Episode Transcript
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Speaker 1 (00:00):
And we are back with
another episode of Two for the
Culture.
I'm Justin Devante, I'm StevenWright.
Yes, sir, we're here.
How you feeling?
I'm feeling good man Feelinggood.
That's great to hear.
Speaker 2 (00:11):
You know, take a
little break.
Yeah, take a little break.
Speaker 1 (00:14):
Got revitalized and
you know new format, you know
plan things out, so hopefully weget a lot better.
Speaker 2 (00:21):
Yeah.
No, it's going to get betterevery time.
So I'm really excited abouttoday.
We have a, you know, like alittle set thing, so we're
trying it out and yeah.
Speaker 1 (00:31):
Just ready to see how
it goes right, yeah.
Speaker 2 (00:34):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (00:34):
I really have hopes.
I think it will be successful.
Yeah, how's the last couple ofweeks been for you?
Speaker 2 (00:43):
Last couple of weeks.
Yeah, think I just I justslowed down, like going out and
stuff.
Yeah, I feel like I went superhard and crazy and just like,
like I'm gonna go here.
Here I went like four places inone day, one time the next day
three, the next day four.
Like yeah, comedy show thiskaya's played it that and I just
(01:08):
gotta chill, so but I'm veryhappy about that.
What about you?
Speaker 1 (01:11):
um, my last couple
weeks it's been fairly the same,
you know, working the full-timejob and doing uber um I don't
think there's much in the new.
What I do, you you know, justconstantly working.
You know, sometimes I feel likeI do work for everybody else
(01:31):
but me.
Uh huh.
Speaker 2 (01:33):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (01:34):
I just cause, I look
about, I look at things and I
realize like I don't really domuch for myself, Like what, what
would you do for yourself?
Like um, would you do foryourself?
Speaker 2 (01:48):
Like Go outside.
You looked out like you were injail.
Nah, I was just watching.
I'd like to see the sunshine.
Speaker 1 (01:53):
Nah, I was just
watching somebody walk the dog.
Oh yeah, yeah yeah, so what Ido for myself?
Speaker 2 (02:02):
you ask yeah, like
what is that?
Speaker 1 (02:07):
I listen to podcasts.
You know I yeah, like littlethings like you know working out
, you know enjoy food, obviously, but like real things like I'll
go to like TJ Maxx or Marshallsevery once in a while and get a
shirt.
Speaker 2 (02:24):
You're just saying
like you just want to do that
for yourself.
Speaker 1 (02:27):
No, I'm just saying
that's kind of the extent of
what I do for myself now.
Speaker 2 (02:31):
Oh, is it like you
want to do more?
Speaker 1 (02:33):
No, a little bit.
You know I don't have theincome to really do more.
Yeah, I would love to do more,but you know, of course, in the
midst of paying off debt anddoing other things, but
everything is not cheap, so justjust things that come, you know
(02:55):
, around and I was like dang,hopefully this really does, I'm
sure it'll pay off, hopefully itdoes.
Yeah, like, yeah, just thingsthat come up.
It's like oh, this thousanddollar bill just came, you know,
yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, like,hey, you gotta, you gotta pay
this and like, and then some ofit's completely my doing like,
(03:16):
yeah, little things.
Like, well, now, yeah, yeah,something you know, past
financial um, bad decision thatI thought was going to be and
which wasn't really bad, um, andbut nonetheless, the bill comes
due at some point.
Yeah, yeah.
And then you gotta uh, realizethat in the moment when you know
(03:36):
I saw the biggest success fromit.
Speaker 2 (03:38):
I should have
actually.
I think it sorry.
Speaker 1 (03:44):
There we go.
Speaker 2 (03:45):
I'm back.
Speaker 1 (03:46):
Yeah, when I saw the
biggest success from it is when
I should have started payingdown on things.
Speaker 2 (03:51):
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 (03:52):
But so some of it's
me.
But it's not like I'm in amiserable spot, it's just
something I thought about.
I was like dang, even thefamily reunion, I'm going on.
It's not that I true, I like Iwould love to go, but it's not
like I truly have a desire andcan't wait to go.
I'm really going because mymother wants me to be there.
(04:13):
You know what I mean.
Like it's not like I'm dreadingit, yeah, but you know, but I'm
not really looking forward toit because it's another thing
that I have to pay for thecousins ain't hitting like that
you said the, what I said thecousins oh no no, yeah, yeah, I
love everybody.
It's just, it's just anotherthing you know like, yeah, yeah,
but so it's so, it's justanother task and expense that I
(04:36):
have to um pay for, and it'sjust that kind of drains it.
Yeah, maybe because I don't gotit like that yeah, and maybe
that's a part of it.
Speaker 2 (04:45):
Probably is smart.
Speaker 1 (04:46):
Yeah, stress or added
to everything yeah yeah, but it
was just something I observed.
I was like dang, I really youknow, because I've been talking
about getting a massage foreveruh-huh yeah, yeah, yeah.
But then you know, as soon as Ifeel like I have freedom, yeah,
there's something that comes uplike well, I gotta, I got to
wait another month.
Speaker 2 (05:06):
Tire falls off on the
way to the massage place.
Speaker 1 (05:13):
Exactly Like just
yeah, yeah, did you say the tire
on purpose?
Speaker 2 (05:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (05:20):
Okay, yeah, yeah,
because what was that last week?
Yeah, I had a flat tire.
Yeah, yeah, you're just goingto Kroger and you heard the
hissing sound.
Speaker 2 (05:30):
I was like ah, of
course.
Speaker 1 (05:32):
Yeah, yeah.
So I had to get the tow truckguy out here to move the car
because I wound up driving homelooking homeless as hell.
Well, obviously not homeless,but driving the car a flat home.
Speaker 2 (05:46):
You're hearing it
grind Two miles per hour.
