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May 19, 2025 93 mins
Beyond the Cube: The Diddy Trial Heats Up.  The Diddy trial is underway and Cassie has took the stand to tell all.

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Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:01):
What's going on, guys, your boy h Q four twenty
here once again beyond the keep.

Speaker 2 (00:09):
Way beyond it, like out there and left field beyond it.

Speaker 1 (00:15):
We have got the power one with us. Okay, with
this fresh to Dance camera angle, mister Corey Hughes, Hello,
camera angle, Corey.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
Well, every time I had the goddamn thing up on
my fucking monitor, it just never looked right. And so
I got it on this little tripod daily which I
can move around and stuff. So I kind of like it.

Speaker 1 (00:37):
Okay, Okay, Well it gives a different feel, you know.
And uh and then what they said, people look for
a switch up, people looking for a switch up.

Speaker 2 (00:47):
I believe that's true.

Speaker 1 (00:49):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, tired of the same old, same old.

Speaker 3 (00:53):
Not me.

Speaker 1 (00:54):
I mean this is other people, you know what I'm saying. Uh,
I do almost the exact same thing every single week.

Speaker 4 (01:01):
To a t.

Speaker 2 (01:03):
Is that even? Is that life? My friend? If you're
just on rinse and repeat?

Speaker 1 (01:09):
Oh yeah yeah, I feel real good about it.

Speaker 2 (01:13):
I mean I can't argue with that.

Speaker 5 (01:15):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (01:16):
I ay, look, people who have a lot of excitement,
ton of variance, he said, the life ain't ain't really
going as great as maybe it should be.

Speaker 3 (01:25):
See.

Speaker 2 (01:26):
I guess I'm a guy that like every couple of years,
I just changed it up always. It's always been that way.
The longest stint I did really doing any I didn't
even really do one thing. But I was in Denver
for about four and a half years before I had
to up and go to Vegas, and then I was
there for two. The only reason I left Vegas was

(01:48):
because of COVID. I thought it was the end of
the world and I had to go hide in the mountains,
and so I went back to Colorado. Right, But here
I am again. I've been in this place. Let me see,
September will be three years. I've been there for Collins
and I'm getting antsy like a motherfucker already, Like I
need to up and change a big change, Like I
need to get the fuck back to Las Vegas. Not

(02:11):
that i'll have not that I won't have a cycle
there that will continue to be rinse and repeat for
a while, but Jesus Christ Man, like I'm I'm going
out of my motherfucking mind here. Not that this is
a bad place. It is a great place if you
want to retire or you're in college. Other than that,
I'm really I'm fucking bored. I mean, I went to
a show this week though. I went and saw I'm

(02:32):
at Fourth and fucking and I saw an Undeath and
Flesh God Apocalypse. Holy sh okay, that was a show.

Speaker 1 (02:43):
My friend, how we feeling?

Speaker 2 (02:47):
Oh yeah. Normally you go to shows and you got
like four opening bands, and you're like, these guys suck.
You know, every band was killer, Every band was killer.
Fucking Flesh God Apocalypse. So they come out there from
Italy and they have a chick singer who's like an
opera singer. They're all like symphonic, like they got the
synth in the background and the fucking you know, the

(03:09):
conan fucking opera vocals going on, and like, holy shit,
did they put on a show. I was blown away.
So but it was one of the first shows that
I went to in a long time where I knew
what the bands were like. But I wasn't like I
didn't know any of the songs, you know what I mean,
or any of that stuff. I just went to get
out the house and check out some new ship and
I was completely fucking blown away. Great tour.

Speaker 1 (03:33):
Okay, man, it's been so long since I've been to
a ship class. When I went to was at the Norma.
How we watch in Flames?

Speaker 5 (03:42):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (03:43):
Inflames? I saw in Flames and I listened to a
bunch of their albums. I went through a big new
metal phase where I got into like Unearthed and Inflames
and As I Lay Dying and a couple other bands.

Speaker 1 (04:00):
But probably Trivium Kills, stretching Gage.

Speaker 2 (04:03):
Yep, Trivium Kill, switching, all that stop and start kind
of stuff like on Earth. Yeah, on Earth are the best, man,
I love as far as that kind of genre goes.
They're just killer.

Speaker 1 (04:14):
But I saw I saw Unearthed at oz Fest and yeah,
and it hurt me though, because when they got done
with they said, you know, they had the last breakdown RIF,
and then they proceeded to smash all of their guitars.
I'm like this, because you smashing the six thousand dollar guitar.

Speaker 2 (04:34):
They got money. None of those guys are rich. They
got money, you know, they got money?

Speaker 3 (04:38):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (04:39):
Well yeah, and also the sponsors that they just give
them another guitar. Man, just hey, put that guitar in
the minivan. That's what I'm driving at the moment. Put
that guitar in my minivan. Okay, before you smash it,
pretend that you might do it, and then just put
it in the case and then put it in my minivan.
I appreciate you six thousand dollars guitar.

Speaker 6 (04:57):
I know what it is.

Speaker 1 (04:57):
They we're playing LTDs, I believe with the active pickups.
I was like, oh yeah, Well at that point in time,
I wouldn't. I wasn't quite deep into my career, was I.
I think I just I actually just started the job
I'm at in that well, fifteen years into but uh
so I was still I was still fairly breake. But

(05:21):
uh no, no, no, no, no, no, that's all right. That's
all right.

Speaker 6 (05:24):
I've been there.

Speaker 1 (05:25):
I've been at job a year. So I got my
first tax return, so I felt like a god. When
I got my friend, I was like, is this money mine?

Speaker 2 (05:36):
That's what they stole from you to admit they give
it to get.

Speaker 1 (05:40):
Yeah, that's why I'm saying that, Like you get three
thousand dollars back. I was like, this is my money?

Speaker 6 (05:47):
You know?

Speaker 1 (05:48):
Make how I'm like, oh man, I'm about to go
buy an amp.

Speaker 6 (05:51):
You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (05:52):
Uh, life hadn't changed really much.

Speaker 2 (05:55):
It's pretty simple, say, but I show the next show
I got coming up. It's like fish in July. Well,
here's the thing. I got Napalm Death the twenty seventh
of this month with the Melvins. But I got to
drive to Denver, And every time I drive to Denver,
I got to drop thirty bucks on gas usually like
ten twenty bucks on parking, or I can park on

(06:16):
the street a mile away. You know, it's like the
biggest hassle in the fucking world to go down to
Denver to go to a show. If I live there,
I'd be at shows all the time. But being fifty
sixty miles away, it's really fucking tough. But then you
got Napalm Death next month. Again, they're playing here two
months in a row, so I got I might catch
the one in June. If I don't go this month,

(06:36):
I probably won't go this month. But we just had
Obituary and terror, Like Denver is a fucking hotbed of
amazing music, Like everyone loves to come through here, and
everyone used to come through here because it was the
only weed legal state, right, so everyone had made a
point to come here to smoke weed. That's not the
case anymore. You got thirty plus states, I got legal
weed now. So but Denver has such great fucking music

(06:59):
on a regular fucking basis. But we got fish coming up.
But that same weekend we got the fuck Steve's thing
down in Pueblo. Is that same three days of fish.
So I can't not go to fish at least one
night because then they'll they'll they'll take my fish cart
away from me, you know what I mean. It's like
I'd be less of a man if I don't go

(07:20):
at least one night. So I'll probably go one night
to fish, and then I'll probably go the next night
to or maybe I'll do two nights of fish in
one night of down there in Pueblo. So either way,
it's going to be an expensive motherfucking weekend. So parking
is parking at fish is forty.

Speaker 1 (07:38):
Dollars forty forty what man, parking used to be like
five bucks?

Speaker 2 (07:46):
Yes?

Speaker 6 (07:48):
Forty?

Speaker 1 (07:50):
Yes, you mean to tell me that that that dirt
the dirts went up in uh inflated that much? That
dirt I put my car on because you won't let
you won't let me put on payment. I put it
on dirt. Inflation's real son, Hey, I think that's I
think the I think the biggest scam uh uh perpetrated

(08:12):
upon people across the world is the the raising of
your property value. I think I think that's a big scam.

Speaker 2 (08:24):
I mean your tax assessment based on your property value.

Speaker 1 (08:28):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (08:29):
Yeah, so once upon, it's here's the thing, here's a
big problem. Property taxes do go to some good ship.
They go to police, fire, all emergency services nine to eleven. Like,
so those have to get motherfucking funded no matter what, Like,
I don't give a fuck. Those have to be funded. Period.

(08:49):
So if you're not gonna do property tax, which would
be which is kind of fair because it's representative of
the people who live there, the people who live there
then get to pay for the local services. Makes sense.
I think the biggest problem is that as over time governments,
they're all corrupt. The very nature of government is corruption.
Over time, they start spending more money and they're like, oh, well,

(09:10):
now we need to raise the property taxes to be
more than just this. We we need to Like here in Denver,
their jacket, everyone's property tax up big time and they
passed the law like twenty years ago called Tabor tax,
something Benefit Bill of Right. Oh, the taxpayers Bill of
Rights is what it is. The money for property tax

(09:31):
is designated for x y and z. Once x y
and z is covered, this is what the law says.
Once x y and z is covered, all the money
that's left over from the property tax has to be
refunded to the property owners. Right. I think last year
it was something around eight hundred dollars that got sent
back to every property owner because of the TABOR right.

(09:53):
Colorado is not happy with that anymore, and they're trying
to get rid of TABOR. It is amended into the
state cons it's not just a law and they're trying
to overturn it because they keep pissing away money on
migrants and shit, Like they spent like fifty million dollars
last year on migrants or some shit. I'm probably underestimating
that number. It's probably a lot more, but it was
a fuck ton of money. It's the point I'm making.

(10:14):
So they pissed away your money and then they want
to jack you up through property taxes to make up
for their downfall, and it's like, what the fuck are
you talking about? Like it's some people in some places
pay thousands of dollars per month just for property taxes,
which means that you don't own your shit. You don't
own it. There's no point in buying anything as long
as you're going to be paying as much as if

(10:35):
you can rent a place for less than your property taxes,
then fuck your property tax.

