All Episodes

April 2, 2025 • 86 mins

0:00

Catching Up After a Cold

5:45

Seven-Day Water Fast Experience

17:34

Mental Clarity and Productivity Benefits

25:05

Spirituality and Bible Study Discussion

35:15

Kanye's KKK Hood Controversy

49:08

Recent Rapper Deaths and Violence

1:09:30

Relationship Cheating Scenarios

Mark as Played
Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
What's going on.
And we are back for anotherepisode of 2 for the Culture.
I'm Justin Devante, Steven Ray.
Yes, sir, how you doing I'mdoing well.
How was your week?
My week's been good so far.
We're shooting a little laterthan normal.
We're covering from a cold.

Speaker 2 (00:20):
Oh yeah.

Speaker 1 (00:22):
But yeah, so it's been alright.
Besides that, just been pumpingup on like that turmeric and
ginger um what else I've beentaking?
Of course, vitamin c, vitamin d, b12 um I, just what does b12
do?
It's like like energy more thananything, like mushroom tea yes
, stuff like that.

(00:42):
I'm just taking things you knowme, I'm just here just seeing
things around the house likeorganic sea moss.
I'm taking it yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (00:49):
No, I definitely just saw that.
I just saw that the sea mossyeah, that it's probably expired
.
Yeah, it's I saw something.
I definitely saw somethingexpired and you took it oh, what
was that?
I.
I mean, you were reallyconfident when you did it, so I
just thought you already knewwhat was going on.

Speaker 1 (01:07):
Yeah, no, I was like all right.
Well, yeah, it's been there fora while, but hey.

Speaker 2 (01:13):
I feel better, you feel better though.

Speaker 1 (01:16):
Yeah, all right.
Well, that's all right, and Iprobably took it twice.
Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:20):
I definitely checked it out before you.
It was like a couple daysbefore, because I was messed up.
I was like damn, what is aroundhere?

Speaker 1 (01:30):
I saw that and I was like expired.

Speaker 2 (01:32):
No.
I just saw you a couple dayslater like hmm, you just took it
.
I was like, well shit, I guessI could have just did the same
thing yeah, I don't think it didanything.

Speaker 1 (01:44):
Well, I feel better.
I guess I could have just didthe same thing.
Yeah, I don't think it didanything.
Well, I feel better.
So I don't know what tocontribute to, but I'm all right
, but yeah, so everything's beengoing on your week you been
feeling good.

Speaker 2 (01:57):
Yeah, nah, my week has been pretty.
I feel like my whole week hasbeen an experiment.
What do?
you mean Like I started off.
Oh, yeah, yeah yeah, so Istarted off.
It was my birthday, so you knowI didn't really go anywhere or
anything, but I did chill orderterrible food which tasted

(02:21):
amazing, just fast food likeWendy's and whatever I can get
my hands on.
Uh, drank and then smoked alittle bit and I feel like that
combination, just like I don'tknow, the, the.
I feel like the liquor and the,the food, and the, um, the
smoking, it just like it.
It completely trashed all of mywhite blood cells.

Speaker 1 (02:47):
Okay, interesting.

Speaker 2 (02:48):
Yeah, like my whole immune system was just
vulnerable, like anybodyanything want to come in like
it's welcome, so yeah, so I gotmessed up and then my jaw swole
and I just stopped eating, uh,to do a fast.
And I got to like day three,three and a half, and I was kind

(03:10):
of better and I'm like damn, Inever did seven days before so I
just kept going.
Then kind of like switched itfrom trying to like heal to just
making it like a spiritualthing and then making it more of
uh, uh, uh, changing my habitsand like getting rid of mental,
mental, um, uh, uh, I guess,mental habits of what I would do

(03:34):
and cravings and certain thingsthat could be social media,
this, and that I deletedinstagram on my phone.
So that's been like a gamechanger like, uh, like how you
were, uh, a while ago when youtook off instagram and then you
just felt, I guess I wouldassume you felt more productive
and all that, yeah, I iteliminated, like me scrolling

(03:55):
which was like huge, I didn'tknow how bad that was.
Um, yeah, that and the wholeseven water fast which ends
tonight in about like two hours.
So I'm really happy about that.
I didn't even know it waspossible, at least like a year
ago.
I didn't even know that shitwas even possible to even do.
So you've been doing water,Water only yeah, well, in the

(04:19):
morning I will say this In themorning I usually have this Like
detox drink, yeah, and it'llhave Like lemon.
Well, I think lemon Is fine,though it's got electrolytes in
it.
You still need electrolytes,cause I probably just Can't get
up and walk.
But One thing I will say thefirst couple days I didn't know
that I was doing Was having alittle bit Of honey In my my

(04:43):
drink, that I drink in themornings and.
I'm not supposed to have thatbecause of sugar.

Speaker 1 (04:48):
Oh, right right right , yeah.

Speaker 2 (04:50):
So I was looking it up and the guy was saying how
insulin levels can harden theoutside of your arteries and
stuff like that.
So, like you know, if you, ifyou just basically eat terribly
and that's how people have likeplaque and all that like on the
outside of their arteries.
And he was talking about sugarand I was like, oh shit, sugar's
in honey but that should befine.

(05:11):
And then I typed here I was likewill sugar break, uh, no.
Will honey break, uh, a waterfast?
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes,yes.
And I was like, oh fuck, I juststopped, I just stopped it, but
uh, it's been going well.
It's been going well.
It's a lot of different.
The the the first, like threedays, was, um, it was kind of

(05:35):
easy for me because I I Inaturally don't really eat that
much um on the regular.
But then after that, then Istarted to notice like my jaw
and all this stuff started toheal like very, very quickly.
Uh, then my energy levels it itraised incredibly even last

(05:56):
night.
Like I woke up and I startedworking from nine or ten to to
like 10 or 11 that night and itwas the same energy level
throughout the entire day.
Well, yeah, so like that is thecraziest part.

Speaker 1 (06:12):
Um, yeah, my mind feels super clear you know where
that comes from, where you havethat energy uh, have it.

Speaker 2 (06:19):
Um man, I did just like a couple a couple hours ago
, but another reason why I askedthat?

Speaker 1 (06:26):
because I I was uh listening to the diary ceo a
long time ago, and it wasprobably last year, and he had
on um some type of specialist orwhatever it was a woman yeah
uh-huh and she was talking aboutfast and things like that.
Like the body, the body.
The reason why it heals quicklyis because, since you are

(06:48):
starving, it feels like it needsto prepare itself fast so you
can eat and so you can live yeah, it goes, survival yeah exactly
so.
When your body's in that mode,then at that point you will have
more energy to do things,because it's trying to hunt for
food.

Speaker 2 (07:07):
Oh right, Right, Damn , Damn.
That does make sense.
Yeah, this shit is ridiculous.
Like anytime I'm doing work,usually I would take way more
breaks, way more breaks and thenI'm just sitting here an hour
later and I'm like I don't evenknow how I'm not even moving
away.
It's very weird, but yeah, howI'm not even moving away.
Like it's very weird.
But yeah, that I definitelybelieve that for sure.

Speaker 1 (07:29):
So you say you lost like 10 pounds or something.

Speaker 2 (07:31):
Yeah, probably that was in day five right.
Yeah, it's probably going toround out about 10.
I didn't really like do a fullassessment of myself because
I'll have like shorts one dayand then like sweatpants another
day, so I'm not even sure whatmy first initial weight was oh,

(07:51):
okay, that's what you're saying.

Speaker 1 (07:53):
You didn't do like a before an actual picture and
then like a speedo yeah and aspeedo no, I didn't do the front
back pictures.

Speaker 2 (08:01):
I should have.
I definitely lost weight, forsure, but I mean again, before I
did the fast, I ate like thatday I ate like beans fucking
five wendy's burgers, two um thethe cheese fries, but I was

(08:22):
like I went in, so but you hadno plan on doing a fast when you
did it, you just was likefeeling it uh, yeah, it was more
.
So just because it was mybirthday, I was just like man I
don't care and then I just knewthat when I wake up I'm gonna be
like, damn, I'm 33 now.
And then, like I knew for afact that I was going to be like

(08:43):
, all right, I got to startmaking some changes and all this
.
So I just took the opportunityof when I was in pain.
I was just like man, let mejust do this now.
And yeah.
So I just kind of made thatswitch, but it's been a very I'm
.
I'm definitely going to do thisagain.
I'm probably going to do thismaybe two or three times a year,

(09:07):
because it just gets rid ofeverything.
Like literally everything.
So at least that's what I think.
Was you doing?
Number two what I doing.

Speaker 1 (09:19):
Yeah, in the seven-day pass.

Speaker 2 (09:21):
I thought I had to.
This morning I was like Iwonder what's going to happen.
I really was like what is goingto come out?
But I didn't end up doing itOkay, I was just curious.
Kevin Gates said that around theseventh day he was like that's
when you go to the bathroom andthen that's when you'll see kind

(09:43):
of like mucus a little bit fromthe lining of your stomach or
the lining, probably, of yourintestines and stuff.
So I, I can, I can, I canbelieve that.
I mean, bro, like this is like,it's like you have a dirty car
and then, or the outside of adirty car, and just like a
constant waterfall on it, likeeventually, at the end of it,

(10:05):
everything is going to be clean.
So, um, yeah, so it's.
It's crazy.
I feel like very clear, I canwork, I can.
I had a um, it wasn't aninterview, but it was like
something for progressiveactually, and they had this
assessment that you got to doand then it's like timed, and

(10:25):
then you got to answer thisquestion like in a minute.
I ain't never thought that fastever like from so I was just.
It was almost like I was lookingat it.
It was like my mind couldassess it and my mind just like
computed the whole thing andthen it was just like answer
this.
Now it was, I don't know.
I could just tell thedifference between eating and

(10:48):
not it's.
It's definitely a difference, Ifeel like.
I feel like everybody should bedoing this.
I don't know why it's not athing, because it's difficult
but it's because of the habitsthat are there, though, like the
only time when I started doingfast um last year, when I did
like one day and then I went tolike one and a half days and I

(11:09):
went to two days and likeperiodically over the year, the
only reason that I was hungrywas because of the habit of
eating.
After I realized it was justliterally the habit of eating
and not me actually being hungry, then it all started to change.
So I just feel like everybodyshould definitely have a habit

(11:30):
of at least like intermittentfasting, like that should be the
norm, not eating um.
Yeah, I actually think I'mgonna make that um a a normal
thing for me to do work withouteating.
I'm most efficient when I do noteat during a whole work day.