Speaker 1 (05:49):
Exactly, I had that.
Speaker 2 (05:54):
A little bit of
traffic in Nashville today.
Speaker 1 (05:56):
Everybody's hearing
it grind staring at me, I'm just
petting like a 70-year-old manCome on, I can't do anything
staring at me and I'm just youknow better like a 70 year old
man, come on uh, I can't doanything your hands out the
window yeah, and then the theguy's like well, you know, this
one has insurance, luckily, butyou know, the other one that you
(06:19):
hit is like on a bird on theverge of um blowing out too
uh-huh and then you might aswell get the, because you got
the back to replace, because,keep in mind, I drive the tesla,
so because it goes quick, theback tires is what feels like
the velocity, so they burn outquicker right right yeah, so so
(06:41):
those all need to be replacedquickly, in all things
considered.
And then the front two not asmuch.
Of course, you get rotations,blah, yada, yada, but so the
front two need to be replacedDefinitely.
If I was going to do the rightone, I might as well have did
the left one, because that wasthe only one that was, you know,
(07:02):
fine, but you still probablyneed to get it replaced just to
keep it in line with everythingelse.
Right, yeah, so so that wasanother thing, you know?
Yeah, yeah, that wasn't a dealbreaker, but it just adds on.
Speaker 2 (07:17):
Yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah yeah.
Speaker 1 (07:18):
Yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah bill was due.
That was like.
It was like well, I can't getthat massage.
And then it was this again soit's just like little things
pile on yeah, yeah yeah.
So, um, on top top of literallyeverything you know because you
want to make, I want to makesure that my student loans in
(07:38):
order, because I'm seeing when Ido like the financial analysis
stuff, I'm seeing when I'mlooking through people's
applications, but those studentloans, yeah, destroy people's
credit and and I've been hearingseveral cases amongst my
friends like, hey, those studentloans are you?
know coming back around due.
Yeah, and people was likeovernight from like 700 to 560.
(08:02):
Yeah, yeah, right, right, right, yeah, and so I want to make
sure I'm on top of that stufftoo.
Yeah, yeah.
So it's just like little thingsthat add up to a bigger thing.
So I was like, yeah, well, I'mjust going to wait a little
longer.
Speaker 2 (08:19):
Yeah, that sucks.
That's definitely for a lot ofpeople, but I do feel like it's
very important for us to taketime out to do things that we
love or need.
I got to get back into filming,well, I mean, I started back
with scripting and all that typeof stuff, but like, yeah, I
kind of feel that too if, like,I gotta do something for me.
Speaker 1 (08:39):
Yeah, yeah so, but
that was, that's on the
forefront and I'm using amassage because that was I've
never gotten like a professionalmassage, so I was like that's
on the forefront and I'm using amassage, cause that was.
I've never gotten like aprofessional massage before.
So I was like that's the one ofthe things I'm looking forward
to doing when I actually get achance to.
But you know, it's just goingto take some time, cause I
started a new job in February.
You know, when I was justdriving for uber I was doing
(09:06):
other little things but I wasmaking majority of my income and
then coming from the winter towhere I was suffering, like
living off my savings, yeah, andbarely getting by then.
Now I got a new job and doingover on top of that.
You know, on paper it looksgreat, yeah, yeah, but now it's
just really kind of getting backsome of the things I lost plus
some of the things that I do.
(09:27):
So now I'm at this kind of liketrajectory, midpoint, but then
it comes down and then it goesback, yeah yeah, yeah.
So that's just you know.
Yeah, I took up a lot of timewith that no.
Speaker 2 (09:41):
No, it's cool, but
other things.
Speaker 1 (09:42):
Um, you know, I can't
really complain.
I'm actually literally in goodplace and I'm doing better than
most.
So who?
Speaker 2 (09:48):
am I really to
complain about?
There's definitely something Icame across the other day.
It's just like, um, you know,when whatever you're doing is
always like somebody that'sdoing the worst yeah, yeah, yeah
, yeah, and and so I'm actuallyprobably blessed.
You are yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah,yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1 (10:06):
But it's just, you
know, it's just things like yeah
, I see myself, I'm actuallyvery, and it's a blessing that I
can be helpful to others.
Speaker 2 (10:16):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (10:18):
But you know it does
come at a cost to myself For
sure.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (10:24):
All right, so let's,
uh, let's just get to it yeah,
yeah, you got something on yourmind trending topics.
I mean, some is probably yourstoo okay but you did hear about.
Uh.
Well, first of all, did youhear um, uh about.
This happened like today, thisis right, this is a random like
spit out, uh, mclemore, his cribgot robbed and all three of his
(10:47):
kids were in there and thenanny was okay and the uh, the
nanny was there while they weregetting robbed and she was like
sprayed with bear spray, dang,yeah.
And then she said that, um,that one of the guy who who did
it, or somebody he was trying tohelp her get it out and he
(11:08):
looked scared, yeah, so I thinkthere was one guy there's always
the one guy who's like we'regoing to do this shit.
Speaker 1 (11:16):
Yeah right.
Speaker 2 (11:17):
The other guy who's
like riding.
Speaker 1 (11:19):
Yeah.
Speaker 2 (11:20):
I think that's what
happened.
Yeah, you heard about the ice.
Speaker 1 (11:24):
I was really curious
about the Macklemore, Like
because that's weird.
Speaker 2 (11:29):
That's all I know
about it.
Oh yeah, yeah, that shit justhappened, I think, today.
Speaker 1 (11:35):
Okay, yeah, yeah.
So Macklemore, the rapper right, the one that talks about the
thrift store.
Speaker 2 (11:39):
Yeah, gotta get down
on, yeah, the thrift store, yeah
, yeah, yeah the white, thewhite rapper, yeah, who won the
grammy over kindred?