Speaker 1 (10:41):
Right. Well, note of one of the things that I
speak about, as far as that goes like they're like,
oh man, my property went up. You know, I bought
it for one hundred and fifty and now it's worth
three hundred thousand dollars. I said, okay, that sounds good
in theory, but now all the comps in the area
they're going to be saying, oh, those are three one
hundred thousand dollars as well. And then if you try

(11:03):
to go and move, now you get rid of you
you sell that properly. Let's say you get through three
hundred thousand and four. Well, now our interest rates are
six and a half seven percent, and the houses have
went up. So the next place you go to, you know,
it's gonna bust your ass. So it actually takes away
your flexibility of actually movement, which is actually how people

(11:25):
are able to increase their revenue and stuff is through movement.
It actually it hinders our economy as far as the
movement factor, because so much of yourr is going towards
your property right.

Speaker 2 (11:41):
And so I'm putting together my second book. I'm about
halfway done. It's on Oswald, and it's all the documents
and stuff from his early life, and a huge part
of what my narrative is it has to do with
Marguerite Oswald and how she's broke all the time, had
to put her kids in orphanage because you has no money.
She's destituted on the Virgil homelessness. But this bitch had

(12:02):
like multiple property incomes. And so when you look at
the deals on her properties that she got, not only
could you buy a house for thirty five hundred dollars
back in nineteen forty five, her monthly payments on shit
were like fifty bucks. And one thing I noticed was
that she would buy a house, live in it for
two years, and then sell the house and move on,
just like a person today would rent an apartment. You

(12:25):
know what I mean, Like, this is what you did.
You bought the house. You didn't fucking rent, you bought
the house. I mean, that's how different things are today.
My parents bought their first house the year I was born,
I think seventy six in Brooklyn, New York. They paid
thirteen five hundred dollars, big backyard, decent small house for

(12:49):
like a you know, good for one child house, right,
and they sold it in eighty five for seventy four
to five. So that allowed them to basically pay most
of the down payment on the house in Florida they bought.
They paid like half the house off with their down payment,
you know what I mean. So times, and my dad

(13:10):
was a broke ass his whole life. My dad never
made more than like four hundred bucks in a week
his entire goddamn life, ever, And so for to be
able to raise a family and do that with four
hundred dollars a goddamn week, it's pretty fucking impressive. You
can't do that today at all, like at all.

Speaker 1 (13:25):
Hell no, hell no. And I was like, the way
I look at it, I was like, if if you
actually want the economy to succeed, then the number one
factor is having uh shelter prices under control. So if

(13:45):
the shelter prices get crazy, inflated, rent, your mortgage, things
of that nature, then that gives people less discretionary income
to actually go out and have the money move around.
It's just all tied up in houses, in houses and
rent So, I mean you look around different places, and

(14:07):
I know you said in some of the areas around there,
some of the rents are coming down. Well, let me
tell you in my area, My area is growing and
there's none of the rents that's coming down. Okay.

Speaker 2 (14:17):
Is it growing because people are running from places where
shit just got too expensive?

Speaker 1 (14:22):
It just happens to be growing because first we've got
a college here. Second, we've got a major hospital here.

Speaker 2 (14:32):
What's a population.

Speaker 1 (14:36):
We are? I think we're at one hundred and twenty
thousand now, and I think in twenty twenty or twenty
nineteen we were at like ninety five.

Speaker 2 (14:47):
The demographics on your city as far as population go,
are very similar to here. We're a little over one
hundred and twenty five in Fort Collins proper. But then
you have like the unincorporated areas that probably have another
fifty thousand.

Speaker 1 (14:58):
Right right, Yeah, yeah, So we've got like the nearby
provinces like so we've got Winterville, you you've got Greenville,
which is the town where the college is at uh,
and then nearby you have all.

Speaker 2 (15:11):
Your little little towns.

Speaker 1 (15:12):
You know what I'm saying, Huh is that spartans No,
EACU pirates pirates.

Speaker 2 (15:18):
I didn't know that. Never mind, I thought I actually
knew something about college sports for a minute.

Speaker 1 (15:23):
Yeah, yeah, it's the e C Yeah, e CU pirates.
Yeah yeah. So so yeah, that's that's that's that's where
I'm at. So like, this area is actually which I'm
not exactly sure how because I don't I don't see
quite quote unquote the jobs, but I guess they're around.
I guess that's a lot of people to work in
the hospital industry. And then we have a lot of
car dealership, so hospital car dealership, school and so, and

(15:50):
they're building all the time, and and the and the
school is actually expanding. Man, they're buying that properties all
over the place and expanding out. So uh, there's there's
quite a bit of opportunity there. So you know, with
the influx of people in and out, you know, of course,
are the population here increases. This is the population without
college students, all right, so you get a major uptick

(16:12):
when college students get here. But I mean you look around,
let's say that they're building a some new townhouses all right,
that they're gonna rent, all right, and not for buying purchase,
and they're gonna rent. But they got the rent between
twenty twenty five hundred dollars a month. I'm like, you know,

(16:35):
it's like.

Speaker 2 (16:36):
That's pretty wild. So when I moved to Vegas in
twenty seventeen, I had a lot of money then because
I was that was like that the peak of my
crypto and my parents died. I got about a bunch
of money from my parents when they died, and so
I was rolling in cash. And the place that we rented,

(16:56):
initially it was fifteen hundred dollars a month for four bedroom,
two story, twenty five hundred square foot place, huge wood
floor living room. We ended up getting it for seventeen
fifty a month because it was like ten people on
the fucking who were interested in it. And I was like, look,
just give me the fucking place, how much you want,
just give it to me. I'll take it, right. So

(17:17):
eventually they came back at seventeen fifty. That same place
today as like twenty four hundred, and it's only a
couple of years different. Like COVID fucked everybody Like COVID.
They just felt like this was the opportunity to take
and see. This is why I'm really glad with what's
happening now. So COVID call, and I've talked about this before.
I almost feel like a broken record. But COVID caused them,

(17:39):
caused the supply chains to get limited, the prices to
go up, all this stuff. Housing. They needed a lot
of housing at the time, so particularly in Vegas, where
I was and where I'll be again, hopefully fucking soon,
they just went all hogwild. Like you could get apartment
originally for like seven hundred bucks. That went up to
like eleven or twelve hundred bucks, and they built all

(18:01):
these fucking apartment complexes. Still right now, there's eleven complexes
that are still under construction in Las Vegas, and the
market's already starting to tank. The number of houses for
sale in Las Vegas right now has is like double
what it was the peak during COVID. It is absolutely unbelievable.
What we're seeing is a housing crash in slow motion

(18:22):
that's going to affect the entire country nationwide period. And
I think it's a glorious thing. It's an amazing thing.
The idea that somebody can actually go out and buy
a house again for one hundred and fifty grand and
actually get financing at a reasonable rate, I think is awesome.
And that's what we're going to be seeing for sure.

Speaker 1 (18:38):
Right And I mean, like I said, that free stuff
up because you want people to actually go out and
spend money. That's actually how the economy continues to do
well with it with money changing hands. Right when money
doesn't change hands, you you know, it looks like China.
Why you think why you think China wants to sail

(18:58):
this year? Because over there in China and neiggers don't
spend no money. They save everything, so they needed they
need to send shit out. So you know, we talking
about twenty one, twenty five hundred dollars a month, and
they won't. They say that you shouldn't spend no more

(19:20):
than what's that thirty percent of your income in in housing,
So you know what I'm saying, So that that that
means that somebody will have to be making seventy five
hundred eight grand a month.

Speaker 2 (19:32):
I was wondering, is that individuals or is that household
total or what like if you have two three roommates,
could you do that or what?

Speaker 1 (19:39):
Well, I mean that that makes sense there, But now
you're having to depend on that. Well, now you're having
to hope that you've got dependable people that's staying with you. Okay,
that's that's the number one thing, all right. And at
any point in time somebody could you know, find them

(20:01):
a cheek and feel like they, hey, man, I need
to go spread my wings. That's what the chick ten
that spread my wings or or vice versa. And all
of a sudden it's like, hey, hey, but I'm out,
And it's like, well, I mean, you paying a third
of his rent becuzin I mean, and you leaving so soon?

Speaker 2 (20:22):
Right, So I'm I'm in that situation too because I
have three roommates. I got my business partner, Chris and
his wife. They live upstairs, and we got another we
rent out a room across the hall. You know, everything's
kosher there. But if it wasn't for that situation, like
I'm broke all the time as it is, you know

(20:42):
what I mean, I'm broke all the time. That's why
I've been racking up credit cards and shit. But if
I were to leave, that would fuck them. You know
what I mean, We're all interdependent upon each other right now,
and I can't convince them to move to Las Vegas
with me and motherfuckers, I.

Speaker 1 (20:58):
Said, men, little move come on, hey and college, Hey,
you got to do I think you got to do
something like a slash show slash show presentation. That's what
we usually do in situation ideas.

Speaker 2 (21:12):
So basically what has to happen is I need to
be in a financial situation to break him off enough.
So what we're kosher financially and their coachure financially, which
means I need a I need a six figure deal,
you know what I mean, right, which, fortunately for what
I do is not off the table. I just needed
to come to frue, right Yeah.

Speaker 1 (21:31):
So that that that's the that's the uh, that's the
only downfall about the roommate aspect. If you don't have
people that are actually trustworthy and somebody just had to
drop of a wim just be like, hey, I'm gone,
because yeah.

Speaker 2 (21:45):
So me and Chris are bound by our business. We've
been in business together almost five years at this point,
and we just Reell Incorporated and all this stuff. So
to me, it's more than just a roommate situation. You know,
if I go, it fucks him and that's business, and
he fucks everything. Right, So our livelihood is dependent on
all of us sticking together at least for the time being,
you know.

Speaker 1 (22:05):
Right, right, right? So I mean, so you've got people
that you can depend on, you see, that's that's the
number one factor, which is very important.

Speaker 2 (22:14):
I don't have any real family, you know, I got
a cousin I could go live with.

Speaker 1 (22:19):
So I mean your sister, your sister.