Speaker 1 (11:53):
Interesting Because I wound up doing the intermittent
fasting unintentionally todaybecause I had things I needed to
do and I had to prepare themeal and I had to get medication
for my granny yeah, Causeeverything.
So so I was.
I had to eat that on lunch, soI didn't have time to eat.
So I wound up eating until,like, my next break was like

(12:16):
three something, 3 PM.
Yeah, so I.
But I used to do intermittentfasting all the time.
I used to have like an app forit.
Yeah, yeah fasting all the time.
I used to have like an app forit.
Yeah, yeah, which worked great.
Yeah, the app.
Yeah, I'll turn it on, and thenit'll tell me that I'll turn it
on from the last time I ate.
So I hit that start button.
It's like, hey, I could do like14, 16 or whatever hours that I

(12:36):
chose.
And then, within that timeframe, it told it told me what
your body's doing like, say, inthe eighth hour, is now and
maybe repairing something or nowyou're growing home, you know,
it's like something.
It was really cool.
That actually helped me,because now I want to get to
that 16 hour tour, it tells mehey, your body's actually doing
it.
I can't remember exactly, butyour body's doing x while in

(12:59):
this mode.
So it's like all right itencourages you to keep on
fasting because you want yourbody to repair, you know the
skin cells or whatever.
I'm just picking up something,right?
Yeah, yeah.
So, um, if I can remember thatapp, it it was actually like a
like a workout app that I paidfor.
Um, so I wound up likecanceling it, but that part of
the app I loved yeah, no, thisis real.

Speaker 2 (13:22):
I feel like.
I feel like it literally, Ifeel like everything is
connected, like there are dayswhere I'll think negative
thoughts and stuff and Irealized throughout this whole
time of me I'll meditate hereand there and and all that, but
I feel like depression, the, themoodiness and all that type of

(13:45):
stuff it really has something todo with that too.
Like I feel like I think it waslike a couple episodes ago I
was saying how I was interestedin like the what's it called,
not the brainwaves, but the.

Speaker 1 (14:03):
I forgot what you're talking about, like you're
talking about when you saypositive affirmation no, just
new, uh, creating new habits inyour head and it makes new
neurons in your head.

Speaker 2 (14:18):
So, like, I feel like this literally repairs them.
It rewires them, is what.
That's what I was trying to say.
I was trying to like find waysto rewire my brain to where,
like, instead of thinking this,I'm thinking this or you know,
which comes with habits and allthat but I think literally
cleaning out your whole system.
Like I haven't thoughtnegatively for real at all.

Speaker 1 (14:42):
It's been so easy to when a negative thought comes in
, I'm just like, I'm not gonnalike think about this and crazy
enough, but like if I were toeat like a bunch of like five
burgers and this and this andthat, it's it's way easier to be
trapped into that yeah, I Iwonder, um, how true that it

(15:07):
says is like you know when they,when a cow know he's about to
die or uh, any any animal, humanlike, knows about the diet.
They sweat more and it seepsinto that meat it's got to yeah
it, it does, and it tastesdifferent.
people say so I wonder how muchis like?

(15:27):
Of course we go through this.
You know whole factory farmingand there a cow or whatever
knows about the diet, or in ade-stressed situation to where
it gets into that food and we'reconsuming that.
And so now you know that gets inwhat we're eating, because they
say that the stomach is yoursecond brain yeah, yeah, yeah,

(15:51):
your gut is yeah, so, um, Iwonder how much of that actually
creeps into the food, becauseof the food we eat and you know,
it's not just one cow, it'slike, of course, yeah, a lot of
them, yeah yeahers, yeah, yeah,yeah.
You got Betsy Betty.
You know what I?

Speaker 2 (16:04):
mean.
Stacey Becky Keisha but yeah,that's a lot.
I thought about that too.
I was like damn, this ain'tjust one chicken, it's like a
lot of these motherfuckers.
Yeah, yeah, I guess it's kindof different.
But, yeah, the ground beef andall that.
It's like a lot of themtogether.
That's a lot of different.

(16:26):
That's just something to thinkabout.

Speaker 1 (16:29):
I've been trying to focus on eating a lot more.

Speaker 2 (16:33):
And I wonder.
It's like completely theopposite of what I just said.
Excuse me.

Speaker 1 (16:48):
So that's not what I meant to say.
I meant to say cooking a lotmore, yeah yeah, yeah, yeah
whatever you do, I do theopposite.
No, cooking a lot more, eatinga lot more alright, yeah,
cooking a lot more than thatI've been focusing on eating a
lot more.
All right, yeah, but yeah,cooking a lot more, yeah, just
cooking the food, making surethat grassland is kind of where

(17:11):
I was going.
Yeah yeah, because you knowit's easier to go to McDonald's
than for me, definitely, and sothat's why I was like preparing
my food and that's why I waswaiting longer to eat, because I
would rather just cook it,knowing it comes from a certain
place, versus going tomcdonald's, or I don't want to
just keep on shooting upmcdonald's, but um, another fast

(17:34):
food.
Yeah, yeah, exactly at leastmcdonald's beat.
They be owning their own farms,you know I mean, I guess and
you know their quality foods are.
It's like you have Chick-fil-Ait's a B or a B+ I'm just naming
one and McDonald's a B in termsof food value, like it's on

(17:55):
Chick-fil-A's head top for real.
You think so?
Yeah, but last time I looked itup and they're better than
Wendy's, burger King and allthem.

Speaker 2 (18:04):
You mean nutritional, like the grade value of their
meats?
Oh yeah, yeah, huh.
Yeah, I think I did hear thatchick-fil-a chicken wasn't real
chicken.
It is, it's.

Speaker 1 (18:15):
I mean, I think it's probably real chicken, it's just
not um, it's not like grade alike I don't know what it great?
Which one of the restaurants isprobably grade A, but they're
not as best as marketed.
You know what?

Speaker 2 (18:30):
I mean man, I love me some Chick-fil-A.

Speaker 1 (18:32):
I mean me too.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I love the.

Speaker 2 (18:34):
McDonald's breakfast too.
That shit all the way fake.
Yeah yeah, yeah, the eggs lookfake.
This shit look like it'shandmade out of clay.

Speaker 1 (18:43):
It's for mass consumption.
You've seen them make it.
They put the little thing youused to manage or whatever, so
yeah, they put all the things inthe slider, put it out, do the
chick-chick with the seasoning,yeah, yeah, and all that's
portioned out.
You just do one click, you gotthe salt shaker, you know, and

(19:03):
that pours out A hell of a salt.
Yeah, do you just do.
One click, you got the saltshaker, you know, and that pours
out yeah, I'll be putting extrasalt.

Speaker 2 (19:08):
I don't be feeling.
You put extra salt in yourfries, so you say extra salt?
Yes, damn they don't be salt myshit at all I may be going to
the wrong one well, what nothingless.

Speaker 1 (19:18):
They be starting with the extra salt shit.

Speaker 2 (19:22):
A mcdonald's fries like one of the saltiest fries
yeah, yeah, I don't be tastingthat.

Speaker 1 (19:27):
Maybe it's just me, that's why you fucked up now,
that's why I'm sick.

Speaker 2 (19:33):
Oh yeah, no, I didn't damn, I didn't really think
about that.
I mean, again, I used to workthere and I used to like when
somebody said extra salt.
I'm like god damn like, becausewe already like doing that so
extra salt on here.
Yeah and uh, I'll be making surethey be salting my joints no, I

(19:53):
do love, I do I say all this,but I do love man, I love some
fast food, but that's why I likedoing this though, because it's
like a balance of my life.
Life I can, I could go tomcdonald's and not feel too bad.

Speaker 1 (20:09):
You know, like after a while anyway okay, I got you
yeah but it's as for me, it'swhen I'm doing the diet and then
I step off for that cheat dayand I can't get back on that
diet until later on oh yeah it's.
It's like I'll lose weight.
Then it's go back, and I'mconstantly in that same path
mm-hmm yeah.
So it's just focus on justmaking sure, just stick to it,

(20:31):
cuz I know I should know myselfat this point mm-hmm.

Speaker 2 (20:34):
What helps out like is the intermittent fast enough.
Yeah, I used my weight.
I mean I know it doesn't looklike I just like get super big
or whatever.

Speaker 1 (20:43):
But there was a time.

Speaker 2 (20:45):
I mean, there was like in college, my weight would
like go up, like my cheekswould be kind of filled.
There are times where I can goback videos ago, maybe like a
couple years ago when I startedrace so silly in Memphis, my
cheeks were like big as fucklike they were super huge and I
had to.
I was just eating a lot, a lot,a lot, and then eventually like

(21:08):
me doing a detox.
I've been doing that for maybesix, two years, now two, maybe
three years, something like that, but I wouldn't eat in the
morning.
I used to eat a lot in themorning, but after I stopped
doing that and just like kind ofpushed my meals back to like
later on in the day, thatregulated my weight.
So even if I was like messingit up or messing up a diet or

(21:29):
whatever that that alone does alot and now I'm talking about I
did because honey does help withcolds.

Speaker 1 (21:37):
I didn't do intermittent fasting Like I'm
thinking I did, because I didput it in my turmeric and ginger
tea honey to feel better.

Speaker 2 (21:44):
How is it not?

Speaker 1 (21:46):
It's not because, um, even though it is separating,
uh, fasting to a certain degree,but I started off the day, um,
not fasting because we, we justtalked about the tea and how
it's sugar honey.