Speaker 1 (11:49):
uh-huh, yeah, okay,
yeah, so all three of his kids
were there.
Hit the um lady got maced andso the other the main dude was
just like all right, there'splenty of shit to get.
Speaker 2 (11:59):
Yeah, they were like,
where's the jewelry, where's
the this and that and um?
And she told them and uh, yeah,it said they, they walked out
with like thousands of dollarsworth of stuff, but I don't know
, usually it's like way morethan that so I.
I think it was like they didn'tget that.
(12:20):
I don't know if they feltaccomplished when they left
right, I'm sure they was hopingfor a lot more.
Right.
Speaker 1 (12:26):
Yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, did you know?
Well, I guess you would know.
But I just look at situationslike that and you know I don't
know if this is going to comeoff as victim-limit but why is
your house not secure?
Speaker 2 (12:43):
How secure can your
house be?
Speaker 1 (12:47):
Yeah, that is, you
can't kick in my shit.
Speaker 2 (12:51):
They broke in.
They didn't like slide in theback window, they broke in there
.
Speaker 1 (12:58):
Yeah, I mean, I don't
know.
I feel like if I'm worthmillions and my kids are on
safety and definitely we'rehearing about I, keep in mind I,
you know who knows, I, you knowI want to make sure that I
preface um, that you know, I'mlike I said, I'm not trying to
(13:18):
victim blame but I'm also tryingto be like, okay, there's a lot
of kid, there's a lot ofsituations to where a lot of
famous people are having a lotof break-ins like this.
So, you know, maybe havingsecurity will be like a focal
point.
Definitely my kids are, youknow, my kids are in trouble and
(13:39):
I realized like, hey, like Ilook at um security flaws in my
own house, yeah, I'm like youknow, this can easily somebody
can throw a rock in here youknow what I mean and then get in
yeah yeah, but you're not gonnaget much.
But so somebody, if you're ahomeowner and you wouldn't look
(13:59):
at the little things like maybeI should get somebody to.
You know, not only securitycameras to alert me like a ring
camera, but having like 24 hoursecurity around my house,
definitely my kids are, that'sto say, but your kids will
always be home until they'relike fucking what 18 no, they
always won't be home because yougot vacation, so the security
(14:22):
takes vacation when you.
And then, not only that, ifyou're talking about I don't
know his money, he, he may nothave a lot, but he got enough to
somebody want to break in it,you know.
Yeah, so make having um payingfifty thousand dollars for one
person and fifty thousanddollars a year for another, that
(14:44):
you know for another, that'swell worth $100,000 a year to
run a clock in your house.
Maybe that's a lot, maybe it'snot.
Speaker 2 (14:53):
Yeah, I feel like
that's more of that thing.
I feel like anybody who's got afamily thought about that
already, when you're ahigh-profile person, so it
probably has something to dowith with.
With that I always thoughtabout like I gotta be so rich
that you can't even access thecrib type thing, but I don't
(15:14):
know.
Speaker 1 (15:14):
I don't know.
Yeah, and now at this, at thispoint, I was like, if you're at
that level, if I ever get at thelevel, it was like maybe I
should just get like a like apenthouse, like in a park, you
know to where it's a doormanthat gets to check in, so I'm
paying the cost of.
You know it's shared amongsteverybody, yeah, yeah, and just
(15:37):
have a little vacation home orsomething like a little joint.
You know what I mean.
That can go off too.
Speaker 2 (15:43):
That's definitely how
I started to think, like in
terms of like the exponential,like growth and all that type of
shit, like then getting to likedifferent levels, yeah.
Speaker 1 (15:58):
Because I don't like
to be anywhere where I could be
pulled up on Right right At all.
Speaker 2 (16:03):
And then you add a
family to this shit, like, yeah,
I'm probably not gonna have ahouse until man, until I don't
know.
I used to want that, I do wantthat.
I do want the house with thewife, kids.
Speaker 1 (16:17):
They run down and
this Christmas tree and dog in
the backyard and shit, but likebeing able to be pulled up on
yeah, and that's kind of whatscares me too about kind of like
what you do is like you're yougot more clout than you do
income like yeah, yeah.
(16:38):
So the you, you.
It's hard to pay for a lot ofthe things when people really
want to see you because theylove what you do.
So you can have millions of youknow, know across platforms,
you know you can have millionsof fans, but it's like I don't
have the means to justify havingsecurity.
Speaker 2 (16:54):
Right, right, yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah, that's always
been a thing for sure.
Yeah yeah, oh yeah, that'ssomething.
So what about you heard aboutthe ICE?
Oh yeah, that's something.
So what about you heard?
Speaker 1 (17:07):
about the ICE?
Oh, you talking about inCalifornia?
Uh-huh, yeah, I heard a lotabout what's going on there.
I think they're fighting back.
I mean, you got enough MexicansThen yeah, yeah, yeah, people
ain't just going for real.
Speaker 2 (17:20):
Yeah, yeah.
And then it's no, it's like waypast a certain point.
I remember we first startedtalking about it before it
happened and I was saying how,like something about it just
don't, I don't know, like I getthe drug dealing shit and like
trying to get certain people out, but like I just saw a gray
area in that gray area startingto like get bigger and bigger
(17:41):
and bigger.
You get what I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (17:44):
Right, so I think
that you just got to.
So California is on theopposite side of ICE, so they're
suing the Trump administration,so you're backed by your local
government for the immigrants orwhoever is fighting amongst
(18:05):
them.
You know, I mean, because yougot family and you got the.
You know, so quote unquoteillegal immigrants, their family
, and then you're backed by yourstate as well.
Then it's going to accumulateto like a huge disaster.
Speaker 2 (18:19):
What it's going what
it is now.
So I heard they can't even have, uh, they like the graduations
and shit, like it's starting tobe.