Speaker 2 (22:22):
My sister. I love my sister, God bless her heart.

Speaker 1 (22:34):
Hey, Corey, if you can't say nothing nice, don't say
nothing at all.

Speaker 2 (22:37):
And my sister's a blue hair. I mean, she's a
fucking wacko commie jew blue hair. And I say that
because she married a Jew and is raising her children
is Jewish. And if you ask her, she'll tell you
she's Jewish when she's about his fucking Jewish as goddamn Hitler,
give me a fucking break, Like, so, yeah, I could

(22:57):
not step foot in that house without her husband. Like,
try to debate me on some jew shit and I'm like,
I can't say what I want to say. You're married
to my sister motherfucker, you know. But other than that,
I love my sister. She's just the most. She's really
a very difficult, very difficult person. She got a chip
on her shoulder, you see. She she's a very big person.

(23:18):
She's like three hundred plus pounds and she doesn't even
eat a lot. Same thing with my dad. My dad
was a huge guy, like almost two fifty to three
hundred all his whole life. Neither one of them eat
a lot. It's just they're fucking They got the bad
shit side of the jeans, unfortunately, and so that has
caused my sister to have a chip on her shoulder
her whole fucking life. And I can't say I really
blame her. But doesn't mean you got to be a

(23:40):
COMMI fucking hippie faggot, you know what I mean? With
blue hair?

Speaker 1 (23:43):
Hey, well, look man, every once in a while, you know,
you fall in a hole. But sometimes you get out
of it. Okay, Sometimes there's enough right eventually get sent
down to you grab a hold of it, you get
pulled out the whole.

Speaker 2 (23:57):
I do love my sister, but if I ever needed
to talk to somebody and I older and told her
my problems, she'd be like, WHOA, sorry about your luck?
You know what I mean?

Speaker 1 (24:09):
Is this stuff? Is that stuff work? Talking about your
problems to a degree?

Speaker 2 (24:14):
Yeah, my cousin. I got a cousin who just moved
down to Florida. We talk, you know, a lot, and
so yeah, it does help for sure.

Speaker 4 (24:23):
Okay you're still there?

Speaker 1 (24:35):
Oh yeah, yeah, boy, you missed me. I thought you frozen.

Speaker 6 (24:39):
Leah.

Speaker 1 (24:40):
I was like, hond what.

Speaker 6 (24:45):
Okay, okay talking, I don't know.

Speaker 2 (24:48):
But then make this really clear. There's only two problems
everybody ever has in life. They don't have any money
and they don't have any pussy, and that's it. All
problems in life can go back to those two fucking things. Two.

Speaker 1 (24:59):
That's it, it said nobody and no po said that's
pretty much it. So okay, okay, well well we can't.
I think we can get the money thing situated. You know,
it might be by hook or crook, poo anything.

Speaker 2 (25:18):
If you got the money, you get the money, you
get by hooker cruk either, you know, so.

Speaker 1 (25:23):
Yeah, you might just buy hooker. You know what I'm saying.
I mean, it may have to be like that, but
you know it's a Bakers can't be choosers you know
what I'm saying, Uh, we're not We're not here to
down the working gals. Okay, the true working gals ain't
talking about these only fans girls and you know.

Speaker 2 (25:46):
Porn they got their toe in the pond, then yeah.

Speaker 1 (25:50):
They ain't true working gals like they you know, they
don't go to the job. And it's some you know,
three hundred and fifty pound dude that they gotta you know,
they're gonna blow They gotta blow off because he dropped
the thousand dollars. You know what I'm saying. They get
to pick and choose. Yeah, so it's a little bit different,
all right. So I say it's I call them posers.

(26:12):
That's what I call them. I said, you pose them,
all right, because for women, women for for eons, okay,
since the dawn and time, have had to do all
kind of scraggly, skanky men all right, to make its meet,
and y'all manage to themn figure out how to do it,
and you get to pick all your partners. Some of
them just be doing their husbands on camera. I'm like,

(26:37):
hold on second, it's like here, we make millions of dollars.
I'm like, how y'all scam folk into that. That's what
I'm trying to figure out. Okay, not even a true prostitute.

Speaker 2 (26:47):
How dare you could.

Speaker 1 (26:48):
Have stained on prostitutes names? All right, stain the profession.
All Right, we need to go into go in these
streets and ask the real prostitutes what they think about
these only fans girls. So you don't know what it's
like out here. Okay, you ain't got a clue. All right,

(27:09):
it's crazy, but yeah, but yeah, guys, a house in housing,
it's big, it's a it's a big deal. And mobility
is everything. I mean, hell, it's it's pretty much only thing.
I mean that's people got here in the United States
and that moved west. You know, we continue to go west.

(27:33):
We could have just stayed on this side. But mobility, so,
I mean, that's a that's a key factor. And a
lot of times if you're trying to improve your economical situation,
a lot of times you do have to move. So
that's where when you rent, that actually frees you up

(27:53):
to do that and you're not so worried about you know,
are you gonna be able to sell your house? And
next thing I buy is you know, this is gonna
cost me four hundred and fifty thousand dollars at seven percent,
which was that thirty five hundred dollars a month, four
grand a month. Four yeah. So I mean it's I mean,

(28:14):
I don't know how much you're making at your new gig,
but damn son, you know. And then you know, depending
on if you've got kids, you know, if you got
a doll that cost you, you know, and you got
your wife what she do or a girlfriend what she

(28:34):
do for work. Maybe you don't have one and you're
just doing it all yourself. So all those factories come
into play. And so I think and we kind of
stuck ourselves during COVID because everybody was rubbing it. They
were like Maty Burns out here and huh, you mean
to tell me I can make eighty thousand dollars on

(28:56):
the house I sold you?

Speaker 6 (28:58):
Okay, I like did some.

Speaker 1 (29:00):
I'm like, man, you knew you know this is gonna
fuck us down the road, right. I was like, man,
when the good whenever I seen that these ninjas was
out here talking about oh yeah, two percent interest rate
and cars too, were like, oh yeah, zero percent. I'm like,
hold on a second, I said, bo they trying to
prop this up with some fake shit. I said, man,
don't fall for the fake shit out here, and bo,

(29:22):
we fall right in it. Fail right for the fake shit.
I was like, it's gonna it's gonna bite us in
the inn. And now folks are like, man wise, house
is so crazy? I said, don't you remember you damn
clapping your hands when you make eighty thousand dollars on
that rickety piece of shit you lived in. Ain't did
no improvements, you know, zero improvements. Shit were built in

(29:44):
nineteen fifty five, all right, same busted ass water heater,
damn ac twenty year old. And it's like, oh yeah,
that thing worth three hundred thousand dollars. Now, I'm like,
when shit usually get old, it don't get it, don't
get more valuable.

Speaker 2 (30:00):
Some of this, some of the real estate I've seen
in California, like little sheds down in South Central for
like a million dollars.

Speaker 6 (30:08):
Yeah, but I was looking.

Speaker 1 (30:10):
I was looking at HDTV. They were doing was it
a flip flip or flop with l Musasa all right
where he goes and he helped some of his friends
out to do a flip. They were in Compton, Compton,
all right straight out of Compton. Nigga name ice Cube.
You know what I'm saying that Compton folk get shot

(30:31):
in the street and they were like, yeah, we got
this nine hundred square foot house.

Speaker 6 (30:37):
Uh, we bought it.

Speaker 1 (30:39):
For two hundred and seventy five thousand dollars and we're
gonna flip it and we want to sell it for
five fifty.

Speaker 6 (30:47):
I'm like, in Compton, you said Compton right?

Speaker 1 (30:52):
The hood.

Speaker 6 (30:56):
Is Compton glorious? Now?

Speaker 1 (30:57):
I mean, I'm trying to figure it out. I said,
did it rent on the thug that of Compton?

Speaker 6 (31:02):
Five fifths?

Speaker 1 (31:04):
I'm living We getting out of range, ain't we? If
it's notn't that much to live in the hood? Shit?
I mean, because.

Speaker 2 (31:13):
At what point you have to wonder, like a house,
let's just say a normal house is three hundred thousand
dollars right across the country. That's I'd say that's about
a hot upper end of average. At what point in
time did people just start to think that people would
be okay spending double or triple that for the same house,

(31:34):
Like it doesn't make any sense at all. Maybe it's
just maybe it's like that fake it till you make
it kind of thing like, if you just say it's
worth that much, maybe somebody will believe you. Maybe that's
what it comes down to.

Speaker 1 (31:49):
They met Corey. The median home price, the medium current
home price, it's four hundred and seventeen thousand dollars. The
average home sale price is five hundred and four thousand dollars.

Speaker 2 (32:09):
Here's what I don't understand. There's some brokeouts and ninjas
out there. How the fuck are they who they selling
us to?

Speaker 1 (32:19):
That's what I'm trying to figure out. Somebody said, hey, man,
you want to buy this grip for five hundred four
thousand dollars. Look, I mean I do I do pretty well. Okay,
I do pretty well. But I'm a man that I'm fine,
you know, living well below my means because shit, hell,
all I do is go home and damn you know,

(32:41):
sit mistak ass on the couch and throw my covers
up over me, look at the computer. You know, I'm
here literally just to sleep, almost like, because I'm at
work all day, my work, I'm at the gym. Say
that the house stuff don't mean that much to me.
But you start talking about five hundred and four thousand dollars,
I'm like it's percent who for thirty years were talking

(33:08):
about five six thousand dollars a month. You got to
be making it, like, you got to be man, you
need to be made. I'm talking about take on too.
You need to be taking home combined about fifteen thousand
dollars between you and whoever's with you to even even

(33:31):
make it feasible. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (33:36):
Yeah, it's like.

Speaker 1 (33:38):
And so and the uh, anybody who's making one hundred k,
you're lik in the top, like what like eight percent?

Speaker 6 (33:49):
Seven eight percent? Ain't that many people.

Speaker 1 (33:52):
Making one hundred thousand dollars And I'm talking about hundred
thousand before taxes, I mean, because you'd probably be a
W two employee more than likely, So you skirting the
tax code to be a little bit more difficult. So,
I mean, how many combined household's gonna say that they

(34:12):
taking home fifteen thousand dollars a month?

