
The individual do not
do what they were supposed to
do and I do not feel safe toproceed with the operation.
If they continue to grow andeat as they're eating, at the
astronomical rate, they will notbe alive long enough to even
see the procedure come fullcircle.
Speaker 2 (42:24):
I would be surprised
if she made it even to your next
appointment.
Speaker 1 (42:28):
Hey, you saw the
motherfucker that got on the
scale, and this is a scale thatthey use to weigh beans and shit
Like this is real.
They can't bring no regularmotherfucking Walmart scale in
there.
Hell no, nigga, they need theshit they use to weigh rice.
They got a freight fucking theyweighing sacks of potatoes on
this motherfucking old trucksman.
(42:50):
So uh, it might have been awoman, but anyway, man, she got
on the scale.
Nigga, that bitch said couldn'teven.
And then I believe I might begetting episode men, but I
believe her brother.
He was big too, but he wouldway less than her.
Speaker 3 (43:04):
Oh, I seen that my
nigga was like damn.
Speaker 1 (43:08):
Man, I seen that
episode.
A whole family, it's like thewhole family fat as fuck, man.
No disrespect to peoplesensitive.
We love the people around here,man, but at the end of the day
don't care.
You said yeah, man.
So all of them.
They be killing me on thepeople back on their backstory.
Speaker 3 (43:27):
I've been practicing
on my diet and Dr Now told me
I've been managing my weight.
I don't think I gained thatmuch.
Hopefully he gives it to me,but we'll see.
Speaker 1 (43:38):
And then they walk in
and get weighed and be up on
weight.
Speaker 2 (43:43):
Post to lose 30 and
gain 45.
Speaker 1 (43:45):
Man, God fuck Shit.
Yeah, man, Then we be up onweight Post the lose 30 and gain
45.
Speaker 2 (43:46):
Shit.
Speaker 3 (43:48):
I thought you were
supposed to Stick to the diet.
What's going?
Speaker 2 (43:53):
on, I have been
sticking to the diet, but no,
you haven't.
Speaker 1 (43:57):
Yeah, it sucks.
I remember he got on them onetime.
The lady was like I can'tsurvive off of this diet.
Speaker 3 (44:05):
I need to eat.
He was like you've eaten fourmonths worth of food already.
You are not going to starve.
Speaker 1 (44:11):
He got right on her
case like, hey man, quit fucking
playing with me, man, don'tplay with me man.
But I like watching Dr Now, man, dr Now you a hero man For sure
.
So if you go back, because Iwas watching them from the
beginning At first, dr Now wasjust okay.
In surgeries the niggas wascoming back, you know, getting
(44:31):
fucked up.
Yeah, now they had them.
You kept watching it.
These people had to make goalsand weights, man, they had to go
talk to like a psychiatrist.
That's a big step.
Like a psychiatrist, that's abig step.
They had to go, you know, loseweight.
I mean, you got to lose thisamount of weight just because,
man, you giving somebody 700pound gastro surgery but they
(44:52):
ain't going on the anesthesiaand shit.
You don't know what to do.
Yeah, yeah, so they startchanging.
I'm like, oh so, shout out toDr Now.
Man, freedom Speakers, I'mgoing to be Dr Now next season
for Halloween.
I'm practicing my voice.
I fuck with Dr Now.
If you notice sometime, man, hedon't blink when I watch him.
(45:15):
I'm like, man, he ain't blink.
Or his eyes be so low he looklike he blink.
Hey, you watch, or that's awatch?
That's a watch.
What's a thousand pound sisters?
Speaker 3 (45:29):
My bill to pay.
Speaker 1 (45:30):
I ain't no, baby yeah
.
Speaker 3 (45:32):
You don't know what
it's like To be this big Tammy,
you don't no.
Speaker 1 (45:38):
You don't, hey,
listen, so check it out.
So Tammy ended up, you know,losing weight.
I think she ended up likeGetting a surgery, not sure.
Another fat-ass family.
I mean I like that Because bothof the sisters and the brother
we getting canceled this week.
Speaker 2 (45:53):
I'm sorry.
Speaker 1 (45:54):
But the brother big,
you got the I believe she's the
older sister.
And then you got the twoyounger sisters who are like the
main characters, you know.
So the older sister, you knowshe's still like, you know,
pretty in the face, you knowwhat I mean.
So Tammy and the older sisterlike arguing.
So Tammy, do like her greenscreen backdrop, you know.
And she's lost his weight, butshe got like a lot of like
(46:15):
excess skin and shit like that.
Speaker 2 (46:16):
So she do her green
skin.
She's like what's wrong man,cause you not the pretty one, no
more.
I'm like oh cut.
Speaker 1 (46:26):
Oh shit, that y'all
the pocket.
I respect your confidence.
Tlc wrong for that.
I respect your confidence.
Speaker 2 (46:34):
Whatever did editing
and did y'all, it was just oh my
gosh.
Speaker 1 (46:39):
Edit this out if you
got to, man, I don't wanna.
Speaker 2 (46:43):
I like doing the show
we'll see but listen.
Speaker 1 (46:48):
It was an episode,
man, where the middle sister is
pushing Tammy in the wheelchairand they have to cross a brick
road.
Speaker 2 (47:10):
Debbie got so fucking
mad because she didn't stay on
the sidewalk.
Speaker 1 (47:14):
You know, trying to
cross a brick road in a
wheelchair with a six sevenhundred pound person.
Speaker 2 (47:24):
That wheel, get
between them bricks.
Speaker 1 (47:30):
She was so fucking
mad man.
People looking at shit oh man,I don't like when they be doing
shit like that and then theother person be like be
pretending to be helpless, theyact like come on, tammy, move, I
can't keep moving your big ass,all like that.
That's the brother.
I saw you and her eat a lasagnathe size of this pan.
Speaker 2 (47:55):
I don't mean I ate it
all in one day.
Speaker 1 (47:58):
Tammy, don't you
goddamn do that shit to me,
don't you goddamn lie.
You can pull that bullshit overtheir ass, that's it.
Yeah, but they got a Kentuckyaccent.
Speaker 2 (48:06):
They from Kentucky.
Yeah, they from Kentucky.
Speaker 1 (48:08):
They from Kentucky,
yeah, they sound like Kentucky
man, but I watch that show andeat and don't feel too bad.
I'm like I ain't, but none ofthem single, yeah, man.
So I remember Tammy had oh fuck, I wish one of the sisters
don't give me the quote but oneof them had a black guy and he
(48:28):
was like a true.
He was a true, true BBW lover,true.
Speaker 2 (48:34):
He was real skinny,
wasn't?
Speaker 1 (48:35):
he, he was, yeah, he
was real skinny, so she was.
Which one of them at this timehad all that fat In they
forehead?
Speaker 2 (48:47):
I forget Not the one
with the eyes.
It was the one.
Speaker 1 (48:50):
With the fat in the
forehead, the one that got the
children, not her, okay.
I know what you're talkingabout and not the older sister
who is yeah, she look decent,she pretty.
Yeah.
Yeah, tammy is the one who wasstruggling With the weight loss.
The younger one who went intorehab yeah, okay.
Speaker 3 (49:06):
And that's.
Speaker 1 (49:06):
Tammy, she was the
one that was like an extreme,
extreme case, and the othersister was like my bills are
paid.
Yeah, I pay my bills bitch, mybills are paid.
Speaker 2 (49:15):
She was like you're
the one acting like a baby about
it.
Well, who's calling you a baby?
I ain't no baby.
My bitch might be a spank.
Speaker 1 (49:22):
So I watched that on
there with Nessa.
Speaker 2 (49:26):
You, the damn baby.
Speaker 1 (49:27):
I'm trying to think
what else on TLC I'll be
watching with her.
Bravo really been her networklately.
Speaker 3 (49:34):
Bravo, been the one.
Speaker 1 (49:35):
Catching back up on
them Housewives shows.
Tlc, rome man Exposing thisfamily the way they are for
capital.
Speaker 3 (49:43):
It ain't right.
Speaker 1 (49:44):
Hey, man, speaking of
capital man, this shit about to
get dark.
Okay, what's up?
You heard about the healthcareexec got knocked over.
Yeah, shit real.
They trying to say it was ayoung dude, I think he was like
26.
Something like that.
They caught him.
They caught him like two daysago and, to be honest with you,
(50:05):
bro, I think he wanted to getcaught.
Apparently, this nigga stillhad the gun in which I heard I
don't want to put no false, I'mnot reporting, I'm just saying
what I heard it was a 3D printedgun.
Oh yeah, that's serious, 3dprinted, no serial number.
That's serious, 3d printing, noserial number.
No, nothing.
But he still had the gun andthe manifestos, I believe from
the plane and shit.
(50:26):
I don't fucking know, you know,but this guy's apparently very
intelligent, had like a 130 IQ,some shit like that.
So pretty much premeditated.
He wasn't no fool, definitelypremed.