Well, I mean, it's past thispoint now, but it was a thing
like it's almost like anythingthat you kind of um hold dear to
(18:39):
your heart in terms of, like,family events and stuff is a
setup to take people down.
So there are kids not evengoing to graduations because
they know that their parents aregoing to get like got there,
Right, I mean, I came from asblack people.
Speaker 1 (19:01):
You know, it was
never really a thought for us to
be like.
You know, if we suffered theconsequence if we did something
illegal, it's pretty much whatI'm saying.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So to see, it's just kind ofweird place to be to see like,
(19:22):
hey, bro, you do somethingillegal, you get caught, that's
on you.
You know what I mean, and sothat's the stance I take.
Speaker 2 (19:29):
Mentally it's like I
think that's the main point.
Speaker 1 (19:32):
There's a purpose of
it so when I look at illegal
immigration it's like hey, hey,hide, I ain't gonna snitch on
you, but if you get caught, youknow.
I mean, yeah, I can see whereit could be sad, but at the end
of the day, um, you know, Ican't call it injustice because
you're doing illegal activity.
Speaker 2 (19:51):
Yeah, I'm, I'm
thinking more so on the the side
of uh, past that like the, the,like I said, like the gray area
, not the you, where you ain'tsupposed to be here like going
Like not that straightforward,but like you're the friend of
(20:11):
somebody, but now you're next tothem, all right, get all of
them, now, all of y'all.
And then now you got likefamilies being broken up because
you're going so hard.
But I get what was supposed tobe, but it just seems like it's
going way farther than that andnow it's just like up yeah, two
things.
Speaker 1 (20:32):
I'm not saying that's
not happening, because I'm sure
that probably is.
I'm not.
I don't think that's the bulkof what's happening.
It's like, hey, bro, you'rearound him, so you're getting
locked up with him I definitely,I definitely, I say I'm sure
that's happening, but that's notthe bulk of what's happening
yeah, right, right yeah, yeah soso you're saying those small
stories of the families, thatthat that is actually injustice
(20:55):
is small, but it's a big story,exactly okay yeah, to further
the point.
So the second thing is if you inthe car, if you in the car,
bruh and you do a shootout, yougoing to jail too.
You know what I mean?
Yeah, it's everybody in the cargetting locked up.
(21:15):
Yeah, yeah, and that's how it'salways been.
That's why my mom always saidchoose your friends wisely.
Speaker 2 (21:22):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (21:23):
And for the most part
, I've chose my friends wisely.
Yeah, my friends who are reallyto this day ain't with the bull
bs yeah, we ain't.
We already know the consequenceto our actions.
Of course we're men and we'regoing, or people, we're going,
to make flaws and make baddecisions, but for the most part
we ain't doing bs to getourselves in trouble, yeah, yeah
(21:44):
.
So so I've all, we've all knownthat stance.
It's like, hey, you're aroundit, y'all get going on too.
You know what I mean.
Y'all accessory of it.
So that's always been, as ablack man, a stance that we
always knew was a thing.
Yeah, so I'm not saying thatfighting for it is wrong, but we
(22:09):
always get.
As a black man, I feel likewhen it happens to us it don't
really be a thing for real.
Speaker 2 (22:20):
I mean, that's the
norm of the nation, for real,
for real.
Somebody made a quote that waslike bruh, if they could have
found it's not funny.
But he was like Vic Mensa.
That was like bro, if theycould have found it's not funny.
He was like he was like bro, ifyou think that he was basically
(22:40):
saying like don't you thinkthey wish they would have been
found out to how to ship niggasout of here?
And then I was like damn, yeah,like it really.
Just like gather them up andlike put them, put all black
people in jail and all that shit, and just like the certain
(23:01):
lifestyle that you're saying,yeah, like it's just automatic.
Um, you can't do, you can't getout of line and all that type
of, and what they're doing withthe, the, the immigrants, and
you know like we're talkingabout la, and like you know the,
the, the hispanics and all that.
It's just like if they couldhave figured out how to get
black people out here, theywould have been did that, or
(23:22):
like been started.
Speaker 1 (23:23):
That that's the
interesting point, and I think
there's um something in a waythey did, though, but yeah
there's something to that, butwhat I would add on is that or
you can just exploit them forworkforce, ie put them in prison
and they work for less, andit's literally you still get
money.
Speaker 2 (23:43):
Yeah, because you got
.
That's the same thing thatthey're doing with black people.
Exactly that's what I'm saying.
It's like why?
Speaker 1 (23:49):
why ship them away
when we can actually force them
to work for us and give themharsh sentences and give them 10
cents an hour?
So yeah, instead of why givethem away for free when we can
actually use them for labor andbe profitable for them?
(24:12):
So that makes more sense thanhaving to ship them away and
they can be a resource forsomebody else.
We can just put them in prisonand have them work for pennies
on the dollar, literally.
No wonder it was worse.
Speaker 2 (24:29):
I'm just dollar.
Speaker 1 (24:29):
Literally I wonder
what's worse.
I'm just saying that is what'shappening and it's that makes
more sense for that than sendingthem away, because then you're
losing people to exploit yeahyeah which we clearly see the
(24:51):
machine of um america doing that.
Yeah, anyway, absolutely that'syeah, I mean, that's the part
about illegal immigration thatpeople want to keep.
It's an exploitable labor forcethat produce cheap for.
And that's the argument whenthey talk about well, you know,
if you ship off all the illegalimmigrants, the price is going
(25:12):
to raise.
It's like okay, so you're okaywith um, you know illegal
standards and people beingexploited.
Yeah, for pennies on thedollars because everything's
cheaper.
That's the same.
Yeah, that's a tear up fromprison.
Yeah, they, they no longer haveto work.
(25:33):
Uh, abide by the laborstandards.
So they put themselves indangerous.
