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May 2, 2025 • 30 mins

We highlight a building race war with the case of Shiloh Hendrix, Kanye "Ye" West's dentist allegedly drugging him, and a hypothetical Gorilla question that surprisingly took the Internet by storm.

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Speaker 1 (00:03):
This is Red Pilled America. You're listening to Red Pilled
America's Famboogie or getting into part two. Please become a
FANBAM member. Go to Redpilled America dot com click join
in the top menu. We need you guys to support,
support which you love, or it goes away. Crazy story

(00:25):
going viral right.

Speaker 2 (00:26):
Now, literally as we.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
Speak, literally as we speak. And it was something that
I saw cross my feed, my ex feed earlier in
the day, and I just didn't entirely register. But now
it's going crazy viral. There was this incident that happened
at this park. It looks like it happened in Rochester,

(00:49):
I want to say Minnesota. And this woman, this white woman,
like tattoos, sleeved tattoos at a park holding on to
her kid looks to be maybe one plus.

Speaker 2 (01:02):
Years old and half he's eighteen months old.

Speaker 1 (01:05):
And somebody comes up starts videoing her. And this is
what happens.

Speaker 3 (01:10):
You call him a child? Did you call the child
the ward? It is my own business you call him? Okay,
why don't you have the boss to say it right
now again? Okay, all right, that's what you say. Nobody
digging a little kid? You call him a little child.

(01:35):
Are you about to hit him? You're chasing him here?
My son stopped.

Speaker 1 (01:39):
So apparently this kid, according to this mom, by the way,
he was not five years old. I would We don't
know how old he is, but he doesn't look fine.
Eight nine, ten something along those lines. Playing in a park. Apparently,
according to the mom, the black kid allegedly went into
their diaper bag and was rifling through it, potentially to

(02:01):
steal something, is what she She calls him the hard,
hard and R word. And so this guy grabs his
phone and walks up to her and videotapes her and
confronts her on saying the N word to this kid.
So what happens is he posts it online like we've

(02:23):
been seeing over the course since, like going back to
the early Trump days, where you have somebody kind of
confront somebody that they think is being racist. Obviously, she
said something racist to the kid. She shouldn't have said
anything like this to the kid. She's the grown up
in the space. She shouldn't have said that. He walks
up to her, videotapes her, and then posts it online

(02:44):
and the thing goes viral over the course of the
last day. So now you have all of these kinds
of white people coming to her defense. She posts a
give send go on this. Let me read that for
you guys. When I first saw the gifts go, it
was around twenty thousand dollars was raised. And this is

(03:06):
what she says. My name is Shiloh, and I have
been put into a very dire situation. I recently had
a kid steal from my eighteen month old son's diaper
bag at a park. I called the kid out for
what he was. Another man, who we recently found out
has had a history with law enforcement, proceeded to record

(03:29):
me and follow me to my car. He then posted
these videos online, which was caused my family and myself
great turmoil. My social Security number has been leaked, my
address and phone number have been given out freely. My
family members are being attacked. My eldest child may not
be able to be going back to school. Even where

(03:50):
I exercise has been exposed. I'm asking for your help
to assist in protecting my family. I fear that we
must relocate. I have two small children who do not
deserve this. We have been threatened to the extreme by
people online. Anything will help. We cannot and will not
live in fear. Thank you. She the original I believe

(04:13):
it was twenty thousand dollars was the goal. That goal
has been raised to two hundred and fifty thousand dollars.

Speaker 2 (04:19):
Now, oh wow, last time it was I thought it
was one fifty.

Speaker 1 (04:22):
Yes, well now it's two fifty and the number is
getting close to two hundred thousand dollars raised in I
want to say, like maybe, well, I.

Speaker 2 (04:31):
Think today eight hours and today, oh my gosh, that's nuts.

Speaker 1 (04:35):
Eight hours. So everybody is coming to this woman's defense.
What are your thoughts on this, Adriana?