This wasn't no, just randomBruh, like, first of all, man,
(50:47):
it's just sad man.
Definitely our condolences tothe family, but it's man.
My wife jameika made a goodpoint last night, man.
She was like people are upset,you know, I'm saying, be it
health care and even autoinsurance, like you know, people
go.
It's fucking scam.
You know I'm the big weed isgetting rich and we down here
getting fucked.
You know what I mean, becauseI'm paying into this, you know,
(51:10):
and then when I actually need touse my insurance, I get denied.
You know, like people are angry.
So those people out there mankind of reminds me of the Joker
movie, mm-hmm.
You know, when he killed thosethree Wall Street, you know,
(51:30):
guys, when they were they werebullying him in this case, you
know, but people kind of gotbehind that like yeah, fuck,
fuck them.
Speaker 2 (51:39):
You know what I'm
saying?
Speaker 1 (51:40):
It's us, the little
guys yeah, it's people out there
who are kind of like putting onthe clown mask, like, yeah,
fuck, give us free healthcare.
You know what I'm saying,really, yeah.
Yeah, it's people out there whoyou know and like and I can
understand, but at the same timeit's like, oh man, the man got
killed for this shit.
The point that Jameika made wasman.
You never know.
(52:01):
He might have been one of theguys trying to make some shit
happen on the.
You know behind the scenes, forthe people he could have been
one of the people who voted forit.
Yeah, the deciding factor of it.
Yeah, it got took out.
Yeah, now they lost themajority vote.
Speaker 2 (52:14):
Right.
Speaker 1 (52:16):
Right, because you
mad.
That happens though.
Yeah, because you mad man, theshit wild man.
As an employer man, I believethat in health insurance, not
only just like the employerbeing able to be in a good place
to offer it, but I do feel likethe country, with all of the
things that it has, it canreally be a really good managed
(52:38):
thing.
Yeah for sure, but it's thesame, it's like okay.
So even when you think back,like John Q, you know what I'm
saying.
Ain't John q a true story?
oh, I don't know I want to sayyeah, I want to say that shit
really happened, man, but whenit come down to it, it's like an
important thing.
That john said was like hey,sick, help.
(53:00):
We hear the commercials andpeople talking about how
expensive insulin is and shitlike that.
You know what I mean.
It's like if I don't get thisshit, I'm going to die.
I'm burning a hole in my pockethaving to pay.
You know what I'm saying.
Why are these rates so high?
Yeah, why does this thing thatpeople need to stay alive cost
(53:22):
so much?
Like it's that expensive.
It shouldn't be that expensive.
It shouldn't be that expensive.
So the argument that is Peoplegetting rich off this.
Yeah, the argument that normallycomes into play with that is
most insurance is still filteredthrough government regulations,
through stuff like that.
So when you have corrupt peoplein there, or corrupt
(53:44):
politicians, excuse me, who siton ballots or committees to be
able to vote for differentthings, vote for rates to be
increased, vote for you know thelevies of what.
You know what you can and can'tdo, yeah, yeah, y'all are
making record, breakingbreakingprofits.
Man, you can't trim insulin.
(54:06):
You can't trim.
It's like insulin shouldn'tcost more than Viagra.
Okay, insulin shouldn't costmore than Bluetooth.
All right, it shouldn't Shoutout to Bluetooth.
We get a sponsorship for theshow or something.
Shout out to Bluetooth, we usethat.
But I believe in that.
And, like I said, on theemployment side, if you are
(54:28):
running a business that can beprofitable, you hope to be
profitable.
There's negotiations you canmake for health insurance, but I
do believe bigger than theemployer going to go still do
the legwork.
I believe it's a society thecountry can truthfully help
benefit Um Health insurance.
But I'll say this, and thiswill probably take a turn for it
(54:52):
why would they Help?
Preserve us or people Like uswhen they were trying to Like,
kill us or mass Keep us in massextinction yeah, that's fucked
up too yeah, so giving me healthinsurance or life insurance,
I'm pretty sure they stoppedkilling people if everybody went
got like life insurance yeah,and
(55:13):
that's yeah, and that's where itgo to, because it's like you
already know.
Let's just say you havemajorities and minority, you
know.
So we, as black people, we're aminority, you know.
We cover about 13% of thiscountry.
Um, you know, you got for whatthey call.
(55:36):
You know Hispanics, latinAmericans, you know are another,
I don't know 10%.
So when you add up theminorities in this country,
we're actually a majority.
The minorities, when youcombine them all, outnumber the
(55:57):
majority white people.
You know what I'm saying so it'sbasically colors and whites.
Yeah, colors and whites.
So it gets to a point to whereyou know they they 53%.
Now they take our country.
That's why they say shit likeah, we got our country back.
The fuck are you talking?
We're trying to take thismotherfucker and we stopped them
from reproducing man.
(56:17):
So I'll say this, even with theabortion thing that comes into
play with that we talked aboutthat a couple weeks ago.
I'm with the abortion thing thatcomes into play with that.
We'll talk about that a coupleof weeks.
You know I'm for, I'm forchoice, for you to have your own
choice on it.
But I do understand, like theabortion clinic is another way
of population control.
The way that you look at it, ifshe's not ready, she ain't
ready.
(56:37):
But to have a, to have a strongworkforce, the way I'm looking
at it, I want you to rememberthe country is a business.
If you keep getting rid of theirworkforce, it's going to be an
issue.
They're going to have to go toautomation.
They're going to have to go toAI.
People don't want to work, nomore.
(56:58):
We still got to produce.
Results are mandatory.
We control how you reproduce.
We make you have to stick withit.
Hey, man, if that child endedup for uh in in the jail, we got
profit for profit prisons.
And that child end up somewhereworking somewhere, we got
another.
You know person punching,punching the clock nine to five.
(57:18):
It's like we ain't gonna letyou get rid of our potential uh
workforce.
So that's just big corporategreed, america.
Like it's still a numbers game.
Still a numbers game, man.
Uh, as a man, that's why, when Isit in the place I sit.
I try to understand that andlook at it, try to be a really
good employer, offer thedifferent things.
(57:40):
Man, I know, and I know that'snormally the first place they
tell you to go get stuff from us, from your job.
Yeah, you want more money, goto your job.
You want to raise, go to yourjob, need insurance, go to your
job.
So I'll get that.
I get that.
I get that.
But when I do see other, likesay, other establishments that
could offer just a tad bit more,and maybe not just on the
hourly thing, like per hour, butmore health benefits, more this
(58:04):
, more that, or pay a morepercentage into it, man, it is
they got it and not just saythey got it, they supposed to
give.
But that's a way that I look atit, as that's the way the
business comes to the people,because the business is the, is
the is the bridge between thegovernment and the people.
Yeah, you know, the employer isthe bridge between them.
(58:27):
So, right, man, it's wild times.
Man, yeah, man, it's difficultwild times, for sure, 1000%, but
definitely, you know, shout outto the family, man, our
condolences from permission tospeak freely.
That shit is that shit, wildman.
(58:47):
Yeah, that shit.
No, life shouldn't be taken,man.
Nah, not at all, not at all.
That just lets you know, man,the power of a conversation,
that shit.
As we talk, man, and we haveour conversations, man, we label
them conversations of faith,man, we, we label them
conversations of faith.
We have a conversations aboutthings we need to organize and
do about people's lives andpositions that they may not even
(59:09):
fully be aware of, but theytrust our navigation of being a
part of the team, of where we'regoing.
You know, I'm saying so,introducing new, taking away
some.
Oh, yeah, they, they, theythey're blindly building their
life off of us.
If us sitting somewhere and wenot on top of our, our shit, and
we gotta show up one day like,hey, yeah, today, the last day,
(59:31):
yeah, I ain't do my job.
Can't be that day, man, so soshifting it a little bit, man,
how you feel about uh uh, uncletrump in office?
not uncle trump man I feel aboutuncle trump.
You know what man I want to uhI'm glad you asked me that, bro
I want to uh, if I can, uhrecant statement I made in our
(59:55):
uh, our post-election episode afew weeks ago.
You know, um, I was a little Iguess just naturally flustered
man.
You know, we recorded that shitlike two days after the
election man, so I was still alittle raw.
You know what I mean.
So I will say this, though, andthis is something that I stand
(01:00:16):
on I do not believe that DonaldTrump is racist.
Allow me to explain for sure.
Believe that Donald Trump isracist?
Allow me to explain For sure.
I don't believe that he isracist.
However, I do believe that heis okay with benefiting and
(01:00:38):
using racist people to get whathe want.
I couldn't agree more.
I believe he's okay with that.
Speaker 2 (01:00:49):
Alright.
Well, they gonna vote for me.
Alright, I'm gonna fuck withthem.
Speaker 1 (01:00:52):
You know what I'm
saying, but like would Donald
Trump go up there and maybe hewould now, being that this will
be his last term?
Hey, we got four years of atleast Donald Trump.
One of them other, you knowTrump niggas might pull up next.