Speaker 6 (34:18):
No lot, That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (34:23):
That's what I'm saying. And folks are just like, oh man, yeah,
let's keep going up. And there's so many people who's uh,
who bought their house when it was one hundred and
seventy five thousand dollars. I think this is really prominent
in like your your bigger states, like you like your
California per se. They bought it at one hundred and

(34:44):
seventy five thousand, and let's say nineteen eighty five, eighty six,
because it's still California. And then now they said, oh man,
that property is worth one point three million. Well what's
your property tax on one point three million? They look
up foth can't even afford their property tax on one
point three million.

Speaker 2 (35:05):
That's like that should be Criminal's.

Speaker 4 (35:08):
What I'm saying.

Speaker 1 (35:11):
It's like, oh, yeah, man, I own my home. Yeah,
well you gotta pay that property tax, So do come
take that ship of property.

Speaker 2 (35:20):
It's got to be away for governments to bring in
money other than taxation, or gotta.

Speaker 1 (35:24):
Be they don't have a product. That's the that's the
one thing I said. That's the number one issue. Governments
do not have a product. Their product is the iron
fist all right and guns all right, pointed at you
saying I'll cut I'll send somebody in your house and

(35:45):
I will shoot your ass if you cut up.

Speaker 2 (35:47):
Okay, Nationalize the nationalize the gun industry.

Speaker 1 (35:52):
The government seals the guns.

Speaker 2 (35:54):
The government sells you the guns.

Speaker 1 (35:57):
Wow man, huh so, so we would have our individual
individual gun maker tourists. See, they would sell to the
government at a wholesale and then and then the government
will sell to you. You have to buy directly through
the government. Okay, then, but then you.

Speaker 2 (36:18):
Get your name on a list. But you're on a
list anyway. If anybody thinks that you buy a Goma cash,
you're still not on a list. Fuck off.

Speaker 1 (36:24):
Yeah, yeah, yeah, you're You're definitely on the list.

Speaker 2 (36:27):
Which I mean, that's fun up to begin with.

Speaker 1 (36:34):
I don't I don't know how you how you how
you don't get on a list because when you're born
to give you a soci security number.

Speaker 2 (36:40):
They were on like fifty lists. Is there a top
secret list.

Speaker 1 (36:45):
That I'm on somewhere, a black black, black ops list?
You know, I'd like to, man, it's just one time
I could go and look at maybe some of the
strange ship that they got, because you know that we
got some shit somewhere and it's just like just wild
dude experiments and stuff they're working on. You just go

(37:08):
check it out, just for like, give me fifteen minutes.
Like I don't want to ask you to be there.
Just put on a monitor. I'll be there, you know,
because if I'm there, you know, that might be a problem.
It might be like, hey, man, don't you want to
step over here this way? And then they shut me
in there. It's like, well we needed to tell a subject.
Uh what of my sons? Go to see some of
the crazy shit.

Speaker 2 (37:28):
You get on a list when you sell guns. Because
when I left Florida, I sold. I only had a gun.
I only had one gun left. I think by the
time I left Florida, I had a TOURUS forty five
and I went to the range and I shot, and
on the way out the door, I was like, hey,
you guys will buy this gun. And he bought it
off me on the spot for cash, like no ID

(37:49):
is nothing. He just bought it off me off on
the spot for two hundred fifty dollars. So I was
wondered if that didn't require some other additional paperwork.

Speaker 1 (38:00):
I think there's potential. There's potential. Well, you know we
got you've got you've got the black market black market guns.
They got you three D printed goods, which I still
don't understand. They three D printed goods.

Speaker 2 (38:19):
So you have a central receiver, Like you have a
central mechanism that is got has to be stamp with
a serial number, and then you can buy replacement parts, barrel, magazine,
all that other stuff. Right, But the central part is
what makes the gun the gun, and that has to
have stamp of a serial number. You can three D

(38:40):
print that central part of the gun and then just
all the other stuff, just buy the replacement parts to
put on it. So the problem is that they say
it's like untraceable. But where the fucking Second Amendment does
it say you got to have your name in a
database when you buy a gun, or your gun's got
to have a serial number on it. See problem is

(39:00):
even this ultra conservative Supreme Court ruled against ghost guns
like by a pretty overwhelming majority. So that might just
be because the law, I don't know, they didn't find
the law and constitutional. Which is weird because under Bruin
Bruin was like the game changer in gun law. So

(39:22):
Bruin the Bruin decision, as it's known, what it did
was it said that all new gun laws have to
be in line with historical precedent going back to like
seventeen ninety, right, and so virtually virtually all gun laws

(39:42):
are going to be end up getting scrapped as they
go through the court system because of the Bruin decision.
Things that didn't get scrapped, or they like the ghost
gun law because I can kind of I sort of
kind of understand what they're saying. But I mean, the
way the solve crimes involving guns is through serial numbers.

(40:03):
Every transaction of a serial number changing hands of a
gun is supposed to be documented in the system. What
system did we use? We used, God, I forget what
it was called. NIBEN was the bullets. The National Ballistic
Database was NIBEN, But the gun database, I forget. That
might have just been an NCIC, like the actual National

(40:26):
Crime Information Center database, and that's got everything, like I
could literally put your name in data, birth in there,
and anything related to you that's ever come up criminally
will pop up. If you've got a traffic ticket years ago,
it'll pop up right well, not necessarily. Maybe some of
the more local stuff will stay local, but like convictions,
you know, probation, all that stuff will show up in

(40:47):
the database, and that's where they search for the gun
serial numbers. So right now I actually have a need
to search a gun serial number, and I don't know,
I don't know how to do it. I can't do
it outside of law enforcement mechanisms. And that's another thing.
When I was a cop, and this is like two
thousand and six to twenty, like fourteen ish, they were

(41:09):
only starting to crack down on database abuse at that
point in time. For my first at least five or
six years, Like people were looking up their friends, you know,
people were going in and running their own serial numbers
to check out their own firearms. I mean, people were
like just doing what, looking up celebrities, like all kinds
of stuff that didn't really get They didn't start cracking
down on that until I left. But nowadays I called

(41:32):
my friend who's a well she's a cop, but she's
like a forest ranger cop. She left law enforcement and
then ended up going into the Forestry Service and she
has access to all those databases and she's like, no way.
She's like, if I ran that, I get fired like
tomorrow if I didn't have justification. So they're really strict
on that kind of shit. So that's they just want

(41:54):
the guns under Here's the thing, like the Second Amendment
was pretty goddamn absolute. Over the years, people have tried
to reason why it's not absolute, But I disagree. Like
I'm all four, Like you should have a fucking gun
vending machine. Literally, you just go up, put your cash in,
you get your fucking gun. Period. No idea, background checks,

(42:14):
none of that. Ship. All that is in contra contradiction
to the Second Amendment. So hm, the older I get,
the more of a constitutional absolutist, I become.

Speaker 1 (42:26):
Okay, okay, an absolutist. The world was much simpler back,
wasn't it.

Speaker 2 (42:33):
Yeah, And if your neighbor fucking pissed you off, you
went and you dueled them and shot him to death,
and everything was cool.

Speaker 1 (42:41):
It said, don't worry, I'm coming to CEO ass all right,
you know what I'm saying. Ten paces, Well, we just
sitting there and look at each other. And my my
fa my favorite one was the God It Won't The
Good and Bad Ovid, But it was a Clint east
Wood one where they had the little locket and it
played a little song and they're just sitting there looking

(43:04):
at each other. They're waiting waiting for the locket to
get done with the song, and the premise of the
locket is that. Uh, the the guy's daughter got killed
by this dude.

Speaker 2 (43:17):
You're talking unforgiven.

Speaker 1 (43:20):
That's not unforgiving. Goodness, which one is it? It ain't? No, no,
hold on, let's see Clint Eastwood Westerns. It's westerns. What's
the movie. Uh, let's see, let's see.

Speaker 4 (43:43):
Let's see.

Speaker 2 (43:44):
Let's see.

Speaker 1 (43:46):
Not hanging them high not high planes, drifter, not Jersey Wells.
Uh uh for a.

Speaker 2 (43:57):
Few dollars more, for a few dollars more.

Speaker 1 (44:00):
I'm pretty I'm pretty sure this is it.

Speaker 2 (44:04):
My dad actually, I remember took me to see Pale
Writer in the theaters. That was I didn't that was
like eighty three eighty four.

Speaker 1 (44:12):
Mm hmm yeah, four few dollars yep, that's it. A
musical pocket watch taken from a woman who had shot
herself while he was raping her after he had murdered
her husband. That's it. And Clint Eastwood was a bounty
hunter and he teamed up with the with the other
guy who was pretty famous. Oh yeah, Lee Vane Cleif,

(44:35):
Oh yeah, oh Lee Vane Cleif. Yeah. So that's one
of my favorite ones. They sitting there with that pocket
watch and what was crazy is that right there at
the end Uh, Clint Eastwood's gun was on the ground
and my other man had pulled the pocket watch out.
It's like, yeah, we're gonna do a wait for this

(44:55):
uh wait for it to uh to end. And then
Lee Vane cleif w walked up with the other pocket
watch and the song kept playing.

Speaker 6 (45:03):
He's like, it's not gonna be that simple today. I
was like, yeah, I love those old Westerns. That's good.

Speaker 1 (45:11):
Yeah, what is the undisputed king of Western Right?

Speaker 2 (45:18):
He's John Wayne?

Speaker 1 (45:19):
Right?

Speaker 2 (45:20):
John Wayne. That's not my opinion, that's my observation.

Speaker 6 (45:34):
But John Wayne. Oh oh man, did you see that
John Wayne's number two?

Speaker 2 (45:44):
I sent you a link last week that broke my heart.

Speaker 1 (45:49):
Yeah, yeah, I seen that.

Speaker 2 (45:54):
I mean you want you gotta play that for the
audience now, because, like I've been saying forever that here
you talking Jason State and it's like the fucking He's
like the greatest action hero of all time. And then
he pops up in this gay ass music video and
like some speedo.

Speaker 1 (46:14):
I'm gonna meet it.

