All Episodes

July 7, 2025 • 56 mins
Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
And we are back with another episode of Two for the
Culture.
I'm Justin Devante, I'm SteveRay.
Yes, sir, we're back.
How you feeling, feeling good?

Speaker 2 (00:08):
man Feeling good what happened?

Speaker 1 (00:13):
I think it's just same old, same old.
Now we're on the schedule now.
Oh yeah yeah, yeah, and there'ssomething significant changing,
went out this weekend again,yeah, went to Germantown pub.

Speaker 2 (00:31):
this time I didn't know that was the black place,
because in germantown it seemslike I don't know it's
gentrified.
That's what it is okay wellyeah, I didn't.
I walked in.
I was like the waitress firstof all, the waitresses, the wait
the bartenders.

Speaker 1 (00:44):
Being black is automatic, like oh, this is a
blacklist yeah, yeah so yeah,and seeing like a black staff
yeah, I mean totally differentyeah, and you know, it's kind of
like who you know type of thingis like black people know black
people, white people know whitepeople, mm-hmm.
So it's just kind of how itgoes.

Speaker 2 (01:04):
Yeah, that was dope, that was dope.

Speaker 1 (01:06):
Yeah, well, that's cool, same old, same old,
working all the time.
Yeah, yeah, it's a muchdifferent, you know.
Unless there's something tragichappening, Well, I do have
family reunion in a couple weeks, so maybe we'll come back with,
you know, something new.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
But, yeah, working relationship, taking care of
people, the family reunion, isit like a big one?

Speaker 1 (01:26):
Yeah, it's big.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, one of thosesummer joints.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's a prettybig event.
You know, my family's ancestryis from New Orleans.
Oh, yeah, yeah, so it'll bedown there.
Mm-hmm, that's cool, but I didwant to get straight into a game
, I think, but I did want to getstraight into a game.

Speaker 2 (01:52):
I think you'll find it okay yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:54):
So this one is kishi my no.
Okay, um, yeah, so this one isum the top five countries
attracted to american women,okay you know, bro, all your
shit is countries.
I keep telling you my, mygeographical sense is yeah and

(02:15):
yeah, and keep in mind this isan easier one medica yeah, yeah,
you want to come to America,exactly so American yeah so
these are guessable.
At least you know it's not onecountry on this list is like oh,
I was never going to think ofthat.

Speaker 2 (02:29):
Okay.

Speaker 1 (02:29):
Okay, I can see that.
All right, so, but these are.
You know the particular order,but you can name three strikes.

Speaker 2 (02:36):
You're out and yeah top five, top top five, uh uh uh
.
Countries that are attracted toamerican women.
Yes, um.

Speaker 1 (02:56):
All right, france.
France is number four france isnumber four okay, so keep on
going on that thing.
When you think of france, whatother country you think of?
When you think of France, whatother country do you think of?
Great Britain?
No, no, that's strike one,think of another.
Now, france and this othercountry are like you can confuse
them.
Both People think.

(03:17):
Italy.
Exactly.
Yeah, that's number one, okay,okay.

Speaker 2 (03:21):
Really Yep.

Speaker 1 (03:22):
Yep.
So now you got one and four.
Now no more Europe is on thisone.
So there's the biggest countryin South America I'm really kind
of giving you hints Mexico.
That's North America, oh shit.

Speaker 2 (03:42):
Hold on.

Speaker 1 (03:44):
You got BBLs.
What does BBL?
Bbl stand for brazil.
Yeah, there you go okay, I wasthe.
I was kind of thinking brazil,all right and I'm gonna give you
the reason why these are, theseare, and I'm gonna stem a
question off of that all right,so now we got one country in
africa and one company, onecountry in uh asia.
All right, so this one.
I'm gonna give you the reasonwhy, uh, cultural fact.

(04:09):
Well, I'll give you theamerican women represent a
different type of feminine, amore assertive independence,
which intrigues these men.
I guess I should have reallygave you those guesses.
And, and this is the country inAsia, we went to war Exactly.

(04:32):
So that's number three, okay.
Now this is kind of funny alittle bit.
The reason why this is numberfive American women are often
viewed as successful, ambitiousand strong.
American women are often viewedas successful, ambitious and
strong.
Many of these men admire thosetraits and also seek US
connection for education, familyopportunity.
So they're pretty much usingAmerican women right and this is

(04:56):
in Africa blank scammer.

Speaker 2 (05:03):
Nigeria exactly.

Speaker 3 (05:04):
Oh my god oh my god, yeah, exactly, oh my god all
right yeah yeah, so that'sfucked up, yeah yeah, and I
definitely knew what it was.

Speaker 1 (05:13):
I've heard that many, many times exactly uh, I mean,
but yeah, so even you know, chatdbt is like brad they be using
these hoes out here oh my godyeah, so.
So italy, ital, italian men areoften intrigued by American
women's confidence, openness andindependence.
Uh-huh, brazil.
American women are often seenas exotic and adventurous.

(05:34):
Okay, and we talked about Japan, france.
There's long been mutualattraction between America and
the French.
French men often see America'swomen as stylish, open-minded
and intellectually curious.
Yep, so yeah.
But the Japan one makes sense.

(05:54):
It's more assertive andindependent, which intrigues
some Japanese men.

Speaker 2 (05:59):
Which I guess they like that.
I said France because I saw alot of photos of French women
who don't shave their armpits soI thought maybe like they
wanted somebody who does okay,yeah, so yeah understood, it
worked yeah yeah, does that list.

Speaker 1 (06:19):
Do you feel like there should have been others on
that list?

Speaker 2 (06:22):
I don't know.
I don't know because you knowI'm in america so if anything, I
kind of, I guess, like them,look at women in different
countries.
It's just like foreign.
You could just see the beautyin a foreign woman.
So I I wouldn't.
I wouldn't even know what typefor real that they liked.

(06:43):
You know there's many differenttypes of women here.
I didn't know which type theywere going for.
Maybe y'all in Miami.

Speaker 1 (06:56):
The Nigerian one made the most sense because they're
seeking citizenship.
Yeah, yeah.
And the Mexican.
They're so close to the borderI could see that one has been a
top one.
That's why I'm kind of like notreally I'm a little surprised
not seeing that uh-huh.
Uh, because just by nature, orcanadian, but I guess it was

(07:17):
kind of like outruling that theneighboring countries a little
bit yeah, damn-hmm, damn, okay,no, this is though, this though
yeah since you're doing it now,I'll do mine, okay thank you all
right, let's see.