Speaker 2 (01:01:07):
We'll see if the
Republican Party want to do that
, she may.
Even I wouldn't be another.
Speaker 1 (01:01:11):
He may even try to
run as an independent.
Now, you know, independentsdon't win, they don't win.
But you know him and thatfamily got enough of a following
where they may be able to runas an independent.
If the republican party doesnot want a representative from
the trump family, um, to betheir candidate in uh 2028, but
(01:01:33):
um, but that's what I believe,man, he's okay with rick donald.
Trump is not racist.
However, his followingabsolutely fucking is you know
what I'm saying?
The folks right here on thecorner, right here a few weeks
ago selling the shirts and gotthe trucks out and the flags and
shit.
Y'all fucking racist.
(01:01:54):
So let me ask you this Ain'tnobody going that fucking you
know what I'm saying.
Speaker 3 (01:01:58):
Hold on, wait.
Alright, go ahead.
I know where you're going withit.
Speaker 1 (01:02:00):
Let me ask you this
Did you, your mama, have an?
Speaker 2 (01:02:05):
Obama shirt.
Damn, fuck yeah.
Did you have an Obama shirt?
Speaker 1 (01:02:08):
You had an Obama
phone.
Speaker 2 (01:02:09):
No, I ain't.
Did somebody have an Obamaphone?
Speaker 1 (01:02:11):
I knew some niggas
had some phones, you know what.
Speaker 2 (01:02:13):
I'm saying, all right
, man.
Speaker 1 (01:02:14):
Niggas had Obama
flags T-shirts playing to the
difference.
Man and I.
You know, I would love to havea, a trump supporter in here,
one of them heavy motherfuckers.
You know I'm saying I wear myobama shirt to represent to
solely represent my candidate.
A lot of these people.
(01:02:37):
I want to say all y'all, notall of you, and if you exempt,
feel free to go ahead, exemptyourself and move on.
They wear and represent tooffend.
You know I'm saying that's theinteresting way I'm wearing this
shit to offend you.
Speaker 2 (01:02:55):
You know I'm saying
trump bitch whoa you know that
man said come help a nigga getelected, Change you know what
I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (01:03:07):
You know what I'm
saying.
But, like I don't know and itmay be me, I may be nuts you
know what I'm saying.
But, white man, were youoffended by my Obama t-shirt?
Because that wasn't his purpose?
You know?
And if you can sit here andtell me that, you, you know, you
wave that flag and you, it'sjust, it's just so egregious.
(01:03:29):
You know I'm saying, and it'sso nigga.
Trump flag, the america flag,the confederate flag, all mean
the same fucking thing to meright now.
And then they sometimes theythrow in a prisoner of war flag,
yeah, the POW, yeah, all thatshit.
It's kind of like yo y'allbeing offensive.
And I will never forget, man, Imentioned it, you know, that
day when I mentioned just seeingthe image of his supporters
(01:03:53):
pushing that black woman aroundat that Trump rally.
You know what I'm saying,mm-hmm.
And him standing up at thatpodium pumping his fist,
standing up at that podiumpumping his fist, chanting oh,
if this was 50 years ago, itwould not be good for her.
I tell you what it's like.
Who the fuck you running forpresident?
Nigga, you need to take controland be like hey, hey, hey, cut
that shit.
(01:04:14):
You know what I'm saying, butyou just going, and that's my
issue.
That's my issue.
He couldn't go against in thatscenario.
He couldn't go against thepeople who put him there, yeah.
And if they're like hey, wedon't care if you're supporting
or not, you, clinton Biggs,beating me bitch, you a nigger
(01:04:37):
lover who?
You a white cracker lover whowas a nigger.
Speaker 3 (01:04:41):
Don't do it.
Speaker 1 (01:04:41):
Let me put it like
this my 12-year-old son Cracker
lover, who was a nigga.
Don't do it.
Let me put it like this my12-year-old son, the day the
Wednesday after election night,I asked him, matter of fact.
I told him that morning hey,it's looking like Donald Trump
is going to be the nextpresident.
I don't want you gettinginvolved in any political talk
(01:05:02):
today.
Okay, that's what I told him.
Be the next president, I don'twant you getting involved in any
political talk today.
Okay, that's what I told him.
After school he tells me he'swalking down the hallway into
his class and just because he'sblack, this kid, who ain't even
old enough to fucking vote, okay, come running, skipping down
the hallway and goes ha Trumpwon.
(01:05:23):
What makes you think I'm not aTrump supporter just because I'm
black?
What makes you think my dad youknow what I'm saying didn't
vote for Trump?
So just because I'm black, youdon't even know me.
You don't even know my name.
And I'm speaking from Lowe'sperspective.
I don't even know my name.
I'm speaking from lowe'sperspective.
(01:05:44):
You don't even know you, butyou feel you know.
Ha trump, just because I'm ablack person walking down this
hallway, you felt the need tothrow that in my face.
And where did that attitudecome from their parents came?
Speaker 2 (01:06:02):
from their parents.
Speaker 1 (01:06:04):
You know what I'm
saying and that's the issue.
You know what I mean.
You know how much like, howbullying took a huge incline
under the Trump administration,his last term.
You know what I'm saying,because his attitude validates
(01:06:26):
the bullshit the bullshit Likeit's okay.
You know what I'm saying, withno consequences.
Yeah, and that's not somethingthat I want my children under.
You know what I mean, like youknow.
So, yeah, that's my thoughts,man, that's my thoughts.
I'm with it.
Does he have some good policies?
Yes, do trump supporters not?
(01:06:47):
Do they not know what the fuckthey'd be talking about?
Also, yes, jimmy kimmel did auh, a whole thing where he would
ask them hey, so tell us aboutuh, the americare, and they'd be
like oh yeah, I think it'sgreat.
Oh, I'm sorry, that wasobamacare we were talking about.
Oh well, that sucks.
No, you just said you justcomplimented it.
Yeah, yeah, I've seen that.
I've seen that Getting you knowgetting there.
(01:07:07):
I am not a political person.
God in charge.
Okay, me neither, at least I'mnot, but I do partake in it
because, like I'm not apolitical person, I'm like I
identify with a party or whatnot, you know, or one of them.
You're a capitalist, or you'rethis or you're that.
I'm like I don't know.
(01:07:30):
We're all political, whether youwant to be or not Whether you
want to be or not, so at leastunderstanding where your benefit
lies.
Yeah, kind of.
You know what I'm saying.
So I'm supposed to beRepublican because you know
where I sit.
However, I as a politician Idon't get involved too heavily
in the personal character ofthemselves, because I understand
(01:07:53):
all.
I live long enough to see a lotof the presidential things and
it's like a cut and paste.
All the everybody go around,they need to get all the black.
It's like a cut.
It's a cut and paste.
Yeah, all the everybody goaround and get, they need to get
all the black vote, the whitevote.
It is the that, that that, andnobody unanimously wins.
No matter who gets in office,somebody's upset.
Yeah, so this is why it's like,yeah, whatever.
(01:08:25):
But I understand on policies andrules that are written for
businesses, because the us isset up really on businesses the
supreme court, judges and apollo, the all of the people who sit
up on there, the house, who passthese laws and levies and bills
and all of this stuff.
They sit in there and havethese conversations and I get
shit moving and push through.
So, for example, for, as asmall business owner, if you are
(01:08:48):
looking to offer your employees, uh, health insurance maybe be
prior to covid you had to haveenough people on your payroll to
even be able to communicatewith um and this is even, I
think, before healthcare market,healthcaregov that you can go
and look on like policieslegitimate policies, because you
can get scammed and be payinginsurance and it'll be some
(01:09:10):
off-rate ass Taiwan insurance orsome shit.
You know what I'm saying.
But it ain't accepted orrecognized a certain mean amount
of people to be able to qualifyfor a single plan or family
plan, and one side would getdicked because, hey, man, you
got more single people or morefamily people and that's kind of
where they lean to for ratesnow after covid and they got a
(01:09:33):
chance to see, like, how manybusinesses there are.
And keep in mind, during covidthey had a lot of ppp, faking
people, fake businesses.
So for all business owners, man, don't forget to register your
BOI.
Well, they're going to shutyour shit down.
Ten thousand dollar, fine, butthat's a way to help minimize
register your way.
Yeah, that helps minimize allof the fake industries and big
(01:09:55):
industries, fake businesses thatwere started to get PPP laws,
at least in my theory.
In my theory, uh, but knowinghow, uh, congress had changed
things before health insurancethat allow business owners to be
able to individualize plan likereimburse finance for you to be
able to have, uh, healthinsurance and you just not going
(01:10:16):
without because the hospitalsand shit, you get hurt, you get
shot.
Then go to the hospital.
Somebody still is stuck withthat building.
Normally is the hospital.
Especially if the is stuck withthat building, normally it is
the hospital, especially if thefamily don't got no insurance or
now they cooking plates foryour gun Fund me.