Speaker 2 (21:59):
Yeah, yeah, exactly, I mean, I mean excuse me yeah,
that ain't like.

Speaker 1 (22:03):
I mean it's not, it's not, it's not all.
I mean it's.
It's still technically notanimated fasting if I'm
consuming a sugary substance inany way.

Speaker 2 (22:11):
Yeah, yeah, I'll say that too.
Like it really at least.
Like the seven day thing, andagain, seven day is kind of like
big, like this was me a yearago.
I'd be like, bro, you did seven, what are you talking?
About yeah, seven days isextremely tough yeah and um,
there are people out there thathave done 30, there are people
out there done 60, and it's justthat that sounds crazy to me,

(22:33):
but knowing me, I'm probably todo 30 one day.

Speaker 1 (22:37):
Oh, wow yeah.

Speaker 2 (22:39):
But I say all that to say, like, even when it comes
down to the honey, I'm like abig honey guy, like I always do.
Caffeine, usually throughoutthe day.
I associated doing work withcaffeine, I think I told you
that, um, and with this Irealized it doesn't have to be

(23:02):
associated with it, like Iliterally just don't have to eat
, like maybe it's, maybe it'skind of like a biblical thing as
well, like I know there'ssomething in there that uh says,
you know the, the person thatdoesn't work like doesn't eat.
Basically, you know what I'mtalking about um, not
specifically the verse, but Imean that sounds like you know,

(23:25):
I mean like a saying I've heardbefore yeah, yeah, but, um, I
don't know, I kind of I kind oflike understand that a little
more, not in the sense of likeduh, if you don't work, you
don't eat, but more so taking ita little bit more literal, like
what if you don't?
Or what if you work but youdon't eat while you work and you

(23:47):
eat after you're done, like Ifeel like that can be.
I'm gonna start seeing whatthat feels like to me, because
I've been incredibly, incrediblyproductive.
It's been ridiculous howproductive I've been.
I literally just finishedyesterday editing all 21 videos

(24:07):
for like the week.
Remember, I told you I was goingto do like three videos a day
and then schedule all up.
I did all this.
I I got I got like four or fiveposts per day going for a week,
like it's, it's already.
I don't gotta touch nothingright now.
I feel like I'm floating rightnow.
I never did that before and Ialready downloaded like 40 other

(24:32):
videos for the next comingweeks and then, after this
podcast, I'm going to be likehopping on that so I can be even
further ahead.
It's just it's too manybenefits to this thing, so I'm
an advocate for it.
I think people should reallyget on that, and it's a
spiritual thing too.

(24:52):
I mean, even though I got thebible, but like that ain't I
didn't got the bible, but likethat ain't it I didn't, I didn't
buy the bible for thatspecifically.
I actually like I actually wantto study it, yeah, but, um, so
I started, but that's, that'sthat's started with uh, where
you at?

Speaker 1 (25:09):
if you don't mind me, I'm starting in the beginning.

Speaker 2 (25:11):
Okay, just I'm gonna go through the whole book.
It's probably gonna take me ayear.
Okay, I'm going to go throughthe whole book.

Speaker 1 (25:16):
It's probably going to take me a year or so.
That's a long time.
Yeah, you know what I mean.
You can finish the Biblequicker than that.

Speaker 2 (25:23):
Yeah, I can finish it , but I'm not going to study it.

Speaker 1 (25:25):
Oh, okay, excuse me, my bad.

Speaker 2 (25:27):
Yeah, I didn't buy it to read it like a movie.
I bought it to like Read a book, you mean well, I'm saying like
you know you watch a movie, butoh, that was a cold movie.
I like this part, this part,that part yeah, yeah not like
that.
I didn't buy it for that I Iwanted the bible so I could
study it.
Like what, what happened?

(25:48):
What's the?
The four rivers, this split offat what's the?
It was saying something aboutthe sky.
I, I looked up stuff, gotpictures, drew the pictures of
like what this is and what thislooks like Like actually study
it.
You know, that's like veryimportant to me because I just
feel like that's one of the mainthings that we have right now.

(26:10):
That is basically like the lawof the land, absolutely yeah,
it's like the law of the land,absolutely.
Yeah, it's like the blueprint tolife.
So, like I think it's veryimportant to know, like all the
stories that's in there and allthat.
I mean everything that I'veheard about.

(26:30):
Of course, I've grown up in achurch, but it's kind of like,
not, I don't know, you can growup in a church and it could be
in the.
I don't know you can grow up inthe church and it could be in
the back of your head instead oflike the front of it.
If you get what I'm saying,it's kind of like.
It's kind of like a tv on that,uh, uh, your, your parents
watch all the time, or a certainshow that they watch all the

(26:50):
time and you know of it, but youdon't like know everything
about it.
But, um, yeah, so you know.
Now I'm just kind of like I Ijust want to study it and just
figure out like what, what doesthis mean?
This mean, that mean?
Where did this person come from?
How did the blueprint to?
Relationships, friendships,building a community?

(27:11):
I'm building a community, like,uh, leading a community, like
what could I?
That could probably teach mehow to do something way bigger
than whatever I'm thinking.
Um, yeah, so I just think it'sthe law of the land so no, I
mean, I I'm the biggest.

Speaker 1 (27:27):
You know I'm not the biggest, but I'm a big advocate
on um reading the bible.
Um, when I do bible, myfavorite part about church is
bible study.
Um, when I do bible, myfavorite part about church is
bible study.
Is actually learning the bible?
We able to feed off each otherwhat you think?
I disagree here.
You know what's yourinterpretation of it.
It's literally the best thing.
Um, so I personally enjoy it.

(27:49):
I think that it's harder to doon your own.
You think so.
Um the bible, I'm saying it'shard, it is.
I'm not saying that it's harderto do on your own.
You think so.
The Bible, I'm saying it's hard.
I'm not saying that it'simpossible, but it is harder to
do on your own versus with agroup.
I actually like it more on myown.
Well, I mean, have you been toBible study as an adult?

Speaker 2 (28:08):
As an adult?
No.

Speaker 1 (28:09):
Yeah.
So I mean, you wouldn't knowuntil you go as an adult.
And not only that, it's goingto be different from you just to
go to a church randomly andlike not know anybody and try to
do bible study.
That may be different if youhave, like me, and like, say,
five, six of your closestfriends together reading the

(28:31):
bible.
It's you, that's somethingyou're gonna look forward to
because, you got all your, allyour friends, somebody you're
comfortable with so you can tossideas to you.
Gotta talk about it, it'sabsolutely.
And then you have a a uh like alittle workbook that dedicates
these chapters explaining thecontent of it.
Um, and then you're able toread, read that book and then

(28:55):
get the verses, and then theyhave questions in it.
I'm telling you, it's literallymy favorite thing when we have
good discussions, because thenyou're just going to have life
discussions of like, hey, I seethese same flaws today, you know
, and whatever.

Speaker 2 (29:08):
Absolutely.

Speaker 1 (29:09):
It's absolutely yeah, yeah, so you know, and then you
read it.
You read it and you like Iwould have never gotten this
just from just reading the book,reading the Bible.
You know, yeah, Because Iskipped right over this and
didn't see the meaning in thisverse.
You know, I was just readingthe verse and didn't see the
meaning in it.

(29:29):
So there's a lot of things likeI think the Proverbs is going
to be a good one for you.
ecclesiastes, king solomon youknow, like all of them are
really really really good.
Good, uh, it's good stuff.
The hardest thing is to getthrough to me was numbers,
because all it did was talkabout.

(29:50):
You know, he's the son of thisperson, the son of this, and
it's just of this and it's justthat it's all supposed to lead.
You know it's leading tosomewhere, but it's just like.
That, to me, is the most boringpart of the Bible.
Yeah dream numbers Becauseliterally it's just like a
lineage of people.
It feels like uselessinformation when I was reading

(30:11):
it.

Speaker 2 (30:13):
Okay, yeah, I think I'd like to do that, but I do
really want to study it myselftoo of course.

Speaker 1 (30:25):
I mean you can do both.
I'm just saying when, if you dogo to a church and maybe go to
Wednesday night Bible study it'sa group of your peers, you get
comfortable, you'll be like Isee what Justin's talking about.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, butnonetheless I'm not saying that
you can't do it and you won'tget success from it, but because

(30:46):
you're going at your own paceand your own want, you know what
I mean.
Yeah, so I can see the comfortin that.
But if you was to do it, itfeels so much better and you get
a lot out of it.
Yeah, yeah, because I mean thebiggest.
I'm not going to say it's goingto come off wrong, but and I'll
just say how I feel, the churchI go to, I love that church and

(31:10):
I love a lot of people in there, but there's not a lot of
people my age group.
So it's it.
It's it hits different wheneverybody's your age and you can
hold each other accountableaccountable and y'all go do the
same things together.
Yeah, but you know I don't havethat.
So if you was to get that andlike go to a church that has a

(31:31):
lot of people our age I, I thinkit would be a better way to
live a christian life just mepersonally, but everybody's like
.
you know, I got people reallydrastically younger than me and
pretty much people significantlyolder, Like the youngest person
next to me is kind of like mymentor.
Yeah, and he's in his 40s.

Speaker 2 (31:50):
Oh, okay.

Speaker 1 (31:50):
Yeah, so it's different.
But, I appreciate him a lot,you know.
Yeah, I go to him for a lot ofguidance and I'm glad I'm able
to have a lot of wisdom in thechurch.
But to have people my age thatyou can, you know, have
confidence that y'all go throughthe exact same things, that you
can talk to personally, um, andit's a lot of them, it would be
great, yeah yeah, yeah, no butI like that talk though.

Speaker 2 (32:13):
I'm happy for you yeah, bro, bro, it's really cool
.
Yeah, I'm a very spiritual guy.
Yeah, I always wanted to getyou know more into the Bible.
It's just time like divine time.
It just aligns up with where Iam mentally.