Speaker 2 (07:35):
Alright, so it's literally on my laptop so don't
look at it.
All right, so the top fivegrossing black movies in the 90s
uh top five grossing blackmovies.

Speaker 1 (07:53):
You got three strikes okay, um, I would say um menace
to society yes, okay, that'snumber three all right, I'll say
Friday no, okay, that'sactually a little shocking,
because that was.

Speaker 2 (08:09):
Was that in the 90s?
I would think it is.

Speaker 1 (08:13):
Okay, probably in the 99, man.

Speaker 2 (08:21):
I would say what's the one with Tupac and Janet
Jackson?
Poetic Justice, yes, no, wow,this top five, though, so this
is like mass mass appeal, right,huh.

Speaker 1 (08:34):
And what can I get a hint on?

Speaker 2 (08:36):
what constitutes like a black movie, like yeah, see
that that was my thing, but uh,just mainly like a classic black
film okay, yeah, so if I solike probably.
Justice was a great choice yeah, okay, so, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (08:49):
So I need to stay along on that theme.
Yes, like it's like what one ofthem.

Speaker 2 (08:54):
One of them is kind of like out of it.

Speaker 1 (08:55):
Okay, because as long as I was like brad, like it has
a bunch of black cast right butit's like like men in black or
some exactly I know what you'resaying.

Speaker 2 (09:03):
yeah, one of them is a little bit outside of it, okay
.

Speaker 1 (09:09):
I'm going to need a little bit.
I can name some stuff.
Do they have generationalactors like Will.
Smith, what's the movie withEddie Murphy when he's like an
African prince?

Speaker 2 (09:26):
Oh, that was a good one, but no, I don't think
that's on there?

Speaker 1 (09:29):
Wow, Is there any Eddie Murphy movies on there?
Like it's not, like what's thejoint where he's big and he
turns skinny when he drinks apotion?

Speaker 2 (09:42):
Yeah, that's wrong too.
I don't know if this list Imean this is what says.
Highest grossing black moviesin the 1990s was yep.
Follow closely so the first oneis boys in the hood okay the
second one is malcolm x.
That's what I was like.

Speaker 1 (09:58):
It's a little bit out okay, you said generational
actors oh, okay, I got so yeahit's that one minister, society.

Speaker 2 (10:05):
What's Love Got To Do With it?

Speaker 1 (10:06):
That is a damn lie.
No, no, no, what's Love.
Oh yeah, now I'm tripping.

Speaker 2 (10:10):
In 93, I'm tripping, yeah, I'm tripping, and
Boomerang.

Speaker 1 (10:14):
Boomerang, yeah, that Poetic Gotta be higher than
that.

Speaker 2 (10:22):
You know what's Love Got To Do With.

Speaker 1 (10:26):
No, that's the Tina Turner, joint, okay, yeah.

Speaker 2 (10:29):
I can see it.

Speaker 1 (10:29):
Because that still comes on now.

Speaker 2 (10:31):
Boomerang was funny, but when was poetic justice?
Poetic justice hats?
Yeah, because Tupac was onlypopping for like a couple years
and it was in the 90s.

Speaker 1 (10:41):
Yeah, I was like a juice.
I'm thinking brown sugar likeloving basketball, not brown
sugar.
Loving basketball always comesto my head oh my God.
Yeah, I knew I was going to,because Menace to Sisters.
No, it was Boys in the Hoodthat was critically acclaimed.

Speaker 2 (10:56):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, so that was the one I was really
thinking about.
Yeah.
Boys in the Hood I thought youwas going to get that one.
Oh well, Okay.
Oh yeah, Did you hear aboutsomething that happened today?
What is that?
I'm going to watch out with thething.

Speaker 1 (11:15):
But you like touched it.

Speaker 2 (11:16):
Oh, okay, but so what happened today was did you hear
about the Idaho sniper?

Speaker 1 (11:22):
No, I didn't hear about that.

Speaker 2 (11:24):
Right so there was a guy and I forgot his age.
He had to be like kind of young, this man.
He lit a fire, like on somemountain or something, and the
firefighters came to put it out,and while the firefighters were

(11:44):
there I think it was a numberof them there and he literally
set himself up like posted upand sniped the firefighters oh
wow yeah while they were tryingto do it, and then he killed two
of them and injured one of them.
And then the guy's granddadsaid that he applied to be a
firefighter and he didn't get inbecause he wasn't tall enough

(12:09):
so how tall you think it wasfive eight.
Oh yes, it was five eight okay,yeah uh I guess he got mad and
then they found him with the gunand he was dead, so I guess he
shot himself yeah, someone'swrong him for that, kill him.

Speaker 1 (12:25):
You know why he killed himself.
And two is why did you killsome, some firemen?

Speaker 2 (12:30):
because you didn't get in I don't know, but I mean,
how else does it add up for?

Speaker 1 (12:35):
you, I mean, I mean, I'm not saying like a conspiracy
is deeper than that, but I'mjust saying like you really
really one.
He didn't get in because hisheight he got.
He didn't get in because he wasthrown off.

Speaker 2 (12:50):
Yeah, yeah yeah, yeah , because, yeah, even bad vibes,
yeah, absolutely like yeah,you're not worthy to put on.

Speaker 1 (12:57):
Yeah, if you're willing to kill somebody over
that, then you're thrown off.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So the height was probably anexcuse to get rid of his ass.

Speaker 2 (13:07):
I just see him in his interview.

Speaker 1 (13:08):
Let him burn pass on this guy.
Yeah, yeah, no, I didn't hearabout that.
When did this happen today?

Speaker 2 (13:15):
today, yeah, earlier today oh, wow I think earlier
today or yesterday, and theyalready got an explanation of
the reason why.
I mean, I guess he did, yeah,yeah yeah, so I guess they
talked to his granddaddy orsomething.

Speaker 1 (13:26):
I don't know.
Yeah, and why?
How is they ever going to traceit back to him?
You know?

Speaker 2 (13:30):
what I mean why did he?

Speaker 1 (13:31):
it didn't seem like he had to kill himself, right?

Speaker 2 (13:35):
I I mean you sniping people, I mean I don know, I
would assume that they mightfind him.

Speaker 1 (13:41):
I guess, I'm just saying that's very difficult to
trace back to you.

Speaker 2 (13:46):
Yeah, when you say sniper that's like a long-ass
distance.