It's like nah, you can eathealth insurance and
supplemental insurance and stufflike that.
(01:10:37):
It's more affordable than whatyou think.
If you drink down, julio RussPosado, what you drink, what you
think if you drink down who yoruss passato.
You can afford life insuranceout your own pocket.
53 a month.
If that brother, if you got anemployer, they might be paying
80, 20, 60, 40, 50.
We pay 50, 50.
I need you healthy hoe on allaccounts, man.
(01:10:59):
But it's stuff like that that Ilearned, I had to learn because
that weighs in politics withhealth, or hey, they regulated
the health insurance, so you allwould.
It can be beneficial more tothe country.
You know I'm saying so, yeah,but I'm not a political person,
but I I know enough to know likeI don't want to be fucked up,
(01:11:19):
so I I ain't vote for trump, butI would have voted.
I ain't vote this time.
I ain't vote, which is votingnot voting, not voting.
Speaker 3 (01:11:27):
You're still voting,
yeah, so and I respect your
opinion.
Speaker 1 (01:11:30):
I so I, I I like
trump on the policies of
business, of, as we keep saying,man.
It's the mantra for 2025.
Results are mandatory.
I feel like he's going to getin office, as he do, as all the
presidents do, and say theycleaning up the last person's
(01:11:53):
and that yeah, and that's how itgoes that's the same play, or
or in trump's case, benefitingtrump's first term, benefiting
from eight years of Obama'sadministration.
So when it comes to hisreelection, he is getting credit
for his.
You know what I'm saying.
(01:12:13):
Like when a football team hirea new coach, shit don't just
change that day, my snaps ain'tworking.
But shit don't just change likethat.
They're like ah, new coach, ittakes time for shit to okay,
we're not doing that, no more,we're doing this.
We get some of my recruits inhere.
If you're talking collegefootball like this, the last
coach, the niggas he liked, yeah, they running different plays,
(01:12:35):
formations.
Speaker 2 (01:12:36):
They got different
essence.
Speaker 3 (01:12:37):
Yeah, you right, it
takes time.
Speaker 1 (01:12:38):
It takes time, but
let me get my recruits in here,
not to mention the fuckingSenate, the House, the fucking
judges and shit in the SupremeCourt.
It takes time for that shit togo and like the real power, like
I'm going to say this man, thisis for fuck the presidential
(01:13:03):
election, it's really about thislocal shit.
Get down to your local levelsand vote.
Don't vote to fuck thepopularity contest that we have
every four years.
You know I'm saying 2020, 2024,2028.
You know I'm saying fuck thatcome 2026, we need to make sure
we get our asses out here andvote and put people in place who
can really do some shit for uson our local level.
(01:13:25):
You know I'm saying what wouldyou like to see?
What would you like to see?
I would like?
I would like to see thecurriculum change in the school
okay I think that's somethingbecause we help our kids with
their homework, really becauseI'll be just as lost like them
like that, but we both seem likewe ain't sitting in the
classroom that day.
But that's.
That's political though.
(01:13:46):
So, being that, this curriculumkind of got you like, huh even,
let's not even put it into math, let's talk about history,
because that's huge, the shitthat's being taught in the
schools.
When you see your kids homeworkand it's around this time of
year, thanksgiving and shit andthey teaching about the uh, the
indians I've learned likethere's nothing wrong with
saying the term indian.
(01:14:06):
Okay, because naming thosepeople after the people who
fucked them over is more fuckedup than calling them.
And why would I call themnative Americans?
This place wasn't even calledAmerica, but I fucking digress.
That's political.
So, when it comes to voting forwho's in charge of the
education system or theeducational system, shout out to
(01:14:29):
Hurricane Chris.
You know that's where I, that'swhere my vote matters.
That's something I can feeldirectly.
Speaker 3 (01:14:35):
You know what I'm
saying?
Yeah, like right here you knowwhat I'm saying?
Speaker 2 (01:14:37):
Yeah, like right here
.
Speaker 1 (01:14:38):
You know what I'm
saying.
Who's your governor, who's yourmayor?
Vote for that shit.
You know what I'm saying.
It's important too.
It's important forrepresentation.
You know what I'm saying.
However, what's more important,what's really directly going to
affect you, it's them, smalllocal elections, and the lines
ain't nearly as long.
They need to be.
They should be and I hope theywill be, but that's something
even I need to get better at.
(01:15:00):
With these midterm elections,these you know what I'm saying I
got to start making sure mypeople know and understand.
Hey, get down there and vote,and this is where we can make
some change.
For sure, man and me learningthat as well and I vote there
more often than the presidential, yeah, to be honest, uh,
especially because some of thepeople in our community, or
people that we uh affiliate withmen, are like councilmen.
(01:15:21):
Yeah, we smoke cigars and stuffsometime together.
So we me seeing that andknowing that and knowing, like
hey man, that they are able to,you know, speak on behalf of
certain things for the school orthe city.
Not that they can just writelaws and shit, but it's like
they exercising the rules thatare already there.
You know, they're hearing whatthe people can say and they need
(01:15:41):
to amend something, they canamend something.
So, getting to see that man,and for people who are aren't
too familiar on political thingsor how, um, you know, the
structure of policies and thingsbroke down a little bit through
politics you might, might not.
I'm not a politician, eventhough I wanted to be.
So I studied a little bit ofhow it goes.
If I can break it down from thetop dog all the way down, it'll
(01:16:06):
go.
Presidential is the president,is the top dog.
He thought he's the CEO of theUSA.
All right, he the boss.
In each state's 50 states.
You got two managers.
So that's your Republicanmanager and your Democratic
manager.
Normally they're like statesenators, the senators who
(01:16:26):
oversee the state.
Under them they have their team, they're the department
managers.
Mike DeWine is the departmentmanager of Ohio, basically.
So then under Mike DeW de one,he has his uh, representation of
each county in ohio, somebodythat's I forgot what they call
that on the municipal level.
(01:16:47):
You know I'm saying what withthe county level.
Then, after the county level,you got like your city
councilman.
That's municipal, that's local,that's within.
That's your cleveland, that'syour euclid, that's your
cleveland heights, that's yourbroadview heights, that's, uh,
the west side.
That's a little bit of everycity that you can look at.
(01:17:07):
They have differentrepresentation in there.
That sits on the levies of uh,sits on the board to be able to
write and say things or bring upthings for the schools and for
the community getting road workdone, getting homes tore down,
like you said, food drives,community outreach programs,
recreation centers.
Speaker 2 (01:17:27):
All of those things
is held like and the census is
important too.
Speaker 1 (01:17:30):
For sure, stop
fucking running for these people
when they come to see who livehere.
Speaker 2 (01:17:35):
Comply, God damn it.
Speaker 1 (01:17:36):
That's the only way
they gonna know.
Stop being scared.
First of all, the governmentknow where the fuck you at, why
you think they came there.
They know exactly what theylooking for hey, I'm looking for
uh melanie we know you here.
You know you.
Okay, we just coming to see howmany kids you got, where you
work, how much money you make.
So they and the reason why theydo this.
But they want to know how manypeople live in this area.
(01:17:58):
So they know, okay.
Hey, I mean, you know, I guessI'm being kind of silly, but
okay, we're going to put aPopeye's right here.
It makes sense.
Yeah, you know what I'm saying.
We'll put a recreation centerin this neighborhood because
there's a lot of young kidsaround.
They're going to need something, a pool.
You know what I'm saying.
You know what I'm saying?
A fucking basketball court.
Remember Pride, the movie Pride.
Speaker 3 (01:18:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:18:17):
When they came and
took them rims down.
That's political.
Speaker 2 (01:18:22):
Yeah, when they shut
down the basketball court.
Speaker 1 (01:18:23):
Yeah, they fucking
just took the rims off the hoop,
left niggas with a backboard.
They in there playing fuckingHitting rocks.
Speaker 2 (01:18:28):
You know what I mean.
It's hitting the backboard.
Speaker 1 (01:18:31):
That's what you're
talking about.
Right, yeah because it's likehey, well, no, ain't no kids
around here?
We can see there's plenty ofkids around here doing that shit
.
But if the census shows hey man, it's only you know what I'm
saying 68 children under the ageof 12 in this neighborhood, you
know, and my number's a littleyou know funny.
Speaker 2 (01:18:50):
But like, is that a
lot?
Speaker 1 (01:18:51):
I don't know what's a
lot, what's a little bit of
kids.
You know what I'm saying.
But you know, hey, it's abasketball court over there.
We don't need two.
Speaker 2 (01:18:58):
You know what I'm
saying Everybody, come here to
play basketball, because that'sa city budget to maintain.
Speaker 3 (01:19:03):
Oh yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:19:04):
We'll use this for
somewhere else.
Take the rims down.
We'll tear it down in 2027.
Don't worry about it.
Can y'all leave?
I would love to, on some hugethe entropy type shit, break
ground in a neighborhood of likea park.