Speaker 2 (04:41):
Okay, my thoughts on this are number one. I don't
feel sorry for this woman at all. She's an adult,
and I find it disgusting that she would call a
little boy the N word. I don't like it one bit.
Was what the little boy? Was he doing something? Yes? Absolutely,

(05:04):
but he is a child. We don't know anything about
this kid. We don't know anything about his home life,
we don't know what he's being taught, we know nothing
about him. But what we do know is that he's
a little boy. He's a kid, and she was the
adult in this situation and she acted a fool. I
don't like it. I don't feel sorry for her, she
brought this upon herself. But I also don't like that

(05:28):
this immigrant, this man that's not an American, decides to
film her and is coming into our country and profiting
off of cancel culture. I have a problem with that
as well, and have let it. Apparently he might be
an alleged rapist. Is this true?

Speaker 1 (05:47):
We don't know that. The Internet is saying that he's
tied to this man that committed some kind of a
sexual assault act. We don't know if that's true or not.
I have not been able to clearly find a connection.
I've been seeing it all over the place, and the
account that people are using to say this is the
guy that did the video. He's privatized his account now,

(06:10):
so it's hard to tell whether it is him or not.
If it is the guy that privatized his account, then
there is a connection to potential sexual assault case. But
he could have made his account private because of that
sexual assault case and not have anything to do with this.
I have not been able to find a connection to it.
So but the thing is is this there's like a

(06:32):
building race war. We talked about this with the Anthony
Carmelo story and Austin Metcalf, Anthony Carmelo stabbed and killed
Austin Metcalf at a track meet in Texas. And now
here we have this case where I think, what's happening
here is people saw Anthony Carmelo stab and kill this

(06:55):
Austin Metcalf guy gets out on a twenty five I
think it was twenty five thousand dollars bond, whatever it was,
it was very low amount of money for potential murder.
And people think that he murdered him. If you listen,
if you read the police report, you see that he
murdered him. In my opinion, it was murder. But and so,

(07:15):
but this Anthony Carmelo guy puts up a Gifts and
Go account and raises hundreds of thousands of dollars, and
people are like, how can all of these people be
given this man hundreds of thousands of dollars after you
read the police report and clearly see that he provoked
this and stab this guy. So people are seeing this
and they're reacting to this, and it's a tribal thing

(07:39):
that's happening right now. People are getting behind this woman.
This is the problem with all of these kinds of cases,
and I'm not going to jump into this. The same
thing that let's say, some of the race hustlers within
BLM does is they pick these heroes that you cannot
get behind, okay, that are doing things and that are
living a life that is not an example, uh for

(08:04):
a moral example for the public. This woman may have
been frustrated, she may have been who knows, maybe she's
in some issue in her town where she's facing there's
some kind of like racial animists there, and maybe there's
some history to it. But ultimately, you just don't say
that to a kid, Okay, you just you don't say

(08:25):
that to a kid. It's just not going to solve
the problem. And it's just race things just continues to
build and build and build. But I do understand the
frustration with all of these white people that feel like
they are under attack, that they are feel like they
are being that they're losing jobs to illegal immigration that

(08:49):
they have you know, Haitians coming into their town and
invading their town. They be the pets, they could potentially
be eating the pets, because there are reports of pet
either and there's a frustration there. And I gotta say,
working on this, what's an American series. When you work
on these kinds of stories, you're doing research. You go

(09:10):
to various sources for research. And I started to notice
I would go to, like, you know, an AI thing here,
ask a question. I go to Wikipedia, looking the sources,
the footnotes, kind of find things there. You look for hints.
And at one of the points, I was talking to
chat GPT, my boy, chat Chatty.

Speaker 2 (09:28):
That's my that's what I call my Yes, my girl,
her name's Chatty.

Speaker 1 (09:31):
Well, we're using the same chatty I named.

Speaker 2 (09:34):
You know, it's a hymn. It's a hymn, and I
do call him.