Speaker 2 (46:17):
I don't even know a song that.

Speaker 1 (46:18):
Is coming on Strong I don't either, but uh, here
we go. He's gonna pop up right here shortly there
he is Oh my god, I mean, I mean he's
knocking it out too. At first, I didn't think it
was Jason Stathon.

Speaker 2 (46:36):
To be honest, I hope, I hope that Ninja got paid.

Speaker 6 (46:47):
And sure are we sure it is Jason stasny.

Speaker 2 (46:53):
Okay, I watched it like six times in awe and disbelief.

Speaker 1 (47:00):
That I could not believe.

Speaker 4 (47:01):
But that's like I could not believe it.

Speaker 2 (47:03):
You know, Tupac he got his start as a backup
dancer for the fucking Digital Underground. So I guess being
a backup dancer is a keda pop culture success.

Speaker 1 (47:17):
Yeah, well, a lot of a lot of people get
their starts from like being a backup dancer, being somebody's driver,
sucking dick on the weekend, stuff like that. Man, So
how'd you get your start? Well, you know, I held
a couple of penises over the weekend, so they gave

(47:37):
me my gig. But yeah, I probably wouldn't have got
it without doing that. So it's all good.

Speaker 4 (47:45):
Here.

Speaker 1 (47:46):
You got to start somewhere, and it would it's.

Speaker 2 (47:47):
A different would our pop culture life have been over
the last twenty thirty fifty seventy one hundred years if
it wasn't for producers getting blow jobs in the office.

Speaker 1 (47:59):
Maybe somebody would have with talent, would actually somebody with talent,
just not somebody that looked good. You know what I'm saying.
That's what it had been like, do you actually truly
have talent? I forget about the talent. Okay, come suck
this thing. Look, you can sign this record deal if

(48:23):
you get on this thing. They call that quid pro quote. Corey,
uh this for that, you know, the quick pro quote
that's frowned a pun. And then when I'm doing my
doing my training every every like four years they put
up there about harassment in the workplace, different types of harassment,

(48:46):
and of course they say the number one is the
quit pro quote. They'd be like, oh, oh, Sureley, you
can get that. You can get that raise. All right, Shirley.
All you gotta do is come in the back with
me and let.

Speaker 6 (48:59):
Me hit that thing.

Speaker 1 (49:01):
Quit pro quae. I'm like that and how and how
it works and how jobs work. I mean, that's what
I's how I thought jobs worked. Most of the time.
You got to be careful. Look, you just you just
got to be careful because before you know it, man,

(49:24):
the whole business be under ground because I mean they sue. Now.
Back in the day, they didn't sue. You know, the
women had dignity. If they went back there and they
sucked some cock to get the damn promotion, they would
they would take that and go home. I live with that,
you know what I'm saying. Nobody gets in trouble. But now,
but they be extorting after the fact, you know what

(49:45):
I'm saying, pure extoration. It's like, man, we both got
what we want to hear. It's like, well, I think
I need a little bit more. Hold on a second, now,
I laid the groundwork to start off with, none of
this extortion. Where's all the old women at all?

Speaker 6 (49:58):
Right?

Speaker 1 (50:00):
They used to do this and they be like, Okay, cool,
I got I got what I wanted, So we're all good. Nah,
gotta keep going. And that's how things get out of hand, okay, because.

Speaker 2 (50:10):
We live in a time where people are just so soft.
You gotta live through hard times to be okay with
sucking a dick for a job.

Speaker 1 (50:16):
You know what I mean, m hm, sit time too soft.
But that's that's the problem. They said. Man, they used
to do that with even bad eye. You know what
I'm saying, wipe the mouth falls, go sit right back
at the secretary. Day that like that, and they were happened.
You know what I'm saying, Pick the next phone call,
right on up, not rattled or anything.

Speaker 6 (50:41):
Oh man, that's some good stuff right there.

Speaker 1 (50:43):
Yeah. But I mean that that's that's what life looks like. Now, Okay,
that's what life looks like. Corey. I got I got
a little little video I want to share with you.
How about this, Uh, this chick up here is talking
about how if you're a man, you need to tame yourself.
You know what I'm saying, Even with your wife you

(51:06):
see here walking around naked. You know what I'm saying.
That don't mean that it's time to get a feel
of copper feel I'm like, well, if I can't Coppa
feel on you, who I'm on copper feel on? You
know what I'm saying. I mean, I thought that was
the premise. I mean, that's I thought. That's why I'm here.
So let's see what you got to say up here.

Speaker 7 (51:24):
Do you want your wife to start walking around and
have naked again, then stop trying to jump her every
time she is. My husband loves when I walk around
in my underwear. But there was a time I couldn't
even get dressed in the same room out of fear
of being grabbed and fondled. Here's what he did to
get me to act more like I did when we
first started dating. First, he had to make me feel
comfortable enough. Now, it's no secret you love getting a

(51:45):
little glimpse of your wife changing or showering. But do
you always have to act like a little boy who
just got the last cookie from the cookie jar. My
husband stopped trying to jump me every single time I
was half naked. He stopped smothering me with his words
and groping me every time I was getting ready in
front of the bathroom mirror.

Speaker 2 (52:01):
Just cheat, bro, just cheat on her. Did you have
kids with this woman?

Speaker 1 (52:06):
I hope not.

Speaker 6 (52:08):
That's horrible, dude, that is horrible.

Speaker 1 (52:10):
I am sick to my stomach watching this black piled again.

Speaker 6 (52:16):
I'm that's absolutely disgusting.

Speaker 1 (52:21):
I mean, I thought I thought that was kind of
like the whole premise. You know what I'm saying. You
get you know, you get your longtime girlfriend, get married,
and so I'm granted. So I got beauty to grab. Yep,
you know what I'm saying, I got I mean me,
and look at it is. Okay, I got guaranteed beauty

(52:42):
and a lot of time men are okay with that.
You know what I'm saying. It's better than the alternative,
which is no booty. It's like, okay, this is guarantee beauty.
So I mean, you know what I'm slaying. But uh,
she said, stop acting like a little boy. You know,
gotta cookie out of cookie jars.

Speaker 2 (52:59):
You don't like the That's all it is to it.
She don't like the guy.

Speaker 1 (53:03):
That's what I kind of That's what I kind of heard.

Speaker 2 (53:05):
That's exactly what I heard. Because when you like the guy,
that guy could just bend you over in the kitchen
and you're all go with it whatever.

Speaker 1 (53:12):
You know, Yeah, exactly. So I mean, we gotta, we gotta.
I'll put that out there in a video I made.
I was like, look, just just admitted that the chick
didn't like you. All right, when they got all these roles,
you got to jump through all these hoops. Well you

(53:33):
need to do this, you need to do that. Well,
you're not this tall, so you need to make this
amount of money. She just don't like you. Man. It's
okay when you can be real about it, all right.
She just ain't that interested in you. When the other
chick was like, oh he he didn't take he didn't
take the kids up water bottles out of the dishwasher.

(53:54):
The other morning I thought about divorcing them.

Speaker 2 (53:56):
I was like, bro, if you're fighting over which way
you put the roll of toilet paper on, it's more
than just a toilet paper. Okay, that's when it comes down.

Speaker 6 (54:10):
You be in there, you be in there arguing.

Speaker 1 (54:12):
You know, somebody forgotten the toast in there too long,
and it con turns into a knock down drag out.
It's like, dog, this ain't about no toast, man. You
know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (54:21):
Every situation you're in you can read the response as
to how that person fucking feels about you in one way,
shape or form, whatever you're doing or talking about, you
know what I mean? So right, because people can't hide
their emotions, they're not good at that.

Speaker 1 (54:39):
They can try to, they can try to be somewhat manipulative.
Let's say that some yeah, and hide some things from me,
but overall the idiot, idiot, idiot's kind of tough, uh,
no doubt about it. So I wanted to share that
because I was just like, I mean walking around naked.

(55:01):
I mean, look at here's here's one of my things.
I mean, when my girl, I mean, she come through
and she been over, I'll be like, bam, you know
what I'm saying. She's like, boy, I was like, I
mean you've been over, so I mean, I just want
to let you know that I still think you all right,
you know what I'm saying. So, I mean that's how
that's how dues do with like we we're not uh,

(55:24):
we're not covert. We're very overt, all right. We I
mean we just kind of throw it out here. That's
why we're like, hey, you know, chicks, if y'all just
come up and just tell the dude, it's like, you
know what I think you look all right? No, I
think I think I want to go have some sex wich. Okay.

Speaker 2 (55:43):
My opinion on that is one hundred percent of women
can be picked up in fucked that night. Or it's
just that they have an encryption lock and you got
to have that encryption code and that's the hard part.
But every woman, I'm giving a fuck who you are,
sixty year old librarian. I don't get the fuck. Okay,
they have an encryption code that as soon as you

(56:04):
can unlock that encryption code, it's this game on. So
it varies from person to person, but I promise you
every woman will throw down on day one under the
right circumstance.

Speaker 1 (56:15):
Yeah, for the right ding. Ye, for the right ding that.
Whatever type of requirements that that they supposedly have don't exist,
all right, It's just it's just the way life is. Okay,
no harm, no fail, no harm, no fail. Uh, Corey.
We had a a fresh trailer, fresh trailer. Drop to

(56:36):
watch here.

Speaker 2 (56:37):
The new Final Destination. Man, it's like the only you
give a fuck about.

Speaker 6 (56:44):
We've seen that one.

Speaker 2 (56:45):
They wed. Yeah, we should watch it again.

Speaker 1 (56:47):
Because we showed that one, not the new Superman. Oh,
fresh trailer, fresh trailer, Here we go. We got hey,
we got to play the official trailer.

Speaker 6 (56:59):
For therefore.

Speaker 1 (57:05):
This and tasty trailer. Hold on, here we go.

Speaker 2 (57:11):
Are you being serious right now?

Speaker 1 (57:14):
Yeah?

Speaker 8 (57:16):
You'd let me interview you as Superman?

Speaker 2 (57:18):
Sure, ready, let's.

Speaker 4 (57:25):
Do it, Cronkite Superman, miss Lane.

