Episode Transcript
Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
All right, here we go. When he's up in arms.
Are you ready, Whinnie? Okay, well she's taking him minute,
so taking him minute. Hi, everybody, it's the after Show.
Justin Whinnie. We're here. It's a Thursday, another gloomy day outside.
When he is now leaving the studio, Whennie will be
here waiting for you when you get back. Anyway, thank
you for listening. Hopefully you listen to the Billy and
Lisa Show and now you're listening to the after Show.
(00:21):
It is the Companion Podcast. It's where we sometimes talk
about the show, but sometimes we just talk about ourselves.
That's just the way it is, you know. And oh,
she's back. Okay, what's going on Whennie? Okay, you can
talk into the microphone. Okay, all right, well, welcome back
(00:42):
to Winnie after Anyway, on the show this morning, would
you miss You missed a really good topic that you know,
sometimes the topics we do on the show, they come
up naturally and I never know how they're gonna hit.
And it came from Lisa having her little mishap on
her clothes. Her body suit was on backwards yesterday and
then she just left it. So we were talking about
(01:02):
that and then we had the idea, wait, could this
be a topic, And so we did it. And I
gotta say, we got, like I don't even know, a
couple hundred calls and talk pecks about people that had
the same kind of clothing mishaps, and yeah, it's it's embarrassing.
It happens. But one thing I don't agree with. And
when you can, you can talk about this when she
comes back. If I am in public and somebody, even
(01:25):
somebody that I know, a woman has her shirt unbuttoned down,
like really far where her bra is showing.
Speaker 2 (01:32):
It's not your place to say something.
Speaker 1 (01:33):
I'm not saying anything, and not because I know you
like it, right, but some women do that.
Speaker 3 (01:39):
Yeah, oh, can we talk about that real quick? Last
week I was at Pecko Pet Smart whatever, get in
the dog groomed, and it was one of those days
where it was like the first one, it was like
forty degree day out last week or something like that.
It was funny, but it was still like forty and
these two girls they were probably my age, a little
bit younger, and they I see the first one, she's not,
you know, obese, but she's thicker wearing basically like thong
(02:04):
jean jean shorts right a crop top in like an
oversized open like sweater, but you could see every crevice,
every thought, I every and whatever. And I'm like, not, I'm not,
you know, small, like I celebrate all body sizes. You
can wear what you wants. Your business, not mine what
you wear. Then there was a girl that came in
her front after her, who was very tall and the
(02:26):
luptious like big breasts everything about her. I mean she
was three fifty maybe okay, like I mean maybe three
hundred pounds. She was tall, but tall, ambig notchet, you
know what I mean. She was wearing booty shorts where
they were eating her asks like I saw every celluli,
I saw every ass she like, I saw way too much.
Speaker 2 (02:47):
And I was just like girls.
Speaker 3 (02:48):
Like like we all you what I know? And you
know mean I wear sweats, I wear whatever, but like
if you're gonna look a little disheveled, at least be
like covered. And I was like appalled. I was like,
oh my god, I feel like I was like their mother.
And I would never body shame or close shame somebody.
But I was thinking, if I'm thinking this and I'm
(03:10):
progressive and douyu boo.
Speaker 2 (03:12):
What is some other person thinking when they see them?
Speaker 1 (03:15):
Yeah, do you think it's worse now? Not worse, But
do you know, do you think nowadays, the younger generation,
as opposed to when we were younger, dressed crazy.
Speaker 3 (03:25):
I see like girls who are in high school or
middle school wearing crop tops, wearing booty shug I've seen
way too many girls ass cheeks that are probably fourteen
years old, and I'm looking at them like, oh my god.
Speaker 2 (03:37):
But you know, there's some fucking creeps out there that
are fucking loving it. I'll tell you a story real quick. Now.
Speaker 3 (03:42):
This is a if you have teenagers or middle schoolers
or high schools. This is for you moms and dads
and cousins whoever, if you know a child in your
life that's between the ages of like eleven and fifteen,
listen to the story. So when I was in middle school,
I had a friend and she was a very tall
girl and chubbier when we were young. When we were
in middle school, she lost a lot of weight and
(04:02):
she was like six feet tall, six feet beautiful girl.
So in eighth grade, when she lost all the weight,
this girl was wearing booty shorts. If it was December
or June or whatever.
Speaker 2 (04:12):
Now, in middle.
Speaker 3 (04:13):
School, boys just drew over you because they're all you know,
they're pubanty, exactly right. But not only that, they're still
you know, eleven, twelve, thirteen. They're not they're not asking that,
they're not trying to fuck you know what I mean,
they are they're still preteens or whatever. So all the
boys in middle school were drooling over her. We got
to high school.
Speaker 2 (04:32):
It was bad because she was.
Speaker 3 (04:33):
Wearing the same outfits and the senior boys were who
were what seventeen eighteen, way more developed, were trying to
hook up with her. And all the senior girls hated
her because she was beautiful and tall and just showing
them everything. And she got in a situation with a
senior boy and everyone called her. I think she might
(04:55):
have been ripe. I don't know if she was or not,
but everyone, of course that she hooked up with him.
They were slept shaming her.
Speaker 1 (05:01):
You mean, like, what do you call that? What kind
of statutory is that what you're talking about?
Speaker 2 (05:05):
I think I think she I think she.