Speaker 1 (09:38):
I went to chat GPT and I was asking some
question about something to kind of, you know, get a
feel for what its response would be in regards to
this What's an American series? And I started to notice
that every time that it mentioned black people, it capitalized
the B in black, but when it would mention white people,
it would not capitalize the W. And I had heard

(10:01):
this for quite time, kind of debate about this, and
I didn't pay attention to it. I didn't know what
it was about in care, but it did register me
that there's some kind of debate over capitalizing these letters.
These black and white references. So I asked chat GPT this,
I said, I noticed that you capitalize black but not white.

(10:25):
Why this is the way chat GPT responded, that's a
thoughtful question, and it reflects an ongoing discussion in journalism, academia,
and public writing. Here's a clear explanation why black is
often capitalized. Black is capitalized when referring to people of
African descent to recognize it as a shared cultural and

(10:45):
ethnic identity, not just as skin color. It's similar to
capitalizing terms like Latino, Asian or Native American. This convention
emphasizes community history and social experience, not just biology. Why
white is not not typically capitalized. Many style guides do

(11:06):
not capitalize white because white has historically referred more to
a social category of privilege than to a shared cultural
or ethnic group. There is no single white culture or
heritage in the same way black often signifies a collective
historical experience, especially in the US context. There's also caution,

(11:31):
as capitalizing white has been used by white nationalist groups
to imply racial solidarity or supremacy. So here you have
a clear indication of this kind of bias against whites.
They're saying that white is not a culture. It is

(11:51):
like a is not a something that you can group
people by from a shared history and a shared culture.
All you need to do is look at American history
and know that that is false. All you need to
do is watch MSNBC when all they do is point
at white people and talk about white privilege and talk
about white this and white that, and blame things on

(12:13):
white supremacy. And they're constantly categorizing people as white. Yet
the second that you start to say, okay, well we
are a people, they say, oh, no, you're not that.
There is no such thing as white culture. If you
look at American history, there is a such thing as
white culture. The country was founded to target or to
try to encourage white people to come into the United States.

(12:37):
That's just the history of things. And I think people
are seeing this now and they're they're getting tired of it.
I think this woman is expressing frustration. This man should
not have gone off and videotaped her.

Speaker 2 (12:49):
I don't know that Shiloh is that deep. Shiloh looks
kind of trashy to me with her for full sleeve
and her hand tattoos, and she looks kind of trashy.
To me, I don't know that she's that deep. I
think that the people that are funding her are probably
feeling a certain way. I think it's that's fair to say.
I think that in our society, unfortunately, there's only one

(13:11):
acceptable form of racism, and it's against white people. It's
it's widely accepted, which is unfortunately it shouldn't be. Racism
is racism is racism. However, that does not make what
this woman did right. She set herself up, she did
what she did, She put herself in that position, and
I don't think she deserves a penny.

Speaker 1 (13:31):
I think she knew that the camera was on, and
she still said those things to the camera. I think
what it is is expressing a frustration. I think she
was wrong, she shouldn't have done it. But I also
don't think that her life should be canceled because of it.
I don't think because you catch somebody in one moment,
you have this guy following her around, she's probably feeling

(13:54):
a little bit intimidated by a man following her. She's
got her young baby baby, and so she's basically trying
to say, I'm not afraid of you, and I'm going
to do this thing that you're saying that I'm not
that I should be afraid of to get you away
from me.

Speaker 2 (14:07):
That's a very very solid point. So I would feel
very threatened to think about a man, Yeah, was following
me around and videotaping me, and you know, kind of
threatening me, and you.

Speaker 1 (14:19):
Say things in those kinds of heated moments.

Speaker 2 (14:22):
You puff up, you puff your chest like I'm not afraid. Yes,
that is definitely my style.