Speaker 8 (57:32):
Recently, you've come under a lot of fire for what
some might it's a lot. Today the Secretary of Defense
said he was going to look into your actions.

Speaker 6 (57:44):
That's funny my actions.

Speaker 2 (57:46):
I stopped a war. Maybe not, maybe I did.

Speaker 8 (57:52):
In effect, you illegally entered a country.

Speaker 2 (57:55):
This is how you're going to be.

Speaker 8 (57:56):
I'm not the one being interviewed, Superman. Did you consult
with the president? You seemingly acting as a representative.

Speaker 1 (58:08):
Except and doing good.

Speaker 5 (58:14):
I would question myself in the same situation and consider
the consequence people were going to die.

Speaker 1 (58:30):
Hey, budd eyes up there.

Speaker 3 (58:45):
Your choice, your excellence, that's what makes you who you are.

Speaker 2 (59:06):
Super Man, He's not a man, he's an it.

Speaker 3 (59:15):
Somehow become a focal point in the entire world's conversation.

Speaker 1 (59:20):
I will not.

Speaker 7 (59:24):
Accept that, I claimed to b I'll go get them
for you.

Speaker 3 (59:59):
Mm hmm.

Speaker 6 (01:00:07):
Or what do you think?

Speaker 2 (01:00:10):
It's all about the dog? No, that looks good. It
actually looks good, and he actually looks like he could
be a good Superman. I can't believe I'm saying that
ship because I got you want to talk about some
fucking fatigue. I got some superhero fatigue.

Speaker 1 (01:00:27):
Oh so you you it's it up fatigue down, it's
about past out. Uh. One thing I did notice is
that man, it looked like gonna be a ship ton
of folks in this movie. They're gonna have enough time.

Speaker 2 (01:00:43):
It looks like it's a fucking DC's Avengers kind of deal.
It almost looks like a Justice League because we saw
a green ring dude in there, didn't we. Yeah, we
saw hawk Man or whatever the we the DC version
of the hawk is.

Speaker 1 (01:00:58):
It looks like hap, it looks like hawk Girl now
hot Girl.

Speaker 2 (01:01:01):
So this is gonna be like a Justice League. This
is like a Justice League basically minus Batman and I'm
sure a couple other people. But it looks good. It
actually looks good. James Gunn has done some good stuff.

Speaker 1 (01:01:14):
He has.

Speaker 2 (01:01:15):
He's done some ship there too, hasn't he?

Speaker 1 (01:01:19):
Oh?

Speaker 2 (01:01:19):
He did? He did't Guardians of the Galaxy.

Speaker 1 (01:01:21):
Right, Yeah, Yeah, he did the Guardians, which was a series.

Speaker 2 (01:01:25):
It was solid. I'll give it solid.

Speaker 1 (01:01:28):
Oh. Let me see, let me see what all he's
he's got under his belt. He did the suicide Squads?
Did he do both of them? Uh? Let's see, he
did the Suicide Squad, which is the newest one. Oh,

(01:01:52):
I didn't even realize he did the Beilco experiment. Huh
ope it the.

Speaker 2 (01:01:59):
Which one is that that sounds familiar?

Speaker 1 (01:02:03):
The so the Belko experiment is where everybody went to
work and then they gave them ultimating made hims of
how many people had they had to kill or all
of them were gonna die because they had chips. They
had chips and planting in them that allowed him to
get into work, and the chips had an explosive device
in it, so they were experimenting what, you know, what

(01:02:25):
humans would do to survive. Hm hmm, it's pretty gruesome. Actually,
crazy depths in that thing. Yeah, So I didn't realize
he did that. Uh, yeah, he's really He did the
screenplay for Dawn the Dead from two thousand and four. Yep, ip,

(01:02:48):
he did the screenplay of that. H let's see what.
He was a producer, okay, produce, let's see director. Who
want to see director? So he did direct Peacemaker Show,
which actually they said it's pretty good. Uh really his

(01:03:08):
uh he was a director of Slyther He directed that,
So he's got some pretty good chops. He really he
really got his claim to fame, like he really got
put on the map whenever they allowed him to do
that Guardians of the Galaxy series. So that's kind of
that's kind of jumped him off to the point where
he's at right now as far as his career goes.

(01:03:34):
So uh so, yeah, yeah, it looks like there's gonna
be a ton of folk in it. I don't know
what the run time is on that movie. It's got
to be, of course, it's got to be well over
two hours. I would, I would figure, but it doesn't
say right now, I don't believe. Let's see what we got. No,

(01:03:56):
I didn't, No, I didn't currently tell you so, but
I'm figuring probably run time two hourage in thirty minutes
probably now. I hope he kind of just which it
looks like he's going to he's just gonna jump right
into the point where he's at right now. It's no
origin or background stuff, which is good because we don't

(01:04:18):
need that.

Speaker 2 (01:04:19):
Yeah yeah, well, I.

Speaker 1 (01:04:21):
Mean we got the background enough. It's kind of like Batman,
but we don't need Batman's background. We understand his background,
you know by now. So so yeah, yeah, it was
like to be interested in July eleventh. That should to
be here for you know it.

Speaker 2 (01:04:38):
The year's almost half over.

Speaker 1 (01:04:40):
That's what I know. It's crazy as hell, crazy as hell,
So yeah, be on the lookout for that. I'm gonna
check it out. I'd just like to go to theaters
and watch this stuff, just to go to a theater
to have a reason. I don't know why.

Speaker 2 (01:04:54):
No, I like to. I find excuses to get out
the house every day. But I'm going to a movie, man. Like,
I haven't really been enjoying watching anything lately, like at all. Like,
if it's fiction, I really haven't wanted anything to do
with it. I'll be honest with you, man, I've been
so consumed with my work lately that everything else just

(01:05:15):
seems boring.

Speaker 1 (01:05:21):
Everything is bored.

Speaker 2 (01:05:22):
So I'm writing this book. I'm writing this book. I'm
like halfway done with it. It'll be out, I'll be
done with I'll be done in the next two weeks.
So I put together a document book on Kennedy for
Actually it's on Oswald. It's the early days of Oswald,
the first twenty years of his life. And so that
story is crazier than any motherfucking movie that we're gonna

(01:05:44):
go see this year or next year or any fucking year.
So but yeah, that's my rant on modern fiction. I
just don't like it for some reason. I just haven't
been enjoying being entertained in that manner, Earlily. But I
have been playing to some video games because that I

(01:06:06):
think is there so much better than movies for entertainment.
It's interactive, you know, it's fucking awesome.

Speaker 1 (01:06:14):
Right right, You're you're like a part of it. Okay, So, uh, Cory,
we're gonna jump into the main topic, the Deadler. Of course,
his trial has been going on.

Speaker 2 (01:06:25):
Ohler Man, what I'm hearing is that the prosecution's like
throwing the case and ship like, what's up with that?

Speaker 1 (01:06:33):
Yeah, I'm not sure what. Cassie has been on the
uh the stand for the past few days. Uh, Cassandra
ventour fine now and they're just kind of going through
through her freak off sessions while her husband's sitting there.
Uh it's it's weird. She's like yeah, She's like yeah,

(01:06:54):
uh he had the h the male sex workers bush
but snutch all over my belly. And then I got
up and walked in the other room and I took
the com and I rubbed it on diddies nipples and what.

Speaker 6 (01:07:14):
O hold on a second, now, I this.

Speaker 1 (01:07:20):
Is this is a little little deep painted.

Speaker 2 (01:07:23):
I mean, my goodness, bro, it really sinks. It really
hits home how fucking vanilla I am in the sack
compared to some of the ship that I hear other
people are into.

Speaker 1 (01:07:36):
Oh dude, I'm core four. That's it. Core four positions,
y'all be talking about. I don't even want to get
to messy. I'll be I lay a tail down.

Speaker 6 (01:07:47):
On the sheets.

Speaker 1 (01:07:48):
You get wet, cause I don't mean, damn, I ain't
laying in all that stuff. I mean, I'm an easy,
quick clean up. I mean, I'm trying to tell you.
But and these other folks, man, they be flipping and
smacking and shit be flying everywhere.

Speaker 2 (01:08:03):
Think through the fucking hole in their fucking pajamas.

Speaker 1 (01:08:06):
Yeah, that's what I'm saying. You know what I'm saying
you man, I don't even want to get fully naked.
You know, I said I might not even do that. Yeah.
But I mean, like she she's been going through all
the details of her free calls, which people were like,
are we just going through their their crazy sexual adventures.
I thought we were supposed to get into some type

(01:08:26):
of trafficking, which is kind of determed from the case.
It's just showing him to be like, oh, he's this
bad guy who quote unquote made me do stuff. Now.
At what point in time do you feel like, you know,
maybe this is going too far and I should think
about leaving all right now. They called this victim shaming,

(01:08:48):
this victim blaming.

Speaker 2 (01:08:49):
Let me stop you right there, because this is exactly
what was going through her head. She's like, look, I
could get the fuck out of here right now and
not put up with this ship. But I can also
not put up with all this money. So if you
don't leave a situation because the money's on the table,
then fuck you.

Speaker 1 (01:09:04):
I'm a man, exactly exactly now they got up here.
Victims of abuse often get asked why they stay, but
it's a question of psychologists and sociologists say rarely helps
and can result in victim blaming. Research has shown there
are many reasons that victims struggled to leave their abuses,

(01:09:26):
including the threat of escalated violence, and there are other
more helpful questions to ask someone who is in an
abusive relationship. My only problem with that is the fact
that she's currently married, and she had been with Diddy
for a while and he didn't kill her. So I'm
just trying to figure out, you know, what took.

Speaker 2 (01:09:48):
You, you know, heyday she's looking for a pay day.

Speaker 1 (01:09:51):
Eleven years, eleven years I was seven to twenty eighteen. Cause,
I mean, that's a certain point in time where you're like, Okay, this,
this ain't me. You know what I'm saying this is
maybe we've stepped over the boundary.

Speaker 2 (01:10:06):
What about the Russell Brown case that should happened twenty
years ago. Yeah, I'm talking about crawling out of the woodwork. Yeah,
you ain't emotionally healed in twenty years. Fuck off.