Speaker 1 (13:50):
Yeah, and then you get sniped, then he's running in
the woods and then how do youreally trace that back to him?
I feel like there's some ways.

Speaker 2 (14:03):
I I mean yeah there is some ways, but if you're
really 50 50, chance.

Speaker 1 (14:05):
I mean he's throwed off.
So I'm sure he probably usedhis own bullets so you could
trace that back to himeventually.
Yeah, but uh, I'm just sayinghe's just.
I mean he's this is throwed off, individual right.
Yeah, yeah, because I'm justsaying he could have probably
got away with that it soundslike it yeah yeah, it sounds
like maybe he wasn't as far asit sounds like in my head.

(14:26):
Yeah, I mean he's he's, I meanhe's sniping them and they don't
know where he's come from.
And these ain't police officers.
It's not like they got guns.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
They gotta go back to where they came from, to, I
would assume as soon as guynumber one dies it's like click
the button.
I guess I would assume there'sa button in the fire truck to
call the police.
Maybe.
Yeah.
I mean I don't know, I don'tknow.

(15:00):
Yeah, I mean it's a highintense situation.
So he could have.

Speaker 1 (15:06):
Maybe he could have got away with it.
Yeah, but he didn't even try.

Speaker 2 (15:10):
Yeah, he's like damn, that was fucked up.
Like that was fucked up.
Let me just end it.
Yeah, you say that after youdrop one.

Speaker 1 (15:18):
Yeah, you say that.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
after you drop one, yeah you know, oh yeah, yeah, it
was probably the third one thathe just like all right, he's
running away trying to Anyway.

Speaker 1 (15:29):
But yeah, that's just hella, throw it off behavior.
Obviously, I don't even need tostate that point.
Yeah, no, it's weird to statethat point, yeah, yeah.
So on top of recent news therewas a lady who was owned her own
restaurant here, hmm, but sheworked so hard and long she

(15:49):
finally took a couple days offand then she went to sleep and
never woke up I saw that, yeah,wow yeah that's.

Speaker 2 (16:00):
That's kind of crazy.

Speaker 1 (16:01):
It's fucked up though right, I mean totally, it just
got, it just kept.
Uh, put me down a whole likerabbit hole of just thinking
like what if we was in like backin the day, like back in the
day day like the 1600s?
It's like not even slavery, butlike as an indian like how much
work are they putting in?

Speaker 2 (16:23):
wow, what's the difference between?
I mean, I'm just like look atnatural.

Speaker 1 (16:29):
It just got me thinking.
Just like a natural way ofliving yeah of how you hunt,
kill and then you know you playor whatever they do yeah and and
how much hours are they puttingin?
Because I feel like today's dayis like legitimately slave
culture we have everything weneed, but we work so hard, yeah,

(16:49):
we put in so many amount ofhours, we stress out so much
that this it had to feel a lotespecially in my mind easier
than than then, I mean like itseemed easier than then, like
you hunt your food and then youcome home.
Of course we don't have.
We don't have to worry aboutstarvation like back in the day
does yeah and I think that'sreally the where we kind of have

(17:13):
the advantage, becausesometimes you don't know when
your meals are coming.
Yeah, but now I was like dang,we're just slaving away and
we're killing ourselves.

Speaker 2 (17:23):
I wouldn't compare it to slavery.
I think they did way more.
But, like the, the, the peopleof the land, yeah, I don't think
it even amounts close to theamount of work just because,
like you have to clock in at acertain time, like her, she was
running a business.
Right, that's totally different.

(17:45):
That's like day in, day out, ifI'm hunting, I go and kill this
bear or whatever, I bring itback home, we chilling for days.
Maybe even you don't, you don'tget it every single day.
So it's like time goes by and Idon't think was like running

(18:06):
from one one land to the other,probably walking or whatever,
and every single day cooking andthe heat and the steam and the
I don't know.
That's when you like try tothink about it.
I see what you're saying.
It's like uh, yeah, and I thinkI read in there that like she
died of quote like the, thehustle culture.

(18:27):
Yeah exactly.
Yeah, yeah, that is wild, thatis wild.
And.
I do.
I see that a lot of people, butI hear a lot from people, and
something I never really agreewith was like this, this sleep,
I mean this, this theory of like, no sleep, like I don't get

(18:50):
that, like I've anytime I'vebeen in pain, anytime I've had
anything going on with my bodythat just needs to be improved,
or like a muscle, whatever thefuck.
Soreness from working out sleepis the only thing that could
get me right every single time.
So it's gotta destroy you likeliterally from the inside, and I

(19:15):
read somewhere that when youdon't sleep like that, your
brain eats itself.
So after a while you're noteven quick to make decisions.

Speaker 1 (19:31):
Make decisions yeah.

Speaker 2 (19:33):
Just react on your feet and stuff like that, like
your cognitive ability, isdeclining.
Yeah, I heard that if you sleepfor five hours, that's
equivalent to like going out andhaving a drunk night.
So like you wake up, the same,the same grogginess, the same,
all that shit I don't know aboutthat.

Speaker 1 (19:52):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I do both.
I do the five hours on a weeklybasis.
Just because when I get off ofUber and Saturday I have church,
on Sunday I can definitely sayit.
Yeah it's definitely not theequivalent of having a drunk
night out.

Speaker 2 (20:10):
Yeah yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (20:12):
But maybe if it's constant, like over a period of
time, because then I try to makeup for it the following Sunday.
Yeah yeah, period of time,because then I try to make up
for it the following sunday,uh-huh, yeah, yeah, so, um, yeah
, I don't.
Yeah, I, I did disagree, atleast from that one day.
Now, maybe, if it's like over amonth's period, like where you
only get five hours of sleep,right, yeah, I can understand.
I can understand that maybe alittle bit more, but no, I mean,

(20:34):
sleep is very important andwho's this?
And I wonder.
It's like so, is she?
Because I don't know and I'masking you, like as if you know,
but how many hours is sheputting in?

Speaker 2 (20:48):
I don't know Specifically those people who
run the restaurants not workthere, but like who run them,
hoes they be there all fuckingday.
Yeah, like really cooking.
Like to me that's like workingout from point a to point b

(21:08):
throughout the day and if you'renot overseeing the restaurant
and you're like actually in it,you gotta be overworking
yourself, like after a certainamount of time and then then to
even like to have to pick up abusiness off of the ground like
bro, you gotta be going ham andin a business like that, like

(21:30):
versus, like an e-commerce, oreven a clothing store or I don't
know whatever else.
That shit sounds like I'mworking out all day, so that's
just very tragic because of howmuch success that she was, uh,
that you know, to the point thatshe's gotten to which a lot 90

(21:52):
of people haven't, uh in termsof their career, or that they're
, they're following their dreamsand wanting to do certain
things.
So that's very, very sad.
Do you know how old she was?