Bruh, you hey, listen, listen,you read my mind, man,
(01:19:29):
especially being that you divinginto real estate.
Now I know, eventually you wantto get into a commercial
property.
Yes, sir, alright, so therewhat it may still be.
But there's a building I wantto own into commercial property.
Yes, sir, all right, so it maystill be for sale.
There was a building I want toown, a moon.
Speaker 2 (01:19:41):
While I'm planning a
Saturn, one of them stars.
Speaker 1 (01:19:45):
But there was a
building for sale off of 25th
Archwood, which is not a badneighborhood, and say, when
you're going to buy property, atleast a commercial property,
and you go, man, I really likethe building, it's nice, it's
been updated, it's full oftenants, it's got a couple of
vacancies, but whatever, I wantto buy this building, but I'm
concerned about thisneighborhood.
(01:20:06):
Don't let that scare you awayand say, okay, you know what,
I'm going to buy this propertyand I'm going to be a big
fucking hand in cleaning up thisneighborhood.
For sure, get these drugs outof here, get these guns up out
of here.
You know what I'm saying.
Now, we sound like bitch assniggas, right, you know, we
sound like furious styles, butreal shit, though, like you know
(01:20:29):
and like that, that's part ofit, man Especially.
You know we talking aboutrunning business man.
Of it man especially.
We know we talking aboutrunning business man and if this
is a good opportunity for me,my children, my family, I want
to do this, but I can't let theenvironment ruin.
You know saying what I want totake place and make sure it's
cool.
You know, and even when itcomes down to man, we can employ
(01:20:51):
some of the people around here.
It's the reason why poverty isthe way it is it is.
Is is one of the reasons whycrime is the way it is.
Yeah, with poverty comes crime.
Well, if we get hungry enough,we don't be hungry before.
Yeah, man, it's why we starteating this way.
Yeah, I'm 65 like next.
Hey, man, so I would I wouldlove to do something like that
(01:21:13):
man and, uh, get back to thecommunity that way.
I would love to do that.
Talk to.
That would be a city councilkind of thing.
Yeah, potentially Like MookRobinson from Richmond Heights.
He own Diamond Cut Barbershop.
Hey man, I want to go into thecity and build a.
(01:21:33):
I want to put four slides up.
Nigga, how do I?
Speaker 3 (01:21:35):
do it, yeah.
How do I get the four slides up?
Nigga?
How do I do it?
Yeah, how do I?
Speaker 1 (01:21:39):
Six rims up in the
city and that's three courts.
Yeah, Y'all either can get atennis court, basketball court
baseball you got to pay for theland and shit, but I would love
to sit in one of them seats andbe able to have that
conversation At the same time.
Grow to become a pillar in thecommunity, just like your
councilmen, just like yourchurches, just like your
(01:22:02):
barbershops, your beauty salons.
Yeah, for sure I understand.
Gentrification always is goingto happen.
We just most of us over thelast 10 years found a word for
it, but gentrification hasalways been around.
Oh yeah, always been around Withthe old and with the new you
ride down 105, nigga don't,don't blink.
We lost that neighborhood isgone.
Speaker 2 (01:22:24):
Certain set like all
those big ass homes.
Once you hit the experience, oh, man.
Speaker 1 (01:22:29):
But um, uh way, park
those.
Oh, my goodness.
You know I wanted one of themhouses.
When I was a kid I went.
I was in like high school, Ihad a law class man.
I think I shared this before.
But we was a kid, when I was inlike high school, I had a law
class man I think I shared thisbefore but we was talking about
buying cars.
I was looking up property inthat area.
Those houses they wereabandoned at the time.
Yeah, they were abandoned atthe time On average.
(01:22:52):
All them fat ass houses looklike they belong in EC and if
you know, you know EC got somebeautiful fucking houses too,
used to be top notch.
Oh my goodness that cemeteryain't sitting right there for no
reason.
Some billionaires in thatcemetery.
Okay, those houses were onaverage $105,000.
No pun intended, it was only$105,000.
, it was $105,000.
Like this one on three, thisone on six, this one, no pun
(01:23:13):
intended, it was only $105,000,it was $105,000.
Speaker 2 (01:23:16):
Like this one
$103,000, this one, $106,000,
this one.
These bitches big as hellduplexes and shit.
Speaker 1 (01:23:22):
You know what I'm
saying.
A friend of mine had stayedover on $106,000.
I got one fix it up.
I'm not sure if they still livethere or not, but shit was
beautiful.
And we talking when show my age, show my age.
But you know, now they've beenbought up.
The VA is right there.
(01:23:42):
You know what I'm saying.
Cleveland Clinic yeah, and soyou know.
Remember, like years ago, man,they tore down that hospital
that sit right there off ofMartin Luther King Drive.
You know, it was a hospitalright there.
That was like our go tohospital in the hood, somebody
get shot.
That's where we going, that'swhere they going.
You know what I'm saying?
That shit was gone.
And once again, nigga census,right, if we ain't participating
(01:24:04):
in the census, hey, ain'tnobody live here.
Take that fucking hospital down.
What do we need a hospital forin this community?
Ain't nobody here.
Nobody lives here.
Speaker 2 (01:24:12):
They on the road
Fucking library and shit.
Speaker 1 (01:24:14):
Yeah, shut it down.
Nobody, even fucking, liveshere.
Speaker 2 (01:24:16):
You know what?
Speaker 1 (01:24:16):
I'm saying so, you
know, we certainly hold a hand
in destroying our ownneighborhoods too.
Oh yeah, oh yeah, we hold someof that state, we hold some of
that state.
We can't just be pointing atthe white man.
Oh they, no, we got to ofputting work in just on.
(01:24:37):
Our level is just caring solelyabout where you live.
Yeah, cut your grass, take yourtrash out front, paint the hive
.
Paint the hive, do them leaves,manage your children, oh man,
okay.
So, kj, I always got to put astory of my baby in here.
Speaker 2 (01:24:55):
No way, okay, kj, I
always got to put a story of my
baby in here.
No way, okay.
Speaker 1 (01:24:57):
So the other day I
was having a conversation with
KJ and he had brought up aboutgetting in.
You know he got in trouble inschool or a little mischief or
whatever in school and he hadsaid like I forgot how it turned
out, but it was like, hey, man,we'll come up to the school and
kick your ass.
Speaker 2 (01:25:18):
Who said that?
Speaker 1 (01:25:19):
Me as a parent.
I said I come up to this schooland kick your ass.
And he was like you guys get introuble for child abuse.
I'm like you must not rememberat the time, or was never told,
like at the time, that theteachers used to whoop the kids.
That's a fact.
Yeah, I just used to whoop thekids.
That's a fact.
I'm I used to get paddled.
I'm like.
So let me ask you this you doyou think mom and dad don't come
up to the school and kick yourass because we're scared to go
(01:25:41):
to jail because you're sayingit's child abuse, or do you feel
like that?
Hey, we, we talk to you likeremember, he get ass whoops, he
get it, but it's far and inbetween, I ain't one of them.
Whoop your ass, dad.
First type of thing.
I'm'm one of them.
Whoop your own ass.
I'm going to have you whoopyour own ass.
Okay, you're going to do this.
I'm going to have you do that.
You're going to learn the skill.
I'm going to have you work somuch.
(01:26:03):
You might have preferred to getyour ass whooped, but you still
had to do all the skills too.
That's the goal, you would stilldo that Everything.
Go back and appreciate thisshit.
Oh yeah, man, because it'sgoing to kick in man.
So me expressing to him like doyou think mom and dad don't
kick your ass like that?
I said child abuse.
(01:26:23):
I'm like do you think mom and Idon't abuse you because we're
scared to go to jail, or wedon't abuse you because we love
you and we're not like thosekind of parents?
He's like because you love me.
I'm like no, nigga, tell thetruth, because you sure enough
believed that you're shit.
Yeah, nigga felt like he couldhave called the police and I'm
like, bro, don't let theinternet get you fooled on.
(01:26:45):
You can say fuck that, don'tlet the internet get you fucked
up, son.
It's like, hey, not that someconsequences of things may not
happen of us fucking you up to alevel of severity, you're right
.
However, if you were to get introuble and this is the point I
made to him if you were to getin trouble and then they
(01:27:07):
investigate your household andsee that you had a dad, they'll
say I failed as a father.
You got a daddy and you actinglike this, yeah, he should have
fucked you up, should havekicked your ass.
Remember, sometimes thestrongest gotta be he got the
lessons gotta be brutal.
Sometimes for some people itgotta be brutal, it got.
(01:27:28):
You can't just gently talk to aperson and they get it.
You know I'm got to be tough,you got to be assertive.
So I say this man you know Idigress on my KJ story he got
the picture, he did.
But a conversation thathappened, you know, right after
that with wifey and I withVanessa.
Now shout out to Vanessa mybaby.
(01:27:49):
What's up, sis?