Speaker 1 (01:10:22):
That's true. That's true. I mean, it's all. I mean,
it's all true. And I'm like, man, he bought her
two places? I mean, did he rougher up? I mean
it looks like he may have.

Speaker 2 (01:10:36):
Yo. Man, if some chick wants to give me two
places and rough me up a little, I'll put up.

Speaker 1 (01:10:41):
With it, Man said, I happily put up with it.

Speaker 2 (01:10:50):
I'll be a battered husband.

Speaker 6 (01:10:53):
Man said, I said. I.

Speaker 1 (01:10:55):
I said, I ain't got no problem putting it up,
putting up Okay, he said, no problem at all. But
you know, she was reading on this stuff out loud,
Dan about what all they were doing. Freak off? She
talking about ninety six hour freak off.

Speaker 6 (01:11:15):
I don't even know what that means.

Speaker 2 (01:11:17):
Us four days, No, Ninja, you ain't got nothing to
do for four days. I thought you was busy.

Speaker 1 (01:11:31):
I'm like, dude, I'm like, now, some of this stuff
seems like almost like folk lore.

Speaker 2 (01:11:36):
Just I'm telling you right now, you're not freaking off
without crystal meth for four days. These people are doing
crystal meth is inevitable. Oh okay, and they're doing bi
agri because crystal meth makes you dick not work.

Speaker 1 (01:11:47):
So okay oo boom okay. So this is what the
prosecutors say. You know, they exploded his status as a
powerful music executive, violently forced Cassi, you know, win them
and to take part in these drove fuel encounters with
sex workers. Now these other women, did they get killed
or are they still alive? Why they stay around? How

(01:12:10):
long they stay it, says another women. Okay, we're just
trying to figure it out. The counters with second workers
called the freak alls, which sometimes lasted days. I mean,
you got to eat, you gotta drink some water. At
some point in times, somebody had to stop. Look as somebody, uh,

(01:12:33):
there's been a couple of times in my life or
I did what they like to call the marathon fucking
all right, and as somebody who's done it, it's really
not that great, all right because your nutsack hurts the next.

Speaker 2 (01:12:50):
Day because you're not a trust messing my friend.

Speaker 1 (01:12:53):
Yeah, that may have been my issue. Okay, that may
have been my issues.

Speaker 2 (01:13:00):
Get yourself a little tea, some math, get some viagra,
and go to town for like three days. You'll be good.

Speaker 1 (01:13:06):
No, uh uh, because I remember what happened when I
when I just did it a few times that one night.
You know what I'm saying. You bussed you about about
about three or four in a night, you know, and
it's just like that next day, I couldn't even sit
on the seat. My nuts were damned that that sensitive
I said. Now, I said, Oh, my buddy's like, hey, man.

Speaker 5 (01:13:27):
What's wrong with you?

Speaker 2 (01:13:28):
I was like, kind of, you know, I'm almost done
reading Dan Bilzarian's book. He gave me a copy of
this book, and this is the wildest book you ever read.
This motherfucker had to go to the doctor for an
inflamed prostate from fucking too much.

Speaker 1 (01:13:55):
Mm hmm. Okay that's one hell of a problem to have. Yeah,
that's why. Yeah, they ain't no doubt about that. Ain't
no doubt about that. Look yeah, look a too much
sex can be a problem, all right, and it's and
it's problem just for your sack, man, your sack draw up.
It's just like bo I ain't got no more seeming

(01:14:15):
to pump out. You got to go do something else.
You gotta drink some water, you gotta get some natrits
back in here. I got nothing else to pump th dog,
he pumped out all the life essence that you got. Okay,
I mean so so, I mean, let's let's get right
But they're saying right here that they got a text message. Uh.

(01:14:36):
In August two thousand and nine, Combs asked when she
wanted the next encounter to be, and she replied, I'm
always ready to freak off. So two days later, Cassie
sait an explicit message, and he replied in eager anticipation,
she responded, me too, I just wanted to be uncontrollable.

Speaker 2 (01:14:53):
That's her saying that, you know what I'm saying. Yeah,
Oh so she's a lying hippocat.

Speaker 1 (01:15:00):
I'm just trying to I'm trying to figure out when
the freak calls became a problem.

Speaker 2 (01:15:06):
What is the try. What is the charge? I don't
even know what the fucking charge is.

Speaker 1 (01:15:11):
They're supposed to be six trafficking, six trafficking and racketeering.
That's what the that's what the charges are against Diddy.

Speaker 2 (01:15:23):
But what did he do? No one says anything except
he had freak offs and got came on his nipples.
What else did this?

Speaker 6 (01:15:30):
Then?

Speaker 3 (01:15:30):
You do?

Speaker 6 (01:15:32):
Yeah?

Speaker 1 (01:15:32):
But they but they're saying that he coerced people through
his power, and so all these people that were fucking
they did it against their wheel.

Speaker 2 (01:15:40):
Bro, if you fuck a hooker, you're you're coercing her
with money, yes, technically, yeah, technically, So oh my god.
The double standard is unbelievable.

Speaker 1 (01:15:55):
It's just like, but that's what people have been saying.
They were like, I means this trial is supposed to
be about him six trafficking, right, so when we gonna
get into that, the six trafficking and the racketeering racketeering
is just like, hey, we just gonna find whatever and
just put it on you. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2 (01:16:11):
Does sound like that much of a case.

Speaker 1 (01:16:15):
Yeah, And so they got Cassie up there, which she
already oh wish they did finally release how much money
that she got paid back in twenty twenty three, cause
it was it was an undisclosed amount, but she got
twenty million dollars.

Speaker 2 (01:16:27):
Twenty million dollars enough to keep my mount bucking shuck.
I'm giving a fuck if you murdered Santa Claus in
front of me, twenty million dollars. I didn't see a
goddamn thing.

Speaker 1 (01:16:37):
And she got twenty million, you know, and she on
the on the on the stage right now. I'm just like,
that made me feel like, uh, what was it? Hugh
Hefner's last wife. When he's like, look, man, when I'm dead,
just don't talk shit about me. First thing she does,
gets right out there and talks shit about him. Oh,

(01:16:58):
I didn't want to have sex with him. Oh he
want good in bed?

Speaker 6 (01:17:01):
Nigga was ninety man. Of course he won't no good.

Speaker 1 (01:17:06):
I mean you probably had the damn put a damn
a stint in that motherfucker afford to stand up, you
know what I'm saying. Had to put one of them,
little one of them little steals, wooden steals. I'm like,
just like, all it was nasty. He won't good in bed.
He made me do this and that. How he make

(01:17:27):
you do anything at ninety. You know what I'm saying.
May you kick him in the shed one time, but
about end his life? Man, when you ninety, any glance
a glance and blow about take you out, you know
what I'm saying. So it's just like, ah, you just

(01:17:49):
don't know how horrible it was.

Speaker 6 (01:17:51):
I'm like, but you went there day, It won't.

Speaker 1 (01:17:56):
Horrible when you were getting your uh you know, getting
in that private you got your ch nail bag and
your Gucci. You're drinking your damn you're eighteen fifty five champagne.
They got champagne that old Oh I'm sure, yeah, your
your eight thousand dollars ball of champagne. You don't get
me three glasses out of I ain't hear no lip then.

(01:18:21):
But now the man Dad left you all that money
and stuff. But you got lip. Now you want to
make You want to write a book, Now I got it.
Now you got a book tour? Now, Oh I want
to exposee playboy, ma'am. You were paid prostitute. That's why
at least get props to Kendre Wi Wilkinson. I think
that's her name. She's like, look, bo I just hore

(01:18:43):
it out. Okay, I understood what the deal was, Go
have sex with this whole dude a few times a week,
and I got everything paid for. It's like thank you,
I'm saying, thank you for your honesty, ma'am. You know,
I mean, that's it to Cassie. Can we get a
little honesty here, okay? And now, maybe there was a

(01:19:06):
point in time where you were, you know, you were
doing some stuff and maybe it got a little out
of hand. Okay, maybe a slippage into the back door
via no loop something like that.

Speaker 2 (01:19:17):
Oh not something like Vince McMahon. Accidental uh, accidental sexual escapades.

Speaker 1 (01:19:25):
Maybe not quite that that deep, you know what I'm saying.
But you know, there may be a point in time
where maybe and it's got a little bit out of hand,
you know. But uh, I like I like to talk about,
you know, all the other times that you were doing
it and it was completely fine, all right, and you

(01:19:47):
were getting two apartments paid for. Uh, you had you
you made your your hit song me and you you know,
you were with Diddy on the Red Car and you
felt and you felt good about life. Can we talk
about that or that we were just gonna we're just

(01:20:11):
gonna write that under the rug like and and obviously
this is something that was happening multiple times. So how
many times does it take before I say, you know what,
this is enough? And they're like, oh, well, you know
the abuse are harmed? I said, but it's.

Speaker 6 (01:20:28):
It's p Diddy man, and he lets you live right now.

Speaker 1 (01:20:34):
So don't miss me with that. Ow he was gonna
kill me, you left him and he didn't kill you.

Speaker 2 (01:20:43):
So I mean, what's the problem.

Speaker 1 (01:20:46):
I'm just trying to figure it out. At what at
what point in time were you gonna where you're gonna
be like enough's enough, you know, and then you come
back years later and you're not trying to get the
criminal investigation against him. You want civil only. That's always
a red flag for me when people want civil only.