They get paid pennies on thedollar and we, we fight for it
because we want things cheaper.
Yeah, so that's just a tear upfrom so, so, but that's
typically when I hear a littleimmigration, you know the cost
of strawberries gonna blah, blah, like all right, yeah, like I
(25:54):
was like okay, so that's what wewant to, so we're okay.
So we're okay with exploitingpeople uh, yeah, america yeah
well, I'm just, I'm I'mlistening, I'm just listening to
people's arguments.
Speaker 2 (26:07):
Uh-huh, uh-huh.
Speaker 1 (26:08):
Yeah, yeah, and I
understand.
By getting here through legalmeans, it makes sense.
I understand you doing itillegal and you get caught.
Hey, you know what I mean?
Who am I going to?
Hey, you did it illegal, yougot caught, bro.
You robbed a bank, you gotcaught, bro.
Speaker 2 (26:26):
Yeah yeah, yeah, oh
bro, there was one dude bro.
Oh damn, I forgot the story,but it kind of ties into what
we're talking about and it wasjust like it was a dude who was
wrongfully caught or deported orsome shit like for is it ice or
ice?
Speaker 1 (26:44):
ice, ice, ice, all
right so, uh, but it's still an
acronym, but yeah.
Speaker 2 (26:49):
Okay, okay, I didn't
know.
People just wrote off thetongue.
Speaker 1 (26:52):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (26:55):
But I don't even know
his story.
But let's just say he gotcaught and he actually was a
legal immigrant but he brought20 niggas over here.
He's like the guy that they'rekind of like looking for.
Do you know what I'm saying?
But like he was legal he was.
He was legal, but so he waswrongfully deported oh yeah and
(27:17):
then when they were about tolike bring him back, they they
actually found out like hebrought out he was trafficking
people.
He was trafficking people forlike 20 years, yeah, yeah yeah,
yeah, yeah, yeah so that was,that was.
Speaker 1 (27:28):
Yeah, so it's, it's,
it's a, it's a thin line.
You know, some people are in,just in just, and I, I want to,
you know, still shout them outand scream their names.
And because you don't want, youwant to have a standard on um,
uh, you don't want pretty muchwhat I'm saying.
You don't want Pretty much whatI'm saying.
You don't want to just letinjustice Just fall by the
(27:49):
wayside and don't care.
You know that's, that's gonnahappen, just by the sheer nature
of it.
But, yeah, yeah, so ifsomebody's Like bruh, I'm
American, hey, bruh, we can'tship.
You know, you're an Americancitizen, we have laws and
procedures around that, so youshould just be shipped off to
another country.
But that laws and proceduresaround that, so you should just
be shipped off to anothercountry.
(28:09):
Um, but that is a part of thenature of the beast, like
there's a part of a nature ofthe beast of when people get
unjustly locked up.
Right, yeah, you still want tofight for that injustice, but
that it's going to happen aswell in facts.
Yeah, thanks yeah that was areal good talking, my shit yeah,
they shoot niggas.
Speaker 2 (28:30):
Yeah, yeah, they're
not playing.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's not apart of it.
Feels like kind of weird to me.
Um, but I've seen two, tworeporters.
No, I see one reporter get shot.
You seen her?
Speaker 1 (28:44):
yeah, like they're
shooting people but I haven't
been really keeping up with it.
I've just been kind of seeingthe headlines, that one clip is
gone.
Speaker 2 (28:54):
No, they shooting
people like right.
Speaker 1 (28:57):
Man.
Speaker 2 (28:58):
I thought about that
the other day, Going to the
protest, when you know all theblack stuff.
And I just remember about 7o'clock.
I don't know, man man itstarted getting real rowdy how
long I need to go?
But um yeah, yeah, what uh?
(29:19):
Was it something that you wantto talk?
Speaker 1 (29:20):
about.
I mean, I did, but yeah, yeah,yeah I don't know if we get that
much time.
It's bs, though, who reallycares?
It was, uh, while they notbeing recognized by Kai Sinatra.
Oh yeah, I saw that.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I was goingto say that in the car when we
was coming back.
Speaker 2 (29:35):
Bro.
Yes, bro, that was too funny.
I was going to tell you I'mlike bro Kai is getting so big
now that these streamers ingeneral they are getting so rich
.
Now they walking through thatbitch like they like the number
one artist in the world.
Speaker 1 (29:52):
Yeah, I mean, he's
the biggest streamer and that's
the biggest thing of the time.
That's like Mr Beast.
Mr Beast, you know what I mean.
He got 400 something millionsubscribers, I think he's a
billionaire.
Oh, I mean, it only makes sense.
I mean his evaluation got to be.
I mean he's one of the biggestYouTubers there.
And YouTube.
Youtube is the biggest platform.
(30:12):
So yeah, if you're the biggestof the big, yeah, yeah, Then you
, you're just naturally going tobe that and then.
So I mean but yes, Katsunai isthe biggest streamer of
streaming, because I don't know,it was too yeah, but I guess
the ultimate point is like walesalty, because an individual
didn't know him.
(30:32):
I don't know if he was salty.
He was.
You think so absolutely.
Why would you come to him andsay you got me looking crazy out
here I didn't know if he wasplaying or not why would he say,
why would he play like that?
Speaker 2 (30:41):
because why would you
say that?
Yeah, because you're salty yeahyeah, I remember I saw both
clips and it was too funny.
Then Kai got in the car.
He was like oh, some, some, oh,they must have knew him, wally
(31:02):
yeah, the limo driver is likeWale.
Wale, yeah, yeah, wale, oh cool, yeah, he yeah, yeah, yeah,
wale, oh cool, yeah, yeah, yeah,in Lotus Flower yeah, he's a
rapper.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, like cool.
He didn't know nothing.