She had mentioned just on alevel of discipline within
herself of her as a woman, and Iwould love for her to be able
to say it herself one day on airso people can get to hear it
and see, hear it from her as awoman.
But she had mentioned she, as awoman, needs and prefers a
(01:28:11):
certain level of man.
She, like you, know what mydiscipline is.
Is my man sometimes beingdisciplined on me, my man
sometimes getting on me a littlebit.
Hey, you know, I may be shoppinga little bit too much or I may
be, you know, slipping a littlebit here because I'm not yeah,
we may be stopping, but she'slike, hey, I like my man to be
(01:28:34):
able to be a man and you, youknow, keep me in line, keep me
navigating.
She's like my discipline issomebody being disciplined on me
?
And when she said that, I waslike I respect it and I can
understand that because Iunderstand, just say, from a
male perspective, a coach, yeah,I was going to say, like a gym
(01:28:55):
partner, like a coach.
Coaches elevate your talent.
Coach coaches elevate yourtalent, not good coaches elevate
your talent.
Bad coaches rely on your talent.
Yeah, they rely on you beingreally good compared to like, no
, nigga you, you can always bebetter than you, can always be
more crisp.
So that discipline on there andthem getting to see the reward
(01:29:15):
I, that's what, how I calculatedit of like, hey, I respect you
as a woman, saying that I thinksome women would love to be able
to hear that and hear a woman,a woman's perspective of hey,
yeah, I'm disciplined and I cando shit and I handle things too.
She's like, but my man is a man, that's a man and my man be,
he'd be on me if I get, you know, look, you know, I can get a
little crazy, it's like, but he,he'll reel me in.
(01:29:36):
I get you know you know, I canget a little crazy, but he,
he'll reel me in and get meright, like as as I, as she
would say, like as I want my manto do.
She's like I got enoughself-control, of course, like,
but if I'm not aware, hey, baby,you, uh, you know, hey, and
she's receptive to it.
Now, well, it ain't always beenlike that.
(01:29:57):
But in that, in that, in, inthis sweet ride we on right now,
hey, I can approach and say,babe, stop spending a ball of
fucking money.
And I say it in a tone so itcan't be said, it's my tone that
I'm telling the truth.
What Mika say is she always saylike you keep me grounded,
that's her turn.
She's like you keep me grounded, that's her turn.
(01:30:18):
She's like you keep me grounded, you know like, because you
know it's Christmas time rightnow.
So it's some counters that wewant to get done in the mudroom,
at the houses.
You know some DIY projects, youknow what I mean.
I want to get a new vehiclesoon, you know.
So we, you know discussingfinances and shit like that.
So she bring up these counters.
She's like we should get thecounters For the new year.
(01:30:40):
I'm like bae, enough shit goingon Right now.
Speaker 2 (01:30:43):
We gonna be in a boat
In June.
Speaker 1 (01:30:45):
You know what I'm
saying.
So we certain shit, you knowPlanning for that as well.
Wanna get a car, it's enoughGoing on at one time, but then
you throw on.
We can do about that.
We got four kids and each othermoms and shit.
We got to get shit for ChiefHolly needs shit.
You know I could benefit.
We got but Salt Night Bay AfterChristmas.
Let's drop that low first andthen let's bring in the
(01:31:10):
countertop.
We don't need countertops everymonth.
We ain't Christmas shoppingevery month.
I make my peanut butter andjelly sandwiches.
Just fine, up here, right now.
Yeah, we ain't Christmasshopping anymore.
I make my peanut butter andjelly sandwiches just fine up
here right now.
Yeah, yeah, but that's one ofthe things she kind of like and
that's what she say.
Like you keep me grounded.
It's kind of like hold tight,we ain't had it this whole time.
Hold up, don't put too much.
I don't like too much shitbeing on my plate at once.
(01:31:32):
Yeah, I get overwhelmed withthis first.
In this case, let's getChristmas out the way.
You know what I'm saying.
Please, like fuck that.
Let's get that done first, thenwe can bring in something.
Oh well, let's get two thingsoff the plate and bring in one.
You know what I'm saying andjust tackle, shit man, those
conversations are healthy, bro,those conversations?
(01:31:54):
are healthy man.
I think they overlook some timeof y'all being able to sit down
and talk about like micromanagethe small things in a
relationship, like finance, likebudgets, like define the
responsibilities of handlingthings.
Man, I'm not a, I'm not a.
I've seen it on other shows,I've heard other people talk
about it.
I'm not really a big fan oflike the 50, 50 or like this the
(01:32:17):
dude, like they hell bent on it.
You're not a man if you don'tpay all the bills.
It's like nigga, she isneurosurgeon.
damn, what the fuck I need to bebopping floors for my wife
can't be great, not that stayinghome moms aren't great, but my
wife can't be amazing and bemarried.
Yeah, hey, I thought americawas a melting pot.
I didn't think it was just likesome what's the I don't know
(01:32:39):
communists.
Like everybody think it's oneway, Like I didn't.
I don't know, Don't quote me oncommunists, so check this out.
I want to take this so if yousee a successful married woman,
she's a neurosurgeon.
Let's go ahead and be extreme.
Look at her, not knowing herhusband, and say her husband
ain't shit, he ain't a man likewhat.
(01:32:59):
I'm pretty sure she would saymy man is fucking everything to
me.
You know he helped me getthrough school yeah, like not
just financially, but likereally helped me get like bang.
You know you got homeworkflashcard.
Yeah, all that shit.
You know what I'm saying.
But yeah, man, it is man.
It's so much more that goesinto a relationship than just
(01:33:20):
money.
Speaker 2 (01:33:22):
You know what I'm
saying, and that's important too
.
Speaker 1 (01:33:24):
Yeah, you had
mentioned on the other show man
that, uh, finance is one of thebiggest things for, like,
divorce.
Yeah, it's one of the biggestreasons for divorce.
Yeah, so the yeah fucking andmoney Fucking and finance.
But I believe that, hey, man, alot of people.
I don't think that more peoplehave more money than the next
(01:33:45):
person.
For real, I think people managetheir money better or
differently than the next person.
Yeah, because I had that, hey,man, like I was told before, man
, I was thinking about thisreminded me what I was thinking
about earlier, when I wasdriving I had to send my
(01:34:06):
finances to therapy For real.
I had to send my finances totherapy.
Hey, you need to talk tosomebody here, go Go to therapy.
Now, you know, I'm thetherapist, you know and I'm, you
know, advice and shit like that, but I had to send my finances
to therapy.
Speaker 2 (01:34:16):
Man 2024, you know,
it was kind of like, hey, you
know it gets to the point whereyou're like, hey, y'all don't
fuck up, we too.
All right to be All right, I'mgoing to get the four for four.
Let me see, y'all got somefries in there.
Y'all want no?
Speaker 1 (01:34:32):
no, no, no, no no no
no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
And I'm being goofy man, butyou know it gets to the point
where you're like hang on, let'slook at this shit.
You know what I'm saying.
I try to tell my littlebrothers this shit man.
Shout out to Jerome man, hisbrother's birthday tomorrow.
Shout out, bro, this nigga be22.
(01:34:55):
I still everybody.
I be fucking with him, man.
I hope he hear this.
I'm having an event at my house.
I get everybody.
I bring out my glasses and shit.
You know what I'm saying.
For the drinks.
You know I bring that niggaplastic cups.
You bring that nigga, one ofthem, razor Canes cups, the
little baby one, the cups.
(01:35:18):
But shout out to my bro, jerobe, happy birthday, babe.
Happy birthday to you, bro.
But no man.
But when you really break itdown and look at this shit like
freedom speakers, when was thelast time you looked at your
bank statement and break yourshit up in categories?
How much did you spend onentertainment?
How much did you?
We was talking about them.
Subscriptions yeah, hey, diveinto them, subscriptions, and
see what's coming out youraccount.
(01:35:39):
Dive into them.
Chick-fil-a trips yeah them.
Fast food runs, man, nothing,hey, man, most fast food runs
ain't nothing less than probably$11.
Yeah, and not that you can't go, but imagine I'm going to just
get, hey, you know what?
Speaker 2 (01:35:56):
Imagine just cutting
your fast food trips in half to
start.
Nigga half.
Speaker 1 (01:36:02):
You know what I'm
saying.
If you're one of those peoplewho say you eating out on
average one and a half times aday Average One and a half times
a day that means you gettingbreakfast and lunch, you going
Instead of packing your lunch.
Start packing your lunch threetimes a week.
See how your finances change.
They'll be packing the fuckingfood you bought the day before
(01:36:22):
okay, get some groceries.
Speaker 2 (01:36:24):
You know, yeah, I
pack these wendy's no no, but
just little shit like that.
Speaker 1 (01:36:30):
Make it a good like
I'm gonna pack my lunch on
monday, wednesdays and fridaynot friday, that's the day to go
that's the day to go, one day,your appetite changed when that
direct deposit hit you.
You feel, okay, you saw meearlier, that little punk ass
burger.