Speaker 1 (14:27):
So I could imagine that being the case. And it
wasn't smart. But should her life be destroyed because she
said a word? No, I don't think so. I'm sorry,
I don't think. I don't think that her life should
be destroyed because of that. I think that she did
something very stupid. But I think the point here that
I want to I do want to close this out,

(14:49):
is that there is a push right now for a
race war. I could feel it. We're seeing it with
the Carmelo thing, We're seeing it with this thing. I mean,
by the time tomorrow or by the time within the
next twenty four hours, bet you that gets well above
two hundred and fifty thousand dollars, there's a building race
warw're getting ready to enter into the summer. You're also

(15:10):
seeing they're having a hard time attacking Trump. There's people
that still will stay by him, that believe in what
he's doing, believe in what he's the these deportations that
he's attempting to do. They believe in his campaign, they
believe in his policies, and they're going to try to

(15:31):
figure out any way possible to attack, any attack vector possible.
And the things that worked during his first term was
things like happened that Charlottesville, things like this race thing,
things like happen with the BLM riots in twenty twenty.
They're going to try to do this again, and they're
setting up for that, the powers that be, And so

(15:53):
don't buy into it. Don't out of frustration call some
kid the N word because they they've rifled through your
diaper bag.

Speaker 2 (16:01):
Listen, would I be pissed off if that happened, of course, absolutely,
But to call the kid a racial slur is just
it's beyond the pale. It's disgusting. Agreed, So we're going
to take At the end of the day, you just
have to call people out for their bad behavior, and
their color of their skin doesn't matter, should not matter.

Speaker 1 (16:20):
Who cares exactly. We're going to take a quick break,
but I want to get into this meme that's been
going around that took the world by storm this last
week about one hundred men taking on a gorilla. And
also there's a crazy story about Yay West, Kanye West
suing his dentist and suing him for getting him addicted

(16:44):
to a dental drug that kind of explains what we've
been seeing with him over the course of last year.
We're going to get into that right after the break,
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IFCJ dot org. That's IFCJ dot org. You're listening to
red Field America's Famboogie And we're gonna talk for a
second about a meme that took the world by storm

(18:14):
this last week. And I don't know why it did,
and I want to get your opinion on this, Adriana
as a woman, because as a man, I kind of
understand it, but it blew up. It's like crazy proportions,
and it's this whole thing that this guy, he posted
this tweet really small account, so he basically posted this

(18:39):
question that one hundred men could beat a gorilla, one
gorilla up just with their bare hands and they just
have to act coordinatedly. And this thing went crazy online.
It has over two almost three hundred million views on
x and I've seen so many videos made of a

(19:03):
gorilla fighting one hundred men. I've seen, you know, it's
expanded into a hippo, you know, I think Matt Walsh said, well,
I think a hippo would have it'd be a lot
harder for one hundred men to kill a hippo. Polar
bear kind of came in. Two hundred men's against a
cold polar bear. This is one of these things that
I think only men could kind of get down with.

Speaker 2 (19:25):
I agree. I literally don't care about this meme one bit.
And you have been really really seeing a laughing and
laughing and laughing at night looking at your phone with.

Speaker 1 (19:37):
These memes, well, because it's been this kind of hilarious
thing where guys, it's kind of like the new Roman Empire. Okay,
yeah it is.

Speaker 2 (19:45):
I agree with that. Now. I do think one hundred
men could beat a gorilla, but I think all of
those men, I think most of them would end up dying.
So if you're you know, like one of the first,
you're definitely gonna die, and if you're one of the last,
you're definitely still going to get hurt.

Speaker 1 (20:06):
There's apparently have like a thirteen hundred pound crushing force
with their hands. They could bench like I don't know,
well over one thousand pounds. I think they they're about
four hundred pounds total weigh I think so, yeah, but
it's all muscle, and it's all muscle. Yeah, so I
mean it is one of those kinds of things. It

(20:28):
was a fun thing to watch. I think that there's
a difference. This is a difference between men and women.
Patrese O'Neill had an old joke. He was an old
stand up comedian that died a couple of years back,
and he talked about that men could be philosophical about
the stupidest shit, but it is something that that women
just can't relate with, is that we can basically talk about,

(20:52):
you know, would you have His joke is a guy
would walk up to a friend and ask would you
have sex with a girl with no nose? And that
the guy I would sit there and really seriously contemplate
it philosophically, and then he would do the same thing.
And he'd walk up to a woman and you know,
ask her about this question, would you have sex with

(21:13):
a man with no nose? And she would completely not like,
she would not entertain the question whatsoever. And this is
kind I think this story kind of for whatever reason,
it really tells the difference between men and women, and
how different we are, how different the sexes are. Yeah,

(21:36):
this is not something you want to entertain at all.