Speaker 1 (31:11):
I'm like yeah, yeah,
I think that you know, if you're
up in hip hop culture, youshould probably know who Wale is
.
You should probably knowsomething about him, heard.
Speaker 2 (31:23):
Yeah, you like kind
of shitting on him, you kind of
like all right, bro, yeah, yeah,yeah, he didn't even care.
He was like, oh bet, he got anew record out, or something,
yeah, yeah, yeah All right.
But I did see him come back andhe was like, hey, I'm going to
do this.
Speaker 1 (31:42):
You know he's like
man.
You got me looking crazy.
He's like.
All right, my bad bro.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, like I'mgonna Holler at you later, yeah,
yeah, but yeah, for him to comeup To him directly, that wasn't
really a joke, cause youcould've waited To make that
joke and I would've smiled andbe like I guess what he and you
could tell that he was hurtBecause Wale went Out my way.
What's up Ka?
What's up man?
(32:02):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (32:05):
He's like who's that?
Oh yeah, oh yeah, yeah, exactlyso he was embarrassed, and
that's just big egos.
Speaker 1 (32:11):
That's purely what it
was.
Speaker 2 (32:13):
Yeah, that was too
funny.
Yeah, yeah, I couldn't.
I don't know, I didn't get theembarrassed, I didn't know what
it was.
You know me, but I'll take yourword for it.
Speaker 1 (32:25):
Yeah, but we can move
on.
That was just a little funnything.
What else, what else?
So we can talk a little bitabout relationships,
relationships.
Speaker 2 (32:36):
Yeah.
Speaker 1 (32:39):
Or you want something
else.
Speaker 2 (32:42):
Yeah, we can go into
relationships, you can go what
you got?
Speaker 1 (32:45):
Okay, I got you.
It was just a relationshiptopic just to kind of drive some
conversations, could you?
I probably have an idea.
I do have the idea of howyou're going to answer it, but I
still want to know Could you doa long-term relationship?
Speaker 2 (33:01):
A long-term
relationship.
I think that, yeah, that'sprobably going to be where I'm
at for a minute.
Speaker 1 (33:09):
Okay, okay.
Speaker 2 (33:10):
Yeah, I think I was
talking to Tate about that too.
It was just like proximityversus me, like race, so silly,
and all that type of stuff.
It's not the same thing.
Like what about you?
You do you think that you coulddo it a long time?
Speaker 1 (33:32):
I could do it long
distance.
Speaker 2 (33:33):
But I what throws me
off about you, where I couldn't
put my b in that shoe, is howseamlessly you're able to do it
you know, sometimes I look atmyself like you're a little too
good at this not like that, notlike I have like so many
girlfriends or whatever, butjust the fact of meeting one
(33:57):
girl and then you know, then asix-year relationship comes from
that, or and we were not in thesame space.
And then you know it just kindof I don't know man, it's like
it's just picture you go to thegrocery store or something and
then you could tell somebodytakes a liking of you it's just
(34:18):
online you know like they're.
They're in the same spot whereyou're at and it's, it's.
I don't know like half of halfof the wonder of like.
I wonder if they like kind oflike what I do and all that
stuff.
It's already done.
Speaker 1 (34:35):
I guess what I'm
saying.
When it comes to a longtermrelationship outside, looking in
, I feel like you can do thatfor years.
Speaker 2 (34:43):
Me.
Speaker 1 (34:43):
Yeah.
Hmm, no no no, no no, no, thelongest I've been in a long-term
relationship was what?
Six months and was, how muchdid you miss her?
Uh, like, was it that thirst towhere?
(35:03):
You know I'll start looking at?
I didn't see that thirst.
I really want to see you rightnow and I can't like.
It was just like I'll see youwhen I'll start looking at.
I didn't see that thirst.
I really want to see you rightnow and I can't like it was just
like I'll see you when I seeyou.
I have a feeling I got from notto say you didn't love her or
whatever, because I know you diduh-huh, well, uh, you, you.
Speaker 2 (35:21):
I don't really know
who you're talking about whisper
like do this, uh-huh, uh, whatabout it?
Speaker 1 (35:28):
yeah, I was just
saying that.
It's like I know that you lovedher a lot, but I never saw the
third, like the third stuff.
I really need to see you rightnow like, like the urge of it.
Speaker 2 (35:40):
I probably like.
I mean first of all like youseeing me in that situation.
It just the the relationshipwas already all bad by then so
like you weren't gonna see that,okay you see what I'm saying,
well, I would.
Speaker 1 (35:58):
I see what you're
saying, but I didn't even know
what we was doing by then.
Yeah, yeah, okay, yeah, but no,like long-term relationship.
Speaker 2 (36:07):
I feel like it's
phases of it and you know the
first phase is cool, but likethat shit weighs down heavy
eventually Because like youcan't see, you can't see the
person.
You know if there's amiscommunication, it's way
(36:28):
easier for that shit to getthrown off.
You know there's a lot thatdeals with you know we're humans
we're not supposed to be like,we're not naturally made to be
like on the phone for real.
You know it's more so we'resupposed to have like human to
human interaction and like youcan see what they look like when
you say this word or you knowI'm saying like it's all energy,
um, so long-term relationshipsain't like.
(36:48):
I feel like sometimes you knowyou might have to start that way
, but that shit weighs down, itreally.
It really kills a lot okay inthe relationship.
It's not as it's not as it'sharder yeah, as I make a scene,
I don't know, it's not.
Yeah, if anything, I just havelike an optimistic mindset of
(37:17):
like anything.
I feel like, um, the man whocan and the man who says you
can't like they're both right.
So if I say like this long-termrelationship is gonna us up,
it's gonna us up okay and Iliterally and I have to like
literally do that, I have toliterally be like no, there's
got to be a way of something.