Pay that tomorrow flat as fuckand get a day's double.
Yeah, man, but I'm a, I'm a.
(01:36:50):
I'm a huge person when it comesto the finances, like I'm a
huge person when it comes tofinancial literacy, I'll be able
to ask you shit hey, man, I, I,but I swear by it and I only
give my story like there's nosecrets.
If I give you, if I can give youthat there's no secrets, is
there's really a level ofdiscipline.
It's really, uh, that's thebiggest thing, that's the
(01:37:10):
biggest one.
Uh, it's really a level ofdiscipline.
It's really of um, budgetingmaking yourself a good a budget,
like man, sticking to thebudget and disciplining yourself
to do it.
Especially, you got, you knowthings you want to do and I'll
say remain goal oriented.
If you're like man, I want tosave a few bucks for this, so I
want to do this or do that, youknow that.
(01:37:31):
That that data discipline youthat way, most people.
I got a vacation coming up, Igot a trip coming up you, you'll
find you working harder to getwhat you want you know what I'm
saying Mika got her a savingsbook, got the little pockets and
shit in there.
You know it's a, I want to sayit's 100 pockets, but in each
pocket you put that amount inthat pocket.
(01:37:52):
So in pocket number one you put$1.
Pocket number two, you put two,number three you put three, so
on and so on up to a hundred.
So when it's all said and done,I want to say it's fire rack,
but you, um, you got a hundredin this one.
99, 98, 97.
Add that shit up and we can dosomebody.
Do Maverick real quick.
Let me know how much that isyeah, but it's supposed to, you
(01:38:14):
know, and she been putting thatlittle okay, and she don't do it
in order.
Okay, $1, $2.
She'll skip up to $48.
Go back to $12.
Speaker 2 (01:38:22):
I broke $100.
It's for the change.
Yeah, like okay.
So I got my $96 in there and my$12 and the $19 and the $34.
Speaker 1 (01:38:30):
You know what I'm
saying.
But it's good shit, man, andshe big on that and like been
rubbing off on me with it.
You know, I'm saying it's like,yeah, I want, yeah, I want our
shit to be solid, yeah, andthat's the same way with it.
Like I mean, I, I'm addicted tomoney.
Okay, like I'm addicted in ahealthy manner.
What you told me a long timeremember you telling me this?
You said, nigga, I becomeaddicted to saving money.
(01:38:53):
Saving money, yeah, yeah.
So now, now that I learneddifferent versions of saving
money, meaning like saving cashwon't never make you rich okay,
to never get you rich, it's ascary
um, uh, applying our countryruns on credit, runs on debt.
Okay, it runs on debt.
It doesn't run on money, runson debt, which means everybody
(01:39:15):
owe everybody's wives always anexchange bargain like a
bartering barter.
You know what I'm saying?
Um, get you some, man.
I always stay like get you somecredit, that's your cushion.
Get you some and you ain'tgotta use all of it.
But it's like man, they, theyreally happy.
If you come in and ask them formoney and if you look halfway
decent man, or your your shit,look halfway decent and somebody
(01:39:38):
some bank a deal with you, man,they give you two hundred
dollars.
They're giving you what theyfeel like they can potentially
afford to lose and you're justgetting yourself into the door.
So just grow from there.
I promote to people like I gotvery addicted to saving money,
especially when I, when we, gotin business, because you get a
whole new set of bills, man, youget staff and stuff like that.
(01:39:59):
You got insurances, you got 941taxes all of that, man, in this
tax season now for us.
So that's, that's what has mereconciling and in the next two
weeks, bro, I'm gonna get realpassionate.
You're gonna hear me reflectingon the year.
Don't be come up like I'm gonnago.
I'm gonna have them miles foryou for sure, on jan'm gonna go.
I'm gonna have them in my eyesfor you for sure, on January 3rd
I'm gonna have them bitch bet,bet.
(01:40:20):
Cause the accountant be on usyeah, he be rushing us like hey,
I don't wanna wait till fuckingApril 15th yeah, get extensions
now we in September.
For the last two years, bro, Iain't had to get an extension
and I felt pretty good man meand Mick we end up owing.
You know you hit a certain pointthat refund should over with,
(01:40:41):
but we always end up owing.
You know, now the days ofgetting a refund is we're about
to get $12.
Alright, you want to pull it,but we need to change our
deductions.
That's why y'all end up owingmore.
Speaker 2 (01:40:57):
Like for most people.
Speaker 1 (01:40:59):
So it's like another
$60 each per pay would come out.
And then when you do the math,it's like, yeah, that's why we
owe, so we need to change ourdeductions to where more is
coming out weekly.
So then, come the end of theyear, we may not get a refund,
but we don't owe shit.
I need to do that this monthfor sure, man, and most people.
(01:41:19):
I'm no huge guru on it, man,but I love kind of giving people
information that can you knowthey may be overlooked, like
most people don't know how tofill out a W-4 form or get a job
.
And then, after 2020 and Trumpgot in office, like it really
changed on how it was set up,had a household, how many
dependents you got.
It was real straightforward.
It puts you in a tax bracket.
(01:41:40):
It makes you know what taxbracket you in.
But for most people who getlarger refunds, they took more
federal taxes and things out oftheir check and most people
don't really make that muchmoney, so they get a larger
refund back, uh, at the end ofthe year.
(01:42:02):
And it's not even like and Isay this too remember everything
you spend is taxed.
Everything you go into thecorner store, your shit tax you
go into the license bureau, getshit tax, your gas tax, your
food, it's all tax.
So you're paying mad taxes.
Yeah, you're paying doubletaxes.
You're getting mad taxthroughout the year.
So for people who are in asubstantial place, you are taxed
(01:42:24):
at a different percentage or adifferent level.
So it may be sometimes in yourbest interest to have more
dependents or your order to takemore money out.
You, you make an honest paymentof them.
Y'all can deduct.
You know a little bit more, sothat, like you said, you aren't
on, and if you do, you give me,you may get a few hundred
dollars back if anything.
But you didn't, you didn't.
(01:42:45):
You didn't live to wellthroughout the year.
You satisfied uncle sam and,hey, you satisfied yourself on
man, my car, my kids, my this,my that, boom, boom, boom, boom,
boom.
So it, yeah, I won't come toend of 2025 because they sent
our estimate for 2024 already.
Hey, bitch, don't be guessing.
Huh, yeah, they, it's calledpredictions, they just be
(01:43:07):
predicting.
But uh, so she opened the shit.
She's like damn fucking 19.
Speaker 2 (01:43:13):
I'm like 19, what oh,
oh.
Speaker 1 (01:43:16):
It'd be all right.
Yeah, yeah, y'all at a placetoo, man, y'all, y'all.
Speaker 3 (01:43:23):
Y'all look like that
5%, but yeah, but it's like you
know, it comes with education.
Speaker 1 (01:43:27):
You know what I'm
saying.
So let's learn.
In that it's kind of like allright, come 2025.
Let's switch up them.
Deductions long term.
You don't see that shit until52 weeks later and you're like
oh, hey, man, nigga now theincome time.
Speaker 2 (01:43:38):
okay, cool, yeah, the
annual recon man the annual
reconcile they call it.
Speaker 1 (01:43:42):
Yep, we gonna do that
.
So for people freedom speakers,just giving y'all this clue man
, for a lot of people out therethat lie and you know all kind
of different scam ways.
But I know most definitely,when I was growing up, that was
the one people would lie and saythey were students to get that
student credit.
The government be knowing, ok,the government be knowing.
(01:44:09):
And when they reconcile, as anemployer, the same W-2 that we
send the employees, we send thecity, the state and federal of
money that we spent and who itwas allocated to, when you go to
(01:44:29):
school and say that you was astudent, that's tuition, that's
money, it's numbers, they can belike oh, I had nobody enrolled
in this bitch name, this nigga,they didn't have this.
This motherfucker ain't noschool book.
So how the fuck is theyunschooled?
And then sometime you can belike, hey, man, I'm taking
online classes at the library.
It's like, show me sometranscripts, show me an F
(01:44:52):
motherfucker, show me, youfailed at least a class.
So but when they reconcile tothe government and most
industries, most businesses,have to file taxes or at least
report.
You know some, you get it's allclassified different ways.
But because we have employeesand we are a business that has
to classify and show funds andstuff where we're going, where
(01:45:14):
it went.
So the other institutions haveto do it too.
So when you may have turned inthree or four of your w-2s to
h&r block to get your shit doneonce they enter into this system
of you claiming you as astudent or you claiming
deductions, claiming this,they're waiting to get reconcile
numbers from.
Hey, you said you spent fivethousand dollars over here as a
(01:45:35):
write-off.
We waiting for them to show a$5,000 credit that they got from
you, right, okay, and if itain't that bitch, that's where
you get audited.
You know what I'm saying?
That's where you get auditedand they start be looking at
your shit.