Speaker 2 (21:39):
You know, It's just it's so stupid.

Speaker 1 (21:42):
It is stupid, but it made it onto NBC.

Speaker 2 (21:45):
Okay, let me ask you something. What's your plan to
beat the gorilla?

Speaker 1 (21:50):
I think somebody has to get behind him and get
the eyes first. I have to get the eyes. You
thought about that, Oh no, I've totally thought about this.
This is the difference between men and women. See, we
have to do these kinds of things.

Speaker 2 (22:03):
This is true.

Speaker 1 (22:04):
This is the thing that like men. The difference between
men and women is is that men actually sit back
and think about how they can do this and how
they can win.

Speaker 2 (22:15):
This is why it takes you, guys so long to
do something after we tell you to do it.

Speaker 1 (22:18):
Well, there's that, but I think that with men, the
fact that there are men out there that would consider
doing something like this is what pushes society forward. Okay,
you have men that would take these kinds of risks
and would plan out something like this and strategize about
how to do this. I think the women could probably

(22:40):
would have a better time defeating the gorilla because they'd
nagge it to death. Oh is that right? Right? Naggot,
nagget naggot, and then it would die, and then they
would be all good.

Speaker 2 (22:50):
No, we would just tell you to go fight the
gorilla and then we would live happily ever after. And
your dummies go do it.

Speaker 1 (22:57):
I think you take out his eyes. I think you
have to, and then you'd have to somehow get it
into your naked choke hold. I think that's the main
way that you would do it.

Speaker 2 (23:06):
I'm so embarrassed for you. Why and then take out
his eyes first?

Speaker 1 (23:13):
Okay, okay, let's move on. Yes, please, let's move on.
So there's this story about Yay West. He sued his dentist.
I don't know if you guys noticed this, but he
did these kinds of this thing to his teeth for
a minute where he had it was like adorned with
this kind of the thing in the hip hop world

(23:34):
where you will replace your teeth with like jewels or
a grill.

Speaker 2 (23:38):
He had like just to straight up like a titanium grill.
I think he did, and it looked like vampire teeth almost.

Speaker 1 (23:45):
Well, apparently he goes to this guy who's this famous
dentist guy, a be jeweler, dentist, dude fully tatted head
like the guy looks nuts, okay, And I want to
read this from TMZ because it's I'd rather read this
because it's condensed than the actual letter to the dentist
that announced the announcing the lawsuit. Kanye West is geared

(24:09):
up to sue his former dentist, claiming he suffered injuries
and financial damages due to alleged reckless administration of nitrous oxide.
The Rappers legal team, headed by Andrew Jurkowski, sent a
notice of intention to sue doctor Thomas P. Connolly, who

(24:31):
they say became Yay's dentist in early twenty twenty four.
Yay's team claims that while he was under Connolly's care,
the dentist engaged in numerous inappropriate and dangerous practices that
were far outside the bounds of any legitimate medical purpose
or standard of care. Among this alleged inappropriate behavior, Yay's

(24:54):
side claims Connolly gave him excessive amounts of nitrous oxide
for non medical purposes, permitting and encouraging unsupervised self administration
of the gas, and continuing treatment despite adverse neurological and
behavioral signs. If you read the letter to the dentist.

(25:15):
They basically claim that this dentist actually delivered him this
nitrous oxide to his house in like it was kind
of like his pusher, a pusher, a pusher, like a
drug pusher, and it was costing Kanye fifty thousand dollars
a month now apparently last year. If you could see this.