Speaker 3 (05:08):
I don't want to say like this. I think she
wrote a check her ass could in cash. Oh you
know what, I mean, I think she probably. I'm not
saying that any I. I just I feel I don't
want I want to say this in a way, but
like I saw this for years happening, and my mother
would say it because my mother knew her mother.
Speaker 2 (05:24):
My mom goes.
Speaker 3 (05:25):
My mom had known them for years because her brother
grew up with my brother and whatever. And my mom
was like, how is she learning her walk around with that? Like?
Speaker 2 (05:31):
How was she learning her walk around with that? And
when we got to high school and it got.
Speaker 3 (05:34):
Way worse because the older boys were trying to hook
up with her. And I think she wanted to be
excpted so bad because she was that chubby little girl
that didn't get any looks and now all these boys, hot,
you know, senior boys are trying to hook up with her.
She went to a party, went to a room of
home and the boys. I don't know what happened in
that room. She never came back to school.
Speaker 1 (05:53):
Where'd she go?
Speaker 2 (05:54):
She stayed home?
Speaker 1 (05:55):
Oh, she was homeschooled. She did see her again.
Speaker 2 (05:58):
I saw her again when I I was like in
my early twenties.
Speaker 3 (06:01):
She was working at the mall, at a jewelry store,
and I had not seen her and she had know
so she's no social media nothing. And I saw her
maybe eight or nine years ago at the mall, said
Hyderr obviously didn't at that point. She was like going
to call maybe like taking like classes somewhere, and she
had a boyfriend who I think it was like the
Middle Eastern. So we were talking about that and that
was the only time I had seen her, and that's
(06:21):
really yeah, and she they moved her. She bullied so
bad by the older girls. She was so traumatized by
what happened at that party that she never went to
school again. And my mom said, I'm not trying to
like blame her parents, but if my daughter's fourteen, she's
not going to a party with eighteen year olds wearing
what she was wearing, like like like there was but
(06:44):
her mother was like, look at my beautiful butterfly that,
you know what I mean. Like, so just because you
can wear it doesn't mean you should, right, And these
girls don't know what they're asking for sometimes. And I'm
not saying you're asking to be rapeding like that, That's
not what I'm saying. But when you put out a
certain image, certain people are going to expect you to
back it up, and if you don't, that's when things
(07:04):
are going And not that you should have to, but
that's when things can get really really messy. And I
think that's exactly what happened to her. And she never
and I mean never came to school again.
Speaker 1 (07:13):
That's really it's really sad because that one, whatever did
happen in her leaving school, you know, obviously affected her
and will affect her probably for life.
Speaker 3 (07:22):
It definitely did. When I saw her like a couple.
I mean this was almost ten years later. I saw
when we were like maybe twenty four to twenty five.
She wanted I think she was even mind you, I
don't heard. I had known taither as were little girls.
Like our brothers played baseball together, so we would be
playing together at the park, like since I was like
maybe like.
Speaker 2 (07:36):
Second and third grade.
Speaker 3 (07:37):
I didn't I never did anything to her, and I
even think she felt a little weird talking to me,
because you know what I mean, like and obviously I
didn't even you know, ask about anything.
Speaker 2 (07:46):
But it was just so weird. She disappeared off the
face of the earth. After that.
Speaker 1 (07:49):
Wow. Yeah, yeah, that's that's that's really unfortunate. But high
school thing.
Speaker 3 (07:54):
School is brutal iet I know, thought I get worried
for my nieces, like.
Speaker 1 (07:58):
Yeah, I am able to yeah, you know, like even
like there's a little bit of bullying going on, nothing
bad where he is now, and I'm like in my
head him thinking, no, same thing.
Speaker 3 (08:07):
My niece has a one girl in her class that
hates her and it is so mean to her and
doesn't like that they're you know, they they share best friend.
Well you know, oh that's my friend. No, that's when
they're they're eight years old. And my nieces like, I
don't know why she.
Speaker 2 (08:19):
Doesn't like me.
Speaker 3 (08:19):
I don't I'm nice to her, like I don't. And
now my niece at this point is like I don't
like her, but you know she I hate her, you know,
And I'm like all right, Like and they're only eight
in the beginning, That's what I'm saying.
Speaker 1 (08:31):
By the way, my sons eight and they're already doing
the have crushes.
Speaker 2 (08:35):
Oh yeah, oh yeah.
Speaker 1 (08:37):
Like I wasn't thinking about girls when I.
Speaker 2 (08:38):
Was that age, about drugs.
Speaker 1 (08:40):
No, I was talking about g I.
Speaker 2 (08:43):
Joe's turn for you.
Speaker 1 (08:45):
Yeah. Anyway, I gotta kind of show we have a
meeting to get to Winnie in two minutes. The big,
the big Thursday meeting all of Kiss programming, the program
director McKay, Mikey, and the rest of the people that
work here. So I hope you figure out whatever disaster
you got going on there. Sorry, your computers.
Speaker 3 (09:03):
You're going to at the local Legends thing for tomorrow,
complete disaster.
Speaker 1 (09:07):
Oh I need to do that too, debacle. Okay, well
you figure that out and uh anyway, tomorrow morning seven ten,
eight ten the match game. Also, Marlon Wayan is going
to be in studio at nine to ten. Piece out