Speaker 1 (32:34):
It just happens to be now up with where I am mentally
and it just happens to be now.
So, yeah, and the biggest thingabout you know what?
I get a lot from the Bible andI have to go through, uh, it's
like um, one of I can't rememberthe verses, um, the actual
verse, but it's like um, whyworry, um, when you know that

(32:55):
God feeds the birds of the airand you know the animals on the
ground I'm really paraphrasing.
And then he's like they, theyfind their way to eat, mm-hmm,
it's like, and they don't live alife of stress you know kind of
.
Why would you everything?
Like you know, it's pretty muchsaying like hey, he, he, he

(33:17):
feeds the earth.
Why are you worried about whatthe next thing is going to come?
You know what I mean You'regoing to be taken care of.
God's going to take care of you.
You know, what I mean.
I'm really paraphrasing and I'mdoing it very injustice because
it's coming off my but if you,if you was to start repeating, I

(33:38):
could then say it um I get whatyou're saying.

Speaker 2 (33:39):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, but , yeah, yeah, literally.

Speaker 1 (33:40):
But for the the earth is clearly meant for everything
to get fed yeah, yeah, so, um,but yeah, so it's, it's
absolutely great, um, it's, it'shumbling.
It makes things in the worldlike less trivial.
It's like I hate that, you know.
I mean like I have to careabout things that really don't
matter yeah just like umclassism oh, yeah, yeah, human

(34:09):
made.
Yeah, yeah, like yeah, like, butwhy?
I gotta care, care whatsomebody else got and I gotta
match him.
I gotta have this big old houseand these cars and all this
money.
It's like for what?
Yeah, yeah, like.
I'm good where I'm at.
You know what I mean that is so.
That's the type of things I feel.
It's like sometimes I getfrustrated at, at that aspect of

(34:34):
life is like when um, I I'lltalk about a little bit more um
in a personal person personinstead of the podcast.
But sometimes I look at things.
I'm like bro, like why do I?
Why should I care about this?
It makes me just like want toleave things, you know, cut
things off it's like, bro, thisis what you worried about, and

(34:57):
you know what I mean.
Yeah, it's like I gotta, yeah,yeah, I gotta leave you alone,
if this is what you want forreal no, uh-huh yeah, yeah, uh,
but yeah, so, um, but yeah, yeah, there's, there's more things
to get to talk to, though oh,yeah, yeah there's a lot of well
, no, I would say a lot ofthings, but a lot of interesting
things that happened since thelast podcast.

(35:19):
Uh, what, um.
Yay's interview with theacademics.

Speaker 2 (35:24):
Oh yeah, I didn't.
I didn't see the interview.
Did you hear it?

Speaker 1 (35:26):
uh, I saw a little bit of it because I tried to
skip through where he was nottalking about Cardi.

Speaker 2 (35:34):
I was just remembering him wearing the KKK
mask.

Speaker 1 (35:39):
I saw no outrage for the KKK mask or the KKK hood.

Speaker 2 (35:44):
In the comments.
In the robe, yeah.

Speaker 1 (35:46):
Just even listening to different outlets, it was
kind of yay.
Yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 2 (35:52):
Oh, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1 (35:53):
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Everybody was unbothered at theKKK robe, right, yeah, yeah,
yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (35:57):
Oh, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, like nobody.
Everybody was unbothered at theKKK road, right, yeah, yeah,
yeah, me too, yeah, yeah.
I think I was more shocked ofhim selling the shirt with the
swastika on it.

Speaker 1 (36:08):
I didn't Not by a lot , but just like a teeny little
bit.

Speaker 2 (36:14):
Like damn, you finna make money off this.
Right, right, but just like ateeny little like damn, you,
finna, make money off this,right.
Right, that was the only thing.
But yeah, as soon as I saw himon here, I saw him in there, I
was all right yeah, you know,the thing about the robe and the
swastika stuff is he's backyears ago.

Speaker 1 (36:34):
He tried to kind of do the same thing with the
confederate flag now and hetalks about symbolism and how
symbolism is not like a realthing, it's a mental thing.
It controls your mind.

Speaker 2 (36:46):
Yeah, I don't know if you ever remember that uh, I
feel like he's trying to flipthe narrative.

Speaker 1 (36:52):
Uh, a lot of things well, I think he like literally
don't like jewish people forreal but yeah, yeah yeah, yeah,
but but I'm saying about theswastika stuff.
I think he literally don't likejewish people, damn.
But uh, but the the symbolismthing is that there's an element
to it uh-huh like I believe,that um and and when I say he

(37:14):
there little, I think let me Ikind of misspoke.
I think that there's Jewishpeople that he does like.
I think that when he looks atthe community as a whole, that's
when there's a lot of disdain,because he looks at everything

(37:37):
of how we talked about in ourold podcast about like jewish
controlled media and how, andthen also israel and how they
control politics here and a lotof things, and then you look up
like, oh, you know he runs soand so he's jewish you know he.

(37:57):
You know what I mean.
So it lets you down this rabbithole of art.
We're controlled by jewishpeople, which everybody.
You know I come, that's when Icome.
You know where I have.
You know the god and bible andme it's like bruh.
All this is trivial at the endof the day.
You know what I mean.
It's like whatever yeah I can't.

(38:18):
I can't control this.
This ain't my world that I'mliving in.
You know I mean so, so I don'ttry to get caught up in that
heap, but I can't see to whereyou know when you, when you read
that information and you lookit up, and it's it's true, it
can be very shocking andalarming.
You know, because you want fairequity and um inclusion.

(38:39):
You know what I mean yeah, so.
So you want those things, so youwant to be treated like hey, I
want to be.
You know, I want a partnershipof things I don't want to feel
like I'm controlled.
I want to be actually, you know, my mind be free, and I can see
a lot of that from yay, um, butthen how he goes about it is
not, is not correct.

Speaker 2 (39:01):
But I mean it goes, had another picture of him with
the as soon as like a picturepops in my head.

Speaker 1 (39:08):
It's like bruh yeah, yeah, but when?
But when you go about talkingabout how many people wronged
him, it's like all right bro itcan't be everybody's fault.
You know it's like okay, do youapologize for the people you
wronged?
You know what I mean and youalso got to look at it as, like

(39:31):
some people you can't even blamefor them turning their back on
you.
Yeah, you can't just make adecision.
You can't just keep on makingdecisions and not keep them in
the loop and then be like saythey always got to back you.
You know, what I mean.
Yeah, and some people don'tpublicly even disown you.
They just like hey, bro, you doyour thing because you've been

(39:52):
wilding.
You know what I mean.
Yeah, yeah, that's like I'm notsaying this is equivalent, but
if somebody keep on robbing thebank, and that's my homie, it's
like, bruh, I'm trying to atleast have space.
I respect you.
Yeah, yeah, I love you, but yougot to do your own thing over

(40:14):
there.

Speaker 2 (40:14):
Yeah, you know what I mean.
Yeah, yeah, don't come overhere.

Speaker 1 (40:16):
My space is too peaceful over here.
You wild over there and I hadto do that with a family and
friends.
It wasn't to that degree, butit'll be like their personality
was wild.
It was like I like my peace, bro.
Yeah, yeah, I love you.
I want you to do well andprosper.
It can come off as Justin, youknow he, he changed.

(40:41):
It'd be like nah, y'all justnot on the same thing.
I'm on, and that's fine, we canhave a conversation, but y'all,
y'all, y'all, ain't y'all gotthat ambition, ambitious drive
as me, yeah, yeah, or y'all justkeep caught up in the wrong
things and it just don't feelgood, yeah yeah, everything that
comes out your mouth isnegative, yeah yeah, it's about

(41:04):
what everybody else does and notwhat you done.
Yeah, yeah, and I don't, and Ihave specific people in my head
when I'm even saying thesethings.
So that's why I was like, hey,I love y'all, I wish you well,
but I don't want to enter y'allspace and I'm sure you don't
want to enter mine.
Yeah um I can see that yeah,yeah, so so yeah, so yeah, if

(41:26):
you're going to be on all theway over on that fence, you can
only help.
But to believe some, so only somany few people are going to
follow you.
Everybody ain't going to be onthat side, right?
Yeah, yeah, definitely ifyou're displaying the message
how you want to, because allyou're doing is screaming yeah,
yeah, like that.

(41:46):
Is there a call to action?
Uh, you know him.

Speaker 2 (41:50):
I mean, I would assume that he's when he goes on
a rant, or whatever.
I mean it seems like what hewants is just, it seems like he
wants I was about to say itseems like he wants black power,
but also he does give thenarrative that we're all one.

(42:11):
I think it's more of like howyou said, like being included,
uh, black people doing their ownthing.
And he's kind of, um, he seesthat, and he sees a sword on the
side laying down on the ground.
He's like man, fuck it, I'mgonna do it.
And then, like he goes out andgets the sword just starts

(42:33):
swinging at everybody and youknow, the crowd of black people
behind him is just kind of likebrad, we ain't have to do it
like that but, and when I say acall to action, it's like oh
well, that's what I was gettingto.
I meant that, um, with him doingthat, I feel like, with

(42:54):
swinging, he's like lookingbehind his shoulder, like are
y'all coming?
I think he just wants people tolike join in.
You know, like, bro, who cares?
Let's change the narrative.
I'm going to sell this swastika.
I'm pretty sure, bro, if, ifsomebody, if any rapper, would

(43:18):
have been like, yeah, you werethat kkk thing.
Like, exactly, bro, like that'swhat I'm, that's what I wanted
us to be.
On, man, we I think, he's justwaiting on people, because he
already knows at this point thatain't nobody, is nobody's going
to stand up and just be like,yeah, yeah, you're right you
know, he's.
I think he's very muchinternalized that.
So I feel like the main thingthat he's doing is just trying

(43:41):
to set the way and like eitherwait on, or either two things
wait on somebody, like lookingover his shoulder, like bro, is
anybody going to come up?
Or two.
He just feels so hard that he'smaking the way, he's making a
new way for black people andy'all just gonna get it later,

(44:05):
and y'all the call to actionwould be like y'all will figure
that shit out later.
I'm gonna just I'm gonna be theone to do it first and then
y'all, y'all gonna get it lateron yeah, I think that is.