So like if a girl is, um, Idon't know, like you got to
start thinking on your feet like, oh well, let's, let's watch a
(37:39):
movie together, let's do this,and then, or like you send her
something or something like yougot to do all these things just
to kind of have that presence oflike he's here and it's it's
way harder than just knocking onthe door.
Speaker 1 (37:54):
I got you, uh, but I
like what you said, because I've
never heard it before and butyou said so effortlessly, so I
know it's the thing you said theman who who can and versus the
man who can't, they're bothright.
Yeah, where did you first hearthat?
Because it makes sense.
Speaker 2 (38:12):
Yeah, no, that's like
really big for me in life and
in relationships for sure.
Speaker 1 (38:20):
Was that a
motivational speaker?
Speaker 2 (38:22):
No, it was just like
some, I don't know, I don't know
, I don't know, I don't know.
Maybe I didn't read itsomewhere, so I heard it,
probably from an older guy, or Ameme, or something.
Speaker 1 (38:36):
Okay, well, yeah, I
feel like If I was ever Writing
a sermon, that's a good topic Towrite it on.
Speaker 2 (38:42):
Nah, bruh, that shit,
that shit is for real.
For real Cause it's, it's.
And I was just talking Tosomebody the other day and I was
just like you know, words arereal, I live by that.
I'm still trying to change whatI say, stuff all the time.
But yeah, bro, if I say I wasjust talking to somebody
yesterday and they were likework is getting hard and you
(39:05):
know they're letting people goand I kind of feel like I might
be next and all that, and I wasjust telling them like yo, you
know, you kind of got to thinkI'm an amazing worker, these
people love me and you know,kind of like that route, because
if you think the other, thenyou're gonna ultimately mold
(39:30):
into that person.
Like, have you ever thoughtsometime, like been in a
situation this is?
random, but like let's say, likeone time I was at a pep rally
and I had to play Obama for somereason, but I had to walk from
one side of the gym to the otherside and it was just me and
(39:50):
this girl who was playingMichelle.
It was a pep rally, so thisbitch was packed with all the
kids and all I could think aboutwas like don't trip, don't trip
don't trip.
And I swear I was walkingdifferent just because I was
telling myself don't trip thewhole time, versus like I walk
this whole, I'm gonna go hereand it's gonna be like one of
(40:13):
the greatest moments of my life.
So you know, that could be twodifferent people the dude who
say he gonna trip, I might trip.
And then dude who's like no,I'm gonna do this right, or
whatever.
And I just think, I just thinkabout that.
Uh, with life and especially inrelationships, because it's too
easy to be like she tripping, Idon't think I like this, or
(40:36):
same thing with the dude.
That's a red flag.
I'm not going to do thisbecause I know exactly how this
is going to go and it's going togo exactly like that, just
because you thought that way.
So yeah, that's, that's, that'sa big thing.
Speaker 1 (40:49):
Understood and I like
you know, I like where we're at
with.
It's a very good conversation.
There's some stuff that I'mgonna take note of and uh, just
remind to kind of bring backaround to what you just
mentioned too, but we got somefun some fun happening.
Speaker 2 (41:05):
Oh, oh, okay, oh shit
, you already have 40.
Yeah, exactly, exactly.
Speaker 1 (41:10):
And there's a game
that we want to start
introducing, just to kind ofhave fun and just be kind of
more interactive.
Yeah, do you have a game thatyou want to play first or you
want to go to mine?
Speaker 2 (41:24):
I think mine, you
might have to think just a
second.
Okay, all right, you can Okay.
Speaker 1 (41:29):
Well, mine's just
like name the top top five
places, type of thing.
So that's what I want to do is,like you know, I'll say, hey,
you know, like what do blackpeople like the most foods?
And then you would name the topfive that's not what I got but
that's ultimately how the gameworks, all right.
(41:50):
So are you familiar with what apassport bro is Passport.
Speaker 2 (41:58):
Passport bro.
Speaker 1 (42:01):
As in a guy who goes
places.
Speaker 2 (42:03):
I literally context,
clues this shit out of there.
Okay, yeah, well.
Speaker 1 (42:05):
I will give you the
definition, you the definition
definition.
So passport bros is uh, it'slike the most popular
destination for men um to find amate in a different country
yeah, because they're prettymuch saying that, hey, the um,
the american women or westernwomen aren't suited, uh, to be a
(42:27):
traditional man's partner for xamount of reasons, and so
they're now they're looking fora mate outside the country.
So, so that's kind of what apassport bro is.
So now that you have the umdefinition of a passport bro,
name the well now you.
(42:48):
So we really have yeah, it'sreally gonna kind of be tough
for you, since you don't knowthis but name the top five
places.
You don't have to name like one.
I'll give you if it's one ornot, uh, in the country or in
the world that are the mostknown for passport destination.
Like where are the mentraveling to to find their mate?
(43:08):
Like where?
Speaker 2 (43:15):
are the men traveling
to to find their mate?
No, oh, oh, as in.
Like this is a real thing.
Yes, oh, as in.
Like there, there's a, there'san actual top five to where men
will be like you know what Iwant?
A wife.
So I'm gonna go to one of thesefive places yes spain no damn,
yeah, yeah well, if you was inthe, if you was in the Red Bull
community.
Speaker 1 (43:32):
That's how you know
you're not.
I do it for entertainment.
You would have some of theseplaces.
You would know and really youcould just where's the cheapest
place to get cooch.
Thailand that's number one.
That is hilarious.
Speaker 2 (44:01):
Somebody told me that
y'all, I ain't never been to
Thailand before.
Speaker 1 (44:03):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (44:05):
Oh my God, yeah, yeah
, damn.
Speaker 1 (44:08):
Yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah.
Speaker 2 (44:10):
that's really when
it's starting to turn Early into
.
That's number one.