(25:36):
Milo actually was the first one to talk about this
story because he was working for Kanye. I believe he
was his chief of staff. He noticed that this was
going on and called out the situation and people said,
you're lying, what have you? This was I want to
say it was last summer, and so he was the
one that broke this story today or excuse me, I

(25:58):
should say on Thursday, saying that Milo broke the story
with the letter, and it's very detailed. It goes into
this long, you know, case by case thing that this
dentist did, and it's at one point the letter claims
that the dentist apologized and said that what he was
doing was inappropriate. It almost sounds like the old Michael

(26:20):
Jackson stuff where you're giving like propothol was was that
what Michael Jackson's doctor gave him to help him go
to sleep. It sounds like Kanye was getting addicted to
the stuff and that all of a sudden the doctor
cut him off, and that he was having like kind
of withdrawals associated to it. He's all he was doing,
was talking about nitros oxide for a while, and they're

(26:43):
saying that it affected him mentally. It was affecting his
mental acuity. His wife was watching it happen. She was
trying to stop it as well, but this guy continue,
according to this letter, was continuing to give it to Kanye.
I feel like this is one of those things where
it kind of explains a lot of a lot of

(27:03):
his activities and maybe some of the things that had
been going on. Of course last year, if he was
actually getting high on this stuff, well.

Speaker 2 (27:12):
I've long said that I didn't think that what Kanye
has is mental illness. I've always thought it was drug abuse.
I don't know that for sure. It's just my guests,
my personal guests, and he has clearly been losing his mind.
So I mean, for a doctor to be doing this
with celebrities, I don't think it's as uncommon as people

(27:35):
think it is. Yeah, you know, I've known people who
were addicted to prescription drugs and they were getting them
legally from their doctor. And the doctor obviously know you know,
they know that these people they're junkies.

Speaker 1 (27:51):
They want to get in there. There's pr associated with it,
just money.

Speaker 2 (27:54):
There's big money.

Speaker 1 (27:54):
There's big money.

Speaker 2 (27:55):
There's money.

Speaker 1 (27:56):
Once you're rand a month, once you're kind of known
through in the circuit, through the celebrity circuit, those guys
get picked up from other celebrities. They start talking to
each other, they go to their house and that it
sounds like this what this guy was doing, according to
this letter, is that he was going to his house
to administer this stuff. The article goes on. Yea's attorneys

(28:18):
say he suffered from physical, psychological, and financial issues because
of doctor Conley's negligence. They're also claiming Bionca Censory, Kanye's
wife was harmed in the process as well, losing out
on Ye's companionship because of their addiction.

Speaker 2 (28:34):
So what a harmful Yeah, she was actually not harmed.
That was a blessing for her. She should be thinking
her lucky stars.

Speaker 1 (28:41):
We're told Connolly's been served with this letter already and
we've reached out for his response to it. We broke
the story Kanye's ex chief of staff, Milo Unapolis went
on to say, Kanye talked about nitrous oxide NonStop and
meetings turning his mood unpredictable and his directions to staffers incomprehensible.

(29:03):
So it's just one of those kinds of things where
it seems like this guy's troubles just seemed to have
been mounting up since the breakup with with his his
wife Kim. And I'm not making excuses for this guy.
I've already kind of been voicing my opinion on him

(29:23):
over the course of the last couple of months and
how disgusted I have been by his like publishing a
pornography and some of the other stuff that he's been
some of the taboos that he's been kind of, you know,
trying to break artistically. But it just I think all
it's been doing is making him do a deep dive
into darkness. And you know, he recently admitted to giving

(29:48):
a blow jobs to his cousin. You know, this is
this is a man that is in deep need of
prayers and God. He's obviously drifted far away from his
Jesus walks a day in his Sunday service days, and
I hope he finds it. That's it for this week

(30:13):
of Red Pilled America's famboogie. Be sure to see it's
going to be coming on Monday. What's an American? Part
three out this Monday. Please join the fanbam. Go to
Redpilled America dot com click join the top menu. We
need your guys, support, support what you love, or it
goes away. Thank you guys, and enjoy the rest of
your week. Until next time.
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Adryana Cortez

Adryana Cortez

Patrick Courrielche

Patrick Courrielche

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