Speaker 1 (22:04):
I don't seem kind of young yeah, but I just had a
cousin that passed away in thesleep, I don't know where what,
yeah, I know.
And he was like in his 40s,like out of nowhere, isn't you
know.
He was healthy and just likeout of nowhere, isn't you know

(22:24):
he was healthy and just went tosleep and didn't wake up that's
scary as hell.

Speaker 2 (22:29):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, all right, I mean that's kind of
the best way to go oh my godyeah, yeah that's even more
effective yeah, yeah, yeah,because it's like.

Speaker 1 (22:40):
It's like, how do you like?
You know, I mean, how do you?
That's what I'm like is is thatbecause people are in pain and
just not saying anything?
Yeah yeah, cuz like if she's,she's so tired and she just
doesn't wake up, it's like yourbody.
How does it shut down like that?
You know?
I mean, I just don't understandthat concept.

(23:01):
It just doesn't make any senseI do.

Speaker 2 (23:03):
I wish I wish we were more advanced.
We probably are.
We just don't have access to it.
But like actually seeing what'sgoing on in the inside, versus
like after something's wrongwith you, then you treat it.
Yeah, I want that thing where,like it's got a, it goes to your

(23:23):
arteries mm-hmm it's like someblue, blue dye, some shit.
It goes all the way through yourarteries and then there's like
an x-ray or some shit and youcan see if your arteries are
clogged anywhere yeah, yeah, butI mean I feel like that should
be manifesting this itself in alot of areas you know what I
mean like if my arteries areclogged, like my hand should be

(23:43):
numb.

Speaker 1 (23:44):
You know what I mean, you know what I'm saying it
don't be like that.
That's what I'm saying.
I feel like it should, oh yeahfor sure, because, yeah, we
would never know yeah, becausepeople be like you know I got a
headache and then yeah, andconstantly, like my hair hurts,
you know, and people say thosethings as if it's normal, like
your head's supposed to behurting all the damn time.
So that's why we told me I waslike bruh, you need to get

(24:07):
checked out because there'ssomething you're doing wrong,
whether you're eating the wrongthing or whatever, are you
taking pills you need?
that needs to be kind of figuredout if your stomach's hurting
all the damn time yeah thatain't a good sign right like and
I'm a big dude, my head don'tif my head be hurting constantly
.
I'm looking into it you knowwhat I mean.
Yeah, my head don't be hurtinglike that now.

(24:29):
Yeah, I remember I was gettinglike these head tremors like my
head was shaking like this yeah,yeah.
And then I'm like what is goingon, like I'm looking at this
why is that funny?
I don't know.

(24:50):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm sorry, noI'm not tripping, I'm just
wondering why that funny.
But yeah, yeah, I'm like.
Yeah, I'm just like shaking,like like head trimming and then
so, so.
So I'm looking up online justsearching things, because I'm
the type of person I'm gonnaread information.
It's not always going to bethat, you know.
I'm just oh, I found the onething and I'm gonna follow this

(25:11):
advice.
That happens sometimes, but ithas to make sense in my head.
Yeah, like okay, I should tothat like this.
The thing what it was sayingwas you, um, because of all um,
the bluetooth, audio and stufflike that.
This is just what I'm readingwhen I talk about head tremors

(25:31):
and you need to actually dogrounding techniques take your
shoes off and walk in the grassI saw you

Speaker 2 (25:37):
do that okay, yeah, yeah oh wow, yeah, yeah, it does
do something yeah and so.

Speaker 1 (25:43):
So what I noticed and what made sense to me is that
with my headphones I put on, andthen also when I'm going to
work, I had the bluetoothheadset set up the whole time.
So I'm constantly getting thatthat, whatever radiation- or
wave thing.
And I was like, okay, I didn'teven look up Bluetooth stuff.
It was just saying that and Iwas like that's the issue,

(26:10):
because I just started this joband I've been on that Bluetooth
headset so eight, nine hours outof the day on top of my
headphones.
You can't have a plug orsomething.
That's what I started doing.
I started plucking it up.

Speaker 2 (26:24):
Yeah, yeah, and so I haven't had those head trimmers.
Damn yeah, brad, we be fuckedup, don't even know it, yeah,
yeah.

Speaker 1 (26:27):
So I was like okay, I was like they, you know, it
wasn't the information that Ijust, you know, put in the uh, I
just said head trimmers, andthen I start reading it.
And then I went to a YouTubepage.
He necessarily didn't talkabout this, but then I was like
let me see what the comments andsee what people say about that.
You know the video.
And then he's like shoot thisperson's.
Like my husband was having headtremors, he started doing

(26:50):
grounding and walking in thegrass and then, you know,
because of whatever, and I waslike dang, I have been using a
lot of bluetooth, that actuallymakes sense.
And then when I did thegrounding stuff, it felt much
better, wow, so it's just likelittle things, little techniques
that we don't even think about.
Yeah, and what we actually needand that's what really talked

(27:11):
about the indian and natural wayof life of just things of like
are we actually working too much?
and also the thing about whenI'm talking about slave.
So there's the slave concept ofactually getting whipped, but
you also have the indenturedservitude.
Are you more familiar aboutindentured servitude?
Uh, explain it Well so it'spretty.

(27:31):
So the first really time Ireally heard about it was like
in the Bible when, um, I'm gonnasay the names but they're gonna
be completely wrong.
When Abraham worked for I'msaying the name's wrong but
worked to get pursued Sarah as awife, the father was like, if

(27:54):
you work for me for a certainamount of years, you can have my
daughter.
So he worked for him to marrythis woman One that's a whole,
nother separate conversation,like picture working for a man
for five years just to marrysomebody.
You know what I mean.
Yeah, that's love.

(28:17):
Is it absolutely you gonna who?
You don't know her, I mean Idon't know.
Yeah yeah, yeah, adding up tolike he really knew the girl I
mean, but I'm just saying, butthat's love, that's dedication,
that's one that's drive,commitment I'll give you that
that's I mean you.
You work for the things youwant, correct?