Speaker 1 (44:13):
Yeah, yeah, yeah,
alright, so you oh shit.
Okay, so now I'm, you got Fivestrikes.
Speaker 2 (44:21):
Alright, okay,
starting now.
I already got one.
Speaker 1 (44:24):
Yeah, starting now,
cause it's gonna get A lot
tougher.
Speaker 2 (44:26):
I don't think you're
gonna get, you're not gonna get
number two Thailand for thecheap.
I mean, alright, I'm going togo with.
Speaker 1 (44:37):
I'm going to help you
.
Speaker 2 (44:38):
Tokyo.
Speaker 1 (44:39):
No, that's not cheap
at all.
Speaker 2 (44:40):
Japan, no Vietnam.
Speaker 1 (44:43):
That's number five,
so now I'm going to help you out
.
Speaker 2 (44:47):
There's no more.
Speaker 1 (44:48):
Asian.
That's it For Asian.
Now go to south america, okay,where the baddest, baddest
brazil no, well, that that's agood, all right.
So that's one all right, no two, because you just said japan um
, uh, uh, damn um Japan.
Speaker 2 (45:18):
What's that place
called South?
Speaker 1 (45:21):
All right, okay,
think of beautiful, but you know
this place, so you think ofbeautiful women.
You just said Brazil, it'sSouth America.
Speaker 2 (45:29):
I don't know, all
right.
Speaker 1 (45:35):
All right.
Well, just All right.
Speaker 2 (45:37):
I don't know too many
countries.
Speaker 1 (45:38):
Okay, and I lied
there's actually there's another
Asian place on this list, butyou're not going to get it.
Speaker 2 (45:45):
North.
Speaker 1 (45:45):
Korea.
Come on now.
Speaker 2 (45:47):
South.
Speaker 1 (45:47):
Korea.
That's number four.
No, no, know that's number four.
No, no, I'll help you.
Speaker 2 (45:58):
Okay, this one we can
get.
What's the?
What's the place known forcocaine, colombia, pablo yeah,
so that's number four, it'sColombia uh-huh so you got
number one, thailand, forColumbia, and five, vietnam.
Speaker 1 (46:09):
So the next two
you're not going to get, but
ones in Europe ones in Europe.
Speaker 2 (46:22):
I'm going to go
Finland no, that's number 5.
Speaker 1 (46:27):
It was going to be
tough.
Number 2 is Croatia.
Croatia is known for its beautyand perceived openness to
foreigners, particularly intourist areas.
Number three is Cambodia, oftenhighlighted for its cultural
traditions and affordability.
Thailand's the perennialfavorite.
Obviously, its affordability,cultural norms and perceived
(46:47):
openness to foreign partners.
Cultural norms and perceivedopenness to foreign partners.
Colombia attracts manytravelers for its rich cultural
device, landscape and relativelylow cost of living, plus bad
bitches.
It didn't say that, but Vietnamis popular for its vibrant
culture, delicious food andrelatively affordable prices.
So it's really all cheap placesfor cooch and that's where the
(47:10):
passport rolls off.
Damn Okay that.
That's where the Patsburg Brosare Damn Okay.
Speaker 2 (47:13):
That was a good one.
I like what you did there.
Mine was a little different.
But, it's just mine's, justbecause of relevancy.
Yeah, you know, Lil Waynereleased the Carter 6.
Speaker 1 (47:26):
Yes.
Speaker 2 (47:27):
So I was going to ask
you to.
Speaker 1 (47:33):
Rank the top, damn,
yeah, rank the Carters.
Okay, I got you All right.
Yeah yeah, yeah, carter III ishands down, my favorite.
Speaker 2 (47:40):
Carter III is number
one.
Speaker 1 (47:41):
Yeah, yeah, yeah,
yeah, I'm not as familiar with
Carter I.
Speaker 2 (47:47):
Uh-huh.
Speaker 1 (47:49):
So Carter VI is sort
of six.
Carter one would be four, justbecause I'm not familiar with it
as much um, and so I'll saycarter.
Four is my second what was onthat?
Um uh.
Papa Pussy for a real name, butI still dig her.
Speaker 2 (48:16):
Well, I still dig her
.
Is that she Will no?
Speaker 1 (48:19):
Yeah, oh yeah, I
think, yes, yeah, she Will.
Speaker 2 (48:23):
Yeah, I hear it now.
Yeah, okay, yeah, yeah, yeah,alright.
Speaker 1 (48:27):
I just, and I think,
what's got Beat?
Speaker 2 (48:28):
Build on it.
Speaker 1 (48:29):
That's three.
Speaker 2 (48:31):
What's the other one?
Speaker 1 (48:32):
that's kind of like
beat build oh so that, so that's
one of my favorites.
And then um, uh, oh, well, yeah.
And then Carter two's numberthree, um, that has fireman uh-
huh, yeah and uh no, fireman ison Carter 1.
Oh, okay.
Well then never mind.
Speaker 2 (48:55):
Then Carter 1 is my
third.
Okay, no, I'm lying, so you'regoing 3, 4.
Speaker 1 (48:59):
No, it's 3, 4, 2, 1,
carter, 5, Carter 6.
Speaker 2 (49:05):
What was on Carter 5?
Carter 5 was Mona Lisa.
Speaker 1 (49:09):
Oh yeah, exactly,
exactly, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 2 (49:12):
Mine is sort of the
same.
I think the ending is the same.
Speaker 1 (49:16):
But my first three is
carter three, carter two,
carter four and carter one andthen five and six, yeah, there
you go yeah so we shared some ofthe same spots yeah, um, I
think, yeah, I can say itwhatever that was for the next
one, but yeah yeah, all right,for sure this was cool yeah, it
(49:37):
was, it went by fast.
Well um, I think we are good,we good yeah all right.
Well, this is two for thecultural we love y'all.
We'll be back.