Speaker 1 (44:18):
It's very much narcissistic.
I think a lot of his.
I don't I am no therapist soI'm not gonna try to mentally
try to understand where he'scoming from, but I do see
narcissistic behavior from him.
And, um, there's things that Ilove the path he on.

(44:39):
When he was building he had theDonda school he had, he had a
Donda management team and I waslike dang, he's beyond stuff
real quick he had like JalenBrown basketball player was at
one point.
The highest paid basketballplayer was at one point the
highest-paid basketball playerin the league, aaron Donald, one
of the best defensive playersin his era.

(45:01):
He was the best.
He had him on management.
He had a lot of guys real quickwho was doing very successful
and you could have been on thatpath strategically, but the
outrage had it all destroyed.
And come on, you know, I mean,as I don't know- exactly, it's a

(45:23):
mental, it's actually a mentalthing yeah, yeah, I mean I think
it's a I, I him, and he's beenvery successful.
So a part of him, it's what himsuccessful.
So I can't be like Brett, tonedown.
You know what I mean, but somethings you're going to be wrong
on and and how you handle that,and that's any leader.

(45:43):
You know what I mean.
You go and you're going to andit's because I was about to say
like I'm you know, I was like,well, you could tone it down,
but at sometimes he, him, beingloud, he was right when he
talked about bush, don't careabout black people.
You remember he was like youknow he was asking zuckerberg
bill, get me out of debt.
You know I'm 50 million dollarsin debt.

(46:04):
You know me.
Yeah, yeah, and somehow he got adebt really quick yeah, yeah so
I was like, hey, there's amethod to how he does some
things, so I can't, you gottatake the good with bad.
But obviously, obviously thisis so far left.
What he's doing now, yeah, towhere it's like it's
entertaining, I still reallywant him to do well and rebound.

(46:27):
But a lot of stuff is like allright, but what we on for real,
but like it's symbolism.
But I don't mind the Cardistuff, that's his own thing.
And then he talked about JimJones and Jay-Z and all that
stuff.
But the symbolism I understand,so it don't really bother me.
When I see the robe or theConfederate flag or even the

(46:52):
swastika, yeah, and then thatstuff really, really, because it
is symbolism to a certaindegree.
But, um, just the rhetoric isit could be a little too much,
you know and I'm still comingfrom a hardcore fan yeah, I'm
still a hardcore fan.

Speaker 2 (47:09):
Yeah, I still play his music, for sure, and his new
stuff and what and his newstuff uh I was listening to
vultures um uh yesterday yeah, Iwas listening to it last week.
It's too good, it's too good.
He's super, super man.
A lot of people that are justso so, so, so talented get away

(47:29):
with a lot of things.

Speaker 1 (47:32):
It's just like god-given talent yeah, but
there's a lot of things he callsout that is good to where.
It's like hey, I didn't knowhow Hollywood, how everything.
You know who runs what and howit controls it.
It's like it's interesting tohear on that side of the world,
because I'm so far in my ownbubble too.

Speaker 2 (47:52):
Did you hear how much he hates J Cole?

Speaker 1 (47:53):
No, I didn't hear that yet Did you hear how much
he hates J Cole?
No, I didn't hear that.

Speaker 2 (47:57):
Yet he's been like tweeting, like how much he
doesn't like J Cole.
Yeah, he said that he met withDrake and you remember that run
that Drake and J Cole had likearound the time of something,
the Super Bowl yeah,first-person shooter.
Yeah.
And J.
Cole was on tour with Drake.

(48:18):
He said he met up with Drakeand he told him he's like bruh
stop hanging out with J Colecause he's ruining hip hop he
was just like he's like hedoesn't do anything for this.
He said I like Future better.

Speaker 1 (48:32):
Make more music with Future or something yeah, the
more I get to understand themusic.
It's just like you know.
I stopped looking up to theseguys yeah yeah, yeah, because
these, you know, of coursethey're, of course they, they
make music to make money and youknow it's, it's very much in

(48:54):
themselves, in it for themselves.
But a lot of these guys it'slike all right, I can't judge
anybody in their intentionsanymore where is j cole, I don't
know, damn.
Yeah.
So it's like I wish all theseguys were.
I still love j cole as well too,but yeah, it's like these guys
ain't who I really thought theywould be you know, I think j

(49:16):
cole might be yeah, maybe, yeah,I just I just like yeah, I
don't know these individuals,they don't know me, so I could
think they do well by the musicthey make and it sounds
meaningful, but at this pointyou, you just don't know who's
controlled by what.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, because it isstuff don't make start to make

(49:38):
sense the more I I understandand look at behavior I'm like
all right, bro.
Yeah, I appreciate for what youoffer and you do have um the
music you do make have meaningto it I see that I mean I'll
never believe.

Speaker 2 (49:55):
Kanye is one thing like he released a gospel album
never believe.
Kanye is one thing he releasedthe gospel album and then the
next song he released after thegospel album was the song with
him and Lil Pump you're such anFNL, I thought that was I think
that was before, because he wasafter he did the.

(50:19):
I'm not talking about Donda,I'm talking about Jesus the
Jesus album oh yeah, he made aJesus album yeah, you're talking
.

Speaker 1 (50:28):
I know exactly what you're talking about following
that album.
I can't remember.
I have it in my head, in myhead.
I thought it was, but he madeDonda after that no, he made
Donda after that no, you can'tmake daughter after yeah, yeah,
yeah, so he had that the littlepump thing before the before
Donda you for the Christianalbum?
For sure, because, because fora little bit he wasn't even even

(50:51):
on the Donda album he blurt, hebleeped out all the curse words
.

Speaker 2 (50:54):
He wasn't even on the Donda album.
He bleeped out all the cursewords.
He wasn't even on the Dondaalbum.

Speaker 1 (50:58):
No, he bleeped out the curse words on the Donda
album.
Yeah, I know I'm right on this.
Yeah, yeah, just take my wordfor it.

Speaker 2 (51:05):
Well, he did something super holy, basically
like before then.

Speaker 1 (51:09):
Yeah, exactly, or maybe what I'm saying yeah he
did the Christian album, then hedid Donda 1 and Donda 2.
But he didn't release Donda 2on the streaming.

Speaker 2 (51:21):
He released it on this little media player.

Speaker 1 (51:24):
Was that Donda 2?
Yeah, he released Donda 2 on amedia player or something Was
that the one with Soulja Boy onit.
Soulja Boy, I got listed as aknight Soulja Boy was on remote
control and that was on Donda 1.

Speaker 2 (51:34):
No, I'm saying I've was there for a long time, that
was there for a long.
You know what I'm talking about.
No, soulja Boy was on something.

Speaker 1 (51:45):
Yeah, he had something that was number two,
yeah but that little pump stuffMaybe it was.
Donda 2.
No, it was definitely Donda 2.
Yeah.
Okay, but another rapper passedwho was taking on music Young
Scooter.

Speaker 2 (51:59):
Oh, yeah, uh, I haven't really heard a lot of
his music, but I've heard it.

Speaker 1 (52:02):
Yeah, yeah.
No, I was listening to a littlebit of it today and it was
actually some good like uhreminded me, like it reminded me
of like the paper chase typemusic in that era.
Oh yeah, it was hard thoughyeah, um, it was like dang, I
can definitely work out to thisjoint did he?

(52:23):
He died from like running awayor um, like I guess, like he's,
uh yeah, running from the policeand slipped on like maybe a
fence and just artery got cutwrong fuck yeah.
Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (52:36):
That is the scariest thing to me, yeah, like cutting
an artery or even getting shot,and you think like, oh, it's
just like my arm or my wrist orwhatever.

Speaker 1 (52:47):
And then you go bleed out.
Yeah, exactly, yeah, yeah, butyeah, so it happened on his
birthday.
Yeah, and apparently it wasactually a swatting event.
You familiar with swatting?
Yeah, yeah.
So somebody, a lady, called thepolice on the house and saying,

(53:07):
hey, there's a woman that gotbeat up and dragged into the
house.
They're waving guns everywhere,there's blood on the ground.
You need to come and help andshe has a baby with her on his.
They did that on his birthday.
Yeah, she lied to get the policeover there, yep and he died
well, I mean, that ended uphappening, yes, but I mean, yeah

(53:31):
, yeah, but I'm making a longstory short, um, and it comes
out that, yeah, her boyfriend, Iguess, was hanging with Young
Scooter.
Uh-huh, who was her boyfriend?
The girl who called yeah, yeah,exactly, so did she go to jail.
She just got arrested, I thinktoday or yesterday she's
definitely going to jail.
Well, I mean, I think she'sbooked, but yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 2 (53:59):
Now she can bail out and plead not guilty and all
that stuff.
I mean, the SWAT team came andthey didn't see blood on the
ground.

Speaker 1 (54:05):
Yeah, but you can plead not guilty, yeah.
Yeah, I mean, you know that's aprocess into it.

Speaker 2 (54:10):
Speaking of that, did you see Yella Beezy got out.

Speaker 1 (54:13):
Yeah, yeah, his case is not looking.
Yeah, yeah, his, I heard his.
He has a actually weak caseagainst him.

Speaker 2 (54:21):
Yes, that's good right.