(28:37):
Yeah I mean yeah, yeah.
So if you see, if you say eyesto somebody picture, I mean I've
seen you do it.
So yeah, yeah, back in the daywhen that person you really want
to pursue how much you?
Wanted for her what you did topursue her.
Yeah, over five years, thoughyou know what I mean yeah, right
so.
So, regardless of whatever yousay, it wasn't like if, if that

(29:01):
didn't work out, you ain'tdivorcing nobody.
I slaved for you, yeah, forfive years, yeah, yeah, so
that's a different type of love,but besides that, that was we
could put a pin on the appeal inthat whole thing, but yeah.
So the indifferent districtservitude is you work for a
certain amount of time to paysomebody off okay, yeah and and

(29:26):
so with we're in such a debtsociety, that's that's that's
essentially what we're.
We're working to pay offsomething that they loaned us to
, right?
So so that was back in the day,that was slavery.
Yeah, you had, you had umwilling slavery and you have
like, actually right oppressedslavery uh, so it's, and it's

(29:50):
always interesting to me and youknow, something I may get
killed for is how I don't nowthat I get older, I don't really
feel bad for homeless people asmuch as I used to all right,
hardly ever because I feel likethey're freer than us you, I was

(30:11):
, I was, I thought you weregoing a certain way, but then
you went yeah, yeah, yeah,completely.

Speaker 2 (30:16):
Uh, what do you mean?
Yeah, they're, they'redefinitely free, for sure.

Speaker 1 (30:21):
Yeah, they don't have bills, they don't have an
obligation, right, they dothings on their own accord, like
heroin, exactly.
Yeah, they do it because theylove that shit, like I mean,
yeah, yeah yeah.
They collect money by whatevermeans Uh-huh, and they do what
they love and have no obligationto anybody but themselves.

(30:44):
Mm-hmm.
And move freely.
Yeah, that is way freer than us.
We have responsibility.
Mm-hmm.
We have set things that we oweto people, that we make sure
that other people have, and wehave our own self-governance of
what we're supposed to be.
Yeah, it's going to sound bad,but they're a failed society.

(31:07):
They don't have a.
I mean yeah, yeah, yeah.
So they don't have a feeling ofyeah, but so they don't have a
feeling of needing to do betterfor others yeah, well maybe
that's there.

Speaker 2 (31:20):
They just don't act on it.
I mean for the most part yeah,yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (31:23):
I'm sure they were like I need to get myself
together.
I'm sure there's a level tothat.

Speaker 2 (31:29):
I'm sure, but they don't give a damn oh no they
yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (31:34):
I'm not.
There's a level to that, butthey don't give a damn.

Speaker 2 (31:36):
I don't know, I'm not in their mind, but that's
definitely the feeling I get.
Yeah, I feel like at some point, how about you not?

Speaker 1 (31:41):
giving them money.
You know what I mean.
Like how you mad at me.
Like, dang, I owe you this.
You know what I mean.
Like you, my homie.

Speaker 2 (31:51):
You ever think they like if they're outside?
Of walmart or some, you knowlike what.
If they go in to um to pee orsomething like in the bathroom
and they look in the mirror andthey're like I really got to get
my together, do you thinkthat's ever okay?

Speaker 1 (32:08):
it's gotta be for someone.

Speaker 2 (32:09):
Oh, yeah, yeah some of them may, yeah, yeah, you
talking about the ones who livein god.

Speaker 1 (32:14):
Yeah, but but that goes.
Yeah, we I'm enjoying theconversation, but that's just
going off of just like freefreedom yeah and we, when you're
in debt society, we don't havethat free freedom.
There's people that we owe,that we have to work for to pay
them off.
You know.
There's people that we haveresponsibly to to make sure
they're taken care of, andthat's just a form of indenture

(32:37):
servitude.

Speaker 2 (32:38):
Yeah, no, that's the way of life on earth, for real,
and so I'm getting somewherewith this.

Speaker 1 (32:48):
So it brings me on about the lady rest in peace of
she's work.
We're all in a rat race,working for something, she, I'm
sure, in her mind.
I don't want to speak for restin peace, but there's the idea
of if I'm a business owner, I'm,I'm free, I make these choices.

Speaker 2 (33:11):
But how are you free?
I feel like you're more.

Speaker 1 (33:14):
Because you're responsible.
Nobody's telling you what to do.
You have the ownership.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So that's the freedom part ofit I don't think it's.

Speaker 2 (33:26):
I feel like it's much worse.

Speaker 1 (33:29):
I mean it's more stressful, but you gotta pay the
bill for the building.

Speaker 2 (33:34):
Yeah, you gotta pay the workers.
That's you gotta you.

Speaker 1 (33:37):
So you're yeah, exactly, but that's what I'm
saying.
I'm just saying to when peoplepursue ownership, why do you
think they do that?
What do you think the reasonswhy?

Speaker 2 (33:47):
oh yeah, so it's, it's more control of the
situation.
Exactly yeah exactly.

Speaker 1 (33:54):
So there's a freedom level to that, yeah and so.
But to your point, which Iagree, is that now you're more
in debt to, like you said, thebuilding, the worker.
Yeah, you're still on top ofyour regular obligations, of

(34:14):
your family, right?
So it's like, you see, the onepercent, literally the top one
percent, are are it should belike slash, luckiest men alive,
you know, because you you're atthat point of where you're free

(34:34):
and you also have and I'm surethat's stressed the hell out,
but you also have the incomecapacity to do whatever you want
.

Speaker 2 (34:43):
Yeah, no, for sure that's.
That's, I think, what everyonestrives for.
That's why I don't like um, Idon't know.
I I will continue to geartoward more information on
things that can scale, versuslike set things in terms of like
jobs and stuff.

(35:03):
I mean, I love my job.
Uh, I appreciate them forgiving me that paycheck every
month, thank you.
But um, yeah, just like thingsthat scale you know I'm saying
like you, you can't, you can'treally scale that much in the
job, because what you work here,you work here for a year, you
get a raise, you just bump upjust a little bit for real.
But entrepreneurs and all thatshit, like they'll take it of

(35:28):
course, like I'm in the socialmedia space, so I've seen this
over and over and over and overagain.
Right, somebody starts off.
It's 50 cents this month, nextmonth, 100, three years from now
they're making a hundredthousand a month yeah and doing
like you're saying.
It's just like, depending on whothey are, uh, a lot of freedom,

(35:48):
a lot, a lot, a lot a lot offreedom in there.
It's a total, total differentlifestyle of having to, like,
really bust your ass everysingle day.
And I mean you have to bustyour ass to get to a certain
point.
But it ain't the same thing aslike working overtime at this
warehouse because you gotta payoff a car note or you know.