(01:21:08):
Oh I just need the money. I'm just like, well,
don't you don't you want justice for all the wrongdoing
that got done to you? Well, twenty million dollars justice
and not I got you. Okay, so you're gonna let
so you let the man stay out on the street
where he can abuse other women. Okay, this is the
premise that we're going off of. Because he's a horrible person,

(01:21:32):
he can't get redemption. You know, I've heard a whole
lot about redemption and did he went up there and
he had a he had a heartfelt message that he
put out to his fans and everybody else in the
world about had was ashamed of some of the things
that he did and asked for forgiveness. And I ain't
see nobody letting no forgiving hand all right now, when

(01:21:55):
when all all the hookers and hores go out there
and slob on all this stuff and then come back
and say, Praise Jesus, They're like, oh, thank God you come.
I was like, Bode, you saying that because you want
the banger. There's a whole bunch of dogs, you know
what I'm saying. But when the do come ask for forgiveness,
it's like, Noah, never mind. No, dudes, don't get no forgiveness. Okay,

(01:22:17):
you got to burn in hell forever for your dudes,
get no forgiveness. So I mean, Cassie, what's the deal.
Twenty million suffice for you, twenty million. I don't need justice,
I just need twenty million. But now you understand, you're

(01:22:41):
reliving the whole everything that's done in the past, and
some of this stuff seems like, you know, maybe you
were involved and you were enjoying it. That's all Wes saying.
The swinger lifestyle, which I don't understand anyway, that's stuff.
I mean, this stuff cut off in people's brains. Because

(01:23:04):
the last thing I want to do is see some
other dude over there banging my chick. And you want
to talk about fully enraged, fully in rage or fully
in the dumpster. I might need to go sit in
my car for a while, you know what I'm saying,
for a few nights. That's a traumatic moment, you know
what I'm saying. That's been but I couldn't even imagine it.

(01:23:29):
Oh honey, I'm home, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6 (01:23:31):
I'm home early.

Speaker 1 (01:23:32):
She over there, been over This dude is killing it,
you like, man, I hate it for people who's been
through that ship man. God, but across the years has
been many many a motherfucker come in on a situation
like that, and I can't blame them for whatever they do,

(01:23:52):
you know what I'm saying, because you in that moment
of rage, you don't know anybody who's ever walked in
on there on the spouse doing that The girlfriend or anything.

Speaker 2 (01:24:09):
I can't say. I can't say that I have. But
if I'm on a jury and some dude murdered his
wife because he walked in and she was getting railed,
I don't know. Man, not guilty, Chroy said.

Speaker 1 (01:24:27):
Man.

Speaker 6 (01:24:27):
I looked at him and said, not guilty. I mean,
that's all I know.

Speaker 1 (01:24:31):
I mean, it's like what you want the man to do.

Speaker 2 (01:24:33):
She forced she forced her him to kill her.

Speaker 1 (01:24:37):
Yeah, it's a self defense. Okay, this is the way
I see the self defense. I'm defending myself from the
from the rest of his pain that's coming my way,
all right, the mental, the mental and emotional anguish. Don't
people get paid for that emotional distress? Yes, exactly, So
I mean I mean I had to do something about it. Okay,

(01:25:01):
I was emotionally distressed. All right, Guys, we're not saying
take your girl out when you find a cheating Uh.
This is all alleged, Okay, But I mean, I mean,
I see how you know, you walk in on a
situation like that, if it's somebody that you actually care about,

(01:25:22):
and it's like that forever about forever, change your life
as far as the way you look at relationships, and
then there's people to go out and intentionally do that.

Speaker 6 (01:25:31):
They swing.

Speaker 1 (01:25:33):
I was just like, man, like you go to a
party and you're like, okay, all right, honey, I'm going
over here with him. I'll catch you later.

Speaker 6 (01:25:43):
He won't be catching me later.

Speaker 2 (01:25:45):
Those people are emotionally damaged. Like those people have some
kind of trauma in their life or something like that
that causes them to not be bothered by that or something.
It's most certain they got to Yeah, it's some sort
of deficiency one hundred percent.

Speaker 1 (01:25:59):
They It's the same way as when when guys mary
porn stars and it's like, oh, yeah, my husband's not
in the industry. It's like, oh, you're still working, yeah,
like working with Dick.

Speaker 6 (01:26:14):
Yeah poo really.

Speaker 1 (01:26:19):
I mean you cooking breakfast. It's like, oh, yeah, you know,
I got a long shoot today. I got about ten hours. Like, wow,
you're gonna come back home to me? Come on now,
I mean, how I'm gonna do this? All right, it's
gonna be too much now, It's it's something totally different.
If it's just some some cheek you just got with

(01:26:42):
and it don't matter, you just got with her and
then boom, that's it. But I mean somebody you're trying
to build a relationship with a foundation man that they
can't be much foundation there, Like you've got to destroy
a part of your brain that goes into fight mode,
you know, when your territory is being over taken, because
the woman is your territory. That's the way we see things.

(01:27:04):
That's this is the whole premise of men. If you
look out in a while, when another male tries to
come into the territory the other male, we got to
fight this thing out though, like somebody got to go.
That's that's the way things are supposed to be. And
it actually keeps the women safer if it's that way,
to be honest, the kids, because then they're not treated

(01:27:29):
as just something that can be thrown away. That was
the whole premise, you know what I'm saying. Say, So, yeah,
this this trial's heating up, but I don't know if
they're if they're moving towards an actual conviction of what
they originally bringing him there for, which is six trafficking.

Speaker 2 (01:27:50):
Well, even if they don't have a case, they know
bringing them and dragging him through the muddle ruins everything.
And so he's naming his mud after this pretty.

Speaker 1 (01:27:58):
Much why and so that and so against that would
be that'd be good enough.

Speaker 2 (01:28:03):
As government does that ship on purpose. They know what
they're doing, and we ain't heard a single detail. And
he offered fifty million out on bond and they said no.
So something big happened.

Speaker 1 (01:28:15):
Right right, Someone got he's got.

Speaker 2 (01:28:19):
Someone got rape. I bet you they got rape on camera.
I bet you that's what they got somewhere. I bet
you there was cameras all up in that place, if
nothing else for Diddy to jerk off to.

Speaker 1 (01:28:28):
So right right, there's something big, and I think I
think that knowledge there's something big. But there's some big
names that are involved with it that they're trying to make.

Speaker 2 (01:28:41):
Sure you don't Obama didn't he.

Speaker 1 (01:28:45):
I believe say, I believe say. There's been a lot
of big names at the deity parties now, all of
them are saying that, oh no, we didn't stay for
new free calls. I mean, I guess I don't know.
Were you drunk? I mean, I ain't sure if you you.

Speaker 2 (01:29:05):
Know what I'm saying, Oh well, it's ten o'clock, freak
off starting, we better get out of here.

Speaker 1 (01:29:11):
Is that the way it works, Corey to look down
and watch's like okay, it's like and then all of
a sudden, didd He's like closed the doors, just like,
huh close the doors.

Speaker 6 (01:29:24):
Oh but I did ship.

Speaker 1 (01:29:28):
The door is unlocked from the inside. Right, It's like
it's like you got called up? Is that the way
it was like you you lost track of time, and
it's like you're like.

Speaker 6 (01:29:41):
Oh, look at the time, it's about this ship.

Speaker 1 (01:29:44):
The doors are closing like you just see the colors,
the doors just closing in slowly like that. You try
to run it, slide through it, get your arm caught
in it smashed. It's like, man, I said, I tried
to get out, I couldn't get out, has said, and
that now you're a part of it. It's like, it's
good of you to stay this time. You know what

(01:30:04):
I'm saying. We were wondering when you were gonna go.

Speaker 6 (01:30:07):
Damn it, but this is.

Speaker 1 (01:30:10):
Gonna be like a three hour one right, This ain't
gonna be nah, this is the four day. When how
they get caught up in the four day when I
wanted a shorter session. Ye I ain't got a twenty
minute session or something. My goodness, this is bad. So
we'll see how it plays out. Obviously, we're thinking that

(01:30:32):
he's probably gonna be convicted of something something, seeing how
they're going to this lip that these links. No matter
what the evidence looks like, they're gonna that he's gonna
be got on something. Uh so, or whether it be
enough to put him behind bars for an extended period
of time. I'm not sure they did get r Kelly.

(01:30:54):
Uh but he had the tapes of him peeing on
the girls. Which that's that rule number one. Stop recording yourself.
Everybody who records themselves, you're a dumb ass. Okay, you're
an absolute idiot. When you go back and look at it,
you can be like, man, that looks like hell anyway,

(01:31:15):
but hell, I record it for man. You don't want
to see you said you want to be in the moment.
You don't want to see yourself afterwards. All right, you're
not nothing professional about what you're doing. Okay, it'd be
looking over you'd be like, Okay, I thought my work
went prettier than that, but you know what I'm saying.
Obviously I need to work on my craw. So recording

(01:31:36):
yourself is it's numera numero uno thing not to do,
all right, But everybody wants to record themselves. I guess
they didn't go back later and look at their conquest.
I guess you could almost see it as almost like
serial killer having a trophy, having some type of token.
I guess you could see it like that, somebody who's

(01:31:57):
an fo added to the six some type of sexual
disorder in that in that manner. Sah. So yeah, we'll
see how the how the Diddy case pans out, and
we'll bring more stuff to you as a as the
updates come along, and uh yeah, we're going to close
out this episode of Beyond the Queue. Corey Hughes dot org,

(01:32:17):
make sure you go in there, buddyhistory dot substack, the
best historian on the Internet. I want it from History JFK.
His book audiobook be out, seene out now.

Speaker 2 (01:32:33):
It's out on buying me a coffee, but I want
to go take care of it on Audible and Amazon today.
And it's a long story. I'm not gonna tell the
whole story, but I gotta do my ebook first. They
said I had an ebook, but my ebook got pulled
for stupid reasons from the third party company I was
working with. So I got to read you the ebook

(01:32:54):
first and then I can get it on audible. So
that's the deal.

Speaker 1 (01:32:57):
There, Okay, okay, all right. So uh so as currently constructed,
you can get it on buy me a coffee.

Speaker 6 (01:33:05):
Uh.

Speaker 1 (01:33:05):
If you're going through some of these other sites, that
will be a little bit longer for that'll be available,
So be on the lookout for that for for us
people who are partially illiterate. Uh, and we'll rather listen,
which is most of society. And that's okay, all right.
I'm not hating on folks because I ain't gonna liket
to you. I hate you read, but I will listen. Uh.

(01:33:28):
So we appreciate everybody for hanging out with us. Uh.
Make sure you listen to us on podcast platforms, hit
that follow button, hit the subscribe button, and on all
the places that you're watching us. And we'll catch y'all
next week on Beyond the Cue peace Out
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