Speaker 1 (54:24):
I mean depending on who you talk to.
If you feel like he didn't doit, then yeah, it's really good.
If you're like he did do it andyou want justice for mode three
, then it's not good but it'sgood for yellow beezy.
Yeah yeah, um they.
I mean the person who theperson who did it is um was
saying that what was sellingthat yellow beezy was the one

(54:47):
who hired right he just said it?
Um, I mean to answer yourquestion.
Yes, he just said it, but hecould be telling the truth.
Yeah yeah, yeah.
And then not only that, I thinkit was like either, for like
the dude wasn't even likecharged for murder, the dude

(55:08):
killed him.
Yeah, exactly, like, like.
So that's not going to playwell in trial if y'all go to
trial because he can lie aboutdoing that for a lighter
sentence.
Did you see the video?
Yeah, yeah.
But they're saying that, hey,he's just a tool.
Like, for example, if I'm justusing an example it may not come

(55:31):
off right, you can tell me ifit comes off wrong, not come off
right.
You can tell me if come offwrong.
If if I shoot you or I shoot aperson here and um, that gun
doesn't go to jail, I go to jail, and that's what that's.
What they're saying is likehe's the tool.
He just killed that person onyour behalf because you wanted
him to die.
So you're really the personbehind it because you hired him

(55:53):
to kill him, if that makes senseyeah, yeah, you're saying that
for, but he didn't, he didn'thire him.
Yeah, exactly, but that's whatthe the prosecutors are.
I guess justifying their mindis to why they didn't um charge
him for murder, which theyreally should charge them both,

(56:14):
but then they wouldn't havegotten um a confession.
So it's just like, yeah, that'sall gonna play well for yellow,
easy, because now it just lookslike a weak case.
Yeah, yeah, not to say who'sright or wrong, because I I have
no idea.
I didn't know yellow beezy likethat.
You know, I've heard some music,yeah, yeah and um I I knew mo

(56:35):
three a little bit like just asmuch as I heard Yellow Beezy, so
I didn't know there was abeefing thing going on.

Speaker 2 (56:42):
Nah me either.
I started looking stuff up,yeah exactly.

Speaker 1 (56:44):
So I'm dwelling on the loop, so I'm just stating it
how I kind of see it.

Speaker 2 (56:49):
At this point, bro, if somebody says like, nah, I
don't know who you're talkingabout, if somebody says like,
nah, I don't know who youtalking about, I automatically
think they have something to dowith it at this point yeah, or
you may not actually know whatyou talking about.
I feel like I see so much moreof who you talking about.
Are you from the same city?
I haven't heard it from him.

Speaker 1 (57:14):
Yeah, I can understand that part of it, but
I also look at it as you mayknow something.
So it's like I don't want tojust play my hand like that.
And then not only that.

Speaker 2 (57:26):
No, I get it.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, I get it.
I'm saying as a consumer, yeah,as soon as I hear that I'm like
, okay, there's more to thisstory understood?

Speaker 1 (57:37):
yeah, I'm sure there is.
I feel that, but at the sametime, I'm trying to stay away
from things like that definitelyinvolves a death and I'm not
trying to have them look at meso it's always going to be like,
bro, I don't know sex yeah,yeah, yeah if I'm far from the
situation like I am, with that Icould give my opinion like, oh

(57:58):
shoot.
Like you know from the, fromthe way he was talking, he kind
of had it coming.
You know what I mean yeah, yeah,I could maybe get, but I'm not.
I'm if I'm somewhat close tothe situation, if I know
somebody who knows that person.
I was like bro, I don't know.
Yeah, I may have not been closeto that if it was something in
my city, and then I'm, I've knewother person like bruh.
I wish him well.

(58:18):
You know what I mean.
I don't know nothing about that.

Speaker 2 (58:21):
Yeah, yeah that's, that's why did you see um one of
the guys that shot.
Say so P uh, he's dead inHouston no he died in Memphis.
I don't know where he died.

Speaker 1 (58:37):
I heard he died in Houston.
I could have been wrong.

Speaker 2 (58:39):
I don't know where he died, I mean, I don't know.

Speaker 1 (58:47):
He's running from the police, yeah his picture is out
there, but no he was dead.

Speaker 2 (58:53):
He definitely, yeah, he died.
From what I mean he didn't kill, I mean yeah, I'm just saying
like for what?
Reason, not the police, likesomebody killed him.

Speaker 1 (59:03):
I get that, I'm just saying.
I'm just saying that I meankillers don't have that long of
a lifespan, you know.
I mean, if you really killsomebody's cold blood, you
that's kind of how it goes rightlike he could have died for
many reasons.
He could have, you know, I meanknown too much and his own
homies could have killed him.

(59:24):
Yeah, it could be a millionreasons on why he died yeah he
could be in his own bs trying tokill somebody else and somebody
kill him if he's.
If he's a hitman for real,Because he put up on, you know,
say Topee and them real quick.
So, he may be a real hitman andyou know, tried to do a hit,
tried to get a plug and die.

(59:45):
There's a million reasons whyhe could have died.
That don't tell me nothingright now.

Speaker 2 (59:50):
I mean, I was just saying yeah, yeah saying, Did
you hear that?
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (59:55):
And I'm just speaking for the podcast.
Bro, how dare you speak on this?

Speaker 2 (01:00:01):
Nah, that's not what I'm saying.
I'm with you.
Nah, I was trying to get allthe shootings and killings out
of the way.

Speaker 1 (01:00:11):
I mean shoot, that's what we own.

Speaker 2 (01:00:19):
We have no bright spot, dang.
Did somebody say somebody froma fire?
Yeah, we started off withfasting and god, and now we're
just like straight.

Speaker 1 (01:00:22):
Oh yeah, okay, we did have some good things straight
up yeah yeah, murder, execution,murder, murder, murder murder
yeah, I mean dang like I.
That is a lot, that's kind ofgoing on in the streets.
That's just a different world.
That's what I'm saying.
I don't want to be a part of.
I'm a piece.
You know what I mean?
I just like piece way too much.

Speaker 2 (01:00:43):
This is the best way to live.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
I saw a poster, a meme, becauseI had to like fill um schedule
up for my Facebook page andstuff.
And there was a meme.
And it was a meme of St Louis,memphis.
It's a um the sign on thehighway, and it was like Memphis

(01:01:04):
, st Louis is somewhere else, Ithink I think Alabama, some
somewhere else.
It was all three of them onthere.
And then the caption ifsomebody commented you know how,
like they'll comment on it, andthen they'll, they'll like put
it on to me.

Speaker 1 (01:01:23):
And then the caption was like it really don't matter
where you're going, you stillcan get shot, that's great yeah,
it's just you know, I mean, hey, it feels so much like like the
devil's kingdom, for I don'tunderstand people stay.

Speaker 2 (01:01:42):
You said what?
I don't understand how peoplestay here in memphis oh, I was
just talking about there, butwhere?

Speaker 1 (01:01:47):
um no, I'm just saying like when I said that was
kingdom, I was talking aboutthe earth.
It when?
No, I was just saying like whenI said devil's kingdom, I was
talking about the earth.
It's like you know, that's howI just like bruh, I was like you
would rather to bring back to,like the Bible stuff.
It's just like man, just live,try to live as a righteous life
as you can for real.
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:02:09):
Yeah, I think it's possible.
I think it's.
I think it's possible.
I think it's location is likeone of the main things, though
location?

Speaker 1 (01:02:16):
oh for sure, I mean yeah, absolutely, because some
you know there's some privilegedpeople who live in the hills
that could never fathom in lifelike that.

Speaker 2 (01:02:23):
Oh, absolutely, yeah, yeah, I don't understand why
people in the in the hill in lalike in the Beverly Hills.
I don't understand why theythink like that.

Speaker 1 (01:02:35):
Think like what?

Speaker 2 (01:02:36):
Because it's so easy to pull up on anybody.
I don't want to put that energyout there, but I'm just like
when I was driving for Uber orUber Eats and Instacart and
stuff like that they wouldnormally be the ones to do.

(01:02:56):
That.
I mean, that makes sense, butlike bro, you could pull up to
their house like it's a big asshouse it's in the hills, but
like anybody can pull up thereunless you're in, I guess, the
hidden hills or the stuff likethat.
But there's so many houses youcould just pull up to and I just
don't understand.
You know, having a good housein a in a good neighborhood, I

(01:03:19):
guess.
I guess this social media stuffkind of like trained my brain
to that there's a, there's acertain way I want to live, uh,
or that I'm striving to get to,and it's very like gated, like
you can't get in here, and okay,stuff like that.

Speaker 1 (01:03:35):
Yeah, I and I can have a possible answer to that
is because it's psychologicallike and even like a killer in a
thief's mind, like in theirmind.
They think that's tougher to getinto a home like that but it's
easier robbing you know like abad neighborhood and get stuff.

(01:03:57):
Then not only that.
Yeah, I remember walking around, um, and I was never a thief,
but I walk around in theneighborhood and then the nice
neighborhood was across thestreet and I felt like I
couldn't even get to thatneighborhood, like I'll get
arrested if I go across thestreet, you know I mean yeah.

(01:04:19):
So I can only imagine thepsychological mind of a thief is
like bruh my.
You know, if I get arrestedain't gonna be no light sentence
they gonna you know, punish meand give me the book for real
and and they often do so I so Ithink it's more psychological on
why that doesn't happen butthis, but this era is different,

(01:04:42):
bro.

Speaker 3 (01:04:43):
You know what I mean.
Yeah, yeah, but still like myera it was more like that this
era.

Speaker 1 (01:04:46):
I feel like they breaking and robbering.
You know they'll go to lebron'shome.
And you remember they had a listof people's homes they was
breaking into.
Like so it was years ago, butthey had a list of homes of who
they was breaking into, going tobreak into next and like they

(01:05:07):
do that.
Like they broke into JoeBurrow's home that's the
quarterback, francisco DaddyBengals.
They broke into his home whilehe was away games.
You know what I mean.
So they have a strategy on howthey do it for real.
Yeah, so this era completelydifferent.

Speaker 2 (01:05:21):
Everything's off tables or on the table.
I believe there's a lot ofweight to what you're saying too
.
It's definitely psychological,because otherwise Beverly Hills
would have been run down by nowyeah, yeah there.
Yeah, that that is a thing.
It does feel different outthere.
I'm not a criminal, so like Idon't.
I don't know what it feels liketo be a difference, but um, it

(01:05:45):
does.
That is a thing of thinkingdifferently when you pull up to
those type of places, so onlylike one out of a certain amount
would do that instead of itbeing a normal thing but that
that was something I thought inthe back of my head.