Speaker 1 (36:10):
So, yeah, for sure, yeah, yeah, yeah, and you know
it.
It just because I mean, whenit's scary to think that you
work so hard that you never wakeup again.
Oh, my god, yeah, yeah and andI think we're oversimplifying
the situation because I'm surethere had to be health-wise-

(36:31):
wrong.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,yeah I mean god can call us home
for any time, any reason.
You know what?

Speaker 2 (36:38):
I mean so that.

Speaker 1 (36:38):
So that's the real thing.
But you know, I just look atthat and how shocking that is
and it's like, bro, what, whatare we doing to ourselves?
Yeah, yeah, and it's.
I'm always going to be a personself-reflecting like,
ultimately, what do I want?
What do I want for myself, myfamily, what are my goals and

(37:01):
how, you know, what is thehealthiest way to get there?
Yeah, and that's kind of whereI'm at now.
I'm stuck in some of mydecisions you know like yeah
because you know like for my,you have two cars once because
you know for well, they're bothfor uber.
But the idea was to have waswhen I got in a car accident for

(37:24):
the expedition, how much I wasspending on rent, rental costs.
I was like I could have leaseda another vehicle and that could
have been my assurance policy,and I could have had that.
Now, since I have a real job, Ido uber less.
So now I'm stuck in thatdecision.
That decision I made, you know,which seemed like a good
decision.
I mean a good decision at thetime, but not so much now that I

(37:46):
have an obligation 40 hours aweek to something else.
Um, yeah, so it, you know.
It always things you know justhas me questioning the world,
because I'm always going aboutthe rabbit hole of how we should
actually be doing things andsometimes the simple answer is
the best.
Yeah.

(38:07):
Like getting your sleep.
Yeah, stop stressing overthings.
Being little debt is possible.
All those sound easy.
Yeah, until life hits you,until you know.
Yeah, until your daughter needssomething no, and you can't
tell.
It's harder to say no, yeah,yeah.
So you're gonna work harder forthat.
My grandmother needs something,my girlfriend needs something

(38:30):
yeah, you want to elevate ingeneral?
yeah yeah, you always want tosee them happy, yeah, and so
it's always an add-on to thingsto where it's like dang, yeah,
I'm gonna be literally workingfor it.
Yeah, by that, you don't helpthe glider.
Yeah, he, he always gonna needsomething.
So it's like it's the part ofyou wants to say no, but a part

(38:51):
of you feels like you can'treally you know, yeah,
everybody's like, yeah, it's,it's a tough thing.

Speaker 2 (39:00):
I really wonder how.
I don't know if it was everdifferent, though I don't think
it ever was, cause like peoplewas working hard as hell way
back then.
I would assume I would assumeby like the stories that I've

(39:22):
read, like in the bible and allthat stuff, like people like
saying working hard it's.
That means something like it'snot just kind of like just there
, yeah.

Speaker 1 (39:31):
So so picture if there was more self-care though
yeah, picture, picture, you know, your baby mother saying I know
this ain't a real, I'm justgiving you, uh, just a scenario
saying hey, I need rent moneyand or we're gonna be out on the
street, oh shit and I need, Ineed 500, but all that's all you
got.
You know what I mean.

Speaker 2 (39:52):
Yeah, I'm going to have to give that up, yeah.

Speaker 1 (39:54):
Give that up, yeah.
So you're putting yourself in adetriment in order to take care
of other people.
Mm-hmm.
Yeah, and that's life, yeah,yeah, and definitely double that
for a man oh, yeah, yeah, yeah,for sure.
So it's just like it's always aconstant of just life happening

(40:14):
, and it's just not always on asituation that you put yourself
in, it's your potentialsituation that you put uh, that
your loved ones put themselvesin, that you have to help them
dig them out right, and that'sjust part of love, and that's
why I was like, when we talkabout freedom and homelessness,
nobody's gonna call on them.
For you know what I mean?
It just that's just.
I was like, when we talk aboutfreedom and homelessness,
nobody's gonna call on them.
You know what I mean?
That's just the reality of it.

(40:35):
Yeah, so, and I was likethey're free.
That's why I'm less likely Now.
I give dollars and I give itaway Cause it's not Gonna mean
that much to me.
But I look at it and I was likeBruh, you freer than me, you
know what I mean.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Like I don't want to say youlive in a good life because I
don't want to be in your shoes.
Yeah, but I, I I'm lesssympathetic, as I used to be.

Speaker 2 (40:57):
Uh, you're living the life that you want yeah, yeah,
yeah.

Speaker 1 (41:04):
Like it's a choice at some point.
Yeah, part of live off the landand didn't worry about this
debt stuff.
Like I wish, I wish people carelike less than I do Like, and
this is a problem thatultimately lie in and why it's
it's hard for me to prove thispoint and why I can be as like,

(41:27):
like when I asked the question,like you think I'm hard on my
girlfriend and I and I was likeI do agree that I can be, I'm
tougher than most one think I'mhard on my girlfriend and I and
I was like I do agree that I canbe, I'm tougher than most one
because I'm honest.
And two is like I work hard asf, yeah, so, yeah, the less care
I got to be more sympathetic ofyour feelings because your ass
are strong.

(41:47):
In my situation now, if I'm amillionaire, your ass may not be
as strong as they are in thismoment, but for what I got they
are.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, like I haveless time, yeah, yeah, yeah, I'm
working harder than ever todeal.
There's more people that needthings.
I have more expenses, right?

(42:07):
Yeah, yeah, so my, when yourass are lengthy, then then I'm
doing that Instead of saying no.
I'm doing what you want, butI'm also putting myself more
debt.
I'm stressing myself out more,I'm working harder than ever.
So, yeah, my attitude, I'mgoing to be more strict in how.

(42:31):
Yeah, how my want is and mywants aren't strong.
Yeah, my, and that's the, andwe.
So we had this conversation.
Am I talking too much?
Uh?

Speaker 2 (42:45):
I don't know where you're about to go so maybe like
summarizing a couple yeah, Igot you, I got you do we have
other things to talk about?
I'm just kidding.
I got another question damn howthe fuck we get.
I don't know how we got to 40something yeah, you're right,
right, right yeah and just along story.

Speaker 1 (43:06):
Short of it is that, hey, I don't ask truly for much,
but my overall asks aresomewhat vague, to where it can
be encompassing in a lot of ways, like be respectful.
That ask is small, but that'svery encompassing, right right.