Especially, you might can getaway one or two years, one or
two years but when you startmaking a career out of that,
(01:45:55):
they'll send them federal IRSagents knocking at your door.
I know personally, man, shoutout to Joanne Gross.
She was the first one, and thenit was one I just went to
earlier this year.
They tried to say that I wasthe linker for some taxes last
(01:46:16):
year and I'm like, no, I had acredit.
I was proud of you for that.
Speaker 2 (01:46:19):
I was proud of me too
.
I walked out a free fucking man.
Oh shit, you know what, Mr Johnyeah.
Speaker 1 (01:46:27):
He's right.
I had to go back and startwhispering and I promote for
anybody that when you going inthere dealing with the IRS man,
bring representation, be niceone, be nice, comply, but don't
pay them more than what theydon't owe, what you don't owe
(01:46:49):
them somebody on the phonethat's them calling now.
I heard you talking about, butuh, that was the IRS calling.
Speaker 2 (01:47:04):
I heard you talking
shit, man, I heard you talking
shit.
Speaker 1 (01:47:05):
We gonna get your
bitch ass End of the year, nigga
.
Yeah, man, they sent outnotices you ready, especially
since man we gave Raises andshit.
Oh man, hold on, you spendingour money, you spending our
money.
You still delinquent onsomething.
You still gotta pay us.
You shit.
You ever know like I've beenlike reconciling with debt and
shit like that, and so once yousettle some shit, them other
(01:47:28):
motherfuckers are like hey, hey,hey you.
Speaker 2 (01:47:31):
Remember 2018?
Remember that, yeah, yeah.
So I heard you're feeling good,you better you up you up what's
up how much?
Speaker 1 (01:47:42):
So when we, in 2017,
2018, when we bought our first
house, that's what happened tous.
We, we, oh so I owe taxes atthat time.
And it wasn't just taxes, itwas tax lien.
Like all of this is publicknowledge, man.
You, it wasn't just taxes, itwas tax lien.
Like all of this is publicknowledge, man, you can go look
it up, it's public knowledge.
And when you go look up the taxlien, look up the tax release
(01:48:03):
too.
They all clear that's right,All right, Hit you with the fat
Joe For sure, but yeah, but it'slike hey to see how much money
I made to see how much money Iowe, let you know how.
But hey, hey, but the irs isvicious, bro, like vicious and
they're gonna.
They take your shit.
But what we end up doing was tomake.
We had to show our home wasgonna cost x amount of dollars
(01:48:25):
to put down and we had an fhaloan 3.5, but we still had to
show x amount of dollars insideof our bank account and the way
in order to do that, we had togive ourselves raises to be able
to do it within this timebefore we close.
Yeah, the company had to giveourselves raises to be able to
do it within this time before weclose.
Yeah, the company had tofinance.
But then, at the same time,this was me learning more of
business, of we financiallyputting ourselves in a dire
(01:48:47):
straits and we didn't need towhen the company said in fact,
when it really is a healthy,it's a healthy financial
exercise, depending on where yousit at like the company to be
financially broke, but you doingokay, so that if something was
to happen, hey, you can dissolvethe company and start over, or
(01:49:07):
you can build a company out onyour own, compared to nigga, you
gotta keep moving and shitbecause you fucked up, but
that's different financialstrategy.
So, learning that we gaveourselves substantial raises
Soon as the second directdeposit of that motherfucking
shit hit the second cycle, youknow it's like oh, we start
(01:49:27):
getting letters from everybody.
Must have been a mistake in thatsecond one.
In the second one they like no,no, no, no, no, no, no, no.
That's the new pay.
Two Fridays.
Oh, call him.
They ain't about to let a monthand a half go by and be like
six pays.
They might be three pays, theymight let three pays, but they
start sending like oh, man, youowe this on your credit, which
(01:49:48):
was healthy for us anyway to getclean.
Because clean our credit up,because it helped us with the
interest rate.
You know what I'm helped uswith the interest rate.
You know I'm saying if you gota, you know you got a decent
credit score, you can get a goodinterest rate.
Um, we had, we wereself-employed, so it showed like
hey, man, we made good money,but we weren't um w2 employees
(01:50:10):
at that time, it was just a soleproprietorship of me and nessa
was an employee got you, but wewere at a financial place where
we needed the structure to be anescort where I can give myself
a substantial salary.
I really was just living offbooks.
You know I'm saying reallyliving.
I had a budget but I'm reallyliving off that for myself.
But glad that we switched overto escort because now, like I
(01:50:33):
said, I'm a w-2 employee.
I get the same benefits thatall the employees get, um, and
I'm healthy negotiating on goodshit because I use it too.
But we learned that let's makeit so, bring the full circle.
We learned that gave ourselvesthe substantial raise.
All the people that we weredelinquent with, that we needed
to pay off anyway, startreaching out and normally it's
(01:50:53):
uh, it's the uh, not the court,the, the lawyer's reaching out,
especially if it's going tocollections.
The lawyer's office is like,hey, I was willing to settle.
But at this time, bro, like Isaid, I owe Tom one a cable.
That shit got up to the $131bill that I ever paid.
That got up to like$300-something.
That got up to $500-something.
(01:51:13):
These niggas was willing tosettle for $237.
Clean you right off your credit.
500, some dollars.
But these niggas was willing tosettle for 237.
Clean you off.
Clean it right off your credit.
Remember it's on the businessside.
It's money already paid indebts.
Like they already lost it.
They already wrote it off as aloss.
So now you just covering yourdebt and really regardless of
paying the money to them, andreally you paid yourself to get
out of jail free on that shitfor real.
(01:51:35):
That shit helps you it comes,your credit, I don't care if it
show, oh man, we will save.
Whatever you say, it's like hey, it's one less, nigga, I owe,
and that's what people who loanyou money look at.
Look at like, if we were togive you this money and
something was to happen, whocould we get it back?
How far in line are we to getour money back?
Who else do you owe?
(01:51:55):
And that's what it be like.
Who else do you owe?
So I preach that.
I preach that.
I preach it.
So, niggas, don't be asking mefor fucking money or feel like
that I'm telling secrets orsomething.
We're out and coming with somephilosophies Like no man, I got
punched in the mouth by thegovernment by not managing this
shit, right Okay, by thegovernment.
(01:52:16):
By not managing this shit,right Okay.
Read them, speak, understandyour bands, budget your shit,
make the bank your friend.
They're willing to give youmoney.
People used to rob themotherfucker bank because that's
(01:52:37):
where the money at.
Nigga, get your shit togethertogether.
They'll be more than willing togive you some money and they're
really easy about you notpaying them back on time.
They'll just take it out inblood or interest on your shit.
They give you time they a loteasy, hey, man.
Hey, trust me, you ain't gonnahave to fight to tell her you
don't pay back that $20 on timethey ain't gonna have to fight
(01:52:57):
to tell her you don't pay backthat $20 on time.
They ain't trying to bust yourkneecaps out, they ain't gonna
leave no dead rat at your doorIs it a horse head in your bed?
Nah, man.
But freedom speakers, weactually forgot to start off
this beautiful episode with ourprayer that we usually do.
We practice.
Bear with us on, you know,missing it at the beginning, but
(01:53:22):
we most definitely, definitely,definitely, did not forget to
bless you all with a prayer atthe end of this one.
So, lo, looking to end this offin prayer, I got you For sure,
for sure.
Freedom speakers by your head,chief.
Dear Lord, thank you once againfor bringing us together.
Thank you for this day, lord.
(01:53:43):
Thank you for the rain.
Thank you for the snow, lord,we thank you for each and every
person listening to this podcastright now.
Now, we hope that you've usedus to reach their ear to
hopefully gain something andlearn something, so they can use
(01:54:03):
something in their lives tobenefit themselves and
ultimately give you the thanks,because it all turns back to you
, god.
It all turns back to you.
You are the reason and as wemove even deeper into this
holiday season, lord, we want tothank you for the snow, thank
(01:54:26):
you for the feet, thank you forthe boots on our feet.
God, we know and we're gratefulas people in this world who
aren't as fortunate as others,as fortunate as we are, and as
we look to move through thisjourney, we look to also keep
you with us and we hope that youcover us, lord.
(01:54:49):
We ask that you reveal to usyour, your will, your will, and
we hope that every day, we'removing in the right ways and
saying the right things andteaching the right things and
being good examples ofstewardship, being good examples
and even role models for menlike us, for women who need
(01:55:12):
somebody to talk to, forchildren who need someone to
listen to God.
Thank you so much, god, in yourson, jesus' name.
Amen, amen, yeah, solid man,hey, freedom speakers, thank
y'all so so much, so so much.
Once again, man, me and Chief,we greatly, greatly appreciate
(01:55:33):
every single one of y'all.
I mean that, I mean that youknow and thanks for being here
along with us on this journeyonce again, and we gonna catch
y'all on the flip.
For Chief Ali, I'm Laylo theMost, and this is Permission to
Speak.
Speaker 2 (01:55:52):
Freely.