Speaker 1 (01:06:01):
I'm like, bro, let anybody pull up in this bitch
anybody yeah, and then, not onlythat, you got cars that people
look out for, that police lookout for.
So, yeah, like my, even myexpedition that will get pulled
over more than my Tesla,whatever would.
Hmm, yep, as I've gotten pulledover randomly for dumb things

(01:06:24):
yeah just a bigger vehicle andthat you know.
Yeah, like like challengengersget pulled over.
Chargers get pulled over a lotmore just because those are like
, quote-unquote, like hood carsor where you know this stuff is
undocumented so fast.
Cars like that, big SUVs getpulled over a lot more often.

(01:06:46):
Yeah, it's just kind of whatthe trailer.
You see a black man in one ofthose.
You're more likely going to getpulled over for sure.
Yeah, I got pulled over forI've gotten tailed many of times
, got pulled over for maybe notstopping at it, and you know how
you can make a right at uh, uh,right at the red light uh yeah,
yeah, not pulled over for that,completely stopping had a

(01:07:09):
license plate.
The license plate light up waswasn't on.
Oh yeah, so like half have twolights in the license plate
light.
Like one of them wasn't on.
Yeah, because it was out.
I got pulled over for that.
Yeah, so you can visit.
Like what's crazy, like it'sthe night time yeah, because

(01:07:31):
your headlights on.
So you can visibly see myheadlight in my my, uh, my
license plate, because yourheadlights are on right and you
can run it.

Speaker 2 (01:07:41):
And they obviously.

Speaker 1 (01:07:42):
Yeah, they just give me a reason to pull over to make
sure my everything's legit.
He did, of course.
He didn't give me a ticket no,okay, yeah yeah, because it was
bs, yeah.
And then you ran it like, ohshit, oh, it's just good he got
insurance, he got thisregistration I do, do, I do uber
yeah, I gotta have those things.
Yeah, yeah, not only that Iwould have, yeah, yeah, but I

(01:08:02):
have to have those things anyway.
So, yeah, you got a cleanrecord.
Okay, you move on.

Speaker 2 (01:08:08):
It's just annoying yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
So I mean you still drive it.

Speaker 1 (01:08:15):
You don't yeah, because I make money from it, I
mean, but not why would I?
I mean it's finance, I'm notgoing to just I get pulled over
too much.
Let me take it back.
Uh-huh.
Yeah, yeah, but my Tesla, Idon't think I've got pulled over
once from it.

Speaker 2 (01:08:30):
yeah oh, yeah, yeah well, that makes sense too.
I wonder if your information islike is it on there?
What, like what?
I don't know?
Well, I mean the question.

Speaker 1 (01:08:43):
The answer is yes yeah, yeah, well, yeah, you're
gonna pull up.
You're gonna see my.
You run my tags.
You're gonna run it, it's gonnacome up either way yeah, yeah
that's right.

Speaker 2 (01:08:53):
So what else has been going on?

Speaker 1 (01:08:55):
I think we're doing good on time, but um, yeah, um,
oh, oh, yeah.
Yeah, do you feel good or doyou want to?

Speaker 2 (01:09:05):
you know um, let's see, let's see if I can see
maybe one question.

Speaker 1 (01:09:10):
Okay, well, I mean, we can end on relationships,
because that's always a fun one,okay, or if you got one, Would
you rather find out your partneremotionally cheated on you for
years or physically cheated onetime?
I wouldn't even care.
Give me a reason to break up.

(01:09:32):
I'm literally just kidding yeahyeah, yeah, no, I'm just
kidding emotionally cheated onetime or emotionally cheated for
years?
What's emotionally?

Speaker 2 (01:09:44):
cheated for years.

Speaker 1 (01:09:47):
They love this other person yeah, I'm cool on that
one.

Speaker 2 (01:09:51):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, cheating one time I'll live yeah
, I think, cheating one time letme see if it's a good one.
If not, then we could just endit um uh, uh, uh, uh, um um it's

(01:10:21):
okay, I mean you.

Speaker 1 (01:10:26):
You can say one just pick one.

Speaker 2 (01:10:28):
All right, I'm gonna just pick one.
Um, all right, I'm going tojust pick one.
If your ex started datingsomeone who looked exactly like
you, would you feel flattered orfreaked out?

Speaker 1 (01:10:43):
I feel weird, I will feel.
I will feel.
That happened to my homeboy whojust got married, yeah.
Uh-huh.
Yeah, like I will feel some, shejust got a tight for real and
yeah, I would feel like thatwould be hilarious.
Yeah, yeah, so maybe find herno way, I guess.

(01:11:04):
Yeah, but you also got tight.
But literally my homeboy, oneof my close friends, his, his
ex-girlfriend she wanted tomarry that nigga for real.
Yeah, like for real.
Like his name even like rhymedwith his what Like it was crazy

(01:11:24):
how much I didn't know how youcould find the exact replica in
Nashville.

Speaker 2 (01:11:29):
In Nashville.
Yeah, so one city, yes, oh myGod, I thought she like, she
like traveled, went somewhereelse.

Speaker 1 (01:11:34):
No, and she married to him.
Now, yeah, yeah yeah, yeah, Iwas like that, looked like the
great value version of you.
Oh my god yeah, yeah, yeah.
What about you?

Speaker 2 (01:11:45):
um, uh, I feel like, I feel like that has happened.
It wasn't like exactly, likeshe definitely had a type.
For sure, it is 100% and I knewit before me Cause I kinda
looked like the last nigga.
So I was like you definitelygot a type.

(01:12:08):
But, it didn't really likeBother me too much.
I felt weird at first, just cuzit was like we was ending and
it was just messy.
It was it ended really messy,and then just to see somebody
that kind of looked like you,let me fuck this nigga okay,
would you stalk his page?
No, I just went to it once whenshe sent it to me.

Speaker 1 (01:12:33):
She sent you his page .

Speaker 2 (01:12:35):
Yeah, it was like after a while.

Speaker 1 (01:12:36):
For what?
What was she hoping toaccomplish?

Speaker 2 (01:12:39):
No, it was after a while.
It was after, like after usbreaking up and all that stuff
has been done.
We're talking like months andmonths and months and months
down the line and they don'ttalk anymore or whatever.
And then they're like we washaving a conversation about who
we've dated and stuff like that,and uh, we were just like
opening up to each other.

(01:12:59):
I think this had happened or II don't.
I don't really know exactly howit happened it's just like it's
just so many people around me,like again, like I'm around
women sometimes, or even like mysister.
My sister would be like, oh youknow, uh, like what.

(01:13:20):
Maybe she showed me somebodyshow yeah but I never went back
on his page, okay, kept lookingat shit.

Speaker 1 (01:13:27):
I was just like then would you hate it?
Was you like?

Speaker 2 (01:13:29):
scroll hating oh no, no, it was just more so like.

Speaker 1 (01:13:34):
This nigga ain't better than me.
Yeah, bruh your ego, be likethat, don't even.

Speaker 2 (01:13:39):
I mean yeah, it'll definitely make me work harder
and shit.

Speaker 1 (01:13:42):
Just like bruh nigga.
What if he's killing shit?
Would that bother?

Speaker 2 (01:13:47):
you Maybe at the time of the breakup, just because it
was messy.

Speaker 1 (01:13:51):
What if he wanted to collab with you?
Come on, he's like you know.
Actually I love your work.

Speaker 2 (01:13:58):
I'm going to screenshot that.

Speaker 1 (01:14:00):
That's going to make you feel too good.
Oh God, oh.

Speaker 2 (01:14:03):
God, I'm going to be like okay.
Might leave that nigga on thescene.
What are you talking about?
Nah, yeah no, I I ain't reallyhave like a hating bone toward
him.
Uh, I don't really be like madat guys that much.
Again, I haven't been in like alot of crazy situations, but I

(01:14:25):
always had hypotheticalsituations in my head that if a
guy tried to get at my girlwhile I was with her and if you
know, if she ended up doingsomething like while we were
together or whatever I would Istill wouldn't be too mad and I
can't be friends with him.

(01:14:46):
Yeah, I don't respect this nigga, but like I don't hate this man
.
You just being a fuckboy andlike it's really on the girl.

Speaker 1 (01:14:57):
I agree.

Speaker 2 (01:14:58):
So, yeah, I don't really just like hate people for
just being themselves.

Speaker 1 (01:15:03):
So what if you're still in a relationship with her
?
Would you want that guy to letyou know if that he was having
sex with your girl?
This is like I'm just saying ingeneral oh, I wouldn't.

Speaker 2 (01:15:19):
I don't want to talk to no other dude about nothing,
but I would want to know, so Icould let her go okay, I got you
so she's not coming, if thesituation is, she ain't going to
tell me.
I would want somebody to tellme what's going on.
So I know it's almost like, nomatter how much that feels, it's

(01:15:41):
just like.
Thank you for telling me.

Speaker 1 (01:15:43):
So, now I know who's in this house with me Okay, so
you'll be totally cool with if Igot.

Speaker 2 (01:15:49):
Would not be totally cool.

Speaker 1 (01:15:54):
No, I'm just saying he deemed you like bruh.
I didn't know who you was untilyou know she she had mentioned
she had a boyfriend.
I looked you up and I thinkthat you're hilarious.
I kind of feel bad that I'mhaving sex with your girl.
I just wanted to let you knowbecause I feel bad.
Man to man, I would respect him.

Speaker 2 (01:16:07):
Okay, for sure, I don't think there's a lot of
guys like that out there he'slike Do you wanna?

Speaker 1 (01:16:12):
Do I need to prove it , do I need to see?
Do I need to show you thisvideo?

Speaker 2 (01:16:17):
I'll show you, bro, you know, like to let you know
it's real.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
Does your number start with a901 no?