Speaker 2 (43:30):
I'll just end it on that note.
That can go like many differentways as well, though, but no,
that makes sense.
I mean, I did read somewherethat the people who I think it's
the people who've like triedharder than others have less

(43:58):
sympathy for people in generalyeah, I, I read that somewhere
and I definitely got that,because it was like some years
ago, where I would see somethinghappen or, like you said, like
a homeless person or whatever.
I'm like damn.
And then now I'm like nigga,you chose that I'm like a little

(44:19):
bit of it now.
Things can't happen to peopleabsolutely and it could be a
really messed up situation, butfor the most part, like nigga, I
seen you last four saturdays onthe same block this show hustle
I ain't got it you, you, you dothis so much and so often that
you don't even remember me.

Speaker 1 (44:40):
That's funny that you said that, because, like I was
pulled up at a gas station,homie was like bruh.
Honestly, I just got out ofjail.
You know I need this thing,da-da-da.
I know it's BS, you know I'mgoing to just throw you it.
Just off of the strength, youknow what I mean.
Just off of love.
One black man to another.

(45:02):
I put up the true fit bro, putup a safe card.
Hey, bro, I just gotta.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I was like you asked me thatlast month.
I remember you.
No, I swear on god, I ain'tnever done that.
That ain't never done that.
It drives off what the fuck?
you don't know me damn what thefuck, I'm with you on that after

(45:31):
a while I was like alright comeon now alright, hold on.

Speaker 2 (45:36):
I have one question damn damn.
That actually kind of tied alittle bit into what you were
saying.
But have you ever put arelationship first and felt like
a romantic relationship?
Have you ever put a romanticrelationship first and felt like
a background character in yourown life, like almost like you

(45:57):
had identity loss?
Identity loss.

Speaker 1 (46:01):
Yeah, I want you to answer it first, and then I and
now.

Speaker 2 (46:04):
I've done it before to where it was one point I was
just putting the wholerelationship in front of me and
what I saw myself, maybe evenlike before my own purpose at
one point, and I felt like I wascompletely losing who I was in
general to where it kind of likepsychologically was like

(46:28):
messing with.

Speaker 1 (46:29):
I felt like I was losing myself yeah, I'm gonna
say I put others first, but II'll take an l on this slightly,
is I'm gonna let you know yeahyeah, my words I may.
I'm the type of person that'sgonna kick and scream and still

(46:50):
do it.
Uh-huh, yeah, like notlegitimately, but it's like, hey
, man, hey, we gotta easy.
You gotta be easy on me.
You know what I mean.
My words may be a little light.
My grandmother, like I, waslike hey, you know, I gotta do
this and that you're.
You know the ask is a littlestrong, but I'm gonna fit it in.

Speaker 2 (47:08):
I'll be doing that sometimes you know and um I'm
sorry, you was like that,forever like um, I mean for
forever.

Speaker 1 (47:16):
I'm 32, so, yeah, yeah.
So I mean not no, I guess,because you just do what you're
told when you're younger.
But but now, and and now I havemore since February when I
started the job, I'm less timethan ever.
Like two years ago two, threeyears ago, I would say, were my

(47:37):
best times to where and I know,I know I was gonna pay for it
eventually like when I got theexposition, I was like there's
gonna be maintenance issues onthis one and so my expenses are
gonna be more.
But now, like the money ispaying for itself, I should
probably put down a little bitmore, but I'm having a lot of
fun going out.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I, I could have been waymore.

(47:58):
That's why I'm out.
I could always point it back tome, yeah, yeah.
So I, I could have been waymore.
That's why I'm out.
I could always point it back tome, yeah, yeah.
So I put myself, you know, andand then I was saying, like you
know, I probably should pay moreon these student loans, but you
know, since it's it's it'spandemic, they're not asking for
it, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So so I was like it's probablygonna come back and haunt me.

(48:19):
But, I'm enjoying my life.
Yeah, yeah.
Yeah, so, so, yeah.
So I'm trying to equate it backto there how I did it.

Speaker 2 (48:29):
But yeah.

Speaker 1 (48:29):
So, oh, I know where I was getting at, so I had more
freedom To do anything.
So my complaints To mygrandmother Wouldn't be crazy,
because I had.

Speaker 2 (48:38):
I ain't talking about like regular people, I'm saying
like a romantic relationship?
Yeah, romantic relationship.
Have you like put this girllike on a pedestal, basically,
and eventually you realize likeyou were starting to lose
yourself or lose like the, whatyou thought of yourself and all

(49:00):
that type of shit.
Would you put her up in front?
Does that make sense?

Speaker 1 (49:08):
I feel like I could have gotten there.

Speaker 2 (49:10):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (49:11):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So at one point I'm sure Icould have gotten gotten that
bad, but luckily she didn't dothe right things.
So it also just like exactly,yeah, yeah, cuz that I'll say
it's openly, because I was trulyvery insecure with myself

(49:33):
uh-huh then it was to a point towhere, you know, she was off,
was always breaking up andgetting back together, so we
wasn't even together at the time.
I was like, hey, do what youwant, as long as you come home
it was like that, that's howthat's like.

Speaker 2 (49:55):
Ultimately very pathetic, very much so yeah, I
just, I just felt like all, allthe world so gone through
something yeah, that was justlike.
So I put her above all thistype of stuff.

Speaker 1 (50:11):
So I was like I know I can't say this thing because
that is very simpy.
That's the ultimate simp.
Yeah.
So I would never speak that.
Yeah, but that's how I felt.

Speaker 2 (50:22):
Uh-huh In that moment .

Speaker 1 (50:24):
Yeah, so that's when you talk about losing yourself,
like these are not behaviorqualities that I would ever
believe in, right, yeah, but mylove for this person is filling
to that point.

Speaker 2 (50:35):
Yeah, yeah, no, yeah, yeah, yeah, no, yeah, yeah.
So in that, point.

Speaker 1 (50:38):
Yes, that has happened, so I have lost who I,
who I actually was in order tobe with or appease that person.

Speaker 2 (50:46):
Yeah, I feel like everybody kind of has some some
sort of story like that in theirlife, their dating life, anyway
.
Um, I don't think I really haveanything else uh, oh well, I'll
, I'll say this, but a randomfact, because we're talking
about like back then, and youknow like how, uh health wise

(51:08):
how things could have beendifferent.
Um, the way people work, the waypeople where I'm coming in is
the way people eat, and thingslike that.
Did you know in the early 1900s?
Um, scientists put like moneyin, uh uh, some doctors no, no,

(51:29):
no no, no, no, no, no.
The uh people behind likemarketing, because you remember,
tv start rolling out and shitlike that and, and you know,
like newspapers was a big thing,so advertisements start to go
like all the way up.
So, as you know, like companiesbehind food brands or whatever,

(51:51):
maybe like cereal in I guessscientists, scientists slash
doctors' pockets to say thatbreakfast is the most important
meal of the day.

Speaker 1 (52:06):
Oh yeah, they did that behind a lot of different
foods.

Speaker 2 (52:09):
But yeah, yeah, yeah, so they did that shit with
cereal to market the cereal.
And then now that's like a bigthing for Americans and that
goes with orange juice as well,because they had um, you know,
they were selling oranges andshit just like any any time ever
, but they were over producingthe oranges and they didn't know

(52:30):
what to do with the rest ofthem and it was like, well, shit
, we're just gonna like mix itwith some shit and it's orange
juice.
And then they did the samething with that.
So like that's why, like nowit's like a norm to have an
orange juice.
And then they did the samething with that.
So like that's why, like nowit's like a norm to have an
orange juice with like somethingin the morning but yeah it's
all like it's all made up yeah,absolutely like.

Speaker 1 (52:50):
Even cheese is like a byproduct that they didn't know
what to do with I canunderstand that was a great yeah
yeah, that boy, oh my godcoming, coming back here to
nashville, bruh, it's.

Speaker 2 (53:04):
It's so much easier to gain weight here, like bruh,
what the fuck like in la like.
Anywhere I went I could findmaybe salmon with something here
, it's not like that.
This shit is a straight hotchicken burgers.
Yeah, bruh, this, this don'teven taste right without cheese
on it.

(53:24):
Yeah, yeah, yes, bro no, no,that's 100.

Speaker 1 (53:29):
Yeah, they did that with a lot of things, uh-huh
yeah yeah, yeah, that's whythat's why we?

Speaker 2 (53:35):
uh, I just really wonder how.
I just really wonder what we'resupposed to be doing.
I feel like it's so fuckingsimple, bro.
That's why I'm gonna get me ajuicer and.
I'm going to try to.
I'm gonna start implementingnot drinking as much just
straight purified water, butmixing it with like watermelon

(53:57):
and cucumber and differentjuices, to where I'm not
drinking purified water anymore,like I'm drinking only coconut
water watermelon water.

Speaker 1 (54:06):
Okay, so like structured water is what they're
calling it.
Is that what you?

Speaker 2 (54:11):
it's just got electrolytes in it.

Speaker 1 (54:13):
It's just yeah, yeah, it's kind of like just eating
fruits all the time yeah, soI've been drinking okra water,
okra, yeah, yeah, so I'll let itsoak, but it's like very it's
slimy yeah no yeah it's not likeit doesn't bother me, but it's
not like.
Yeah, it's not the best in theworld to like, consume.

(54:35):
In terms of like it's becauseit's texture.
It's like you can dip your handup and goo's coming out, but
you don't like beans.
Um, no, beans is like chewingthe organ.
Beans are.
Yeah, but this is my preference.
But yeah, yeah yeah yeah, sorry, you act like beans and slime
is the same thing.
No, no, it's just like I don'tlike how beans look.

(54:56):
They look like yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, poor man's pebbles you
know what I mean?

Speaker 3 (55:02):
like it's just yeah, I don't like how they look, I
talk about kidney beans.

Speaker 1 (55:06):
Eating it straight up don't smell good, they look bad
, it looks like mush and theyand you throw it in with
everything else and it and ittastes it doesn't you don't like
it with rice either.

Speaker 2 (55:18):
Some type of beans?
No, not at all.

Speaker 1 (55:19):
Wow, I don't like refried beans.

Speaker 2 (55:21):
Oh, for real, the Mexican.

Speaker 1 (55:22):
That looks like baby poop.

Speaker 2 (55:25):
That's a good analogy yeah, yeah, yeah, that's a good
one.

Speaker 1 (55:30):
Yeah, I can tolerate barbecue beans, but I don't eat
two scoops before it gets toomuch, before it's like Alright,
I'm chewing this.
It's not good.
It tastes well Because it'ssweet, barbecue Right, and it
masks the taste of the beans.
Yeah, yeah yeah, so it's like Ican put this on anything but
beans.
You're just masking what theyare.

Speaker 2 (55:51):
Yeah, you can't put that on a burger.
Huh, I said yeah, you can't putthat Like on a burger.

Speaker 1 (55:56):
Yeah, exactly.

Speaker 2 (55:58):
Yeah, well, that was, that was, that was my fact yeah
, well, I think we did it, wedid good.
Yeah, yeah, I appreciate itgood conversation yeah, this was
this we could really be talkingall day for real.
I just wanted to say oh right,yeah, and just oh.
Do I have something else?

Speaker 1 (56:12):
no, no, I'm just saying that's a possibility for
us, because we could just chatoh, okay yeah yeah, yeah, that's
true, absolutely, but I thinkwe did it.
Yeah, we did good, alright.
Well, this is Two for theculture.
We'll be back, alright.
Yes, sir, peace.
Advertise With Us

Popular Podcasts

Crime Junkie

Crime Junkie

Does hearing about a true crime case always leave you scouring the internet for the truth behind the story? Dive into your next mystery with Crime Junkie. Every Monday, join your host Ashley Flowers as she unravels all the details of infamous and underreported true crime cases with her best friend Brit Prawat. From cold cases to missing persons and heroes in our community who seek justice, Crime Junkie is your destination for theories and stories you won’t hear anywhere else. Whether you're a seasoned true crime enthusiast or new to the genre, you'll find yourself on the edge of your seat awaiting a new episode every Monday. If you can never get enough true crime... Congratulations, you’ve found your people. Follow to join a community of Crime Junkies! Crime Junkie is presented by audiochuck Media Company.

24/7 News: The Latest

24/7 News: The Latest

The latest news in 4 minutes updated every hour, every day.

Stuff You Should Know

Stuff You Should Know

If you've ever wanted to know about champagne, satanism, the Stonewall Uprising, chaos theory, LSD, El Nino, true crime and Rosa Parks, then look no further. Josh and Chuck have you covered.

Music, radio and podcasts, all free. Listen online or download the iHeart App.

Connect

© 2025 iHeartMedia, Inc.