Speaker 1 (01:16:22):
I was actually gonna show you the back shots I was
giving.

Speaker 2 (01:16:24):
Yeah, I know I'm like yeah, yeah, I would feel I
wouldn't respect them then.

Speaker 1 (01:16:32):
Yeah, but the first initial message.
I'm like but, would you want toslightly see the back shots?

Speaker 2 (01:16:38):
No, no, what to see my girl getting killed by some
other man.
Yeah, yeah, yeah, oh no, I'malready going through it,
knowing that she's having sexwith some other dude.
Yeah.
And I'm looking at her,probably while I'm reading this
message yeah, would it feel less?

Speaker 1 (01:16:57):
but would it feel less worse if she's like, but
his penis was small no, okay,like it would.

Speaker 2 (01:17:06):
it would feel I wouldn't even know how to take
that.
I wouldn't even know how totake this.
I wouldn't even know how totake that, because I don't even
think if she's still having sexwith this dude and this dude
came out and said that I don'tknow.
I would just like cut my mindoff from thinking, because it's
too much to think about.

(01:17:26):
It's like, bro, first of allyou probably lying.
And then I'll be thinking tomyself like why am I thinking
she's lying?
Why you probably lying?
And then then I'll be thinkingto myself like why am I thinking
she's lying?
Why am I?
it just be too much, but so Iwould just respect the fact that
he said something so I can lether go.

Speaker 1 (01:17:44):
Yeah, like it wouldn't even be a question yeah
, but you don't think you cantake somebody back.
I thought you said if theycheated one time?

Speaker 2 (01:17:51):
if they cheated one time it depends on, I don't know
, I don't know but it's also theembarrassment that comes with
it.
Yeah, it's likeself-embarrassment yeah like you
gotta look at yourself in themirror or now that'll start
changing stuff.
It's like you know she's outwith her girls and stuff.

(01:18:11):
Now you asking like one or twomore questions than you would
have.

Speaker 1 (01:18:14):
Yeah, yeah and it's just like I wouldn't even like
this yeah, I don't like I don'tlike feeling like that yeah, and
then you see him out there andwe're like he's trying to shake
up with you, like damn, y'allstill together like damn.
I tried to warn you.

Speaker 2 (01:18:30):
You good oh my god, that would fuck me up.
That would be a silent ridehome you gonna be mad at him.

Speaker 1 (01:18:39):
I'm not mad at him, I'm mad at her.

Speaker 2 (01:18:40):
Still, all the mad goes straight back on her.
As soon as I see this man, he'slike y'all still together.

Speaker 1 (01:18:45):
I'm like you see, the Michael Ealy, jonathan Majors
thing and she runs and hugs him.
That would be wild.
Right, the Michael E Lee,jonathan Majors thing and she
runs and hugs him.

Speaker 2 (01:18:53):
Oh, that would be wild right, bruh, I would have
to break up Like now nowadays.
I just realized bruh just breakup when the shit is small.
So that is way far past that.

Speaker 1 (01:19:09):
Yeah, yeah, of course I'm adding so much self, yeah,
yeah yeah, like yeah, if she'sreacting like that, then she
never yeah, yeah, she's, she'sher, her mind.
She don't really respect youfor real oh god yeah, yeah,
because you gotta look at himwith disgust, you know?

Speaker 2 (01:19:24):
yeah, let's go though and then she can't even she
can't say nothing.
I've been with women whoprobably I'll never, I'll never
know the full story ofeverything that has happened.
And then I've been with womenwho probably I'll never, I'll
never, know the full story ofeverything that has happened.
And then I've been with womenthat probably told me too much
where I'm like damn.
I respect you for telling methe truth, but like why you do

(01:19:45):
that you know, but then there's,like I said, there's other
women.
It's like I would never evenknow and I feel more.

Speaker 1 (01:19:53):
I feel more uneasy with the woman that I would
never, ever know versus thewoman that told me that she
fucked up yeah, yeah, I remember, just like my, when I was young
, very insecure, I coulddefinitely see myself in a place
to where I was like pleasedon't tell me you know, me now.

(01:20:14):
No, now it's completelydifferent.
I want to know yeah, being holdyeah yeah, but but I think it
was just when you're like, whenI was deeply in love, insecure,
and I felt like I got somebodythat was way better than myself,
then I could that.
That's probably where it camefrom that just reminded me.

Speaker 2 (01:20:35):
Neo definitely said that shit years ago.
You remember that?
No, he said that when he hadhis wife at that one time and he
said if you're doing something,don't even tell me.
But in reality he was doing abunch of stuff okay, and that
makes sense.
Now, I don't know, I just had a.
That's a moment.

Speaker 1 (01:20:55):
Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, but it was just insecurity
I faced with myself and how Ivalue myself in my mind
absolutely that.

Speaker 2 (01:21:04):
That I realized that a lot, especially this year.
Oh, I mean, you know, like withthe past girl, whatever, like
that.
Like that's definitely somethingthat I realized with my
relationship with women is thatI think I had always kind of saw
myself in this form of like Ineed to grow, like from where

(01:21:26):
I'm at or whatever, that I wouldsometimes not even put
boundaries on myself for like myown growth or whatever, and I
would just like see myself like,damn, steve, you could have got
better with that, or you couldget better with this, or you
could do this, but not like ahard like set concrete thing,
like but no, you need to do this, you need to do this.
And I think that opened up waysfor me to kind of accept flaws

(01:21:51):
from people.
And then, which is what you'resaying, it's kind of like when
you don't really fully respectyourself or like that, that
insecurity kind of shows, likein a way, or that insecurity
comes from a different place.
And then when you finally getto the point where you like, but

(01:22:11):
I'm, you know, I, I don't docertain things in a relationship
.
I don't treat certain peoplelike this or this, that and the
other, like you know it, it putme on a total different level,
like of um, or it is going toput me on a different level now,
like in terms of like dating,because, like, if a girl says

(01:22:37):
like, I'm going to call youtomorrow?

Speaker 1 (01:22:39):
she don't call me tomorrow.
Hey, like she justdo-do-do-do-do.

Speaker 2 (01:22:42):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, it's small shit, you know.

Speaker 1 (01:22:43):
I mean, it's some things.
It's just like you got to watchout behavior and the actions.
You can get grace, you know.
Sometimes you know, butgenerally I can tell who means
well, for the most part I cantoo.
Yeah, yeah.
And then you know, I even youknow there's one more thing I do
want to get to that we forgotto miss and we're kind of

(01:23:05):
running a little long, but tokind of pin it when he was
talking about the relationshipit was like I was just remember,
I just remember, I say, brett,I don't know why you put putting
up with this is like you knowyou're him, you know I mean,
yeah, but there was one thingthat I want to mention about
that the viral video of themorning routine from the Ashton

(01:23:25):
Hall dude, yeah, like, do youlook at a video like that,
indeed, and what would he do?
you think it's like viralbecause it's people are really
watching it, or it's just pushed, you know, mechanically,
because you have organic and youhave mechanic mechanically, and
do you think it's like moremechanically viral?

Speaker 2 (01:23:45):
I think that was organic okay I think that was
organic because it was justridiculous okay, it was, it was
just way too much.
And then, like he kept puttinghis face in the water, which is
a great thing to do we, that'sactually a good thing yeah, I
agree I agree.
But um, it was just so extremeand he got up at three something

(01:24:06):
and then, like, all it takes isfor somebody to see your video
and if you post like somethingorganic, like that, like not
trying to be funny, not tryingto do it, it's just you.
And then if somebody sees that,and then they make fun of you
and that's the actual trend.
Oh, okay, and then the trend islike now everybody's making

(01:24:30):
these videos, acting like theywoke up at 3, 7 pm.
I'm working out.
I'm doing all that.
So now it makes.
Now it makes your video evenfunnier yeah yeah, so I feel
like that was that.
I feel like it was organic,because I saw a lot of people uh

(01:24:52):
uh, my my, uh uh, influencerfriends and stuff, like they
start doing that stuff.
Like even Mr Mr Beast like dida video with him, like the when
he was going viral.

Speaker 1 (01:25:04):
Oh, okay.

Speaker 2 (01:25:04):
Yeah, he literally like called him up and then
start acting like he was doingit with him.

Speaker 1 (01:25:10):
Oh, acting like he was doing it with them.
Okay, no, that's hilarious.
So because it's just followingthe trend and then make sure
video get that much biggerbigger.

Speaker 2 (01:25:17):
Yeah, it creates a trend okay, yeah, exactly, yeah
versus just that one.

Speaker 1 (01:25:21):
Thing yeah, that's actually.

Speaker 2 (01:25:24):
I love it, you know, it's just and it go bigger from
that yeah, but same thing thathappened, uh, with.
I did a video and it was me andI forgot the name Waiting to
exhale and I was laying in thebed with a girl and then she was
just like I want to buy a houseand I was like where she's?

(01:25:45):
Like in Sky's Tale.

Speaker 1 (01:25:46):
Oh yeah.

Speaker 2 (01:25:47):
Yeah, I want to get married.
What you doing on Friday.
And they took my sound and thenpeople start doing it
themselves.
It was mostly women, women, men, and it'll be like when you on
that jail phone call knowingthat you ain't going to hear
from them again when you theymade it a trend.

(01:26:09):
I didn't know that.
Oh yeah, that video.

Speaker 1 (01:26:12):
I saw just the view count, yeah, no.

Speaker 2 (01:26:15):
The view count on my page is crazy, but that one
actually traveled.
There's no telling how far it'smy voice, my voice is out there
.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So it's just a trend fromsomething.
So it kind of correlates towhat I was saying.

Speaker 1 (01:26:30):
I understood, yeah, but I think we nailed it bro.

Speaker 2 (01:26:34):
Yeah, bro, this has been a great episode.

Speaker 1 (01:26:36):
All right.
Well, we'll be back withanother episode or two for the
culture we love y'all.
All right.
All right, peace.
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